
Text -- Jonah 2:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jon 2:6 - -- The fish carried him down as deep in the sea as are the bottoms of the mountains.
The fish carried him down as deep in the sea as are the bottoms of the mountains.

Wesley: Jon 2:6 - -- I seemed to be imprisoned where the bars that secured were as durable as the rocks, which they were made of.
I seemed to be imprisoned where the bars that secured were as durable as the rocks, which they were made of.

By what was first my danger, thou hast wonderfully secured me.

Or the pit, a description of the state of the dead.

In the assurance of faith, he speaks of the thing as already done.
JFB: Jon 2:6 - -- Their extremities where they terminate in the hidden depths of the sea. Compare Psa 18:7, "the foundations of the hills" (Psa 18:15).

Earth, the land of the living, is (not "was") shut against me.

So far as any effort of mine can deliver me.

JFB: Jon 2:6 - -- Rather, "Thou bringest . . . from the pit" [MAURER]. As in the previous clauses he expresses the hopelessness of his state, so in this, his sure hope ...
Rather, "Thou bringest . . . from the pit" [MAURER]. As in the previous clauses he expresses the hopelessness of his state, so in this, his sure hope of deliverance through Jehovah's infinite resources. "Against hope he believes in hope," and speaks as if the deliverance were actually being accomplished. Hezekiah seems to have incorporated Jonah's very words in his prayer (Isa 38:17), just as Jonah appropriated the language of the Psalms.
Clarke: Jon 2:6 - -- I went down to the bottoms of the mountains - This also may be literally understood. The fish followed the slanting base of the mountains, till they...
I went down to the bottoms of the mountains - This also may be literally understood. The fish followed the slanting base of the mountains, till they terminated in a plain at the bottom of the great deep

Clarke: Jon 2:6 - -- The earth with her bars - He represents himself as a prisoner in a dungeon, closed in with bars which he could not remove, and which at first appear...
The earth with her bars - He represents himself as a prisoner in a dungeon, closed in with bars which he could not remove, and which at first appeared to be for ever, i.e., the place where his life must terminate

Clarke: Jon 2:6 - -- Yet hast thou brought up my life - The substance of this poetic prayer was composed while in the fish’ s belly; but afterwards the prophet appe...
Yet hast thou brought up my life - The substance of this poetic prayer was composed while in the fish’ s belly; but afterwards the prophet appears to have thrown it into its present poetic form, and to have added some circumstances, such as that before us; for he now speaks of his deliverance from this imminent danger of death. "Thou hast brought up my life from corruption."
Calvin -> Jon 2:6
Calvin: Jon 2:6 - -- According to the same sense he says, I descended to the roots of the mountains. But he speaks of promontories, which were nigh the sea; as though h...
According to the same sense he says, I descended to the roots of the mountains. But he speaks of promontories, which were nigh the sea; as though he had said, that he was not cast into the midst of the sea, but that he had so sunk as to be fixed in the deep under the roots of mountains. All these things have the same designs which was to show that no deliverance could be hoped for, except God stretched forth his hand from heaven, and indeed in a manner new and incredible.
He says that the earth with its bars was around him. He means by this kind of speaking, that he was so shut up, as if the whole earth had been like a door. We know what sort of bars are those of the earth, when we ascribe bars to it: for when any door is fastened with bolts, we know how small a portion it is. But when we suppose the earth itself to be like a door, what kind of things must the bolts be? It is the same thing then as though Jonah had said, that he was so hindered from the vital light, as if the earth had been set against him to prevent his coming forth to behold the sun: the earth, then, was set against me, and that for ever
He afterwards comes to thanksgiving, And thou Jehovah, my God, hast made my life to ascend from the grave. Jonah, after having given a long description, for the purpose of showing that he was not once put to death, but that he had been overwhelmed with many and various deaths, now adds his gratitude to the Lord for having delivered him, Thou, he says, hast made my life to ascend from the grave, O Jehovah. He again confirms what I have once said, — that he did not pour forth empty prayers, but that he prayed with an earnest feeling, and in faith: for he would not have called him his God, except he was persuaded of his paternal love, so as to be able to expect from him a certain salvation. Thou, then, Jehovah, my God, he says; he does not say, Thou hast delivered me, but, Thou hast brought forth my life from the grave. Then Jonah, brought to life again, testifies here that he was not only delivered by God’s aid from the greatest danger, but that he had, by a certain kind of resurrection, been raised from the dead. This is the meaning of this mode of speaking, when he says that his life had been brought forth from the grave, or from corruption itself. It follows —
Defender: Jon 2:6 - -- In Jonah's day, so far as we know, men had no means to explore the sea floor, yet Jonah somehow knew that mountains had "roots" extending deep into th...
In Jonah's day, so far as we know, men had no means to explore the sea floor, yet Jonah somehow knew that mountains had "roots" extending deep into the earth's crust. In fact, this may even be another way of referring to his descent into "hell."

Defender: Jon 2:6 - -- The Lord Jesus Christ, speaking prophetically through David, had prophesied His resurrection, saying: "Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wi...
The Lord Jesus Christ, speaking prophetically through David, had prophesied His resurrection, saying: "Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption" (Psa 16:10). Jonah used the same word here, indicating still further the remarkable typological correlation of his own experience to the death and resurrection of Christ, as cited by Him (Mat 12:40)."
TSK -> Jon 2:6
TSK: Jon 2:6 - -- bottoms : Heb. cuttings off
mountains : Deu 32:22; Psa 65:6, Psa 104:6, Psa 104:8; Isa 40:12; Hab 3:6, Hab 3:10
the earth : Job 38:4-11; Pro 8:25-29
y...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jon 2:6
Barnes: Jon 2:6 - -- I went down to the bottoms, (literally "the cuttings off") of the mountains - , the "roots"as the Chaldee and we call them, the hidden rocks, ...
I went down to the bottoms, (literally "the cuttings off") of the mountains - , the "roots"as the Chaldee and we call them, the hidden rocks, which the mountains push out, as it were, into the sea, and in which they end. Such hidden rocks extend along the whole length of that coast. These were his dungeon walls; "the earth, her bars,"those long submarine reefs of rock, his prison bars, "were around"him "forever:"the seaweeds were his chains: and, even thus, when things were at their uttermost, "Thou hast brought up my life from corruption,"to which his body would have fallen a prey, had not God sent the fish to deliver him. The deliverance for which be thanks God is altogether past: "Thou broughtest me up."He calls "the"Lord, "my"God, because, being the God of all, He was especially his God, for whom He had done things of such marvelous love. God loves each soul which He has made with the same infinite love with which He loves all. Whence Paul says of Jesus Gal 2:20, "Who loved me and gave Himself for me."He loves each, with the same undivided love, as if he had created none besides; and He allows each to say, "My God,"as if the Infinite God belonged wholly to each. So would He teach us the oneness of Union between the soul which God loves and which admits His love, and Himself.
Poole -> Jon 2:6
Poole: Jon 2:6 - -- I went down the fish carried him down,
to the bottoms of the mountains as deep in the sea as are the bottoms of the mountains, or into those depths...
I went down the fish carried him down,
to the bottoms of the mountains as deep in the sea as are the bottoms of the mountains, or into those depths out of which might be supposed that mountains were thence drawn out by the roots; an elegant description of fathomless depths, whirlpools of the seas.
The earth with her bars was about me for ever I seemed to be imprisoned where the bars that secured me were as great and durable as the rocks which they were made of.
Yet notwithstanding all these insuperable difficulties, and my own fears,
hast thou brought up by what was first my danger thou hast wonderfully secured me, what I thought should have been my grave was made a safety to me; by the fish Jonah is in due time fairly and safely set on shore.
My life his life of nature; his life of comfort, and peace, and joy too.
From corruption or the pit; a description of the stale of the dead, whose bodies turn to putrefaction and stench.
O Lord O almighty and eternal Being, Lord and Sovereign over all.
My God mine, saith Jonah, by particular choice, faith, and hope, whom I had served and should not have disobeyed, to whom I prayed, who hath pardoned, whom I will adore, obey, and love for ever.
Haydock -> Jon 2:6
Haydock: Jon 2:6 - -- Soul, so that I was in danger of being suffocated, Psalms lxviii. 2. (Calmet) ---
Sea. Hebrew, "weeds entangled," &c. (Haydock) ---
The Mediter...
Soul, so that I was in danger of being suffocated, Psalms lxviii. 2. (Calmet) ---
Sea. Hebrew, "weeds entangled," &c. (Haydock) ---
The Mediterranean has a great deal of sea weed. He speaks of the time before he was swallowed up by the fish.
Gill -> Jon 2:6
Gill: Jon 2:6 - -- I went down to the bottom of the mountains,.... Which are in the midst of the sea, whither the fish carried him, and where the waters are deep; or the...
I went down to the bottom of the mountains,.... Which are in the midst of the sea, whither the fish carried him, and where the waters are deep; or the bottom of rocks and promontories on the shore of the sea; and such vast rocks hanging over the sea, whose bottoms were in it, it seems are on the shore of Joppa, near to which Jonah was cast into the sea, as Egesippus f relates:
the earth with her bars was about me for ever; that is, the earth with its cliffs and rocks on the seashore, which are as bars to the sea, that it cannot overflow it; these were such bars to Jonah, that could he have got clear of the fish's belly, and attempted to swim to shore, he could never get to it, or over these bars, the rocks and cliffs, which were so steep and high:
yet hast thou brought up my life from corruption, O Lord my God; notwithstanding these difficulties, which were insuperable by human power, and these seeming impossibilities of, deliverance; yet the Lord brought him out of the fish's belly, as out of a grave, the pit of corruption, and where he must otherwise have lain and rotted, and freed his soul from those terrors which would have destroyed him; and by this also we learn, that this form of words was composed after he came to dry land: herein likewise he was a type of Christ, who, though laid in the grave, was not left there so long as to see corruption, Psa 16:10.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jon 2:6 Jonah pictures himself as being at the very gates of the netherworld (v. 6b) and now within the Pit itself (v. 6c). He is speaking rhetorically, for h...
Geneva Bible -> Jon 2:6
Geneva Bible: Jon 2:6 I went down to the bottoms of the mountains; the earth with her bars [was] about me for ever: yet hast thou brought up my ( d ) life from corruption, ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jon 2:1-10
MHCC -> Jon 2:1-9
MHCC: Jon 2:1-9 - --Observe when Jonah prayed. When he was in trouble, under the tokens of God's displeasure against him for sin: when we are in affliction we must pray. ...
Matthew Henry -> Jon 2:1-9
Matthew Henry: Jon 2:1-9 - -- God and his servant Jonah had parted in anger, and the quarrel began on Jonah's side; he fled from his country that he might outrun his work; but we...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jon 2:5-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Jon 2:5-7 - --
x720 5 Waters surrounded me even to the soul: the flood encompassed me,
Sea-grass was wound round my head.
x720 6 ...
Constable -> Jon 1:1--2:10; Jon 2:2-9
Constable: Jon 1:1--2:10 - --I. The disobedience of the prophet chs. 1--2
The first half of this prophecy records Jonah's attempt to flee fro...
