
Text -- Jonah 2:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Jon 2:3
JFB: Jon 2:3 - -- Jonah recognizes the source whence his sufferings came. It was no mere chance, but the hand of God which sent them. Compare Job's similar recognition ...
Jonah recognizes the source whence his sufferings came. It was no mere chance, but the hand of God which sent them. Compare Job's similar recognition of God's hand in calamities, Job 1:21; Job 2:10; and David's, 2Sa 16:5-11.
Clarke -> Jon 2:3
Clarke: Jon 2:3 - -- All thy billows and thy waves passed over me - This may be understood literally; while the fish, in whose belly he was, sought its pleasure or suste...
All thy billows and thy waves passed over me - This may be understood literally; while the fish, in whose belly he was, sought its pleasure or sustenance in the paths of the deep, the waves and billows of the sea were rolling above. This line seems borrowed from Psa 42:7.
Calvin -> Jon 2:3
Calvin: Jon 2:3 - -- In this verse are set forth his difficulties: for Jonah, for the sake of amplifying, refers to his condition. It was a great thing that he cried to G...
In this verse are set forth his difficulties: for Jonah, for the sake of amplifying, refers to his condition. It was a great thing that he cried to God from the bowels of the fish; but it was far more difficult for him to raise up his mind in prayer, when he knew or thought God to be angry with him: for had he been thrown into extreme evils, he might yet call upon God; but as it came to his mind that all the evil he suffered was inflicted by God, because he tried to shun his call, how was it possible for him to penetrate into heaven when such an obstacle stood in his way? We hence see the design of these words, But thou hadst cast me into the gulf, into the heart of the sea; the flood surrounded me, all thy billows and waves passed over me.
In short, Jonah shows here what dreadful temptations presented themselves to him while he was endeavoring to offer up prayers. It came first to his mind that God was his most inveterate enemy. For Jonah did not then think of the sailors and the rest who had cast him into the sea; but his mind was fixed on God: this is the reason why he says, Thou, Lord, hadst cast me into the deep, into the heart of the sea; and then, Thy billows, Thy waves 38 He does not here regard the nature of the sea; but he bestows, as I have already said, all his thoughts on God, and acknowledges that he had to do with him; as though he said, “Thou Lord, in pursuing me, drivest me away; but to thee do I come: thou showest by dreadful proofs that thou art offended with me, but yet I seek thee; so far is it that these terrors drive me to a distance from thee, that now, being subdued as it were by thy goads, I come willingly to thee; for nowhere else is there for me any hope of deliverance.” We now then see how much avails the contrast, when Jonah sets the terrible punishment which he endured in opposition to his prayer. Let us now proceed —
TSK -> Jon 2:3
TSK: Jon 2:3 - -- thou : Jon 1:12-16; Psa 69:1, Psa 69:2, Psa 69:14, Psa 69:15, Psa 88:5-8; Lam 3:54
midst : Heb. heart
all : Psa 42:7
thou : Jon 1:12-16; Psa 69:1, Psa 69:2, Psa 69:14, Psa 69:15, Psa 88:5-8; Lam 3:54
midst : Heb. heart
all : Psa 42:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jon 2:3
Barnes: Jon 2:3 - -- For Thou hadst ("didst") cast me into the deep - Jonah continues to describe the extremity of peril, from which God had already delivered him. ...
For Thou hadst ("didst") cast me into the deep - Jonah continues to describe the extremity of peril, from which God had already delivered him. Sweet is the memory of perils past. For they speak of God’ s Fatherly care. Sweet is it, to the prophet to tell God of His mercies; but this is sweet only to the holy, for God’ s mercy convicts the careless of ingratitude. Jonah then tells God, how He had cast him vehemently forth into the "eddying depth,"where, when Pharaoh’ s army "sank like a stone"(Exo 15:5, add Exo 15:10), they never rose, and that, "in the heart"or center "of the seas,"from where no strong swimmer could escape to shore. "The floods"or "flood,"(literally "river,") the sea with its currents, "surrounded"him, encompassing him on all sides; and, above, tossed its multitudinous waves, passing over him, like an army trampling one prostrate underfoot. Jonah remembered well the temple psalms, and, using their words, united himself with those other worshipers who sang them, and taught us how to speak them to God. The sons of Korah Psa 42:7. had poured out to God in these self-same words the sorrows which oppressed them. The rolling billows and the breakers , which, as they burst upon the rocks, shiver the vessel and crush man, are, he says to God, "Thine,"fulfilling Thy will on me.
Poole -> Jon 2:3
Poole: Jon 2:3 - -- For: this introduceth the account of his distress, mentioned Jon 2:2 .
Thou the Almighty, offended by my frowardness and obstinacy,
hadst cast me ...
For: this introduceth the account of his distress, mentioned Jon 2:2 .
Thou the Almighty, offended by my frowardness and obstinacy,
hadst cast me into the deep though the mariners’ hands heaved me overboard, it was thy hand that did it, and pressed me sore. The deep ; the bottom of the sea: by what follows it is probable Jonah was cast into the sea far from shore.
In the midst of the seas or heart of the seas, but more literally and strictly in the midst of the seas, than that Eze 27:4 .
The floods either the mighty rivers which run into that sea, or the floods, the mighty currents, which the rolling sea and winds with tide made.
All thy billows and thy waves passed over me the surges of the sea, which explains what before he called the floods . Here is an elegant description of the violence and horror of the seas into which Jonah was cast, which tossed his body, and signified the terrors wherewith his soul was distressed from God’ s immediate hand, as Psa 42:7 .
Thy waves: Jonah seeth God’ s hand and sovereignty in all this, intimating that he prayed for what he knew his God could do for him.
Haydock -> Jon 2:3
Haydock: Jon 2:3 - -- I cried. These five verses (Haydock) express his thoughts while he was in the sea, (St. Jerome; Calmet) or in the fish. (Haydock) ---
He doubtless...
I cried. These five verses (Haydock) express his thoughts while he was in the sea, (St. Jerome; Calmet) or in the fish. (Haydock) ---
He doubtless prayed before, when he was cast into the sea, and also in the whale's belly, having then greater confidence that he should arrive safely on dry land, (ver. 5.) and therefore vowing sacrifices of thanks, ver. 10. (Worthington) ---
Hell; the whale's belly, (Theodoret; &c.) or rather the depth of the sea. It may denote any imminent danger.
Gill -> Jon 2:3
Gill: Jon 2:3 - -- For thou hadst cast me into the deep, in the midst of the seas,.... Though the mariners did this, yet Jonah ascribes it to the Lord; he knew it was he...
For thou hadst cast me into the deep, in the midst of the seas,.... Though the mariners did this, yet Jonah ascribes it to the Lord; he knew it was he, whom he had sinned against and offended; that he was he that sent the storm after him into the sea; that determined the lot to fall upon him; that it was not only by his permission, but according to his will, that he should be east into it, and overcame the reluctance of the men to it, and so worked upon them that they did it; and therefore Jonah imputes it to him, and not to them; nor does he complain of it, or murmur at it; or censure it as an unrighteous action, or as hard, cruel, and severe; but rather mentions it to set off the greatness of his deliverance: and by this it appears, that it was far from shore when Jonah was cast into the sea, it was the great deep; and which also is confirmed by the large fish which swallowed him, which could, not swim but in deep waters; and because of the multitude of the waters, called "seas", and "in the heart" c of them, as it may be rendered; and agreeably Christ the antitype of Jonah lay in the heart of the earth, Mat 12:40;
and the floods compassed me about; all thy billows and thy waves passed over me; which was his case as soon as cast into the sea, before the fish had swallowed him, as well as after: this was literally true of Jonah, what David says figuratively concerning his afflictions, and from whom the prophet seems to borrow the expressions, Psa 42:7; and indeed he might use them also in a metaphorical sense, with a view to the afflictions of body, and sorrows of death, that compassed him; and to the billows and waves of divine wrath, which in his apprehension lay upon him, and rolled over him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 2:3-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Jon 2:3-4 - --
x720 3 Thou castedst me into the deep, into the heart of the seas,
And the stream surrounded me;
All Thy billows and Thy waves...
Constable: Oba 1:19--Jon 2:3 - --B. The Occupation of Edom by Israel vv. 19-21
This pericope (section of text), as the former one, also has a framing phrase: "the mountain of Esau" (v...

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...
