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Text -- Nahum 3:15 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
In the very fortresses.
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As easily as the canker - worm eats the green herb.
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They are innumerable; be thou so if thou canst; all will be to no purpose.
JFB: Nah 3:15 - -- In the very scene of thy great preparations for defense; and where thou now art so secure.
In the very scene of thy great preparations for defense; and where thou now art so secure.
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JFB: Nah 3:15 - -- Even as at the former destruction; Sardanapalus (Pul?) perished with all his household in the conflagration of his palace, having in despair set it on...
Even as at the former destruction; Sardanapalus (Pul?) perished with all his household in the conflagration of his palace, having in despair set it on fire, the traces of which are still remaining.
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JFB: Nah 3:15 - -- "the swarming locusts" [HENDERSON]; that is, however "many" be thy forces, like those of "the swarming locusts," or the "licking locusts," yet the foe...
"the swarming locusts" [HENDERSON]; that is, however "many" be thy forces, like those of "the swarming locusts," or the "licking locusts," yet the foe shall consume thee as the "licking locust" licks up all before it.
Clarke -> Nah 3:15
Clarke: Nah 3:15 - -- Make thyself many as the cankerworm - On the locusts, and their operations in their various states, see the notes on Joel 2 (note). The multitudes, ...
Make thyself many as the cankerworm - On the locusts, and their operations in their various states, see the notes on Joel 2 (note). The multitudes, successive swarms, and devastation occasioned by locusts, is one of the most expressive similes that could be used to point out the successive armies and all-destroying influences of the enemies of Nineveh. The account of these destroyers from Dr. Shaw, inserted Joel 2, will fully illustrate the verses where allusion is made to locusts.
Calvin -> Nah 3:15
Calvin: Nah 3:15 - -- But he adds, There shall the fire consume thee There is much importance in the adverb of place, there, which he uses: there also, he says, shall ...
But he adds, There shall the fire consume thee There is much importance in the adverb of place, there, which he uses: there also, he says, shall the fire eat thee up: for he expresses more than before, when he said, that the Assyrians would weary themselves in vain in fortifying their city and their empire; for he says now, that the Lord would turn to their destruction those things in which they trusted as their defenses; There then shall the fire consume thee We now then see what the Prophet means.
We must at the same time observe, that he mentions water; as though he said, However sparingly and frugally thy soldiers may live, being content with water as their drink, (for it is necessary, when we would firmly resist enemies, to undergo all indulgences, and if needs be to endure want, at least the want of delicate meat and drink,) — though thy soldiers be content with water, and seek not water fresh from the spring or the river, but drink it from cisterns, and though thy fortresses be repaired, and thy walls carefully joined together in a solid structure, by bricks well fitted and fastened, yet there shall the fire consume thee; that is, thy frugality, exertion, and care, not only will avail thee nothing, but will also turn out to thy ruin; for the Lord pronounces accursed the arrogance of men, when they trust in their own resources.
He afterwards adds, Exterminate thee shall the sword; that is, the Lord will find out various means by which he will consume thee. By the fire, then, and by the sword, will he waste and destroy thee. He then says, He will consume thee as the chafer we may read the last word in the nominative as well as in the objective case — He as a chafer will consume thee. If we approve of this rendering, then the meaning would be, — “As chafers in a short time devour a meadow or standing corn, so thy enemies shall soon devour thee as with one mouthful.” We indeed know, that these little animals are so hurtful, that they will very soon eat up and consume all the fruit; and there is in these insects an astonishing voracity. But as the Prophet afterwards compares the Assyrians to chafers and locusts, another sense would be more suitable, and that is, — that God’s judgment would consume the Assyrians, as when rain, or a storm, or a change of season, consumes the chafers; for as these insects are very hurtful, so the Lord also exterminates them whenever he pleases. 248 He afterwards adds, to be multiplied; which is, as I have said, a verb in the infinitive mood. But the sentence of the Prophet is this, by multiplying as the chafer, to multiply as the locusts: but why he speaks thus, may be better understood from the context; the two following verses must be therefore added —
TSK -> Nah 3:15
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Nah 3:15
Barnes: Nah 3:15 - -- There - where thou didst fence thyself, and madest such manifold and toilsome preparation, Shall the fire devour thee. - All is toil with...
There - where thou didst fence thyself, and madest such manifold and toilsome preparation,
Shall the fire devour thee. - All is toil within. The fire of God’ s wrath falls and consumes at once. Mankind still, with mire and clay, build themselves Babels. "They go into clay,"and become themselves earthly like the mire they steep themselves in. They make themselves strong, as though they thought "that their houses shall continue forever"Psa 49:11, and say, "So, take thine ease eat, drink and be merry"Luk 12:19-20. God’ s wrath descends. "Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee. It shall eat thee up like the canker-worm."What in thee is strongest, shall be devoured with as much ease as the locust devours the tender grass. The judgments of God, not only overwhelm as a whole, but find cut each tender part, as the locust devours each single blade.
Make thyself many as the cankerworm - As though thou wouldest equal thyself in oppressive number to those instruments of the vengeance of God, gathering from all quarters armies to help thee; yea, though thou make thy whole self one oppressive multitude, yet it shall not avail thee. Nay, He saith, thou hast essayed to do it.
Poole -> Nah 3:15
Poole: Nah 3:15 - -- There in the very fortresses.
The fire either literally, or figuratively, the wrath of the enemy hot as fire, or the pestilence, or all together.
...
There in the very fortresses.
The fire either literally, or figuratively, the wrath of the enemy hot as fire, or the pestilence, or all together.
The sword of the Chaldeans their wars, (after all that the Scythians have done against thee,) these shall utterly destroy thee.
It shall eat thee up: this tells us the manner how the Ninevites shall be destroyed, they shall be eaten up.
Like the canker-worm either the enemy shall as easily eat thee up as the cankerworm eats the green herb, or thou shalt as soon be devoured as canker-worms are destroyed by storms, rain, fire, or change of weather.
Make thyself many as the cankerworm they are innumerable, be thou so if thou canst be, all will be to no purpose.
Make thyself many as the locusts: the same irony repeated: when Ninevites have done all they can, they shall as fully and suddenly be destroyed as these vermin are.
Haydock -> Nah 3:15
Haydock: Nah 3:15 - -- Locust. Yet all will be in vain. Thy numbers will be cut off as easily as locusts.
Locust. Yet all will be in vain. Thy numbers will be cut off as easily as locusts.
Gill -> Nah 3:15
Gill: Nah 3:15 - -- There shall the fire devour thee,.... In the strong holds, made ever so firm and secure; either the fire of divine wrath; or the fire of the enemy the...
There shall the fire devour thee,.... In the strong holds, made ever so firm and secure; either the fire of divine wrath; or the fire of the enemy they should put into them; or the enemy himself, as Kimchi; and so the Targum,
"thither shall come upon thee people who are as strong as fire:''
the sword shall cut thee off; it shall eat thee up as the cankerworm: that is, the sword of the Medes and Chaldeans shall utterly destroy thee, as the cankerworm is destroyed by rain or fire; or rather, as that creature destroys all herbs, plants, and trees it falls upon, and makes clear riddance of them, so should it be with Nineveh:
make thyself many as the cankerworm; make thyself many as the locust; which go in swarms, innumerable, and make the air "heavy" in which they fly, and the earth on which they fall, as the word y signifies. The locust has one of its names, "arbah", in Hebrew, from the large numbers of them; so a multitude of men, and large armies, are often signified in Scripture to be like grasshoppers or locusts, for their numbers; see Jdg 6:5. So Sithalces king of Thrace is represented z as swearing, while he was sacrificing, that he would assist the Athenians, having an army that would come like locusts, that is, in such numbers; for so the Greek scholiast on the place says the word used signifies a sort of locusts: the sense is, gather together as many soldiers, and as large an army, as can be obtained to meet the enemy, or cause him to break up the siege: and so we find a the king of Assyria did; for, perceiving his kingdom in great danger, he sent into all his provinces to raise soldiers, and prepare everything for the siege; but all to no purpose, which is here ironically suggested. The word in the Misnic language, as Kimchi observes, has the signification of sweeping; and some render it, "sweep as the locust" b; which sweeps away and consumes the fruits of the earth; so sweep with the besom of destruction, as Jarchi, either their enemies, sarcastically spoken, or be thou swept by them.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Nah 3:15 The root כָּבֵּד (kabbed, “be numerous”) is repeated for emphasis: the forms are the Hitpael inf...
Geneva Bible -> Nah 3:15
Geneva Bible: Nah 3:15 There shall the fire devour thee; the sword shall cut thee off, it shall eat thee up like the ( e ) cankerworm: make thyself many as the cankerworm, m...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Nah 3:1-19
MHCC -> Nah 3:8-19
MHCC: Nah 3:8-19 - --Strong-holds, even the strongest, are no defence against the judgments of God. They shall be unable to do any thing for themselves. The Chaldeans and ...
Matthew Henry -> Nah 3:8-19
Matthew Henry: Nah 3:8-19 - -- Nineveh has been told that God is against her, and then none can be for her, to stand her in any stead; yet she sets God himself at defiance, and hi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Nah 3:14-17
Keil-Delitzsch: Nah 3:14-17 - --
In conclusion, the prophet takes away from the city so heavily laden with guilt the last prop to its hope, - namely, reliance upon its fortification...
Constable: Nah 1:15--Hab 1:1 - --III. Nineveh's destruction described 1:15--3:19
This second major part of Nahum contains another introduction an...
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Constable: Nah 2:3--Hab 1:1 - --B. Four descriptions of Nineveh's fall 2:3-3:19
The rest of the book contains four descriptions of Ninev...
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