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Text -- Nahum 3:18 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
Concluding Dirge
3:18 Your shepherds are sleeping, O king of Assyria! Your officers are slumbering! Your people are scattered like sheep on the mountains and there is no one to regather them!
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Assyria a member of the nation of Assyria


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Shepherd | Prophecy | Nineveh | Nahum | NOBLE; NOBLES; NOBLEMAN | Assyria | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy rulers and counsellors.

Thy rulers and counsellors.

Wesley: Nah 3:18 - -- Are remiss, heartless, or dead.

Are remiss, heartless, or dead.

Wesley: Nah 3:18 - -- No one will concern himself to preserve thy dispersed ones.

No one will concern himself to preserve thy dispersed ones.

JFB: Nah 3:18 - -- That is, Thy leaders.

That is, Thy leaders.

JFB: Nah 3:18 - -- Are carelessly secure [MAURER]. Rather, "lie in death's sleep, having been slain" [JEROME] (Exo 15:16; Psa 76:6).

Are carelessly secure [MAURER]. Rather, "lie in death's sleep, having been slain" [JEROME] (Exo 15:16; Psa 76:6).

JFB: Nah 3:18 - -- (Psa 7:5; Psa 94:17).

JFB: Nah 3:18 - -- The necessary consequence of their leaders being laid low (1Ki 22:17).

The necessary consequence of their leaders being laid low (1Ki 22:17).

Clarke: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy shepherds slumber - That is, the rulers and tributary princes, who, as Herodotus informs us, deserted Nineveh in the day of her distress, and ca...

Thy shepherds slumber - That is, the rulers and tributary princes, who, as Herodotus informs us, deserted Nineveh in the day of her distress, and came not forward to her succor

Diodorus Siculus says, lib. ii., when the enemy shut up the king in the city, many nations revolted, each going over to the besiegers, for the sake of their liberty; that the king despatched messengers to all his subjects, requiring power from them to succor him; and that he thought himself able to endure the siege, and remained in expectation of armies which were to be raised throughout his empire, relying on the oracle that the city would not be taken till the river became its enemy. See the note on Nah 2:6.

Calvin: Nah 3:18 - -- He confirms the preceding verse, and says that there would be no counsel nor wisdom in the leading men: for the shepherds of the king of Assyria wer...

He confirms the preceding verse, and says that there would be no counsel nor wisdom in the leading men: for the shepherds of the king of Assyria were his counselors, in whose wisdom he trusted, as we know that kings usually depend on their counselors: for they think that there is in them prudence enough, and therefore they commit to them the care of the whole people. But the Prophet ridicules the confidence of the king of Assyria, because the shepherds would not have so much vigilance as to take care of themselves, and of the people, and of the whole kingdom. He speaks in the past tense, either to show the certainty of the prediction, or because the change of tenses is common in Hebrew. Lie still, he says, shall thy mighty men; 250 that is, they shall remain idle; they shall not be able to sally out against their enemies, to stop their progress. They shall then lie still: and then he says, Scattered are thy people פוש , push, is not to scatter; hence I doubt not, but that there is a change of letter, that ש , schin, is put for ץ , tzaddi; and I am surprised that some derive the verb from פוש , push, when, on the contrary, it is from פוף , puts, and the change of these two letters is common in Hebrew. Thy people then are dispersed on the mountains and there is no one to assemble them

By these words the Prophet means, that such would be the scattering of the whole kingdom, that there would be no hope of restoration; There will then be none to assemble them He had said before that the chiefs or mighty men would be still. Though it would be needful to go forth to check the progress of their enemies; yet he says, They shall idly lie down: He refers here to their sloth. But the people who ought to be quiet at home, as being weak and feeble, shall be dispersed on the mountains, and no one will be there to gather them It follows —

TSK: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy shepherds : That is, the rulers and tributary princes, who, as Herodotus informs us, deserted Nineveh in the day of her distress, and came not to ...

Thy shepherds : That is, the rulers and tributary princes, who, as Herodotus informs us, deserted Nineveh in the day of her distress, and came not to her succour. Diodorus also says, that when the enemy shut up the king in the city, many nations revolted; each going over to the besiegers for the sake of their liberty; that the king despatched messengers to all his subjects, requiring power from them to succour him, and that he thought himself able to endure the siege, and remained in expectation of armies which were to be raised throughout his empire, relying on the oracle, that the city would not be taken till the river became its enemy. Nah 2:6; Exo 15:16; Psa 76:5, Psa 76:6; Isa 56:9, Isa 56:10; Jer 51:39, Jer 51:57

O King : Jer 50:18; Ezek. 31:3-18, Eze 32:22, Eze 32:23

nobles : or, valiant ones, Isa 47:1; Rev 6:15

thy people : 1Ki 22:17; Isa 13:14

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy shepherds - that is, they who should counsel for the people’ s good and feed it, and "keep watch over their flocks by night,"but are n...

Thy shepherds - that is, they who should counsel for the people’ s good and feed it, and "keep watch over their flocks by night,"but are now like their master, the "King of Assyria,"are his shepherds not the shepherds of the people whom they care not for; these slumber, at once through listlessness and excess, and now have fallen asleep in death, as the Psalmist says, "They have slept their sleep"Psa 76:6. The prophet speaks of the future, as already past in effect, as it was in the will of God. All "the shepherds of the people", all who could shepherd them, or hold them to together, themselves sleep "the sleep of death;"their mighty men dwelt in that abiding-place, where they shall not move or rise, the grave; and so as Micaiah, in the vision predictive of Ahab’ s death, "saw all Israel scattered on the hills, as sheep that have not a shepherd"1Ki 22:17, so the people of the Assyrian monarch shall be "scattered on the mountains,"shepherdless, and that irretrievably; no man gathers them.

Poole: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy shepherds subordinate magistrates, rulers, and counsellors, or officers set over the kingdom, slumber; are remiss, or mistake, or are heartless o...

Thy shepherds subordinate magistrates, rulers, and counsellors, or officers set over the kingdom, slumber; are remiss, or mistake, or are heartless or dead, they cannot or will not mind the public concerns.

O king of Assyria his name I meet not with; Asaradinus, or, as the Scripture calls him, Esarhaddon, may possibly be the name and man intended.

Thy nobles the brave, valiant, and famous men,

shall dwell in the dust either be buried as dead, or lie in the dust as faint and weary, or be trampled on as worthless and useless.

Thy people thy citizens and subjects in their great numbers, is scattered, partly through fear, shame, and astonishment, partly by violence of the invading enemy, upon the mountains, where is neither safety, nor provision against danger and want.

No man gathereth them no one that will concern himself to preserve thy dispersed ones; so thou and they are left hopeless and ruined, for the shepherds are some dead and cannot, the rest slumber and will not, lay to heart their condition.

Haydock: Nah 3:18 - -- Slumbered. They have not guarded the flock. (Calmet)

Slumbered. They have not guarded the flock. (Calmet)

Gill: Nah 3:18 - -- Thy shepherds slumber, O king of Assyria,.... Who this king of Assyria was is not easy to say; some think Esarhaddon, who is the last of the kings of ...

Thy shepherds slumber, O king of Assyria,.... Who this king of Assyria was is not easy to say; some think Esarhaddon, who is the last of the kings of Assyria the Scriptures speak of; according to Diodorus Siculus n, Sardanapalus was the last of these kings, and in him the Assyrian monarchy ended; though, according to Alexander Polyhistor o, Saracus, perhaps the Chyniladanus of Ptolemy, was king when Nineveh was destroyed: it is very likely that Sardanapalus and Saracus design the same person, though set at a great distance by historians; since the same things are said of the one as of the other; particularly that, when they saw their danger, they burnt themselves and theirs in the royal palace at Nineveh; nor is it probable that the same city with the empire should be destroyed and subverted twice by the same people, the Medes and Babylonians, uniting together; and it is remarkable that the double destruction of this city and empire is related by different historians; and those that speak of the one say nothing of the other: but this king, be he who he will, his case was very bad, his "shepherds slumbered"; his ministers of state, his counsellors, subordinate magistrates in provinces and cities, and particularly in Nineveh; his generals and officers in his army were careless and negligent of their duty, and gave themselves up to sloth and ease; and which also was his own character, as historians agree in; or they were dead, slumbering in their graves, and so could be of no service to him:

thy nobles shall dwell in the dust; be brought very low, into a very mean and abject condition; their honour shall be laid in the dust, and they be trampled upon by everyone: or, "they shall sleep" p; that is, die, and be buried, as the Vulgate Latin renders it: or, "shall dwell in silence", as others q; have their habitation in the silent grave, being cut off by the enemy; so that this prince would have none of his mighty men to trust in, but see himself stripped of all his vain confidences:

thy people is scattered upon the mountains, and no man gathereth them; like sheep without a shepherd, which being frightened by beasts of prey, run here and there, and there is none to get them together, and bring them back again; so the subjects of this king, being terrified at the approach of the Medes and Babylonians, forsook their cities, and fled to the mountains; where they were scattered about, having no leader and commander to gather them together, and put them in regular order to face and oppose the enemy. So the Targum interprets it

"the people of thine armies.''

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Nah 3:18 The words “like sheep” are not in the Hebrew text; they are added for clarification of the imagery. The previous line compares AssyriaR...

Geneva Bible: Nah 3:18 Thy ( f ) shepherds slumber, O king of Assyria: thy nobles shall dwell [in the dust]: thy people is scattered upon the mountains, and no man gathereth...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Nah 3:1-19 - --1 The miserable ruin of Nineveh.

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 - -- 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 3:18-19 - -- Such an end will come to the Assyrian kingdom on the overthrow of Nineveh. Nah 3:18. "The shepherds have fallen asleep, king Asshur: thy glorious o...

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...

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...

Constable: Nah 3:8-19 - --4. The fourth description of Nineveh's fall 3:8-19 This section, evidently another message that Nahum delivered concerning Nineveh's fall, begins by c...

Guzik: Nah 3:1-19 - --Nahum 3 - Nineveh, the Wicked City A. The sin within Nineveh. 1. (1-4) The violence and immorality in Nineveh. Woe to the bloody city! It is all f...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Nahum (Book Introduction) NAHUM means "consolation" and "vengeance"; symbolizing the "consolation" in the book for God's people, and the "vengeance" coming on their enemies. In...

JFB: Nahum (Outline) JEHOVAH'S ATTRIBUTES AS A JEALOUS JUDGE OF SIN, YET MERCIFUL TO HIS TRUSTING PEOPLE, SHOULD INSPIRE THEM WITH CONFIDENCE. HE WILL NOT ALLOW THE ASSYR...

TSK: Nahum 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Nah 3:1, The miserable ruin of Nineveh.

Poole: Nahum (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT THE prophet Nahum is one of those prophets whose family and country are concealed, and it would be more labour than profit to spend ti...

Poole: Nahum 3 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 3 The miserable ruin of Nineveh.

MHCC: Nahum (Book Introduction) This prophet denounces the certain and approaching destruction of the Assyrian empire, particularly of Nineveh, which is described very minutely. Toge...

MHCC: Nahum 3 (Chapter Introduction) (Nah 3:1-7) The sins and judgments of Nineveh. (Nah 3:8-19) Its utter destruction.

Matthew Henry: Nahum (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Nahum The name of this prophet signifies a comforter; for it was a charge given to al...

Matthew Henry: Nahum 3 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter goes on with the burden of Nineveh, and concludes it. I. The sins of that great city are charged upon it, murder (Nah 3:1), whoredom ...

Constable: Nahum (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The title of the book comes from the name of its writer....

Constable: Nahum (Outline) Outline I. Heading 1:1 II. Nineveh's destruction declared 1:2-14 A. The ...

Constable: Nahum Nahum Bibliography Armerding, Carl E. "Nahum." In Daniel-Minor Prophets. Vol. 7 of The Expositor's Bible Commen...

Haydock: Nahum (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF NAHUM. INTRODUCTION. Nahum, whose name signifies a comforter, was a native of Elcese, or Elcesai, supposed to be a little to...

Gill: Nahum (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NAHUM This book is called, in the Vulgate Latin version, "the Prophecy of Nahum"; and in the Syriac and Arabic versions, "the Proph...

Gill: Nahum 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NAHUM 3 In this chapter is contained the prophecy of the destruction of Nineveh, and with it the whole Assyrian empire; the causes ...

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