
Text -- Zephaniah 1:17-18 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Not knowing where to go.

As abundantly, and as carelessly as dust in the highway.

Wesley: Zep 1:18 - -- Therefore let not sinners be laid asleep by the patience of God; for when the measure of their iniquity is full, his justice will both overtake and ov...
Therefore let not sinners be laid asleep by the patience of God; for when the measure of their iniquity is full, his justice will both overtake and overcome them, will make quick and thorough work.
JFB: Zep 1:17 - -- Unable to see whither to turn themselves so as to find an escape from existing evils.
Unable to see whither to turn themselves so as to find an escape from existing evils.

JFB: Zep 1:18 - -- Rather, a "consummation" (complete destruction: "full end," Jer 46:28; Eze 11:13) "altogether sudden" [MAURER]. "A consumption, and that a sudden one"...
Clarke: Zep 1:17 - -- They shall walk like blind men - Be in the most perplexing doubt and uncertainty; and while in this state, have their blood poured out by the sword ...
They shall walk like blind men - Be in the most perplexing doubt and uncertainty; and while in this state, have their blood poured out by the sword of their enemies, and their flesh trodden under foot.

Clarke: Zep 1:18 - -- Their silver nor their gold - In which they trusted, and from which they expected happiness; these shall not profit them in this awful day. And God ...
Their silver nor their gold - In which they trusted, and from which they expected happiness; these shall not profit them in this awful day. And God will bring this about speedily; and a speedy riddance - a universal desolation, shall in a short time take place in every part of the land.
Calvin: Zep 1:17 - -- He confirms what I have already stated—that though other enemies, the Assyrians or Chaldeans, attacked the Jews, yet God would be the principal lea...
He confirms what I have already stated—that though other enemies, the Assyrians or Chaldeans, attacked the Jews, yet God would be the principal leader of the war. God then claims here for himself what the Jews transferred to their earthly enemies: and the Prophet has already often called it the day of Jehovah; for God would then make known his power, which had been a sport to them. He therefore declares in this place, that he would reduce man to distress, so that the whole nation would walk like the blind —that, being void of counsel, they would stumble and fall, and not be able to proceed in their course: for they are said to go astray like the blind, who see no end to their evils, who find no means to escape ruin, but are held as it were fast bound. And we must ever bear in mind what I have already said—that the Jews were inflated with such pride, that they heedlessly despised all the Prophets. Since then they were thus wise in themselves, God denounces blindness on them.
He subjoins the reason, Because they had acted impiously towards Jehovah 86 By these words he confirms what I have already explained—that the intermediate causes are not to be considered, though the Chaldeans took vengeance on the Jews; for there is a higher principle, and another cause of this evil, even the contempt of God and of his celestial truth; for they had acted impiously towards God. And by these words the Prophet reminds the Jews, that no alleviation was to be expected, as they had not only men hostile to them, but God himself, whom they had extremely provoked.
Hence he adds, Poured forth shall be your blood as dust 87 They whom God delivered up to extreme reproach were deserving of this, because he had been despised by them. Their flesh, 88 he says, shall be as dung. Now, we know how much the Jews boasted of their preeminence; and God had certainly given them occasion to boast, had they made a right and legitimate use of his benefits; but as they had despised him, they deserved in their turn to be exposed to every ignominy and reproach. Hence the Prophet here lays prostrate all their false boastings by which they were inflated; for they wished to be honorable, while God was despised by them. At last he adds—

Calvin: Zep 1:18 - -- He repeats what he has already said—that the helps which the Jews hoped would be in readiness to prevent God’s vengeance would be vain. For thoug...
He repeats what he has already said—that the helps which the Jews hoped would be in readiness to prevent God’s vengeance would be vain. For though men dare not openly to resist God, yet they hope by some winding courses to find out some way by which they may avert his judgment. As then the Jews, trusting in their wealth, and in their fortified cities, became insolent towards God, the Prophet here declares, that neither gold nor silver should be a help to them. Let them, he says, accumulate wealth; though by the mass of their gold and silver they form high mountains for themselves, yet they shall not be able to turn aside the hand of God, nor be able to deliver themselves,—and why? He repeats again the same thing, that it would be the day of wrath. We indeed know, that the most savage enemies are sometimes pacified by money, for avarice mitigates their cruelty; but the Prophet declares here, that as God would be the ruler in that war, there would be no redemption, and therefore money would be useless: for God could by no means receive them into favor, except they repented and truly humbled themselves before him.
He therefore adds, that the land would be devoured by the fire of God’s jealousy, or indignation. He compares God’s wrath to fire; for no agreement can be made when fire rages, but the more materials there are the more will there be to increase the fire. So then the Prophet excludes the Jews from any hope of deliverance, except they reconciled themselves to God by true and sincere repentance; for a consummation, he says, he will make as to all the inhabitants of the land, and one indeed very quick or speedy. 89 In short, he means, that as the Jews had hardened themselves against every instruction, they would find God’s vengeance to be such as would wholly consume them, as they would not anticipate it, but on the contrary enhance it by their pride and stupidity, and even deride it. Now follows—
TSK: Zep 1:17 - -- they shall : Deu 28:28, Deu 28:29; Psa 79:3; Isa 29:10, Isa 59:9, Isa 59:10; Lam 4:14; Mat 15:14; Joh 9:40,Joh 9:41; Rom 11:7, Rom 11:25; 2Co 4:4; 2Pe...
they shall : Deu 28:28, Deu 28:29; Psa 79:3; Isa 29:10, Isa 59:9, Isa 59:10; Lam 4:14; Mat 15:14; Joh 9:40,Joh 9:41; Rom 11:7, Rom 11:25; 2Co 4:4; 2Pe 1:9; 1Jo 2:11; Rev 3:17
because : Isa 24:5, Isa 24:6, Isa 50:1, Isa 59:12-15; Jer 2:17, Jer 2:19, Jer 4:18; Lam 1:8, Lam 1:14, Lam 1:18, Lam 4:13-15; Lam 5:16, Lam 5:17; Eze 22:25-31; Dan 9:5-19; Mic 3:9-12, Mic 7:13
and their blood : 2Ki 9:33-37; Psa 79:2, Psa 79:3, Psa 83:10; Jer 9:21, Jer 9:22, Jer 15:3, Jer 16:4-6, Jer 18:21; Lam 2:21, Lam 4:14; Amo 4:10

TSK: Zep 1:18 - -- their silver : Zep 1:11; Psa 49:6-9, Psa 52:5-7; Pro 11:4, Pro 18:11; Isa 2:20,Isa 2:21; Jer 9:23, Jer 9:24; Eze 7:19; Mat 16:26; Luk 12:19-21, Luk 16...
their silver : Zep 1:11; Psa 49:6-9, Psa 52:5-7; Pro 11:4, Pro 18:11; Isa 2:20,Isa 2:21; Jer 9:23, Jer 9:24; Eze 7:19; Mat 16:26; Luk 12:19-21, Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23
in the day : Zep 1:15; Job 21:30
but : Zep 3:8; Lev 26:33-35; Deu 29:20-28, Deu 31:17; Isa 24:1-12; Jer 4:26-29, Jer 7:20,Jer 7:34, Jer 9:11
the fire : Zep 3:8; Deu 32:21-25; 1Ki 14:22; Psa 78:58, Psa 79:5; Eze 8:3-5, Eze 16:38; Eze 36:5, Eze 36:6; 1Co 10:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Zep 1:17 - -- I will bring distress upon men - I will hem them in, in anguish on all sides. God Himself shall meet them with His terrors, wherever they turn....
I will bring distress upon men - I will hem them in, in anguish on all sides. God Himself shall meet them with His terrors, wherever they turn. "I will hem them in, that they may find it so".
That they shall walk like blind men - Utterly bereft of counsel, seeing no more than the blind which way to turn, grasping blindly and franticly at anything, and going on headlong to their own destruction. So God forewarned them in the law; "Thou shalt grope at noon day, as the blind gropeth in darkness"Jer. 10:29; and Job, of the wicked generally, "They meet with the darkness in the day-time, and grope in the noon-day as in the night"Job 5:14; and, "They grope in the dark without light, and He maketh them to stagger like a drunken man"Job 12:25; and Isaiah foretelling of those times, "We grope for the wall, as the blind; and we grope, as if we had no eyes; we stumble in the noon-day as in the night. Because they have sinned against the Lord"Isa 59:10, and so He hath turned their wisdom into foolishness, and since they have despised Him, He hath made them objects of contempt. "Their blood shall be poured out like dust"1Sa 2:30, as abundant and as valueless; utterly disregarded by Him, as Asaph complains, "their blood have they shed like water"Psa 79:3; contemptible and disgusting as what is vilest; "their flesh as the dung,"refuse, decayed, putrefied, offensive, enriching by its decay the land, which had been the scene of their luxuries and oppressions. Yet, the most offensive disgusting physical corruption is but a faint image of the defilement of sin. This punishment, in which the carrion remains should be entombed only in the bowels of vultures and dogs, was especially threatened to Jehoiakim; "He shall be buried with the burial of an ass, dragged and cast forth beyond the gates of Jerusalem"Jer 22:19.

Barnes: Zep 1:18 - -- Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord’ s wrath - Gain unjustly gotten was the cause of ...
Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord’ s wrath - Gain unjustly gotten was the cause of their destruction. For, as Ezekiel closes the like description; "They shall cast their silver into the streets, and their gold shall be removed; their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the Lord; they shall not satisfy their souls nor fill their bowels: "because it is the stumbling-block of their iniquity"Eze 7:19. Much less shall any possession, outward or inward, be of avail in the Great Day; since in death the rich man’ s "pomp shall not follow him"Psa 49:17, and every gift which he has misused, whether of mind or spirit, even the knowledge of God without doing His will, shall but increase damnation. "Sinners will then have nothing but their sins."
Here the prophet uses images belonging more to the immediate destruction; at the close the words again widen, and belong, in their fullest literal sense, to the Day of Judgment. "The whole land,"rather, as at the beginning, "the whole earth shall be devoured by the fire of His jelousy; for He shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the land:"rather, "He shall make an utter, yea altogether a terriffic destruction of all the dwellers of the earth."What Nahum had foretold of Nineveh , "He shall make the place thereof an utter consumption,"that Zephaniah foretells of all the inhabitants of the world. For what is this, "the whole earth shall be devoured by the fire of His jealousy,"but what Peter says, "the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up?"2Pe 3:13. And what is that he says, "He shall make all the dwellers of the earth an utter, yea altogether a hasty destruction,"but a general judgment of all, who belong to the world, whose home, citizenship, whose whole mind is in the world, not as true Christians, who are strangers and pilgrims here, and their "citizenship is in heaven?"Heb 11:13; Phi 3:20.
These God shall make an utter, terrific, speedy destruction, a living death, so that they shall at once both be and not be; be, as continued in being; not be, as having no life of God, but only a continued death in misery. And this shall be through the jealousy of Almighty God, that divine quality in Him, whereby He loves and wills to be loved, and endures not those who give to others the love for which He gave so much and which is so wholly due to Himself Alone. Augustine, Conf. i. 5. p. 3, Oxford Translation: "Thou demandest my love, and if I give it not, art wroth with me, and threatenest me with grievous woes. Is it then a slight woe to love Thee not?"What will be that anger, which is Infinite Love, but which becomes, through man’ s sin, Hate?
Poole: Zep 1:17 - -- I will bring distress cast them into, and surround or besiege them with distress, calamities which shall greatly trouble and perplex.
Upon men the ...
I will bring distress cast them into, and surround or besiege them with distress, calamities which shall greatly trouble and perplex.
Upon men the chiefest among them, the richest, and who think themselves safest; the mighty men, as Zep 1:10 ,
like blind men shall neither know what to do nor where to flee, neither be fit for counsel nor action.
Because they have sinned against the Lord all this for their great sins against the Lord; these men of note have been as much greater in sin as in state above others, and shall be as much deeper in distress.
Their blood shall be poured out as dust as freely, abundantly, and as contemptibly, as dust in the highway.
And their flesh as the dung shall be spread as dung on the face of the earth to fatten and improve it; their life shall be of no more value than dust, their honour no more regarded than dung, and they shall be so used after death.
I will bring distress cast them into, and surround or besiege them with distress, calamities which shall greatly trouble and perplex.
Upon men the chiefest among them, the richest, and who think themselves safest; the mighty men, as Zep 1:10 ,
like blind men shall neither know what to do nor where to flee, neither be fit for counsel nor action.
Because they have sinned against the Lord all this for their great sins against the Lord; these men of note have been as much greater in sin as in state above others, and shall be as much deeper in distress.
Their blood shall be poured out as dust as freely, abundantly, and as contemptibly, as dust in the highway.
And their flesh as the dung shall be spread as dung on the face of the earth to fatten and improve it; their life shall be of no more value than dust, their honour no more regarded than dung, and they shall be so used after death.

Poole: Zep 1:18 - -- Neither their silver nor their gold: sometimes these have purchased friends, and redeemed a life at the hand of greedy soldiers, who have spared on p...
Neither their silver nor their gold: sometimes these have purchased friends, and redeemed a life at the hand of greedy soldiers, who have spared on promise of money; but now it shall not be so, neither silver nor gold shall help.
Shall be able to deliver to pacify the enraged sultan of Babylon, who had been formerly appeased with presents and tribute money, but will no more. Nor shall his soldiers dare to spare or save any when they are charged to slay man, woman, and child, as in the taking of Jerusalem it is probable they were charged, Psa 137:7-9 .
The Lord’ s wrath: were it the wrath of man only, gifts might appease it; but it is the wrath of God, who is a righteous Judge, and receives not gifts.
Shall be devoured utterly ruined, its wealth carried away, its provisions eat up, its stores exhausted, and its stock (which should continue their provision) utterly destroyed, as Zep 1:2 .
By the fire of his jealousy to which their sins provoked the Lord, which their sins enkindled, and now it burns that notre can quench it; see Deu 28:15 , to the end of the chapter; all which God will now make good against them.
For he shall make even a speedy riddance: though lie had with wonderful patience waited and forborne, now he would wait no longer, but with speedy executions fulfil his threats and accomplish his wrath; which he did within less than twenty years after this prophecy, as is most likely, on the accuratest computation we can make of the times of Zephaniah’ s prophesying and Nebuchadnezzar’ s taking the city.
Haydock: Zep 1:17 - -- Blind. Not knowing what course to take, Deuteronomy xxviii. 29., and Isaias lix. 10. (Calmet) ---
Such will be the horror preceding judgment. (Ha...
Blind. Not knowing what course to take, Deuteronomy xxviii. 29., and Isaias lix. 10. (Calmet) ---
Such will be the horror preceding judgment. (Haydock)

Haydock: Zep 1:18 - -- Gold. Ezechiel vii. 19. Thus the Medes despised riches, Isaias xiii. 17. (Calmet) ---
Jealousy. God regarded the synagogue as his spouse. (Men...
Gold. Ezechiel vii. 19. Thus the Medes despised riches, Isaias xiii. 17. (Calmet) ---
Jealousy. God regarded the synagogue as his spouse. (Menochius) ---
"If he loved not the soul of man, he would not be jealous of it." (St. Jerome) (Haydock)
Gill: Zep 1:17 - -- And I will bring distress upon men,.... Not upon men in general, but particularly on the men of Judea, and inhabitants of Jerusalem; and especially th...
And I will bring distress upon men,.... Not upon men in general, but particularly on the men of Judea, and inhabitants of Jerusalem; and especially those that were in the fenced cities and high towers; and who might think themselves safe and secure; but, being besieged, should be distressed with famine and pestilence, and with the enemy; and more especially when stormed, and a breach made, and the enemy just entering:
that they shall walk like blind men; not knowing which way to go, where to turn themselves, what methods to take, or course to steer, no more than a blind man. The phrase is expressive of their being at their wits' ends, void of all thought and consultation:
because they have sinned against the Lord; and therefore he gives them up, not only into the hand of the enemy, but unto an infatuation of spirit, and a judicial blindness of mind:
and their blood shall be poured out as dust; in great quantities, like that, without any regard to it, without showing any mercy, and as if it was of no more value than the dust of the earth. The Targum is,
"their blood shall be poured out into the dust;''
or on it, and be drunk up by it:
and their flesh as the dung; or their carcasses, as the same paraphrase; that is, their dead bodies shall lie unburied, and rot, and putrefy, and shall be cast upon fields like dung, to fatten them. The word for "flesh", in the Hebrew language, signifies bread or food; because dead bodies are food for worms; but in the Arabic language, as Aben Ezra and Jarchi observe, it signifies "flesh".

Gill: Zep 1:18 - -- Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord's wrath,.... Which they have gotten in an unjust way, and hav...
Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord's wrath,.... Which they have gotten in an unjust way, and have hoarded up, and put their confidence in; these were the lees on which they were settled; but now, as they would be disregarded by the Lord, as insufficient to atone for their sins, and appease his wrath, and procure his favour; see Job 36:18 so they would be of no avail to them, to deliver from their enemies, who would not be bribed therewith to save their lives; the same is said of the Medes at the taking of Babylon, Isa 13:17,
but the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousy; his zeal against sin, and for his own glory, shall burn like fire; which shall consume the whole land, and all the inhabitants of it, and was not to be stopped by anything that could be done by them; so furious and raging would it be:
for he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the land; burn up at once all the briers and thorns, even all that offend, and do iniquity, and spare neither root nor branch; or, as when a field is cleared of the stubble on it, after the wheat is gathered in; or a grain floor of its chaff, after the wheat is separated from it; thus with the besom of destruction would the Lord sweep away the sinful inhabitants of Judea, and clear it of them, as he did by the sword, by famine, by pestilence, and by captivity.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Zep 1:17 The words “will be scattered” are supplied in the translation for clarity based on the parallelism with “will be poured out” i...

NET Notes: Zep 1:18 It is not certain where the Lord’s words end and the prophet’s words begin. It is possible that Zephaniah begins speaking in the middle of...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zep 1:1-18
TSK Synopsis: Zep 1:1-18 - --1 The time when Zephaniah prophesied.2 God's severe judgments against Judah.
MHCC -> Zep 1:14-18
MHCC: Zep 1:14-18 - --This warning of approaching destruction, is enough to make the sinners in Zion tremble; it refers to the great day of the Lord, the day in which he wi...
Matthew Henry -> Zep 1:14-18
Matthew Henry: Zep 1:14-18 - -- Nothing could be expressed with more spirit and life, nor in words more proper to startle and awaken a secure and careless people, than the warning ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zep 1:17-18
Keil-Delitzsch: Zep 1:17-18 - --
In the midst of this tribulation the sinners will perish without counsel or help. Zep 1:17. "And I make it strait for men, and they will walk like ...
Constable: Zep 1:2--3:9 - --II. The day of Yahweh's judgment 1:2--3:8
Zephaniah's prophecies are all about "the day of the LORD." He reveale...

Constable: Zep 1:4--2:4 - --B. The judgment on Judah 1:4-2:3
The Lord gave more details about this worldwide judgment. It would incl...
