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Text -- Zephaniah 1:3 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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The idols and their worshippers shall be involved in a common destruction.
Clarke -> Zep 1:3
Clarke: Zep 1:3 - -- I will consume man and beast - By war, and by pestilence. Even the waters shall he infected, and the fish destroyed; the air become contaminated, an...
I will consume man and beast - By war, and by pestilence. Even the waters shall he infected, and the fish destroyed; the air become contaminated, and the fowls die.
TSK -> Zep 1:3
TSK: Zep 1:3 - -- consume man : Jer 4:23-29, Jer 12:4; Hos 4:3
stumblingblocks : or, idols, Isa 27:9; Eze 7:19, Eze 14:3-7, Eze 44:12; Hos 14:3, Hos 14:8; Mic 5:11-14; ...
consume man : Jer 4:23-29, Jer 12:4; Hos 4:3
stumblingblocks : or, idols, Isa 27:9; Eze 7:19, Eze 14:3-7, Eze 44:12; Hos 14:3, Hos 14:8; Mic 5:11-14; Zec 13:2; Mat 23:39; Rev 2:14
and I : Eze 14:13-21, Eze 15:6-8
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zep 1:3
Barnes: Zep 1:3 - -- The stumbling-blocks with the wicked - Not only shall the wicked be utterly brought to an end, or, in the other meaning of the word, "gathered ...
The stumbling-blocks with the wicked - Not only shall the wicked be utterly brought to an end, or, in the other meaning of the word, "gathered into bundles to be taken away,"but all causes of stumbling too; everything, through which others can fall, which will not be until the end of all things. Then, he repeats, yet more emphatically, "I will cut off the whole race of man from the face of the earth,"and then he closes the verse, like the foregoing, with the solemn words, "saith the Lord."All this shall be fulfilled in the Day of Judgment, and all other fulfillments are earnests of the final Judgment. They are witnesses of the ever-living presence of the Judge of all, that God does take account of man’ s deeds. They speak to men’ s conscience, they attest the existence of a divine law, and therewith of the future complete manifestation of that law, of which they are individual sentences. Not until the prophet has brought this circle of judgments to their close, does he pass on to the particular judgments on Judah and Jerusalem.
Poole -> Zep 1:3
Poole: Zep 1:3 - -- The former verse denounced the future desolation in general terms. This verse specifieth what desolation in particular God would bring upon the land...
The former verse denounced the future desolation in general terms. This verse specifieth what desolation in particular God would bring upon the land.
I will consume man and beast man shall be consumed for his own sin, and the beasts consumed for man’ s sake; men by the pestilence and famine, the beasts by murrain, and devoured by multitudes of hungry soldiers, that shall make greater havoc than any murrain ordinarily doth.
The fowls of the heaven either by some unknown disease among them, or else by a distaste at the stench of putrefying carcasses, they fled away, so that none, or very few, appeared, insomuch that it looked as if all were consumed.
The fishes of the sea: by sea, some understand ponds, lakes, or smaller seas, such as that of Gennesareth and Tiberias, the waters whereof might be made noisome to the fish by the streams of blood and carcasses which might possibly be east into them; or God might destroy the fishes by some consuming disease too. He hath ways to do it, who hath once said he will do it.
The stumbling-blocks the idols.
The wicked the idolatrous priests, and others who worshipped them.
I will cut off man all shall disappear,
from off the land of Judah
Haydock -> Zep 1:3
Haydock: Zep 1:3 - -- Sea: the waters and air shall be pestilential. (Haydock) ---
St. Jerome frequently observes that when a country is depopulated, as the Roman empire...
Sea: the waters and air shall be pestilential. (Haydock) ---
St. Jerome frequently observes that when a country is depopulated, as the Roman empire was in his days, the most fertile regions were soon abandoned even by beasts and birds. ---
Meet. Septuagint, "be weak." Hebrew, "I will gather (Calmet; Protestants, "consume;" Haydock) scandals (or idols) with the wicked." (Symmachus)
Gill -> Zep 1:3
Gill: Zep 1:3 - -- I will consume man and beast,.... Wicked men for their sins, and beasts for the sins of men; and, as a punishment for them, the creatures whom they ha...
I will consume man and beast,.... Wicked men for their sins, and beasts for the sins of men; and, as a punishment for them, the creatures whom they have abused to the gratifying of their lusts:
I will consume the fowls of the heaven, and the fishes of the sea; so that there shall be none for the use of man, which are both delicate food; the latter were not consumed at the general deluge. Kimchi thinks this is said by way of hyperbole; but it is possible for these to be consumed, as men by famine, pestilence, and captivity, and beasts by murrain; so the fowls of the air by the noisomeness of it; and the fishes of the sea, that is, such as were in the sea of Tiberias, and other lakes in Judea, by the stagnation of the waters, or by some disease sent among them; unless wicked men, comparable to them, are intended; though they are expressly mentioned, both before and after:
and the stumblingblocks with the wicked: that is, idols, which are stumblingblocks to men, and cause them to offend and fall; these, together with those that made them, and the priests that sacrificed unto them, and the people that worshipped them, should be consumed from off the land: or, "the stumblingblocks of the wicked"; for
and I will cut off men from off the land, saith the Lord: this is repeated for the certainty of it; or else this designs another sort of men from the former; and that, as before wicked men are designed, here such as are not perfectly wicked, as Kimchi observes; yea, the righteous should be carried captive, so that the land should be left desolate, without men, good or bad; for even good men may fall in a general calamity, and be cut off from the land, though not from the Lord. The Septuagint indeed here render it wicked men. The phrase, "saith the Lord", is twice expressed, for the certain confirmation of it; for it may be concluded it will be, since God has said it again and again that it shall be.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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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 1:1-6
MHCC: Zep 1:1-6 - --Ruin is coming, utter ruin; destruction from the Almighty. The servants of God all proclaim, There is no peace for the wicked. The expressions are fig...
Matthew Henry -> Zep 1:1-6
Matthew Henry: Zep 1:1-6 - -- Here is, I. The title-page of this book (Zep 1:1), in which we observe, 1. What authority it has, and who gave it that authority; it is from heaven,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zep 1:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Zep 1:1-3 - --
Zep 1:1 contains the heading, which has been explained in the introduction. Zep 1:2 and Zep 1:3 form the preface. - Zep 1:2. "I will sweep, sweep a...
Constable -> Zep 1:2--3:9; Zep 1:2-3
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...
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