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Text -- Zephaniah 1:7 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Thou that murmurest against God, stand in awe.
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The wicked Jews, whom he will sacrifice by the sword.
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Wesley: Zep 1:7 - -- summoned the beasts of the field, and the fowls of the air, to eat the flesh, and drink the blood.
summoned the beasts of the field, and the fowls of the air, to eat the flesh, and drink the blood.
JFB: Zep 1:7 - -- (Hab 2:20). Let the earth be silent at His approach [MAURER]. Or, "Thou whosoever hast been wont to speak against God, as if He had no care about ear...
(Hab 2:20). Let the earth be silent at His approach [MAURER]. Or, "Thou whosoever hast been wont to speak against God, as if He had no care about earthly affairs, cease thy murmurs and self-justifications; submit thyself to God, and repent in time" [CALVIN].
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JFB: Zep 1:7 - -- Namely, a slaughter of the guilty Jews, the victims due to His justice (Isa 34:6; Jer 46:10; Eze 39:17).
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JFB: Zep 1:7 - -- Literally, "sanctified His called ones" (compare Isa 13:3). It enhances the bitterness of the judgment that the heathen Chaldeans should be sanctified...
Literally, "sanctified His called ones" (compare Isa 13:3). It enhances the bitterness of the judgment that the heathen Chaldeans should be sanctified, or consecrated as it were, by God as His priests, and be called to eat the flesh of the elect people; as on feast days the priests used to feast among themselves on the remains of the sacrifices [CALVIN]. English Version takes it not of the priests, but the guests bidden, who also had to "sanctify" or purify themselves before coming to the sacrificial feast (1Sa 9:13, 1Sa 9:22; 1Sa 16:5). Nebuchadnezzar was bidden to come to take vengeance on guilty Jerusalem (Jer 25:9).
Clarke: Zep 1:7 - -- Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lords God - הס has , the same as hush, hist, among us. Remonstrances are now useless. You had time to acqua...
Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lords God -
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The Lord hath prepared a sacrifice - A slaughter of the people
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Clarke: Zep 1:7 - -- He hath bid his guests - The Babylonians, to whom he has given a commission to destroy you. In all festivals sacrifices
1. The vic...
He hath bid his guests - The Babylonians, to whom he has given a commission to destroy you. In all festivals sacrifices
1. The victims were offered to God, and their blood poured out before the altar
2. The people who were invited feasted upon the sacrifice. See on Isa 34:6 (note).
Calvin -> Zep 1:7
Calvin: Zep 1:7 - -- The Prophet confirms here what he has previously taught, when he bids all to be silent before God; for this mode of speaking is the same as though h...
The Prophet confirms here what he has previously taught, when he bids all to be silent before God; for this mode of speaking is the same as though he had said, that he did not terrify the Jews in vain, but seriously set before them God’s judgment, which they would find by experience to be even more than terrible. He also records some of their sins, that the Jews might know that he did not threaten them for nothing, but that there were just causes why God declared that he would punish them. This is the substance of the whole.
Let us first see what the Prophet means by the word, silence. Something has been said of this on the second chapter of Habakkuk. We said then that by silence is meant submission; and to make the thing more clear, we said that we were to notice the contrast between the silence to which men calmly submit, and the contumacy, which is ever clamorous: for when men seek to be wise of themselves, and acquiesce not in God’s word, it is then said, that they are not silent, for they refuse to give a hearing to his word; and when men give loose reins to their own will, they observe no bounds. Until God then obtains authority in the world, all places are full of clamor, and the whole life of men is in a state of confusion, for they run to and fro in their wanderings; and there is no restraint where God is not heard. It is for the same reason that the Prophet now demands silence: but the expression is accommodated to the subject which he handles. To be silent at the presence of God, it is true, is to submit to God’s authority; but the connection is to be considered; for Zephaniah saw then that God’s judgment was despised and regarded as nothing; and he intimates here that God had so spoken, that the execution was nigh at hand. Hence he says, Be silent, 73 that is, Know ye, that I have not spoken merely for the purpose of terrifying you; but as God is prepared to execute vengeance, of this he now reminds you, that if there be any hope of repentance, ye may in time seek to return into favor with him; if not, that ye may be without excuse.
We now then understand why the Prophet bids them to be silent before the Lord Jehovah: and the context is a confirmation of the same view; for the reason is added, Because the day of Jehovah is nigh. For profane men ever promise to themselves some respite, and think that they gain much by delay: the Prophet, on the contrary, does now expose to scorn this self-security, and says, that the day of Jehovah was nigh at hand. It is then the same thing as though he had said, that his judgment ought to have been quickly anticipated, and even with fear and trembling.
He afterwards employs a metaphor to set forth what he taught,—that God had prepared a sacrifice, yea, that he had already appointed and set apart his guests. By the word, sacrifice, the Prophet reminded them, that the punishment of which he had spoken would be just, and that the glory of God would thereby shine forth. We indeed know how ready the world is to make complaints; when it is pressed by God’s hand, it expostulates on account of too much rigor; and many in an open manner give utterance to their blasphemies. As then they own not God’s justice in his punishment, the Prophet calls it a sacrifice; and sacrifices, we know, are evidences of divine worship, and he who offers a sacrifice to God, owns him to be just. So also by this kind of speaking Zephaniah intimates that God would not act a cruel part in cutting off the city Jerusalem and its inhabitants; for this would be a sacrifice, according to the language often employed by the Prophets, and especially by Isaiah, who says of Bozrah, ‘A sacrifice is prepared in Bozrah,’ Isa 34:6;) and who says also of Jerusalem itself, ‘Oh! Ariel! Ariel!’ Isa 29:1, where Jerusalem itself is represented as the altar; as though he had said, In all the streets, in the open places, there shall be altars to me; for I will collect together great masses of men, whom I shall slay as a sacrifice to me. For all who were not willing to render worship to God, and who did not freely offer themselves as spiritual victims to him, were to be drawn to the slaughter, and were at the same time called sacrifices. So the executions on the gallows, when the wicked suffer, may be said to be sacrifices to God: for the Lord arms the magistrate with the sword to restrain wickedness, that the wicked may not have such liberty as to banish all equity from the world. The cities also, which, being forcibly taken, are subject to a slaughter, and the fields, where armies are slain, become altars, for God makes the rebellious a sacrifice, because they refuse willingly to offer themselves.
So also in this place the Prophet says, Jehovah has prepared for himself a sacrifice, —Where? At Jerusalem, through the whole city, as it has appeared from the quotation from Isaiah; for as they had not rightly sacrificed to God on Mount Sion, but vitiated his whole worship, God himself declares, that he would become a priest, that he might slay, as he thought right, those beasts, who had obstinately refused his yoke: And he has prepared his guests. But I cannot finish today.
Defender -> Zep 1:7
Defender: Zep 1:7 - -- The term "day of the Lord" normally refers to the future period of God's judgments against the earth because of man's sin. It may also, as here, refer...
The term "day of the Lord" normally refers to the future period of God's judgments against the earth because of man's sin. It may also, as here, refer to a precursive fulfillment on a local scale. The ultimate fulfillment seems to be at Armageddon, when the angel of God will invite all the birds of the air as His guests to "the supper of the great God" (Rev 19:17). He will also invite the birds to "my sacrifice" (Eze 39:17-20) at the defeat of Gog's army."
TSK -> Zep 1:7
TSK: Zep 1:7 - -- thy : 1Sa 2:9, 1Sa 2:10; Job 40:4, Job 40:5; Psa 46:10, Psa 76:8, Psa 76:9; Isa 6:5; Amo 6:10; Hab 2:20; Zec 2:13; Rom 3:19, Rom 9:20
for the day : Ze...
thy : 1Sa 2:9, 1Sa 2:10; Job 40:4, Job 40:5; Psa 46:10, Psa 76:8, Psa 76:9; Isa 6:5; Amo 6:10; Hab 2:20; Zec 2:13; Rom 3:19, Rom 9:20
for the day : Zep 1:14; Isa 2:12, Isa 13:6; Eze 7:7, Eze 7:10; Joe 2:1, Joe 2:2, Joe 2:11, Joe 2:31; Amo 5:18-20; Mal 4:1; Phi 4:5; 2Pe 3:10-12
for the Lord : Isa 34:6; Jer 46:10; Eze 39:17-20; Rev 19:17, Rev 19:18
he hath : Pro 9:1-6; Mat 22:4; Luk 14:16, Luk 14:17
bid : Heb. sanctified, or prepared, 1Sa 16:5, 1Sa 20:26; Col 1:12
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zep 1:7
Barnes: Zep 1:7 - -- Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God - (Literally, "Hush,"in awe "from the face of God.") In the presence of God, even the righteous ...
Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God - (Literally, "Hush,"in awe "from the face of God.") In the presence of God, even the righteous say from their inmost heart, "I am vile, what shall I answer Thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth"Job 40:4. "Now mine eye seeth Thee, wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes"Job 42:5-6. "Enter not into judgment with Thy servant, O Lord, for in Thy sight shall no man living be justified"Psa 143:2. How much more must the "man without the wedding garment be speechless"Mat 22:11-12, and every false plea, with which he deceived himself, melt away before the Face of God! The voice of God’ s Judgment echoes in every heart, "we indeed justly"Luk 23:41.
For the Day of the Lord is at hand - Zephaniah, as is his custom, grounds this summons, which he had renewed from Habakkuk, to hushed silence before God, on Joel’ s prophetic warning , to show that it was not yet exhausted. A day of the Lord, of which Joel warned, had come and was gone; but it was only the herald of many such days; judgments in time, heralds and earnests, and, in their degree, pictures of the last which shall end time.
Dionysius: "All time is God’ s, since He Alone is the Lord of time; yet that is specially said to be His time when He doth anything special. Whence He saith, "My time is not yet come"Joh 7:6; whereas all time is His."The Day of the Lord is, in the first instance, Jerome: "the day of captivity and vengeance on the sinful people,"as a forerunner of the Day of Judgment, or the day of death to each, for this too is near, since, compared to eternity, all the time of this world is brief.
For the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice - God had rejected sacrifices, offered amid unrepented sin; they were "an abomination to Him"Isa 1:11-15. When man will not repent and offer himself as "a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God"Rom 12:1, God, at last, rejects all other outward oblations, and the sinner himself is the sacrifice and victim of his own sins. The image was probably suggested by Isaiah’ s words, "The Lord hath a sacrifice in Bozrah, and a great slaughter in the land of Idumea"Isa 34:6; and Jeremiah subsequently uses it of the overthrow of Pharaoh at the Euphrates, "This is the day of the Lord of Hosts; that He may avenge Him of His adversaries, for the Lord God hath a sacrifice in the north country by the river Euphrates"Jer 46:10. "The Lord hath made all things for Himself, yea even the wicked for the day of evil"Pro 16:4. All must honor God, either fulfilling the will of God and the end of their own being and of His love for them, by obeying that loving will with their own freewill, or, if they repudiate it to the end, by suffering it.
He hath bid His guests - (Literally, sanctified) God had before, by Isaiah, called the pagan whom He employed to punish Babylon, "My sanctified ones"Isa 13:3. Zephaniah, by giving the title to God’ s instruments against Judah, declares that themselves, having become in deeds like the pagan, were as pagan to Him. The instruments of His displeasure, not they, were so far his chosen, His called. Jeremiah repeats the saying, "Thus saith the Lord against the house of the king of Judah;...I have sanctified against thee destroyers, a man and his weapons"Jer 22:6-7. That is, so far, a holy war in the purpose of God, which fulfills His will; from where Nebuchadnezzar was "His servant"Jer 25:9, avenging His wrongs . Cyril: "To be sanctified, here denotes not the laying aside of iniquity, nor the participation of the Holy Spirit, but, as it were, to be foreordained and chosen to the fulfillment of this end."That is in a manner hallowed, which is employed by God for a holy end, though the instrument, its purposes, its aims, its passions, be in themselves unholy. There is an awe about "the scourges of God."As with the lightning and the tornado, there is a certain presence of God with them, in that through them His Righteousness is seen; although they themselves have as little of God as the "wind and storm"which "fulfill His word."Those who were once admitted to make offerings to God make themselves sacrifices to His wrath; these, still pagan and ungodly and in all besides reprobate, are His priests, because in this, although without their will, they do His will.
Poole -> Zep 1:7
Poole: Zep 1:7 - -- Hold thy peace thou that murmurest in discontent, or disputest out of frowardness against God, his worship, and his government, that thinkest of him ...
Hold thy peace thou that murmurest in discontent, or disputest out of frowardness against God, his worship, and his government, that thinkest of him but little better than of Baal or Malcham, cease all thy quarrels and dispute, stand in awe.
At the presence of the Lord God who is almighty, omniscient, who ruleth and will avenge.
The day of the Lord a day of vengeance from the Lord. The Lord hath prepared a sacrifice; the wicked among the Jews, whom he will sacrifice by the Chaldean’ s sword.
He hath bid his guests summoned in beasts of the field and fowls of the air, to eat the flesh and drink the blood of slain Jews, whom the Babylonians slew.
Haydock -> Zep 1:7
Haydock: Zep 1:7 - -- Silent. Hebrew has, (Haydock) an interjection, (St. Jerome) like our hush. (Haydock) ---
This denotes the importance of what he is going to say....
Silent. Hebrew has, (Haydock) an interjection, (St. Jerome) like our hush. (Haydock) ---
This denotes the importance of what he is going to say. ---
Guests. The blood of the wicked is his victim, Jeremias xlvi. 10., and Ezechiel xxxix. 17. (Calmet) ---
The day of punishment is commonly styled the day of the Lord, Isaias ii., and 1 Corinthians iii. (Worthington)
Gill -> Zep 1:7
Gill: Zep 1:7 - -- Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God,.... When he comes forth, and appears in the way of his judgments, do not dispute the point with him, o...
Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God,.... When he comes forth, and appears in the way of his judgments, do not dispute the point with him, or pretend to offer reasons against his proceedings, or in order to disprove the justice of them; stand in awe and reverence of him, who is the Lord God omniscient and omnipotent, holy, just, and true; humble yourselves under his mighty hand; be still, and know that he is God; and let not one murmuring and repining word come out of your mouth. The Targum is,
"let all the wicked of the earth perish from before the Lord God:''
for the day of the Lord is at hand; the time of his vengeance on the Jewish nation for their sins, which he had fixed in his mind, and had given notice of by his prophets: this began to take place at Josiah's death, after which the Jews enjoyed little peace and prosperity; and his successor reigned but three months, was deposed by the king of Egypt, and carried thither captive, and there died; and Jehoiakim, that succeeded him, in the fourth year of his reign was carried captive into Babylon, or died by the way thither; so that this day might well be said to be at hand:
for the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice: his people the Jews, who were to fall a victim to his vengeance, and a sacrifice to his justice, to atone in some measure for the injury done to it by their sins; thus they that had offered sacrifice to idols, and neglected the sacrifices of the Lord, and especially the great sacrifice of Christ typified by them, the only proper atoning one, should themselves become a sacrifice to the just resentment of God; this he had prepared in his mind, determined should be done, and would bring about in his providence; see Isa 34:6,
he hath bid his guests: or "called ones" o; the Chaldeans, whom he invited and called to this sacrifice and feast: or whom he "prepared", or "sanctified" p; he prepared them in his purpose and providence; he set them apart for this service, and called them to it; to be the sacrificers of this people, and to feast upon them; to spoil them of their goods and riches, and enjoy them. These guests may also design, as Kimchi observes, the fowls of the heaven, and the beasts of the field, invited to feast upon the slain; see Eze 39:17.
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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 1:7-13
MHCC: Zep 1:7-13 - --God's day is at hand; the punishment of presumptuous sinners is a sacrifice to the justice of God. The Jewish royal family shall be reckoned with for ...
Matthew Henry -> Zep 1:7-13
Matthew Henry: Zep 1:7-13 - -- Notice is here given to Judah and Jerusalem that God is coming forth against them, and will be with them shortly; his presence, as a just avenger,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zep 1:7
Keil-Delitzsch: Zep 1:7 - --
This judgment will speedily come. Zep 1:7. "Be silent before the Lord Jehovah! For the day of Jehovah is near, for Jehovah has prepared a slaying o...
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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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...
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