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Text -- Zephaniah 3:1-2 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
Jerusalem is Corrupt
3:1 The filthy, stained city is as good as dead; the city filled with oppressors is finished! 3:2 She is disobedient; she refuses correction. She does not trust the Lord; she does not seek the advice of her God.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: ZEPHANIAH, BOOK OF | Afflictions and Adversities | 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: Zep 3:1 - -- Jerusalem.

Jerusalem.

Wesley: Zep 3:2 - -- Of God by his mercy and judgments crying aloud.

Of God by his mercy and judgments crying aloud.

JFB: Zep 3:1 - -- MAURER translates from a different root, "rebellious," "contumacious." But the following term, "polluted," refers rather to her inward moral filth, in...

MAURER translates from a different root, "rebellious," "contumacious." But the following term, "polluted," refers rather to her inward moral filth, in spite of her outward ceremonial purity [CALVIN]. GROTIUS says, the Hebrew is used of women who have prostituted their virtue. There is in the Hebrew Moreah; a play on the name Moriah, the hill on which the temple was built; implying the glaring contrast between their filthiness and the holiness of the worship on Moriah in which they professed to have a share.

JFB: Zep 3:1 - -- Namely, the poor, weak, widows, orphans and strangers (Jer 22:3).

Namely, the poor, weak, widows, orphans and strangers (Jer 22:3).

JFB: Zep 3:2 - -- Jerusalem is incurable, obstinately rejecting salutary admonition, and refusing to be reformed by "correction" (Jer 5:3).

Jerusalem is incurable, obstinately rejecting salutary admonition, and refusing to be reformed by "correction" (Jer 5:3).

JFB: Zep 3:2 - -- Distrust in the Lord as if He were insufficient, is the parent of all superstitions and wickednesses [CALVIN].

Distrust in the Lord as if He were insufficient, is the parent of all superstitions and wickednesses [CALVIN].

JFB: Zep 3:2 - -- Though God was specially near to her (Deu 4:7) as "her God," yet she drew not near to Him, but gratuitously estranged herself from Him.

Though God was specially near to her (Deu 4:7) as "her God," yet she drew not near to Him, but gratuitously estranged herself from Him.

Clarke: Zep 3:1 - -- Wo to her that is filthy - This is a denunciation of Divine judgment against Jerusalem.

Wo to her that is filthy - This is a denunciation of Divine judgment against Jerusalem.

Clarke: Zep 3:2 - -- She obeyed not the voice - Of conscience, of God, and of his prophets

She obeyed not the voice - Of conscience, of God, and of his prophets

Clarke: Zep 3:2 - -- She received not correction - Did not profit by his chastisements; was uneasy and ill-tempered under her afflictions, and derived no manner of good ...

She received not correction - Did not profit by his chastisements; was uneasy and ill-tempered under her afflictions, and derived no manner of good from these chastisements

Clarke: Zep 3:2 - -- She trusted not in the Lord - Did not consider him as the Fountain whence all help and salvation should come; and rather sought for support from man...

She trusted not in the Lord - Did not consider him as the Fountain whence all help and salvation should come; and rather sought for support from man and herself, than from God

Clarke: Zep 3:2 - -- She drew not near to her God - Did not worship him; did not walk in his ways; did not make prayer and supplication to him.

She drew not near to her God - Did not worship him; did not walk in his ways; did not make prayer and supplication to him.

Calvin: Zep 3:1 - -- The Prophet speaks here again against Jerusalem; for first, the Jews ought ever to have been severely reproved, as they were given to many sins; and ...

The Prophet speaks here again against Jerusalem; for first, the Jews ought ever to have been severely reproved, as they were given to many sins; and secondly, because there was always there some seed which needed consolation: and this has been the way pursued, as we have hitherto seen, by all the Prophets. But we must also bear in mind, that the books now extant were made up of prophetic addresses, that we might understand what was the sum of the doctrine delivered.

The Prophet here makes this charge against the Jews, that they were polluted and become filthy. And he addresses Jerusalem, where the sanctuary was; and it might therefore seem to have been superior to other cities; for God had not in vain chosen that as the place for his worship. But the Prophet shows how empty and fallacious was any boasting of this kind; for the city which God had consecrated for himself had polluted itself with many sins. The Prophet seems to allude to the ancient rites of the law, which, though many, had been prescribed, we know, by God, that the people might observe a holy course of life: for the ceremonies could not of themselves wash away their filth; but the people were instructed by these external things to worship God in a holy and pure manner. As then they often washed themselves with water, and as they carefully observed other rites of outward sanctity, the Prophet derides their hypocrisy, for they did not regard the real design of the ceremonies. Hence he says, that they were polluted, though in appearance they might be deemed the most pure; for they were defiled as to their whole life. 106

He adds that the city was היונה , eiune; some render it the city of dove, or, a dove; for the word has this meaning: and they take it metaphorically for a foolish and thoughtless city, as we find it to be so understood in Hos 7:11; where Ephraim was said to be a dove, because the people were void of reason and knowledge, and of their own accord exposed themselves to traps and snares. Some then consider this place to have this meaning,—that Jerusalem, which ought to have been wise, was yet wholly fatuitous and foolish. But it may be easily gathered from the context, that the Prophet means another thing, even this,—that Jerusalem was given to plunder and fraud; for the verb ינה , ine, signifies to defraud and to take by force what belongs to another; and it means also to circumvent as well as to plunder. He therefore means no doubt, that Jerusalem was a city full of every kind of iniquity, as he had before called it a polluted city; and then he adds an explanation.

The Prophet in the first verse seems to have in view the two tables of the law. God, we know, requires in the law that his people should be holy; and then he teaches the way of living justly and innocently. Hence when the Prophet called Jerusalem a polluted city, he meant briefly to show that the whole worship of God was there corrupted, and that no regard for true religion flourished there; for the Jews thought that they had performed all their duty to God, when they washed away their filth by water. Such was the extremely foolish notion which they entertained: but we know and they ought to have known that the worship of God is spiritual. He afterwards adds, that the city was rapacious, under which term he includes every kind of injustice.

It follows, She heard not the voice, she received not correction. The Prophet now explains and defines what the pollution was of which he had spoken: for true religion begins with teachableness; when we submit to God and to his word, it is really to enter on the work of worshipping him aright. But when heavenly truth is despised, though men may toil much in outward rites, yet their impiety discovers itself by their contumacy, inasmuch as they suffer not themselves to be ruled by God’s authority. Hence the Prophet shows, that whatever the Jews thought of their purity at Jerusalem, it was nothing but filth and pollution. He says, that they were unteachable, because they did not hear the Prophets sent to them by God.

This ought to be carefully noticed; for without this beginning many torment themselves in the work of serving God, and do nothing, because obedience is better than sacrifice. If, then, we wish our efforts to be approved by God, we must begin with faith; for except the word of God obtains credit with us, whatever we may offer to him are mere human inventions. It is, in the second place, added, that they did not receive correction; and this was no superfluous addition. For when God sees that we are not submissive, and that we do not willingly come to him when he calls us, he strengthens his instruction by chastisements. He allures us at first to himself, he employs kind and gentle invitations; but when he sees us delaying, or even going back, he begins to treat us more roughly and more severely: for teaching without the goads of reproof would have no effect. But when God teaches and reproves in vain, it then appears that our disposition is wicked and perverse. So the Prophet intended here to show the wickedness of his people as extreme, by saying, that they heard not the voice nor received correction; as though he had said, that the wickedness of his people was unhealable, for they not only rejected the doctrine of salvation, when offered, but also obstinately rejected all warnings, and would not bear any correction.

But we must bear in mind, that the Prophet had to do with that holy people whom God had chosen as his peculiar treasure. There is therefore no reason why those who profess the name of Christians at this day should exempt themselves from this condemnation; for our condition is not better than the condition of that people. Jerusalem was in an especial manner, as we have already said, the sanctuary, as it were, of God: and yet we see how severely the Prophet reproves Jerusalem and all its inhabitants. We have no cause to flatter ourselves, except we willingly submit to God, and suffer ourselves to be ruled by his word, and except we also patiently bear correction, when his teaching takes no suitable effect, and when there is need of sharp goads to stimulate us.

He afterwards adds, that it did not trust in the Lord, nor draw nigh to its God. The Prophet discovers here more clearly the spring of impiety—that Jerusalem placed not the hope of salvation in God alone; for from hence flowed all the mass of evils which prevailed; because if we inquire how it is that men burn with avarice, why they are insatiable, and why they wantonly defraud and plunder one another, we shall find the cause to be this—that they trust not in God. Rightly then does the Prophet mention this here, among other pollutions at Jerusalem, as the chief—that it did not put its trust in God. The same also is the cause and origin of all superstitions; for if men felt assured that God alone is enough for them, they would not follow here and there their own inventions. We hence see that unbelief is not only the mother of all the evil deeds by which men willfully wrong and injure one another, but that it is also the cause of all superstitions.

He says, in the last place, that it did not draw nigh to God. The Prophet no doubt charges the Jews that they willfully departed from God when he was nigh them; yea, that they wholly alienated themselves from him, while he was ready to cherish them, as it were, in his own bosom. This is indeed a sin common to all who seek not God; but Jerusalem sinned far more grievously, because she would not draw nigh to God, by whom she saw that she was sought. For why was the law given, why was adoption vouchsafed, and in short, why had they the various ordinances of religion, except that they might join themselves to God? ‘And now Israel,’ said Moses, ‘what does the Lord thy God require of thee, except to cleave to him?’ God thus intended his law to be, as it were, a sacred bond of union between him and the Jews. Now when they wandered here and there, that they might not be united to him, it was a diabolical madness. Hence the Prophet here does not only accuse the Jews of not seeking God, but of withdrawing themselves from him; and thus they were ungovernable. The Lord sought to tame them; but they were like wild beasts. It now follows—

TSK: Zep 3:1 - -- her that is filthy : or, gluttonous, Heb. craw, Lev 1:16 to the : Isa 5:7, Isa 30:12, Isa 59:13; Jer 6:6, Jer 22:17; Eze 22:7, Eze 22:29; Amo 3:9, Amo...

her that is filthy : or, gluttonous, Heb. craw, Lev 1:16

to the : Isa 5:7, Isa 30:12, Isa 59:13; Jer 6:6, Jer 22:17; Eze 22:7, Eze 22:29; Amo 3:9, Amo 4:1; Mic 2:2; Zec 7:10; Mal 3:5

TSK: Zep 3:2 - -- obeyed : Deut. 28:15-68; Neh 9:26; Jer 7:23-28, Jer 22:21; Zec 7:11-14 she received : Isa 1:5; Jer 2:30, Jer 5:3; Eze 24:13 correction : or, instructi...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Zep 3:1 - -- The "woe,"having gone round the pagan nations, again circles round where it began, the "Jerusalem that killed the prophets and stoned those that wer...

The "woe,"having gone round the pagan nations, again circles round where it began, the "Jerusalem that killed the prophets and stoned those that were sent unto her"Mat 23:37. Woe upon her, and joy to the holy Jerusalem, the "new Jerusalem Rev 3:12; Rev 21:10, the Jerusalem which is from above, the mother of us all,"close this prophecy; both in figure; destruction of her and the whole earth, in time, the emblem of the eternal death; and the love of God, the foretaste of endless joy in Him.

Woe - " Rebellious and polluted;""thou oppressive city!". The address is the more abrupt, and bursts more upon her, since the prophet does not name her. He uses as her proper name, not her own name, city of peace,"but "rebellious,""polluted;"then he sums up in one, thou "oppressive city."

Jerusalem’ s sin is threefold, actively rebelling against God; then, inwardly defiled by sin; then cruel to man. So then, toward God, in herself, toward man, she is wholly turned to evil, not in passing acts, but in her abiding state:

(1) rebellious

(2) defiled

(3) oppressive

She is known only by what she has become, and what has been done for her in vain. She is rebellious, and so had had the law; defiled, and so had been cleansed; and therefore her state is the more hopeless.

Barnes: Zep 3:2 - -- She obeyed not the Voice - Of God, by the law or the prophets, teaching her His ways; and when, disobeying, He chastened her, "she received not...

She obeyed not the Voice - Of God, by the law or the prophets, teaching her His ways; and when, disobeying, He chastened her, "she received not correction,"and when He increased His chastisements, she, in the declining age of the state and deepening evil, turned not unto Him, as in the time of the judges, nor ceased to do evil.

In the Lord she trusted not - But in Assyria or Egypt or her idols. Our practical relation to God is summed up in the four words, "Mis-trust self; trust God."Man reverses this, and when "self-trust"has of course failed him, then he "mistrusts God". "Such rarely ask of God, what they hope they may obtain from man. They strain every nerve of their soul to obtain what they want; canvass, flatter, fawn, bribe, court favor; and betake themselves to God when all human help fails. They would be indebted, not to God, but to their own diligence. For the more they receive of God, the less, they see, can they exalt their own diligence, the more they are bound to thank God, and obey Him the more strictly."

To her God she drew not nigh - Even in trouble, when all draw near unto Him, who are not wholly alien from Him; she drew not near by repentance, by faith hope or love, or by works meet for repentance, but in heart remained far from Him. And yet He was "her"own "God,"as He had shown Himself in times past, who changes not, while we change; is faithful to us, while we fail Him; is still our God, while we forget Him; "waits, to have mercy upon us;"shines on us while we interpose our earth-born clouds between us and Him. Dionysius: "Not in body nor in place, but spiritually and inwardly do we approach to the uncircumscribed God,"owning Him as our Father, to whom we daily say "Our Father."

Poole: Zep 3:1 - -- Filthy loathsome in her sins, so foul they are, and so abominably acted. A city, that, like an infamous woman, is branded for her impudence in sin. O...

Filthy loathsome in her sins, so foul they are, and so abominably acted. A city, that, like an infamous woman, is branded for her impudence in sin. Or, Woe to the great craw ! as pointing out the gluttony of Jerusalem literally, and their swallowing the poor who were a prey to the great ones.

Polluted greatly polluted by this means.

To the oppressing city or the city foolish and seduced, as a silly dove; so the Hebrew will bear: but our version is to be preferred; it is come to that pass, Jerusalem is a city that doth nothing but oppress, Jer 6:6 Eze 22 .

Poole: Zep 3:2 - -- She obeyed not the voice of the law, her prophets or her faithful priests, (which were too few, yet some there were.) nor of God, by his mercy and ju...

She obeyed not the voice of the law, her prophets or her faithful priests, (which were too few, yet some there were.) nor of God, by his mercy and judgments crying loud, warning, inviting, persuading to return.

She received not correction or instruction, did not learn, would not be instructed; there is a meiosis in the words, she hated instruction, as that wicked one, Psa 50:17 Pro 5:12 13:18 .

She trusted not in the Lord put her confidence in Egypt and Asshur, in any carnal refuges, rather than in her God; in her kings, princes, counsellors, warriors, and confederates, &c.

She drew not near to her God when revolted did not return, when in distress did not seek him, did not draw near with prayer, &c.

She obeyed not the voice of the law, her prophets or her faithful priests, (which were too few, yet some there were.) nor of God, by his mercy and judgments crying loud, warning, inviting, persuading to return.

She received not correction or instruction, did not learn, would not be instructed; there is a meiosis in the words, she hated instruction, as that wicked one, Psa 50:17 Pro 5:12 13:18 .

She trusted not in the Lord put her confidence in Egypt and Asshur, in any carnal refuges, rather than in her God; in her kings, princes, counsellors, warriors, and confederates, &c.

She drew not near to her God when revolted did not return, when in distress did not seek him, did not draw near with prayer, &c.

Haydock: Zep 3:1 - -- Judgment, or "condemnation." Septuagint, "iniquities," (Calmet) nailing to the cross the handwriting that was against thee. (Haydock) --- God do...

Judgment, or "condemnation." Septuagint, "iniquities," (Calmet) nailing to the cross the handwriting that was against thee. (Haydock) ---

God does not treat thee with rigour. He will be thy king. The Jews had no king for a long time. But the true Israel, of whom the prophet speaks, is continually ruled and fed by Jesus Christ, who imparts his graces abundantly. (Calmet)

Haydock: Zep 3:1 - -- Dove. Jerusalem is upbraided, and then comforted. She had been treated like a spouse, a dove; and yet proved faithless. (Calmet) --- Hebrew, "W...

Dove. Jerusalem is upbraided, and then comforted. She had been treated like a spouse, a dove; and yet proved faithless. (Calmet) ---

Hebrew, "Woe to the famous, and defiled, and oppressing city." Septuagint agree with us, if we only exchange famous for provoking. (Haydock) ---

After being redeemed from Egypt, the Jews ungratefully followed idols, Osee vii. 11. (Menochius) ---

Jerusalem having been freely chosen and favoured above other places, and still provoking God, cannot escape a severe chastisement. (Worthington)

Haydock: Zep 3:2 - -- Lord. She had recourse rather to the princes of Assyria and of Egytp, which proved her ruin.

Lord. She had recourse rather to the princes of Assyria and of Egytp, which proved her ruin.

Gill: Zep 3:1 - -- Woe to her that is filthy, and polluted,.... Meaning the city of Jerusalem, and its inhabitants; not as before the Babylonish captivity, but after the...

Woe to her that is filthy, and polluted,.... Meaning the city of Jerusalem, and its inhabitants; not as before the Babylonish captivity, but after their return from it, under the second temple, as Abarbinel owns; and even as in the times before and at the coming of Christ, and the preaching of his apostles among them; as the whole series of the prophecy, and the connection of the several parts of it, show; and there are such plain intimations of the conversion of the Gentiles, and of such a happy state of the Jews, in which they shall see evil no more, as can agree with no other times than the times of the Gospel, both the beginning and latter part of them. The character of this city, and its inhabitants, is, that it was "filthy", and polluted with murders, adulteries, oppression, rapine, and other sins: our Lord often calls them a wicked and an adulterous generation; and yet they pretended to great purity of life and manners; and they were pure in their own eyes, though not washed from their filthiness; they took much pains to make clean the outside of the cup, but within were full of impurity, Mat 23:25. In the margin it is, "woe to her that is gluttonous". The word is used for the craw or crop of a fowl, Lev 1:16 hence some render it t "woe to the craw"; to the city that is all craw, to which Jerusalem is compared for its devouring the wealth and substance of others. The Scribes and Pharisees in Christ's time are said to devour widows' houses, Mat 23:14 and this seems to be the sin with which they were defiled, and here charged with. Some think the word signifies one that is publicly, infamous; either made a public example of, or openly exposed, as sometimes filthy harlots are; or rather one "that has made herself infamous" u; by her sins and vices:

to the oppressing city! that oppressed the poor, the widow, and the fatherless. This may have respect to the inhabitants of Jerusalem stoning the prophets of the Lord sent unto them; to the discouragements they laid the followers of Christ under, by not suffering such to come to hear him that were inclined; threatening to cast them out of their synagogues if they professed him, which passed into a law; and to their killing the Lord of life and glory; and the persecution of his apostles, ministers, and people: see Mat 23:13. Some render it, "to the city a dove" w; being like a silly dove without heart, as in Hos 7:11. R. Azariah x thinks Jerusalem is so called because in its works it was like Babylon, which had for its military sign on its standard a dove; See Gill on Jer 25:38, Jer 46:16, Hos 11:11 but the former sense is best.

Gill: Zep 3:2 - -- She obeyed not the voice,.... Of his servants the prophets, as the Targum, by way of explanation, adds, who warned her of her sins and of her ruin. Th...

She obeyed not the voice,.... Of his servants the prophets, as the Targum, by way of explanation, adds, who warned her of her sins and of her ruin. The inhabitants of Jerusalem hearkened not to the voice of John the Baptist, the forerunner of Christ, who gave notice of his coming; nor to the voice of Christ himself, who stretched out his hand all the day to a disobedient and gainsaying people; nor to the voice of his apostles, whose doctrines they contradicted and blasphemed; and put away the word of God from them, thereby judging themselves unworthy of eternal life:

she received not correction; by the rod, by the judgments of God upon her: or "instruction" y; by the Gospel preached to her inhabitants. So the Targum interprets it,

"she received not doctrine;''

the doctrine of baptism, repentance, and remission of sins, preached by John; but rejected the counsel of God by him against themselves, Luk 7:31 nor the doctrine and instruction of Christ and his apostles, though of more worth than gold and silver; but, on the contrary, slighted and despised it, and rejected it with the utmost contempt:

she trusted not in the Lord; not in the Word of the Lord, as the Targum; the essential Word, Christ Jesus; the Word made flesh, and dwelling among them; they trusted in the law of Moses, and in their obedience to it; in their rites and ceremonies, and in the observance of them, and the traditions of their elders; they trusted in the flesh, in their carnal privileges; in their own legal righteousness, and in themselves, that they were righteous, and despised others; and particularly the righteousness of Christ they submitted not unto; they trusted not in him, nor in that; though they were told, that, if they believed not that he was the Messiah, they should die in their sins:

she drew not near to her God; Immanuel, God manifest in the flesh, who was promised to the Jews, and sent unto them, whom their fathers expected, and whose God he was, and theirs also; being in his human nature of them, and God over all blessed for ever; so far were they from drawing near to him, and embracing, him, that they hid, as it were, their faces from him; they would not come to him for life and light, for grace, righteousness, and salvation; nor even to hear him preach, nor suffer others to do the same; but, as much as in them lay, hindered them from attending his ministry, word, and ordinances. The Targum is,

"she drew not nigh to the worship of her God.''

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Zep 3:1 The following verses show that Jerusalem, personified as a woman (“she”), is the referent.

NET Notes: Zep 3:2 Heb “draw near to.” The present translation assumes that the expression “draw near to” refers to seeking God’s will (see...

Geneva Bible: Zep 3:1 Woe to her that is filthy and polluted, to the oppressing ( a ) city! ( a ) That is, Jerusalem.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Zep 3:1-20 - --1 A sharp reproof of Jerusalem for divers sins.8 An exhortation to wait for the restoration of Israel,14 and to rejoice for their salvation by God.

MHCC: Zep 3:1-7 - --The holy God hates sin most in those nearest to him. A sinful state is, and will be, a woful state. Yet they had the tokens of God's presence, and all...

Matthew Henry: Zep 3:1-7 - -- One would wonder that Jerusalem, the holy city, where God was known, and his name was great, should be the city of which this black character is her...

Keil-Delitzsch: Zep 3:1-4 - -- To give still greater emphasis to his exhortation to repentance, the prophet turns to Jerusalem again, that he may once more hold up before the hard...

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 3:1-7 - --D. Judgment on Jerusalem 3:1-7 Having announced that divine judgment would come on the nations around Judah (2:4-15), the prophet returned to the subj...

Guzik: Zep 3:1-20 - --Zephaniah 3 - The Lord Rejoices Over the Restoration of His People A. A contrast between a wicked city and a righteous God. 1. (1-4) Jerusalem, the ...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) ZEPHANIAH, ninth in order of the minor prophets, prophesied "in the days of Josiah" (Zep 1:1), that is, between 642 and 611 B.C. The name means "Jehov...

JFB: Zephaniah (Outline) GOD'S SEVERE JUDGMENT ON JUDAH FOR ITS IDOLATRY AND NEGLECT OF HIM: THE RAPID APPROACH OF THE JUDGMENT, AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF ESCAPE. (Zep. 1:1-18...

TSK: Zephaniah 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Zep 3:1, A sharp reproof of Jerusalem for divers sins; Zep 3:8, An exhortation to wait for the restoration of Israel, Zep 3:14. and to re...

Poole: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This prophet, by a somewhat larger account of his pedigree, gives us ground to guess of what family he might be; the last named may po...

Poole: Zephaniah 3 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 3 A sharp reproof of Jerusalem for divers sins, Zep 3:1-7 . An exhortation to wait for the restoration of Israel Zep 3:8-13 ; and to rejoic...

MHCC: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) Zephaniah excites to repentance, foretells the destruction of the enemies of the Jews, and comforts the pious among them with promises of future bless...

MHCC: Zephaniah 3 (Chapter Introduction) (Zep 3:1-7) Further reproofs for sin. (Zep 3:8-13) Encouragement to look for mercy. (Zep 3:14-20) Promises of future favour and prosperity.

Matthew Henry: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Zephaniah This prophet is placed last, as he was last in time, of all the minor prophet...

Matthew Henry: Zephaniah 3 (Chapter Introduction) We now return to Jerusalem, and must again hear what God has to say to her, I. By way of reproof and threatening, for the abundance of wickedness ...

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

Constable: Zephaniah (Outline) Outline I. Heading 1:1 II. The day of Yahweh's judgment 1:2-3:8 A. Judgm...

Constable: Zephaniah Zephaniah Bibliography Chisholm, Robert B., Jr. "A Theology of the Minor Prophets." In A Biblical Theology of t...

Haydock: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF SOPHONIAS. INTRODUCTION. Sophonias, whose name, saith St. Jerome, signifies "the watchman of the Lord," or "the hidden of the Lo...

Gill: Zephaniah (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ZEPHANIAH This book in some Hebrew copies is called "Sepher Zephaniah", the Book of Zephaniah. Its title, in the Vulgate Latin vers...

Gill: Zephaniah 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ZEPHANIAH 3 In this chapter the character of the city of Jerusalem, and its inhabitants in general, is drawn, as it would be, and a...

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