z:zwL"J l : ' "¦ r.m.-jj.;m*i t*A**.\t.€&X33m *P'ti £ HP* £*y mm bible FOR SCHOOLS & COLLEGES ^es-S! aanijicTi-g-i, raanroip^firteTS^ HOSEA D.D. tjnronjwiWiiMttimaiigirr.331 ~t" nit ti .-_- rrajaats GENERAL EDITOR J. J, S. PEROWNB, D, BISHOP OF WORCESTER YALE DIVINITY SCHOOL LIBRARY Gift of The Reverend Edward C. Dahl €#e Cambrtoa* 3Sti)Ie for ^tjjools anti Callers, H O S E A. HonDon: C. J. CLAY and SONS, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, AVE MARIA LANE. ffiteBgoiu: 263, ARGYLE STREET. JUijijig: F. A. BROCKHAUS. fUtaffiorfs: THE MACMILLAN CO. JSomimg: GEORGE BELL AND SONS. C&e Camfcritnje Bible for g>c|)ooIs anli Colleges* General Editor:— J. J. S. PEROVVNE, D.D., Bishop of Worcester. HOSEA, WITH NOTES AND INTRODUCTION THE REV. T. K. CHEYNE, M.A., D.D. ORIEL PROFESSOR OF THE INTERPRETATION OF HOLY SCRIPTURE AT OXFORD ; CANON OF ROCHESTER. STEREOTYPED EDITION. ©amtmtfge : AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 1897 VP3t First Edition, i88+. Reprinted 1887, 1889, 1892, 189;. PREFACE BY THE GENERAL EDITOR. The General Editor of The Cambridge Bible for ¦^ScJtools thinks it right to say that he does not hold (himself responsible either for the interpretation of particular passages which the Editors of the several Books have adopted, or for any opinion on points of doctrine that they may have expressed. In the New Testament more especially questions arise of the deepest theological import, on which the ablest and most conscientious interpreters have differed and always will differ. His aim has been in all such cases to leave each Contributor to the unfettered exercise of his own judgment, only taking care that mere controversy should as far as possible be avoided. He has contented himself chiefly with a careful revision of the notes, with pointing out omissions, with PREFACE. suggesting occasionally a reconsideration of some question, or a fuller treatment of difficult passages, and the like. Beyond this he has nqt attempted to interfere, feeling it better that each Commentary should have its own individual character, and being convinced that freshness and variety of treatment are more than a compensation for any lack of uniformity in the Series. Deanery, Peterborough. CONTENTS. PAGF-S I. Introduction. 9—39 Chapter I. The prophet's name and origin. His period and its characteristics 9 — 15 Chapter II. Hosea's domestic history. Parable or fact? Chapter III. The second Book of Hosca Chapter IV. The five leading ideas of the pro phecy. Hosea compared with prophets before and after him . . . Chapter V. His style, etc Chronological Taelf, II. Text and Notes Index I. To the Subjects treated of 131 — 2 II. To the Chief Passages from other Parts of the Bible, illustrated in the Notes 132 15- -19 19- — 22 22- -32 32" -39 40 41— 130 The Text adopted in this Edition is that of Dr Scrivener's Cambridge Parag7-aph Bible. A few variations from the ordi nary Text, chiefly in the spelling of certain words, and in the use of italics, will be noticed. For the principles adopted by Dr Scrivener as regards the printing of the Text see his In troduction to the Paragraph Bible, published by the Cambridge University Press. INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER I. The Prophet's name and origin. — His period and its characteristics. The Book of Hosea stands first among the writings of the 'Minor Prophets', not because it was thought to be the earliest (for of this there is no proof), but because it is the longest. Joel (at least according to the ordinary opinion) and Amos are both prior in time to Hosea, and Amos in particular ought to be very carefully compared with the subject of our present study. Hosea indeed is throughout enigmatical and obscure compared with Amos, partly from the peculiarities of his style, partly from the want of such illustrative details as those with which we have been supplied by his predecessor (Am. vii. 10 — 17). The pro phet's name is one specially characteristic of Northern Israel; it was borne by the last king of the Ten Tribes (2 Kings xv. 30), and also originally by Joshua (Num. xiii. 8, 16 ; Deut. xxxii. 44). True, the prophet appears in Auth. Vers, as Hosea, but there is no difference between the names of the three persons in the Hebrew. The form in our Bibles was suggested by the Osee of the Septuagint and the Vulgate ; St Jerome bears witness that even in his time there was no distinction between the letters Sin and Shin. It is St Jerome again who informs us (see his note on i. 1) that in some Greek and Latin MSS. the name of the prophet was written Ause, which reminds us of the form which the name assumes in the Assyrian inscriptions — Ausi'. Nothing is known of the prophet's father Beeri ; it was a Jewish fancy that 10 INTRODUCTION. he too was a prophet, and verses 19, 20 of Isa. viii. (see L)e- litzsch's note) were even declared to be words of Beeri which had intruded into the text of Isaiah1. That Hosea was a native of the northern kingdom needs no proof to any one who has read his book. Without laying any stress on occasional Arama- isms, or on the phrase ' our king' in vii. 5, which is probably enough a popular phrase taken up half-satirically by the pro phet, it would seem that the flow of sympathy towards the Israelites, the intimate knowledge of their circumstances, the topographical2 and historical allusions, point unmistakably to one born and bred in the northern state. How different is the superficial though not untruthful survey of things and people given by a mere visitor from Judah — the prophet Amos! In addition to this, consider Hosea's apparent familiarity with the great love-poem of Northern Israel, which is of course not coun terbalanced by his probable knowledge of the Book of Amos3 — a Judahite prophet, but commissioned to prophesy to Israel (vii. 15). A subtler argument in favour of the same view may be derived from the tone of Hosea's religion, which is on the whole both warmer and more joyous (see especially chaps, ii. and xiv.) than that which prevails in the great Judahite prophets. Hosea seems indeed to have been affected by the genial moods of nature in the north, and to have partaken of that expansive, childlike character, which as a matter of fact led his country- people astray, but which might have issued in loving obedience to the God of love. We have taken some pains to prove the Israelitish origin of the prophet, because it is this which gives his book such a high historical importance. There is very much to interest us in that northern people of which we have for the most part such fragmentary and indirect notices. It embraced the larger part of the old Jsraelitish community, and, sad as were the final 1 It need hardly be said that there is no inconsistency of style be tween these two verses and those which precede and follow to justify the theory of interpolation. 2 See v. 1, vi. 8, 9, xii. n, xiv. 5, 6. 6 On both points, see end of Introduction. INTRODUCTION. results of its struggle for independence, the struggle itself was from a secular point of view not merely excusable but inevit able. Nor can we doubt that, if we knew more at first hand respecting the north-Israelitish kingdom, we should find much to sympathize with even morally, and many germs of good which might have developed into lovely 'plants of Jehovah.' Elijah is hardly a full representative of Israel's moral capacities. His character could not help being affected by his origin. He was a Gileadite1, a fellow-tribesman perhaps of those Gadites of David 'whose faces were like the faces of lions', and who were 'as swift as the roes upon the mountains' (i Chron. xii. 8), and of those 'fifty men of the Gileadites' who captured and slew Pekahiah in his royal fortress (2 Kings xv. 25). Very different is Hosea, and the difference is reflected in his character, which again is partly accounted for by his origin. That one of so typically Israelitish a nature, and so full of love for his northern home, should have taken such a hopeless view of the prospects of the state, seems proof enough of the deadly corruption which prevailed. As Stanley has said2, he was the Jeremiah of Israel; no wonder therefore that he met Jeremiah's fate of opposition and contempt3 (ix. 7, 8, comp. Jer. xxix. 26, 27). Hosea, then, was the prophet of the decline and fall of Is rael ; so much indeed is clear from a glance at his book. But did he prophesy during the whole of this sad period ? It is not by any means inconceivable, according to our chronological table, but we are bound to test the view by internal evidence. First of all, there is the heading (i. 1), which states that Hosea received divine revelations 'in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jero boam the son of Joash, king of Israel.' The natural inference would be that these two historical periods synchronized. But if anything is certain in Biblical history, it is that Jeroboam II. of Israel died before his contemporary Uzziah or Azariah of 1 'Elijah the Tishbite, of Tishbeh in Gilead', 1 Kings xvii. 1 (Ewald and Thenius, following the Septuagint and Josephus). 2 Lectures on the Jewish Church, ii. 369. 3 It was the fate of Amos, too, in Hosea's own country (Am. vn. 10—13)- 12 INTRODUCTION. Judah. We need not however accuse the author of the heading of an error in calculation; the heading is probably a thought less combination of two distinct traditions or views which do not refer to the same amount of prophetic writing. That the first three chapters, which form a whole in themselves, were written in the reign of Jeroboam II., is sufficiently clear from internal evidence. The ruin of the house of Jehu is still future in chap. i. (see ver. 4), and the picture of the prosperous condi tion of Israel given in chap. ii. agrees with no admissible period but that of Jeroboam II. Hence the first part of the heading may reasonably be presumed to have been originally prefixed to the small prophetic roll containing chaps, i. — iii. As for the second part, it was doubtless intended to refer to the complete book of Hosea ; the author of it however is not to be taken quite at his word. The fact that the book of Isaiah (or shall we say, Isa. i. — xxxix. ?) is preceded by a heading which mentions the same four kings of Judah, suggests that one and the same editor wrote the heading of Isaiah and the latter part of that of Hosea. Now it may be assumed as practically certain that the former heading (or at any rate the chronological part of it) was the work of a scribe during the Exile, so that this late editor pro bably only knew in a vague way that Isaiah and Hosea were more or less contemporary. Micah he thought (for we can hardly doubt that he also wrote Mic. i. 1) was a little junior to those two, and so he left out 'Uzziah' in the heading of Micah's book. In the case of Micah we have seen already that internal evidence does not bear out a strict interpretation of the heading, and it will be easy to prove the same in the case of Hosea. It is true that 'Shalman' is referred to in x. 14, and that Dr Pusey and Mr Bosanquet have identified this name with Shalmaneser, but we shall see later on how groundless this view is; true, further, that King Hoshea formed political relations with Egypt such as are referred to in vii. 11, xii. 1, but a party friendly to Egypt must from the nature of the case have existed before Hoshea's reign; true, lastly, that x. 5, 6, xiii. 16 contain detailed predic tions of an Assyrian conquest which have been supposed1 to 1 Prebendary Huxtable, Speakers Commentary, Vol. VI. p. 405. INTRODUCTION. 13 indicate that the events foretold were on the point of taking place, but the expressions could just as well have been used under Pekah or Menahem as under Hoshea, and xiv. 3 shows that when the latter chapters were written the Jews had not finally broken with Assyria. The reigns of Ahaz and Hezekiah seem therefore to be out of the question as periods for any part of Hosea. There remains, as a possible date for chaps, iv. — xiv., the reign of Jotham, who was contemporary with Zecha- riah, Shallum, Menahem, and Pekahiah, and perhaps for two or three years with Pekah. Many have thought that the diffi cult passage viii. 10 refers to the tribute which Menahem paid to Tiglath-Pileser1 (2 Kings xv. 19 mentions him by his private name Pul), but the Hebrew text probably needs correction. It is at any rate certain that the picture described in chaps. iv. — xiv. is one of alarming national decline both in the moral and in the political sphere. In chap. ii. the prophet had severely reprimanded the Israelites for confounding Jehovah with the Canaanitish Baalim (see on ii. 16, 1 7), but he says nothing of that fearful moral corruption which in the later chapters he sees to be eating away the life of the nation. Why this is the case, is uncer tain : it would be hazardous to assume that the corruption did not in some degree exist. If Hosea did not at once depict it in its true colours, we may conjecturally ascribe this either to the hopefulness of youth, or to the circumstance that the people of the district from which he sprang were comparatively pure in their morals, owing perhaps to their remoteness from the great centres of a debasing worship. Can we support this latter theory by external evidence? It seems that we can with at least a reasonable degree of certitude. We need not dogmatize here as to the composition of that exquisite love-poem the Song of Songs, but we may at any rate be allowed to hold that the most characteristic portions of it are monuments of the reign of Jero boam II. If so, it is evident that the rustic beauties of N. Israel not only had external attractions, but also the 'gentlest and 1 Tiglath-Pileser mentions Rasunnu (Rezin) of Damascus and Mini- khimmi (Menahem) of Samaria among his tributaries in the eighth year of his reign, B.C. 738 (Schrader). 14 INTRODUCTION. noblest' womanly virtues1- The generally admitted fact that the Book of Hosea contains reminiscences of the Song of Songs suggests that a change had passed over Israel since that poem (or some portion of it) was written, otherwise the prophet would clearly stand self-convicted of exaggeration. We may perhaps ascribe this change in part to the removal of the vigorous states man upon the throne, who must surely have recognized the poli tical importance of preserving intact the moral foundations of the state : — it is of Jeroboam's upstart successors that the prophet complains that they took pleasure in wickedness, and shared in the licentiousness of their people (vii. 3, 4). And no wonder that they did so, when, as in the decline of the Roman state, rough 'pretorians' seized and gave away the crown2. Could it be otherwise, when the tone of society was set by the coarsest and most lawless natures? Such was not a period in which many women like the Shulamite or men like the prophet Hosea could be expected to arise. Add to this, that the priests found it their interest to encourage vice and sensuality (iv. 6 — 8), and what further need have we of witnesses to the inner necessity of the speedy downfall of a self-betrayed state ? The concluding years of the reign of Jotham saw the forma tion of an alliance between Rezin king of Syria and Pekah king of Israel, based on the importance of opposing a firm front to the aggressions of Assyria. They needed the support of Judah, but Jotham, perhaps from religious motives, held back. Hosea makes no allusion to the Syro-Israelitish inroads which led up to the great invasion described in Isa. vii. The inroads he might have passed over in silence, but scarcely the invasion. A reunion of north and south was a part of his most cherished ideal (i. 11), but such a reunion as was now threatened he could not but denounce as prematurely involving Judah in the fate of her apostate sister. From his not mentioning it, it is plain that he was no longer prophesying, and it is for a similar reason plain that no part of his book was written as late as the inva- Delitzsch, Canticles and Ecclesiastes, E. T. , p. 5. See Heilprin, Historical Poetry of the Ancient Hebrews, ii. 118. INTRODUCTION. 15 sion of Gilead1 and Naphtali by Tiglath-Pileser. It is a satis faction to believe that such a devoted patriot (if the word be allowable) had closed his eyes before this 'beginning of pangs'— this first fulfilment of his reluctant threatenings. CHAPTER II. Hosed 's domestic history. — Parable or fact f — Chap. ii. alone an allegory. At the opening of this essay, a regret was expressed that we had no such illustrative details respecting Hosea as in the case of Amos. We have in fact no information as to his outward circumstances, or as to his intercourse with the different classes in the state. But we do know a series of domestic events which Hosea himself viewed as interpretative of God's purposes for him, and as conveying to him a clearly defined mission. The prophet has himself lifted the veil from his home life, and the sad story is briefly this. In the reign of Jeroboam II., when the nation was already on the down-hill road to moral ruin, Hosea married a wife named Gomer. He hoped the best of her, there is no reason to think otherwise; but she proved unworthy of his trust. Whether her profligacy showed itself in simple adultery, or in her following the licentious rites of the consort of the Canaanitish Baal (Asherah)2, we know not. But such was 1 In fact, Gilead is repeatedly referred to as a part of N. Israel (see v. 1, vi. 8, xii. ir). 2 As Dean Plumptre well remarks (Lazarus and other Poems, p. 209}, 'The two sins of idolatry and sensual licence were closely intertwined.... [t would be hardly too much to say that every harlot in Israel was probably a votary of the goddess' (see on iv. 13, 14). Asherah (trans formed by Auth. Vers, into 'grove') was, as most think, the name of a Canaanitish goddess, though some scholars prefer to regard the word as a noun meaning 'pole', the sacred tree being represented by a pole on or near the altar. In any case the goddess had such an artificial tree or symbol of a tree erected near her altars. Those who take Asherah to be the name of a goddess refer to the Assyrian dsir, fem. dsirat 'favourable', whence also probably the name Asher (a divine 16 INTRODUCTION. Hosea's love for his wife, and such perhaps his hope of reclaim ing her, that he took no legal step against her, and acknowledged her three children for his own. At last, however, Gomer fled away to her paramour, but even then Hosea's love followed her. He found her, as it would seem, already despised and shamed ; perhaps her paramour had grown weary of her, and brutally sold her for a slave. At any rate, Hosea had to buy her back for the price of a slave, — "weeping blinding tears, I took her to myself, and paid the price (Strange contrast to the dowry of her youth When first I wooed her) ; and she came again To dwell beneath my roof. Yet not for me The tender hopes of those departed years, And not for her the freedom and the love I then bestowed so freely. Sterner rule Is needed now. In silence and alone, In shame and sorrow, wailing, fast, and prayer, She must blot out the stains that made her life One long pollution1." Such is the story told us in the first and third chapters. There is no attempt to soften the colouring by half-tints ; 'rough fresco- strokes,' to adopt Ewald's phrase, seemed perhaps more effec tive. Besides, it would have led some to accuse Hosea of egotism, a fault from which a prophetic writer must be con spicuously free, if he had lavished his artistic power on his own tragic history. The student is, however, much indebted to Dean Plumptre for his strikingly suggestive poem, a few lines from which are quoted above. A poet as well as an expositor, he name, like Gad). They also quote passages in which an image of the Asherah is spoken of (see 1 Kings xv. 13; 2 Chr. xv. 16; 2 Kings xxi. 7), and others in which vessels and tents for the Asherah are mentioned (2 Kings xxiii. 4); also the famous phrase in 1 Kings xviii. 19, 'the prophets of the Baal and the prophets of the Asherah.' This is quite consistent with the occasional use of the word for the material symbol of the goddess. It is right to add that Hosea does not mention Asherah by name: he only alludes to the worship of her (iv. 13). But Amos does not mention either Asherah or Baal. 1 Plumptre, Lazarus &c. , pp. 87 — 88. INTRODUCTION. 17 felt that Hosea's poetic imagination was marked by spontaneity and originality. At a later period of Hebrew literature, a fic titious narrative of this kind might be conceivable, but not in the still youthful bloom of lyric poetry, and in the case of so fresh and original a poet as Hosea. We are thus taking a different line from Dr Pusey when he says, ' There is no ground to justify our taking as a parable what Holy Scripture relates as a fact.' There must be some plausible ground for it, or the opinion rejected by Dr Pusey would not have commended itself to the majority of modern commentators. It is not at all a necessary inference from the inspiration of the Scriptures that the events described by Hosea should be historical; it is rather an in tuition which comes of itself to the unbiassed reader who has any poetic insight. The only plausible argument on the other side is that Hosea seems, when understood literally, to confess to an act which offends our moral consciousness. But had Hosea really meant this, he could have said at once that the bride of his choice had been ' a harlot.' He simply says that she was 'a woman of whoredom', which, according to He brew idiom, need only mean 'a woman of an unchaste dispo sition'; we must suppose that he afterwards found out Gomer to be a woman of the character described (see on i. 2) The inherent difficulties of the parabolic interpretation are much greater than any slight difficulty in the literalistic one adopted by Ewald and Wellhausen in Germany, and by Dr Pusey, Dean Plumptre, and Prof. Robertson Smith in England. It is indeed much to say after Dean Plumptre's poem that there is any difficulty in the literalistic view, and if there be, it is only because the Dean, following Dr Pusey and early Jewish autho rities, unfortunately adopts the view that Hosea deliberately married a woman who was, in the later Jewish phrase, 'a sinner,' with the view of reclaiming her. ' To seek and save the lost, Forgetful of my calling and my fame, To call thee mine, and bring thee back to God,, Became the master-passion of my heart1.' 1 Dean Plumptre, Lazarus &c, p. 84. 18 INTRODUCTION. The chief difficulties in the parabolic interpretation are (i) the refractory name Gomer, which refuses to be unlocked by the parabolic key, and contrasts so strongly with the names of the children, and (2) that this interpretation leaves it unex plained how Hosea came to think of Jehovah's relation to Israel as a marriage. With regard to{i), M. Reuss exposes the weakness of his own position by remarking, ' II est fort proba ble que ces noms doivent avoir une signification symbolique, comme tous les autres qui vont suivre. Mais nos dictionnaires he'breux n'offrent aucun moyen de la retrouver1.' And with regard to (2), as the present writer has endeavoured to enforce elsewhere, 'Throughout the Old Testament we detect a gracious proportion between the revelation vouchsafed and the mental state of the person receiving it2.' But what proportion is there between this new and strange revelation and the mental state of a worshipper of a Deity as moral as Baal and Asherah were immoral? It was no doubt the custom among the heathen relations of the Israelites, and probably among the semi-heathen Israelites, to speak of the god of heaven as married to the land3. But how came Hosea to admit so distinctly heathenish a con ception within the circle of the prophetic religious ideas ? It is not enough to reply that ' the word of Jehovah came to him :' how could such a 'word' come to him, unless there were already some point of contact for it in his mind ? He must have been prepared by personal experience to find a moral element in this conception which fitted it for the use of a prophet of Jehovah. 1 Reuss, Les prophites, i. 138. There is no strangeness in the pro phetic names of the children (comp. Isa. vii., viii.), but nothing obliges us to assume that the mother had one too. 2 The Book of Isaiah Chronologically Arranged, p. 22. 3 It is a remarkable 'survival' of this idea that the cognate word to Baal in Arabic (ba'l") means, according to Lane, 'any palm-trees, and other trees, and seed-produce, not watered ; or such as are watered by the rain : or palm-trees that imbibe with their roots, and so need not to be watered ', in short vegetation which owes nothing to artificial irriga tion, and is the direct product of the 'rain from heaven.' See below on ii. 2T, 22, and especially Prof. Robertson Smith (The Prophets of Israel, pp. 172, 409), who has thrown much fresh light on this part of Hosea. INTRODUCTION. 19 Why not, then, accept Hosea's statement of his experiences in its literal sense, interpreting his phraseology, however, with due attention to Hebrew idiom ? Thus much by way of introduction to chaps, i. and iii. ; the meaning which the prophet's sad history, interpreted, as he felt, by an inward divine voice, conveyed to him, will be seen in its full beauty, when we come to chaps, iv. — xiv. The word 'allegory' or 'parable' belongs properly not to these chapters, but to chap, ii., in which the ideas which Hosea had gained through his providential discipline are set forth in figurative language. The position of this chapter (with which i. 10, 11 ought, as we shall see, to be taken) is remarkable. Whether its contents represent Hosea's thoughts previously to the events described in chap, iii., is uncertain ; the chapter may equally well express his later reflexions, and be simply designed as a commentary on the names ' Lo-ruhamah' and ' Lo-ammi ' in i. 6, 9. CHAPTER III. The second Book of Hosea.— A reproduction, not a report- Neither in chronological nor in logical order. — Heart-logic. — Gomer and Hosea both types. With the Messianic promise (taking this adjective in the wider sense) at the end of chap, iii., we have evidently reached the close of one great portion of prophecy. Chaps, iv.— xiv. have a unity of their own : we might almost call them the second Book of Hosea. That there is a substratum of prophetic oratory is proved by the allusions to facts and persons, obscure to us but clear to the original hearers ; in fact, in ix. 1 the motive of the discourse is still perfectly visible. Yet we cannot suppose that Hosea delivered any part of this ' book' in its present form ; it can only be a reproduction by the prophet himself of the main points of his discourses, partly imaginative, partly on the basis of notes. We might have looked for this to prove a connected record of the state of things in Israel from one definite historical 20 INTRODUCTION. point to another. Such however is not the case. Although in one respect chap. iv. seems to justify its priority (namely, that Judah is spoken of more hopefully, ver. 15, than later on), yet upon the whole we cannot say that the early chapters belong, say, to Menahem's reign, and the later ones to Pekah's. Nor is there any clear evidence of a designed logical connexion ; Bishop Lowth even compares the book to 'sparsa quasdam Sibyllas folia.' Pauses there are from time to time in the pro phecy (see especially v. I, viii. 1, ix. I, xii. 1), but it is not ob vious that they mark stages in the development of an argument. There is indeed an argument, but it is one of the heart, not of the head. It is based on the assumption that Jehovah cannot be less loving and less faithful than the creatures He has made. Bitter domestic experience has developed in the prophet the most wonderful capacity for unselfish affection, and he argues from this (somewhat as our Lord in Matt. vii. 11) to the existence of a still greater passion of self-sacrificing love in ' the framer of hearts.' We have seen how Hosea, after selecting, as he had thought, a bride like the Shulamite of his favourite poem, dis covered to his unutterable grief that instead of a ' lily of the valleys' (Cant. ii. 1), he had unawares •enfolded in [his] arms A lily torn and trampled in the mire1.' We have seen, too, how, after Gomer had fled from her home, in obedience to an unchaste impulse, the master-feeling which that sweet old poem calls ' strong as Death ' and ' obstinate as She612' (Cant. viii. 6), prompted him to rescue her from her desti tution, and bring her home again, not indeed at first to freedom, but to the cleansing chastisement of seclusion. We have seen the bitter experience, but not as yet penetrated into the mystery of its meaning. Both Hosea's impulses were according to the 1 Dean Plumptre (Lazarus and other Poems, p. 85), who however prefixes the words 'I, knowing all', which imply a misinterpretation of i. 2. 2 Death is a synonym for Sheol or the Hebrew Hades (as Isa. xxviii. 15, 1 8, xxxviii. 18). The Underworld is represented as having a mysterious power of attracting and swallowing up all men. INTRODUCTION. 21 unmistakable will of God, who overruled this domestic tragedy to a wise and gracious end. Hosea was to learn what no pro phet had learned before, and what no prophet ever could have learned by a mechanical revelation from without — viz. that the essence of the divine nature was not justice but love (comp. 1 John iv. 8). Gomer in her prime of purity was a symbol of Israel whom Jehovah 'found as grapes in the wilderness' (ix. 10) ; in her unnatural infidelity, of Israel who ' went after ' the Baalim (ii. 13); in her undeserved gradual restitution into the position of a wife, of Israel, first led aside into the wilder ness, and then taken back to the full favour of an eternally loving God. And Hosea in his mixed and harrowing feelings towards Gomer is himself a type of Jehovah. His loathing abhorrence of her sin, his flaming indignation at her infidelity, and, stronger than either, his tender compassion at the depth of misery to which she has reduced herself, are but a reflexion of Jehovah's feelings towards His people. Hosea's work is to give expression to this newly-found truth. He does so in what may be called in the main a lyric monologue of Jehovah Himself. He has no occasion to say, ' Thus saith the Lord1.' Without referring to any past revelation and clothing it in self-chosen words, he feels and knows that the words which well up from his heart ade quately express the feelings of the divine Heart. Gomer in fact is not merely an emblem; she is a representative. As Gomer has erred, so Israel as a nation has erred. Gomer was unchaste and, it would seem, a devotee of Asherah ; so were too many others of the women of Israel, while the kindred worship of Baal or Baal-Jehovah absorbed the religious feelings of the men. Hosea, who has learned to 'know Jehovah ', is cut to the quick by such apostasy ; he spares no detail of the abominations that are committed ; with a kind of grieved sur prise he puts before the people the inevitable punishment, but when he has fully realized the awful nature of the doom, he melts with pity, and recalls the woe (see xiii. 13— xiv. i)2. His 1 This formula occurs only once in chaps, iv.— xiv.; see xi. it. 2 In his flow of sympathy towards the object of the judgment Hosea INTRODUCTION. feelings are those which are natural to a pure-minded worship per of Jehovah, trained in the high thoughts of prophetic re ligion ; but they also correspond, as an inner voice assures Hosea, to what may analogously be called the feelings of Je hovah, who has prepared His servant in so exceptional a way to think in unison with Himself. A fitter person than Hosea surely could not be found to be Israel's prophet in the gathering storm. Knowing Jehovah's 'secret' (Am. iii. 7), he could be faithful to Him without being untrue to Israel. Next to Jeho vah, he loves his country and his wife with a clinging, inextin guishable love. But only next to Jehovah ; for Hosea knows that all relationship is rooted in Him, and that both the people of Israel (xi. 1) and each individual Israelite (i. 10) are before everything else ideally Jehovah's sons. If we cannot therefore strictly call him a patriot, we can at any rate say that he has something higher than even patriotism — an enthusiasm for that 'pearl of great price' described by the phrase 'the divine sonship of Israel.' CHAPTER IV. The five leading ideas of the prophecy. — (a) Immorality of the northern kingdom. — (b) Sinfulness of the idolatrous fehovah- worship and of the confusion of fehovah and Baal.— (c) Sinfulness of Israel's foreign policy. — (d) Sinfulness of the separate kingdom of Israel. — (e) The conception of love as the bond between fehovah and Israel, and between the indi vidual Israelites. — Hosea compared with prophets before and after him. — No personal Messiah in Hosea. To summarize the contents of the book before us is a pecu liarly difficult task, systematic order being more alien to Hosea than perhaps to any other prophet. Still an incomplete sketch is only exceeded by the unknown author of the early prophecy on Moab in Isa. xv., xvi., adopted by Isaiah (see Isa. xvi. 13). The latter too was possibly a N. Israelite, to judge from his minute acquaintance with Moabitish topography. INTRODUCTION. 23 may be attempted, (a) It will be noticed at once what a large part of his book is taken up with lamentations over the general immorality of the Israelites, which appears (comparing the statements of Amos and Hosea with those of the prophets of Judah) to have been more glaring than that which at any time prevailed in the south. The Israelites of the north seem, in fact, to have admitted a larger Canaanite element than those of the south, who had received a considerable infusion of Arab blood1. Not that Hosea altogether neglects the moral state of Judah. At first he gives a more favourable verdict of her than of the sister-country (i. 6, 7, comp. iv. 15), but later on strong complaints of her misconduct are incidentally made — complaints, through which we can hear the pulsations of a loving heart (v. 10 — 13, vi. 4, xi. 12). Hosea, therefore, like all the 'goodly fellowship', is a preacher of morality. He represents Jehovah as saying, 'For I delight in love, and not in sacrifice, and in the knowledge of God more than in burnt-offerings ' (vi. 6) ; and whatever the precise meaning of 'love' may be (on which see some pages further on), 'love to man' must be, even if only indirectly, referred to, just as the 'knowledge of God' includes the imitation of God (as Jer. xxii. 16). It was the sacred duty of the priests, according to Hosea, to teach a morality based upon pure religion (iv. 6) ; instead of which, they only promoted a worship which infallibly developed into at least one form of gross immorality, and welcomed the spread of iniquity, because the consequent sin-offerings were profitable to themselves (v. 1, iv. 8). They even took the lead in outraging the law (vi. 9), and the prophet tells us soon after, that even the king and the princes took an unnatural delight in the general licence (vii. 3). So true was that which Isaiah, perhaps at this very time, said of the northern kingdom, 'And they that lead this people cause them to err, and they that are led of them are destroyed' (Isa. ix. 16). 1 Prof. Robertson Smith, The Prophets of Israel, p. 201. 24 INTRODUCTION. (b) Hosea does not, however, delude himself with the idea that preaching will of itself convert his brethren. He knows but too well that their errors in morality have sprung from their 'backsliding' in religion, in a word, from their idolatry (evidence of which still exists in the oldest Israelitish seals). And hence one of the most striking features of Hosea is his incessant pole mic against the worship — not of the Phoenician Baal, which had been put down by Jehu — but of the small plated images of a bull, which were the symbols of Jehovah in the local sanctuaries of the north (i Kings xii. 28, comp. Ex. xxxii. 4, 5). Even Amos has not a word to say against these images, whereas Hosea flatly denies that there is any divine power behind them (viii. S, 6) and describes them as the source of all the varied evils which are ruining the community. And the longer he lived, the more convinced of this he became. In chap, ii., as we have seen, he does not refer to the corrupting effect upon morals of the popular religion, but chaps, iv. — xiv. are full of it. The corrup tion was doubtless growing deeper every year. The God of Israel, through being addressed as Baal (ii. 16), was confounded with the local divinities of the Canaanites1, and the moral influence of the old Jehovah-worship was lost. Indeed, the Baal-cultus itself, in which the Jehovah-cultus was now practi cally merged, was descending in the scale of religions. The Israelites were no longer in the stage of naive faith, and so could not recognize the old nature-worship in its original significance. They were forftialists of the worst kind, because the meaning of their forms had never been a high and elevating one. And besides this, the still grosser form of Baal-cultus introduced by the Tyrian princess2 Jezebel probably had a baleful effect on the native religion, since its persecuted adherents would become 1 The Israelites considered themselves Jehovah- worshippers (viii. 1 3, ix. 4, 5). But the prophet quietly calls the local Jehovah-Baals 'other gods' (iii. i), and says that in her feast-days Israel 'forgat me' (ii. 13; comp. n). ^Comparing 1 Kings xvi. 31 with Menander in Josephus Antiq. viii. 13, 2 and Contra Apion. i. 18, we may infer, with Ewald (History, iv. 39) that Jezebel was the daughter of Ethbaal king of Tyre, who had formerly been a priest of Astarte. INTRODUCTION. 25 fused with those of the latter, and would bring their gross prac tices and licentious spirit with them. (On the whole subject of the popular religion of N. Israel, see commentary on ii. 13, 16, 21, 22). (c) One proof of the formalism of the Jehovah-Baal worship (though it is a proof, as we shall see, of something else besides) is the want of faith in the protecting care of its deity shown by the north-Israelitish people. We must first of all ascertain Hosea's judgment on this point, and then explain in what sense we can adopt it. Not only, says the prophet, has ' Ephraim' deserted Jehovah, but he has also 'hired loves among the nations' (viii. 9, 10). This is an expression for the attempts of the rulers to bribe the favour of their powerful neighbours Egypt and Assyria (see v. 13, vii. 11, viii. 9, 10, xii. 1, xiv. 3, and comp. 2 Kings xvii. 4). In fact, there seem to have been two factions in the northern as well as probably in the southern kingdom (Isa. xxx. 1 — 7, xxxi. 1 — 3, comp. 2 Kings xvi. 7), the one devoted to Assyria, the other to Egypt. Hosea was equally opposed to both. Like Dante, he thought it an honour ' to have formed a party by himself alone1.' Hosea denounces the policy of the rulers as not merely a sin but a blunder. To trust in chariots and horses in preference to Jehovah, who was ' their God from the land of Egypt' (xii. 9, xiii. 4), is the part of 'a silly dove without understanding' (vii. 1 1). To coquet with the neighbour ing empires will too surely lead to enforced expatriation. Egypt and Assyria (such perhaps is the prophet's meaning, comp. Isa. vii. 18, 19) shall fight for the land of Israel, and shall each carry part of the inhabitants into captivity. Instead of the gentle yoke of Jehovah, so touchingly described in the words — 'I was unto them as they that lift up the yoke over their cheeks, and I bent towards him and gave him food ' (xi. 4), the Israelites shall pass under the tyranny of aliens, — 'He shall return unto the land of Egypt, and Asshur — he shall be his king, because they have refused to return ' (xi. 5). Paradise, xvii. 69. 26 INTRODUCTION. Such is Hosea's judgment on the 'folly' of the Israelites, and his prophetic intuition of its inevitable consequences. He ex presses himself with a condensation which may obscure to some readers the real kernel of his thought. What he really means we have to divine from our knowledge of his religious position. We must remember that the Jehovah of the N. Israelites was very different from the Jehovah of Hosea, and that he had now sunk to the level of the Canaanitish Baal. The necessary con sequence, at that stage of the Baal-worship, was formalism ; and when to this was added the surprising successes of the Assyrians, whose warfare was avowedly in part directed against foreign deities as well as foreign nations1, we cannot be surprised that the Israelites began to distrust the protecting care of their god. Logically, therefore, the 'folly' of the Israelites consisted, not in making terms with Assyria, but in accepting a corrupt form of the worship of Jehovah, which could no more inspire courage than the love of goodness, and therefore doomed its adherents to a rapid national decline. (d) Another leading idea in this prophecy is one very closely connected with those already mentioned, viz. the sinfulness of the separate kingdom of Israel. Hosea has a remarkably clear view of the different aspects of the 'schism', and represents Jehovah as saying — ' I give thee kings in mine anger, and take them away in my wrath' (xiii. u). In one sense, then, the separate kingdom of Israel was justifiable ; in another it was not. It must be confessed, however, that the latter aspect is predominant in Hosea's mind (comp. viii. 4), whereas the former is exclusively present to the narrator in 1 Kings xi. 29, comp. 2 Chron. xi. 4 (see further note on i. 4). 1 Sargon says in his Annals, 'I counted all the armies of the god Assur, and I marched against these towns ', and carries captive not only men but gods ; he brings countries into subjection not merely to himself but to Assur (Records of the Past, vii. 25 — 26). Esarhaddon's Annals contain the remarkable statement that, after taking away the gods of the Arabs, he wrote the mighty deeds of ' Assur my lord ' upon them, and also his own name, and sent them back repaired (Budge, The History of Esarhaddon, p. 57). INTRODUCTION. 27 The ground for Hosea's severe view is that he feels pure religion to be the safeguard of the national existence. As no compromise is allowable between Jehovah and Baal, so there should be no opposition to the divinely sanctioned house of David. A rival dynasty involves a rival deity, as Hosea expressly says in viii. 4. The Israelites might regard themselves as worshippers of Jeho vah, but the prophet contradicts this without scruple in the fol lowing verses (viii. 5, 6). He certainly yearned for the healing of the 'schism' by a Davidic king, and speaks in his earlier prophecy (iii. 5) as if Providence were leading in this direction. The event proved that he was too hopeful, but the fact that he left his early work unaltered, shows what a mistake it is to insist too much on a literal fulfilment of every detail of prophecy, particularly in Hosea the most lyrical and the least reflective of all the prophets, who evidently uses prediction, just as he uses upbraidings and threatenings, partly to relieve his own over wrought feelings, partly to move his people to a timely repent ance. As Prebendary Huxtable remarks, ' The style very often assumes the form of prediction ; but this form is probably for the most part adopted, rather as an engine of persuasion, than as an absolute foretelling of what was about to happen1.' No doubt some of Hosea's particular predictions have been fulfilled, but we have no right to assume that the prophet himself attached more importance to these predictions than to others. The truth is that he has no fixed view respecting the future of Judah, much less about the reunion of the two kingdoms. In i. 6, 7 he contrasts the mercy not extended to Israel with the mercy extended to Judah, but in vi. 11 (comp. v. 5, 14, viii. 14, x. 11, xii. 2), he points to a 'harvest' of retribution for Judah similar to that destined for Israel ; and if in i. 11 he antici pates the healing of the ' schism', yet in chap. xiv. his radiant description of the future contains not a line of hope for Judah. ( be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured nor numbered; and it shall come to pass, that in the My people', and directly after, 'Plead with your mother, plead'.) (b) Still more objectionable is the arrangement of A. V., derived from one form of the Hebrew text, and followed by the Septuagint, Luther, and Calvin. Its only justification lies in the accidental circumstance that two successive verses in the Hebrew text begin with an imperative. Verse i chap. ii. in A. V. is utterly unintelligible by itself, and the transition from the first to the second imperative becomes even more strikingly abrupt than in the Hebrew Bible, (c) Feeling these objec tions, Ewald and Pusey propose to begin the second chapter of the book with the verse which stands fourth in order in our Hebrew Bibles. But most readers cannot help seeing that the transition from threatening to promise, from Lo-ammi, to Ammi, is singularly abrupt, and not to be admitted except from dire necessity, (d) The transposition of lines or sentences is well known to be a fruitful source of error in ancient texts. Hence it has been suggested that w. i — 3 of chap. ii. in the common Hebrew Bible (i.e. the last two verses of chap. i. and the first of chap. ii. in A. V.) originally stood at the end of chap. ii. The plau sibility of this suggestion of Heilprin's and Steiner's would be seen to most advantage, if these verses could be explained at the end of chap. ii. This would be only following the precedent of St Paul, who adopts a very similar arragement in Rom. ix. 25, 26. (Verse 9 therefore should be taken as the close of chap, i., and ii. 1 as the close of chap, ii.) 10 — 11. 1. Predicted alteration of Names. Yet the number of the children of Israel shall be] However sad the present prospects of Israel may be, a glorious future is in store for him. So our translators mean us to interpret the passage, confounding the province of the translator with that of the expositor. The Hebrew merely says, And it shall come to pass that the number of the chil dren of Israel shall be, &c. In all probability, this verse should have come after ii. 23, to the opening statement of which it gives a further development. 'I will sow her for myself in the land,' were the words of Jehovah in reversing the prophetic import of the name Jezreel. Now the Divine speaker assures us that the 'sowing' shall be followed by a rich harvest of inhabitants. An increase in population is elsewhere also a leading feature in the promised prosperity of Israel; e.g. (not to quote the disputed passage, Is. ix. 3), Mic. ii.' 12, where the restored remnant is said to be 'tumultuous for the multitude of men'. Observe that the blessing is at first limited in its scope (as it is again in chap. xiv.). 'Children of Israel' means evidently, not all Israel, but the northern kingdom, for in the next verse (comp. i. 6, 7) 'the children of Israel' are clearly distinguished from 'the children of Judah'. The limitation was natural, because the prophet belonged to the northern and larger section of the nation; the horizon is widened immediately after, so as to include Judah. as the sand of the sea] Comp. Gen. xxii. 17, xxxii. 12. 46 HOSEA, I. [v. n. place where it was said unto them, Ye are not my people, there it shall be said unto them, Ye are u the sons of the living God. Then shall the children of Judah and the children of Israel be gathered together, and appoint themselves one head, and they shall come up out of the land : for great shall be the day of Jezreel. in the place where it was said unto them] This may mean either Palestine, or, more plausibly, the land of captivity. But surely the fact, and not the place, of restoration is the thought which fills the mind of the prophet. The sense is much improved by adopting the alternative version, Instead of Its being said, &c. It is true that an indisputable parallel for the sense 'instead of is wanting, neither Isa. xxxiii. 2 1 nor 2 Kings xxi. 19 being decisive. But grammatical theory raises no objection to the proposed rendering, and where this is the case the Hebrew concordance must not override the exercise of exegetical tact. Ye are not my people] Or, Ye are Lo-ammi. the sons of the living God] 'The living God', as 1 Sam. xvii. 26, Deut. v. 26, in contrast to the idol-gods ('elilim, or 'nothings', as Isaiah delights to call them) : one of the earliest appearances of prophetic monotheism (see on ii. 10). Notice the bold expression 'sons'- At the foundation of popular Semitic religion (the religion of the group of nations to which the Assyrians and the Syrians, the Israelites and the Arabs equally belonged) lay the materialistic idea that the worshipping nation was the offspring of the patron-divinity. Hosea allows and adopts the expression, but signifies by it a moral kinship rather than a physical one. Compare the remarkable passages in Num. xxi. 29, Mai. ii. 11, and see note on xi. 1. 11. Then shall the children of Judah and the children of Israel be gathered together] Thus the schism of north and south shall be healed (comp. Isa. xi. 13, Ezek. xxxvii. 22) — a schism to which by implication Hosea denies the Divine sanction, on the ground (we may suppose) that Jehovah being one, His people must also be one. See on iii. 4, and comp. iii. 3, viii. 4, xiii. 10, 11. In the last passage, however, Jehovah is represented as in a certain sense sanctioning the usurping dynasties of Israel ('in His anger'), and in the idealizing description which follows (chap, xiv.) Judah seems to find no place appoint themselves one head] The 'one head' is doubtless the Davidic king (iii. 5). come up out of the land] The recruited people, too numerous for 'the land to bear them', shall seek to enlarge their territory (comp. Am. ix. 12, Isa.xi. 14, Mic.ii. 12, 13). The 'land' spoken of can only be Palestine, since there is nothing in the context to suggest that either the land of captivity (as Kimchi, following the Targum) or the earth in general is intended. 'Come up' should rather be go up, i.e. march to battle, as Nah. ii. 2, Joel i. 6, and often. for great shall be the day of Jezreel] The result of the warlike enter prise of Judah and Israel is not expressly mentioned, but the addition i, 2.] HOSEA, II. 47 Say ye unto your brethren, Ammi ; And to your sisters, Ruhamah. Plead with your mother, plead : For she is not my wife, neither am I her husband : of these words permits no doubt of its success. Hosea means by the phrase, not the day on which Jehu's guilty dynasty shall be cut short ; for the name Jezreel has now been freed from all gloomy associations, and become a title of the regenerate people of Israel. Besides, in phrases like 'the day of Jezreel', the name is always either that of a person, or of a place, or a city personified. Chap. II. 1. The parallel lines here seem misleading. Say ye...] Now that the storm-cloud has rolled away, those names of baleful import Lo-ammi and Lo-ruhamah have ceased to be ad missible, and are altered into the direct opposites. The verse is best understood as the conclusion of chap, ii., just as 'Call his name Lo- ammi ', &c. ought to form the conclusion of chap. i. The persons addressed are perhaps the disciples of the prophet, who are directed to communicate the joyful news summed up in the names Ammi ('my people') and Ruhamah ('she hath found compassion') to the whole nation. 2 — 23, 1. 10, 11, 11. 1. Hosea's first discourse, slightly obscured by the dislocation of some of its verses (see above on i. io, ii). The prophet sets forth in more intelligible language what he has already suggested rather enigmatically. The finest part of the chapter is from v. 14 to v. 23, where Hosea shows how Israel will emerge purified from her captivity, and enjoy the love and favour of her Divine Bridegroom. 2 — 7. The prophecy begins with a solemn admonition on the faith less conduct of Israel towards her Divine Bridegroom. The dramatis persona are the same as in chap. i. ; only, whereas in chap. i. the husband, wife, and children, are both historical persons and significant symbols, in chap. ii. they are obviously pure allegories. Israel becomes the adulterous wife, and Jehovah the aggrieved husband. The in dividual Israelites are the children. The appeal of Jehovah to the latter implies that they have not altogether given way to their inherited propensities ; they can still be expected, at least in some cases, to co operate for the extinction of a corrupt worship. Comp. 1 Kings xix. 18 'seven thousand in Israel... which have not bowed unto the Baal'. 2. Plead with your mother, plead] The repetition of the appeal shews its urgency. 'Do not murmur against me', Jehovah seems to say, 'plead your cause against your own mother : Israel is the author of her own calamities.' for she is not my wife...] A parenthetical explanation of the ex pression 'your mother'. Adultery has destroyed the relation of the wife to the husband, but not of the mother to the children. Como. Isa. 1. 1. 48 HOSEA, II. [vv. 3, 4. Let her therefore put away her whoredoms out of her sight, And her adulteries from between her breasts ; i Lest I strip her naked, and set her as in the day that she was born, And make her as a wilderness, and set her like a dry land, And slay her with thirst. > And I will not have mercy upon her children ; her whoredoms out of her sight] Rather, from her face, the index of obstinacy (comp. Jer. iii. 3), as the breasts of shamelessness. 3. Lest I strip her naked...] So far the punishment of the adulteress agrees with that customary among the Germans (Tac. Germ. §§ 18, 19). But the punishment of the Hebrew adulteress is not intended to stop here ; death was the penalty she had to fear — death by strangling, according to the Rabbinical explanation of Lev. xx. 10, Deut. xxii. 22, death by stoning, according to Ezekiel in a passage which alludes to the present (Ezek. xvi. 39, 40, comp. John viii. 5). But the prophet speaks here of neither form of punishment, but of death by thirst in the desert. The meaning of the allegory is, that the people of N. Israel shall be put to open shame, and deprived of the rich temporal blessings vouchsafed to them. At the beginning of Israel's history, we see her, as it were, a homeless wanderer in the wilderness, with nothing either in her nature or in her surroundings to promise a longer existence than was enjoyed by many another of the Semitic pastoral tribes (comp. Ezek. xvi. 5), and the close of her history, says the prophet, shall present an exactly similar picture. Observe in passing how nearly the ideas of 'land' and 'people' cover each other in the mind of Hosea. In fact, in the mythic stage of religion (from which Hosea's country men had not as yet for the most part emerged), it was the land which was imagined as in direct relation to the deity, the people being only so related in virtue of their dwelling in the land. They were in fact the children of the land (comp. Ezek. xiv. 15 'bereave it,' viz. the land) ; nationality, land, and religion were three inseparable ideas. Hence, though Hosea begins with the figure of disclothing, he glides insensibly into forms of expression appropriate to a land. 'Lest I make her as the wilderness, and set her as a dry land, and slay her with thirst.' - The latter expression could of course be used of a wanderer in the desert, but was also allowable of a desolate region (see Ezek. xix. 13, and comp. Koran xxx. 18). i. And upon her children...] No bar shall be opposed, Jehovah declares, to the natural consequence of a corrupt and corrupting re ligion. Israel, as an independent nation, must at least for a time cease to be. It appears then that the appeal in ver. 4 was uttered as a forlorn hope. All but a few of the Israelites were too far gone to desire to cooperate in a reformation. They were the 'children of 49 vy- 5—7-] HOSEA, II. For they be the children of whoredoms. For their mother hath played the harlot : 5 She that conceived them hath done shamefully : For she said, I will go after my lovers, That give me my bread and my water, My wool and my flax, mine oil and my drink. Therefore behold, I will hedge up thy way with thorns, 6 And make a wall, that she shall not find her paths. And she shall follow after her lovers, but she shall. not 7 overtake them; \\nd she shall seek them, but shall not find them: Then shall she say, I will go and return to my first husband ; whoredom', not merely as the children of idolaters, but as idolaters themselves. 5. I will go after my lovers...] Israel, then, had given up the true Jehovah for 'lovers' (i.e. not, as the Targum explains it, and as the phrase often means, especially in Ezekiel, the neighbouring peoples whose favour was courted by the Israelites, but, as w. io, 15 suggest, the Baalim). mine oil and my drink] Rather, drinks (as margin), i.e. wine and various fermented liquors made from fruits such as the date, the mul berry, the fig, and the dried raisin (see Tristram, Natural Hist, oj Bible, p. 412). Observe the influence of the primitive idea that the land (rather than the people) was in mystic relation to Jehovah ; see on w. 21, 22. 6. / will hedge up thy way with thorns] Notice how, in the excite ment of anger, the person changes from the second to the third. The figure is that of a traveller, who has not indeed lost his way, but finds it shut up by a thorn-hedge planted right across it, and by a wall, which formerly could be scaled through a breach, but is now solidly built up. Job iii. 23, xix. 8 and Lam. iii. 7, 9 are strikingly parallel. The reality signified is of course some dark calamity utterly paralyzing the vital powers. In the second line render a wall for her (lit., 'her wall'). 7. not overtake... not find them] Because the sense of the mystic nearness of the Baalim, formerly enjoyed by their worshippers, will have disappeared together with the prosperity which they were imagined to have granted; prayers and sacrifices will have lost their supposed efficacy. / will go and return] Rather, Let me go and return. A resolution which strikingly resembles that of the Jews in Upper Egypt in the time of Jeremiah, who persisted in worshipping the Queen of Heaven, on the ground that when they had worshipped her in former times 'they had plenty of food, and were well, and saw no evil' (Jer. xliv. 17). Israel's language here reminds us of a later parallel passage (vi. 1 — 3) ; HOSEA 4 50 HOSEA, II. [w. 8, 9. For then was it better with me than now. For she did not know that I gave her corn, and wine, and oil, And multiplied her silver and gold, Which they prepared for Baal. Therefore will I return, and take away my corn in the time thereof, And my wine in the season thereof, And will recover my wool and my flax given to cover her nakedness. it is not so much the expression of penitence, as of a longing to escape from the sense of misery. then was it better with me than now] For, after all, Israel was better off materially at the opening of her national existence. She had not indeed as yet appropriated the good things of Canaanitish civilization ; but her independence was secured, and she had a bright horizon of hope. 8 — 13. The offended Husband describes the compulsion which he will employ towards his faithless wife. 8. For she did not know that I...] Rather, and she (the recipient of such favours) hath not taken notice that it was I who gave her the corn, and the new wine, and the fresh oil. Corn, new wine, and fresh oil, are the three great material blessings of the land of Canaan (see Deut. vii. 13, xi. r4, xii. 17, &c). silver and gold] The fruits of commerce, then, are also the gifts of Jehovah (contrast the language of Isaiah in a different mood, Isa. ii. 7). The riches of N. Israel are testified to by the Black Obelisk of Shal- maneser II., where 'silver and gold, bowls of gold, cups of gold, bottles of gold, vessels of gold' are mentioned in the tribute paid by Yahua habal Khumri (Jehu, son of Omri) to the Assyrian king. which they prepared for Baal] Rather, which they have used in the service of the Baal, (i.e. the pretended Baal or 'lord' whom they worship). This may allude partly to the overlaying of images with silver and gold, as was the practice in Judah in the time of Isaiah (Isa. xxx. 22), but no doubt refers chiefly to the molten images in the form of a calf (i.e. a small bull), which the first Jeroboam placed on the bdmoth or high places at Bethel and at Dan, and doubtless else where. It is possible, however, to render 'and who multiplied silver for her, and gold, which (viz. which gold) they have used,' &c. In this case the reference will be exclusively to the golden bulls. This view is favoured by the Hebrew accentuation. 9. And now in order radically to cure the Israelites of this error (viz. that their good things have come from the Baals) the people are for a time to be deprived of these blessings. return and take away] Rather, take back again. my corn... my wine... my wool... my flax] For though Israel may Si vv. 10—12.] HOSEA, II. And now will I discover her lewdness in the sight of her 10 lovers, And none shall deliver her out of mine hand, I will also cause all her mirth to cease, „ Her feast days, her new moons, and her sabbaths, and all her solemn feasts. And I will destroy her vines and her fig trees, r2 speak, as in v. 7, of 'my bread and my water,' these things were really the property of Jehovah, who could withdraw them at any moment, even in the 'time' or season of the corn and the new wine, when the husbandman was counting implicitly on the harvest and the vintage. recover] Or, rescue, viz. from the misuse to which these gifts would be put by the idolaters. given to cover her nakedness] Thus reminding Israel that in her natural condition she was utterly helpless and destitute. Comp. Ezek. xvi. 8, which evidently alludes to this passage. 10. in the sight of her lovers] Note here that the prophet seems to admit the real existence of the Baalim. Seems, but only seems ; for in iv. 12 he describes the popular oracles as 'stocks,' and in xiv. 3 he describes it as folly to say 'to the work of our hands, Ye are our gods.' Hosea's language here is probably poetically free, just as in Ps. xcvi. 4 a psalmist declares that Jehovah is ' to be feared above all gods' ('elohim), though he adds in v. 5 that 'all the gods of the nations are but 'elilim 'nothings' or 'not-gods.' The later prophets are more emphatically monotheistic (see Introduction, part v., and comp. on i. 10). 11. her feast days, her new moons, and her sabbaths] (The Hebrew has the singular, ' her feast-day' &c.) These expressions are remarkable, for Hosea is a prophet of northern Israel. It would appear, then, that the separation of north and south did not involve a discontinuance of the festivals in the north (see ix. 5). Amos had already predicted the ruin of the 'feasts' in N. Israel (Amos viii. 10). In addition to the 'feasts' which are doubtless those mentioned in the earliest body of legislation (Ex. xxiii. 14, &c. , xxxiv. 18, &c), Hosea specifies the new moon and the sabbath (comp. 2 Kings iv. 23) as passing away together with the national independence. This was not strictly speaking the case with regard to the sabbath, which became one great bond of union among the Jews in exile. But the old, popular sabbath of unrestrained joy (comp. Hosea's 'all her mirth') did pass away; the sabbath of Is. lviii. 13 was very different from that which was popularly observed in ancient Israel. and all her solemn feasts] Or, festal assemblies. The term is more comprehensive than 'feast'; the Levitical legislation recognizes seven 'festal assemblies', but only three 'feasts' (comp. Lev. xxxiii.). 12. her vines and her fig-trees] The Hebrew has 'her vine and her fig-tree'. It would seem as if here, as in Joel i. 7, Israel personified 4—2 52 HOSEA, II. [v. 13. Whereof she hath said, These are my rewards that my lovers have given me : And I will make them a forest, And the beasts of the field shall eat them. 1 And I will visit upon her the days of Baalim, wherezV? she burnt incense to them, were represented with a vine and a fig-tree, like any individual Israelite (1 Kings iv. 25). But A. V. gives the right sense. my rewards] The 'hire' or 'reward' of a prostitute is me^nt (comp. ix. 1, and see on v. 5). a forest] A frequent feature in descriptions of desolation (comp. Isa. v. 6, vii. 23, xxxii. 13; Mic. iii. 12). 'A forest' however is misleading; the word (ya'ar) often means low, tangled brushwood (e.g. Cant. ii. 3; Isa. xxi. 13; 1 Sam. xiv. 25, 26). The idea in the prophet's mind is inaccessibility, not stateliness (like that of forest- trees). the beasts of the field] ' Field ' = open country. The enemies of Israel are compared to wild beasts in Isa. lvi. 9 ; Ezek. xxxiv. 25. 13. / will visit upon her the days of Baalim] To 'visit' is to examine or take notice of, whether in a favourable sense or the reverse. ' Baalim ' should rather be the Baalim (the various local Baals). Hosea has referred to the holydays of Jehovah (v. 11); now he com plains of the holydays of the Baalim, which, there is reason to think, are, in name at least, the same holydays as those of the more spiritual worshippers of Jehovah (new moons, sabbaths, and festal assemblies), but differing from these in the total absence of a spiritual element. They are in fact nothing better than sensual merry-makings and displays of finery such as the heathen loved at the turning-points of the agri cultural year. But what does Hosea mean by 'the Baalim'? Certainly not, as some have supposed, statues of a god distinct from Jehovah called Baal — a view which is opposed by v. 19, 'I will take away the names (not, the name) of the Baalim out of thy mouth'. The com parison of another Semitic religious vocabulary will here, as so often, facilitate our exegesis. With the Phoenicians the word Baal, 'lord', was an appellative term for a god, and was used as well for any local as for the national deity. It occurs in the phrase 'Melkart, Baal of Tyre' in the bilingual inscription on two candelabra known as Meli- tensis prima ; and if we only had Canaanitish and Israelitish inscriptions we should doubtless find that the Canaanitish and popular Israelitish usage was identical with that of the Phoenicians. What Hosea does mean by ' the Baalim ' is the varieties of the one national deity specially worshipped in different Israelitish localities, such as Baal-Hamon, Baal- Hazor, Baal-Shalisha, Baal-Tamar, &c. In spite of the name Baal (see on v. 16) it was Jehovah who was worshipped at the 'high places,' just as in Mohammedan Syria it is Allah who, in name at least, receives the adoration of the felldhin. But the worship was, from Hosea's point of view, a purely nominal one, just as the worship of Allah by '40 HOSEA, II. t And she decked herself with her earrings and her jewels.er And she went after her lovers, and forgat me, saith the Lord. Therefore behold, I will allure her, , the fell&htn is mixed up with many most un-Mohammedan elements. The Israelites of the north looked upon the Baalim as the givers of their bread and their water, their oil and their 'drinks'; in short, as in no essential respect different from the heathen Baalim of the Canaanites. This was, no doubt, a backsliding from the spiritual truths which seem to be involved in the revelation of Sinai. But it was a backsliding which can be accounted for ; it is not to be traced, as the older writers on the Old Testament naively traced it, to a peculiar wickedness in the primitive Israelites. A fusion of the religion brought by the Israelites from Sinai with the religion found by them in Canaan, was, humanly speaking, inevitable ; partly because from pre historic times the Hebrews, equally with the Canaanites had used the term Baal, 'lord', as an appellative for a deity, and partly because, like the Cuthaean colonists of the cities of Samaria, they thought it essential to learn 'the manner (rather, religion) of the god of the land' (2 Kings xvii. 26), since the national prosperity seemed to depend on the favour of the territorial deities. burned incense] The word will also cover the burning of sacrifices upon the altar, as Lev. i. 9, 17, &c. Comp. Ps. Ixvi. 15 'incense [or, the sweet smoke] of rams.' her earrings and her jewels] Rather, her nose-ring (as only one ring is mentioned, and there is no evidence that Hebrew ladies had a store of these articles), as Gen. xxiv. 47, and her necklace (as Prov. xxv. 12). Popular religious ideas required such ornaments for holy days. See Ex. iii. 21, 22 (comp. v. 18), and Kordn, Sura xx. 61 ' on the day of ornament ' (i.e. at the festival). 14 — 23. And now the notes of threatening are dying away ; bright and glorious days are announced for both sections of the nation. There shall be a second Exodus ; no more idolatry ; no more war ; no cloud upon Israel's relation to her God. (Notice in passing the limi tations of this stage of religious knowledge; the Messianic hope is as yet confined entirely to the people of Israel.) 14. Therefore] i.e. because, without Jehovah's help, Israel will never come to herself, and reform (comp. Isa. xxx. 18). Her punishment has an educational object ; the threat has a tinge of promise. I will allure her...] The pronoun is expressed in the Hebrew. / have not forgotten her, though she has forgotten me. 'Allure herO seems out of place in introducing the punishment ; generally the exile/ is described as an expulsion (comp. Jer. viii. 3). Either we must rejftU with Buhl, 'I will loose hex bonds' (m'faltekhdh, cf. Jer. xl. 4), or w\ must suppose a violation of natural order such as occurs now and then] in Hebrew, so that the 'alluring' may refer to the cordial address or Jehovah spoken of afterwards. Kimchi explains, ' I will put into her heart to return, while she is yet in exile '- How beautifully the promise J. HOSEA, II. [vv. is, 16. ~~ And bring her into the wilderness, And speak comfortably unto her. And I will give her her vineyards from thence, And the valley of Achor for a door of hope : And she shall sing there, as in the days of her youth, And as in the day when she came up out of the land of Egypt. And it shall be at that day, saith the Lord, that thou shalt call me Ishi ; And shalt call me no more Baali. anticipates the great prophecy of Israel's restoration, which opens, remarkably enough, with the very phrase used by Hosea, 'Speak ye to the heart of Jerusalem' (Is. xl. 2). [According to another expla nation of the passage which goes back to St Jerome, the wilderness is not only a place of affliction, but one of hope. The latter sense seems to be opposed by a passage in Ezekiel (xx. 33 — 38) which is evidently^ a reminiscence of our passage, and which refers to the wilderness exclusively as a place of punishment. Keil, on the other hand, thinks that Israel is to be led into the wilderness, not for punishment, but for deliverance from bondage. This certainly explains the 'I will allure her,' but is not consistent with the next verse, in which allusion is made to the punishment undergone in the wilderness. Comp. on xiii. 10.] into the wilderness] By 'wilderness' Hosea means not merely the desert which lay between Canaan and the land of captivity, but thft captivity or exile itself. Sojourn in a heathen land appeared to pious' Israelites like a wandering in the desert (comp. Isa. xii. 17). speak comfortably unto her] Lit., 'speak unto her heart'. x 15. / will give her her vineyards from thence] So soon as she has left the wilderness ('from thence'), Jehovah will restore to her the vine yards which he had taken away (v. 12). the valley of Achor for a door of hope] Whereas the first Israelites had to call their first encampment after crossing the Jordan the vallev of Achor or 'Troubling' (Josh. vii. 26), their descendants shall find the same spot a starting point for a career of success. Another prophet' praises the same valley for its fertility (Is. lxv. 10). she shall sing there] Or, 'thereupon'. Alluding to the songs of Moses and Miriam in Ex. xv. 1 (see v. 21, where, as St Jerome with Jewish writers points out, the same verb is used of Miriam's 'answer-^ ing' the song of Moses). But antiphonal singing is not suitable here, and much less in w. 23 — 25 (where A. V. arbitrarily alters the render-' ing of the verb). Render, she shall respond there. Theod. iironpi- 8^£ /xiv ayvos oiipavos rpojoat xW>va) ; but we need not have recourse for illustrations to classical literature. The prophets and psalmists have no scruple in adopting and spiritual izing popular (i.e. heathenish) Semitic modes of thought. One of the most prevalent of these modes of thought is referred to by Hosea both in this chapter and in i. 1. The heathen Semitic deities were the pro ductive powers of nature, and were grouped in couples of male and female principles, known in the middle zone of Semitic countries as Baal and Baalath (=Baaltis), Baal and Asherah (see note in Introd., part II.), and Ashtar (or Ashtor) and Ashtoreth (or Astarte). It was vv. 22, 23.] HOSEA, II. 57 And they shall hear the earth ; And the earth shall hear the corn, and the wine, and the 22 oil; And they shall hear Jezreel. And I will sow her unto me in the earth ; 23 And I will have mercy upon her that had not obtained mercy; believed that the fruitful earth was the issue of this union; or, by a variation of the same myth, that the earth itself was the female principle. Hence the idea that the land (see i. 2. and comp. the expressions in w. 5, 9), and, by a later inference, the people of Israel, were the offspring or the spouse of their God was a truism to the hearers of the prophet ; but that divine sonship was not physical but moral (see below, on xi. 1), and that the nation's Bridegroom could even divorce his spouse — these were strange and offensive ideas. The latter indeed was so inconceivable that Hosea was directed to explain it by allegorizing a distressing episode in his own histoiy. We must not omit to notice in conclusion that the adaptation of mythic and therefore strictly speaking heathenish forms of speech is not confined to the records of revealed religion. The Arabic vocabulary of Mohammedan times contains a group of parallel expressions which may pertinently be referred to here. Thus, for instance ball and 'aththari or 'athari are used of land which is watered from heaven (i.e., by rain and not by springs), and these, being derivatives of the Arabic forms of the divine names Baal and Ashtar, imply the very same myth which has been mentioned above. So too both in Talmudic Hebrew and in Arabic 'field, or land of Baal' means land which has no need of irriga tion, and ba'l in Arabic, according to Lane, any seed-produce only watered by the rain. (See Prof. Robertson Smith, The Prophets of Israel, pp. 172, 409, Cheyne, The Prophecies of Isaiah, Vol. II. p. 295 = 282 ed. 2). These significant phrases throw a fresh light, not only (as Prof. Smith has shown) on Hosea, but also on the language of Isa. xiv. 8, 'Shower, ye heavens from above. ..let the earth open, and let them (viz. heaven and earth) bear the fruit of salvation'. Jezreel] In i. 4 Jezreel was only mentioned for its historical associa tions, without any reference to the meaning of its name. Here however it evidently has a symbolic value, viz. 'God sows (it)'. 23. And I will sow her unto me in the earth] Rather, in the land. Jehovah declares that Jezreel shall verify her name (her name, for Jezreel means restored Israel) by being sown anew in the promised land. (Similarly Jeremiah, see xxxi. 27, 28). Thus one of the symbolic names of chap. i. is not indeed changed, but transformed by interpreta tion. The other names are absolutely reversed. 'Unto me', because while they were outside 'Jehovah's land', the relations of Jehovah to Israel seemed interrupted. I will have mercy upon ] Rather, I will compassionate Uncom- passionated [Lo-ruhamah], and to Not-my-people [Lo-ammi] I will 58 HOSEA, III. [vv. i, 2. And I will say to them which were not my people^ Thou art my people; And they shall say, Thou art my God. 3 Then said the Lord unto me, Go yet, love a woman beloved of her friend, yet an adulteress, according to the love of the Lord toward the children of Israel, who look to 2 other gods, and love flagons of wine. So I bought her to say, Thou art My-people [Ammi] ; and he (viz. Not-my-people) shall say, My God ! St Paul's quotation in Rom. ix. 25 (in a form which differs both from the Hebrew and from the Septuagint) has been already referred to in illustration of a critical hypothesis (see on i. 10, 11). A post-exile prophecy also contains an unmistakable allusion to this pas sage (Zech. xiii. 9, end). Applications like these shew how great was the posthumous influence of the prophets. Ch. III. The second part of the parable of Hosea's family- life. 1. Go yet, love] Rather, Once more go love, indicating that the narrative dropped at i. 9 is now resumed. (Notice also in this connexion the change of the third person into the first in chap, iii.) It is the same woman who is meant ; otherwise a different form of expression would have been used (like that in i. 2), besides which the allegory would have been spoiled had there been two women concerned. Gomer is throughout the symbol of faithless but not forsaken Israel. The narrative is told in a condensed allusive style, which makes some demand on the imagination of the reader. If Gomer is to be taken back, it is clear that she must have left her husband, and the price at which (v. 2) she has to be brought back shews that she had fallen into depths of misery. beloved of her friend, yet an adulteress] Rather, beloved of a para mour, and an adulteress. As if Jehovah had said, Love her just as she is; the definition is added for the reader's sake, to show how great an act was demanded of Hosea, like ' Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest' (Gen. xxii. 2). For the rendering 'paramour', comp. Jer. iii. 20; Lam. i. 2. who look...] Rather, whereas they (on their side) turn. flagons of wine] Rather, cakes of grapes. Cakes of dried grapes were common articles of food, mentioned with cakes of figs, bread, and wine, and parched corn (1 Sam. xxv. 18). The cakes here mentioned, however, must have been of a superior kind ; they bear a different name, and appear from Isa. xvi. 7 (corrected translation) to have been considered as luxuries. They formed part of David's royal bounty on the removal of the ark to Jerusalem (2 Sam. vi. 19), or more correctly of the sacrificial feast implied by the context. This latter point is interesting as it suggests that Baal-worship was closely related to the festivities of the vintage (Prof. Robertson Smith, The Old Testament in the Jewish Church, p. 434). Hosea too seems to refer to these cakes in connexion with the sacrificial feasts, not without a touch of sarcasm. vv. 3, 4.] HOSEA, III. 59 me for fifteen pieces of silver, and for a homer of barley, and a half homer of barley : and I said unto her, Thou shalt 3 abide for me many days ; thou shalt not play the harlot, and thou shalt not be for another man : so will I also be for thee. For the children of Israel shall abide many days 4 / bought her to me] Why Hosea had to buy his wife back from her paramour, does not appear; had he lost his rights over her by her flight and adultery ? Perhaps it was simply to avoid an altercation with the adulterer, or we may imagine such a scene as is depicted by Dean Plumptre in his poem ' Gomer' (Lazarus, p. 87). The view of Pococke and Pusey that Hosea means to explain how he undertook to allow his wife just sufficient for a decent maintenance till she should be reinstated in her full position, accounts no doubt for grain being given as well as money, but does violence to the letter of the text, as there is no suffi cient proof of the rendering 'I provided her with food'. for fifteen pieces of silver, and for a homer of barley, and a half- homer of barley] In 2 Kings vii. 18 two seahs of barley are rated at a shekel. This however was immediately after the siege of Samaria had been raised ; the normal rate would probably have been lower, say three seahs at a shekel, so that a homer (= 30 seahs) would have cost ten shekels and a homer and a half fifteen. The total price paid by Hosea would therefore be thirty shekels (about £¦$. i$s.) the average value of a slave (see Ex. xxi. 32). Why it was paid partly in money, partly in kind, cannot be determined. Hosea only tells us enough to make the allegory intelligible. Gomer in her misery is a type of Israel in her unhappy alienation from her God. a half-homer] Strictly, a lethech. The Sept. has 'a bottle of wine' (* And there shall be, like people, like priest : And I will punish them for their ways, And reward them their doings. > For they shall eat, and not have enough : They shall commit whoredom, and shall not increase : Because they have left off to take heed to the Lord. i Whoredom and wine and new wine take away the heart. 8. They eat up the sin of my people] The subject of the verb is evidently the priests (see v. 9), and the phrase can therefore only mean, they eat the sin-offering of my people (i.e. the portion assigned to the priests, comp. Lev. x. 17). Here we come into collision with a theory of the radical school of criticism that the Levitical legislation (including the appointment of ' sin-offerings ' and 'guilt-offerings ') originated after the Babylonian captivity. There are however two earlier references to the sin-offering, viz. here and in Ps. xl. 6, and one to the guilt-offering in Prov. xiv. 9, not to insist on the disputable allusions in Isa. i. 1 1 ; . Mic. vi. 7 ; 2 Kings xii. 16 (17). And if the dates of one or another of these passages be challenged, yet the supposed novelties are not referred to at all frequently in undoubtedly post-Captivity writings. Sinrofferings are mentioned twice (Neh. x. 34 ; 2 Mace. xii. 43) ; guilt- offerings only once (if we accept a very probable emendation of Ezra x. 19, pointing ashamim). Next, granting a reference to the sin-offering, does the prophet mean to condemn the priests for eating of it ? Certainly not ; whatever were the traditional rules respecting the sin-offering, the priests would naturally have a just claim to their portion of the victim. The next clause explains the charge brought against them — it is that (like the sons of Eh, 1 Sam. ii. 13 — 17) they greedily devoured what the people brought to atone for their sins ; so that in eating the ' sin-offering ', they also fed upon the ' sin ' (the same word, khattath, covers both) of Jehovah's people. Instead of trying to stem the tide of iniquity, they long for its onward march, with a view to unholy gains. set their heart] Literally, 'lift up their soul' (or, 'each one his soul'), i.e. 'direct their desires', as Ps, xxiv. 4, xxv. 1. 9. like people, like priest] i.e. the priest shall fare no better than the people. His official 'nearness' to Jehovah shall be no safeguard to him. I will punish them...] Rather, punish him, viz. the priest representing the order. 10. they shall eat...] Greed is punished retributively by insufficiency of food (Mic. vi. 14 ; Lev. xxvi. 20) ; whoredom by childlessness. 11 — 14. Thus the priests have led the way, and the people follow. They have lost the spiritual faculty ; a wild impulse to the most sensual idolatry has carried them away. 11. Whoredom, &c] 'The heart', not 'their heart' (as the Targum vv. 12, 13.] HOSEA, IV. 67 My people ask counsel at their stocks, 1 And their staff declareth unto them : For the spirit of whoredoms hath caused them to err, And they have gone a whoring from under their God. They sacrifice upon the tops of the mountains, 1 And burn incense upon the hills, and Peshito). It is a moral adage, showing that Hosea was not more inclined than Isaiah to abandon simple moral teaching to the class of ' wise men ', who ' sat in the gate ' and conveyed practical lessons in the form of proverbs. It is literal whoredom that is meant, as, even apart from w. 13, 14, the juxtaposition with 'wine and new wine' shows. The impure rites of nature-worship had destroyed the reverence for the marriage-bond. Heart here means ' the spiritual understanding ', ' a heart to know Me' (Jer. xxiv. 7); 'sons of Belial' cannot 'know Je hovah' (2 Sam. ii. 12). For the drunkenness of Samaria comp. Is. xxviii. 1. 12. My people ask counsel at their stocks] Lit., 'My people — he asketh counsel at his wood.' Jehovah alone can give oracular 'counsel' ; not the teraphim, nor yet the bull-images of Jehovah. The latter did, indeed, seem to the Israelites to bring Jehovah near to their conscious ness, but it was not the true Jehovah, who could not be represented by images (viii. 6) and hated the rites of the Israelitish worship (ix. 15) ; Hosea therefore calls them 'wood'; comp. Hab. ii. 19; Jer. ii. 27, x. 8. There is a touch of melancholy in ' my people ' ; comp. Isa. iii. 12. their staff declareth unto them] ' Declareth ', with reference to secret things, as Isa. xliii. 9, xliv. 7. The ' staff' is probably the diviner's wand ; so in Ezek. xxi. 2 1 the king of Babylon combines consultation of the teraphim with divination by arrows, which is merely another form of rhabdomanteia (Sept. substitutes 'wands', pafiSov, for 'arrows'). Wands were one of the recognized instruments of soothsaying, in both East and West ; see Pococke, Specimen Historiae Arabum, p. 327 ; Azraki, The Chronicles of the city of Mecca, Arabic and German by Wiistenfeld, I. 73 ; Herodotus iv. 67 ; Tacitus, Germ. 10. Pococke however thinks 'staff' is synonymous with 'stocks', and that a staff is meant which had an idol carved at the top. the spirit of whoredoms] i.e. an impulse prompting them to whoredom (in the literal sense, to avoid tautology) ; comp. 'spirit of perverseness ' (Isa. xix, 14), 'spirit of uncleanness ' (Zech. xiii. 2), ' spirit of Jealousy ' (Num. v. 14). 13. upon the tops of the mountains] ' Every high hill and every green tree ' are repeatedly mentioned together as the scenes of the popular nature-worship (e.g. 1 Kings xiv. 23 ; 1 Kings xvii. 10 ; Jer. ii. 20, iii. 6) ; and, to avoid misunderstanding, it would have been better to supply an 'and' before 'under oaks', &c. The sacred hill-tops were specially selected for being treeless—' bare places ' they are called in Jer. iii. 2. 'Elms' should rather be terebinths (Tristram, Natural Hist, of Bible, p. 350). 68 HOSEA IV. [vv. 14, 15. Under oaks and poplars and elms, Because the shadow thereof is good : Therefore your daughters shall commit whoredom, And your spouses shall commit adultery. 1 I will not punish your daughters when they commit whoredom, Nor your spouses when they commit adultery : For themselves are separated with whores, And they sacrifice with harlots : Therefore the people that doth not understand shall fall. i Though thou, Israel, play the harlot, Yet let not Judah offend ; And come not ye unto Gilgal, 13. therefore your daughters shall commit whoredom] (Rather, do com mit.) Harlotry and idolatry being so inextricably connected, it was only natural that the women should be given up to licentiousness ; the more religious they were, the stronger would the evil habit be. For 'spouses', read daughters-in-law. The allusion is to the lascivious worship of Asherah and Ashtoreth (the goddesses were distinct) ; see next verse. Asherah or ' the propitious ' was at first probably a title of the feminine variety of the Assyrian deity Ishtar. See Introduction. 14. The precedence in guilt belongs to the elders who set so wicked an example. themselves are separated with] Rather, they themselves go aside with. A change of person, instead of 'ye yourselves.' harlots] Rather, consecrated harlots, i.e. women who dedicate themselves, or are dedicated by others, to the service of Asherah or of Ashtoreth, and give up their chastity in honour of the goddess. Mesha, king of Moab, says that, when he took Nebo from the Israelites, he slew the men, but spared the women in order to devote them to Ashtar-Chemosh (Moabite inscription, lines 16, 17). sacrifice] Probably the reference is partly to the feast which followed the sacrifice (Ex. xxxii. 6). shall fall] Rather, shall be dashed to the ground. IB — 19. Judah is cautioned not to fall into the same ruin as Israel, of which a deterrent picture is given. 15. offend] Rather, become guilty, viz. by participation in Israel's idolatry. come not ye unto Gilgal] Gilgal was one of the chief seats of the idolatrous worship of the north, see ix. 15, xii. n; Am. iv. 4, v. 5. But which of the Gilgals (see Smith's Bibl. Diet.) is meant? The Jewish commentators are agreed that it was the famous Gilgal ' in the east border of Jericho' where Joshua pitched his camp for the first time after crossing the Jordan (Josh. iv. 19), and later on 'the true centre of the whole people' (Ewald, History of Israel, in. 29). Pro bably they are right. No doubt, we should have expected this Gilgal vv. 16, 17.] HOSEA, IV. Neither go ye up to Beth-aven, Nor swear, The Lord liveth. For Israel slideth back as a backsliding heifer : 1 Now the Lord will feed them as a lamb in a large place. Ephraim is joined to idols : 1 Let him alone. to have belonged to Judah, but the natural boundary of the two kingdoms was not the historical one; 'those places which their past history had rendered most sacred or memorable — Bethel, Gilgal, Jericho — were incorporated in the northern kingdom ' (Ewald, Hist. iv. 3). neither go ye up to Beth-aven] A Beth-aven near Bethel is mentioned Josh. vii. 2; 1 Sam. xiii. 5, but this Beth-aven, 'house of vanity', 01 'of wickedness', is a keenly sarcastic substitute for the desecrated name Bethel, 'house of God' (see x. 5, 8, and comp. Am. iv. 4, v. 5; 1 Kings xii. 29 — 33). 'Go ye up', because Bethel was situated on the slopes of a hill, comp. 1 Sam. x. 3, 'going up to the Elohim (i.e. the sacred place) to Bethel.' nor swear, The Lord liveth] Hosea may mean to say that the oath 'As Jehovah liveth' has been so profaned by the Israelites of the north that he wishes to see it abolished. It is more likely however (considering Deut. x. 20; Jer. iv. 2) that he deprecates oaths by the Jehovahs of Gilgal and Bethel — oaths which in the mind of the swearer are connected with idolatrous symbols of Jehovah, precisely as Amos denounces those who say, ' As thy God, O Dan, liveth', and 'As thy God, O Beer-sheba, liveth' (Am. viii. 14, corrected partly from the Sept.). 16. slideth back as a backsliding heifer] Rather, is stubborn like a stubborn heifer. A favourite figure of the prophets, xi. 4; Jer. xxxi. 18; comp. Deut. xxxii. 15. now the Lord will feed them as a lamb in a large place] Israel in the weakness of captivity is compared to a lamb in a large pasture- ground, which is an object of attack to all the wild beasts prowling about — so most commentators explain. But 'a large place' is every where else an image for prosperity (see Ps. xviii. 19, xxxi. 8, cxviii. 5), and Isaiah in describing a happy future says, 'in that day shall thy cattle feed in large pastures (Isa. xxx. 23).' It is much safer, therefore, follow ing Ewald and Hitzig, to take the passage as an incredulous exclamation or question, this being so, should the Lord feed them as a lamb in a large meadow ! In fact, a prophet would hardly have said that Je hovah shepherded His people during the Dispersion (see Ezek. xxxiv. rl — 14)( and in the very next verse Jehovah exclaims, 'Let him alone.' On the other hand, the clause, thus translated, fits most naturally into the context,— 'Israel is a stubborn heifer, how then should it expect to be treated as kindly as a lamb?' 17. joined to idols] The cognate noun is used m Mai. 11. 14 of a wife in her relation to her husband, and in Isa. xliv. n of an idol- worshipper in his mystic relation to his god (comp. 1 Cor. x. 20). 70 HOSEA, IV. [vv. 18, 19. ; Their drink is sour; they have committed whoredom continually : Her rulers with shame do love, Give ye. > The wind hath bound her up in her wings, And they shall be ashamed because of their sacrifices. 18. Their drink is sour...] This translation is cannot be sustained philologically. If the text is correct, the only version at once intelligible and philologically sound is, ' Their drunkenness has passed by.' For the rendering of the verb comp. 1 Sam. xv. 32 Hebr., and for 'drunk enness', lit. drink, comp. 1 Sam. i. 14, xxv. 37 (where 'wine' must be synonymous with 'the fumes of wine'). Connecting this clause with the following, we may render (as Henderson, following the Jewish commentator Abarbanel), When their carousal is over they indulge in lewdness, i.e. when tired of one sin they plunge without scruple into another. The Sept. rendering rtpirure Kavavalovs is very difficult to justify. The Peshito omits the words. St Jerome explains the whole clause, Factum est, inquit Deus, convivium eorum a me alienum. her rulers with shame do love, Give ye] Rather, her shields are enamoured of infamy (Henderson). This involves a slight change in the points, necessary in order to make sense of the word rendered 'infamy.' Probably, however, as Abp. Seeker was the first to infer from Sept. and Pesh., there is an erroneous repetition of three letters (comp. a similar case in Ps. lxxxviii. 17), so that we may render simply, 'her shields love infamy' ('shields' for 'rulers', as Ps. xlvii. 10). The Septuagint, indeed, suggests a various reading which possibly deserves the preference ; it renders, i^yajrTjo'av dri^jdav 4k $pva.yfia.Tos avrijs. Here, as in Am. viii. 7, the Greek translator seems to have misunderstood the expression, 'the excellency of Jacob' (i.e. Jehovah). The Hebrew which he had before them may be thus put into English, they love infamy rather than her Excellency (or, her Pride, i. e. Jehovah, Israel's God), fyvaytw. is in fact the rendering of Heb. gaon in Zech. xi. 3 and three other passages. 19. The wind hath bound her up in her wings] A figure for the suddenness and violence with which the enemy should carry Israel away into exile (comp. Isa. lvii. 13). The perfect is that of prophetic certitude. Chap. V. Interlacing descriptions of guilt and punishment. 1 — 7. A personal arraignment of the priesthood (accused less directly in chap, iv.) and of the court, who, instead of warning the people, have led them into the snare of sin. So entangled are they in it that they cannot repent, and Judah too has fallen. They may seek to propitiate Jehovah by sacrifices, but in vain : the judgment is close at hand. -3-] HOSEA, V. 7i Hear ye this, O priests ; And hearken, ye house of Israel ; And give ye ear, O house of the king ; For judgment is toward you, Because ye have been a snare on Mizpah, And a net spread upon Tabor. And the revolters are profound to make slaughter, Though I have been a rebuker of them all. I know Ephraim, and Israel is not hid from me : 1. O priests] Hosea addresses the priests of the high places in N. Israel. O house of the king] i.e. the king and his courtiers, whether of the royal family or not. judgment is toward you] Rather, the judgment is for you. a snare on Mizpah, and a net spread upon Tabor] Tabor is the well- known mountain of the name in Galilee (see Judg. iv. 6), and may be taken as the representative of the region on the west of the Jordan (as Ps. lxxxix. 12); Mizpah (a common name = place of watch) is most probably Mizpah in Gilead (Judg. x. 17, xi. n, 29), also called Ramoth-Gilead (Josh. xx. 8, xxi. 36; 2 Kings ix. 1, 4, 14), and conse crated by Jacob (Gen. xxxi. 45 — 54). Probably these places (comp. next note) are mentioned because the idolatrous worship was most dangerously seductive there. The worshippers were like the deluded birds who sought shelter in the woods and ravines (comp. 2 Sam. xxvi. 20 ; Ps. xi. r). 2. And the revolters are profound to make slaughter] The expres sions used have a most un- Hebraic cast, and what can the 'slaughter' refer to? There is nothing at all in the context to suggest that the slaying of sacrifices is meant (as many after St Jerome have supposed), and it is very harsh to understand it as a fresh image for the priests' abuse of their position. It is better to render (changing a Teth into a Tav), The apostates are gone deep in corrupting (comp. ix. 9). The ancient versions already found the passage obscure. The Septua gint (and similarly the Peshito) renders 8 (sc. rd SIktvov) ol aypeiovres tt)v ffripav Karitrrfeav . Possibly they had had a somewhat different text. Certainty is unattainable, and another plausible and easy emendation deserves at least a mention, from its suitableness to the context, And the pit of Shittim they have made deep. Having been a station of the camp under Moses and Joshua (Num. xxv. 1; Josh. iii. 1, v. 1), it is probable, though unproved, that Shittim contained one of the popular shrines or holy places. though I have been a rebuker of them all] Lit., 'and I am chastise ment for them all'; comp. Ps. cix. 4 A.V., 'I give myself unto prayer' (lit., 'I am prayer'). This however is very harsh, and it is simpler to transpose two letters and render, and there is no correction for any of them. 72 HOSEA, V. [vv. 4, 5. For now, O Ephraim, thou committest whoredom, and Israel is defiled. They will not frame their doings to turn unto their God: For the spirit of whoredoms is in the midst of them, And they have not known the Lord. ; And the pride of Israel doth testify to his face : Therefore shall Israel and Ephraim fall in their iniquity ; Judah also shall fall with them. 3. / know Israel] The pronoun is expressed for emphasis, I who punish Israel am well acquainted with its open and secret sins. 4. They will not frame...] Rather, as in the margin, Their doings will not suffer them to turn unto their God. The same idea that from the meshes of an inveterate vicious habit there is hardly an escape is expressed in vii. 1, comp. John viii. 34; Rom. vi. 16. the spirit of whoredoms] See on iv. 12. is in the midst of them] Rather, is within them, i. e. in their inmost being. have not known] Rather, know not (see on ii. 20). 5. And the pride of Israel doth testify to his face] Rather, But... shall testify to his face. 'The pride of Israel' is capable of two in terpretations. It may mean Israel's vainglorious self-confidence, which is so hateful to Jehovah, and as it were testifies against Israel on the day of Jehovah's assize (Isa. ii. 12). But it is more natural to take the phrase as a title of Jehovah (see on iv. 18 'her rulers', &c), borrowed probably from Am. viii. 7. How does Jehovah 'testify against' anyone? The answer is furnished by Ruthi. 21, 'Jehovah hath testified against me, and Shaddai hath afflicted me.' An ob jection of small weight has been raised, viz. that Jehovah, in the pro phetic figure, is the complainant and the judge, but not the witness. The answer is that the Hebrew 'andh is not exactly 'to witness' but 'to meet with words or a declaration'; hence it can be used of a judicial sentence. Hosea means that Jehovah has spoken one of those words which kill (comp. vi. 5) — has delivered a judgment by which Israel shall 'fall.' The rendering 'Israel's pride shall be humbled' adopted in the ' Speaker's Commentary' from the Sept., the Targum, and the Peshito, scarcely suits the following words ' to (lit. in) his face.' Still less suitable is it in vii. 10, where the phrase is re peated. Israel and Ephraim] i.e., Israel and especially Ephraim; like 'Judah and Jerusalem' (Isa. ii. 1). shall fall] Rather, shall stumble. A figure for calamity (as Isa. viii. 15, xxxi. 3, and often). In iv. 15 the prophet uses less distinct language with regard to Judah's punishment; she is warned not to offend rather than threatened with punishment. Perhaps this chapter represents the utterances of a later period than the preceding chapter. vv;6-8.] HOSEA, V. 73 They shall go with their flocks and with their herds to & seek the Lord ; But they shall not find him; he hath withdrawn himself from them. They have dealt treacherously against the Lord : 7 For they have begotten strange children : Now shall a month devour them with their portions. Blow ye the cornet in Gibeah, 8 And the trumpet in Ramah : 6. with their flocks and with their herds] i. e., with their sacrificial offerings. This passage affords decisive proof (if indeed the converging evidence from other quarters can be held incomplete) that the Israelites of the north simply and in good faith professed to be worshippers of Jehovah. It will be too late, says the prophet, to use the ordinary means of appeasing Jehovah's wrath, which have only a value as the outward signs of penitence and faith (see on vi. 6). Micah uses similar expressions respecting prayers which are offered too late (Mic. iii. 4). 7. Why Jehovah has withdrawn himself, dealt treacherously] i.e. faithlessly. The word is used of an adulteress, Jer. iii. 20. they have begotten strange children] The subject of the verb are the Israelites individually, of whom the same statement is made which we have already met with respecting the nation in ii. 4, 5. now shall a month devour them] The time for punishment has arrived. Instead of watching gladly for the new moon to fix the various hallowed festivals (comp. ii. n), they should have a 'fearful looking for of judgment' increasing as each new moon arose. If not this, then perhaps the next would bring with it a slaughtering, plun dering horde of invaders. ' Month ' should rather be new moon (as nothing is added to qualify the sense). with their portions] i.e. the lands assigned to the several tribes and families (comp. 'the portion of Jezreel,' 2 Kings ix. 10). 8 — 15. The prophet 'in the spirit' sees the threatened trouble bursting upon both the separated kingdoms. In vain will Ephraim seek help from Assyria ; there is no deliverance from Jehovah's hand until Ephraim repents. 8. Blow ye the cornet... the trumpet] A usual direction on the ap proach of an invading army; see viii. 1; Jer. iv. 5, vi. 1. Previously to the captivity the cornet and the trumpet were probably different names for the same instrument, as the Law (Num. x. 1 — 10, xxxi. 6) prescribes the use of the silver trumpet (khafocerah) in cases when, ac cording to the prophetic and historical books, the comet or shofar was used. In writings of post-Captivity origin (Ps. xcviii. 6; 1 Chr. xv. 28; 2 Chr. xv. 14) they appear to represent different instruments, or rather slightly different varieties of the same instrument. The Mishna tells us that the shofar was sometimes straight, sometimes curved, and this difference would of course involve a difference of note. We may help 74 HOSEA, V. [w. 9, 10. Cry aloud at Beth-aven, After thee, O Benjamin. i Ephraim shall be desolate in the day of rebuke : Among the tribes of Israel have I made known that which shall surely be. > The princes of Judah were like them that remove the bound : ourselves to form an idea of the Hebrew trumpets by representations of the Egyptian (see Wilkinson, Manners and Customs, II. 260, &c. ). Gibeah... Ramah] Both towns were situated on eminences, and there fore well adapted for signals of alarm ; both apparently belonged to Judah. Gibeah (lit. 'a hill') is ' Gibeah of Benjamin ' (1 Sam. xiii. 2, xiv. 16), or 'Gibeah of Saul' (1 Sam. xi. 4); the Ramah (lit. 'height') is the same where Samuel dwelt (1 Sam. xv. 34). Both probably belonged at this time to Judah (see 1 Kings xv. 2 1 ; Isa. x. 29). Taking in Bethel, the cities are those from which the signal of alarm could be heard in both kingdoms. after thee, O Benjamin] Rather, behind thee, 0 Benjamin ; this is the cry of warning which the men of Beth-aven or Bethel (a border- town between Benjamin and Ephraim) are to send on to the Benja- mites. Understand either 'the sword rages', or more simply 'be on thy guard.' Sept. however renders (from a different text?), ii When I returned the captivity of my people. When I would have healed Israel, ', Then the iniquity of Ephraim was discovered, and the wickedness of Samaria : For they commit falsehood ; and the thief cometh in, And the troop of robbers spoileth without. And they consider not in their hearts : That I remember all their wickedness : was therefore destroyed by Abimelech (Judg. ix. 25, 45). It lay on the road, which was doubtless much frequented, from Samaria and the north to Bethel, now the chief sanctuary of the so-called Ten Tribes. Gilead and Shechem together represent the eastern and western divisions of the kingdom. 10, 11. Jehovah is still the speaker. From his heavenly ' place ' he points indignantly (as v. 7) to the abominations practised ' there ', i.e. in the whole land of Israel, for even Judah has not escaped the infection. The structure of the verses becomes more symmetrical, if we attach the concluding words of v. 10 to v. 11, and turn v. 11 thus, altering one vowel-point, Israel is defiled; for thee also, Judah, a harvest is appointed. The Septuagint partly favours this, rendering i/udvfftj 'laparjk Kal TouSa. The concluding words of ». 11 should rather be attached to v. 1 of chap. vii. Chap. VII. 1 — 7. The moral degradation of Israel, especially of its ruling class, which, so far from stemming the tide of corruption, applauds and encourages its progress. 1. How foolish is the conduct of Israel ! When the great turning- point in her fortunes arrives, the day of mingled punishment and mercy, all bis wickedness will be remembered and brought to light. To improve the sense and restore balance to the opening of the verse, it is expedient to read thus, with Ewald, When I turn the fortunes of my people, when I heal Israel, then will be manifest Ephraim 's guilt and Sama ria's wickedness, how they practise falsehood, and the thief cometh in, and bandits roam abroad without. Comp. iv. 2. Samaria is ' mentioned, as the abode of the princes next spoken of. 2. they consider not in their hearts] Rather, as margin, they say not to their heart. 'Heart' here = self; the meaning is therefore they have no pricks of conscience. HOSEA 6 82 HOSEA, VII. [vv. 3—6. Now their own doings have beset them about ; They are before my face. i They make the king glad with their wickedness, And the princes with their lies. They are all adulterers, as an oven heated by the baker, Who ceaseth from raising after he hath kneaded the dough, until it be leavened. i In the day of our king the princes have made him sick with bottles of wine ; He stretched out his hand with scorners. ¦ For they have made ready their heart like an oven, whiles they lie in wait : now their own doings have beset them about] They are so entangled in sin (to use a more familiar figure) that they cannot even try to repent. they are before my face] Comp. Ps. xc. 8. 3 — 6. The highest personages are not too refined for the most sen sual pleasures. A consuming passion inflames them as if with the heat of a furnace. Their way of celebrating a royal commemoration is to indulge in monstrous excess. 4. as an oven...] The fire corresponds to sensual lust, the oven is the heart. The baker ceaseth from kindling (so we should render), when the oven has reached a certain heat, and then he leaves the fire to smoulder, till the fermentation of the dough is complete, and a fresh heating is necessary. So after passion has once been gratified, it smoulders for a time, but is afterwards kindled to a greater heat than before, when some attractive object comes within its range. 5. Here the figurative description is interrupted by one from real life. In the day of our king] Either the coronation- day (so the Targum), or (comp. Matt. xiv. 6) the royal birthday is meant. The prophet quotes the words of the princes. He was himself too loyal to the house of David to adopt the phrase seriously. have made him sick with bottles of wine] Rather, are become sick with the fever of wine. The Auth. Version probably means to imply that the princes meant to assassinate the king when he was drunk; but there is no evidence of this (see on v. 7). he stretched out his hand with scorners] i.e. he (the king) entered into close relations with proud, lawless men (comp. Prov. xxi. 24). So Isaiah too calls the politicians of Judah 'men of scorn' (Isa. xxviii. 14). Hosea may perhaps refer to some lawless project decided upon in the intoxication of the revel. 6. For they have made ready their heart like an oven, whiles they lie in wait] Better, with Ewald, 'Yea, almost like the oven have they made their heart in their intrigue', if there were only sufficient justifica tion for the rendering. This view of the verse makes it a climax to ver. vv. 7—9.] HOSEA, VII. 83 Their baker sleepeth all the night ; In the morning it burneth as a flaming fire. They are all hot as an oven, 1 7 And have devoured their judges ; All their kings are fallen : There is none among them that calleth unto me. Ephraim, he hath mixed himself among the people ; 8 Ephraim is a cake not turned. Strangers have devoured his strength, and he knoweth 9 it not : 5. Better still, by self-evident corrections of the text, For their inward part is like an oven, their heart burneth in them (the reason for the strong expression 'scorners'). their baker] Better, to follow the vocalizing of Targum and Peshito, and render, their anger, viz. against the destined victims of their in trigue. sleepeth all the night] Rather, still retaining the consonants of the text, smoketh all the night (for the phrase, comp Deut. xxix. 20). The night is mentioned as the time when evil devices are matured. 7. The consequence of all this licence. King after king falls a victim to the violent passions he has fostered in his subjects. Four regicides are recorded within forty years (2 Kings xv.). And yet no one calls to Jehovah for help ! Sacrifices indeed were not wanting (vi. 6), but those who offered them had no true 'knowledge of God', and so they profited them not. 8 — 16. The outward evidences of Israel's decay. 8. he kath mixed himself among the people] Rather, he mixeth himself among the peoples. How ? By courting the favour now of Egypt, now of Assyria (v. 1 1). a cake not turned] Burnt to a coal at the bottom, raw dough at the top : an apt emblem of a character full of inconsistencies (Bishop Hors- ley). The explanation is plausible,, as long as we look at the figure by itself. But the context, which refers only to Israel's political decline, favours another view. 'A brand snatched from the burning' is a figure of a country, rescued only just in time from destruction. Hosea's 'cake not turned ' may equally well be an emblem of a country half ruined by calamities, and not rescued. The calamities of Israel, alas ! are of his own making; by mingling with 'the peoples' he sought for warmth, but found a destroying conflagration (cf. Isa. xlvii. 14). The 'cake' is the round flat cake of bread which was baked on hot stones (1 Kings xix. 6) or on hot ashes, and required frequent turning, to prevent its being burned. 9. Strangers have devoured his strength] By heavy tribute and desolating invasions. The ' strangers ' would be Hazael and Benhadad (2 Kings viii. 12, x. 32, 33, xiii. 3, 7), Pul (2 Kings xv. 19, 20), 6—2 HOSEA, VII. [w. 10—12. Yea, grey hairs are here and there upon him, yet he knoweth not. And the pride of Israel testifieth to his face : And they do not return to the Lord their God, nor seek him for all this. Ephraim also is like a silly dove, without heart : They call to Egypt, they go to Assyria. When they shall go, I will spread my net upon them ; I will bring them down as the fowls of the heaven ; I will chastise them, as their congregation hath heard. and Tiglath-Pileser (2 Kings xv. 29), though the two last are really the same person, Pul being the private name of a usurper who took the old royal name of Tiglath-Pileser (as proved by Mr Pinches). gray hairs are here and there upon him] Lit., 'are sprinkled upon him.' That a state has different stages, analogous to the periods of human life, was a familiar idea; comp. xi. 1; Isa. xlvi. 4; Ps. lxxi. 18 (where the speaker is probably the personified people, comp. v. 20 in the Hebrew). 10. And the pride of Israel,.^ Repeated from v. 5, just as xii. 9 a is repeated in xiii. 40. It is not the prophet who speaks condemning a bad quality in his people, but Jehovah, Israel's true Pride, and the source of Israel's prosperity, who utters a solemn word of warning translated into act. How much more suitable this explanation is in such a context than either of the alternatives mentioned on v. 5. for all this] i.e. in spite of all this chastisement, comp. Isa. ix. 12, 17, 21. 11. Ephraim also is like...] Rather, But Ephraim is become like a silly dove without understanding. This verse does not begin a fresh section, but is closely connected with the preceding. As a dove, fleeing from a hawk, is snared in the fowler's net, so Ephraim, when afraid of Assyria, calls in the assistance of Egypt, and when afraid of Egypt, applies to Assyria (see Introduction). In his folly he does not observe the snare which the false friend, or rather (v. 12) Jehovah, prepares for him. i2. When they shall go] Rather, As soon as they go. I will spread my net] The image of Jehovah's net is not a frequent one; see however Job xix. 6; Ezek. xii. 13, xvii. 20, xix'. 8, xxxii. 3. Here the net means captivity. I will bring them down] Apparently by placing; a bait to draw them to the earth, at least if the figure is to be continued. Am. ix. 2 is therefore not parallel. as their congregation hath heard] Lit., 'according to the announce ment to their congregation.' Comp. Isa. liii. 1, 'Who hath believed our announcement' (a cognate word) = ' that which we heard'. The punishment, says Hosea, will agree exactly with his own repeated predictions (comp. v. 9). w. 13—16.] HOSEA, VII. 85 Woe unto them ! for they have fled from me : I3 Destruction unto them ! because they have transgressed against me : Though I have redeemed them, yet they have spoken lies against me. And they have not cried unto me with their heart, 14 When they howled upon their beds : They assemble themselves for corn and wine, And they rebel against me. Though I have bound and strengthened their arms, 15 Yet do they imagine mischief against me. They return, but not to the most High : 16 13. they have fled from me] like birds scared out of their nest (Isa. xvi. 2) ; but the Israelites have only themselves to blame for the fatal consequence. They have left their true home, and shall find no second (see on ix. 17). transgressed] Or, 'rebelled'; strictly, ' broken away.' though I have redeemed...] Rather, I Indeed would redeem them, but they, &c. The 'lies' of the Israelites related (see next verse) to Jehovah's power and willingness to save. 14. with their heart, when they howled] Rather, In their heart, but they howl. The prophet contrasts the quiet communion of the heart with Jehovah and the wild-beastlike 'howling' of the impenitent Israelites, who murmur at the withdrawal of material blessings. Comp. Isa. xxiv. n. they assemble themselves] i.e. to lament together in their affliction. But the rendering is doubtful. Ewald, better, 'they excite them selves' (or, are inwardly moved). But it is much more natural to suppose that Daleth has become altered into Resh, and that we should read differently. Render therefore, with the Septuagint and some Hebrew MSS., they cut themselves. It is an allusion to a well-known sign of mourning, forbidden indeed by the Law (Deut. xiv. 1 ; Lev. xix. 28, xxi. 5), but habitually practised in Palestine 0er. xvi. 6, xii. 5, xlvii. 5, xlviii. 37), and still noticeable in the time of St Jerome (comm. on Jer. xvi. 6). 15. Though I have bound and strengthened their arms] Rather, I Indeed have trained and strengthened their arms. The Israelites had had a proof of this not long since when 'Jehovah saw the affliction of Israel that it was very bitter', and ' saved them by the hand of Jero boam the son of Joash ' (2 Kings xiv. 27). IS. They return, but not to the most High] Rather, They turn (i.e. shift or change), but not upwards (as xi. 7). They are not content with passive complaints; they have reached a turning-point in their history, but their way only leads them further and further from the ' knowledge of God.' 86 HOSEA, VIII. [v. I. They are like a deceitful bow : Their princes shall fall by the sword for the rage of their tongue : This shall be their derision in the land of Egypt. Set the trumpet to thy mouth. He shall come as an eagle against the house of the Lord, like a deceitful bow] i.e. like a bow which shoots an arrow in a wrong direction, 'not upwards', towards Israel's ' strong rock ', but earthwards. Cf. the same figure in Ps. lxxviii. 57. for the rage of their tongue] ' Rage ' ; or insolence (i.e. towards God). The root-meaning (as gathered from Arabic) is to make a grumbling sound, like an irritated camel. Hence the appropriateness of the men tion of the tongue. The verb is sometimes rendered 'to curse.' their derision in the land of Egypt] Probably an embassy had boasted of Israel's strength, to entice the Egyptians into an alliance. We may probably assume that the ' sword ' by which the princes were to fall is that of the Assyrians. Chap. VIII. 1—7. In GREAT EMOTION (which reflects itself in the short clauses) the prophet announces the imminent invasion of N. Israel, and its true causes — idolatry and schism. 1. Set the trumpet to thy mouth] Lit., To thy palate the cornet ! An abrupt appeal by a heavenly voice to the prophet, who is bidden to give warning of the approach of the foe (comp. v. 8 note). 'Palate', or 'mouth', as the organ of speech, as Prov. v. 3, viii. 7, &c. as an eagle] The Hebr. word (nesher) seems to have been specially applied to the great griffon vulture, the carrion-eating habits of which are referred to in Job xxxix. 30 ; Prov. xxx. 17 ; Matt. xxiv. 28, and its swift flight in Deut. xxviii. 49; 2 Sam. i. 23; Jer. xlix. 22. Refer ences to this bird of prey (Assyr. nasru) are frequent in the cuneiform inscriptions, and figures of it occur in battle-scenes on the monument. The more appropriate is it as an emblem of the Assyrian invaders. Similarly Nebuchadnezzar (whom St Jerome wrongly supposes to be meant here) is called an eagle (or vulture) in Jer. xlix. 22; Ezek. xvii. 3. the house of the Lord] In chap. ii. we had the people of Israel represented as a bride who is sustained and adorned by her husband ; here we have the figure completed by the description of the land of Canaan as the divine Bridegroom's house (as ix. 15, comp. v. 3). So Assyrian bit Khumri means the land of N. Israel, though here Khumri (Omri) is not a divine name. In the New Testament the house of God, or of Christ, is the Church, see Heb. iii. 6; 1 Tim. iii. 15. w. 2—4.] HOSEA, VIII. 87 Because they have transgressed my covenant, And trespassed against my law. Israel shall cry unto me, My God, we know thee. Israel hath cast off the thing that is good : The enemy shall pursue him. They have set up kings, but not by me : They have made princes, and I knew it not : Of their silver and their gold have they made them idols, my covenant] Most explain this of the 'covenant' or contract between Jehovah and Israel. But the phrase is more probably equiva lent to 'mine ordinance', for the parallel clause has 'my law.' The Heb. word (b'rfth) sometimes appears to mean simply 'appointment', 'ordinance' (so 2 Kings xi. 4; Jer. xi. 6, xxxiv. r3, 18; Job xxxi. 1 ; Ps. cv. 10), which may even be the primary meaning (comp. Assyr. baru 'to decide'). Comp. the phrase 'the book of the covenant' (Ex. xxiv. 7). my law] See note on v. 12. 2. Israel shall cry...] Rather, Unto me they will (then) cry, My God, we— Israel— know thee. When the punishment comes, they will cry aloud to Jehovah, and lay stress upon their belonging to Him. 'Israel' is mentioned, as the title of honour (the kunya, comp. the commentators on Isa. xliv. 5), given by Jehovah, which was the outward sign of His mystic connexion with His worshippers. The speech of the Israelites is the counterpart of that of Jehovah in Isa. xliii. 1, 'I have called thee by name ; thou art mine.' (The Septuagint and the Peshito, however, omit 'Israel.') 'My God' seems used distributively, each Israelite professes to feel his individual relation to the national God. 3. The appeal is dismissed; Israel's piety is but superficial (comp. vi. 1—4); his 'knowledge of God' is not that which Jehovah expects. hath cast off] Not merely put aside out of caprice, but (as the word implies) cast off with loathing (see v. 5). 4. Israel's great offence — making a schism in the 'theocratic' community. Setting up idols was virtually rebellion against Jehovah; whatever Ahijah said (1 Kings xi. 31, &c), or a lower class of prophets after him (comp. Am. vii. 12, 13), the great prophets, such as Hosea, could not sanction any of the N. Israelitish dynasties (see on i. n). See next note. not by me] Rather, not from me. There is a verbal contradiction between these words and those ascribed to Shemaiah in 2 Kings xii. 24. A prophet could only declare the will of God with regard to the particular case laid before him. The disunion of north and south was so gTeat, that for the sake of peace it was better to separate. But when the moral and spiritual decay of N. Israel had reached such a point as in the time of Hosea, no prophet with any spiritual insight could fail to perceive that the usurping kings lacked the divine blessing. 88 HOSEA, VIII. [vv. 5—7. That they may be cut off. Thy calf, O Samaria, hath cast thee off ; Mine anger is kindled against them : How long will it be ere they attain to innocency ? • For from Israel was it also : The workman made it ; therefore it is not God : But the calf of Samaria shall be broken in pieces. For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind : It hath no stalk : the bud shall yield no meal : If so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up. that they may be cut off] The verb is in the singular, and the implied subject is the silver and gold which had been made into idols. 5. Thy calf, O Samaria, hath cast thee off] This rendering is very harsh in this context ; Ewald prefers ' He hath cast off thy calf, a con trast to ' Israel hath cast off that which is good ' in v. 3. But ' casting off' implies a previous connexion (e. g. Ps. xliii. 2) ; it is better to revert to the intransitive sense which belongs to the cognate verb in Arabic, and render, Thy calf, 0 Samaria, is loathsome. ' Thy calf is a contemptu ous expression for the small golden bull which was symbolic of Jehovah; such a bull, it appears, existed at Samaria, and doubtless at other places besides Dan and Bethel (e.g. at Gilgal). ere they can attain innocency] Lit. 'will they be incapable of inno cency. ' Idolatry presented itself to Hosea, not only as a form of wor ship, but as an immoral way of living. 6. For from Israel was it also] Rather, . was this also ; i. e. this idol too (as well as the usurping kings) was Israel's work, unsanctioned by me. But the construction is very dubious, and the integrity of the text may well be questioned. the workman made it; therefore it is not God] Lit., 'and it is not God.' It has a merely fictitious existence (so xiii. 2). The sarcastic words of Hosea contain the germ of the vehement polemic of the later prophets against idolatry in general. but. ..in pieces] Rather, yea, Samaria's calf shall be (broken to) shivers (Targum, 'chips of boards'). 7. The consequences of Israel's evil conduct and policy are here represented under the figure of sowing and reaping. But the form of the figure is varied. First, Israel sows wind and reaps whirlwind, i. e. his present conduct is unprofitable to himself, and the requital of it shall be actual destruction. Next, though Israel sows a corn-plant, it never grows up to its full size (it, i.e. Israel, hath no standing corn); or if it does, it either yields the farmer no meal, or its meal is seized upon by the enemy, i.e. the worldly results of Israel's policy are never good, and any wealth that it attains passes into the hands of the enemy. the bud shall yield no meal] In the Hebrew there is a characteristic play upon sounds, — the cemakh yields no qemakh. w. 8— 10.] HOSEA, VIII. 89 Israel is swallowed up : 8 Now shall they be among the Gentiles as a vessel wherein is no pleasure. For they are gone up to Assyria, a wild ass alone by him- 9 self: Ephraim hath hired lovers. Yea, though they have hired among the nations, now will 10 I gather them, And they shall sorrow a little for the burden of the king of princes. 8 — 14. The judgment is already begun ; Israel has drawn it upon himself, by dallying with Assyria, by religious abuses, and by ~ vain confidence in fortified cities. 8. is swallowed up] i. e. is as good as swallowed up. Foreigners have already begun to absorb the precious morsel (cf. vii. 8, 9) ; com plete destruction is only a question of time. now shall they be...] Rather, now are they become among the nations, &c. Comp. Jer. xxii. 28, xlviii. 38. 'The coarse pottery of this country', says Dr Thomson, 'is so cheap that even poor people throw it aside in contempt, or dash it to pieces on the slightest occa sion' (The Land and the Book, p. 36). 'Nations' (as v. 10). 9. gone up] Used, like atiaflalvw, of going inland ('up the country'). a wild ass alone by himself] Rather, a wild ass taking his own way by himself. The point of comparison is obstinacy. The wild ass is a gregarious animal, but individuals in the herd will sometimes go and roam moodily and obstinately by themselves. See Tristram, Nat. Hist, of Bible, pp. 41 — 43, and Davidson's full note on Job xxxv. 5 — 8. Ishmael is compared to the wild ass in Gen. xvi. 12, and now it appears that Israel is no better than Ishmael. In spite of warnings, he will have his way, though intercourse with Assyria is his ruin. Ephraim hath hired lovers] Rather, loves. The allusion is to the gifts by which Israel sought to gain the Assyrian or Egyptian alliance (xii. 2). The Sept. evidently had a different, though probably not a more correct text. 10. This verse is obscure, and open to a variety of interpretations ; the following however seems by far the most probable. Yea, though they have hired among the nations] Rather, Tea, though they hire, &c, i.e. though they attain a certain amount of success in their negotiations, and win the protection of some stronger nation, yet the time has come for me to check their misplaced activity. now will I gather them] Surely not, ' now will I gather the Assy rian army to fight against them ', which does not suit the context (mark 'yea, though'), but, 'now will I restrain their roving propensities.' Where or how, we are not yet told; it is captivity which is dimly hinted at. This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the next clause. and they shall sorrow a little for the burden of the king of princes] ' The king of princes ' is a phrase not found elsewhere, but might con- 90 HOSEA, VIII. [vv. Because Ephraim hath made many altars to sin, Altars shall be unto him to sin. I have written to him the great things of my law, ceivably=' the king of kings', which is a title claimed by Tiglath- Pileser I. (Records of the Past, v. 8, comp. Ezek. xxvi. 7). The 'bur den ' might be rhe heavy tribute paid by Menahem (2 Kings xv. 20). But why 'sorrow a little'? No better sense is made by rendering 'and they shall begin to be diminished [in numbers, or in prosperity] by reason of the burden of the king of princes ' ; why ' begin ' ? A third rendering, ' and they shall soon be in anguish through the burden ' &c, involves a violation of Hebrew usage (' soon ' should be ' a little '). The only remedy is to follow the Septuagint, which reads two of the Hebrew words differently, and render that they may cease for a little from anointing a king and princes (all the versions and some Hebr. MSS. sanction 'and'). Comp. xiii. 10 'Give me a king and princes', from which it seems as if the personnel of the class of ' princes ' would vary according as the king were of one dynasty or another. In Judah, at any rate, as well as in Egypt, we know that the royal princes enjoyed many of the more important offices under the crown (comp. Isa. vii. 13 ; Jer. xvii. 20; 1 Kings xxii. 26; 2 Kings xxv. 25). 11. Because] Rather, For. It is a justification of the foregoing threat. hath made many altars to sin] In times of national trouble, sacrifices were multiplied, to propitiate the national God (comp. Isa. i. 11). But as no corresponding effort was made to purify the conduct and the character, such sacrifices did but increase the load of the national guilt. Instead of 'many sacrifices', Hosea says 'many altars', because there was even less attempt in the times of Hosea and Isaiah to centralize worship in the northern kingdom than in the southern. The strict rule of Deuteronomy (one temple and one altar) seems at present far removed from the general consciousness. See Introduction, part V. altars shall be unto him to sin] Rather, (yea,) altars are to him for sinning (thereby). There is no unfairness on Jehovah's part; Israel cannot pretend ignorance of His will. 12. / have written to him] Auth. Vers, here follows the Targum and the Peshito (the Septuagint and the Vulgate give the future), but it is more idiomatic (see p. 36, note) to render in the present — I am wont to write. The prophet is fully conscious that the divinely given laws under which Israel lives (or ought to live) were not formulated once for all in the Mosaic age, but grew up in different ages. Thus understood, the passage is an important authority for the existence of a legal literature before the Pentateuch be came canonical. But another rendering is widely accepted, 'Though I wrote unto him' (my law by myriads, i.e. in myriad precepts). the great things of my law] The expression in the Hebrew, however we understand it, is remarkable and somewhat harsh. All difficulty would be removed if we might suppose the omission of a letter and a transpo- v. 13.] HOSEA, VIII. 91 But they were counted as a strange thing. They sacrifice flesh for the sacrifices of mine offerings, ; and eat it; But the Lord accepteth them not ; Now will he remember their iniquity, and visit their sins : They shall return to Egypt. sition ; the phrase would then run, 'the words of my law.' The He brew Bible however gives i, in the margin, ' the multitudes of my law ' (Vulg. multiplies leges meas), which is adopted by Auth. Ver., and 2, in the text, 'the myriads (or, the myriad precepts) of my law.' The word rendered 'multitudes' is questionable, since it occurs elsewhere only in the singular, and there is here no apparent occasion for a plural. ' The myriads of my law ' is a bold expression, but this reading is gene rally preferred. ' My law ' may be understood to imply that, though Jehovah's will was made known 'by divers portions' (Heb. i. 1 R. V.), yet these ' portions ' when fitly joined together made a. whole. This was certainly the feeling of those Jewish Bible-students who affixed the vowel-points ; but, as Hosea is thinking of the multiplicity of the laws, rather than of their unity, some have thought that we should rather read (altering one point), 'my laws.' We can estimate the multiplicity spoken of from the Pentateuch, whether this work was known to Hosea in anything at all like its present form or not. We must remember, however, that the laws to which the prophet alludes are concerned, not with rites and ceremonies, but with civil justice and the applications of a plain but religiously sanctioned morality (comp. the so-called Book of the Covenant, Ex. xxi. — xxiii). they were (rather, are) counted as a strange thing] As something which did (does) not concern them. 13. They sacrifice, &c] Rather, My sacrificial gifts they sacrifice ; (yea,) flesh, and they eat It; i.e., their sacrifices are a mere form, Jehovah abhors them ; the only positive result is that the sacrificer has the luxury of a dinner of flesh-meat. (Comp. a similar accusation against the priests, iv. 8.) That sensual appetites were partly concerned in the offering of sacrifices even in times of national trouble may perhaps be inferred from Isa. xxii. 13, the eating of animal food being only allowed, especially we may suppose in Jerusalem, in connexion with a sacrificial act; comp. Lev. xvii. 3 — 6; Deut. xii. 15, 16 (a mitigation of a primitive rule). [The word rendered ' gifts ' is uncertain.] now] The climax of Israel's iniquity has been reached ; Jehovah will now prove in act that He has not forgotten their transgressions. they shall return to Egypt] Some think this is a kind of poetical expression for being carried into captivity — a most unnatural supposi tion. In Isa. vii. 18 we find a threat of a double invasion from Egypt and from Assyria, and why can we not imagine that a people who were ever vacillating between Egyptian and Assyrian alliances should be threatened with an Egyptian as well as an Assyrian captivity? Comp. the prophecies of restoration from Egypt in Isa. xi. n; Mic. vii. 12. 92 HOSEA, VIII. IX. [w. 14; 1. t For Israel hath forgotten his Maker, and buildeth temples ; And Judah hath multiplied fenced cities : But I will send a fire upon his cities, And it shall devour the palaces thereof. 1 Rejoice not, O Israel, for joy, as other people : For thou hast gone a whoring from thy God, The word ' return ' is pointed with the terrible associations of the ' house of bondage '; comp. Deut. xxviii. 68. Hosea repeats the threat in ix. 3, 6, xi. 5. 14. A fresh reason for the ' swallowing up ' of which the prophet has spoken (v. 8) — Israel's worldliness and self-dependence. buildeth temples] It seems doubtful however whether Hosea would have laid such stress on the wickedness of many temples and many altars (see v. n). More probably ' temples ' should be palaces (the primitive meaning of the Assyrian cognate is ' great house '), in which case for ' palaces ' at the close of the verse we had better substitute castles. It is not so much the ' palaces ' and the ' castles ' themselves as the world liness and the tyranny of those who lived in them that Hosea denounces. but' I will send a fire...] Referring to both Israel and Judah. Re markably enough, we find these words repeated seven times in Amos as a refrain to as many denunciations (Am. i. 4 — ii. 5). It seems hardly likely that so original a prophet should have quoted these words; perhaps they were a well-known prophetic commonplace. Chap. IX. Here the discourse takes a new start. The prophet is a witness of the wild rejoicings of harvest, and warns his people not to be so exuberant, for they must go forth into captivity. Three times in this and the two next chapters he recurs to the early history of the Israelites, and shows how they have constantly met the divine mercy with rebellion and idolatry, so that Jehovah has no choice but to thrust them away. 1 — 9. A vivid picture of the bitterness of the calamity in prospect. It does but equal the Gibeah-like wickedness of Israel. 1. for joy] Rather, too loudly (lit. ' unto exultation '). as other people] Rather, as the peoples. The exuberant joy of the wild nature-worships of Palestine was abhorrent to the calm and deep moral religion of the prophets. To the heathen nations certain material blessings were the final object of the forms of worship ; to the prophets and their disciples, the outward gifts of the Deity stood in a close rela tion to states of the character, as being the rewards of moral obedience (comp. Deut. xxviii. 1 — 14). for thou hast gone...] The blessings of the ingathering were falsely ascribed by Israel to the Baalim (see on ii. 13). As long as they were enjoyed, Israel felt as much pledged by them to her false gods as the harlot is bound by her ' hire ' to her paramour. At every recurring season of harvest Israel gratefully connected these blessings with her r. 2—4.] HOSEA, IX. 93 Thou hast loved a reward upon every cornfloor. The floor and the winepress shall not feed them, And the new wine shall fail in her. They shall not dwell in the Lord's land ; But Ephraim shall return to Egypt, And they shall eat unclean things in Assyria. They shall not offer wine offerings to the Lord, supposed protectors, and offered first-fruits to them, or, as Hosea puts it, she loved a harlot's hire (comp. on ii. 12) upon all corn-floors, alluding to the various local festivals (comp. on xii. 9). Observe, Hosea finds fault with the Israelites, not for neglect of a centralizing ordinance, such as Deut. xvi. 15, but for honouring the Baalim in preference to the true spiritual God. Contrast the reference to the autumn festival in a post-exile prophecy (Zech. xiv. 16 — 19). 2. the winepress] Rather, the vat (within the press) into which the grape-juice or the oil flowed ; comp. Joel ii. 24. shall fail in her] Rather, shall fail her (lit. 'shall lie unto her', as Hab. iii. 17). There is a good various reading (supported by the versions and by the Babylonian codex) 'in them', but the same interchange of pronouns occurs in iv. 19. Idolatrous Israel is personified as a harlot. Wine-drinking was, in fact; so closely connected with the customs of idolatry (comp. Judg. ix. 27 ; Am. ii. 8), that the Nazirites bound themselves by a vow of ' total abstinence ' (Num. vi. 3). 3. in the Lord's land] ' For I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel', Num. xxxv. 34. The expression originated in the popular belief that as, for example, Chemosh was the God of the Amorites, so Jehovah was the God of the Israelites (Judg. xi. 24), a belief which could lead even Jonah to imagine that he could 'flee unto Tarshish from the presence of Jehovah ' (Jon. i. 3). shall return to Egypt, &c] A repetition of the threat so well calcu lated to deter the Israelites from disobedience (see on viii. 13). shall eat unclean things in Assyria] Comp. Ezek. iv. 13, ' Even thus shall the children of Israel eat their bread defiled among the nations whither I will drive them.' The prospect held out is not that the captive Israelites would be reduced to the necessity of eating prohibited food, but that, since all heathen lands were 'unclean' (Am. vii. 17), all the products of the soil would also be unclean. The ' uncleanness ' in both cases was caused by the absence of sanctuaries dedicated to Jehovah. See the foil, notes. 4. They shall not offer wine offerings to the Lord] Libations of wine were accompaniments of the burnt-offerings and the peace-offerings, and so are naturally mentioned in connexion with the 'sacrifices.' It is implied that wine in general would become 'unclean', if a certain measure of it were not devoted to this sacred and sanctifying purpose. The clause is therefore equivalent to this— 'The wine that they drink shall not be pleasing to the Lord ' ; comp. the following words. 94 HOSEA, IX. [v. 4. Neither shall they be pleasing unto him : Their sacrifices shall be unto them as the bread of mourners ; neither shall they be pleasing (lit. sweet) unto him] Strangely enough, the accentuation of the text separates between the verb and its subject ; the Sept. , Targ. , and Peshito preserve the obviously right view of the construction, neither shall their sacrifices be pleasing unto him. The peculiar accentuation was possibly caused by a wish to preclude a mis interpretation of Hosea's language, viz. that the Israelites would go on sacrificing to Jehovah even when in captivity. But the truth is that the Hebrew zibakh (like Upeiov, see Mahaffy's Old Greek Life, p. 32) has a twofold meaning : 1, a sacrifice, and 2, a feast of animal food. Flesh- meat was not the habitual food of the Israelites, any more than it is of the Arabs at the present day ; to partake of it was a special divinely given privilege (comp. Gen. ix. 3), and those who from time to time availed themselves of this privilege had to make an acknowledgment of it by presenting, at the very least, the blood before Jehovah (comp. 1 Sam. xiv. 32 — 35). The Book of Leviticus (xvii. 3, 4) prescribes that the blood of all slain beasts should be offered to Jehovah at the door of the tabernacle, and though a milder rule is given in Deuteronomy (xii. 15, 16), yet, from what we know of the religious habits of the people, we may safely assume that not only did they worship Jehovah at the ' high places ', but they also in one way or another presented any animal food of which they partook at the local shrines, as well as at the central sanctuary. Hence we may very probably lay down that in old Hebrew as in old Greek life the conceptions of sacrifice (and presenting the blood was a minor kind of sacrificial act) and of feasting upon animal food were inseparable ; indeed, we find in the semi-secular Book of Proverbs two synonymous proverbs, in one of which a feast is described as 'a stalled ox', and in the other as 'sacrifices' (comp. Prov. xv. 17 and xvii. 1). Consequently, we might, in the clause before us, with equal justice render 'neither shall their sacrifices', and 'neither shall their feasts (i.e. meat -meals) be pleasing unto him.' It must be ad mitted, however, that the sense is improved if, with Kuenen, we alter a Beth into a Caph, and render, neither shall they lay out their sacrifices before him (upon the altar) ; comp. iii. 4. Such a mistake in the reading of the text would escape notice the more easily, because the phrase produced by it is so idiomatic (comp. Jer. vi. 20 b). If we accept this emendation, all that has been said en the connexion of sacrificing and feasting will still retain its explanatory value. We may illustrate this connexion further by Ezek. xxxix. 17, where Ezekiel is bidden to invite 'every feathered fowl' to the 'sacrifice' (so A.V.) that Jehovah doth 'sacrifice for them'; 'sacrifice' (zibakh) is here evidently equivalent to ' feast ' (in the sense described above). their sacrifices... mourners] Rather, (their bread) shall be unto them as the bread of mourning ; the first two words seem to have fallen out of the text. ' Bread of mourning' means such as was eaten during the seven days of mourning, when everything in the vicinity of the dead w. 5, 6.] HOSEA, IX. 95 All that eat thereof shall be polluted : For their bread for their soul shall not come into the house of the Lord. What will ye do in the solemn day, s And in the day of the feast of the Lord ? For lo, they are gone because of destruction : 6 Egypt shall gather them up, Memphis shall bury them : The pleasantplaces for their silver, nettles shall possess them : body was regarded as unclean (Num. xix. 14) ; it is therefore the emblem of utter impurity. Or there may possibly be a more special reference to the funeral feasts, which lingered on among the Israelites, as St Jerome has noticed (see his note on Jer. xvi. 7 and see Deut. xxvi. 14), but which are to be distinguished from the offerings made at intervals (in Sirach's time) at the grave (Ecclus. vii. 33, xxx. 18). See Ewald, Antiquities, E. T., p. 153, Renouf, Hibbert Lectures, p. 132, Tylor, Primitive Culture, ii. 27. for their bread for their soul...] Rather, for their bread shall be (only) for their hunger (i.e. to satisfy their appetite) ; it shall not come into the house of the Lord. They will not have the joy which belongs to those who have duly presented the tithes of their corn, or the firstlings of their flock, or offered their burnt sacrifices — the joy of the sense of the divine favour. They cannot have this, because their food lacks the consecration of ' the house of the Lord ' (not the temple at Jerusalem, but any of the ' high places ' dedicated to Jehovah). 5. What will ye do, &c] The festivals, which were kept up in N. Israel, even after the schism, were seasons of popular merry-making (see ii. 11). But now as each 'feast of Jehovah' comes round in the calendar, ye will neither have the mechanical performance of ritual forms, nor the accompanying holiday-mirth, to fill up the vacant hours. 6. Hosea ' in the Spirit ' sees the Israelites already being carried into captivity. because of destruction] Rather, from the devastation. They have left their desolated country. shall gather them up] viz. in burial ; comp. Ezek. xxix. 5 ; Jer. viii. 2, xxv. 33. Memphis] The most ancient of the capitals of Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile, south of old Cairo, elsewhere called in the Hebrew Noph (Isa. xix. 13; Jer. ii. 16), but here Moph. The Egyptian name, given to it by Menes, accounts for both forms — Men-nufre ' the good ' or ' perfect mansion ' ; the Assyrians called it Mimpi. All that is left of Memphis is its necropolis ' stretching north and south nearly twenty miles', where Hosea threateningly declares that the Israelites shall find a grave, remote, dishonoured, and 'unclean.' Contrast Ex. xiv. n, where the Israelites reproach Moses with having deprived them of their right to sepulture in the vast cemeteries of Egypt. the pleasant places for their silver] Rather, their precious things of silver, i.e. costly silver ornaments. 96 HOSEA, IX [w. 7, 8. Thorns shall be in their tabernacles. The days of visitation are come, The days of recompence are come ; Israel shall know it: The prophet is a fool, the spiritual man is mad, For the multitude of thine iniquity, and the great hatred. s The watchman of Ephraim was with my God : their tabernacles] i.e., either the idol-tents of the high places (comp. Ezek. xvi. 16), or simply their dwellings (comp. 2 Sam. xx. 1). 7. are come] Rather, come. The sense is that the days of punish ment shall surely come (the tense is the prophetic perfect). shall know it] i.e. by experience ; as Isa. ix. 9. Another view of these words (in connexion with the following clause) is, ' Israel shall perceive (but too late) how it has been deceived by its prophets.' But a false prophet would never be called a 'man of the spirit', but rather ' one that followeth his own spirit ' (Ezek. xiii. 3) ; and neither ' a fool ' nor ' mad ' suggests the idea of falsehood or hypocrisy. the prophet is a fool, the spiritual man is mad] These words evidently convey a reproach, for though 'mad' might be taken in a good sense (=frenzied with sorrow, as Deut. xxviii. 34), ' a fool' could hardly be. But if so, introductory words must have dropped out of the text, such as ' who say in their pride.' ' The spiritual man' is, literally, ' the man of the Spirit', i.e. 'the inspired man', Sept. avBpwiros 6 irvev/iarojripos. ' Mad', or ' a madman', ' a fanatic', is a term applied disparagingly to a prophet's disciple in 2 Kings ix. n, and to Jeremiah by an opponent in Jer. xxix. 26. The expression was doubtless received from those early times, in which the acts performed by prophets were often strange and startling. for the multitude...] Rather, for the greatness of thine Iniquity, and because the enmity hath been great. These words are to be con nected with the preceding. Israel spoke thus because its iniquity was great, and great also the enmity which certain classes (probably) felt to wards the higher prophets. The priests and the lower class of prophets would be at one in their hostility to Hosea. More is said of this feud in the next verse. 8. The watchman of Ephraim was with my God] Rather, Is with my God. There is a various reading ' his God' (so also Rashi), but ' my God' can be well defended; for the watchman spoken of is Hosea him self. We have ' my God ' again in v. 17. The figure implied is de veloped more fully in Jer. vi. 17, ' Also I set watchmen over you, (say ing,) Hearken to the sound of the trumpet.' ' With my God ' = ' in com munion with ' or ' helped by.' The connexion will, however, be improved if we suppose that, owing to the fact that 'Ephraim' ends with a Mem, the same letter has dropped out at the beginning of the next word. In this case, render (connecting this and the next clause), Ephraim's watchman, appointed by my God [comp. in the Hebrew, Isa. viii. n], even the prophet — a fowler's snare is, &c. An entirely w. 9, 10.] HOSEA, IX. 97 But the prophet is a snare of a fowler in all his ways, And hatred in the house of his God. They have deeply corrupted themselves, as in the days of 9 Gibeah: Therefore he will remember their iniquity, he will visit their sins. I found Israel like grapes in the wilderness ; 10 I saw your fathers as the firstripe in the fig tree at her first time : wrong view of the construction is suggested by the vowel-points (which of course form no part of the text proper), viz. ' Ephraim looketh out (for help) beside my God' ; but ' beside' cannot mean 'apart from'; or ' Ephraim is a lier in wait (in his fight) against my God.' but the prophet is, &c] See last note. The prophet meant is a true not a false prophet (as Keil takes it), for though the false prophets might be likened to a fowler's snare, their conduct could not be spoken of as 'envious' or 'persecuting' towards Ephraim. It is rather the Ephraimites who are always laying snares (comp. Isa. xxix. 21) for their troublesome ' watchman. ' hatred] Rather, enmity (or, hostility ; or, persecution). in the house of his God] This must to some extent be equivalent to the parallel words ' in all his ways. ' In v. 1 5 ' mine house ' means the land of Canaan, and so probably here. Jehovah is not their God, for they (Israel) ' know ' Him not ; and they cannot abide those who, like Hosea (v. 8) and the psalmist (Ps. lxxiii. 23), are ' continually with Him.' 9. as in the days of Gibeah] The atrocity described in Judg. xix. 22 — 30, and referred to by Hosea again in x. 9. All the Benjamites were destroyed except 600 men (Judg. xx. 46 — 48) — a warning for Ephraim ! 10 — 17. But not only in the days of Gibeah ; from the very first, the nation trespassed against Jehovah. Awful shall be the judgment for the continued infidelity — so awful, that Hosea can hardly bear to con template it. He seems uncertain whether extermination or dispersion will be the penalty, but concludes with an announcement of the latter. 10. like grapes in the wilderness] With such delight as a traveller would unexpectedly find grapes in the desert, did Jehovah regard the children of Israel at the beginning of their national existence. Comp. Jer. ii. 2, ' I remember for thy good the kindness of thy youth, the love of thine espousals, when thou wentest after me in the wilderness.' Jehovah condescends to overlook the frailties and inconsistencies of ancient Israel, and even idealizes its character. Comp. ii. 15, xiii. 1. as the firstripe in the fig tree] So the better portion of the people of Judah are compared to ' very good figs, even as the figs that are first ripe ' (Jer. 'xxiv. 2). The white fig of Palestine ripens much before the black, sometimes as early as April ; the ordinary fig-harvest is not till the middle of August, but early ripe fruit might be found in June. Hence the fitness of Hosea's image (comp. Isa. xxviii. 4 ; Mic. vii. 1). at her first time] i. e. , when it begins to be ripe. 98 HOSEA, IX. [vv. ii, 12. But they went to Baal-peor, and separated themselves unto that shame ; And their abominations were according as they loved. i As for Ephraim, their glory shall fly away like a bird, From the birth, and from the womb, and from the con ception. : Though they bring up their children, they 'went to Baal-peor ; &c] So early did they fall away ; comp.xi.1,2. Baal-peor is here (as the form of the construction shows) put for Beth- peor (Deut. iii. 29, &c), the place where Baal-peor was worshipped. The open falling-away to this heathen deity was one of the most startling episodes of the period of the wanderings (see Num. xxv.). It is com monly held, but is really a pure conjecture, that the worship of Baal- peor was licentious. If this be correct, it will give a special significance to the last clause in the verse, which may however merely mean that the idols, being abominable to the true God, make their worshippers abominable, just as Shame may refer, not to the shameful rites of this Baal, but to God's abhorrence of idolatry. In 1 Kings xi. 5 and else where 'an abomination' is a. synonym for an idol, apart from the character of the worship. separated [i. e. consecrated] themselves unto that shame] Rather, unto Shame (Heb. bosheth). See above, and compare the substitution of bosheth or besheth for baal in proper names, e.g. Jerubbesheth (for Jerubbaal), Ishbosheth (for Eshbaal), Mephibosheth for Meribbaal (comp. Prof. Kirkpatrick on 2 Sam. ii. 8). and their abominations, &c] Rather, and became abominations like that which they loved (comp, on xii. 1 1). 11. The prophet leaves us to supply the idea that Ephraim's present transgressions are as heinous as those of old, and passes on to the punishment. their glory. ..like a bird] Rather, like birds. All their earthly prosperity shall take to itself wings, because, as we have already heard, ' they have exchanged their (true) glory for infamy ' (iv. 7). Kimchi narrows the meaning too much, when he says, 'He calls children "glory", for they are the glory of fathers (Prov: xvii. 6).' But of course populousness formed a part of the Israelite's conception of national prosperity. from the birth, &c] Rather, that there shall be no birth, nor being with child, nor conception. Such is the retribution for their sins against chastity (see on iv. 10). 12. But what shall be the fate of the children already born? A lurid light is next thrown upon this. Though] Rather, Tea, though. bereave them] Or, 'make them childless'; comp. 1 Sam. xv. 33. when I depart from, them] Better, (reading with a Shin instead of a Sin), when I look away from them. The sense of the passage is. vv. 13—15.] HOSEA, IX. 99 Yet will I bereave them, that there shall not be a man left: Yea, woe also to them when I depart from them ! Ephraim, as I saw Tyrus, is planted in a pleasant place : 1 But Ephraim shall bring forth his children to the murderer. Give them, O Lord : what wilt thou give ? 1 Give them a miscarrying womb and dry breasts. All their wickedness is in Gilgal, for there I hated them : 1 even to turn away my face would sink them in an abyss of ruin. The ordinary reading does not allow us easily to account for the ' also ', or rather, 'even', which precedes. 13. Ephraim, as I saw Tyrus, &c] The passage is most obscure, and it is difficult to believe that Hosea meant what A.V. supposes. 'As I look at Tyre ', would be better ; but then it becomes difficult to extract a sense. Tyre is, in fact, very much out of place in a descrip tion of the fortunes of Ephraim ; and it is a relief to find that it has been introduced by critics contrary to Hebrew usage, for Tyre is elsewhere spelt without a Vav. How, too, can Ephraim be said to be planted, without any explanatory figurative words? The Sept. seems to have had a different text, 'As for Ephraim, according as I see, they have set their sons for a prey ' ; and this seems preferable to the received text. The prophet sees, in imagination the Ephraimites taken like wild beasts, and put to death by their cruel captors. but Ephraim shall, &c] Taking the passage as a contrast between Ephraim's past glory and the dreadful fate impending over it. But if Hosea is throughout describing the judgment, render rather, and Ephraim shall (or better, must), &c. 14. The prophet recognizes the necessity of a judgment, but pleads for a mitigation. Love for his people burns within him, and prompts him to do all that is consistent with his moral perceptions and the revelation made to him. Comp. the conduct of Moses in a similar case, Ex. xxxii. n — 14. what wilt thou give them 7] The prophet considers what he. had best ask for. He is a patriot, but he is also a prophet ; he loves his_ nation with a feminine tenderness, but in zeal for his God he is not inferior to Amos or Isaiah. Hence his momentary perplexity. And yet this is perhaps too literal an interpretation. Rather is it, to use Ewald's language, ' a paroxysm of despair.' Better were it that the Israelites should be condemned to barrenness than lose their choicest young population thus ! It is an involuntary cry from the heart 15, 16. Continuation of the speech of Jehovah, which had been interrupted at v. 13. 15. All their wickedness is in Gilgal, &c] The dangerous attrac tiveness of Gilgal has been mentioned already (iv. 15) : the corruption of the northern, kingdom had its focus there. At Gilgal, then, Jehovah has learned to 'hate' His unnatural children (comp. xi. 1) so much 7—2 HOSEA, IX. X. [w. 16, 17; 1. For the wickedness of their doings I will drive them out of mine house, I will; love them no more : All their princes are revolters. 16 Ephraim is smitten, their root is dried up, they shall bear no fruit : Yea, though they bring forth, yet will I slay even the be loved fruit of their womb. 17 My God will cast them away, because they did not hearken unto him : And they shall be wanderers among the nations. 10 Israel is an empty vine, he bringeth forth fruit unto him self: that He must drive them out of His House (i.e. the Holy Land, as viii. 1). all their princes are revolters] Those who should be the leaders in cheerful subordination to the revealed will of God, are the foremost in transgression. The same paronomasia as in Isa. i. 23— as if he had said, they are not sarim but sorerim. 16. Ephraim is smitten...] Ephraim's population is compared to the branches of a tree, and the national vitality to the root. The tree is ' smitten ' by the withering heat, or by lightning, or, like Jonah's ' ricinus ', by 'worms' (Jon. iv. 7), so that root and branches dry up; the idea of v. 11b in figurative form. Comp. Am. ii. 9; Mai. iv. 1. yea (even) though they bring forth] The prophet steps out of the language of metaphor, and repeats in effect ix. 12 a. This defines the meaning of 'bear no fruit'. 17. The prophet has quelled his brief paroxysm, and calmly proceeds. But the threat is not now extermination. My God] No longer, alas! Israel's God. Comp. Isaiah's 'this people ' for ' my people ' (Isa. vi. 9). wanderers] Or, fugitives (it is the participle of the verb used in vii. 1 3, see note). Chap. X. Israel's guilt and its punishment, each shown by examples. But even in this dark chapter there is a short gleam of hope (ver. 12). 1. Israel is an empty vine...] Rather, Israel was a luxuriant vine, which freely put forth fruit. A development of the suggestions in ix. 10, 16; compare with it the fuller description in Ps. lxxx. 8 n. The ' fruit ' spoken of is not moral, but material. The bounties of vv. 2, 3.] HOSEA, X. 101 According to the multitude of his fruit he hath increased the altars ; According to the goodness of his land they have made goodly images. Their heart is divided ; now shall they be found faulty : 2 He shall break down their altars, he shall spoil their images. For now they shall say, We have no king, 3 Providence were lavished upon northern Israel (comp. chap ii.), and gave ground for the expectation of Israel's grateful obedience. The allusion will be to the prosperous reign of the second Jeroboam. according to the multitude, &c] Rather, as his fruit increased, he increased his altars ; the better it was with his land, the better he made his (sacred) pillars. The material wealth of the country only served to strengthen and extend the idolatrous system of worship (comp. ii. 8, viii. 4, and note on viii. 11). 'Altars' and (sacred) 'pillars' are naturally mentioned together, the 'pillar' (maccebah) or consecrated stone being the recognized token of a ' high place. ' Not only did Jacob set up such pillars at Bethel and elsewhere (Gen. xxviii. 18, xxxi. 45, xxxv. 14, 20), but Moses himself is recorded to have built an altar with no less than twelve sacred pillars (Ex. xxiv. 4). They were forbidden no doubt, absolutely and entirely, in Deut. xvi. 21, but, besides the pillars of Baal (2 Kings iii. 2, x. 26, xvii. 9), there is reason to think that those great stones spoken of in the narrative books (Josh. xxiv. 26; 1 Sam. vi. 14, vii. 12; 2 Sam. xx. 8; 1 Kings i. 9) were really sacred pillars, though the narrator, to avoid startling his readers, denies them the name. Isaiah himself, too, speaks of a 'pillar', or sacred stone, as a sign, together with an altar, of the worship of Jehovah in Egypt (Isa. xix. 19). If then pillars, sacred to Jehovah, were tolerated in Judah in Isaiah's time, much more must we suppose that they were tolerated in Israel. But why does Hosea refer to them as signs of infidelity? Because the worship of Jehovah at the high places was purely formal, and produced no moral effect upon the character (see on viii. n). In short, he is more consistent, more outspoken than Isaiah himself, who never says that the high places are occasions of sin. True, Hosea speaks of the north; Isaiah of the south. 2. Their heart is divided] viz., between Jehovah and idols. But this, which involves an alteration of the points, gives too weak a sense for such a context. It is better to keep the ordinary pointing, and render, Their heart is slippery (or deceitful; lit. 'is smooth'; comp. Ezek. xii. 24 smooth, i.e. flattering, divination). be found faulty] Rather, be dealt with as guilty (as xiii. 16). he shall break down, &c] The phrase is a bold one; it is literally 'he shall break the necks of the altars', i.e. perhaps strike off their horns (Am. iii. 14), and so destroy them. 'He' is emphatically ex pressed in the Hebrew, to indicate the unseen observer of their thoughts and actions. 3. For now they shall say...] Rather, Yea then, &c. They shall 102 HOSEA, X. [vv. 4, 5. Because we feared not the Lord ; What then should a king do to us ? They, have spoken words, swearing falsely in making a covenant : Thus judgment springeth up as hemlock in the furrows of the field. i The inhabitants of Samaria shall fear because of the calves of Beth-aven : come to perceive that the kings set up on their own authority (viii. 4) cannot help nor deliver them. We have no king, &c] i.e., none worthy of the name, for a king should be judge, counseller, general ; hence, they continue, and the king [whom we have], what can he do for us? 4. They have spoken words] i.e. mere 'words of the lips' (Isa. xxxvi. 5, comp". Isa. lviii. 13), and, as the context. shows, deliberate falsehoods (comp. Isa. xxix. 21). swearing falsely in making a covenant] Better, they swear falsely, they make covenants. The 'covenants' spoken of are those entered into with Assyria and Egypt (v. 6, xii. 2), not those of everyday life, since it is the making of covenants, and not the breaking of them, which the prophet denounces. thus judgment springeth up as hemlock, &c.] Rather, so Judgment shall spring up as the poppy. Their sins are as it were the seed from which a plant is produced as bitter and as abundant as the poppy of the fields. The plant in question (Heb. rosh) is often referred to, and cannot be identified with precision (see on Jer. viii. 14); most think it is some umbelliferous plant, rosh being the common word for 'head.'. Else where its bitterness is the point of comparison (Deut. xxix. 18 ; Jer. ix. 15 ; Lam. iii. 19); here its abundant growth as well. Hence some have been led to render, continuing the description of the immorality of Israel, 'and justice springs up like the poppy', i.e., understanding the passage ironically, acts of hurtful injustice are as luxuriantly abundant as that noxious weed, comp. Am. vi. 12. But the universality of the divine judgment can be as well expressed by this figure as the univer sality of sin, and z>. 5 requires some previous reference to the punish ment to explain it. The judgment began with the man who was fore most in those illegitimate covenants — with the prophet's royal namesake (Hoshea) ; see 2 Kings xvii. 4. 5. shall fear because of the calves of Beth-aven] The statement is keenly ironical. So far from being able to help their worshippers, the " ' calves of Beth-aven ' shall occasion the greatest anxiety to their wor shippers. Probably however we should make a slight emendation, and render, shall bemoan the calves (yanudU fox yaguru); comp. the paral lel clause. ' Beth-aven ' is a contemptuous name for Bethel (see on iv. 15); the 'calves', or more literally 'she-calves', may indicate what we should not otherwise have known, that Jeroboam's 'calf (or small bull) was only the chief of several of these idolatrous symbols. It vv. 6, 7-] HOSEA, X. 103 For the people thereof shall mourn over it, And the priests thereof that rejoiced on it, For the glory thereof, because it is departed from it. It shall be also carried unto Assyria for a present to king 6 Jareb : Ephraim shall receive shame, And Israel shall be ashamed of his own counsel. As for Samaria, her king is cut off 7 As the foam upon the water. should be added however that the Sept. and the Pesh. have the masc. sing, form, so that the text is not beyond dispute, especially as Hosea immediately afterwards employs pronominal suffixes of the 3rd pers. sing. masc. The feminine form in the received reading is perhaps to be explained as expressing contempt ('AxadSes oix It 'A-xcuol, II. II. 235, has been compared) ; it is used nowhere else of the steer -gods. for the people thereof, &c] Rather, yea, his people shall mourn for it, and his priests shall tremble for it, for their glory, because it is gone into exile from them. Again keenly ironical. 'His people' means the steer-god's people ; Jehovah's people they are no more : ' Call his name Not-my-people ' (i. 9). The ' priests ' of the idol, too, are not dignified by the title kohanim : the word used (k'mdrim, as in 2 Kings xxiii. 5 ; Zeph. i. 4) comes, directly or indirectly, from the Assyrian kamdru ' to throw down ' ; it describes the priests as those who pro strate themselves in worship (Fred. Delitzsch, Assyrian and Hebrew, pp. 41, 42). Comp. below, on xi. 8. 'Their glory', i.e. the steer-god ; comp. Ps. cvi. 20. Literally, however, it is 'his glory', which might of course mean the splendid appurtenances of the worship of the steer.. ' Shall tremble ' ; yagilu borrows the sense olyakhilu ; it seems preferred for the sake of the assonance with gdldh ('it is gone into exile'). Or there may be a scribe's error in the case. 6. It shall be also] Rather, This also (viz. the steer) shall be. for a present to king Jareb] Just as the kings of Judah repeatedly gave up the gold and silver in the temple to foreign foes. 'King Jareb' should rather be the fighting king (i.e. the king of Assyria, see on v. '3)- shall be ashamed of his own counsel] i.e., shall find out what a mistake it was to set up a helpless idol as the protector of the nation. Better, shall be ashamed through &c. 7. her king] i.e. not merely the king who happened to be on the throne, but the monarchy itself (as v. 15). Others, less probably, her idol-god (comp. Am. v. 26). as the foam, &c] A striking figure, and singled out for its beauty by so good a judge as Mr Ruskin, but Hosea's is still more appropriate. Render, as a chip on the face of the water (following the Septuagint instead of the Targum), and note the contrast between the helpless fragment of wood and the irresistible power of the current. 104 HOSEA, X. [vv. 8— 10. The high places also of Aven, the sin of Israel, shall be destroyed : The thorn and the thistle shall come up on their altars ; And they shall say to the mountains, Cover us; And to the hills, Fall on us. O Israel, thou hast sinned from the days of Gibeah : there they stood : The battle in Gibeah against the children of iniquity did not overtake them. • It is in my desire that I should chastise them ; And the people shall be gathered against them, When they shall bind themselves in their two furrows. 8. The high places also of Aven] Perhaps the same as Beth-aven, i.e. Bethel (iv. 15, x. 5). But 'the high places of idolatry' (as Aben Ezra) is an equally admissible rendering of the phrase ; all the local sanctuaries of the steer-god will then be referred to. The term 'high place' includes both the mound and the shrine and altar erected upon it. they shall say...] Applied proverbially by our Lord (Luke xxiii. 30) and by St John (Rev. vi. 16, ix. 6). 9 — 15. A fresh demonstration of Israel's guiltiness. The prevalent depravity is comparable only to that of the men of Gibeah (see on ix. 9). ' The times are out of joint ' ; all Israel's doings are against nature, and the retribution must be equally exceptional. 9. thou hast sinned...] The prophet's language is correct from his own point of view. True, Israel as a people took summary vengeance on the Benjamites for the outrage of Gibeah. But the seed of wicked ness remained, and developed into evil practices worthy only of the Gibeah of old. there they stood... did not overtake them] The passage is open to various interpretations, but the easiest is as follows, — there they stood that the war against the sons of unrighteousness might not over take them at Gibeah. It is a historic retrospect, with an implied application to the present. Just as the Benjamites offered a stubborn resistance to the onset of the rest of Israel at Gibeah, so the Israelites now persist in their old iniquities, and defy Jehovah to put them down. 10. Jehovah's rejoinder to this tacit challenge. It is in my desire...] Rather, When I desire, I will chastise them, and peoples (i. e. hostile armies), &c. when they shall bind themselves, &c] Rather, when I chastise them (or, when I bind them, or, when they shall be bound) for their two iniquities, viz. for their revolt from 'Jehovah their God and David their king' (iii. 5). The rendering 'furrows' adopted in A.V. from the Targum has no support in Hebrew usage, and yields no intelligible sense. 'Iniquities' is the rendering of the Septuagint and the Vulgate, w. ii, 12.] HOSEA, X. 105 And Ephraim is as a. heifer that is taught, and loveth to u tread out the corn ; But I passed over upon her fair neck : I will make Ephraim to ride ; Judah shall plow, And Jacob shall break his clods. Sow to yourselves in righteousness, 12 Reap in mercy ; as well as of Hitzig, Keil, &c, though these scholars prefer the version 'bind to', and explain that punishment is viewed as the necessary concomitant of transgression. 11. And Ephraim, &c] Rather, Ephraim Indeed is a heifer broken in and loving to thresh, and I have spared the beauty of her neck ; (but now) will I make Ephraim to draw. Israel's punishment is enhanced by contrast with her former prosperity, which, as a mark of the Divine goodness, is compared to the consideration with which a young heifer is treated by its master. The work of treading out the corn was pleasant and easy; the heifer could eat freely as it walked without a muzzle round and round the threshing-floor (Deut. xxv. 4). But this heifer, that is, Israel, has abused the kindness of its Lord (comp. Deut. xxxii. 1$), and henceforth shall be put to the heavy labour of the field — a figure for the depressing conditions of life under a foreign master. The rendering 'spared' (literally, 'passed by') is justified by Mic. vii. 18; Prov. xix. n; it adds a beautiful distinctness to the figure, for the heavy yokes used in the East not only gall the necks of the animals, but often produce deep wounds. The meaning is that Jehovah has hitherto preserved his people from the yoke of captivity ; compare the different applications of the same figure in xi. 4. 'Make to draw'; lit. 'make to ride', but rdkab, as the usage of the cognate word in Arabic shows, can have various secondary meanings. [Space forbids a record of all the explanations of this passage ; none is so simple as that of Buhl given above. The objection that to ' pass by ' is elsewhere used with reference to transgression is not conclusive ; the idiom is just as applicable in the present case. There is good authority, however, for the rendering or paraphrase, ' I mounted upon her fair neck', though why the 'beauty' of the neck should be mentioned, is not clear.] Judah shall plow] Judah, then, is also a ' stubborn heifer ', and cannot be exempted from her sister's punishment. 12. If only a moral miracle could take place, Israel's calamities might yet be averted. Nor is it entirely inconceivable, for miracles, so Hosea thinks, can be wrought by an earnest resolution. Hence Hosea's final appeal. Sow to yourselves, &c] Rather, Sow to yourselves according to righteousness, and ye shall reap in proportion to love ; that is, Let your conduct be governed by a regard to righteousness, and it shall be recompensed in accordance with the divine love (or perhaps, see on 106 HOSEA, X. [vv. 13, 14. Break up your fallow ground : For it is time to seek the Lord, Till he come and :rain righteousness upon you. Ye have plowed wickedness, ye have reaped iniquity ; Ye have eaten the fruit of lies : Because thou didst trust in thy way, In the multitude of thy mighty men. Therefore shall a tumult arise among thy people, iv. 1, in accordance with the love ye have shown to one another, 'righteousness' being only another aspect of 'love' or benevolence). Break up your fallow ground] Husbandmen in the East are indolent, and sometimes 'sow among thorns' (Jer. iv. 3). The Israelites are warned against committing this fault in their spiritual husbandry. Evil habits must be broken off, and a new character formed, or it will be impossible to sow the seed of righteousness. for it is time, &c] There is still time to seek Jehovah, till he listen to your prayer, and rain his righteous gift of salvation upon you. For the figure of righteousness coming down from the sky, comp. Isa. xiv. 8; Ps. lxxxv. n. 'Righteousness' bears the meaning 'salvation' which it virtually has so often in the second part of Isaiah, ' righteous ness ' being the divine principle of action, ' salvation ' the same divine principle in action. 13. How necessary is this exhortation ! For hitherto the Israelites have done the exact opposite. plowed wickedness] i.e., formed wicked plans (as Job iv. 8). The word for ' to plough ' has in fact another meaning ' to plot. ' reaped iniquity] Better, reaped injustice — i. e. the injustice of oppressors, which, being retributive, is, from the higher point of view, substantial justice. The tense is the prophetic perfect. ,. the fruit of lies] To ' lie ' is sometimes=to disappoint (as ix. 2), and probably this is the meaning here, viz. that the consequence of Israel's present policy shall be the disappointment of all his expectations. ' Fruit ' implies that that policy has been one of ' lying ', i.e. treason both to earthly kings and to Jehovah (comp. xi. r2, xii. 1; Isa. xxviii. 15). in thy way] i.e. in thy policy. But there is a reading of earlier date than the Massoretic, viz. in thy chariots (comp. xiv. 3 ; Isa. ii. 7) which, as it harmonizes better with the rest of the clause, is undoubtedly preferable. For few scholars will maintain that the iv ap.apTrifw.iTi of the Vatican MS. of the Septuagint is more original than the iv ciptiaoi of the Alexandrine and other MSS. (confirmed by St Jerome and the Syro-Hexaplar text). The Vatican reading can easily be explained ; the scribe wished to harmonize the translation with the reading ' in thy way ' found by him in his Hebrew Bible. 14, 15. In a few words the prophet describes the crash of Israel's ruin (comp. xiii. 16). Therefore] The prophet simply connects the judgment by an ' and ' ; v. 15.] HOSEA, X. 107 And all thy fortresses shall be spoiled, As Shalman spoiled Beth-arbel in the day of battle : The mother was dashed in pieces upon her children. So shall Beth-el do unto you because of your great i; wickedness ; In a morning shall the king of Israel utterly be cut off. but the next verse clearly shows that sequence is here identical with consequence. a tumult] i. c, the tumult, or, more exactly, the ' roar', of an advanc ing army (as in Isa. xvii. 12). among thy people] Rather, against thy peoples. The tribes of Israel are called peoples, as in Deut. xxxiii. 3. as Shalman spoiled Beth-arbel, &c] It would seem that the prophet refers to some event of recent times which took place in the immediate neighbourhood of Ephraim. Beth-arbel will then be, not the Assyrian Arbela, but either the place so called on the west of the lake of Tibe rias, or more probably that near Pella, on the east of the Jordan. Who Shalman was, is altogether uncertain. Schrader thinks that he was either Shalmaneser III., who made an expedition to the 'cedar country' (Lebanon) in 775 B.C., and to Damascus in 773 — 2, on which occasions he may have penetrated into the Transjordanic country, and destroyed the last-mentioned Arbela, or else a Moabitish king Salamanu, mentioned by Tiglath-Pileser as his tributary, who, like other Moabitish kings, very possibly made incursions into the land of Israel. It is against the former view that the abbreviation Shalman nowhere else occurs, and that 'king' or ' king of Assyria ' is not added. But the latter view, though plausible (the Hebrew word is strictly, not Shalman, but Shalgman), is not the only possible one. The Septuagint renders ' prince Salaman,' which, if we may take it as a variant, will point rather to a general ( = ' prince of the host'). The name has been found both on a Palmyrene inscrip tion and in an Arabian song (see Hamdsa, p. 702). The barbarities attending the capture of Beth-arbel seem to have made a. deep impression on the Israelites; Mr Huxtable aptly reminds us of the horrors of the sack of Magdeburg. Comp. 2 Kings viii. 12; Ps. cxxxvii. 8, 9. [The Septuagint, the Syro-Hexaplar, the Old Latin, and the Vulgate, followed by Bishop Horsley and the Jewish scholar Abraham Geiger, suppose a reference to Zalmunna (2a\p.a.vd, Salmana) who was slain by Gideon or Jerubbaal according to Judg. viii. This hint will enable the reader to understand the singular renderings of these ancient versions.] 15. So shall Beth-el, &c] Such is the awful judgment of which the idolatry of Bethel is the cause. your great wickedness] Lit., "your wickedness of wickedness, with which some compare the phrases ' song of songs', ' holy of holies.' But it is more natural to suppose that the word 'wickedness' was wntten twice over by accident. in " morning] Rather, in the dawn. The meaning is that when 108 HOSEA, XI. [vv. 1—2. 11 When Israel was a child, then I loved him, And called my son out of Egypt. 2 As they called them, so they went from them : They sacrificed unto Baalim, and burnt incense to graven images. the morning-grey appears, the king will be found to be cut off. All has happened as quickly as time seems to have passed when we awake (comp. Ps. xc. 6, ' they become as a sleep '). Chapter XI. For the third time the prophet reverts to the early history of Israel, and points out how Jehovah has proved his parental love, and how ill is the return which Israel has made for this love. Verses 1 — 7 contain this melancholy historic retrospect and a fresh announcement of the penalty which a righteous father cannot withhold. Then the tone sud denly changes to one of promise (see below). The last verse of chap. xi. would be attached more fitly to chap, xii., of which it forms the first verse in the Hebrew Bible. 1. When Israel was a child] i. e., in the earliest stage of Israel's national existence, which is here dated, not, as in ii. 3, from the wan derings in the wilderness, but from the sojourn in Egypt. For the figure, see on ' gray hairs ', vii. 9. called my son out of Egypt] ' Called ' him, locally, into the land of Canaan, and morally, to set an example of true religion. Comp. Ex. iv. 22, ' Israel is my son, my firstborn ; and I say unto thee, Let my son go, that he may serve me.' The words are quoted in St Matthew (ii. 15), who renders from the Hebrew, in connexion with the sojourn of the child Jesus in Egypt. Like the portraiture of the Servant of Jeho-. vah in the second part of Isaiah, the description of Israel as Jehovah's Son was held to be at least in part applicable to the one perfect Israelite. The national ideal never realized in the nation was realized in the Christ. The divine purpose so often baffled in the one was completed in the other. 2. As they called them, &c] Or, The more they called them, &c. (comp. iv. 7). Since Israel disobeyed the first call by Moses, prophets were sent to repeat the call, but their preaching only seemed to increase Israel's obstinacy (comp. Isa. vi. 9, 10 ; Jer. vii. 25, 26). What, then, was the good of prophecy? It kept up a church within the nation, and it developed ideas which bore fruit in due time. unto Baalim, &c] Rather, to the Baalim (see on ii. 13). ..to the graven images. 3. / taught Ephraim also to go] Rather, Whereas I taught Ephraim to go. A figure for the special providence watching over Ephraim. Not Judah, but Ephraim, is spoken of, for the kingdom of Israel embraced the fairer part of the territory, and was far stronger than that of Judah. vv. 3—5-] HOSEA, XI. 109 I taught Ephraim also to go, taking them by their arms ; 3 But they knew not that I healed them. I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love : 4 And I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws, And I laid meat unto them. He shall not return into the land of Egypt, 5 But the Assyrian shall be his king, Because they refused to return. taking them by their arms] Rather, if we accept the Massoretic read ing, 'he took them up in his arms.' There are however grave philo logical objections to this rendering, and we should probably, with most of the versions, correct the reading, and translate, I took them up in my arms. There is a beautiful climax in this part of the figure ; not only did Jehovah train Israel to walk, but when he was tired, Jehovah carried him in his arms, comp. Isa. Ixiii. 9 ; Deut. i. 31, (xxxii. 11), and comp. a parallel passage in the Rig- Veda (x. 69, 10, Max Miiller), 'Thou barest him as a father bears his son in his lap.' they knew not] i.e. they recognized not (as i. 3). that I healed them] The same figure as in v. 13, vi. 1, vii. 1. Comp. Ex. xv. 26, ' for I am Jehovah thy healer.' 4. / drew them with cords of a man, &c] A new image suggested by x. 11, and descriptive of the fatherly love of God. Not with the violence suited to an unruly heifer, but with the 'cords of men' (i.e. such as men can bear), did Jehovah win his people's obedience. But the expression is strange. that take off the yoke on their jaws] Rather, that lift up the yoke over their cheeks. Jehovah compares himself to a considerate master, who raises the yoke from the neck and cheeks of the animal, that it may eat its food more conveniently. and I laid meat unto them] This version however is impossible. As the text stands, we can only render, either (altering one vowel-point), and I bent towards him and gave him food, or, and (dealing) gently with him I gave 'Mm food. Not of course to be interpreted literally ; the figure beautifully describes the tender indulgence of Jehovah to his people. 6. He shall not return into the land of Egypt] This however is pointless ; why should Egypt be mentioned except as the land of bond age? It is also inconsistent with the statements in viii. 13, ix. 3, 6, xi. 11. Some think that lo (here rendered ' not', but also, when spelt differently, meaning 'to him') belongs properly to the end of the previous verse, though no tenable way of fitting it into the construction there has yet been proposed. Others would render in verse 5, ' Shall he not return' ? but this does not read naturally. At any rate, the sense required is, ' He shall return into the land of Egypt.' See note on viii. 13. to return] viz. to Jehovah. no HOSEA, XI. [vv. 6— 8. And the sword shall abide on his cities, And shall consume his branches, and devour them, Because of their own counsels. And my people are bent to backsliding from me : Though they called them to the most High, None at all would exalt him. How shall I give thee up, Ephraim ? How shall I deliver thee, Israel ? How shall I make thee as Admah ? How shall I set thee as Zeboim ? Mine heart is turned within me, My repentings are kindled together. 6. And the sword, &c] Rather, And the sword shall whirl about In his cities, and shall make an end of his defences (lit. his bars ; comp. Jer. li. 30). The sword is personified as the symbol of war, as Ez.k. xiv. 17. 7. And my people, &c] This verse gives the ground of the judg ment; ' and' = 'for', 'in fact.' The reference to 'backsliding' (lit. turning, or turning about) should be taken in connexion with xiv. 4. though they called, &c] Rather, and if they are called (lit., if they, viz. the prophets, call him) upwards, not one striveth to rise. There is a complete moral apathy. A phraseological point of contact with vii. 16. 8—11. The prophet cannot believe in a final rejection of Israel (comp. xiii. 14). He speaks as if Jehovah had at first contemplated this. Evidently there was a conflict in his own mind between the ideas of justice and love. Justice seemed to demand that all relations between Jehovah and Israel should be broken off; love remonstrated with the assurance of its undecayed healing faculty (xiv. 4). Both justice and love were divine; hence it seemed that there must be a conflict even in the mind of Jehovah. Let us not however presume to deduce a ' doctrine ' from Hosea's description of his mental mood. His final intuition alone is his legacy to the Church ; not the inward struggle out of which he triumphantly emerged. 8. deliver thee] Not in the sense of virepaoiriw of the Sept., but in that of Symmachus' iicdwo-a. Better, surrender thee. Admah... Zeboim] Hosea, like the author of Deut. xxix. 23, derives his knowledge of the overthrow of the 'cities of the plain' from a tradition independent of that in Gen. xix. For another instance of such independent knowledge, see xii. 3 — 5. my repentings are kindled together] Even this inaccurate rendering cannot quite conceal the fine intuition of the prophet. By partly humanizing God's nature, he as it were divinizes man's. Human sympathy is but a rill from the mighty stream of God's tender mercy. A closer rendering would be, I am wholly overcome with sympathy. vv. 9, 10.] HOSEA, XI. in I will not execute the fierceness of mine anger, 9 I will not return to destroy Ephraim : For I am God, and not man ; The Holy One in the midst of thee : And I will not enter into the city. They shall walk after the Lord : he shall roar like a lion : 10 The Hebrew idiom however is different — 'my sympathies are wholly overcome.' Almost the same phrase occurs in Gen. xliii. 20, 'his compassions were overcome towards his brother. ' [The word rendered 'are overcome' (nik' merit) has the closest affinity with the Assyrian kamdru ' to throw down ', referred to in the note on x. 5 in explanation oik'mdrim '(idolatrous) priests.'] In Jer. xv. 6 a different but equally anthropomorphic expression is ascribed to Jehovah — 'I am weary of sympathizing.' 9. / will not return, &c] The strict rendering of the words is, 'I will not again destroy Ephraim'; the sense however, is, I will not bring back Ephraim to nothing. He who moulded Ephraim into a nation will not busy himself with it again to its destruction. Comp. the same Hebrew idiom in ii. 9. for I am God, and not man] The perfection of the Divine nature does not, to Hosea, exclude the possession of something analogous to human feelings, but one thing it does forbid us to assume, viz. that an emotion of anger should divert Jehovah from the execution of his eternal purpose. the Holy One in the midst of thee] It is the glory of Israel to have the Holy One specially in her midst. Whatever interferes with His supreme right of property in Israel, He must destroy, but He will not so chastise His chosen people as to extinguish it altogether. All that is left will be holy, as Jehovah is holy — devoted to Jehovah, as Jehovah is devoted to Israel. Of course, though Jehovah's holiness has a special relation to Israel, this does not exclude a more general relation to the world outside. His manifestation is concentrated, but not confined, within His 'peculiar people.' I will not enter into the city] But this is pointless, for why should a visit from Jehovah be deprecated (comp. Ex. xx. 24)? Hence many, adopting a different view of one word, render, I will not come in fury. This is, however, not free from objection, and a very slight emendation gives the very appropriate sense, I will not come to exterminate {parallel to 'to destroy'). 10, 11. Instead of introducing his description of Israel's restoration by some phrase like, 'When I heal Israel' (vii. 1), the prophet ab ruptly transports us in medias res. The return of the Israelites of the dispersion is singled out as one of the most characteristic features of the Messianic age (comp. Isa. xi. 11, 12, xxvii. 13; Jer. iii. 18; Zech. x. 10). The lion's roar takes the place of the 'great trumpet' in Isa. xxvii. 13. 10. They shall walk, &c] Rather, They shall go after Jehovah, HOSEA, XI. [vv. ir, 12. When he shall roar, then the children shall tremble from the west. They shall tremble as a bird out of Egypt, And as a dove out- of the land of Assyria : And I will place them in their houses, saith the Lord. Ephraim compasseth me about with lies, and the house of Israel with deceit : But Judah yet ruleth with God, and is faithful with the saints. as after a lion that roareth; for he himself shall roar, and sons shall come hurrying from the west (lit. from the sea). ' The west ' means the same as 'the islands (or, coast-lands) of the sea' in the latter part of Isaiah, except that Hosea's knowledge of the coasts and islands of the western sea would be much vaguer than that of his fellow- prophet, if Isa. xl. — Ixvi. is as late a work as many modems suppose. ' Go after ' is a phrase for the dependent relation of a worshipper to his God; comp. i. 2; Jer. vii. 9; 1 Sam. vii. 2; Deut. i. 36. For 'shall roar', comp. Joel iii. 16; Am. i. 2, iii. 8; Jer. xxv. 30. Jehovah is compared to a lion calling the young lions; contrast the figure of the lion in v. 14, xiii. 7. 11. tremble as a bird... as a dove] 'Tremble ' is the literal rendering, but the context shows that a thrill of eagerness doubling the speed of motion is what is meant (comp. Ovid's 'penna trepidante'). Render therefore, come hurriedly, and continue, as sparrows.. .as doves. Doves were very early known in both Egypt and Assyria. Elsewhere (vii. ir) Hosea compares the Israelites to doves for their folly. [For the rendering ' come hurriedly ' comp. the Syriac r'hab which combines the meanings of haste and trembling.] place them] Rather, cause them to dwell 12. The Septuagint, and after it the English Version, mistook the blame of the second half of this verse for praise, and hence attached the verse to chap. xi. Properly, however, it belongs to chap, xii., of which it is the first verse in the Hebrew Bible. Jehovah is the speaker. Israel's sins of treason and deceit are so numerous that his God is as it were surrounded by them, and can see nothing else ; nor has Judah shown any more deference to the repeated warnings of the prophet. but Judah yet ruleth, &c] Rather, and Judah is yet wayward towards God, and towards the faithful Holy One. 'Yet', because Hosea's earlier prophecies record the long continuance of Judah's back sliding (v. 10, vi. 4, 11, viii. 14). The word rendered 'wayward' has the root-meaning of roving unrestrained, as when an animal has broken loose. Hence Jer. ii. 31, ' Wherefore say my people, We rove at large; we will come no more unto thee.' 'The Holy One' has in the Hebrew the plural termination, as in Prov. ix. 10 ; it seems formed on the model of Elohim, '(the) divinity', lit. '(the) divinities.' We might express the force of the plural by rendering ' the All-Holy One ', or (as margin) ' the Most Holy.' The Septuagint (partly followed by "3 w. I— 3.] HOSEA, XII. 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Other Volumes Preparing. LONDON : 0. J. CLAY and SONS, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, AVE MARIA LANE. Cfoe Smaller Camforftrge §5t'ble for £>cfooote. Now Beady. With Maps. Price Is. each volume. Book of Joshua. Rev. J. S. Black, LL.D. Book of Judges. Rev. J. S. Black, LL.D. First Book of Samuel. Prof. Kirkpatrick, D.D. Second Book of Samuel. Prof. Kirkpatrick, D.D. First Book of Kings. Prof. Lumby, D.D. Second Book of Kings. Prof. Lumby, D.D. Ezra & Nehemiah. Prof. Ryle, D.D, Gospel according to St Matthew. Rev. A. Cabb, M.A. Gospel according to St Mark. Rev. G. F. Maclear, D.D. Gospel according to St Luke. Very Rev. F. W. Fabear, D.D. Gospel according to St John. Rev. A. Plummer, D.D. Acts of the Apostles. Prof. Lumby, D.D. €f)t Cambridge Bvtek Cesftament for ^brtjools anil ©ollegta General Editor: J. J. S. PEROWNE, D.D. Gospel according to St Matthew. Rev. A. Carr, M.A. With 4 Maps. 4s. 6(2. Gospel according to St Mark. Rev. G. F. Maclear, D.D. With 3 Maps. 4s. 6(2. 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Perowne, D.D., Bishop of Worcester. A. F. Kirkpatrick, D.D., Regius Professor of Hebrew. Opinions! of tt)t press. Guardian. — ' ' It is difficult to commend too highly this excellent series." Academy. — " The modesty of the general title of this series has, we believe, led many to misunderstand its character and underrate its value. The books are well suited for study in the upper forms of our best schools, but not the less are they adapted to the wants of all Bible students who are not specialists. We doubt, indeed, whether any of the numerous popular commentaries recently issued in this country will be found more serviceable for general use." Baptist Magazine. — " One of the most popular and useful literary enterprises of the nineteenth century." Sword and Trowel. — " Of great value. The whole series of com ments for schools is highly esteemed by students capable of forming a judgment. The books are scholarly without being pretentious : and in formation is so given as to be easily understood." Sunday School Chronicle. — " There are no better books in exposition of the different parts of Scripture than those contained in the Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges. The series has long since established its claim to an honourable place in the front rank of first-rate commentaries; and the teacher or preacher who masters its volumes will be, like Apollos, ' mighty in the Scriptures.' All conscientious and earnest students of the Scriptures owe an immense debt to the Cambridge University Press for its Bible for Schools and Colleges. Take it for all in all, it is probably the most useful commentary alike on the Old Testament and on the New that has been given us in recent years." II. Samuel. Academy. — " Smallas this work is in mere dimensions, it is every way the best on its subject and for its purpose that we know of. The opening sections at once prove the thorough competence of the writer for dealing with questions of criticism in an earnest, faithful and devout spirit ; and the appendices discuss a few special difficulties with a full knowledge of the data, and a judicial reserve, which contrast most favourably with the superficial dogmatism which has too often made the exegesis of the Old Testament a field for the play of unlimited paradox and the ostentation of personal infallibility. The notes are always clear and suggestive ; never trifling or irrelevant ; and they everywhere demon strate the great difference in value between the work of a commentator who is also a Hebraist, and that of one who has to depend for his Hebrew upon secondhand sources." n/i/99 i CAMBRIDGE BIBLE FOR SCHOOLS &° COLLEGES. I. Kings and Ephesians. Sword and Trowel. — " With great hearti ness we commend these most valuable little commentaries. We had rather purchase these than nine out of ten of the big blown up exposi tions. Quality is far better than quantity, and we have it here." Ezra and Nehemiah. Guardian. — " Professor Ryle's Commentary is quite the best work on these books accessible to the English reader. " The Book of Job. Spectator. — " Able and scholarly as the Introduc tion is, it is far surpassed by the detailed exegesis of the book. In this Dr Davidson's strength is at its greatest. His linguistic knowledge, his artistic habit, his scientific insight, and his literary power have full scope when he comes to exegesis." Methodist Recorder. — "Already we have frequently called attention to this exceedingly valuable work as its volumes have successively ap peared. But we have never done so with greater pleasure, very seldom with so great pleasure, as we now refer to the last published volume, that on the Book of Job, by Dr Davidson, of Edinburgh.. ..We cordially commend the volume to all our readers. The least instructed will under stand and enjoy it j and mature scholars will learn from it." Psalms. Book I. Church Times. — "It seems in every way a most valuable little book, containing a mass of information, well-assorted, and well-digested, and will be useful not only to students preparing for examinations, but to many who want a handy volume of explanation to much that is difficult in the Psalter We owe a great debt of grati tude to Professor Kirkpatrick for his scholarly and interesting volume. " Literary Churchman. — "In this volume thoughtful exegesis founded on nice critical scholarship and due regard for the opinions of various writers, combine, under the influence of a devout spirit, to render this commentary a source of much valuable assistance. The notes are 'though deep yet clear,' for they seem to put in a concentrated form the very pith and marrow of all the best that has been hitherto said on the subject, with striking freedom from anything like pressure of personal views- Throughout the work care and pains are as conspicuous as scholarship." Psalms. Books n. and III. Critical Review. — " The second volume of Professor Kirkpatrick's Commentary on the Book of Psalms has all the excellent qualities which characterised the first. ...It gives what is best in the philology of the subject. Its notes furnish what is most needed and most useful. Its literary style is attractive. It furnishes all that is of real value in the form of introduction, and it has a studious regard for the devout as well as intelligent understanding of the Psalms." Job — Hosea. Guardian. — " It is difficult to commend too highly this excellent series, the volumes of which are now becoming numerous. The two books before us, small as they are in size, comprise almost everything that the young student can reasonably expect to find in the way of helps towards such general knowledge of their subjects as may be gained without an attempt to grapple with the Hebrew ; and even the learned scholar can hardly read without interest and benefit the very able introductory matter which both these commentators have prefixed to their volumes." OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Isaiah. Chapters I — XXXIX. Professor W. H. Bennett in the British Weekly. — "Dr Skinner's name on the title-page of this book is a guarantee for extensive and exact scholarship and for careful and accurate treatment of the subject. This little volume will more than sustain the high reputation of the series in which it appears... readers will look forward with much interest to Dr Skinner's second volume on chapters xl — Ixvi." School Guardian. — "This last addition to 'The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges,' is a most valuable one, and will go far to increase the usefulness of what we have no hesitation in calling the most useful commentary for school purposes. There ought to be two copies, at least, of this in every parish — one in the clergyman's and the other in the teacher's library." Jeremiah. Church Quarterly Review. — "The arrangement of the book is well treated on pp. xxx., 396, and the question of Baruch's relations with its composition on pp. xxvii., xxxiv., 317. The illustra tions from English literature, history, monuments, works on botany, topography, etc., are good and plentiful, as indeed they are in other volumes of this series." Ezekiel. Guardian. — "No book of the Old Testament stands more in need of a commentator than this, and no scholar in England or Scotland is better qualified to comment upon it than Dr A. B. Davidson. With sound scholarship and excellent judgement he com bines an insight into Oriental modes of thought which renders him a specially trustworthy guide to a book such as this.... His commentary may be safely recommended as the best that has yet appeared. Nor is it unlikely that it will remain the best for some time to come." Joel and Amos. Church Bells. — " Professor Driver's latest con tribution to the Cambridge Bible cannot but shed lustre and value on this already praiseworthy attempt to aid our students of Bible history and doctrine. The introduction and notes place this book among the best handbooks to the Prophets' lives, work, and mission." Nahum, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. Critical Review. — " No better . guide to these three prophets could be wished than Dr Davidson's little book. His commentaries on Job and Ezekiel are perhaps the best in this excellent series, and the present work is equal to its predecessors." Guardian. — " Prof. Davidson has laid all students of the Old Testament under a fresh debt of gratitude by the publication of this scholarly little volume. It is quite the best commentary on these books that has yet appeared... .Small as it is, the volume is well worthy to take its place by the side of the same author's invaluable commentaries on Job and Ezekiel." Spectator. — "We may say without hesitation that Professor David son's guidance is amply satisfactory. The theological student or the preacher who may have to deal with the subject cannot do better than consult him." Malachi. Academy. — "Archdeacon Perowne has already edited 4 CAMBRIDGE BIBLE FOR SCHOOLS &> COLLEGES. Jonah and Zechariah for this series. Malachi presents comparatively few difficulties and the Editor's treatment leaves nothing to be desired. His introduction is clear and scholarly and his commentary sufficient. We may instance the notes on ii. 15 and iv. t as examples of careful arrangement, clear exposition and graceful expression." First Boole of Maccabees. Bookman. — " Useful at once to the theological student and the serious reader of the Bible. The notes are exceedingly interesting and are careful summaries of the best research." Educational Times. — " An excellent school and college edition. " St Matthew. English Churchman. — "The introduction is able, scholarly, and eminently practical, as it bears on the authorship and contents of the Gospel, and the original form in which it is supposed to have been written. It is well illustrated by two excellent maps of the Holy Land and of the Sea of Galilee." St Mark. Expositor. — " Into this small volume Dr Maclear, besides a clear and able Introduction to the Gospel, and the text of St Mark, has compressed many hundreds of valuable and helpful notes. In short, he has given us a capital manual of the kind required — containing all that is needed to illustrate the text, i. e. all that can be drawn from the history, geography, customs, and manners of the time. But as a handbook, giving in a clear and succinct form the information which a lad requires in order to stand an examination in the Gospel, it is admirable I can very heartily commend it, not only to the senior boys and girls in our High Schools, but also to Sunday-school teachers, who may get from it the very kind of knowledge they often find it hardest to get. " St Luke. Spectator. — "Canon Farrar has supplied students of the Gospel with an admirable manual in this volume. It has all that copious variety of illustration, ingenuity of suggestion, and general soundness of interpretation which readers are accustomed to expect from the learned and eloquent editor. Anyone who has been accus tomed to associate the idea of 'dryness' with a commentary, should go to Canon Farrar's St Luke for a more correct impression. He will find that a commentary may be made interesting in the highest degree, and that without losing anything of its solid value. ...But, so to speak, it is too good for some of the readers for whom it is intended. " St John. English Churchman. — "The notes are extremely scho larly and valuable, and in most cases exhaustive, bringing to the elucidation of the text all that is best in commentaries, ancient and modern." Acts. School Guardian. — " We do not know of any other volume where so much help is given to the complete understanding of one of the most important and, in many respects, difficult books of the New Testament." Romans. Expositor. — "The 'Notes' are very good, and lean, as ;he notes of a School Bible should, to the most commonly accepted md orthodox view of the inspired author's meaning ; while the Intro- OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. duction, and especially the Sketch of the Life of St Paul, is a model of condensation. It is as lively and pleasant to read as if two or three facts had not been crowded into well-nigh every sentence." Ephesians. Baptist Magazine. — " It seems to us the model of a School and College Commentary — comprehensive, but not cumbersome; scholarly, but not pedantic." Guardian. — " It supplies matter which is evidently the outcome of deep study pursued with a devotional mind." PhiUppians. Record. — "There are few series more valued by theological students than 'The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges,' and there will be no number of it more esteemed than that by Mr H. C. G. Moule on the Epistle to the PhiUppians." Colossians. Record. —"Those who have already used with pleasure and profit Mr Moule's volumes of the same series on Ephesians and PhiUppians will open this little book with the highest expectations. They will not be disappointed No more complete or trustworthy volume has been contributed to this series." Expository Times. — "This is now the Commentary on Colossians and Philemon to have at your hand, whether you are schoolboy or scholar, layman or clergyman." Thessalonians. Academy. — "Mr Findlay maintains the high level of the series to which he has become contributor. Some parts of his introduction to the Epistles to the Thessalonians could scarcely be bettered. The account of Thessalonica, the description of the style and character of the Epistles, and the analysis of them are excellent in style and scholarly care. The notes are possibly too voluminous ; but there is so much matter in them, and the matter is arranged and handled so ably, that we are ready to forgive their fulness Mr Findlay's com mentary is a valuable addition to what has been written on the letters to the Thessalonian Church." Baptist Magazine. — "Mr Findlay has fulfilled in this volume a task which Dr Moulton was compelled to decline, though he has rendered valuable aid in its preparation. The commentary is in its own way =» model — clear, forceful, scholarly — such as young students will welcome as a really useful guide, and old ones will acknowledge as giving in brief space the substance of all that they knew. " Timothy and Titus. The Christian. — "The series includes many volumes of sterling worth, and this last may rank among the most valuable. The pages evince careful scholarship and a thorough acquaint ance with expository literature ; and the work should promote a more general and practical study of the Pastoral Epistles." Hebrews. Baptist Magazine. — " Like his (Canon Farrar's) com mentary on Luke it possesses all the best characteristics of his writing. It is a work not only of an accomplished scholar, but of a skilled teacher." 6 CAMBRIDGE BIBLE FOR SCHOOLS eV COLLEGES. James. Expositor. — "It is, so far as I know, by far the best exposition of the Epistle of St James in the English language. _ Not schoolboys or students going in for an examination alone, but ministers- and preachers of the Word, may get more real help from it than from the most costly and elaborate commentaries." The Epistles of St John. Churchman. — " This forms an admirable companion to the 'Commentary on the Gospel according to St John,' which was reviewed in The Churchman as soon as it appeared. Dr Plummer has some of the highest qualifications for such a task ; and these two volumes, their size being considered, will bear comparison with the best Commentaries of the time." Revelation. Guardian. — "This volume contains evidence of much' careful labour. It is a scholarly production, as might be expected from the pen of the late Mr W. H. Simcox. ...The notes throw light upon many passages of this difficult book, and are extremely suggestive. It is an advantage that they sometimes set before the student various interpretations without exactly guiding him to a choice." Wesleyan Methodist Sunday-School Record. — "We cannot speak too highly of this excellent little volume. The introduction is of the greatest possible value to the student, and accurate scholarship is- combined with true loyalty to the inspired Word. There is much more matter of practical utility compressed into this volume of pp. 174 than is contained in many a portentous tome." ©be Smaller ©ambrfoge 23ible for ^dbools. Sunday-School Chronicle. — "We can only repeal what we have already said of this admirable series, containing, as it does, the scholar ship of the larger work. For scholars in our elder classes, and for those preparing for Scripture examinations, no better commentaries can be put into their hands. Record. — "Despite their small size, these volumes give the substance of the admirable pieces of work on which they are founded. We can only hope that in many schools the class-teaching will proceed on the lines these commentators suggest." Educational Review.—" The Smaller Cambridge Bible for Schools is unique in its combination of small compass with great scholarship.... For use in lower forms, in Sunday-schools and in the family, we cannot suggest better little manuals than these." Literary World. — "All that is necessary to be known and learned by pupils in junior and elementary schools is to be found in this series. Indeed, much more is provided than should be required by the examiners. We do not know what more could be done to provide sensible, interesting, and solid Scriptural instruction for boys and girls. The Syndics of the OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Cambridge University Press are rendering great services both to teachers and to scholars by the publication of such a valuable series of books, in ¦which slipshod work could not have a place." Christian Leader. — "For the student of the sacred oracles who utilizes hours of travel or moments of waiting in the perusal of the Bible there is nothing so handy, and, at the same time, so satisfying as these little books Nor let anyone suppose that, because these are school-books, therefore they are beneath the adult reader. They contain the very ripest results of the best Biblical scholarship, arid that in the very simplest form." Joshua. School Guardian. — "This little book is a model of what editorial work, intended for the use of young students, should be ; and we could scarcely praise it more highly than by saying that it is "in every way worthy of the volumes that have gone before it." Schoolmistress. — "A most useful little manual for students or teachers." Judges. Educational News (Edinburgh). — "The book makes available for teaching purposes the results of ripe scholarship, varied knowledge, and religious insight. " Schoolmaster. — " The work shows first-rate workmanship, and may be adopted without hesitation." Samuel I. and II. Saturday Review. — "Professor Kirkpatrick's two tiny volumes on the First and Second Books of Samuel are quite model school-books ; the notes elucidate every possible difficulty with scholarly brevity and clearness and a perfect knowledge of the subject." Kings I. Wesley an Methodist Sunday-School Record. — "Equally useful for teachers of young men's Bible classes and for earnest Bible students themselves. This series supplies a great need. It contains much valuable instruction in small compass." St Mark. St Luke. Guardian. — " We have received the volumes of St Mark and St Luke in this series.... The two volumes seem, on the whole, well adapted for school use, are well and carefully printed, and have maps and good, though necessarily brief, introductions. There is little doubt that this series will be found as popular and useful as the well-known larger series, of which they are abbreviated editions." St Luke. Wesleyan Methodist Sunday-School Record. — " We cannot too highly commend this handy little book to all teachers." St John. Methodist Times.— -" A model of condensation, losing nothing of its clearness and force from its condensation into a small compass. Many who have long since completed their college curriculum will find it an invaluable handbook." Acts. Literary World.— "The. notes are very brief, but exceedingly comprehensive, comprising as much detail in the way of explanation as would be needed by young students of the Scriptures preparing for examination. We again give the opinion that this series furmshesas much real help as would usually satisfy students for the Christian ministry, or even ministers themselves." THE CAMBEIDGE GREEK TESTAMENT FOR SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES with a Revised Text, based on the most recent critical authorities, and English Notes. Expositor. — " Has achieved an excellence which puts it above criti cism. " Expository Times. — " We could not point out better handbooks for the student of the Greek." St Luke. Methodist Recorder. — "It gives us in clear and beautiful language the best results of modern scholarship.. ..For young students and those who are not disposed to buy or to study the much more costly work of Godef, this seems to us to be the best book on the Greek Text of the Third Gospel." St John. Methodist Recorder. — "We take this opportunity of recommending to ministers on probation, the very excellent volume of the same series on this part of the New Testament. We hope that most or all of our young ministers will prefer to study the volume in the Cambridge Greek Testament for Schools." II. Corinthians. Guardian. — " The work is scholarlike, and main tains the high level attained by so many volumes of this series. " London Quarterly Review. — " Young students will not easily find a more helpful introduction to the study of this Epistle than this.. ..There is everything that a student of the Epistle needs in this little volume. It deals clearly and thoroughly with every point, and is written in a style that stimulates attention." The Epistle to the Philipplans. London Quarterly Review. — "This is a first rate piece of work, furnished with all the Critical notes that a student of the text needs, and enriched by many excellent quotations from divines and commentators.... It will well repay every student to get this little volume and master it" Educational Times. — "Dr Moule's concise and scholarly edition of the Epistle to the PhiUppians is among the best volumes of the Cambridge Greek Testament." St James. Athenaum. — "This is altogether an admirable text book. The notes are exactly what is wanted. They shew scholarship, wide reading, clear thinking. They are calculated in a high degree to stimulate pupils to inquiry both into the language and the teaching of the Epistle." Revelation, Journal of Education "Absolute candour, a feeling for Church tradition, and the combination of a free and graceful style of historical illustration with minute scholarship characterise this work. We wish we had more work of the same kind in the present day, and venture to think that a mastery of this unpretentious edition would prove to many a means of permanently enlarging the scope of their studies in sacred literature." CAMBRIDGE '. PRINTED BY J. AND C. F. CLAY, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 4/3® iMCT»»rMingiiirrr'"*T — "*"ti