We have seen in the first chapter Habakkuk 1:2 that the Prophet said
in the name of all the faithful. It was indeed a hard struggle, when
all things were in a perplexed state and no outlet appeared. The
faithful might have thought that all things happened by chance, that
there was no divine providen... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet now shows by his own example that there is no fear but
that God will give help in time, provided we bring our minds to a
state of spiritual tranquillity, and constantly look up to him: for
the event which the Prophet relates, proves that there is no danger
that God will frustrate their h... [ Continue Reading ]
This verse stands connected with the last, for the Prophet means to
show that nothing is better than to rely on God’s word, how much
soever may various temptations assault our souls. We hence see that
nothing new is said here, but that the former doctrine is
confirmed—that our salvation is rendered... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet has taught us that a tranquil state of mind cannot be
otherwise had than by recumbing on the grace of God alone; and that
they who elate themselves, and fly in the air, and feed on the wind,
procure for themselves many sorrows and inquietudes. But he now comes
to the king of Babylon, and... [ Continue Reading ]
Now at length the Prophet denounces punishment on the Babylonian king
and the Chaldeans; for the Lord would render them a sport to all. But
some think that a punishment is also expressed in the preceding verse,
such as awaits violent robbers, who devour the whole world. But I, on
the contrary, think... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet proceeds with the subject which we have already begun to
explain; for he introduces here the common taunts against the king of
Babylon and the whole tyrannical empire, by which many nations had
been cruelly oppressed. He therefore says that enemies, who should
_bite him_, (34) would sudd... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet here expresses more clearly why the Babylonians were to be
so severely dealt with by God. He shows that it would be a just reward
that they should be plundered in their turn, who had previously given
themselves up to plunder, violence, and cruelty. Since, then, they had
exercised so much... [ Continue Reading ]
Habakkuk proceeds in exciting the king of Babylon by taunts; which
were not scurrilous jests, but contained serious threatening; for, as
it has been already said, the Prophet here introduces indeed the
common people, but in that multitude we are to recognize the
innumerable heralds of God’s vengeanc... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet again confirms the truth, that those who count themselves
happy, imagining that they are like God, busy themselves in vain; for
God will turn to shame whatever they think to be their glory, derived
from their riches. The avaricious indeed wish, as it appears from the
last verse, to prepa... [ Continue Reading ]
There is here introduced by the Prophet a new personification. He had
before prepared a common song, which would be in the mouth of all. He
now ascribes speech to stones and wood, of which buildings are formed.
_The stone, he says, shall cry from the wall, and the wood from the
chamber_; that is, th... [ Continue Reading ]
_The stone_, then, _from the wall shall cry, and the wood shall answer
_—what will it answer?—_Woe to him who builds a city by blood_,
and who adorns _his city by iniquity_. By blood and by iniquity he
understands the same thing; for though the avaricious do not kill
innocent men, they yet suck thei... [ Continue Reading ]
Then he adds, _Shall it not be, behold, from Jehovah of hosts? _(38)
Some give a wrong version, “Is not this,” as though הנה, _ene_,
were put here instead of a pronoun demonstrative; but they extenuate
and obscure the beauty of the expression; nay, they pervert the
meaning of the Prophet: for when h... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet briefly teaches us here, that so remarkable would be
God’s judgement on the Babylonians that his name would thereby be
celebrated through the whole world. But there is in this verse an
implied contrast; for God appeared not in his own glory when the Jews
were led away into exile; the tem... [ Continue Reading ]
This passage, in which the Prophet condemns the king of Babylon for
his usual practice of rendering drunk his friends, is frigidly
interpreted by most expounders. It has been already often said how
bold the Jews are in contriving what is fabulous; when nothing certain
occurs to them, they divine thi... [ Continue Reading ]
He says that he is _satiated with shame instead of glory_. Some give
this rendering—“Thou art satiated with shame more than glory;”
but this does not suit the passage; for the Prophet does not mean that
the Babylonian king was satiated with his own reproach, but rather
with that of others. Secondly,... [ Continue Reading ]
We may hence easily learn, that the Prophet has not been speaking of
drunkenness, but that his discourse, as we have explained, was
metaphorical; for here follows a reason, why he had denounced such a
punishment on the king of Babylon, and that was, because he had
exercised violence, not only agains... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet now advances farther, and shows that whatever he had
predicted of the future ruin of Babylon and of its monarchy, proceeded
from the true God, from the God of Israel: for it would not have been
sufficient to hold, that some deity existed in heaven, who ruled human
affairs, so that it cou... [ Continue Reading ]
He pursues, as I have said, the same subject, and sharply inveighs
against the sottishness of men, that they call on wood and stone, as
though there were some hidden power in them. _They say to the wood,
Awake_; for they implored help from their idols. _Shall it teach?
_Some render it thus as a ques... [ Continue Reading ]
After having taught us that the Babylonians were deceived in expecting
any help from their idols, and were deluded by Satan, Habakkuk now
recalls the attention of the faithful to the only true God; for it
would not have been enough to take away from the Babylonians the false
confidence which they ha... [ Continue Reading ]