Obadiah’s preface is, that he brought nothing human, but only
declared the vision presented to him from above. We indeed know that
it was God alone that was ever to be heard in the Church, as even now
he demands to be heard: but yet he sent his prophets, as afterwards
the apostles; yea, as he sent h... [ Continue Reading ]
Jeremiah uses nearly the same words; but the sense of the expression
is ambiguous, when he says, ‘Lo, little have I set thee.’ To me it
appears probable, that the Prophet reproves the Idumeans, because they
became arrogant, as it were, against the will of God, and in
opposition to it, when, at the s... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet now laughs to scorn the Idumeans, because they relied on
their own fortresses, and thought themselves, according to the common
saying, to be beyond the reach of darts; and hence they petulantly
insulted the Israelites and despised God himself. The Prophet
therefore says, that the Idumean... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet shows in this verse that the calamity with which God was
resolved to afflict the Idumeans would not be slight, for nothing
would be left among them; and he amplifies what he says by a
comparison. When one is plundered of his property by thieves, he
grieves, that what he had acquired by m... [ Continue Reading ]
He confirms the former sentence, — that the Idumeans in vain trusted
that their riches would be safe, because they had hidden and deep
recesses. Even when a country is plundered by enemies, the conquerors
dare not to come to places of danger; when there are narrow passes,
they avoid them, for they t... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Prophet expresses the manner in which God would punish the
Idumeans: trusting in their confederacies, they despised God, as we
have already had to observe. The Prophet now shows that it is in the
power of God to change the minds of men, so that they who were their
friends being suddenly inf... [ Continue Reading ]
We must now notice what the Prophet says, _Shall I not in that day
destroy the wise from Edom? _Though men be in many respects blind,
whom God guides not by his Spirit, and on whom he shines not with his
word, yet the worst blindness is, when men become inebriated with the
false conceit of wisdom. W... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet, after having spoken of one kind of God’s vengeance,
adds another, — that he would break whatever there was of strength
in Idumea: and thus he shows that the courage and strength of men, no
less than their understanding, are in the hand of God. As then God
dissipates and destroys, whenev... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet here sets forth the reason why God would deal so severely
and dreadfully with the Idumeans. Had he simply prophesied of their
destruction, it would have been an important matter; for the Jews
might have thereby known that their ruin was not chance, but the
scourge of God; they might have... [ Continue Reading ]
_In the day_, he says, _in which thou didst stand on the opposite side
_”. But the Idumeans might have made this objection, “Why dost
thou accuse us for having violently oppressed our brother? for we were
not the cause why they were destroyed: they had a quarrel with the
Assyrians, we labored to pro... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet enumerates here the kinds of cruelty which the Idumeans
exercised towards the Church of God, the children of Abraham, their
own kindred. But he speaks by way of prohibition; it is then a
personification, by which the Prophet introduces God as the speaker,
as though he taught and admonish... [ Continue Reading ]
It follows, _Thou shouldest not enter the gates of my people in the
day of their destruction, nor shouldest thou look on in their
calamity_. Probably the Idumeans had made an irruption in company with
the Assyrians and Chaldeans, when they ought to have remained at home,
and there to lament the slau... [ Continue Reading ]
It follows, _And thou shouldest not stand on the going forth_. The
word פרק _perek _signifies to break, to dissipate, to rend; hence
פרק _perek_, as a noun, in Hebrew means rending and breaking.
Therefore some take it metaphorically for a place where two ways meet,
when one road is cut or divided in... [ Continue Reading ]
By saying that _the day of Jehovah was nigh upon all nations, _the
Prophet may be regarded as reasoning from the greater to the less:
“If God will not spare other nations, how canst thou escape his
hand?” In a like manner does Jeremiah speak in chapter 49, (Jeremiah
49:12) he addresses the Idumeans... [ Continue Reading ]
Here Obadiah proceeds farther and says, that God would revenge the
wrongs done to his Church. The declaration in the last verse was
general, “Behold, on all the nations the day of Jehovah is nigh; as
then thou hast done, God will repay thee:” but now he shows that
this would be, because God purposed... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Prophet promises deliverance to the Jews; for other
consolations would have been of no great moment, had they, who then
were perishing, no hope of being some time restored to safety. The
Jews might indeed have objected, and said, “What is it to us, though
the Lord may avenge our wrongs? Sho... [ Continue Reading ]
Here again the Prophet meets a doubt, which might come into the mind
of each of them; for the Idumeans were flourishing, and their
condition was independent, when the Israelites as well as the Jews
were led into exile, and Jerusalem with its temple was destroyed. They
might under such circumstances... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet proceeds with the same subject, — that God would not
only gather the remnants of his people from the Babylonian exile, but
would restore the exiles, that they might rule far and wide, and that
their condition might be better than it was before: for the Prophet,
as I think, directs the at... [ Continue Reading ]
He afterwards adds, _And the migrations of this host of the children
of Israel_, _etc_. There is here an obscurity in the words. The
Hebrews by Canaan mean the Illyrians as well as Germans, and also the
Gauls: for they say, that the migration, which shall be dispersed in
Gaul, and in Germany, and in... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Prophet says, that there are in God’s hand ministers, the
labor of whom he employs to preserve his own people. He alludes here,
I have no doubt, to the history of the judges. We indeed know that the
people of Israel were often so distressed, that their deliverance was
almost incredible; and... [ Continue Reading ]