457 lines
32 KiB
XML
457 lines
32 KiB
XML
|
<div2 id="Amos.ix" n="ix" next="Amos.x" prev="Amos.viii" progress="83.61%" title="Chapter VIII">
|
|||
|
<h2 id="Amos.ix-p0.1">A M O S.</h2>
|
|||
|
<h3 id="Amos.ix-p0.2">CHAP. VIII.</h3>
|
|||
|
<p class="intro" id="Amos.ix-p1" shownumber="no">Sinful times are here attended with sorrowful
|
|||
|
times, so necessary is the connexion between them; it is threatened
|
|||
|
here again and again that the laughter shall be turned into
|
|||
|
mourning. I. By the vision of "basket of summer-fruit" is signified
|
|||
|
the hastening on of the ruin threatened (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.1-Amos.8.3" parsed="|Amos|8|1|8|3" passage="Am 8:1-3">ver. 1-3</scripRef>) and that shall change their note.
|
|||
|
II. Oppressors are here called to an account for their abusing the
|
|||
|
poor; and their destruction is foretold, which will set them a
|
|||
|
mourning, <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.4-Amos.8.10" parsed="|Amos|8|4|8|10" passage="Am 8:4-10">ver. 4-10</scripRef>. III.
|
|||
|
A famine of the word of God is here made the punishment of a people
|
|||
|
that go a whoring after other gods (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.11-Amos.8.14" parsed="|Amos|8|11|8|14" passage="Am 8:11-14">ver. 11-14</scripRef>); yet for this, which is the
|
|||
|
most mournful judgment of all, they are not here brought in
|
|||
|
mourning.</p>
|
|||
|
<scripCom id="Amos.ix-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8" parsed="|Amos|8|0|0|0" passage="Am 8" type="Commentary"/>
|
|||
|
<scripCom id="Amos.ix-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.1-Amos.8.3" parsed="|Amos|8|1|8|3" passage="Am 8:1-3" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Amos.ix-p1.6">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Amos.ix-p1.7">The Vision of Summer Fruit. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p1.8">b. c.</span> 785.)</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Amos.ix-p2" shownumber="no">1 Thus hath the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p2.1">God</span> shewed unto me: and behold a basket of
|
|||
|
summer fruit. 2 And he said, Amos, what seest thou? And I
|
|||
|
said, A basket of summer fruit. Then said the <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p2.2">Lord</span> unto me, The end is come upon my people of
|
|||
|
Israel; I will not again pass by them any more. 3 And the
|
|||
|
songs of the temple shall be howlings in that day, saith the Lord
|
|||
|
<span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p2.3">God</span>: <i>there shall be</i> many dead
|
|||
|
bodies in every place; they shall cast <i>them</i> forth with
|
|||
|
silence.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p3" shownumber="no">The great reason why sinners defer their
|
|||
|
repentance <i>de die in diem—from day to day,</i> is because they
|
|||
|
think God thus defers his judgments, and there is no song wherewith
|
|||
|
they so effectually sing themselves asleep as that, <i>My Lord
|
|||
|
delays his coming;</i> and therefore God, by his prophets,
|
|||
|
frequently represents to Israel the day of his wrath not only as
|
|||
|
just and certain, but as very near and hastening on apace; so he
|
|||
|
does in these verses.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p4" shownumber="no">I. The approach of the threatened ruin is
|
|||
|
represented by <i>a basket of summer-fruit</i> which Amos saw in
|
|||
|
vision; for the Lord <i>showed it</i> to him (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.1" parsed="|Amos|8|1|0|0" passage="Am 8:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>) and obliged him to take notice of
|
|||
|
it (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.2" parsed="|Amos|8|2|0|0" passage="Am 8:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>): <i>Amos,
|
|||
|
what seest thou?</i> Note, It concerns us to enquire whether we do
|
|||
|
indeed see that which God has been pleased to show us, and hear
|
|||
|
what he has been pleased to say to us; for many a thing God speaks,
|
|||
|
God shows <i>once, yea twice,</i> and men <i>perceive it not.</i>
|
|||
|
Are we in the midst of the visions of the Almighty? Let us consider
|
|||
|
what we see. He saw <i>a basket of summer-fruit</i> gathered and
|
|||
|
ready to be eaten, which signified, 1. That they were ripe for
|
|||
|
destruction, rotten ripe, and it was time for God to put in the
|
|||
|
sickle of his judgments and to cut them off; nay, the thing was in
|
|||
|
effect done already, and they lay ready to be eaten up. 2. That the
|
|||
|
year of God's patience was drawing towards a conclusion; it was
|
|||
|
autumn with them, and their year would quickly have its period in a
|
|||
|
dismal winter. 3. Those we call <i>summer-fruits</i> that will not
|
|||
|
keep till winter, but must be used immediately, an emblem of this
|
|||
|
people, that had nothing solid or consistent in them.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p5" shownumber="no">II. The intent and meaning of this vision
|
|||
|
is no more than this: It signifies that <i>the end has come upon my
|
|||
|
people Israel.</i> The word that signifies <i>the end</i> is
|
|||
|
<i>ketz,</i> which is of near affinity with <i>kitz,</i> the word
|
|||
|
used for <i>summer-fruit.</i> God has long spared them, and borne
|
|||
|
with them, but now his patience is tired out; they are indeed
|
|||
|
<i>his people Israel,</i> but their end, that <i>latter end</i>
|
|||
|
they have been so often reminded of, but have so long forgotten,
|
|||
|
has now come. Note, If sinners do not make an end of sin, God will
|
|||
|
make an end of them, yea though they be <i>his people Israel.</i>
|
|||
|
What was said <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.7.8" parsed="|Amos|7|8|0|0" passage="Am 7:8"><i>ch.</i> vii.
|
|||
|
8</scripRef> is here repeated as God's determined resolution, <i>I
|
|||
|
will not again pass by them any more;</i> they shall not be
|
|||
|
connived at as they have been, nor the judgment coming turned
|
|||
|
away.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p6" shownumber="no">III. The consequence of this shall be a
|
|||
|
universal desolation (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.3" parsed="|Amos|8|3|0|0" passage="Am 8:3"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
3</scripRef>): When <i>the end</i> shall come sorrow and death
|
|||
|
shall ride in triumph; they are accustomed to go together, and
|
|||
|
shall at length go away together, when in heaven <i>there shall be
|
|||
|
no more death, nor sorrow,</i> <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21.4" parsed="|Rev|21|4|0|0" passage="Re 21:4">Rev.
|
|||
|
xxi. 4</scripRef>. But here in a sinful world, in a sinful nation,
|
|||
|
1. Sorrow reigns, reigns to such a degree that <i>the songs of the
|
|||
|
temple shall be howlings</i>—the songs of God's temple at
|
|||
|
Jerusalem, or rather of their idol-temples, where they used, when,
|
|||
|
in honour of the golden calves, they had <i>eaten and drunk,</i> to
|
|||
|
<i>rise up to play.</i> They were perhaps wanton profane songs; and
|
|||
|
it is certain that sooner or later those will be turned into
|
|||
|
howlings. Or, if they had a sound and show of piety and religion,
|
|||
|
yet, not coming from the heart, nor being sung to the glory of God,
|
|||
|
he valued them not, but would justly turn them into howlings. Note,
|
|||
|
Mourning will follow sinful mirth, yea, and sacred mirth too, it if
|
|||
|
be not sincere. And, when God's judgments are abroad, they will
|
|||
|
soon turn the greatest joy into the greatest heaviness, the
|
|||
|
temple-songs, which used to sound so pleasantly, not only into
|
|||
|
sighs and groans, but into loud howlings, which sound dismally.
|
|||
|
They shall come to the temple, and, finding that in ruins, there
|
|||
|
they shall howl most bitterly. 2. Death reigns, reigns to such a
|
|||
|
degree that there shall be <i>dead bodies, many</i> dead bodies
|
|||
|
<i>in every place</i> (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.110.6" parsed="|Ps|110|6|0|0" passage="Ps 110:6">Ps. cx.
|
|||
|
6</scripRef>), slain by sword or pestilence, so many that the
|
|||
|
survivors shall not bury them with the usual pomp and solemnity of
|
|||
|
funerals; they shall not so much as have the bell tolled, but they
|
|||
|
shall <i>cast them forth with silence,</i> shall bury them in the
|
|||
|
dead of the night, and charge all about them to be silent and to
|
|||
|
take notice of it, either because they have not wherewithal to bear
|
|||
|
the charges of a funeral, or because, the killing disease being
|
|||
|
infectious, none will come near them, or for fear the enemy should
|
|||
|
be provoked, if they should be known to lament their slain. Or they
|
|||
|
shall charge themselves and one another silently to submit to the
|
|||
|
hand of God in these desolating judgments, and not to repine and
|
|||
|
quarrel with him. Or it may be taken not for a patient, but a
|
|||
|
sullen silence; their hearts shall be hardened, and all these
|
|||
|
judgments shall not extort from them one word of acknowledgment
|
|||
|
either of God's righteousness or their own unrighteousness.</p>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Amos.ix-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.4-Amos.8.10" parsed="|Amos|8|4|8|10" passage="Am 8:4-10" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Amos.ix-p6.5">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Amos.ix-p6.6">The Sin and Doom of
|
|||
|
Oppressors. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p6.7">b. c.</span> 785.)</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Amos.ix-p7" shownumber="no">4 Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy,
|
|||
|
even to make the poor of the land to fail, 5 Saying, When
|
|||
|
will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? and the sabbath,
|
|||
|
that we may set forth wheat, making the ephah small, and the shekel
|
|||
|
great, and falsifying the balances by deceit? 6 That we may
|
|||
|
buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes;
|
|||
|
<i>yea,</i> and sell the refuse of the wheat? 7 The <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p7.1">Lord</span> hath sworn by the excellency of
|
|||
|
Jacob, Surely I will never forget any of their works. 8
|
|||
|
Shall not the land tremble for this, and every one mourn that
|
|||
|
dwelleth therein? and it shall rise up wholly as a flood; and it
|
|||
|
shall be cast out and drowned, as <i>by</i> the flood of Egypt.
|
|||
|
9 And it shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord
|
|||
|
<span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p7.2">God</span>, that I will cause the sun to go
|
|||
|
down at noon, and I will darken the earth in the clear day:
|
|||
|
10 And I will turn your feasts into mourning, and all your songs
|
|||
|
into lamentation; and I will bring up sackcloth upon all loins, and
|
|||
|
baldness upon every head; and I will make it as the mourning of an
|
|||
|
only <i>son,</i> and the end thereof as a bitter day.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p8" shownumber="no">God is here contending with proud
|
|||
|
oppressors, and showing them,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p9" shownumber="no">I. The heinousness of the sin they were
|
|||
|
guilty of; in short, they had the character of the unjust judge
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.2" parsed="|Luke|18|2|0|0" passage="Lu 18:2">Luke xviii. 2</scripRef>) that neither
|
|||
|
<i>feared God</i> nor <i>regarded man.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p10" shownumber="no">1. Observe them in their devotions, and you
|
|||
|
will say, "They had no reverence for God." Bad as they are, they do
|
|||
|
indeed keep up a show and form of godliness; they observe the
|
|||
|
<i>sabbath</i> and the <i>new moon;</i> they put some difference
|
|||
|
between those days and other days, but they were soon weary of
|
|||
|
them, and had no affection at all to them, for their hearts were
|
|||
|
wholly set upon the world and the things of it. It is a sad
|
|||
|
character which this gives of them, that they said, <i>When will
|
|||
|
the sabbath be gone, that we may sell corn?</i> Yet is still the
|
|||
|
character of many that are called Christians. (1.) They were weary
|
|||
|
of sabbath days. "When will they be <i>gone?</i>" They were weary
|
|||
|
of the restraints of the sabbaths and the new-moons, and wished
|
|||
|
them over because they might <i>do no servile work therein.</i>
|
|||
|
They were weary of the work or business of the sabbaths and
|
|||
|
new-moons, snuffed at it (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.1.13" parsed="|Mal|1|13|0|0" passage="Mal 1:13">Mal. i.
|
|||
|
13</scripRef>), and were, as <i>Doeg, detained before the Lord</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.21.7" parsed="|1Sam|21|7|0|0" passage="1Sa 21:7">1 Sam. xxi. 7</scripRef>); they would
|
|||
|
rather have been any where else than about God's altars. Note,
|
|||
|
Sabbath days and sabbath work are a burden to carnal hearts, that
|
|||
|
are always afraid of doing too much for God and eternity. Can we
|
|||
|
spend our time better than in communication with God? And how much
|
|||
|
time do we spend pleasantly with the world? Will not the sabbath be
|
|||
|
gone before we have done the work of it and reaped the gains of it?
|
|||
|
Why then should we be in such haste to part with it? (2.) They were
|
|||
|
fond of market-days: they longed to be <i>selling corn</i> and
|
|||
|
<i>setting forth wheat.</i> When they were employed in religious
|
|||
|
services they were thinking of their marketings; their hearts
|
|||
|
<i>went after their covetousness</i> (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.33.31" parsed="|Ezek|33|31|0|0" passage="Eze 33:31">Ezek. xxxiii. 31</scripRef>), and thus made my Father's
|
|||
|
house a house of merchandise, nay, a den of thieves. They were
|
|||
|
weary of holy duties because their worldly business stood still the
|
|||
|
while; in this they were as in their element, but in God's
|
|||
|
sanctuary as a fish upon dry ground. Note, Those are strangers to
|
|||
|
God, and enemies to themselves, that love market days better than
|
|||
|
sabbath days, that would rather be selling corn than worshipping
|
|||
|
God.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p11" shownumber="no">2. Observe them in their conversations, and
|
|||
|
you will see they have no regard to man; and this commonly follows
|
|||
|
upon the former; those that have lost the savour of piety will not
|
|||
|
long retain the sense of common honesty. They neither <i>do
|
|||
|
justly</i> nor <i>love mercy.</i> (1.) They cheat those they deal
|
|||
|
with. When they <i>sell their corn</i> they impose upon the buyer,
|
|||
|
both in giving out the goods and in receiving the money for them.
|
|||
|
They measure him the corn by their own measure, and pretend to give
|
|||
|
him what he agreed for, but they <i>make the ephah small.</i> The
|
|||
|
measure is scanty, and not statute-measure, and so they wrong him
|
|||
|
that way. When they receive his money they must weigh fit in their
|
|||
|
own scales, by their own weights, and the <i>shekel</i> they weigh
|
|||
|
by is above standard: <i>They make the shekel great,</i> so that
|
|||
|
the money, being found too light, must have more added to it; and
|
|||
|
so they cheat that way too, and this under colour and pretence of
|
|||
|
exactness in doing justice. By such wicked practices as these men
|
|||
|
show such a greediness of the world, such a love of themselves,
|
|||
|
such a contempt of mankind in general, of the particular persons
|
|||
|
they deal with, and of the sacred laws of justice, as prove them to
|
|||
|
have in their hearts neither the fear nor the love of that God who
|
|||
|
has so plainly said that <i>false weights and balances are an
|
|||
|
abomination to him.</i> Another instance of their fraudulent
|
|||
|
dealing is that they <i>sell the refuse of the wheat,</i> and,
|
|||
|
taking advantage of their neighbour's ignorance or necessity, make
|
|||
|
them take it at the same price at which they sell the <i>finest of
|
|||
|
the wheat.</i> (2.) They are barbarous and unmerciful to the poor:
|
|||
|
<i>They swallow up the needy,</i> and <i>make the poor of the land
|
|||
|
to fail.</i> [1.] They valued themselves so much on their wealth
|
|||
|
that they looked upon all that were poor with the highest contempt
|
|||
|
imaginable; they hated them, could not endure them, but abandoned
|
|||
|
them, and therefore did what they could to make them cease, not by
|
|||
|
relieving them to make them cease to be poor, but by banishing and
|
|||
|
destroying them to make them cease to be, or at least to be in
|
|||
|
their land. But he who thus <i>reproaches the poor despises his
|
|||
|
Maker,</i> in whose hands <i>rich and poor meet together.</i> [2.]
|
|||
|
They were so eager to increase their wealth, and make it more, that
|
|||
|
they robbed the poor to enrich themselves; and they fastened upon
|
|||
|
the poor, to <i>make a prey</i> of them, because they were not able
|
|||
|
to obtain any redress nor to resist or revenge the violence of
|
|||
|
their oppressors. Those riches that are got by the ruin of the poor
|
|||
|
will bring ruin on those that get them. They swallowed up the poor
|
|||
|
by making them hard bargains, and cheating them in those bargains;
|
|||
|
for <i>therefore</i> they <i>falsify the balances by deceit,</i>
|
|||
|
not only that they <i>may enrich themselves,</i> may have money at
|
|||
|
command, and so may have every thing else (as they think) at
|
|||
|
command too, but that they may impoverish those about them, and
|
|||
|
bring them so low that they may force them to become slaves to
|
|||
|
them, and so, having drained them of every thing else, they may
|
|||
|
have their labour for nothing, or next to nothing. Thus <i>they buy
|
|||
|
the poor for silver;</i> they bring them and their <i>children into
|
|||
|
bondage,</i> because they have not wherewithal to pay for the corn
|
|||
|
they have bought; see <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Neh.5.2-Neh.5.5" parsed="|Neh|5|2|5|5" passage="Ne 5:2-5">Neh. v.
|
|||
|
2-5</scripRef>. And there were so many that they were reduced to
|
|||
|
this extremity that the price was very low; and the oppressors had
|
|||
|
beaten it down so that you might buy a poor man to be your slave
|
|||
|
<i>for a pair of shoes.</i> Property was first invaded and then
|
|||
|
liberty; it is the method of oppressors first to make men beggars
|
|||
|
and then to make them their vassals. Thus is the dignity of the
|
|||
|
human nature lost in the misery of those that are trampled on and
|
|||
|
the tenderness of it in the sin of those that trample on them.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p12" shownumber="no">II. The grievousness of the punishment that
|
|||
|
shall be inflicted on them for this sin. When the poor are injured
|
|||
|
they will <i>cry unto God,</i> and he will hear their cry, and
|
|||
|
reckon with those that are injurious to them, for, they being his
|
|||
|
receivers, he takes the wrongs done to them as done to himself,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.22.23-Exod.22.24" parsed="|Exod|22|23|22|24" passage="Ex 22:23,24">Exod. xxii. 23, 24</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p13" shownumber="no">1. God will remember their sin against
|
|||
|
them: <i>He has sworn by the excellency of Jacob</i> (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.7" parsed="|Amos|8|7|0|0" passage="Am 8:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>), by himself, for he can
|
|||
|
swear by no greater; and who but he is the glory and magnificence
|
|||
|
of Jacob? He has sworn by those tokens of his presence with them,
|
|||
|
and his favour to them, which they had profaned and abused, and had
|
|||
|
done what they could to make them detestable to him; for he is said
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.6.8" parsed="|Amos|6|8|0|0" passage="Am 6:8"><i>ch.</i> vi. 8</scripRef>) to
|
|||
|
<i>abhor the excellency of Jacob.</i> He swears <i>in his
|
|||
|
wrath,</i> swears by his own name, that name which was so well
|
|||
|
known and was so great in Israel. He swears, <i>Surely I will never
|
|||
|
forget any of their works,</i> but upon all occasions they shall be
|
|||
|
remembered against them, for more is implied than is expressed.
|
|||
|
<i>I will never forget them</i> is as much as to say, <i>I will
|
|||
|
never forgive them;</i> and then it proclaims the case of these
|
|||
|
unjust unmerciful men to be miserable indeed, eternally miserable;
|
|||
|
woe, and a thousand woes, to that man that is cut off by an oath of
|
|||
|
God from all benefit by pardoning mercy; and those have reason to
|
|||
|
fear judgment without mercy that have <i>shown no mercy.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p14" shownumber="no">2. He will bring utter ruin and confusion
|
|||
|
upon them. It is here described largely, and in a great variety of
|
|||
|
emphatic expressions, that, if possible, they might be frightened
|
|||
|
into a sincere repentance and reformation. (1.) There shall be a
|
|||
|
universal terror and consternation: <i>Shall not the land tremble
|
|||
|
for this</i> (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.8" parsed="|Amos|8|8|0|0" passage="Am 8:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
<i>this land,</i> out of which you thought to drive the poor?
|
|||
|
<i>Shall not every one mourn that dwells therein?</i> Certainly he
|
|||
|
shall. Note, Those that will not tremble and mourn as they ought
|
|||
|
for national sins shall be made to tremble and mourn for national
|
|||
|
judgments; those that look without concern upon the sins of the
|
|||
|
oppressors, which should make them tremble, and upon the miseries
|
|||
|
of the oppressed, which should them mourn, God will find out a way
|
|||
|
to make them tremble at the fury of those that oppress them and
|
|||
|
mourn for their own losses and sufferings by it. (2.) There shall
|
|||
|
be a universal deluge and desolation. When God comes forth against
|
|||
|
them the waters of trouble and calamity shall <i>rise up wholly as
|
|||
|
a flood,</i> that swells, when it is dammed up, and soon overflows
|
|||
|
its banks. Every thing shall make against them. That with which
|
|||
|
they thought to check the progress of God's judgments shall but
|
|||
|
make them rise the higher. Judgments shall force their way as the
|
|||
|
<i>breaking forth of waters.</i> The whole land <i>shall be cast
|
|||
|
out, and drowned,</i> and laid under water, as the land of Egypt is
|
|||
|
every year by the overflowing of its river Nile. Or the expressions
|
|||
|
may allude to some former judgments of God. Their ruin <i>shall
|
|||
|
rise up wholly as a flood,</i> as Noah's flood, which overwhelmed
|
|||
|
the whole world, so shall this the whole land; and the land shall
|
|||
|
be <i>cast out, and drowned, as by the flood of Egypt,</i> as
|
|||
|
Pharaoh and his Egyptians were buried in the Red Sea, which was to
|
|||
|
them the <i>flood of Egypt,</i> both which judgments, as this which
|
|||
|
is here threatened, were the punishment of violence and oppression,
|
|||
|
which the Lord is the avenger of.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p15" shownumber="no">3. It shall surprise them, and come upon
|
|||
|
them when they little think of it (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.9" parsed="|Amos|8|9|0|0" passage="Am 8:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>): "<i>I will cause the sun to go
|
|||
|
down at noon,</i> when it is in its full strength and lustre, at
|
|||
|
their noon, when they promise themselves a long afternoon, and
|
|||
|
think they have at least half a day good before them. The
|
|||
|
<i>earth</i> shall be <i>darkened in the clear day,</i> when every
|
|||
|
thing looks pleasant and hopeful." Thus uncertain are all our
|
|||
|
creature-comforts and enjoyments, even life itself; the highest
|
|||
|
degree of health and prosperity often proves the next degree to
|
|||
|
sickness and adversity; Job's sun <i>went down at noon;</i> many
|
|||
|
are taken away in the midst of their days, and their sun goes down
|
|||
|
at noon. In the midst of life we are in death. Thus <i>terrible</i>
|
|||
|
are the judgments of God to those that sleep in security; they are
|
|||
|
to them as the sun's <i>going down at noon;</i> the less they are
|
|||
|
expected the more confounding they are. When they <i>cry Peace and
|
|||
|
safety</i> then <i>sudden destruction</i> comes, comes <i>as a
|
|||
|
snare,</i> <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.21.35" parsed="|Luke|21|35|0|0" passage="Lu 21:35">Luke xxi.
|
|||
|
35</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p16" shownumber="no">4. It shall change their note, and mar all
|
|||
|
their mirth (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.10" parsed="|Amos|8|10|0|0" passage="Am 8:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>):
|
|||
|
<i>I will turn your feasts into mourning,</i> as (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.3" parsed="|Amos|8|3|0|0" passage="Am 8:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>) the <i>songs of the temple
|
|||
|
into howlings.</i> Note, The end of the sinner's mirth and jollity
|
|||
|
is heaviness. As <i>to the upright there arises light in the
|
|||
|
darkness,</i> which gives them <i>the oil of joy for mourning,</i>
|
|||
|
so on the wicked there falls darkness in the midst of light, which
|
|||
|
turns their <i>laughter into mourning,</i> their <i>joy into
|
|||
|
heaviness.</i> So great, so general, shall the desolation be, that
|
|||
|
<i>sackcloth shall be brought upon all loins, and baldness upon
|
|||
|
every head,</i> instead of the <i>well-set hair</i> and the rich
|
|||
|
garments they used to wear. The mourning at that day shall be as
|
|||
|
<i>mourning for an only son,</i> which denotes the most bitter and
|
|||
|
lasting lamentation. But are there then no hopes that when things
|
|||
|
are at the worst they will mend, and that at evening time it will
|
|||
|
yet be light? No, even <i>the end thereof shall be as a bitter
|
|||
|
day,</i> a day of bitter mourning; that state of impenitent sinners
|
|||
|
grows worse and worse, and the last of all will be the worst of
|
|||
|
all. <i>This shall you have at my hand, you shall lie down in
|
|||
|
sorrow.</i></p>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Amos.ix-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.11-Amos.8.14" parsed="|Amos|8|11|8|14" passage="Am 8:11-14" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Amos.ix-p16.4">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Amos.ix-p16.5">Spiritual Famine Threatened; Judgments
|
|||
|
Threatened. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p16.6">b. c.</span> 785.)</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Amos.ix-p17" shownumber="no">11 Behold, the days come, saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p17.1">God</span>, that I will send a famine in the
|
|||
|
land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing
|
|||
|
the words of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p17.2">Lord</span>: 12 And
|
|||
|
they shall wander from sea to sea, and from the north even to the
|
|||
|
east, they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Amos.ix-p17.3">Lord</span>, and shall not find <i>it.</i>
|
|||
|
13 In that day shall the fair virgins and young men faint for
|
|||
|
thirst. 14 They that swear by the sin of Samaria, and say,
|
|||
|
Thy god, O Dan, liveth; and, The manner of Beer-sheba liveth; even
|
|||
|
they shall fall, and never rise up again.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p18" shownumber="no">In these verses is threatened,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p19" shownumber="no">I. A general judgment of spiritual famine
|
|||
|
coming upon the whole land, a <i>famine of the word of God,</i> the
|
|||
|
failing of oracles and the scarcity of good preaching. This is
|
|||
|
spoken of as a thing at some distance: <i>The days come,</i> they
|
|||
|
will come hereafter, when another kind of darkness shall come upon
|
|||
|
that land of light. When Amos prophesied, and for a considerable
|
|||
|
time after, they had great plenty of prophets, abundant
|
|||
|
opportunities of <i>hearing the word of God,</i> in season and out
|
|||
|
of season; they had precept upon precept and line upon line;
|
|||
|
prophecy was their daily bread; and it is probable that they
|
|||
|
surfeited upon it, as Israel on the manna, and therefore God
|
|||
|
threatens that hereafter he will deprive them of this privilege.
|
|||
|
Probably in the land of Israel there were not so many prophets,
|
|||
|
about the time that their destruction came upon them, as there were
|
|||
|
in the land of Judah; and when the ten tribes went into captivity
|
|||
|
they <i>saw not their signs,</i> there were <i>no more any
|
|||
|
prophets,</i> none to <i>show them how long,</i> <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.74.9" parsed="|Ps|74|9|0|0" passage="Ps 74:9">Ps. lxxiv. 9</scripRef>. The Jewish church, after
|
|||
|
Malachi, had no prophets for many ages; and some think this
|
|||
|
threatening looks further yet, to the blindness which has in part
|
|||
|
happened to Israel in the days of the Messiah, and the veil that is
|
|||
|
on the heart of the unbelieving Jews. They reject the gospel, and
|
|||
|
the ministers of it that God sends to them, and covet to have
|
|||
|
prophets of their own, as their fathers had, but they shall have
|
|||
|
none, <i>the kingdom of God</i> being <i>taken from them</i> and
|
|||
|
<i>given to another people.</i> Observe here,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p20" shownumber="no">1. What the judgment itself is that is
|
|||
|
threatened. It is a famine, a scarcity, not of bread and water
|
|||
|
(which are the necessary support of the body, and the want of which
|
|||
|
is very grievous), but a much sorer judgment than that, even a
|
|||
|
<i>famine of hearing the words of the Lord.</i> There shall be no
|
|||
|
congregations for ministers to preach to, nor any ministers to
|
|||
|
preach, nor any instructions and abilities given to those that do
|
|||
|
set up for preachers, to fit them for their work. The <i>word of
|
|||
|
the Lord</i> shall be <i>precious</i> and scarce; there shall be no
|
|||
|
<i>vision,</i> <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.3.1" parsed="|1Sam|3|1|0|0" passage="1Sa 3:1">1 Sam. iii.
|
|||
|
1</scripRef>. They shall have the written word, Bibles to read, but
|
|||
|
no ministers to explain and apply it to them, the water in the
|
|||
|
well, but nothing to draw with. It is a gracious promise (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.30.20" parsed="|Isa|30|20|0|0" passage="Isa 30:20">Isa. xxx. 20</scripRef>) that though they have
|
|||
|
a scarcity of bread they shall have plenty of the means of grace.
|
|||
|
God will <i>give them the bread of adversity and the water of
|
|||
|
affliction,</i> but their eyes shall see their teachers; and it was
|
|||
|
a common saying among the Puritans that brown bread and the gospel
|
|||
|
are good fare. But it is here a threatening that on the contrary
|
|||
|
they should have plenty enough of bread and water, and yet their
|
|||
|
teachers should be removed. Now, (1.) This was the departure of a
|
|||
|
great part of their glory from their land. This made their nation
|
|||
|
great and high, that <i>to them were committed the oracles of
|
|||
|
God;</i> but, when these were taken from them, their beauty was
|
|||
|
stained and their honour laid in the dust. (2.) This was a token of
|
|||
|
God's highest displeasure against them. Surely he was angry indeed
|
|||
|
with them when he would no more speak to them as he had done, and
|
|||
|
had abandoned them to ruin when he would no more afford them the
|
|||
|
means of bringing them to repentance. (3.) This made all the other
|
|||
|
calamities that were upon them truly melancholy, that they had no
|
|||
|
prophets to instruct and comfort them from the word of God, nor to
|
|||
|
give them any hopeful prospect. We should say at any time, and
|
|||
|
shall say in a time of trouble, that a famine of the word of God is
|
|||
|
the sorest famine, the heaviest judgment.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p21" shownumber="no">2. What will be the effect of this
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.12" parsed="|Amos|8|12|0|0" passage="Am 8:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>): <i>They
|
|||
|
shall wander from sea to sea,</i> from the sea of Tiberias to the
|
|||
|
Great Sea, from one border of the country to another, to see if God
|
|||
|
will send them prophets, either by sea or land, from other
|
|||
|
countries; since they have none among themselves, they shall go
|
|||
|
from the <i>north to the east;</i> when they are disappointed in
|
|||
|
one place they shall try another, and shall <i>run to and fro,</i>
|
|||
|
as men at a loss, and in a hot pursuit to <i>seek the word of the
|
|||
|
Lord,</i> to enquire if there be any prophets, any prophecy, any
|
|||
|
message from God, but they <i>shall not find it.</i> (1.) Though to
|
|||
|
many this is no affliction at all, yet some will be very sensible
|
|||
|
of it as a great grievance, and will gladly travel far to hear a
|
|||
|
good sermon; but they shall sensibly feel the loss of those mercies
|
|||
|
which others have foolishly sinned away. (2.) Even those that
|
|||
|
slighted prophets when they had them shall wish for them as Saul
|
|||
|
did for Samuel, when they are deprived of them. Many never know the
|
|||
|
worth of mercies till they feel the want of them. Or it may be
|
|||
|
meant thus, Though they should thus wander from sea to sea, in
|
|||
|
quest of the word of God, yet shall they not find it. Note, The
|
|||
|
means of grace are moveable things; and the candlestick, when we
|
|||
|
think it stands most firmly, may be removed out of its place
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.2.5" parsed="|Rev|2|5|0|0" passage="Re 2:5">Rev. ii. 5</scripRef>); and those that
|
|||
|
now slight the <i>days of the son of man</i> may wish in vain to
|
|||
|
see them. And <i>in the day</i> of this famine <i>the fair virgins
|
|||
|
and the young men shall faint for thirst</i> (<scripRef id="Amos.ix-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.13" parsed="|Amos|8|13|0|0" passage="Am 8:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>); those who, one would think,
|
|||
|
could well enough have borne the toil, shall sink under it. The
|
|||
|
<i>Jewish churches,</i> and the <i>masters of their synagogues,</i>
|
|||
|
some take to be meant by the <i>virgins</i> and the <i>young
|
|||
|
men;</i> these shall lose the word of the Lord, and the benefit of
|
|||
|
divine revelation, and shall faint away for want of it, shall lose
|
|||
|
all their strength and beauty. Those that trust in their own merit
|
|||
|
and righteousness, and think they have no need of Christ, others
|
|||
|
take to be meant by the <i>fair virgins</i> and the <i>choice young
|
|||
|
men;</i> they shall <i>faint for thirst,</i> when those that
|
|||
|
<i>hunger and thirst after the righteousness</i> of Christ shall be
|
|||
|
abundantly satisfied and filled.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Amos.ix-p22" shownumber="no">II. The particular destruction of those
|
|||
|
that were ringleaders in idolatry, <scripRef id="Amos.ix-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.14" parsed="|Amos|8|14|0|0" passage="Am 8:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>. Observe, 1. The sin they are
|
|||
|
charged with: They <i>swear by the sin of Samaria,</i> that is, by
|
|||
|
the god of Samaria, the idol that was worshipped at Bethel, not far
|
|||
|
off from Samaria. Thus did they glory in their shame, and swear by
|
|||
|
them as their god which was their iniquity, thinking that could
|
|||
|
help them which would certainly ruin them, and giving the highest
|
|||
|
honour to that which they should have looked upon with the utmost
|
|||
|
abhorrence and detestation. They say, <i>Thy god, O Dan!
|
|||
|
liveth;</i> that was the other golden calf, a dumb deal idol, and
|
|||
|
yet caressed and complimented as if it had been the living and true
|
|||
|
God. They say, <i>The manner,</i> or way, of <i>Beer-sheba
|
|||
|
liveth;</i> they swore by the <i>religion</i> of Beer-sheba, the
|
|||
|
way and manner of worship used there, which they looked upon as
|
|||
|
sacred, and therefore swore by and appealed to as a judge of
|
|||
|
controversy. Thus the papists swear by the mass, as the <i>manner
|
|||
|
of Beer-sheba.</i> 2. The destruction they are threatened with.
|
|||
|
Those who thus give that honour to idols which is due to God alone
|
|||
|
will find that the God they affront is thereby made their enemy, so
|
|||
|
that <i>they shall fall,</i> and the gods they serve cannot stand
|
|||
|
their friends, so that they shall <i>never rise again.</i> They
|
|||
|
will find that God is jealous and will resent the indignity done
|
|||
|
him, and that he will be victorious and it is to no purpose to
|
|||
|
contend with him.</p>
|
|||
|
</div></div2>
|