In this chapter we have, I. A high charge drawn up
against both Israel and Judah for their sins, which were the ground
of God's controversy with them,
1 Ephraim feedeth on wind, and followeth after the east wind: he daily increaseth lies and desolation; and they do make a covenant with the Assyrians, and oil is carried into Egypt. 2 The Lord hath also a controversy with Judah, and will punish Jacob according to his ways; according to his doings will he recompense him. 3 He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and by his strength he had power with God: 4 Yea, he had power over the angel, and prevailed: he wept, and made supplication unto him: he found him in Bethel, and there he spake with us; 5 Even the Lord God of hosts; the Lord is his memorial. 6 Therefore turn thou to thy God: keep mercy and judgment, and wait on thy God continually.
In these verses,
I. Ephraim is convicted of folly, in
staying himself upon Egypt and Assyria, when he was in straits
(
II. Judah is contended with too, and Jacob,
which includes both Ephraim and Judah (
III. Both Ephraim and Judah are put in mind
of their father Jacob, whose seed they were and whose name they
bore (and it was their honour), of the extraordinary things which
he did and which God did for him, that they might be the more
ashamed of themselves for degenerating from so illustrious a
progenitor and staining the lustre of so great a name, and yet that
they might be engaged and encouraged to return to God, the God of
their father Jacob, in hopes for his sake to find favour with him.
He had called this people Jacob (
1. Three glorious things concerning Jacob
the person Jacob the people are here put in mind of; but by brief
hints only, for it is presumed that they knew the story:—(1.) His
struggling with Esau in the womb: There he took his brother by
the heel,
2. Two inferences are here drawn from these stories concerning Jacob, for instruction to his seed:—
(1.) Here is a use of information. From
what passed between God and Jacob we may learn that Jehovah, the
Lord God of hosts, is the God of Israel; he was the God
of Jacob, and this is his memorial throughout all the
generations of the seed of Jacob (
(2.) Here is a use of exhortation,
7 He is a merchant, the balances of deceit are in his hand: he loveth to oppress. 8 And Ephraim said, Yet I am become rich, I have found me out substance: in all my labours they shall find none iniquity in me that were sin. 9 And I that am the Lord thy God from the land of Egypt will yet make thee to dwell in tabernacles, as in the days of the solemn feast. 10 I have also spoken by the prophets, and I have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by the ministry of the prophets. 11 Is there iniquity in Gilead? surely they are vanity: they sacrifice bullocks in Gilgal; yea, their altars are as heaps in the furrows of the fields. 12 And Jacob fled into the country of Syria, and Israel served for a wife, and for a wife he kept sheep. 13 And by a prophet the Lord brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet was he preserved. 14 Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly: therefore shall he leave his blood upon him, and his reproach shall his Lord return unto him.
Here are intermixed, in these verses,
I. Reproofs for sin. When God is coming
forth to contend with a people, that he may demonstrate his own
righteousness, he will demonstrate their unrighteousness. Ephraim
was called to turn to his God and keep judgment (
1. He is here charged with injustice
against the precepts of the second table,
(1.) What the sin is wherewith he is
charged: He is a merchant. The margin reads it as a proper
name, He is Canaan, or a Canaanite, unworthy to be
denominated from Jacob and Israel, and worthy to be cast out with a
curse from this good land, as the Canaanites were. See
(2.) How he justifies himself in this sin,
2. He is here charged with idolatry,
against the precepts of the first table, with that iniquity which
is in a special manner vanity, the making and worshipping of
images, which are vanities (
II. Here are threatenings of wrath for sin.
Some make that to be so (
III. Here are memorials of former mercy, which come in to convict them of base ingratitude in revolting from God. Let them blush to remember,
1. That God had raised them from meanness.
When Ephraim had become rich, and was proud of that, he forgot that
which God (that he might not forget it) obliged them every year to
acknowledge (
2. That God had rescued them from misery,
had raised them to what they were, not only out of poverty, but out
of slavery (
3. That God had taken care of their
education as they grew up. This instance of God's goodness we have,
IV. Here are intimations of further mercy,
and this remembered too in the midst of sin and wrath (as some
understand