Hosea son of Beeri, the prophet called to speak the Lord's covenant word to the northern kingdom of Israel.
Israel's Fruitful Vine, False Security, and the Call to Sow Righteousness
When God's people turn blessing into idolatry and trust their own strength, they reap judgment, yet the prophetic word still calls them to break up the fallow ground and seek the Lord.
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When God's people turn blessing into idolatry and trust their own strength, they reap judgment, yet the prophetic word still calls them to break up the fallow ground and seek the Lord.
The chapter argues that covenant blessing increases guilt when it is redirected toward idols, and that only genuine return to the Lord can replace the harvest of wickedness with righteousness and steadfast love.
Primarily Israel/Ephraim/Samaria, with Judah hearing the warning as a covenant neighbor under the same Lord.
The final decades of the northern kingdom before Assyria's conquest, when political instability, idolatrous worship, and foreign dependence exposed Israel's covenant collapse.
When God's people turn blessing into idolatry and trust their own strength, they reap judgment, yet the prophetic word still calls them to break up the fallow ground and seek the Lord.
Hosea son of Beeri, the prophet called to speak the Lord's covenant word to the northern kingdom of Israel.
Primarily Israel/Ephraim/Samaria, with Judah hearing the warning as a covenant neighbor under the same Lord.
The final decades of the northern kingdom before Assyria's conquest, when political instability, idolatrous worship, and foreign dependence exposed Israel's covenant collapse.
- Israel lived under growing imperial pressure while trying to secure itself through kings, treaties, military confidence, and shrine-centered religion rather than returning to the Lord.
The chapter assumes the northern kingdom's fertile prosperity, calf worship associated with Bethel/Beth Aven, multiplied altars and standing stones, oath-making, and agrarian images of sowing, plowing, reaping, and harvest.
Hosea 10 belongs to Book 3 of Hosea, where Israel's inward corruption and outward collapse are exposed before the later restoration promises of Hosea 11-14. It stands within the Mosaic covenant lawsuit tradition, showing that fruitfulness without covenant faithfulness becomes evidence against the people.
Hosea 10 moves from Israel's abused prosperity and divided heart to the collapse of king, calf, shrine, and military confidence, then presses the people with an urgent call to sow righteousness before warning that they will reap the violent harvest of wickedness.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Hosea 10 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot produce saving righteousness from a divided heart, false worship, or self-trust. The chapter calls for righteousness and steadfast love, but Israel's failure reveals the need for God to provide what he commands. In Christ, the true Vine and faithful King, God supplies righteousness, bears the covenant curse, and renews his people so they can bear fruit by grace.
The opening unit turns Israel's material fruitfulness into covenant evidence against them because blessing multiplied idolatrous worship instead of faithfulness.
King, oaths, calf, shrine, and high places are shown to be unable to save; each becomes an object of shame or destruction.
Israel's sin is not momentary but longstanding, yet the chapter still places before the people a genuine prophetic summons to seek the Lord and practice covenant righteousness.
The closing unit applies the sowing-and-reaping logic negatively: trusted strength, wicked cultivation, and lies will yield war, devastation, and the fall of kingship.
- 10:1-2: Israel's prosperity becomes a means of multiplying altars and sacred stones, revealing a divided heart that must be judged.
- 10:3-4: A people without fear of the Lord cannot be rescued by political rule or formal oath-making · their justice has become poisonous.
- 10:5-6: The object of idolatrous devotion becomes an object of fear, exile, tribute, and disgrace.
- 10:7-8: Political and religious centers are swept away, and the people cry out under the terror of judgment.
- 10:9-12: The Lord names Israel's long history of guilt but still calls the people to sow righteousness, reap steadfast love, break up fallow ground, and seek him.
- 10:13-15: Israel's trust in its own way and warriors produces a harvest of lies, evil, war, and royal collapse.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense vine, grapevine
Definition A cultivated vine, often used figuratively for Israel as God's planted people.
References Hosea 10:1
Lexicon vine, grapevine
Why it matters Israel's identity as a fruitful vine becomes ironic because its fruitfulness produces idolatry rather than covenant faithfulness.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense fruit, produce, result
Definition The produce of a tree, vine, action, or way of life.
References Hosea 10:1, 10:13
Lexicon fruit, produce, result
Why it matters The chapter turns fruit into a moral category: Israel's outward prosperity reveals inward rebellion, while later wickedness produces bitter fruit.
Pastoral Entry
מִזְבֵּחַ (mizbeach) is the Hebrew word for altar — the place of sacrifice. It derives from the root zabach (to slaughter, to sacrifice), and the local Hebrew index currently counts about 403 occurrences. The mizbeach is the point at which the gap between the holy God and the sinful person is addressed: through the sacrifice on the altar, the worshipper comes to God not on their own terms but on the terms God has provided. The altar texts repeatedly state how approach to God works — not through human achievement but through sacrifice.
Genesis 22:9 is the OT's most theologically dense altar text: 'Abraham built the mizbeach there and laid the wood in order and bound Isaac his son and laid him on the mizbeach, on top of the wood.' The mizbeach of Moriah is where the theology of substitutionary sacrifice takes its most compressed narrative form: the son is bound, the knife is raised, and then God provides the ram caught in the thicket (22:13). The mizbeach that was built for Isaac becomes the mizbeach on which a substitute is offered. The NT reads this as the most explicit OT anticipation of the cross — where the Son is offered and where God himself provides the substitute.
Exodus 20:24-25 gives the basic theology of the mizbeach: 'An altar (mizbeach) of earth you shall make for me and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your peace offerings... If you make me an altar of stone, you shall not build it of hewn stones, for if you wield your tool on it you profane it.' The mizbeach belongs to God, is built according to God's specification, and cannot be improved by human craftsmanship — the hewn stone profanes it. The altar is God's provision for approach, not a human achievement.
Malachi 1:7-10 is the OT's most pointed prophetic critique of the mizbeach: 'You offer polluted food on my altar (mizbeach)... You have profaned it by thinking the Lord's table may be despised.' The priests are bringing blind, lame, and sick animals — the ones that can't be sold — as if the mizbeach is a waste disposal rather than a place of costly worship. The prophetic rebuke makes explicit what the altar always required: the best, not the leftovers. The theology of the mizbeach is inseparable from the theology of the offering placed on it.
For the preacher, מִזְבֵּחַ (mizbeach) is the word that insists approach to God is never on our own terms: it requires a sacrifice that God provides and accepts, and the worship placed on the altar must be the best, not the remainder.
Sense altar, place of sacrifice
Definition A structure for offering sacrifice; in Hosea 10 it marks corrupted worship centers.
References Hosea 10:1-2, 10:8
Lexicon altar, place of sacrifice
Why it matters Multiplying altars demonstrates that Israel has redirected blessing into unauthorized and idolatrous worship.
Pastoral Entry
לֵב is the Hebrew word English Bibles almost always render 'heart,' but that translation requires immediate rescue from centuries of misreading. In contemporary use, 'heart' has been privatised into the realm of emotion and sentiment — the seat of feeling as opposed to thinking. The Hebrew word refuses that division entirely. לֵב is the integrated centre of the human person: the place where thought is formed, will is exercised, decisions are made, desires are shaped, and character is revealed. When the Old Testament speaks of the heart, it is speaking of what we would distribute across the brain, the soul, the conscience, and the will. The heart is not the irrational self in contrast to the rational self. It is the whole self at its deepest level of operation.
This means that לֵב carries extraordinary theological weight throughout the Hebrew scriptures. When God commands Israel to love him with all their heart in Deuteronomy 6:5, he is not asking for emotional warmth alongside intellectual distance. He is demanding the total allegiance of the whole person — mind, will, desire, and direction — toward himself. When Proverbs 4:23 instructs the reader to guard the heart above all else, because from it flow the springs of life, the sage is identifying the heart as the generative centre of the whole moral life, not merely the emotional life. What the heart believes and treasures will determine what the hands do and what the mouth says.
The Old Testament is unflinching about the heart's problem. Jeremiah 17:9 delivers one of the most sobering verdicts in Scripture: the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick. The heart that was made to orient toward God has turned in on itself. It plots, deceives, and conceals its own corruption. No human diagnosis can fully expose it. Only God searches the heart and tests it. This realism about the heart's condition is not cynical anthropology; it is the biblical setup for one of the Old Testament's most stunning promises.
That promise arrives in Jeremiah 31:33 and Ezekiel 36:26 — the two great new-covenant heart-texts. God will write his law not on stone tablets but on the heart itself. He will remove the heart of stone and give a heart of flesh. The transformation Israel could not achieve by discipline or religious effort, God himself will accomplish by sovereign grace. The heart that was the problem becomes the site of redemption. Pastorally, this arc — from the commanded heart (Deuteronomy), to the guarded heart (Proverbs), to the exposed heart (Jeremiah 17), to the transformed heart (Jeremiah 31, Ezekiel 36) — is one of the most pastorally rich trajectories in the Hebrew scriptures.
Sense heart, inner person, will
Definition The inner center of thought, desire, will, and loyalty.
References Hosea 10:2
Lexicon heart, inner person, will
Why it matters Israel's problem is heart-level duplicity, not merely defective external religion.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to divide, be smooth, be slippery, apportion
Definition A verb with a semantic range that can convey division or smooth/false dealing depending on context.
References Hosea 10:2
Lexicon to divide, be smooth, be slippery, apportion
Why it matters The phrase describes Israel's heart as covenantally unreliable, split or deceptive before the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
מֶלֶךְ (melek) is the Hebrew word for king — the political sovereign who rules, judges, and leads his people. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 2,526 occurrences, making it one of the most frequent nouns represented in the index, and its theological importance is commensurate with its frequency: the entire OT is concerned with the question of who is the true king, what genuine kingship looks like, and how the kingdoms of the earth relate to the kingdom of God.
The OT's most fundamental theological claim about melek is that YHWH Himself is king. 'For the Lord is the great God, and the great King (melek) above all gods' (Ps 95:3). 'The Lord is King (melek) forever and ever' (Ps 10:16). Isaiah's vision in the temple is of the Lord sitting on a high throne, and the seraphim's declaration — 'Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory' (Isa 6:3) — is addressed to 'the King, the Lord of hosts' (6:5). God's kingship is not metaphorical or derivative; it is the original and genuine form of which all human kingship is at best a reflection and image.
The institution of human kingship in Israel is introduced in 1 Samuel 8 under ambiguous conditions: the people ask for a king 'like all the nations' (8:5), and the Lord says to Samuel, 'they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them' (8:7). Human kingship in Israel is not the fulfillment of God's design but an accommodation to Israel's desire, hedged with warnings about what a human king will cost. The laws of the king in Deuteronomy 17:14-20 set out the conditions for a king who functions properly: not multiplying horses (military dependence), not multiplying wives (personal indulgence), not multiplying silver and gold (wealth accumulation), and writing a copy of the Torah and reading it all his days. The king who is genuinely king in Israel is the one who is the Torah-keeping servant of YHWH.
Psalm 2 holds the two dimensions together: the nations rage against the Lord and His anointed (His melek, v. 6: 'I have set my King on Zion, my holy hill'), and the Lord's king will ultimately rule the nations. The Davidic king is the Lord's representative melek — and the NT reads this as fulfilled in Christ: 'You are my Son; today I have begotten you' (Ps 2:7) is quoted in Hebrews 1:5, Acts 13:33, and applied to the resurrection.
For the preacher, מֶלֶךְ is the word that puts all human authority in its place: under the one King who is Lord of lords and King of kings, whose kingdom will have no end.
Sense king, ruler
Definition A royal ruler or monarch.
References Hosea 10:3, 10:7, 10:15
Lexicon king, ruler
Why it matters Israel's king is exposed as powerless because political order without fear of the Lord cannot save.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
בְּרִית (berit) is the Hebrew Bible's primary word for covenant — the formal relational bond that establishes binding obligations between parties. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 284 occurrences, spanning human covenants (treaties, alliances) and the central theological reality of God's binding commitment to His people. The word's etymology is debated, but its usage is consistent: a berit is a sworn, binding relationship that reshapes the entire future of those who enter it.
The covenant structure of the OT is the spine of the entire biblical narrative. God's covenants with Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and the promise of a new covenant (Jeremiah 31) are not independent events but a single, developing story of God's commitment to restore creation through a particular people. Each covenant adds to and builds on what preceded it: the Noahic covenant is cosmic (with all creation); the Abrahamic is particular (with one family for the sake of all); the Sinaitic is constitutive (the covenant community's life and worship); the Davidic is royal (the king through whom the covenant's promises will be mediated); the new covenant is consummating (the inner transformation that all the others pointed toward).
Genesis 15 is the most dramatic covenant-making scene in Scripture: God passes through the divided animals as a smoking firepot and flaming torch, taking on Himself the covenant curse if the covenant is broken. In the ancient Near East, both parties to a treaty would pass through divided animals, invoking the curse on the breaker. God alone passes through — making the covenant unilaterally His own responsibility. This is the theological heart of biblical covenant: God binds Himself to His promises in a way that goes beyond mere promise to the assumption of the covenant's consequences.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 prophesies the new covenant that addresses the old covenant's failure: 'I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts... they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest... for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.' The new covenant resolves what the Sinai covenant exposed: that external law-giving cannot produce internal covenant loyalty. The new covenant writes what the old could only command.
For the preacher, בְּרִית is the word that names the non-negotiable relational commitment at the center of the biblical story — God's binding of Himself to His people, which reaches its fullest expression in the blood of Christ, 'the blood of the new covenant' (Mat 26:28).
Sense covenant, solemn agreement
Definition A binding relationship or treaty, especially the LORD's covenant with his people or human covenants/oaths.
References Hosea 10:4
Lexicon covenant, solemn agreement
Why it matters False covenant-making and oath-taking reveal that Israel's public truth has detached from covenant faithfulness.
Pastoral Entry
מִשְׁפָּט is one of the great load-bearing words of the Old Testament, with the local OT index currently counting about 424 uses and carrying a range of meaning that English forces us to spread across several words: justice, judgment, ordinance, legal right, custom, due order. The breadth is not imprecision — it reflects the Hebrew imagination that saw these as related aspects of ordered covenant life.
At its judicial core, מִשְׁפָּט names the act of rendering a verdict — the formal determination of what is right in a contested situation, pronounced by someone with authority to settle it. It can cover the arc of a legal matter: the case brought, the hearing held, the sentence declared, and the penalty carried out. In Israel's public life, מִשְׁפָּט named the work of judges at the gate, the decisions of kings in their courts, and the ordinances by which the community ordered itself.
But מִשְׁפָּט is more than procedural correctness. The prophets reveal that it names God's own character expressed in the ordering of human society. When justice flows down like water, it is not merely a reform agenda — it is the shape of God's rule made visible in the world. The word carries weight on both sides: it protects those who are wronged, giving them what is their due, and it confronts those who bend the process in favor of power. In this sense מִשְׁפָּט is covenant justice — the justice that belongs to a God who is neither partial nor purchasable.
Pastorally, the word resists reduction. It cannot be domesticated into private virtue alone or inflated into a vague social cause. מִשְׁפָּט is concrete and relational: a widow receiving what is owed her, an orphan's case heard fairly, a poor man's dignity defended at the gate, a people whose king governs in the fear of God. And because God himself is described as a lover of מִשְׁפָּט, the word finally names not merely an obligation but a delight — justice that springs from who God is and that he calls his people to embody.
Sense judgment, justice, legal decision
Definition The exercise of right judgment, legal order, or justice.
References Hosea 10:4
Lexicon judgment, justice, legal decision
Why it matters Justice has become poisonous growth, showing that Israel's public life is as corrupted as its worship.
Sense poison, bitter plant, gall
Definition A bitter or poisonous plant/substance used metaphorically for destructive corruption.
References Hosea 10:4
Lexicon poison, bitter plant, gall
Why it matters The image shows justice turned toxic in the furrows of Israel's public life.
Sense house of iniquity/vanity
Definition A polemical name associated with Bethel, recasting a worship center as a place of wickedness or emptiness.
References Hosea 10:5
Lexicon house of iniquity/vanity
Why it matters The name exposes the spiritual reality beneath Israel's shrine: what claimed sacred identity has become covenant vanity.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to sow, scatter seed
Definition To plant seed; figuratively, to cultivate conduct that will yield a corresponding harvest.
References Hosea 10:12
Lexicon to sow, scatter seed
Why it matters The chapter's central appeal uses sowing to describe deliberate covenant practice before the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
צְדָקָה (ṣĕdāqāh) is one of the most theologically loaded nouns in the Hebrew Bible and one of the most frequently misunderstood by readers trained only in Western legal categories. The root tsādaq (H6663) means to be right, to be in the right, to be in conformity with a standard — but the standard is relational and covenantal, not merely legal and abstract.
Righteousness in the OT is fundamentally about right relationship: a person, action, or legal ruling is ṣaddîq (righteous) when it is in right standing in relation to the covenant, the community, or the character of God. The semantic range of ṣĕdāqāh is broad and sometimes surprising to Western readers. It can describe: (1) legal/judicial rightness — the judge who decides correctly is ṣaddîq; (2) moral integrity — the righteous person lives according to the covenant standard; (3) divine saving acts — 'the righteous acts of the Lord' (ṣidqôt YHWH, Judg 5:11; 1 Sam 12:7) are God's saving interventions in history; and (4) almsgiving/generosity — giving to the poor is ṣĕdāqāh (Ps 112:9; Dan 4:27), because generous provision for the needy is the covenant-relational behavior of a righteous member of the community.
The prophetic literature concentrates on ṣĕdāqāh as the social dimension of covenant: right relationship in the community requires justice for the poor, the widow, the foreigner, and the orphan. Isaiah, Amos, and Micah use ṣĕdāqāh and its companion term mišpāṭ (justice, right judgment) as the twin tests of covenant faithfulness. The absence of ṣĕdāqāh in the community is ipso facto evidence of broken relationship with the ṣaddîq God.
Sense righteousness, justice, right order
Definition Conformity to what is right, just, and covenantally faithful before God.
References Hosea 10:12
Lexicon righteousness, justice, right order
Why it matters The Lord calls Israel to sow righteousness and to seek him until righteousness comes as divine rain.
Pastoral Entry
חֶסֶד is one of the richest and most theologically freighted words in the Hebrew Bible. English translations reach for it with words like lovingkindness, steadfast love, mercy, loyal love, or covenant faithfulness, and none of these alone carries the full weight. What the word names is a kind of committed, active, loyal goodness that holds fast to a relationship even when it is not obligated to do so. It is not merely warm feeling. It is love that acts, love that costs, love that stays.
In its human dimension, חֶסֶד describes the loyalty owed within covenant bonds, whether between king and servant, between friends, between allies, or within a family. When Jonathan asks David to show him חֶסֶד, he is not asking for sentiment. He is asking for the kind of active, faithful, protecting love that holds when everything else might give way. When David shows חֶסֶד to Mephibosheth for the sake of Jonathan, it is costly, deliberate, and unconditional. It moves before merit is established and remains after circumstances have changed.
In its divine dimension, חֶסֶד becomes the defining word for the character of the God of Israel. He is the God who keeps חֶסֶד to thousands of those who love Him, who does not remove His חֶסֶד from David, whose חֶסֶד endures forever. It is this word that lies behind the great covenant confessions of the Old Testament. When Lamentations says that the steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, the word under that translation is חֶסֶד. When Isaiah promises that God's covenant of peace will not be removed, the word behind that covenant loyalty is חֶסֶד. The word does not describe God's passing affection. It describes His covenantal commitment, active across time, faithful in the face of human failure, and anchored in His own character rather than in our performance.
For the preacher and teacher, חֶסֶד is irreplaceable. It resists every reduction of God's love to sentiment or permissiveness. It insists that God's love is relational, purposeful, and covenant-shaped. It pushes against every view that God's mercy is passive or impersonal. And it raises a direct challenge to every congregation: because you have been the recipients of God's חֶסֶד, what does faithful חֶסֶד look like in how you treat one another?
Sense steadfast love, covenant loyalty, mercy
Definition Loyal love and covenant mercy expressed in faithful relationship.
References Hosea 10:12
Lexicon steadfast love, covenant loyalty, mercy
Why it matters Reaping steadfast love stands in contrast to Israel's harvest of evil and lies; it names the covenant mercy that must shape return to the Lord.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
דָּרַשׁ (darash) is the Hebrew verb for seeking — specifically seeking YHWH, inquiring of him, consulting his word and his prophets, and the opposite: consulting false gods, the dead, or idols instead. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 165 occurrences, and the verb remains a theologically important seeking word in the Hebrew Bible. The verb's semantic center is intentional pursuit: darash is not accidental encounter but deliberate seeking. The classic theological use is 'seek YHWH' — a summons that runs from Deuteronomy through the prophets and into the Psalms, often with the covenant promise that YHWH will be found by those who seek him rightly.
Deuteronomy 4:29 gives darash its paradigmatic promise: 'But from there you will darash YHWH your God and you will find him, if you darash him with all your heart and with all your soul.' The context is Moses's prediction of exile and restoration: when Israel is scattered among the nations and in great trouble, they will darash YHWH. The seeking of exile is the seeking YHWH promises to honor — the condition of finding him is not impressive circumstances but whole-hearted darash.
Amos 5:4-6 gives darash its most urgent prophetic form: 'For thus says YHWH to the house of Israel: Darash me, and you will live; but do not darash Bethel, and do not go to Gilgal, and do not cross over to Beersheba.' The shrines of Israel's false worship (Bethel, Gilgal, Beersheba) are contrasted with darash-YHWH. Life is found in seeking YHWH; death is found in seeking the shrines. The brevity of the command is its power: 'darash me, and you will live.'
Isaiah 55:6-7 gives darash its invitation-and-urgency use: 'Darash YHWH while he may be found; call upon him while he is near; let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; let him return to YHWH, that he may have compassion on him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.' The 'while he may be found' introduces an element of urgency: the window of darash is not unlimited. The invitation is to the wicked as much as the righteous — darash is preceded by forsaking wickedness, and followed by compassionate pardon.
Ezra 7:10 gives darash its Torah-study use: 'Ezra had set his heart to darash the Torah of YHWH, and to do it and to teach his statutes and rules in Israel.' The three-part pattern of Ezra's darash — study the Torah, do the Torah, teach the Torah — is the model for the scribal and the pastoral vocation. Darash is first inward (heart set on seeking), then practical (to do it), then communal (to teach it). The same verb covers seeking YHWH in prayer (Deut 4:29), seeking him through his prophets (1 Sam 9:9), and seeking him through his written word (Ezra 7:10) — the object is YHWH; the mode varies.
For the preacher, דָּרַשׁ (darash) defines the posture of the covenant life: the community that darash YHWH — in prayer, through his word, through his prophets — is the community that finds him and lives. Its opposite (darash false gods, the dead, or the shrines) is the community of death. The summons to seek YHWH while he may be found (Isa 55:6) is the urgent invitation of the gospel before the window closes.
Sense to seek, inquire, resort to
Definition To seek, inquire of, or turn toward someone for help, knowledge, or relationship.
References Hosea 10:12
Lexicon to seek, inquire, resort to
Why it matters Hosea's summons is personal and worshipful: Israel must seek the Lord, not merely repair institutions.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense untilled ground, fallow ground
Definition Ground needing to be freshly broken up for cultivation.
References Hosea 10:12
Lexicon untilled ground, fallow ground
Why it matters The image presses repentance into the hardened, uncultivated places of the covenant heart.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense wickedness, guilt
Definition Moral evil and culpable wrongdoing before God.
References Hosea 10:13
Lexicon wickedness, guilt
Why it matters Israel has not merely stumbled; it has actively cultivated wickedness and therefore reaps evil.
Sense lie, falsehood, deception
Definition Falsehood or deceptive unreliability.
References Hosea 10:13
Lexicon lie, falsehood, deception
Why it matters Israel eats the fruit of lies because its chosen path is built on false worship, false trust, and false security.
Pastoral Entry
בָּטַח names the act of casting the full weight of one's life, hope, and security upon someone or something. It is stronger than intellectual confidence and more bodily than mere belief. The word pictures a person leaning — fully, without reserve — upon a support outside themselves. To בָּטַח is to rest your entire orientation toward the future upon that which you have trusted. When the object is the Lord, that is not recklessness; it is the most rational and most secure posture a creature can take toward the Creator.
The Psalms make בָּטַח their anchor verb for this reason. The psalmic world is one of threat, shame, opposition, accusation, illness, and political danger. Into every one of those contexts, the Psalter inserts this verb as the alternative to panic, self-protection, and the false security of human power. To trust God is not to minimize danger. It is to name danger honestly and then place the self — and the outcome — into the hands of the One whose covenant love is unfailing.
Bāṭaḥ also carries a warning edge that shapes its pastoral weight. The prophets deploy it in the negative: trusting in chariots, in Egypt, in riches, in walls, in princes — all of these are forms of בָּטַח aimed at the wrong object. The word therefore is not simply warm or devotional. It exposes the question every person must answer: in what, or in whom, are you actually resting your weight? That question is both convicting and liberating, because the Bible answers it with the character and covenant of God.
Pastorlly, בָּטַח is not passive. The one who trusts continues to act, to pray, to obey — but acts from a different foundation. Trust is not inaction; it is action whose energy and confidence flow from the character of God rather than from the calculation of one's own resources. Proverbs 3:5 captures this: trust with all your heart, lean not on your own understanding. The posture of trust displaces self-reliance without eliminating wisdom or responsibility.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to trust, rely on, feel secure
Definition To place confidence or reliance in someone or something.
References Hosea 10:13
Lexicon to trust, rely on, feel secure
Why it matters The chapter condemns trust in Israel's own way and warriors as a root of coming disaster.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense vine
Definition vine
References Hosea 10:1
Why it matters Frames Israel's prosperity as a covenant test that has been failed through idolatry.
Pastoral Entry
לֵב is the Hebrew word English Bibles almost always render 'heart,' but that translation requires immediate rescue from centuries of misreading. In contemporary use, 'heart' has been privatised into the realm of emotion and sentiment — the seat of feeling as opposed to thinking. The Hebrew word refuses that division entirely. לֵב is the integrated centre of the human person: the place where thought is formed, will is exercised, decisions are made, desires are shaped, and character is revealed. When the Old Testament speaks of the heart, it is speaking of what we would distribute across the brain, the soul, the conscience, and the will. The heart is not the irrational self in contrast to the rational self. It is the whole self at its deepest level of operation.
This means that לֵב carries extraordinary theological weight throughout the Hebrew scriptures. When God commands Israel to love him with all their heart in Deuteronomy 6:5, he is not asking for emotional warmth alongside intellectual distance. He is demanding the total allegiance of the whole person — mind, will, desire, and direction — toward himself. When Proverbs 4:23 instructs the reader to guard the heart above all else, because from it flow the springs of life, the sage is identifying the heart as the generative centre of the whole moral life, not merely the emotional life. What the heart believes and treasures will determine what the hands do and what the mouth says.
The Old Testament is unflinching about the heart's problem. Jeremiah 17:9 delivers one of the most sobering verdicts in Scripture: the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick. The heart that was made to orient toward God has turned in on itself. It plots, deceives, and conceals its own corruption. No human diagnosis can fully expose it. Only God searches the heart and tests it. This realism about the heart's condition is not cynical anthropology; it is the biblical setup for one of the Old Testament's most stunning promises.
That promise arrives in Jeremiah 31:33 and Ezekiel 36:26 — the two great new-covenant heart-texts. God will write his law not on stone tablets but on the heart itself. He will remove the heart of stone and give a heart of flesh. The transformation Israel could not achieve by discipline or religious effort, God himself will accomplish by sovereign grace. The heart that was the problem becomes the site of redemption. Pastorally, this arc — from the commanded heart (Deuteronomy), to the guarded heart (Proverbs), to the exposed heart (Jeremiah 17), to the transformed heart (Jeremiah 31, Ezekiel 36) — is one of the most pastorally rich trajectories in the Hebrew scriptures.
Sense heart, inner person
Definition heart, inner person
References Hosea 10:2
Why it matters Identifies the root issue as inward duplicity rather than merely external religious error.
Pastoral Entry
בְּרִית (berit) is the Hebrew Bible's primary word for covenant — the formal relational bond that establishes binding obligations between parties. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 284 occurrences, spanning human covenants (treaties, alliances) and the central theological reality of God's binding commitment to His people. The word's etymology is debated, but its usage is consistent: a berit is a sworn, binding relationship that reshapes the entire future of those who enter it.
The covenant structure of the OT is the spine of the entire biblical narrative. God's covenants with Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and the promise of a new covenant (Jeremiah 31) are not independent events but a single, developing story of God's commitment to restore creation through a particular people. Each covenant adds to and builds on what preceded it: the Noahic covenant is cosmic (with all creation); the Abrahamic is particular (with one family for the sake of all); the Sinaitic is constitutive (the covenant community's life and worship); the Davidic is royal (the king through whom the covenant's promises will be mediated); the new covenant is consummating (the inner transformation that all the others pointed toward).
Genesis 15 is the most dramatic covenant-making scene in Scripture: God passes through the divided animals as a smoking firepot and flaming torch, taking on Himself the covenant curse if the covenant is broken. In the ancient Near East, both parties to a treaty would pass through divided animals, invoking the curse on the breaker. God alone passes through — making the covenant unilaterally His own responsibility. This is the theological heart of biblical covenant: God binds Himself to His promises in a way that goes beyond mere promise to the assumption of the covenant's consequences.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 prophesies the new covenant that addresses the old covenant's failure: 'I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts... they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest... for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.' The new covenant resolves what the Sinai covenant exposed: that external law-giving cannot produce internal covenant loyalty. The new covenant writes what the old could only command.
For the preacher, בְּרִית is the word that names the non-negotiable relational commitment at the center of the biblical story — God's binding of Himself to His people, which reaches its fullest expression in the blood of Christ, 'the blood of the new covenant' (Mat 26:28).
Sense covenant
Definition covenant
References Hosea 10:4
Why it matters Shows that Israel's speech and treaty-making have become detached from covenant truthfulness.
Pastoral Entry
מִשְׁפָּט is one of the great load-bearing words of the Old Testament, with the local OT index currently counting about 424 uses and carrying a range of meaning that English forces us to spread across several words: justice, judgment, ordinance, legal right, custom, due order. The breadth is not imprecision — it reflects the Hebrew imagination that saw these as related aspects of ordered covenant life.
At its judicial core, מִשְׁפָּט names the act of rendering a verdict — the formal determination of what is right in a contested situation, pronounced by someone with authority to settle it. It can cover the arc of a legal matter: the case brought, the hearing held, the sentence declared, and the penalty carried out. In Israel's public life, מִשְׁפָּט named the work of judges at the gate, the decisions of kings in their courts, and the ordinances by which the community ordered itself.
But מִשְׁפָּט is more than procedural correctness. The prophets reveal that it names God's own character expressed in the ordering of human society. When justice flows down like water, it is not merely a reform agenda — it is the shape of God's rule made visible in the world. The word carries weight on both sides: it protects those who are wronged, giving them what is their due, and it confronts those who bend the process in favor of power. In this sense מִשְׁפָּט is covenant justice — the justice that belongs to a God who is neither partial nor purchasable.
Pastorally, the word resists reduction. It cannot be domesticated into private virtue alone or inflated into a vague social cause. מִשְׁפָּט is concrete and relational: a widow receiving what is owed her, an orphan's case heard fairly, a poor man's dignity defended at the gate, a people whose king governs in the fear of God. And because God himself is described as a lover of מִשְׁפָּט, the word finally names not merely an obligation but a delight — justice that springs from who God is and that he calls his people to embody.
Sense justice, judgment
Definition justice, judgment
References Hosea 10:4
Why it matters Highlights the corruption of public righteousness into poisonous judgment.
Pastoral Entry
צְדָקָה (ṣĕdāqāh) is one of the most theologically loaded nouns in the Hebrew Bible and one of the most frequently misunderstood by readers trained only in Western legal categories. The root tsādaq (H6663) means to be right, to be in the right, to be in conformity with a standard — but the standard is relational and covenantal, not merely legal and abstract.
Righteousness in the OT is fundamentally about right relationship: a person, action, or legal ruling is ṣaddîq (righteous) when it is in right standing in relation to the covenant, the community, or the character of God. The semantic range of ṣĕdāqāh is broad and sometimes surprising to Western readers. It can describe: (1) legal/judicial rightness — the judge who decides correctly is ṣaddîq; (2) moral integrity — the righteous person lives according to the covenant standard; (3) divine saving acts — 'the righteous acts of the Lord' (ṣidqôt YHWH, Judg 5:11; 1 Sam 12:7) are God's saving interventions in history; and (4) almsgiving/generosity — giving to the poor is ṣĕdāqāh (Ps 112:9; Dan 4:27), because generous provision for the needy is the covenant-relational behavior of a righteous member of the community.
The prophetic literature concentrates on ṣĕdāqāh as the social dimension of covenant: right relationship in the community requires justice for the poor, the widow, the foreigner, and the orphan. Isaiah, Amos, and Micah use ṣĕdāqāh and its companion term mišpāṭ (justice, right judgment) as the twin tests of covenant faithfulness. The absence of ṣĕdāqāh in the community is ipso facto evidence of broken relationship with the ṣaddîq God.
Sense righteousness
Definition righteousness
References Hosea 10:12
Why it matters Names both the covenant practice Israel must sow and the divine gift it must seek from the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
חֶסֶד is one of the richest and most theologically freighted words in the Hebrew Bible. English translations reach for it with words like lovingkindness, steadfast love, mercy, loyal love, or covenant faithfulness, and none of these alone carries the full weight. What the word names is a kind of committed, active, loyal goodness that holds fast to a relationship even when it is not obligated to do so. It is not merely warm feeling. It is love that acts, love that costs, love that stays.
In its human dimension, חֶסֶד describes the loyalty owed within covenant bonds, whether between king and servant, between friends, between allies, or within a family. When Jonathan asks David to show him חֶסֶד, he is not asking for sentiment. He is asking for the kind of active, faithful, protecting love that holds when everything else might give way. When David shows חֶסֶד to Mephibosheth for the sake of Jonathan, it is costly, deliberate, and unconditional. It moves before merit is established and remains after circumstances have changed.
In its divine dimension, חֶסֶד becomes the defining word for the character of the God of Israel. He is the God who keeps חֶסֶד to thousands of those who love Him, who does not remove His חֶסֶד from David, whose חֶסֶד endures forever. It is this word that lies behind the great covenant confessions of the Old Testament. When Lamentations says that the steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, the word under that translation is חֶסֶד. When Isaiah promises that God's covenant of peace will not be removed, the word behind that covenant loyalty is חֶסֶד. The word does not describe God's passing affection. It describes His covenantal commitment, active across time, faithful in the face of human failure, and anchored in His own character rather than in our performance.
For the preacher and teacher, חֶסֶד is irreplaceable. It resists every reduction of God's love to sentiment or permissiveness. It insists that God's love is relational, purposeful, and covenant-shaped. It pushes against every view that God's mercy is passive or impersonal. And it raises a direct challenge to every congregation: because you have been the recipients of God's חֶסֶד, what does faithful חֶסֶד look like in how you treat one another?
Sense steadfast love, covenant loyalty
Definition steadfast love, covenant loyalty
References Hosea 10:12
Why it matters Contrasts covenant mercy with the evil harvest produced by wickedness and lies.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
דָּרַשׁ (darash) is the Hebrew verb for seeking — specifically seeking YHWH, inquiring of him, consulting his word and his prophets, and the opposite: consulting false gods, the dead, or idols instead. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 165 occurrences, and the verb remains a theologically important seeking word in the Hebrew Bible. The verb's semantic center is intentional pursuit: darash is not accidental encounter but deliberate seeking. The classic theological use is 'seek YHWH' — a summons that runs from Deuteronomy through the prophets and into the Psalms, often with the covenant promise that YHWH will be found by those who seek him rightly.
Deuteronomy 4:29 gives darash its paradigmatic promise: 'But from there you will darash YHWH your God and you will find him, if you darash him with all your heart and with all your soul.' The context is Moses's prediction of exile and restoration: when Israel is scattered among the nations and in great trouble, they will darash YHWH. The seeking of exile is the seeking YHWH promises to honor — the condition of finding him is not impressive circumstances but whole-hearted darash.
Amos 5:4-6 gives darash its most urgent prophetic form: 'For thus says YHWH to the house of Israel: Darash me, and you will live; but do not darash Bethel, and do not go to Gilgal, and do not cross over to Beersheba.' The shrines of Israel's false worship (Bethel, Gilgal, Beersheba) are contrasted with darash-YHWH. Life is found in seeking YHWH; death is found in seeking the shrines. The brevity of the command is its power: 'darash me, and you will live.'
Isaiah 55:6-7 gives darash its invitation-and-urgency use: 'Darash YHWH while he may be found; call upon him while he is near; let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; let him return to YHWH, that he may have compassion on him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.' The 'while he may be found' introduces an element of urgency: the window of darash is not unlimited. The invitation is to the wicked as much as the righteous — darash is preceded by forsaking wickedness, and followed by compassionate pardon.
Ezra 7:10 gives darash its Torah-study use: 'Ezra had set his heart to darash the Torah of YHWH, and to do it and to teach his statutes and rules in Israel.' The three-part pattern of Ezra's darash — study the Torah, do the Torah, teach the Torah — is the model for the scribal and the pastoral vocation. Darash is first inward (heart set on seeking), then practical (to do it), then communal (to teach it). The same verb covers seeking YHWH in prayer (Deut 4:29), seeking him through his prophets (1 Sam 9:9), and seeking him through his written word (Ezra 7:10) — the object is YHWH; the mode varies.
For the preacher, דָּרַשׁ (darash) defines the posture of the covenant life: the community that darash YHWH — in prayer, through his word, through his prophets — is the community that finds him and lives. Its opposite (darash false gods, the dead, or the shrines) is the community of death. The summons to seek YHWH while he may be found (Isa 55:6) is the urgent invitation of the gospel before the window closes.
Sense seek
Definition seek
References Hosea 10:12
Why it matters Centers the response on turning to the Lord himself, not merely managing consequences.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense fallow ground
Definition fallow ground
References Hosea 10:12
Why it matters Gives a vivid image for repentance that reaches hardened and uncultivated areas of the heart.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
| v.1 | H1238בָּקַקQal · ParticipleH7737שָׁוָהPiel · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7235רָבָהHiphil · Perfect · IndicativeH3190יָטַבHiphil · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.11 | H3925לָמַדPual · Participle passiveH157אָהַבQal · ParticipleH5674עָבַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7392רָכַבHiphil · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortativeH2790חָרַשׁQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7702Piel · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.12 | H2232זָרַעQal · Imperative · ImperativeH7114קָצַרQal · Imperative · ImperativeH5214נִירQal · Imperative · ImperativeH935בּוֹאQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.13 | H2790חָרַשׁQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7114קָצַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH398אָכַלQal · Perfect · IndicativeH982בָּטַחQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.14 | H7703שָׁדַדQal passive · ImperfectiveH7376Pual · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.15 | H6213עָשָׂהQal · Perfect · IndicativeH1820דָּמָהNiphal · Infinitive absoluteH1820דָּמָהNiphal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.2 | H2505חָלַקQal · Perfect · IndicativeH816אָשַׁםQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6202עָרַףQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7703שָׁדַדPoel · Imperfective |
| v.3 | H559אָמַרQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH3372יָרֵאQal · Perfect · IndicativeH6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.4 | H1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH422Qal · Infinitive absoluteH3772כָּרַתQal · Infinitive absolute |
| v.5 | H1481גּוּרQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH56אָבַלQal · Perfect · IndicativeH1523גִּילQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH1540גָּלָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.6 | H2986יָבַלHophal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH3947לָקַחQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.7 | H1820דָּמָהNiphal · Participle passive |
| v.8 | H5927עָלָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH5307נָפַלQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.9 | H2398חָטָאQal · Perfect · IndicativeH5975עָמַדQal · Perfect · Indicative |
Aspect in Hebrew is grammatical form, not tense. Perfect = completed action; Imperfect = incomplete/ongoing. Stem modifies action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive).
Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
The chapter argues that covenant blessing increases guilt when it is redirected toward idols, and that only genuine return to the Lord can replace the harvest of wickedness with righteousness and steadfast love.
Blessing corrupted into idolatry, security exposed as fragile, guilt traced through Israel's history, repentance summoned through agrarian imagery, and judgment announced as the harvest of wicked trust.
- 1.The LORD had given Israel fruitfulness, but Israel used that fruitfulness to multiply idolatrous worship.
- 2.A divided heart makes worship culpable, so the LORD himself will break down the altars and sacred stones.
- 3.Political kingship cannot rescue a people who do not fear the LORD.
- 4.Religious and legal speech becomes poisonous when covenant truth is absent from the heart.
- 5.Idols do not save their worshipers; they become objects of shame, fear, exile, and loss.
- 6.The prophetic call still summons the people to seek the LORD, practice righteousness, and receive steadfast love.
- 7.Those who cultivate wickedness and trust self-strength will reap the destructive fruit of lies and violence.
Theological Focus
- Covenant blessing abused through idolatry
- Divided-hearted worship
- False security in kings and military strength
- Judgment as harvest of cultivated wickedness
- The urgency of seeking the Lord
- Righteousness and steadfast love as covenant fruit
- The collapse of self-made religion
- Prosperity as covenant test
- The divided heart
- Sowing and reaping
- The emptiness of idols
- The fragility of human rule
- Prophetic mercy in warning
- Human Depravity
- Sin and Idolatry
- Covenant Judgment
- Repentance
- Righteousness
- Divine Sovereignty
- Christology
Theological Themes
Israel's fruitfulness reveals the heart: blessing either becomes gratitude and obedience or fuel for idolatry.
The problem is not merely external altars but an inward heart split from covenant loyalty.
The chapter uses agricultural imagery to show moral and covenant consequences: righteousness and steadfast love are to be sown and reaped, but wickedness yields evil and lies.
The calf of Beth Aven cannot protect Israel; it is itself carried away in disgrace.
Kingship severed from the fear of the Lord proves powerless and temporary.
The call to sow righteousness and seek the Lord shows that warning is a merciful summons, not mere condemnation.
Covenant Significance
Hosea 10 functions as a Mosaic covenant lawsuit showing that Israel's prosperity, worship, politics, and legal life have violated covenant loyalty. The chapter presses Deuteronomic sowing-and-reaping consequences while still holding out the proper covenant response: seek the Lord and return to righteousness and steadfast love.
- Covenant blessing - Fruitfulness was meant to lead Israel into grateful fidelity, but it became a means of expanding idolatry.
- Covenant breach - Altars, sacred stones, false oaths, and poisoned justice show that Israel has broken covenant in worship, speech, and public righteousness.
- Covenant curse - Loss of king, shrine, idol, land-security, and peace reflects the covenant curse pattern for rebellion.
- Covenant summons - The command to sow righteousness, reap steadfast love, break up fallow ground, and seek the Lord presents the covenant path of return.
- Covenant harvest - Israel's chosen cultivation of wickedness yields the destructive harvest of evil, lies, and war.
- Leviticus 26 - The covenant curse pattern includes the removal of security, peace, and fruitful enjoyment when Israel rebels.
- Deuteronomy 28 - Blessing and curse logic stands behind Hosea's warning that covenant rebellion produces national collapse.
- Deuteronomy 30:1-10 - The call to seek the Lord and return anticipates the covenant restoration pattern of heart-level return.
- Judges 19-21 - The Gibeah reference recalls deep moral collapse within Israel and the devastating consequences of covenant disorder.
- Jeremiah 4:3 - The call to break up fallow ground parallels prophetic summons to repentance that reaches beneath surface reform.
Canonical Connections
Hosea 10 joins the biblical pattern of Israel as a vine or vineyard whose fruit reveals covenant faithfulness or rebellion.
The call for deep cultivation of the heart parallels prophetic calls to repentance that go beneath religious surface.
Hosea's covenant harvest logic echoes across Scripture as a moral and spiritual principle under God's rule.
The cry for mountains and hills to cover the people becomes part of later judgment imagery in the canon.
The removal of idols, kings, and security fits the covenant curse pattern announced in Torah.
The collapse of Israel's king intensifies the need for a righteous Davidic king whose reign cannot be swept away.
Cross References
For him who knew no sin he made to be sin on our behalf; so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
Don’t be deceived. God is not mocked, for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. For he who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption. But he who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life. Let’s not be...
“I am the true vine, and my Father is the farmer. Every branch in me that doesn’t bear fruit, he takes away. Every branch that bears fruit, he prunes, that it may bear more fruit. You are already pruned clean because of the word which I...
Then they will begin to tell the mountains, ‘Fall on us!’ and tell the hills, ‘Cover us.’
What was sown on the good ground, this is he who hears the word, and understands it, who most certainly bears fruit, and produces, some one hundred times as much, some sixty, and some thirty.”
They told the mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb,
So the king took counsel, and made two calves of gold; and he said to them, “It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Look and behold your gods, Israel, which brought you up out of the land of Egypt!” He set the one in Bethel, and the...
Yahweh will bring a nation against you from far, from the end of the earth, as the eagle flies: a nation whose language you will not understand, a nation of fierce facial expressions, that doesn’t respect the elderly, nor show favor to the...
Beware lest you forget Yahweh your God, in not keeping his commandments, his ordinances, and his statutes, which I command you today; lest, when you have eaten and are full, and have built fine houses and lived in them; and when your herds...
For Yahweh says to the men of Judah and to Jerusalem, “Break up your fallow ground, and don’t sow among thorns.
As they were making their hearts merry, behold, the men of the city, certain wicked fellows, surrounded the house, beating at the door; and they spoke to the master of the house, the old man, saying, “Bring out the man who came into your...
In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did that which was right in his own eyes.
Israel is a luxuriant vine that produces his fruit. According to the abundance of his fruit he has multiplied his altars. As their land has prospered, they have adorned their sacred stones. Their heart is divided. Now they will be found...
“Israel, you have sinned from the days of Gibeah. There they remained. The battle against the children of iniquity doesn’t overtake them in Gibeah. When it is my desire, I will chastise them; and the nations will be gathered against them,...
“When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called my son out of Egypt. They called to them, so they went from them. They sacrificed to the Baals, and burned incense to engraved images. Yet I taught Ephraim to walk. I took them by his...
I found Israel like grapes in the wilderness. I saw your fathers as the first ripe in the fig tree at its first season; but they came to Baal Peor, and consecrated themselves to the shameful thing, and became abominable like that which...
Where is your king now, that he may save you in all your cities? And your judges, of whom you said, ‘Give me a king and princes?’ I have given you a king in my anger, and have taken him away in my wrath.
You are destroyed, Israel, because you are against me, against your help. Where is your king now, that he may save you in all your cities? And your judges, of whom you said, ‘Give me a king and princes?’ I have given you a king in my...
“Come! Let’s return to Yahweh; for he has torn us to pieces, and he will heal us; he has injured us, and he will bind up our wounds. After two days he will revive us. On the third day he will raise us up, and we will live before him. Let’s...
Let Samaria throw out his calf idol! My anger burns against them! How long will it be until they are capable of purity? For this is even from Israel! The workman made it, and it is no God; indeed, the calf of Samaria shall be broken in...
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Hosea 10 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot produce saving righteousness from a divided heart, false worship, or self-trust. The chapter calls for righteousness and steadfast love, but Israel's failure reveals the need for God to provide what he commands. In Christ, the true Vine and faithful King, God supplies righteousness, bears the covenant curse, and renews his people so they can bear fruit by grace.
- Israel's fruitful vine shows that prosperity cannot save the heart · sin can turn good gifts into occasions for idolatry.
- Kings, calves, shrines, oaths, and military strength all collapse under the judgment of God.
- The summons to sow righteousness and seek the Lord reveals the kind of covenant life God requires.
- The hope of righteousness raining down points beyond Israel's capacity to the Lord's gracious provision.
- Jesus fulfills Israel's vocation as true Son and true Vine, bears the curse, and creates fruitfulness in his people by union with him.
- Do not turn Hosea 10:12 into works-righteousness · the call to righteousness exposes need and summons covenant return, and the gospel shows righteousness provided in Christ.
- Do not treat grace as permission to keep sowing wickedness · the gospel saves from the guilt and power of sin and creates new fruit.
- Do not bypass Israel's covenant setting · the chapter's gospel significance is reached through the covenant lawsuit and its canonical fulfillment, not by ignoring the original horizon.
- Do not confuse temporary fruitfulness with saving fruit · only fruit produced from faithful union with the Lord's saving work endures.
For him who knew no sin he made to be sin on our behalf; so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
Don’t be deceived. God is not mocked, for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. For he who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption. But he who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life. Let’s not be...
“I am the true vine, and my Father is the farmer. Every branch in me that doesn’t bear fruit, he takes away. Every branch that bears fruit, he prunes, that it may bear more fruit. You are already pruned clean because of the word which I...
Then they will begin to tell the mountains, ‘Fall on us!’ and tell the hills, ‘Cover us.’
What was sown on the good ground, this is he who hears the word, and understands it, who most certainly bears fruit, and produces, some one hundred times as much, some sixty, and some thirty.”
They told the mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb,
Primary Emphasis
Hosea 10 contributes to Christ-centered reading by exposing the failure of Israel's vine, king, worship, and covenant obedience, thereby intensifying the need for the true Son, true King, true worshiper, and fruitful Vine. Christ fulfills the covenant faithfulness Israel lacked, bears the curse for his people, and creates by the Spirit the righteous fruit Hosea calls for but Israel cannot produce in its divided heart.
Chapter Contribution
The chapter argues that covenant blessing increases guilt when it is redirected toward idols, and that only genuine return to the Lord can replace the harvest of wickedness with righteousness and steadfast love.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Study temple presence, worship, corruption, judgment, and renewal across Scripture.
Material blessing is intended for covenant faithfulness, not idolatry.
Persistent rebellion results in corresponding covenant judgment.
Internal spiritual division leads to external political and cultic instability.
False worship ultimately collapses under divine discipline.
God employs foreign powers as instruments of discipline.
Turning to Yahweh restores righteousness and covenant blessing.
The divided heart can misuse God's gifts, distort worship, and trust lies while maintaining religious forms.
Idolatry is not only bowing before images but redirecting fruitfulness, fear, trust, and worship away from the Lord.
The destruction of altars, removal of the calf, collapse of kingship, and violence of war are covenant consequences for rebellion.
The chapter's command to break up fallow ground and seek the Lord calls for inward and outward covenant return.
Righteousness is both commanded as covenant practice and needed as divine provision from the Lord.
The Lord governs Israel's harvest, dismantles false worship, and gathers nations for discipline according to his covenant rule.
The failure of Israel's vine and king prepares for Christ as the faithful Vine, true King, and source of saving righteousness.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Hosea 10 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot produce saving righteousness from a divided heart, false worship, or self-trust. The chapter calls for righteousness and steadfast love, but Israel's failure reveals the need for God to provide what he commands. In Christ, the true Vine and faithful King, God supplies righteousness, bears the covenant curse, and renews his people so they can bear fruit by grace.
The Lord will not allow his covenant people to turn his gifts into tools of idolatry, nor will he allow false worship, false speech, and false security to stand unexposed.
God's people must examine what they are cultivating before the harvest comes. The call to seek the Lord is urgent, gracious, and concrete.
Wholehearted covenant faithfulness that bears righteous fruit, rejects self-made security, and seeks the Lord for mercy and renewal.
- Identify one blessing that has become a spiritual danger because it feeds self-reliance or pride.
- Confess where the heart is divided between the Lord and a rival trust.
- Name one hardened area that needs to be broken up through repentance, prayer, Scripture, accountability, and obedience.
- Choose one concrete act of righteousness to sow this week in worship, family, leadership, speech, justice, or mercy.
- Pray Hosea 10:12 as a covenantal plea fulfilled in Christ: Lord, teach us to seek you until your righteousness bears fruit among us.
- Hosea 10 gives a severe warning against receiving God's blessings while using them to fortify idolatry, against treating religious structures as substitutes for covenant loyalty, and against trusting political or military strength instead of the Lord.
- Treating Hosea 10:12 as a generic self-improvement slogan - The verse is a covenant summons within a judgment oracle. It calls for repentance, righteousness, steadfast love, and seeking the Lord, not mere personal productivity.
- Reading Israel's fruitfulness as proof of God's approval - Hosea says prosperity can increase guilt when it is turned toward idolatry and self-confidence.
- Assuming political collapse is the main problem - The collapse of kingship is a symptom. The deeper issue is that Israel does not fear the Lord and has a divided heart.
- Flattening the calf of Beth Aven into a mere ancient curiosity - The calf represents a whole system of false worship, misplaced identity, and religious security apart from the Lord.
- Skipping from Israel's failure directly to application without covenant context - The chapter must first be read as a Mosaic covenant lawsuit against Israel, then applied through the canonical and gospel fulfillment in Christ.
- Using sowing and reaping as mechanical karma - Hosea's imagery is covenantal and personal before the Lord. The issue is not an impersonal universe but the holy God governing his covenant people.
- Where has blessing made me more self-secure rather than more grateful and obedient?
- What altars am I multiplying when life becomes fruitful, comfortable, or successful?
- Where is my heart divided between the Lord and another source of security?
- What religious language do I use while avoiding real fear of the Lord?
- What would it look like to break up the fallow ground of my heart rather than merely rearrange outward behavior?
- Am I sowing righteousness in daily obedience, or am I expecting a harvest that does not match what I am cultivating?
- Where have I trusted my own way, my resources, or my strength instead of seeking the Lord?
- How does Christ answer the failure of Israel's vine, king, worship, and righteousness?
- Do not measure spiritual health by fruitfulness alone. Ask whether blessing is producing worship, generosity, justice, humility, and obedience, or whether it is feeding subtle idolatry.
- Do not rely on structures, titles, alliances, or programs to do what only fear of the Lord and covenant faithfulness can sustain.
- Use the image of fallow ground to help people identify hardened, uncultivated areas of the heart that need honest repentance before God.
- Press the chapter's contrast between sowing righteousness and plowing wickedness. A congregation should feel the moral seriousness of what it is cultivating.
- Help believers move beyond general regret to concrete practices of seeking the Lord, pursuing righteousness, and receiving mercy in Christ.
- Warn against beautiful forms of worship that cover divided hearts. True worship must be joined to truth, righteousness, and fear of the Lord.
- Expose the fragility of human power and call people to rest in the Lordship, righteousness, and mercy of God rather than the works of their own hands.
Blessing should lead to self-examination before the Lord, not assumption of approval.
The proper response to exposed duplicity is not denial but returning to the Lord with the whole heart.
Repentance should become concrete righteousness rather than vague intention.
The chapter drives readers away from self-made security toward the mercy and righteousness God provides.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Hosea 10 moves from Israel's abused prosperity and divided heart to the collapse of king, calf, shrine, and military confidence, then presses the people with an urgent call to sow righteousness before warning that they will reap the violent harvest of wickedness.
Hosea 10 functions as a Mosaic covenant lawsuit showing that Israel's prosperity, worship, politics, and legal life have violated covenant loyalty. The chapter presses Deuteronomic sowing-and-reaping consequences while still holding out the proper covenant response: seek the Lord and return to righteousness and steadfast love.
Hosea 10 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot produce saving righteousness from a divided heart, false worship, or self-trust. The chapter calls for righteousness and steadfast love, but Israel's failure reveals the need for God to provide what he commands. In Christ, the true Vine and faithful King, God supplies righteousness, bears the covenant curse, and renews his people so they can bear fruit by grace.
Wholehearted covenant faithfulness that bears righteous fruit, rejects self-made security, and seeks the Lord for mercy and renewal.
Focus Points
- Covenant blessing abused through idolatry
- Divided-hearted worship
- False security in kings and military strength
- Judgment as harvest of cultivated wickedness
- The urgency of seeking the Lord
- Righteousness and steadfast love as covenant fruit
- The collapse of self-made religion
- Prosperity as covenant test
- The divided heart
- Sowing and reaping
- The emptiness of idols
- The fragility of human rule
- Prophetic mercy in warning
- Human Depravity
- Sin and Idolatry
- Covenant Judgment
- Repentance
- Righteousness
- Divine Sovereignty
- Christology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Hosea 10:1-8
Hos 10:4-6 The thoughts of Hos 10:2, Hos 10:3 are carried out still further in Hos 10:4-7. Hos 10:4. “They have spoken words, sworn falsely, made treaties: thus right springs up like darnel in the furrows of the field. Hos 10:5. For the calves of Beth-aven the inhabitants of Samaria were afraid: yea, its people mourn over it, and its sacred ministers will tremble at it, at its glory, because it has strayed from them.
Hos 10:6. Men will also carry it to Asshur, as a present for king Jareb: shame will seize upon Ephraim, and Israel will be put to shame for its counsel. ” The dissimulation of heart (Hos 10:3) manifested itself in their speaking words which were nothing but words, i. e. , in vain talk (cf. Isa 58:13), in false swearing, and in the making of treaties. אלות, by virtue of the parallelism, is an infin.
abs. for אלה, formed like כּרת, analogous to שׁתות (Isa 22:13; see Ewald, §240, b). כּרת בּרית, in connection with false swearing, must signify the making of a covenant without any truthfulness in it, i. e. , the conclusion of treaties with foreign nations - for example, with Assyria - which they were inclined to observe only so long as they could promise themselves advantages from them.
In consequence of this, right has become like a bitter plant growing luxuriantly (ראשׁ = רושׁ; see at Deu 29:17). Mishpât does not mean judgment here, or the punitive judgment of God (Chald. and many others), for this could hardly be compared with propriety to weeds running over everything, but right in its degeneracy into wrong, or right that men have turned into bitter fruit or poison (Amo 6:12).
This spreads about in the kingdom, as weeds spread luxuriantly in the furrows of the field (שׂדי a poetical form for שׂדה, like Deu 32:13; Psa 8:8). Therefore the judgment cannot be delayed, and is already approaching in so threatening a manner, that the inhabitants of Samaria tremble for the golden calves. The plural ‛eglōth is used with indefinite generality, and gives no warrant, therefore, for the inference that there were several golden calves set up in Bethel.
Moreover, this would be at variance with the fact, that in the sentences which follow we find “the (one) calf” spoken of. The feminine form ‛eglōth, which only occurs here, is also probably connected with the abstract use of the plural, inasmuch as the feminine is the proper form for abstracts. Bēth-'âven for Bēth-'ēl, as in Hos 4:15. Shâkhēn is construed with the plural, as an adjective used in a collective sense.
כּי (Hos 4:5) is emphatic, and the suffixes attached to עמּו and כּמריו do not refer to Samaria, but to the idol, i. e. , the calf, since the prophet distinctly calls Israel, which ought to have been the nation of Jehovah, the nation of its calf-idol, which mourned with its priests (kemârı̄m, the priests appointed in connection with the worship of the calves: see at 2Ki 23:5) for the carrying away of the calf to Assyria.
גּיל does not mean to exult or rejoice here, nor to tremble (applied to the leaping of the heart from fear, as it does from joy), but has the same meaning as חיל in Psa 96:9. עליו is still further defined by על־כּבודו, “for its glory,” i. e. , not for the temple-treasure at Bethel (Hitzig), nor the one glorious image of the calf, as the symbol of the state-god (Ewald, Umbreit), but the calf, to which the people attributed the glory of the true God.
The perfect, gâlâh, is used prophetically of that which was as good as complete and certain (for the fut. exact. , cf. Ewald, §343, a). The golden calf, the glory of the nation, will have to wander into exile. This cannot even save itself; it will be taken to Assyria, to king Jareb (see at Hos 5:13), as minchâh, a present of tribute (see 2Sa 8:2, 2Sa 8:6; 1Ki 5:1).
For the construing of the passive with את, see Ges. §143, 1, a. Then will Ephraim (= Israel) be seized by reproach and shame. Boshnâh, a word only met with here; it is formed from the masculine bōshen, which is not used at all (see Ewald, §163, 164).
Hos 10:7-8 With the carrying away of the golden calf the kingdom of Samaria also perishes, and desert plants will grow upon the places of idols. Hos 10:7, Hos 10:8. “Destroyed is Samaria; her king like a splinter on the surface of the water. And destroyed are the high places of Aven, the sin of Israel: thorn and thistle will rise up on their altars; and they will speak to the mountains, Cover us!
and to the hills, Fall on us! ” שׁמרון מלכּהּ is not an asyndeton, “Samaria and its king;” but Shōmerōn is to be taken absolutely, “as for Samaria,” although, as a matter of fact, not only Samaria, the capital of the kingdom, but the kingdom itself, was destroyed. For malkâh does not refer to any particular king, but is used in a general sense for “the king that Samaria had,” so that the destruction of the monarchy is here predicted (cf.
Hos 10:15). The idea that the words refer to one particular king, is not only at variance with the context, which contains no allusion to any one historical occurrence, but does not suit the simile: like a splinter upon the surface of the water, which is carried away by the current, and vanishes without leaving a trace behind. Qetseph is not “foam” (Chald. , Symm.
, Rabb.) , but a broken branch, a fagot or a splinter, as qetsâphâh in Joe 1:7 clearly shows. Bâmōth 'âven are the buildings connected with the image-worship at Bethel ( 'âven = Bēth - 'ēl , Hos 10:5), the temple erected there ( bēth bâmōth ), together with the altar, possibly also including other illegal places of sacrifice there, which constituted the chief sin of the kingdom of Israel.
These were to be so utterly destroyed, that thorns and thistles would grow upon the ruined altars (cf. Gen 3:18). “The sign of extreme solitude, that there are not even the walls left, or any traces of the buildings” (Jerome). When the kingdom shall be thus broken up, together with the monarchy and the sacred places, the inhabitants, in their hopeless despair, will long for swift death and destruction.
Saying to the mountains, “Cover us,” etc. , implies much more than hiding themselves in the holes and clefts of the rocks (Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). It expresses the desire to be buried under the falling mountains and hills, that they may no longer have to bear the pains and terrors of the judgment. In this sense are the words transferred by Christ, in Luk 23:30, to the calamities attending the destruction of Jerusalem, and in Rev 6:16 to the terrors of the last judgment.
Hos 10:7-8 With the carrying away of the golden calf the kingdom of Samaria also perishes, and desert plants will grow upon the places of idols. Hos 10:7, Hos 10:8. “Destroyed is Samaria; her king like a splinter on the surface of the water. And destroyed are the high places of Aven, the sin of Israel: thorn and thistle will rise up on their altars; and they will speak to the mountains, Cover us!
and to the hills, Fall on us! ” שׁמרון מלכּהּ is not an asyndeton, “Samaria and its king;” but Shōmerōn is to be taken absolutely, “as for Samaria,” although, as a matter of fact, not only Samaria, the capital of the kingdom, but the kingdom itself, was destroyed. For malkâh does not refer to any particular king, but is used in a general sense for “the king that Samaria had,” so that the destruction of the monarchy is here predicted (cf.
Hos 10:15). The idea that the words refer to one particular king, is not only at variance with the context, which contains no allusion to any one historical occurrence, but does not suit the simile: like a splinter upon the surface of the water, which is carried away by the current, and vanishes without leaving a trace behind. Qetseph is not “foam” (Chald. , Symm.
, Rabb.) , but a broken branch, a fagot or a splinter, as qetsâphâh in Joe 1:7 clearly shows. Bâmōth 'âven are the buildings connected with the image-worship at Bethel ( 'âven = Bēth - 'ēl , Hos 10:5), the temple erected there ( bēth bâmōth ), together with the altar, possibly also including other illegal places of sacrifice there, which constituted the chief sin of the kingdom of Israel.
These were to be so utterly destroyed, that thorns and thistles would grow upon the ruined altars (cf. Gen 3:18). “The sign of extreme solitude, that there are not even the walls left, or any traces of the buildings” (Jerome). When the kingdom shall be thus broken up, together with the monarchy and the sacred places, the inhabitants, in their hopeless despair, will long for swift death and destruction.
Saying to the mountains, “Cover us,” etc. , implies much more than hiding themselves in the holes and clefts of the rocks (Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). It expresses the desire to be buried under the falling mountains and hills, that they may no longer have to bear the pains and terrors of the judgment. In this sense are the words transferred by Christ, in Luk 23:30, to the calamities attending the destruction of Jerusalem, and in Rev 6:16 to the terrors of the last judgment.
Hos 10:9-10 After the threatening of punishment has thus been extended in Hos 10:8, even to the utter ruin of the kingdom, the prophet returns in Hos 10:9 to the earlier times, for the purpose of exhibiting in a new form and deeply rooted sinfulness of the people, and then, under cover of an appeal to them to return to righteousness, depicting still further the time of visitation, and (in Hos 10:14, Hos 10:15) predicting with still greater clearness the destruction of the kingdom and the overthrow of the monarchy. Hos 10:9.
“Since the days of Gibeah hast thou sinned, O Israel: there have they remained: the war against the sons of wickedness did not overtake them at Gibeah. Hos 10:10. According to my desire shall I chastise them; and nations will be gathered together against them, to bind them to their two transgressions. ” Just as in Hos 9:9, the days of Gibeah, i. e. , the days when that ruthless crime was committed at Gibeah upon the concubine of the Levite, are mentioned as a time of deep corruption; so are those days described in the present passage as the commencement of Israel’s sin.
For it is as obvious that מיממי is not to be understood in a comparative sense, as it is that the days of Gibeah are not to be taken as referring to the choice of Saul, who sprang from Gibeah, to be their king (Chald.) The following words, שׁם עמדוּ גגו, which are very difficult, and have been variously explained, do not describe the conduct of Israel in those days; for, in the first place, the statement that the war did not overtake them is by no means in harmony with this, since the other tribes avenged that crime so severely that the tribe of Benjamin was almost exterminated; and secondly, the suffix attached to תּשּׂיגם evidently refers to the same persons as that appended to אסּ'רם in Hos 9:10, i.
e. , to the Israelites of the ten tribes, to which Hosea foretels the coming judgment. These are therefore the subject to עמדוּ, and consequently עמד signifies to stand, to remain, to persevere (cf. Isa 47:12; Jer 32:14). There, in Gibeah, did they remain, that is to say, they persevered in the sin of Gibeah, without the war at Gibeah against the sinners overtaking them (the imperfect, in a subordinated clause, used to describe the necessary consequence; and עלוה transposed from עולה mo, like זעוה in Deu 28:25 for זועה).
The meaning is, that since the days of Gibeah the Israelites persist in the same sin as the Gibeahites; but whereas those sinners were punished and destroyed by the war, the ten tribes still live on in the same sin without having been destroyed by any similar war. Jehovah will now chastise them for it. בּאוּתי, in my desire, equivalent to according to my wish - an anthropomorphic description of the severity of the chastisement.
ואסּ'רם from יסר (according to Ewald, §139, a ), with the Vav of the apodosis. The chastisement will consist in the fact, that nations will be gathered together against Israel בּאסרם, lit. , at their binding, i. e. , when I shall bind them. The chethib עינתם cannot well be the plural of עין, because the plural עינות is not used for the eyes; and the rendering, “before their two eyes,” in the sense of “without their being able to prevent it” (Ewald), yields the unheard-of conception of binding a person before his own eyes; and, moreover, the use of שׁתּי עינות instead of the simple dual would still be left unexplained.
We must therefore give the preference to the keri עונת, and regard the chethib as another form, that may be accounted for from the transition of the verbs עי into עו, and עונת as a contraction of עונת, since עונה cannot be shown to have either the meaning of “sorrow” (Chald. , A. E.) , or that of the severe labour of “tributary service. ” And, moreover, neither of these meanings would give us a suitable thought; whilst the very same objection may be brought against the supposition that the doubleness of the work refers to Ephraim and Judah, which has been brought against the rendering “to bind to his furrows,” viz.
, that it would be non solum ineptum, sed locutionis monstrum. לשׁתּי עונתם, “to their two transgression” to bind them: i. e. , to place them in connection with the transgressions by the punishment, so that they will be obliged to drag them along like beasts of burden. By the two transgressions we are to understand neither the two golden calves at Bethel and Daniel (Hitzig), nor unfaithfulness towards Jehovah and devotedness to idols, after Jer 2:13 (Cyr.
, Theod.) ; but their apostasy from Jehovah and the royal house of David, in accordance with Hos 3:5, where it is distinctly stated that the ultimate conversion of the nation will consist in its seeking Jehovah and David their king.
Hos 10:9-10 After the threatening of punishment has thus been extended in Hos 10:8, even to the utter ruin of the kingdom, the prophet returns in Hos 10:9 to the earlier times, for the purpose of exhibiting in a new form and deeply rooted sinfulness of the people, and then, under cover of an appeal to them to return to righteousness, depicting still further the time of visitation, and (in Hos 10:14, Hos 10:15) predicting with still greater clearness the destruction of the kingdom and the overthrow of the monarchy. Hos 10:9.
“Since the days of Gibeah hast thou sinned, O Israel: there have they remained: the war against the sons of wickedness did not overtake them at Gibeah. Hos 10:10. According to my desire shall I chastise them; and nations will be gathered together against them, to bind them to their two transgressions. ” Just as in Hos 9:9, the days of Gibeah, i. e. , the days when that ruthless crime was committed at Gibeah upon the concubine of the Levite, are mentioned as a time of deep corruption; so are those days described in the present passage as the commencement of Israel’s sin.
For it is as obvious that מיממי is not to be understood in a comparative sense, as it is that the days of Gibeah are not to be taken as referring to the choice of Saul, who sprang from Gibeah, to be their king (Chald.) The following words, שׁם עמדוּ גגו, which are very difficult, and have been variously explained, do not describe the conduct of Israel in those days; for, in the first place, the statement that the war did not overtake them is by no means in harmony with this, since the other tribes avenged that crime so severely that the tribe of Benjamin was almost exterminated; and secondly, the suffix attached to תּשּׂיגם evidently refers to the same persons as that appended to אסּ'רם in Hos 9:10, i.
e. , to the Israelites of the ten tribes, to which Hosea foretels the coming judgment. These are therefore the subject to עמדוּ, and consequently עמד signifies to stand, to remain, to persevere (cf. Isa 47:12; Jer 32:14). There, in Gibeah, did they remain, that is to say, they persevered in the sin of Gibeah, without the war at Gibeah against the sinners overtaking them (the imperfect, in a subordinated clause, used to describe the necessary consequence; and עלוה transposed from עולה mo, like זעוה in Deu 28:25 for זועה).
The meaning is, that since the days of Gibeah the Israelites persist in the same sin as the Gibeahites; but whereas those sinners were punished and destroyed by the war, the ten tribes still live on in the same sin without having been destroyed by any similar war. Jehovah will now chastise them for it. בּאוּתי, in my desire, equivalent to according to my wish - an anthropomorphic description of the severity of the chastisement.
ואסּ'רם from יסר (according to Ewald, §139, a ), with the Vav of the apodosis. The chastisement will consist in the fact, that nations will be gathered together against Israel בּאסרם, lit. , at their binding, i. e. , when I shall bind them. The chethib עינתם cannot well be the plural of עין, because the plural עינות is not used for the eyes; and the rendering, “before their two eyes,” in the sense of “without their being able to prevent it” (Ewald), yields the unheard-of conception of binding a person before his own eyes; and, moreover, the use of שׁתּי עינות instead of the simple dual would still be left unexplained.
We must therefore give the preference to the keri עונת, and regard the chethib as another form, that may be accounted for from the transition of the verbs עי into עו, and עונת as a contraction of עונת, since עונה cannot be shown to have either the meaning of “sorrow” (Chald. , A. E.) , or that of the severe labour of “tributary service. ” And, moreover, neither of these meanings would give us a suitable thought; whilst the very same objection may be brought against the supposition that the doubleness of the work refers to Ephraim and Judah, which has been brought against the rendering “to bind to his furrows,” viz.
, that it would be non solum ineptum, sed locutionis monstrum. לשׁתּי עונתם, “to their two transgression” to bind them: i. e. , to place them in connection with the transgressions by the punishment, so that they will be obliged to drag them along like beasts of burden. By the two transgressions we are to understand neither the two golden calves at Bethel and Daniel (Hitzig), nor unfaithfulness towards Jehovah and devotedness to idols, after Jer 2:13 (Cyr.
, Theod.) ; but their apostasy from Jehovah and the royal house of David, in accordance with Hos 3:5, where it is distinctly stated that the ultimate conversion of the nation will consist in its seeking Jehovah and David their king.
Hos 10:11 In the next verse the punishment is still further defined, and also extended to Judah. Hos 10:11. “And Ephraim is an instructed cow, which loves to thresh; and I, I have come over the beauty of her neck: I yoke Ephraim; Judah will plough, Jacob harrow itself. ” Melummâdâh , instructed, trained to work, received its more precise definition from the words “loving to thresh” ( 'ōhabhtı̄ , a participle with the connecting Yod in the constructive: see Ewald, §211, b ), not as being easier work in comparison with the hard task of driving, ploughing, and harrowing, but because in threshing the ox was allowed to eat at pleasure (Deu 25:4), from which Israel became fat and strong (Deu 32:15).
Threshing, therefore, is a figurative representation not of the conquest of other nations (as in Mic 4:13; Isa 41:15), but of pleasant, productive, profitable labour. Israel had accustomed itself to this, from the fact that God had bestowed His blessing upon it (Hos 13:6). But it would be different now. עברתּי על, a prophetic perfect: I come over the neck, used in a hostile sense, and answering to our “rushing in upon a person.
” The actual idea is that of putting a heavy yoke upon the neck, not of putting a rider upon it. ארכּיב not to mount or ride, but to drive, or use for drawing and driving, i. e. , to harness, and that, as the following clauses show, to the plough and harrow, for the performance of hard field-labour, which figuratively represents subjugation and bondage. Judah is also mentioned here again, as in Hos 8:14; Hos 6:11, etc.
Jacob , in connection with Judah, is not a name for the whole nation (or the twelve tribes), but is synonymous with Ephraim, i. e. , Israel of the ten tribes. This is required by the correspondence between the last two clauses, which are simply a further development of the expression ארכיב אף, with an extension of the punishment threatened against Ephraim to Judah also.
Hos 10:12-13 The call to repentance and reformation of life is then appended in Hos 10:12, Hos 10:13, clothed in similar figures. Hos 10:12. “Sow to yourselves for righteousness, reap according to love; plough for yourselves virgin soil: for it is time to seek Jehovah, till He come and rain righteousness upon you. Hos 10:13. Ye have ploughed wickedness, ye have reaped crime: eaten the fruit of lying: because thou hast trusted in thy way, in the multitude of thy mighty men.
” Sowing and reaping are figures used to denote their spiritual and moral conduct. לצדקה, for righteousness, is parallel to לפי חסד; i. e. , sow that righteousness may be able to spring up like seed, i. e. , righteousness towards your fellow-men. The fruit of this will be chesed , condescending love towards the poor and wretched. Nı̄r nı̄r , both here and in Jer 4:3 to plough virgin soil, i.
e. , to make land not yet cultivated arable. We have an advance in this figure: they are to give up all their previous course of conduct, and create for themselves a new sphere for their activity, i. e. , commence a new course of life. ועת, and indeed it is time, equivalent to, for it is high time to give up your old sinful says and seek the Lord, till (עד) He come, i.
e. , till He turn His grace to you again, and cause it to rain upon you. Tsedeq , righteousness, not salvation, a meaning which the word never has, and least of all here, where tsedeq corresponds to the tsedâqâh of the first clause. God causes righteousness to rain, inasmuch as He not only gives strength to secure it, like rain for the growth of the seed (cf.
Isa 44:3), but must also generate and create it in man by His Spirit (Psa 51:12). The reason for this summons is given in Hos 10:13, in another allusion to the moral conduct of Israel until now. Hitherto they have ploughed as well as reaped unrighteousness and sin, and eaten lies as the fruit thereof, - lies, inasmuch as they did not promote the prosperity of the kingdom as they imagined, but only led to its decay and ruin.
For they did not trust in Jehovah the Creator and rock of salvation, but in their way, i. e. , their deeds and their might, in the strength of their army (Amo 6:13), the worthlessness of which they will now discover.
Hos 10:12-13 The call to repentance and reformation of life is then appended in Hos 10:12, Hos 10:13, clothed in similar figures. Hos 10:12. “Sow to yourselves for righteousness, reap according to love; plough for yourselves virgin soil: for it is time to seek Jehovah, till He come and rain righteousness upon you. Hos 10:13. Ye have ploughed wickedness, ye have reaped crime: eaten the fruit of lying: because thou hast trusted in thy way, in the multitude of thy mighty men.
” Sowing and reaping are figures used to denote their spiritual and moral conduct. לצדקה, for righteousness, is parallel to לפי חסד; i. e. , sow that righteousness may be able to spring up like seed, i. e. , righteousness towards your fellow-men. The fruit of this will be chesed , condescending love towards the poor and wretched. Nı̄r nı̄r , both here and in Jer 4:3 to plough virgin soil, i.
e. , to make land not yet cultivated arable. We have an advance in this figure: they are to give up all their previous course of conduct, and create for themselves a new sphere for their activity, i. e. , commence a new course of life. ועת, and indeed it is time, equivalent to, for it is high time to give up your old sinful says and seek the Lord, till (עד) He come, i.
e. , till He turn His grace to you again, and cause it to rain upon you. Tsedeq , righteousness, not salvation, a meaning which the word never has, and least of all here, where tsedeq corresponds to the tsedâqâh of the first clause. God causes righteousness to rain, inasmuch as He not only gives strength to secure it, like rain for the growth of the seed (cf.
Isa 44:3), but must also generate and create it in man by His Spirit (Psa 51:12). The reason for this summons is given in Hos 10:13, in another allusion to the moral conduct of Israel until now. Hitherto they have ploughed as well as reaped unrighteousness and sin, and eaten lies as the fruit thereof, - lies, inasmuch as they did not promote the prosperity of the kingdom as they imagined, but only led to its decay and ruin.
For they did not trust in Jehovah the Creator and rock of salvation, but in their way, i. e. , their deeds and their might, in the strength of their army (Amo 6:13), the worthlessness of which they will now discover.
Hos 10:14-15 “And tumult will arise against thy peoples, and all thy fortifications are laid waste, as Shalman laid Beth-Arbeel waste in the day of the war: mother and children are dashed to pieces. Hos 10:15. Thus hath Bethel done to you because of the wickedness of your wickedness: in the morning dawn the king of Israel is cut off, cut off. ” קאם with א as mater lect .
(Ewald, §15, e ), construed with ב: to rise up against a person, as in Psa 27:12; Job 16:8. שׁאון, war, tumult, as in Amo 2:2. בּעמּיך: against thy people of war. The expression is chosen with a reference to rōbh gibbōrı̄m (the multitude of mighty men), in which Israel put its trust. The meaning, countrymen, or tribes, is restricted to the older language of the Pentateuch.
The singular יוּשּׁד refers to כּל, as in Isa 64:10, contrary to the ordinary language (cf. Ewald, §317, c ). Nothing is known concerning the devastation of Beth-Arbeel by Shalman; and hence there has always been great uncertainty as to the meaning of the words. Shalman is no doubt a contracted form of Shalmanezer , the king of Assyria, who destroyed the kingdom of the ten tribes (2Ki 17:6).
Bēth - 'arbē'l is hardly Arbela of Assyria, which became celebrated through the victory of Alexander (Strab. Isa 16:1, Isa 16:3), since the Israelites could scarcely have become so well acquainted with such a remote city, as that the prophet could hold up the desolation that befel it as an example to them, but in all probability the Arbela in Galilaea Superior , which is mentioned in 1 Maccabees 9:2, and very frequently in Josephus, a place in the tribe of Naphtali, between Sephoris and Tiberias (according to Robinson, Pal .
iii. pp. 281-2, and Bibl. Researches , p. 343: the modern Irbid ). The objection offered by Hitzig, - viz. that shōd is a noun in Hos 9:6; Hos 7:13; Hos 12:2, and that the infinitive construct, with ל prefixed, is written לשׁדד in Jer 47:4; and lastly, that if Shalman were the subject, we should expect the preposition את before בּית, - is not conclusive, and the attempt which he makes to explain Salman-Beth-Arbel from the Sanscrit is not worth mentioning.
The clause “mother and children,” etc. , a proverbial expression denoting inhuman cruelty (see at Gen 32:12), does not merely refer to the conduct of Shalman in connection with Beth-arbel, possibly in the campaign mentioned in 2Ki 17:3, but is also intended to indicate the fate with which the whole of the kingdom of Israel was threatened. In 2Ki 17:16 this threat concludes with an announcement of the overthrow of the monarchy, accompanied by another allusion to the guilt of the people.
The subject to כּכה עשׂה is Beth-el (Chald.) , not Shalman or Jehovah. Bethel, the seat of the idolatry, prepares this lot for the people on account of its great wickedness. עשׂה is a perf. proph. ' and רעת רעתכם, wickedness in its second potency, extreme wickedness (cf. Ewald, §313, c ). Basshachar , in the morning-dawn, i. e. , at the time when prosperity is once more apparently about to dawn, tempore pacis alluscente (Cocc.
, Hgst.) The gerund נדמה adds to the force; and מלך ישׂ is not this or the other king, but as in 2Ki 17:7, the king generally, i. e. , the monarchy of Israel.
Hos 10:14-15 “And tumult will arise against thy peoples, and all thy fortifications are laid waste, as Shalman laid Beth-Arbeel waste in the day of the war: mother and children are dashed to pieces. Hos 10:15. Thus hath Bethel done to you because of the wickedness of your wickedness: in the morning dawn the king of Israel is cut off, cut off. ” קאם with א as mater lect .
(Ewald, §15, e ), construed with ב: to rise up against a person, as in Psa 27:12; Job 16:8. שׁאון, war, tumult, as in Amo 2:2. בּעמּיך: against thy people of war. The expression is chosen with a reference to rōbh gibbōrı̄m (the multitude of mighty men), in which Israel put its trust. The meaning, countrymen, or tribes, is restricted to the older language of the Pentateuch.
The singular יוּשּׁד refers to כּל, as in Isa 64:10, contrary to the ordinary language (cf. Ewald, §317, c ). Nothing is known concerning the devastation of Beth-Arbeel by Shalman; and hence there has always been great uncertainty as to the meaning of the words. Shalman is no doubt a contracted form of Shalmanezer , the king of Assyria, who destroyed the kingdom of the ten tribes (2Ki 17:6).
Bēth - 'arbē'l is hardly Arbela of Assyria, which became celebrated through the victory of Alexander (Strab. Isa 16:1, Isa 16:3), since the Israelites could scarcely have become so well acquainted with such a remote city, as that the prophet could hold up the desolation that befel it as an example to them, but in all probability the Arbela in Galilaea Superior , which is mentioned in 1 Maccabees 9:2, and very frequently in Josephus, a place in the tribe of Naphtali, between Sephoris and Tiberias (according to Robinson, Pal .
iii. pp. 281-2, and Bibl. Researches , p. 343: the modern Irbid ). The objection offered by Hitzig, - viz. that shōd is a noun in Hos 9:6; Hos 7:13; Hos 12:2, and that the infinitive construct, with ל prefixed, is written לשׁדד in Jer 47:4; and lastly, that if Shalman were the subject, we should expect the preposition את before בּית, - is not conclusive, and the attempt which he makes to explain Salman-Beth-Arbel from the Sanscrit is not worth mentioning.
The clause “mother and children,” etc. , a proverbial expression denoting inhuman cruelty (see at Gen 32:12), does not merely refer to the conduct of Shalman in connection with Beth-arbel, possibly in the campaign mentioned in 2Ki 17:3, but is also intended to indicate the fate with which the whole of the kingdom of Israel was threatened. In 2Ki 17:16 this threat concludes with an announcement of the overthrow of the monarchy, accompanied by another allusion to the guilt of the people.
The subject to כּכה עשׂה is Beth-el (Chald.) , not Shalman or Jehovah. Bethel, the seat of the idolatry, prepares this lot for the people on account of its great wickedness. עשׂה is a perf. proph. ' and רעת רעתכם, wickedness in its second potency, extreme wickedness (cf. Ewald, §313, c ). Basshachar , in the morning-dawn, i. e. , at the time when prosperity is once more apparently about to dawn, tempore pacis alluscente (Cocc.
, Hgst.) The gerund נדמה adds to the force; and מלך ישׂ is not this or the other king, but as in 2Ki 17:7, the king generally, i. e. , the monarchy of Israel.
Hos 11:1-2 The prophet goes back a third time (cf. Hos 10:1; Hos 9:10) to the early times of Israel, and shows how the people had repaid the Lord, for all the proofs of His love, with nothing but ingratitude and unfaithfulness; so that it would have merited utter destruction from off the earth, if God should not restrain His wrath for the sake of His unchangeable faithfulness, in order that, after severely chastening, He might gather together once more those that were rescued from among the heathen.
Hos 11:1. “When Israel was young, then I loved him, and I called my son out of Egypt. Hos 11:2. Men called to them; so they went away from their countenance: they offer sacrifice to the Baals, and burn incense to the idols. ” Hos 11:1 rests upon Exo 4:22-23, where the Lord directs Moses to say to Pharaoh, “Israel is my first-born son; let my son go, that he may serve me.
” Israel was the son of Jehovah, by virtue of its election to be Jehovah’s peculiar people (see at Exo 4:22). In this election lay the ground for the love which God showed to Israel, by bringing it out of Egypt, to give it the land of Canaan, promised to the fathers for its inheritance. The adoption of Israel as the son of Jehovah, which began with its deliverance out of the bondage of Egypt, and was completed in the conclusion of the covenant at Sinai, forms the first stage in the carrying out of the divine work of salvation, which was completed in the incarnation of the Son of God for the redemption of mankind from death and ruin.
The development and guidance of Israel as the people of God all pointed to Christ; not, however, in any such sense as that the nation of Israel was to bring forth the son of God from within itself, but in this sense, that the relation which the Lord of heaven and earth established and sustained with that nation, was a preparation for the union of God with humanity, and paved the way for the incarnation of His Son, by the fact that Israel was trained to be a vessel of divine grace. All essential factors in the history of Israel point to this as their end, and thereby become types and material prophecies of the life of Him in whom the reconciliation of man to God was to be realized, and the union of God with the human race to be developed into a personal unity.
It is in this sense that the second half of our verse is quoted in Mat 2:15 as a prophecy of Christ, not because the words of the prophet refer directly and immediately to Christ, but because the sojourn in Egypt, and return out of that land, had the same significance in relation to the development of the life of Jesus Christ, as it had to the nation of Israel. Just as Israel grew into a nation in Egypt, where it was out of the reach of Canaanitish ways, so was the child Jesus hidden in Egypt from the hostility of Herod.
But Hos 11:2 is attached thus as an antithesis: this love of its God was repaid by Israel with base apostasy. קראוּ, they, viz. , the prophets (cf. Hos 11:7; 2Ki 17:13; Jer 7:25; Jer 25:4; Zec 1:4), called to them, called the Israelites to the Lord and to obedience to Him; but they (the Israelites) went away from their countenance, would not hearken to the prophets, or come to the Lord (Jer 2:31).
The thought is strengthened by כּן, with the כּאשׁר of the protasis omitted (Ewald, §360, a ): as the prophets called, so the Israelites drew back from them, and served idols. בּעלים as in Hos 2:15, and פּסלים as in 2Ki 17:41 and Deu 7:5, Deu 7:25 (see at Exo 20:4).
Hos 11:1-2 The prophet goes back a third time (cf. Hos 10:1; Hos 9:10) to the early times of Israel, and shows how the people had repaid the Lord, for all the proofs of His love, with nothing but ingratitude and unfaithfulness; so that it would have merited utter destruction from off the earth, if God should not restrain His wrath for the sake of His unchangeable faithfulness, in order that, after severely chastening, He might gather together once more those that were rescued from among the heathen.
Hos 11:1. “When Israel was young, then I loved him, and I called my son out of Egypt. Hos 11:2. Men called to them; so they went away from their countenance: they offer sacrifice to the Baals, and burn incense to the idols. ” Hos 11:1 rests upon Exo 4:22-23, where the Lord directs Moses to say to Pharaoh, “Israel is my first-born son; let my son go, that he may serve me.
” Israel was the son of Jehovah, by virtue of its election to be Jehovah’s peculiar people (see at Exo 4:22). In this election lay the ground for the love which God showed to Israel, by bringing it out of Egypt, to give it the land of Canaan, promised to the fathers for its inheritance. The adoption of Israel as the son of Jehovah, which began with its deliverance out of the bondage of Egypt, and was completed in the conclusion of the covenant at Sinai, forms the first stage in the carrying out of the divine work of salvation, which was completed in the incarnation of the Son of God for the redemption of mankind from death and ruin.
The development and guidance of Israel as the people of God all pointed to Christ; not, however, in any such sense as that the nation of Israel was to bring forth the son of God from within itself, but in this sense, that the relation which the Lord of heaven and earth established and sustained with that nation, was a preparation for the union of God with humanity, and paved the way for the incarnation of His Son, by the fact that Israel was trained to be a vessel of divine grace. All essential factors in the history of Israel point to this as their end, and thereby become types and material prophecies of the life of Him in whom the reconciliation of man to God was to be realized, and the union of God with the human race to be developed into a personal unity.
It is in this sense that the second half of our verse is quoted in Mat 2:15 as a prophecy of Christ, not because the words of the prophet refer directly and immediately to Christ, but because the sojourn in Egypt, and return out of that land, had the same significance in relation to the development of the life of Jesus Christ, as it had to the nation of Israel. Just as Israel grew into a nation in Egypt, where it was out of the reach of Canaanitish ways, so was the child Jesus hidden in Egypt from the hostility of Herod.
But Hos 11:2 is attached thus as an antithesis: this love of its God was repaid by Israel with base apostasy. קראוּ, they, viz. , the prophets (cf. Hos 11:7; 2Ki 17:13; Jer 7:25; Jer 25:4; Zec 1:4), called to them, called the Israelites to the Lord and to obedience to Him; but they (the Israelites) went away from their countenance, would not hearken to the prophets, or come to the Lord (Jer 2:31).
The thought is strengthened by כּן, with the כּאשׁר of the protasis omitted (Ewald, §360, a ): as the prophets called, so the Israelites drew back from them, and served idols. בּעלים as in Hos 2:15, and פּסלים as in 2Ki 17:41 and Deu 7:5, Deu 7:25 (see at Exo 20:4).
Hos 11:3-4 Nevertheless the Lord continued to show love to them. Hos 11:3, Hos 11:4. “And I, I have taught Ephraim to walk: He took them in His arms, and they did not know that I healed them. I drew them with bands of a man, with cords of love, and became to them like a lifter up of the yoke upon their jaws, and gently towards him did I give (him) food. ” תּרגּלתּי, a hiphil , formed after the Aramaean fashion (cf.
Ges. §55, 5), by hardening the ה into ת, and construed with ל, as the hiphil frequently is (e. g. , Hos 10:1; Amo 8:9), a denom . of רגל, to teach to walk, to guide in leading-strings, like a child that is being trained to walk. It is a figurative representation of paternal care foz a child’s prosperity. קחם, per aphaeresin , for לקחם, like קח for לקח in Eze 17:5.
The sudden change from the first person to the third seems very strange to our ears; but it is not uncommon in Hebrew, and is to be accounted for here from the fact, that the prophet could very easily pass from speaking in the name of God to speaking of God Himself. קח cannot be either an infinitive or a participle, on account of the following word זרועתיו, his arms.
The two clauses refer chiefly to the care and help afforded by the Lord to His people in the Arabian desert; and the prophet had Deu 1:31 floating before his mind: “in the wilderness the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son. ” The last clause also refers to this, רפאתים pointing back to Exo 15:26, where the Lord showed Himself as the physician of Israel, by making the bitter water at Marah drinkable, and at the same time as their helper out of every trouble.
In Hos 11:4, again, there is a still further reference to the manifestation of the love of God to Israel on the journey through the wilderness. חבלי אדם, cords with which men are led, more especially children that are weak upon their feet, in contrast with ropes, with which men control wild, unmanageable beasts (Psa 32:9), are a figurative representation of the paternal, human guidance of Israel, as explained in the next figure, “cords of love.
” This figure leads on to the kindred figure of the yoke laid upon beasts, to harness them for work. As merciful masters lift up the yoke upon the cheeks of their oxen, i. e. , push it so far back that the animals can eat their food in comfort, so has the Lord made the yoke of the law, which has been laid upon His people, both soft and light. As הרים על על does not mean to take the yoke away from (מעל) the cheeks, but to lift it above the cheeks, i.
e. , to make it easier, by pushing it back, we cannot refer the words to the liberation of Israel from the bondage of Egypt, but can only think of what the Lord did, to make it easy for the people to observe the commandments imposed upon them, when they were received into His covenant (Exo 24:3, Exo 24:7), including not only the many manifestations of mercy which might and ought to have allured them to reciprocate His love, and yield a willing obedience to His commandments, but also the means of grace provided in their worship, partly in the institution of sacrifice, by which a way of approach was opened to divine grace to obtain forgiveness of sin, and partly in the institution of feasts, at which they could rejoice in the gracious gifts of their God.
ואט is not the first pers. imperf. hiphil of נטה (“I inclined myself to him;” Symm. , Syr. , and others), in which case we should expect ואט, but an adverb, softly, comfortably; and אליו belongs to it, after the analogy of 2Sa 18:5. אוכיל is an anomalous formation for אאכיל, like אוביד for אאביד in Jer 46:8 (cf. Ewald, §192, d ; Ges. §68, 2, Anm. 1). Jerome has given the meaning quite correctly: “and I gave them manna for food in the desert, which they enjoyed.
”
Hos 11:3-4 Nevertheless the Lord continued to show love to them. Hos 11:3, Hos 11:4. “And I, I have taught Ephraim to walk: He took them in His arms, and they did not know that I healed them. I drew them with bands of a man, with cords of love, and became to them like a lifter up of the yoke upon their jaws, and gently towards him did I give (him) food. ” תּרגּלתּי, a hiphil , formed after the Aramaean fashion (cf.
Ges. §55, 5), by hardening the ה into ת, and construed with ל, as the hiphil frequently is (e. g. , Hos 10:1; Amo 8:9), a denom . of רגל, to teach to walk, to guide in leading-strings, like a child that is being trained to walk. It is a figurative representation of paternal care foz a child’s prosperity. קחם, per aphaeresin , for לקחם, like קח for לקח in Eze 17:5.
The sudden change from the first person to the third seems very strange to our ears; but it is not uncommon in Hebrew, and is to be accounted for here from the fact, that the prophet could very easily pass from speaking in the name of God to speaking of God Himself. קח cannot be either an infinitive or a participle, on account of the following word זרועתיו, his arms.
The two clauses refer chiefly to the care and help afforded by the Lord to His people in the Arabian desert; and the prophet had Deu 1:31 floating before his mind: “in the wilderness the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son. ” The last clause also refers to this, רפאתים pointing back to Exo 15:26, where the Lord showed Himself as the physician of Israel, by making the bitter water at Marah drinkable, and at the same time as their helper out of every trouble.
In Hos 11:4, again, there is a still further reference to the manifestation of the love of God to Israel on the journey through the wilderness. חבלי אדם, cords with which men are led, more especially children that are weak upon their feet, in contrast with ropes, with which men control wild, unmanageable beasts (Psa 32:9), are a figurative representation of the paternal, human guidance of Israel, as explained in the next figure, “cords of love.
” This figure leads on to the kindred figure of the yoke laid upon beasts, to harness them for work. As merciful masters lift up the yoke upon the cheeks of their oxen, i. e. , push it so far back that the animals can eat their food in comfort, so has the Lord made the yoke of the law, which has been laid upon His people, both soft and light. As הרים על על does not mean to take the yoke away from (מעל) the cheeks, but to lift it above the cheeks, i.
e. , to make it easier, by pushing it back, we cannot refer the words to the liberation of Israel from the bondage of Egypt, but can only think of what the Lord did, to make it easy for the people to observe the commandments imposed upon them, when they were received into His covenant (Exo 24:3, Exo 24:7), including not only the many manifestations of mercy which might and ought to have allured them to reciprocate His love, and yield a willing obedience to His commandments, but also the means of grace provided in their worship, partly in the institution of sacrifice, by which a way of approach was opened to divine grace to obtain forgiveness of sin, and partly in the institution of feasts, at which they could rejoice in the gracious gifts of their God.
ואט is not the first pers. imperf. hiphil of נטה (“I inclined myself to him;” Symm. , Syr. , and others), in which case we should expect ואט, but an adverb, softly, comfortably; and אליו belongs to it, after the analogy of 2Sa 18:5. אוכיל is an anomalous formation for אאכיל, like אוביד for אאביד in Jer 46:8 (cf. Ewald, §192, d ; Ges. §68, 2, Anm. 1). Jerome has given the meaning quite correctly: “and I gave them manna for food in the desert, which they enjoyed.
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