@Eze 19:1-14. ELEGY OVER THE FALL OF DAVID'S HOUSE.
There is a tacit antithesis between this lamentation and that of the Jews for their own miseries, into the causes of which, however, they did not inquire.
1. princes of Israel--that is, Judah, whose "princes" alone were recognized by prophecy; those of the ten tribes were, in respect to the theocracy, usurpers.
2. thy mother--the mother of Jehoiachin, the representative of David's
line in exile with Ezekiel. The "mother" is Judea: "a lioness," as
being fierce in catching prey (@Eze 19:3), referring to her
heathenish practices. Jerusalem was called Ariel (the lion of God) in a
good sense (@Isa 29:1); and Judah "a lion's whelp . . . a lion . . .
an old lion" (@Ge 49:9), to which, as also to @Nu 23:24 24:9, this
passage alludes.
nourished . . . among young lions--She herself had "lain" among lions,
that is, had intercourse with the corruptions of the surrounding heathen
and had brought up the royal young ones similarly: utterly degenerate
from the stock of Abraham.
Lay down--or "couched," is appropriate to the lion, the Arab name of
which means "the coucher."
3. young lion--Jehoahaz, son of Josiah, carried captive from Riblah to Egypt by Pharaoh-necho (@2Ki 23:33).
4. The nations--Egypt, in the case of Jehoahaz, who probably provoked
Pharaoh by trying to avenge the death of his father by assailing the
bordering cities of Egypt (@2Ki 23:29,30).
in their pit--image from the pitfalls used for catching wild beasts
(@Jer 22:11,12).
chains--or hooks, which were fastened in the noses of wild beasts
(see on Eze 19:9).
5. saw that she had waited, and her hope was lost--that is, that her
long-waited-for hope was disappointed, Jehoahaz not being restored to
her from Egypt.
she took another of her whelps--Jehoiakim, brother of Jehoahaz, who
was placed on the throne by Pharaoh (@2Ki 23:34), according to the
wish of Judah.
6. went up and down among the lions--imitated the recklessness and
tyranny of the surrounding kings (@Jer 22:13-17).
catch . . . prey--to do evil, gratifying his lusts by oppression
(@2Ki 23:37).
7. knew . . . desolate palaces--that is, claimed as his own their
palaces, which he then proceeded to "desolate." The Hebrew, literally
"widows"; hence widowed palaces (@Isa 13:22).
VATABLUS (whom
FAIRBAIRN follows)
explains it, "He knew (carnally) the widows of those
whom he devoured" (@Eze 19:6). But thus the metaphor and the literal
reality would be blended: the lion being represented as
knowing widows. The reality, however, often elsewhere thus breaks
through the veil.
fulness thereof--all that it contained; its inhabitants.
8. the nations--the Chaldeans, Syrians, Moab, and Ammon (@2Ki 24:2).
9. in chains--(@2Ch 36:6 Jer 22:18). Margin, "hooks"; perhaps
referring to the hook often passed through the nose of beasts; so, too,
through that of captives, as seen in the Assyrian sculptures
(see on Eze 19:4).
voice--that is, his roaring.
no more be heard upon the mountains--carrying on the metaphor of the
lion, whose roaring on the mountains frightens all the other beasts. The
insolence of the prince, not at all abated though his kingdom was
impaired, was now to cease.
10. A new metaphor taken from the vine, the chief of the
fruit-bearing trees, as the lion is of the beasts of prey (see
@Eze 17:6).
in thy blood--"planted when thou wast in thy blood," that is, in thy
very infancy; as in @Eze 16:6, when thou hadst just come from the
womb, and hadst not yet the blood washed from thee. The Jews from the
first were planted in Canaan to take root there
[CALVIN].
GROTIUS
translates as the Margin, "in thy quietness," that is, in the period
when Judah had not yet fallen into her present troubles.
English Version is better.
GLASSIUS explains it well, retaining the
metaphor, which CALVIN'S explanation breaks, "in the blood of thy
grapes," that is, in her full strength, as the red wine is the strength
of the grape. @Ge 49:11 is evidently alluded to.
many waters--the well-watered land of Canaan (@De 8:7-9).
11. strong rods--princes of the royal house of David. The vine shot
forth her branches like so many scepters, not creeping lowly on the
ground like many vines, but trained aloft on a tree or wall. The mention
of their former royal dignity, contrasting sadly with her present sunken
state, would remind the Jews of their sins whereby they had incurred
such judgments.
stature--(@Da 4:11).
among the thick branches--that is, the central stock or trunk of the
tree shot up highest "among its own branches" or offshoots, surrounding
it. Emblematic of the numbers and resources of the people.
HENGSTENBERG
translates, "among the clouds." But @Eze 31:3,10,14, supports
English Version.
12. plucked up--not gradually withered. The sudden upturning
of the state was designed to awaken the Jews out of their torpor to see
the hand of God in the national judgment.
east wind--(See on Eze 17:10).
13. planted--that is, transplanted. Though already "dried up" in
regard to the nation generally, the vine is said to be "transplanted" as
regards God's mercy to the remnant in Babylon.
dry . . . ground--Chaldea was well-watered and fertile; but it is the
condition of the captive people, not that of the land, which is referred
to.
14. fire . . . out of a rod of her branches--The Jews' disaster was to
be ascribed, not so much to the Chaldeans as to themselves; the "fire
out of the rod" is God's wrath kindled by the perjury of Zedekiah
(@Eze 17:18). "The anger of the Lord" against Judah is specified as
the cause why Zedekiah was permitted to rebel against Babylon
(@2Ki 24:20; compare @Jud 9:15), thus bringing Nebuchadnezzar
against Jerusalem.
no strong rod . . . sceptre to rule--No more kings of David's stock
are now to rule the nation. Not at least until "the Lord shall send the
rod of His strength ("Messiah," @Ps 110:2 Isa 11:1) out of Zion," to
reign first as a spiritual, then hereafter as a literal king.
is . . . and shall be for a lamentation--Part of the lamentation (that
as to Jehoahaz and Jehoiakim) was matter of history as already
accomplished; part (as to Zedekiah) was yet to be fulfilled; or, this
prophecy both is a subject for lamentation, and shall be so to distant
posterity.