2,  3.  What  has  the  vine-wood  to  make  it  pre-eminent  above  other
  forest-wood?  Nothing.  Nay,  the  reverse.  Other  trees  yield  useful
  timber,  but  vine-wood  is  soft,  brittle,  crooked,  and  seldom  large;  not
  so  much  as  a  "pin"  (the  large  wooden  peg  used  inside  houses  in  the  East
  to  hang  household  articles  on,
  Isa  22:23-25)
  can  be  made  of  it.  Its  sole  excellency  is  that  it  should  bear  fruit;  
  when  it  does  not  bear  fruit,  it  is  not  only  not  better,  but  inferior  to  
  other  trees:  so  if  God's  people  lose  their  distinctive  excellency  by  
  not  bearing  fruits  of  righteousness,  they  are  more  unprofitable  than  
  the  worldly
  (De  32:32),
  
  for  they  are  the  vine;  the  sole  end  of  their  being  is  to  bear  fruit  to
  His  glory  
  (Ps  80:8,  9;
  Isa  5:1,
  &c.;  Jer  2:21;
  Ho  10:1;
  Mt  21:33).
  In  all  respects,  except  in  their  being  planted  by  God,  the  Jews  were
  inferior  to  other  nations,  as  Egypt,  Babylon,  &c.,  for  example,  in  
  antiquity,  extent  of  territory,  resources,  military  power,  attainments  
  in  arts  and  sciences.
  
         
  or  than  a  branch--rather,  in  apposition  with  "the  vine  tree."  Omit
  "or  than."  What  superiority  has  the  vine
  if  it  be  but  a  branch  among  the  trees  of  the  forest,  that  is,  if,
  as  having  no  fruit,  it  lies  cut  down  among  other  woods  of  trees?
JFB.
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