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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