17. the violence of Lebanon--thy "violence" against "Lebanon," that
is, Jerusalem
(Isa 37:24;
Jer 22:23;
Eze 17:3, 12;
for Lebanon's cedars were used in building the temple and houses of
Jerusalem; and its beauty made it a fit type of the metropolis), shall
fall on thine own head.
cover--that is, completely overwhelm.
the spoil of beasts, which made them afraid--MAURER explains, "the spoiling inflicted on the
beasts of Lebanon (that is, on the people of Jerusalem, of which
city 'Lebanon' is the type), which made them afraid (shall cover
thee)." But it seems inappropriate to compare the elect people to
"beasts." I therefore prefer explaining, "the spoiling of beasts," that
is, such as is inflicted on beasts caught in a net, and "which makes
them afraid (shall cover thee)." Thus the Babylonians are compared to
wild beasts terrified at being caught suddenly in a net. In cruel
rapacity they resembled wild beasts. The ancients read, "the spoiling
of wild beasts shall make THEE
afraid." Or else explain, "the spoiling of beasts (the Medes and
Persians) which (inflicted by thee) made them afraid (shall in
turn cover thyself--revert on thyself from them)." This accords better
with the parallel clause, "the violence of Lebanon," that is, inflicted
by thee on Lebanon. As thou didst hunt men as wild beasts, so shalt
thou be hunted thyself as a wild beast, which thou resemblest in
cruelty.
because of men's blood--shed by thee; repeated from
Hab 2:8.
But here the "land" and "city" are used of Judea and
Jerusalem: not of the earth and cities generally,
as in
Hab 2:8.
the violence of the land, &c.--that is, inflicted on the land by
thee.
JFB.
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