5. forgotten--"utterly," so the Greek. Compare
Heb 12:15-17,
in which he implies how utterly some of them had forgotten God's
word. His exhortation ought to have more effect on you than the
cheers and exhortations of the spectators have on the competitors
striving in the games.
which--Greek, "the which," of which the following is a
specimen [ALFORD].
speaketh unto you--as in a dialogue or discourse,
so the Greek, implying God's loving condescension (compare
Isa 1:18).
despise not--literally, "Do not hold of little account."
Betraying a contumacious spirit of unbelief
(Heb 3:12),
as "faint" implies a broken-down, weak, and desponding spirit.
"Chastening" is to be borne with "subjection"
(Heb 12:9);
"rebuke" (more severe than chastening) is to be borne with
endurance
(Heb 12:7).
"Some in adversity kick against God's will, others despond; neither is
to be done by the Christian, who is peculiarly the child of God. To him
such adverse things occur only by the decree of God, and that designed
in kindness, namely, to remove the defilements adhering to the
believer, and to exercise his patience" [GROTIUS].
JFB.
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