25. destroying mountain--called so, not from its position, for it
lay low
(Jer 51:13;
Ge 11:2, 9),
but from its eminence above other nations, many of which it had
"destroyed"; also, because of its lofty palaces, towers, hanging
gardens resting on arches, and walls, fifty royal cubits broad and two
hundred high.
roll thee down from the rocks--that is, from thy rock-like
fortifications and walls.
burnt mountain--
(Re 8:8).
A volcano, which, after having spent itself in pouring its "destroying"
lava on all the country around, falls into the vacuum and becomes
extinct, the surrounding "rocks" alone marking where the crater had
been. Such was the appearance of Babylon after its destruction, and as
the pumice stones of the volcano are left in their place, being unfit
for building, so Babylon should never rise from its ruins.
JFB.
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