5. ye shall flee to the valley--rather "through
the valley," as in
2Sa 2:29.
The valley made by the cleaving asunder of the Mount of Olives
(Zec 14:4)
is designed to be their way of escape, not their place of refuge
[MAURER].
JEROME
is on the side of English Version. If it be translated so, it
will mean, Ye shall flee "to" the valley, not to hide there, but as the
passage through which an escape may be effected. The same divinely sent
earthquake which swallows up the foe, opens out a way of escape to
God's people. The earthquake in Uzziah's days is mentioned
(Am 1:1)
as a recognized epoch in Jewish history. Compare also
Isa 6:1:
perhaps the same year that Jehovah held His heavenly court and gave
commission to Isaiah for the Jews, an earthquake in the physical world,
as often happens
(Mt 24:7),
marked momentous movements in the unseen spiritual world.
of the mountains--rather, "of My mountains," namely, Zion and
Moriah, peculiarly sacred to Jehovah
[MOORE]. Or, the mountains formed
by My cleaving Olivet into two [MAURER].
Azal--the name of a place near a gate east of the city. The
Hebrew means "adjoining"
[HENDERSON]. Others give the meaning,
"departed," "ceased." The valley reaches up to the city gates, so as to
enable the fleeing citizens to betake themselves immediately to it on
leaving the city.
Lord my God . . . with thee--The mention of the "Lord
my God" leads the prophet to pass suddenly to a direct address to
Jehovah. It is as if "lifting up his head"
(Lu 21:28),
he suddenly sees in vision the Lord coming, and joyfully exclaims, "All
the saints with Thee!" So
Isa 25:9.
saints--holy angels escorting the returning King
(Mt 24:30, 31;
Jude 14);
and redeemed men
(1Co 15:23;
1Th 3:13; 4:14).
Compare the similar mention of the "saints" and "angels" at His coming
on Sinai
(De 32:2, 3;
Ac 7:53;
Ga 3:19;
Heb 2:2).
PHILLIPS thinks Azal is Ascalon on the
Mediterranean. An earthquake beneath Messiah's tread will divide Syria,
making from Jerusalem to Azal a valley which will admit the ocean
waters from the west to the Dead Sea. The waters will rush down the
valley of Arabah, the old bed of the Jordan, clear away the sand-drift
of four thousand years, and cause the commerce of Petra and Tyre to
center in the holy city. The Dead Sea rising above its shores will
overflow by the valley of Edom, completing the straits of Azal into the
Red Sea. Thus will be formed the great pool of Jerusalem (compare
Zec 14:8;
Eze 47:1,
&c.; Joe 3:18).
Euphrates will be the north boundary, and the Red Sea the south.
Twenty-five miles north and twenty-five miles south of Jerusalem will
form one side of the fifty miles square of the Lord's Holy Oblation
(Eze 48:1-35).
There are seven spaces of fifty miles each from Jerusalem northward to
the Euphrates, and five spaces of fifty miles each southward to the Red
Sea. Thus there are thirteen equal distances on the breadth of the
future promised land, one for the oblation and twelve for the tribes,
according to
Eze 48:1-35.
That the Euphrates north, Mediterranean west, the Nile and Red Sea
south, are to be the future boundaries of the holy land, which will
include Syria and Arabia, is favored by
Ge 15:8;
Ex 23:31;
De 11:24;
Jos 1:4;
1Ki 4:21;
2Ch 9:26;
Isa 27:12;
all which was partially realized in Solomon's reign, shall be
antitypically so hereafter. The theory, if true, will clear away many
difficulties in the way of the literal interpretation of this chapter and
Eze 48:1-35.
JFB.
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