TYRANNY IS SUICIDE
Hab 2:5-20
IN the style of his master Isaiah, Habakkuk
follows up his "Vision" with a series of lyrics on the same subject:
Hab 2:5-20. They are taunt-songs, the most of them beginning with
"Woe unto," addressed to the heathen oppressor. Perhaps they were
all at first of equal length, and it has been suggested that the
striking refrain in which two of them close:-
"For men’s blood, and earth’s waste, Cities and their inhabitants-"
was once attached to each of the others as well. But the text has
been too much altered, besides suffering several interpolation, to
permit of its restoration, and we can only reproduce these taunts as
they now run in the Hebrew text. There are several quotations (not
necessarily an argument against Habakkuk’s authorship); but, as a
whole, the expression is original, and there are some lines of
especial force and freshness. Hab 2:5-6 a are properly an
introduction, the first Woe commencing with Hab 2:6 b.
The belief which inspires these songs is very simple. Tyranny is
intolerable. In the nature of things it cannot endure, but works out
its own penalties. By oppressing so many nations, the tyrant is
preparing the instruments of his own destruction. As he treats them,
so in time shall they treat him. He is like a debtor who increases
the number of his creditors. Some day they shall rise up and exact
from him the last penny. So that in cutting off others he is "but
forfeiting his own life." The very, violence done to nature, the
deforesting of Lebanon for instance, and the vast hunting of wild
beasts, shall recoil on him. This line of thought is exceedingly
interesting. We have already seen in prophecy, and especially in
Isaiah, the beginnings of Hebrew Wisdom-the attempt to uncover the
moral processes of life and express a philosophy of history But
hardly anywhere have we found so complete an absence of all
reference to the direct interference of God Himself in the
punishment of the tyrant; for "the cup of Jehovah’s right hand" in
ver. 16 is simply the survival of an ancient metaphor These
"proverbs" or "taunt-songs," in conformity with the proverbs of the
later Wisdom, dwell only upon the inherent tendency to decay of all
injustice. Tyranny, they assert, and history ever since has affirmed
their truthfulness-tyranny is suicide.
The last of the taunt-songs, which treats of the different subject
of idolatry, is probably, as we have seen, not from Habakkuk’s hand,
but of a later
INTRODUCTION TO THE TAUNT-SONGS
{Hab 2:5-6}
"For treacherous, An arrogant fellow, and is not
Who opens his desire wide as Sheol; He is like death, unsatisfied;
And hath swept to himself all the nations, And gathered to him all
peoples. Shall not these, all of them, take up a proverb upon him,
And a taunt-song against him? and say":-
FIRST TAUNT-SONG. {Hab 2:6-8}
"Woe unto him who multiplies what is not his own, -How long?-And
loads him with debts! Shall not thy creditors rise up, And thy
troublers awake, And thou be for spoil to them? Because thou hast
spoiled many nations, All the rest of the peoples shall spoil thee.
For men’s blood, and earth’s waste, Cities and all their
inhabitants."
SECOND TAUNT-SONG. {Hab 2:9-11}
"Woe unto him that gains evil gain for his house, To set high his
nest, to save him from the grasp of calamity! Thou hast planned
shame for thy house; Thou hast cut off many people, While forfeiting
thine own life. For the stone shall cry out from the wall, And the
lath from the timber answer it."
THIRD TAUNT-SONG. {Hab 2:12-14}
"Woe unto him that builds a city in blood, {Mic 3:10} And stablishes
a town in iniquity {Jer 22:13} Lo, is it not from Jehovah of hosts,
That the nations shall toil for smoke, And the peoples wear
themselves out for nought? But earth shall be filled with the
knowledge of the glory of Jehovah, Like the waters that cover the
sea".
FOURTH TAUNT-SONG. {Hab 2:15-17}
"Woe unto him that gives his neighbor to drink, From the cup of his
wrath till he be drunken, That he may gloat on his nakedness! Thou
art sated with shame-not with glory; Drink also thou, and stagger.
Comes round to thee the cup of Jehovah’s right hand, And foul shame
on thy glory. For the violence to Lebanon shall cover thee, The
destruction of the beasts shall affray thee. For men’s blood, and
earth’s waste, Cities and all their inhabitants."
FIFTH TAUNT-SONG. {Hab 2:18-20}
"What boots an image, when its artist has graven it, A cast-image
and lie-oracle, that its molder has trusted upon it, Making dumb
idols? Woe to him that saith to a block, Awake! To a dumb stone,
Arise! Can it teach? Lo, it with gold and silver; There is no breath
at all in the heart of it. But Jehovah is in His Holy Temple:
Silence before Him, all the earth."
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