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												Verse 1-2Ezekiel 19:1-2. Take up a 
												lamentation for the princes of 
												Israel — The expression alludes 
												to the mournful songs sung at 
												funerals. Such a lamentation the 
												prophet is directed to apply to 
												the mournful condition of 
												Jehoahaz, Jehoiakim, Jehoiachin, 
												and Zedekiah. And say, What is 
												thy mother? — What resemblance 
												shall I use to express the 
												nature, deportment, and state of 
												the mother of these princes, 
												namely, Judea, or the Jewish 
												nation? The prophet proposes a 
												question that may be applied to 
												each prince distinctly. A 
												lioness — Here is an allusion, 
												says Grotius, to Genesis 49:9, 
												where Judah is represented under 
												the emblem of a lion, and Judea 
												was among the nations like a 
												lioness among the beasts of the 
												forest; she had strength and 
												sovereignty. And the young lions 
												which she produced are the 
												princes, Josiah’s successors, 
												whose life and disgraces the 
												prophet here points out. She lay 
												down among the lions — She 
												remained in grandeur and 
												security in the neighbourhood of 
												many powerful kings. She 
												nourished her whelps among lions 
												— She multiplied and increased 
												in power, notwithstanding the 
												envy of all the neighbouring 
												nations.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Ezekiel 19:3-4. And she brought 
												up one of her whelps — This 
												seems to be spoken of Jehoahaz, 
												who, we are told, followed not 
												the good example of his father 
												Josiah, but the evil practices 
												of the wicked kings his 
												predecessors; and though we have 
												no further account of his acts, 
												yet, from this, there is 
												sufficient reason to suppose 
												that he was rapacious and 
												injurious to his neighbours, and 
												tyrannical and cruel; which 
												possibly was the reason why 
												Pharaoh-necho deposed him after 
												he had reigned only three 
												months, and placed his brother 
												on the throne in his room. The 
												nations also heard of him — The 
												king of Egypt, hearing of his 
												character, and probably some of 
												his subjects having been used 
												ill by him, deprived him of his 
												kingly office, put him in bands, 
												and carried him into Egypt, 2 
												Kings 23:32; 2 Kings 23:34. He 
												was taken in their pit — This 
												expression alludes to those 
												pit-falls and snares which are 
												made to take wild beasts; and as 
												Jehoahaz is spoken of here as a 
												young lion, the expression was 
												quite applicable to signify his 
												being taken prisoner.
 
 Verses 5-9
 Ezekiel 19:5-9. When she saw 
												that she had waited — This seems 
												to signify that the Jews waited 
												some time before they thought of 
												setting another king over them, 
												hoping, probably, that the king 
												of Egypt would restore unto them 
												Jehoahaz, whom he had taken 
												prisoner; but when they saw 
												their hopes disappointed in 
												this, and that there was no 
												longer any room to expect it, 
												then they, by the consent, and 
												probably, direction of the king 
												of Egypt, elected Jehoahaz’s 
												brother, Eliakim, king in his 
												stead, his name being changed to 
												Jehoiakim. And he went up and 
												down among the lions — He 
												imitated the kings his 
												neighbours, and became rapacious 
												and cruel like them. And learned 
												to catch the prey, &c. — He 
												learned and practised all the 
												methods of tyranny and 
												oppression. And he knew their 
												desolate palaces — Dr. Waterland 
												and Houbigant render it, He 
												destroyed their palaces; and 
												Bishop Newcome, He brought evil 
												upon their palaces. The meaning 
												seems to be, that Jehoiakim made 
												himself master of the riches and 
												pleasant seats of the great men 
												of the land. And the land was 
												desolate, &c., by the noise of 
												his roaring — His cruelty and 
												oppression caused many of the 
												inhabitants of Judea to remove 
												out of it, and go and settle in 
												other places, where they could 
												live more secure. Then the 
												nations set themselves against 
												him, &c. — He was attacked by 
												the Chaldeans, Syrians, 
												Moabites, and Ammonites, and at 
												last the king of Babylon took 
												him prisoner, and carried him in 
												fetters to Babylon: see 2 
												Chronicles 36:6. That his voice 
												should no more be heard, &c. — 
												That he should be no more a 
												terror to the land of Israel. 
												For Jehoiakim being compared, in 
												the foregoing verses, to a lion, 
												whose voice, or roaring, strikes 
												men with terror; by saying that 
												his voice should no more be 
												heard, is signified that he 
												should be no longer a terror to 
												any in the country.
 
 Verses 10-14
 Ezekiel 19:10-14. Thy mother is 
												like a vine — Here another 
												similitude is made use of, and 
												the Jewish nation is compared, 
												as it frequently is in other 
												places, to a vine. In thy blood 
												— So the Hebrew and Vulgate; but 
												the LXX. read, ως ανθος εν ροα, 
												as a flower on a 
												pomegranate-tree; and Bishop 
												Newcome, who supposes the LXX. 
												to have read כרמן, and not בדמךְ, 
												renders the clause, like a 
												pomegranate, planted by the 
												waters, &c. — “The Jewish 
												nation, whence the royal family 
												had their original, was like a 
												fruitful vine in a very 
												flourishing condition.” And she 
												had strong rods, &c. — From her 
												sprung valiant princes, fit to 
												sway the sceptre. A rod or 
												sceptre is an emblem of 
												authority. Her stature was 
												exalted among the thick branches 
												— Among the neighbouring kings 
												and princes: see 2 Chronicles 
												32:23. The increase of the 
												nation’s power is expressed by 
												this. But she was plucked up in 
												fury — God, in his anger, 
												removed her out of her own land. 
												She was cast down to the ground 
												— She was reduced to a 
												contemptible state. The east 
												wind dried up her fruit — The 
												Chaldean forces ravaged and 
												depopulated the country; her 
												strong rods were broken — Her 
												kings and princes were subdued, 
												and made captives. The fire 
												consumed them — The divine anger 
												brought them to destruction, as 
												fire consumes the branches of a 
												tree when it is withered. And 
												now she is planted in the 
												wilderness — A great part of her 
												people are carried captive, 
												where their condition is as much 
												different from what it was 
												formerly, as the condition of a 
												tree is when it is removed out 
												of a rich soil into a dry and 
												barren ground. The Jews suffered 
												several captivities before that 
												final one which ended in the 
												destruction of their temple and 
												government. And fire is gone out 
												of a rod of her branches — This 
												is spoken of Zedekiah’s breaking 
												his oath of fidelity to the king 
												of Babylon, which was the 
												occasion of the destruction of 
												the royal family, and the entire 
												ruin of the government. This is 
												a lamentation, &c. — This is 
												matter of present lamentation, 
												and shall be so to after ages.
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