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												Verse 1Ezekiel 29:1. In the tenth year, 
												&c. — The prophecies of Ezekiel, 
												in regard to foreign nations, 
												are not placed according to the 
												order of time in which they were 
												delivered, but according to the 
												respective distances of the 
												nations from Judea, beginning 
												with those which lay nearest to 
												it. And with respect to the 
												prophecies against Egypt, it is 
												justly remarked by Dathius, that 
												this and the three following 
												chapters are joined together, 
												because they treat of the same 
												subject, though they consist of 
												prophecies uttered at very 
												different periods of time. The 
												period assigned in the present 
												text, in this verse, for the 
												prophecy first recorded here, is 
												during the siege of Jerusalem; 
												and, agreeably to Ezekiel 
												29:6-7, might be immediately 
												after Pharaoh’s retreat, 
												foretold by Jeremiah 37:7.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Ezekiel 29:2-3. Set thy face 
												against Pharaoh — Pharaoh being 
												a common name to all the kings 
												of Egypt, this prince was called 
												Pharaoh-hophra: by way of 
												distinction, by Jeremiah 44:30, 
												and Apries by Herodotus. The 
												word תנים, tannim, signifies any 
												great fish, but seems to be here 
												used to signify the crocodile, a 
												fish in a manner peculiar to the 
												river Nile, to which the king of 
												Egypt is compared, on account of 
												his dominions lying upon that 
												river, which he boasted himself 
												of, on account of the prodigious 
												fertility which the overflowing 
												of the Nile caused. It is spoken 
												of here as rivers, on account of 
												its many mouths, or channels. 
												The word Pharaoh signifies a 
												crocodile in the Arabic tongue. 
												Among the ancients, Michaelis 
												tells us, the crocodile was a 
												symbol of Egypt, and appears so 
												on the Roman coins. Milton seems 
												to have had this sublime passage 
												in view, when he said, Par. 
												Lost, 12:190
 
 — — — — Thus with ten wounds The 
												river-dragon, tamed, at length 
												submits.
 
 My river is my own — That is, 
												the kingdom of Egypt, watered by 
												the Nile, is mine. I have made 
												it for myself — It is my own 
												indefeisible right and property, 
												which I cannot be dispossessed 
												of. This king was, indeed, 
												exceeding prosperous, and 
												reigned uninterrupted for 
												twenty-five years; by which he 
												was so elated, as we learn from 
												Herodotus, that he was wont to 
												boast, that not even any god 
												could dispossess him of his 
												kingdom.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Ezekiel 29:4-5. But I will put 
												hooks in thy jaws — The king of 
												Egypt being spoken of as a great 
												fish, or a crocodile, God here, 
												in pursuance of the same 
												metaphor, tells him that he will 
												put hooks in his jaws, or stop 
												his vain-glorious designs and 
												boastings, by raising up enemies 
												that should gain the mastery 
												over him, as the fisherman has 
												the fish in his power, when he 
												has struck the hook into its 
												jaws. This hook to the king of 
												Egypt was Amasis, one of his 
												officers, who set up himself as 
												king, by the favour of the 
												people, and dethroned his 
												master. I will cause the fish of 
												thy rivers to stick unto thy 
												scales — I will cause even thy 
												own people to press thee hard, 
												and to be a torment to thee. And 
												I will bring thee up out of thy 
												rivers — By this is 
												metaphorically expressed his 
												being induced to undertake a 
												foreign expedition. The 
												expression alludes to the nature 
												of a crocodile, which is not 
												confined to the water, but uses 
												to come upon the land, where he 
												is frequently taken. And I will 
												leave thee thrown into the 
												wilderness, and all the fish of 
												thy rivers — Thy army shall be 
												discomfited, and fall in the 
												deserts of Lybia and Cyrene; for 
												there seems to be here an 
												allusion to the heavy loss which 
												Apries and the Egyptian army 
												sustained in his expedition 
												against the Cyrenians, toward 
												whom they must have marched over 
												the desert. Herod. 2. § 161. 
												Apries himself did not fall in 
												battle, but was taken prisoner 
												by Amasis, and strangled by the 
												Egyptians. Herod. 2. § 169. See 
												note on Jeremiah 44:30. Thou 
												shalt fall upon the open fields 
												— A king is said to be defeated, 
												or victorious, when his armies 
												are so. Thou shalt not be 
												brought together, nor gathered — 
												The bones, or carcasses, of thy 
												army shall not be collected in 
												order to their burial, nor 
												gathered to the dead in the 
												sepulchres allotted for them. I 
												have given thee for meat to the 
												beasts of the field, &c. — See 
												Revelation 19:17-18. Some think 
												the expression here is 
												metaphorical, and signifies that 
												the power of depriving him of 
												his kingdom, power, liberty, 
												riches, and at last life itself, 
												should be given to cruel and 
												rapacious men.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Ezekiel 29:6-7. Because they 
												have been a staff of reed to the 
												house of Israel — This 
												expression, a staff of reed, is 
												very emphatical, to signify a 
												confidence which has failed 
												those that depended upon it, or 
												has done them more hurt than 
												good; for if a reed is leaned 
												upon as a staff, it most 
												certainly bends under the weight 
												and breaks, and the splinters 
												sometimes run into the hand of 
												him who leaned upon it. Though 
												the Jews were greatly blamed by 
												God for entering into alliance 
												with the Egyptians, yet we find 
												God here declaring that he would 
												punish the Egyptians for not 
												having performed their 
												engagements to the Israelites; 
												for though God forbade the 
												Israelites to seek the alliance 
												of the Egyptians, this 
												nevertheless did not excuse the 
												Egyptians in their breach of 
												faith. When they took hold of 
												thee by thy hand — When they 
												relied on thee for help; thou 
												didst break — Or, thou wast 
												crushed, as Newcome renders it; 
												and rend all their shoulder — 
												Or, their arm. The sense is, 
												that the Egyptians proved a 
												destruction to the Jewish 
												people, who expected to be 
												helped by them: see Jeremiah 
												37:5; Jeremiah 37:7; 2 Kings 
												24:7. This king of Egypt came 
												with a great army to raise the 
												siege of Jerusalem, but would 
												not venture a battle with the 
												Chaldeans, and marched back 
												again, leaving Jerusalem to be 
												taken by them.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Ezekiel 29:8-9. Behold, I will 
												bring a sword upon thee — This 
												was fulfilled, first by the 
												civil wars which broke out in 
												Egypt, and next by the invasion 
												of it by Nebuchadnezzar, who 
												carried his victorious arms 
												through the whole country, 
												destroying wherever he came; and 
												will cut off man and beast — 
												That is, destroy a vast number 
												both of men and beasts. And the 
												land of Egypt shall be desolate 
												— A great part of Egypt was, 
												without doubt, laid waste and 
												made desolate by the ravages of 
												war. Because he hath said, The 
												river is mine — Arrogance and 
												self-confidence are always 
												spoken of in Scripture as highly 
												displeasing to God. Whenever any 
												one thinks, speaks, or acts as 
												if he were self-dependent, and 
												had safety, prosperity, and 
												happiness in his own power, then 
												do the Scriptures represent God 
												as giving up such a one to 
												calamity, to convince him how 
												little reason he had to think 
												highly of, or to trust in 
												himself.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Ezekiel 29:10-12. Behold, I am 
												against thee and thy rivers — 
												Since thou hast opposed me, I 
												will set myself against thee, 
												and bring down the strength and 
												glory of thy kingdom, wherein 
												thou magnifiest thyself so much. 
												From the tower of Syene, even 
												unto the border of Ethiopia — If 
												we follow this translation, we 
												must understand the word Cush, 
												rendered here Ethiopia, of 
												Arabia, as it is often taken: 
												see note on Jeremiah 13:23. For 
												Syene was to the south of Egypt, 
												under the tropic of Cancer, and 
												bordering on African Ethiopia: 
												see Pliny’s Nat. Hist., 50. 5. 
												c. 9. But the words may be 
												properly translated thus: From 
												Migdol to Syene, even to the 
												borders of Ethiopia: compare 
												Ezekiel 30:5; Ezekiel 30:9. 
												Migdol was a town near the Red 
												sea, mentioned Exodus 14:2; 
												Jeremiah 44:1; Jeremiah 46:14, 
												(where see the notes,) at the 
												entrance of Egypt from 
												Palestine; whereas Syene was at 
												the other end of the country. 
												What is said here of the 
												devastation of Egypt, appears 
												from this to be spoken only of a 
												part of it, and not the whole. 
												No foot of man shall pass 
												through it, &c. — The intestine 
												wars of the Egyptians, and the 
												invasion of Nebuchadnezzar, made 
												some provinces of Egypt, which 
												were most the scenes of action, 
												quite desolate; out of which 
												state they did not wholly 
												recover for the space of forty 
												years. And her cities shall be 
												desolate forty years — “We 
												cannot prove, indeed, from 
												heathen authors, that this 
												desolation of the country 
												continued exactly forty years, 
												though it is likely enough that 
												this, as well as the other 
												conquered countries, did not 
												shake off the Babylonish yoke 
												till the time of Cyrus, which 
												was about forty years after the 
												conquest of Egypt by 
												Nebuchadnezzar: but we are 
												assured by Berosus, that 
												Nebuchadnezzar took several 
												captives in Egypt, and carried 
												them to Babylon; and from 
												Megasthenes we learn, that he 
												transplanted and settled others 
												in Pontus. So true it is that 
												they were scattered among the 
												nations, and dispersed through 
												the countries, and might, upon 
												the dissolution of the 
												Babylonian empire, return to 
												their native country.” — Bishop 
												Newton.
 
 Verse 14-15
 Ezekiel 29:14-15. And I will 
												bring again the captivity of 
												Egypt — This captivity of the 
												Egyptians, though not taken 
												notice of by Herodotus, is 
												mentioned by Berosus, in one of 
												the fragments of his history, 
												quoted by Josephus, Antiq., 50. 
												10. chap. 11, and published with 
												notes by Scaliger, at the end of 
												his books, De Emendatione 
												Temporum, whose remark upon the 
												place is very observable, 
												namely, “The calamities that 
												befell the Egyptians are passed 
												over by Herodotus, because the 
												Egyptian priests would not 
												inform him of any thing that 
												tended to the disgrace of their 
												nation.” And I will cause them 
												to return into the land of 
												Pathros — That part of Egypt 
												which is called Thebais, as 
												Bochart proves by several 
												arguments. And they shall be 
												there a base kingdom, the basest 
												of kingdoms — “By base kingdom 
												is meant, that it should be 
												tributary and subject to 
												strangers, for the much greatest 
												part of the time. This is the 
												purport and meaning of the 
												prophecy; and the truth will 
												appear by a short deduction of 
												the history of Egypt from that 
												time to this. It was first of 
												all tributary to the Babylonians 
												under Amasis; upon the ruin of 
												the Babylonish empire, it was 
												subject to the Persians; upon 
												the failure of the Persian 
												empire, it came into the hands 
												of the Macedonians; after the 
												Macedonians, it fell under the 
												dominion of the Romans; after 
												the division of the Roman 
												empire, it was subdued by the 
												Saracens, in the reign of Omar, 
												their third emperor; about the 
												year of Christ 1250, it was in 
												the possession of the Mamelukes, 
												a word which signifies a slave 
												bought with money, but is 
												appropriated to those Turkish or 
												Circassian slaves, whom the 
												sultans of Egypt bought young, 
												and taught military exercises. 
												These slaves usurped the royal 
												authority, and by that means 
												Egypt became their prey. But, 
												A.D. 1517, Selim, the ninth 
												emperor of the Turks, conquered 
												the Mamelukes, and annexed Egypt 
												to the Ottoman empire, of which 
												it continues to be a province to 
												this day. By this deduction it 
												appears, that the truth of 
												Ezekiel’s prediction is fully 
												attested by the whole series of 
												the history of Egypt, from that 
												time to the present. And who 
												could pretend to say, upon human 
												conjecture, that so great a 
												kingdom, so rich and fertile a 
												country, should ever afterward 
												become tributary and subject to 
												strangers? It is now a great 
												deal above two thousand years 
												since this prophecy was first 
												delivered; and what likelihood 
												or appearance was there, that 
												the Egyptians should, for so 
												many ages, bow under a foreign 
												yoke, and never, in all that 
												time, be able to recover their 
												liberties, and have a prince of 
												their own to reign over them? 
												But as is the prophecy, so is 
												the event.” — Bishop Newton.
 
 Verse 16
 Ezekiel 29:16. It shall be no 
												more the confidence of the house 
												of Israel — At the same time 
												that the Jews put confidence in 
												Egypt they distrusted the 
												promises and assistance of God, 
												and forsook him to comply with 
												the idolatries of their allies. 
												Which bringeth — Or, as Newcome 
												translates it, Calling their 
												iniquity to remembrance — That 
												is, as he interprets it, causing 
												God to remember and punish the 
												iniquity of his people. Or the 
												sense of the verse may be, that 
												the Israelites should no more 
												look to Egypt for help; but, by 
												the deplorable state it should 
												be reduced to, be put in mind of 
												the judgments which wickedness 
												brings down from God; and of 
												their own folly and iniquity in 
												distrusting his assistance, and 
												seeking to Egypt for help, 
												contrary to his commands, and 
												even complying with the Egyptian 
												idolatries, in order to engage 
												them in their favour.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Ezekiel 29:17-18. And it came to 
												pass, &c. — The new prophecy, 
												which begins here, is connected 
												with the foregoing, on account 
												of its relating to the same 
												subject, and not on account of 
												its being the next revelation in 
												time which Ezekiel had; for 
												there is nearly seventeen years 
												distance between the date of the 
												foregoing prophecy and this; 
												during which Egypt was torn to 
												pieces by sedition and civil 
												wars, which seems to be 
												signified by the foregoing 
												prophecy; and, the time then 
												approaching that Nebuchadnezzar 
												was to invade and conquer Egypt, 
												God thought proper to declare it 
												to the prophet more openly and 
												expressly than he had done 
												before. Nebuchadnezzar caused 
												his army to serve a great 
												service against Tyrus — The 
												siege lasted thirteen years, 
												till the heads of the soldiers 
												became bald with continual 
												wearing their helmets, and the 
												skin was worn off their 
												shoulders with carrying earth to 
												raise mounts and fortifications 
												against it: see note on Ezekiel 
												26:8. Yet had he no wages, nor 
												his army, for Tyrus — Before the 
												town came to be closely 
												besieged, the inhabitants had 
												removed their effects into an 
												island, about half a mile 
												distant from the shore, to which 
												they afterward removed 
												themselves, and where they built 
												a new city; so that there was no 
												inhabitant nor booty left there 
												when Nebuchadnezzar’s army took 
												the city. Thus St. Jerome, “When 
												the Tyrians saw that the works 
												for carrying on the siege were 
												perfected, and the foundations 
												of the walls were shaken, by the 
												battering of the rams, 
												whatsoever precious things in 
												gold, silver, clothes, and 
												various kinds of furniture, the 
												nobility had, they put them on 
												board their ships, and carried 
												them to the islands; so that, 
												the city being taken, 
												Nebuchadnezzar found nothing 
												worthy of his labour.”
 
 Verse 19-20
 Ezekiel 29:19-20. He shall take 
												her multitude, and take her 
												spoil — Nebuchadnezzar and his 
												army shall have the captives and 
												spoil of Egypt, which they shall 
												utterly pillage and lay waste. 
												Because they wrought for me, 
												saith the Lord — The destruction 
												of cities and countries is a 
												work of God’s providence, for 
												the effecting of which he makes 
												use of kings and princes as his 
												instruments. Upon this account 
												he calls Nebuchadnezzar his 
												servant, Jeremiah 25:9, because 
												he wrought for him, as it is 
												here expressed, that is, 
												executed his judgments upon 
												Tyre, and the other cities and 
												countries which God had 
												delivered into his hands. Though 
												Nebuchadnezzar was actuated by 
												his own ambition to make the 
												conquest of Tyre, yet, because 
												in doing it he had executed 
												God’s purposes, and that which 
												was pleasing to him, in humbling 
												the Tyrians, therefore God here 
												declares that he should not go 
												without a reward; for that he 
												would give him the spoil of 
												Egypt, which nation was ripe for 
												punishment. If God is so 
												gracious as to reward those who 
												do but execute his designs 
												accidentally, not intentionally, 
												how much reason have we to 
												expect that he will most amply 
												reward those who intentionally 
												obey his will!
 
 Verse 21
 Ezekiel 29:21. In that day — The 
												phrase frequently denotes, in 
												the prophets, not the same time 
												which was last mentioned, but an 
												extraordinary season, remarkable 
												for some signal events of 
												providence: in this sense it is 
												to be understood here. I will 
												cause the horn of the house of 
												Israel to bud forth — The horns 
												being the token of strength in 
												beasts, and that in which their 
												power chiefly consists; 
												therefore the word is put to 
												signify strength, or dominion, 
												or a flourishing condition; and 
												therefore to say, that the horn 
												of Israel should bud forth, was 
												as much as to say, that the 
												Jewish nation should grow 
												prosperous, and come to a 
												flourishing condition again. 
												This seems to be spoken of the 
												return of the Jews from their 
												captivity, and settling again in 
												Judea. I will give thee the 
												opening of the mouth in the 
												midst of them — When thy 
												prophecies are made good by the 
												event, this shall add a new 
												authority to what thou speakest: 
												see Ezekiel 24:27.
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