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												Verse 1Habakkuk 1:1. The burden — The 
												grievous calamities, or heavy 
												judgments; which Habakkuk did 
												see — That is, foresee, and was 
												commissioned to foretel. This 
												burden, or prophetic vision, 
												communicated to Habakkuk, was 
												against the Chaldeans as well as 
												the Jews. For while the prophet 
												was complaining of iniquity 
												among the Jews, 1st, God 
												foreshows him the desolations 
												which the Chaldeans would make 
												in Judea and the neighbouring 
												countries, as the ministers of 
												divine vengeance: and, 2d, Upon 
												the prophet’s falling into an 
												expostulation with God about 
												these proceedings, moved thereto 
												probably by his compassion for 
												his own people, God shows him 
												the judgments which he would 
												execute upon the Chaldeans.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Habakkuk 1:2-4. O Lord, how long 
												shall I cry, &c. — How long 
												shall I complain unto thee of 
												might overcoming right, and thou 
												wilt not save or prevent it? The 
												prophet here proposes the common 
												objection against Providence, 
												taken from the prosperity of the 
												wicked, and their oppression of 
												the righteous, which has often 
												been a stumbling-block even to 
												good men: see Jeremiah 12:1; Job 
												12:6; and Job 21:7; Psalm 37., 
												73. Why dost thou show me 
												iniquity? — Why hast thou caused 
												me to live in such times of 
												iniquity? for I see nothing but 
												scenes of rapine, and the most 
												unjust oppression. And there are 
												that raise up strife, &c. — Or, 
												there is strife, and contention 
												carries it. There is much cause 
												for complaining, but those best 
												skilled in the arts of 
												contention carry the cause. 
												Therefore the law is slacked — 
												The divine law, given us for the 
												regulation of our conduct, hath 
												lost its force. And judgment 
												doth never go forth — Causes 
												remain undetermined, and justice 
												is not duly administered. For 
												the wicked, &c. — For the 
												wicked, by their deceitful arts, 
												prevail against the righteous, 
												and overpower them; therefore 
												[rather, moreover] wrong 
												judgment proceedeth — Not only 
												judgment is delayed, but, what 
												is still worse, unjust judgment 
												is given, and causes are 
												evidently decided in a manner 
												quite contrary to what is 
												equitable and just.
 
 Verse 5
 Habakkuk 1:5. Behold, &c. — For 
												a punishment of such exorbitant 
												practices, behold, God is about 
												to make the heathen the 
												instruments of his vengeance. Ye 
												among the heathen, and regard — 
												Consider and weigh it well, in 
												its nature and consequences; for 
												it is intended as a warning to 
												you, and assures you that 
												judgment will overtake you also. 
												And wonder marvellously — As 
												astonished at judgments too 
												great to be described, and so 
												strange that they will appear to 
												many, even of God’s professing 
												people, to be incredible. For I 
												will work a work, &c., which ye 
												will not believe — The judgment 
												shall be such, as you despisers 
												of God’s word will not believe 
												to be coming upon you. These 
												words are referred to, and 
												indeed quoted, by St. Paul, Acts 
												13:41; not, however, according 
												to the Hebrew text, but the 
												translation of the LXX., who, 
												instead of בגוים, begoim, among 
												the heathen, seem to have read 
												בגדום, begadim, despisers, or 
												perfidious persons. This reading 
												of the LXX. is preferred by 
												Grotius, because, he observes, 
												“God addresses the Jews who were 
												despisers of his deity.”
 
 Verse 6
 Habakkuk 1:6. For lo, I raise up 
												the Chaldeans — This is spoken 
												of as a matter of great wonder 
												and astonishment, because the 
												Chaldeans, in the times of 
												Hezekiah, Manasseh, and Josiah, 
												were allies of the Jewish 
												nation, and seemed linked to 
												them in the greatest friendship; 
												so that they had no fear on that 
												side, but all their fear was 
												from the Egyptians. Therefore 
												the coming of the Chaldeans into 
												the country is spoken of here as 
												a thing entirely new, and as if 
												that people had been called into 
												existence for the very purpose 
												of punishing the Jewish nation. 
												There is a prophecy similar to 
												this in Isaiah, with regard to 
												the Assyrians, in whom the 
												Jewish nation then placed their 
												chief confidence, and thought of 
												nothing less than of the evils 
												which Isaiah threatened should 
												be brought upon them by that 
												nation: so weak and 
												short-sighted often is human 
												policy! see Isaiah 7. That 
												bitter and hasty nation — That 
												people cruel, in their 
												disposition, quick in executing 
												their purposes, and hasty in 
												their marches, Isaiah 5:26-27; 
												Jeremiah 5:16-17. Which shall 
												march through the breadth of the 
												land, to possess, &c. — This is 
												spoken of the Chaldeans 
												extending their conquests to a 
												vast distance from the original 
												seat of their empire.
 
 Verses 7-9
 Habakkuk 1:7-9. Their judgment, 
												&c., shall proceed of themselves 
												— They will judge themselves of 
												what they shall do, without 
												paying regard to any thing but 
												their own will, and shall have 
												power to put in execution 
												whatever they resolve upon. 
												Their horses also are swifter 
												than the leopards — “Leopards 
												tamed and taught to hunt are, it 
												is said, made use of [in 
												Palestine] for hunting, and 
												seize the prey with surprising 
												agility. When the leopard leaps, 
												he throws himself seventeen or 
												eighteen feet at a time.” — 
												Harmer, 2:438. And are more 
												fierce than the evening wolves — 
												Which, having fasted in the day, 
												were wont to come forth in the 
												evening fierce and ravenous. And 
												their horsemen shall spread 
												themselves — Namely, all over 
												the land; that is, they shall be 
												very numerous. They shall come 
												all for violence — To enrich 
												themselves by making a prey of 
												all. Their faces shall sup up as 
												the east wind — They shall 
												destroy every thing where they 
												march, as the east wind blasts 
												the fruits of the earth. And 
												they shall gather the captivity 
												[or, captives] as the sand — Not 
												only in Judea, but in all the 
												neighbouring countries which 
												they conquer. Houbigant renders 
												the clause, A burning wind goes 
												before them, and gathers 
												captives as the sand. They shall 
												carry desolation, destruction, 
												and fire, everywhere before 
												them. The winds which blew from 
												Arabia the Desert were extremely 
												hot, and very dangerous, not 
												only on account of their own 
												heat, but on account of the dust 
												and sand which they brought with 
												them.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Habakkuk 1:10-11. And they shall 
												scoff at the kings, &c. — The 
												Hebrew use the singular number 
												here, (He shall scoff, &c.,) as 
												well as in the following verse, 
												and it is to be understood of 
												the king of Babylon, who treated 
												the kings he conquered with 
												scorn and contempt: so he used 
												Zedekiah and his princes. They 
												shall deride every strong hold — 
												They shall contemn, or count as 
												nothing, the most strongly 
												fortified places. They shall 
												heap dust and take it — They 
												shall cast up mounds against 
												them, and so take them. Then 
												shall his mind change, and he 
												shall pass over — Rather, And 
												shall pass over, (without the 
												personal pronoun he,) that is, 
												his mind shall change, and pass 
												beyond the bounds of moderation. 
												By this and the next clause, 
												imputing this his power unto his 
												god, was foretold that the king 
												of Babylon should be made 
												arrogant by his victories, and 
												should impute them to the power 
												of the false gods he worshipped. 
												This was remarkably true of 
												Belshazzar, Nebuchadnezzar’s 
												successor, who, with his 
												thousand lords, when he was 
												drinking wine in the golden and 
												silver vessels taken out of 
												God’s temple, and was thereby 
												triumphing over Jehovah and his 
												people, praised the gods of gold 
												and silver, &c., as the authors 
												of their successes and 
												victories. It was also 
												remarkably verified in 
												Nebuchadnezzar himself, who, as 
												we find from Daniel 3., cast 
												three otherwise innocent 
												persons, and faithful to him, 
												into a furnace of fire, because 
												they would not fall down before 
												the idol which he had set up. 
												But Grotius, and many others, 
												interpret the latter part of the 
												verse thus: Saying this his 
												strength is his god; that is, 
												imputing all his success to his 
												own skill and prowess; a sense 
												of the words which answers 
												remarkably to the character of 
												Nebuchadnezzar, as given in the 
												book of Daniel: see chapter 
												Daniel 3:17, and Daniel 4:30, 
												and Daniel 5:20. Probably the 
												extraordinary insanity which 
												befell Nebuchadnezzar, as the 
												punishment of his pride and 
												arrogance, might be also here 
												intended in the first clause of 
												this verse, which in the Hebrew 
												is, Then shall his spirit change 
												and pass over, &c. Here, then, 
												is a remarkable proof of what 
												the psalmist says, namely, that 
												God understandeth our thoughts 
												afar off: for here the 
												alteration that should in after 
												times be made in 
												Nebuchadnezzar’s mind by his 
												prosperity is expressly 
												foretold, together with the 
												punishment that should follow 
												upon it.
 
 Verse 12
 Habakkuk 1:12. Art thou not, &c. 
												— Here the prophet, upon being 
												made sensible that the king of 
												Babylon should attribute all his 
												victories to some false or 
												fictitious deity, or to his own 
												abilities, breaks out into a 
												passionate exclamation to 
												Jehovah, Art thou not from 
												everlasting, O Lord my God? — 
												Art not thou he, who only hath 
												been from everlasting; while all 
												others that are called gods have 
												had a beginning, and there was a 
												time when neither they nor the 
												men that set them up had any 
												being? Thou, therefore, art 
												infinitely superior, both to the 
												most powerful men, and to all 
												that are called gods. We shall 
												not die — We shall not utterly 
												perish by the Chaldeans, though 
												we shall suffer severely from 
												them. Or, as Secker renders it, 
												Let us not die. Thou hast 
												ordained them for judgment — 
												Thou hast appointed the 
												Chaldeans to execute thy 
												judgments on sinners. And, O 
												mighty God — Whose sovereignty 
												is unquestionable, and power 
												irresistible; thou hast 
												established them for correction 
												— The Hebrew is, thou hast 
												founded them as a rock for 
												correction, namely, of the 
												Jewish people.
 
 Verses 13-17
 Habakkuk 1:13-17. Thou art of 
												purer eyes than to behold evil — 
												Thou art of too just and pure a 
												nature to approve of wickedness: 
												it must ever be an abomination 
												to thee. Thou canst not look 
												upon iniquity — Except with 
												infinite abhorrence. Wherefore 
												lookest thou upon them — Seemest 
												to connive at, or dost not show 
												any particular dislike at the 
												violence of those idolatrous 
												Chaldeans? And makest men as the 
												fishes of the sea, &c. — By 
												delivering them to 
												Nebuchadnezzar, who takes them 
												in his net, as a fisherman takes 
												fishes; which creatures suffer 
												themselves to be taken without 
												resistance, because they have no 
												power to defend themselves. As 
												the creeping things that have no 
												ruler, &c. — No chief to conduct 
												or guard them. The Hebrews give 
												the common name of reptiles to 
												all fishes. They take up all of 
												them with the angle — The 
												prophet, having in the preceding 
												verse compared men to fishes, 
												continues here, by way of 
												metaphor, to describe the 
												advantages which the Chaldeans 
												gained over other nations, by 
												the several ways used by 
												fishermen in taking fishes, as 
												by catching them with the angle, 
												enclosing them in nets, and 
												gathering them in drags. 
												Therefore they rejoice and are 
												glad — On account of the prey 
												they take; that is, the 
												Chaldeans rejoice in taking a 
												great number of captives, and 
												gathering rich spoils, as 
												fishermen rejoice when they 
												catch a great number of fishes. 
												Therefore they sacrifice unto 
												their net, &c. — They impute all 
												their victories to their own 
												strength and skill, or to idols 
												of their own making, and render 
												no acknowledgments to God for 
												their success. Because by them 
												their portion is fat, &c. — 
												Because by means of their 
												victories they get abundance of 
												rich spoil. Shall they therefore 
												empty their net — Carry away the 
												riches and spoils of their 
												conquests, (see 2 Kings 24:13,) 
												in order to undertake more; just 
												as fishermen empty their nets to 
												fill them again. But the words 
												may be properly rendered, Shall 
												he therefore spread his net? in 
												which sense the Vulgate, as also 
												the Greek and Chaldee, here 
												interpret the Hebrew verb ירוק, 
												a word often used of drawing or 
												unsheathing a sword or spear. 
												And not spare continually to 
												slay the nations — Wilt thou 
												suffer them to go on to make 
												havoc continually of all other 
												nations? Shall they never be 
												stopped in their career?
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