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												Verse 1Hosea 6:1. Come, let us return, 
												&c. — Bishop Horsley considers 
												the prophet as speaking here in 
												his own person, to the end of 
												the 3d verse, and taking 
												occasion, from the intimation of 
												pardon to the penitent, given in 
												the conclusion of the preceding 
												chapter, to address his 
												countrymen in words of mild, 
												pathetic persuasion, and to 
												exhort them to return to the 
												worship and service of God. But 
												many other commentators rather 
												think these are to be considered 
												as the words of the repenting 
												and returning Jews and 
												Israelites in their exile, who, 
												it is said, in the last clause 
												of the foregoing chapter, would 
												in their affliction seek God, 
												which they are here represented 
												as encouraging one another to 
												do, saying, Come, &c. — Not only 
												the LXX., but, according to 
												Houbigant, the Arabic, Syriac, 
												and Chaldee, supply the word 
												saying, before this verse. 
												Whether they did this as 
												interpreters, which, says 
												Archbishop Newcome, is my 
												opinion, or whether they read in 
												their copy of the Hebrew text, 
												לאמר, (saying,) is uncertain. 
												Let us return unto the Lord, &c. 
												— He it is who hath brought us 
												into this estate under which we 
												groan; and he is able, if he 
												think fit, to deliver us from it 
												in a short time: nothing is 
												difficult to him. Full of mercy 
												as he is, he will not permit us 
												to continue long in captivity 
												and oppression, wherein we are 
												buried like the dead in the 
												tomb. He hath torn, and he will 
												heal us, &c. — The same God that 
												punisheth us can only remove his 
												judgments, and show us mercy. 
												The expression, He hath torn, 
												relates to what was said Hosea 
												5:14.
 
 
 Verse 2
 Hosea 6:2. After two days he 
												will revive us — A deliverance 
												from miseries or calamities, 
												from which men had despaired of 
												a recovery, is often represented 
												as restoring them to life after 
												death: see Psalms 30:3; Psalms 
												71:20; Psalms 86:13; 
												particularly the restoration of 
												the Jewish nation is often 
												described, as if it were a 
												resurrection from the dead: see 
												note on Ezekiel 37:11. Two, or 
												three, in Scripture, denote a 
												small number. Two are put for a 
												few, 1 Kings 17:12. One and two 
												for a few, Isaiah 7:21; Jeremiah 
												3:14. Two or three for a few, 
												Isaiah 17:6. Accordingly, here 
												the expression signifies a short 
												space of time. Compare Luke 
												13:32-33. The primary and 
												obvious sense, therefore, of 
												this verse, taking it in 
												reference to the others, is, 
												that they expected God would, in 
												a short time after they should 
												repent and turn to him, free 
												them from their captivity, which 
												might be looked upon as a state 
												of death; and would return again 
												to them, and exhibit the signs 
												of his presence among them, his 
												chosen people: so that, being 
												converted and restored, they 
												should live in his sight, and 
												should attain to that true 
												knowledge of God which they had 
												not possessed before. Added to 
												this, Bishop Horsley thinks 
												these days denote three distinct 
												periods of the Jewish people. 
												His view of the subject he 
												explains as follows: “The first 
												day is the captivity of the ten 
												tribes by the Assyrians, and of 
												the other two under the 
												Babylonians, considered as one 
												judgment upon the nation; 
												beginning with the captivity of 
												the ten, and completed in that 
												of the two. The second day is 
												the whole period of the present 
												condition of the Jews, beginning 
												with the dispersion of the 
												nation by the Romans. The third 
												day is the period yet to come, 
												beginning with their 
												restoration, to the second 
												advent. R. Tanchum, as he is 
												quoted by Dr. Pocock, was not 
												far, I think, from the true 
												meaning of the place. ‘The 
												prophet,’ he says, ‘points out 
												two things — and these are, the 
												first captivity, and a second. 
												After which shall follow a 
												third, [time,] redemption: after 
												which shall be no depression or 
												servitude.’ And this I take to 
												be the sense of the prophecy, in 
												immediate application to the 
												Jews. Nevertheless, whoever is 
												well acquainted with the 
												allegorical style of prophecy, 
												when he recollects that our 
												Lord’s sufferings and death” 
												were endured for our sakes, “and 
												that he, rising on the third 
												day, raised us to the hope of 
												life and immortality, will 
												easily perceive no very obscure, 
												though but an oblique, allusion 
												to our Lord’s resurrection on 
												the third day; since every 
												believer may speak of our Lord’s 
												death and resurrection, as a 
												common death and resurrection of 
												all mankind.”
 
 
 Verse 3
 Hosea 6:3. Then shall we know, 
												if we follow on, &c. — Hebrew, 
												ונדעה נדדפה לדעת, And we shall 
												know, we shall follow on to know 
												the Lord. Then, when we have 
												returned unto the Lord, Hosea 
												6:1, in sincerity and truth; 
												when he hath torn and healed us, 
												hath smitten and bound us up, 
												hath convinced us of and humbled 
												us for our sins, and converted 
												us to himself, and created us 
												anew; when he hath revived us, 
												raised us up, and made us live; 
												then shall we experimentally 
												know the Lord, as merciful to 
												our unrighteousness, Jeremiah 
												31:34; we shall taste and see 
												that he is good; we shall not 
												only be raised out of deep 
												afflictions, wherein we lay as 
												in a state of death, but we 
												shall live in his sight, a life 
												of union and communion with him, 
												a life of faith, love, and 
												obedience; we shall know Him 
												whom to know is life eternal. 
												And we shall prosecute that 
												knowledge; we shall follow on to 
												know him, not content with any 
												measures of the knowledge of him 
												already attained. We shall 
												proceed therein, and make 
												progress, as the morning light 
												doth to the perfect day. For, 
												his going forth to visit, 
												deliver, and comfort his people, 
												to manifest himself to them, to 
												refresh and save them; or, his 
												going forth before his people, 
												in his gracious, faithful, holy, 
												just, and wise providence, for 
												their benefit and comfort, is 
												prepared as the morning — As 
												sure, beautiful, grateful, 
												reviving, and clear, with a 
												continually increasing light, 
												which proclaims his own approach 
												and progress. And he shall come 
												unto us as the rain unto the 
												earth — Which refreshes it, 
												renders it fruitful, beautifies 
												it, and gives it a new and 
												smiling face. As the latter and 
												former rain — Or, as the words 
												should rather be rendered, the 
												harvest rain, and the rain of 
												seed-time: see notes on 
												Deuteronomy 11:14, and Proverbs 
												16:15. For, as Bishop Horsley 
												justly observes, the Hebrew 
												words here used have nothing of 
												latter or former implied in 
												their meaning. And these 
												expressions convey a notion just 
												the reverse of the truth to the 
												English reader. For what our 
												translation here terms the 
												latter rain, מלקושׁ, is 
												literally, as the bishop terms 
												it, the crop rain, which fell 
												just before the season of the 
												harvest, to plump the grain 
												before it was severed: that is, 
												it fell in what we term the 
												spring, and consider as the 
												former part of the year; for the 
												harvest in Judea began about the 
												middle of our March, according 
												to the old style. The other, 
												יורה, which we term the former 
												rain, and which is literally the 
												springing rain, or the rain 
												which makes to spring, fell upon 
												the seed newly sown, and caused 
												the green blade to shoot up out 
												of the ground: that is, it fell 
												about the end, or middle, of our 
												October, which we consider as 
												the latter end of the year. 
												These rains, of seed-time and 
												harvest, are the υετος πρωιμος 
												και οψιμος, the early and latter 
												rain, of St. James 5:7. But the 
												apostle’s epithets have 
												reference to the order of the 
												husbandman’s expectations, not 
												to the civil division of the 
												year.
 
 Verse 4
 Hosea 6:4. O Ephraim, what shall 
												I do unto thee? — Or rather, 
												what shall I do for thee? Here 
												the Lord takes up the discourse 
												again in his own person, and 
												gives an answer to the prayer, 
												or promises, of Judah and 
												Israel: as if he had said, How 
												can I give either of you, O 
												Israel and Judah, any tokens of 
												my favour, since there is no 
												sincerity or stability to be 
												found in you? Such is the 
												essential beneficence of God, 
												that he delights to bestow 
												favours on all his creatures; 
												and here, and elsewhere in the 
												Scriptures, represents himself 
												as it were concerned, whenever 
												their conduct is such that it 
												becomes inconsistent with his 
												attributes, as the all-righteous 
												governor of the universe, to 
												bestow his blessings upon them. 
												Thus we find Christ lamenting 
												over Jerusalem, Matthew 23:37; 
												and Isaiah 59:1-2 representing 
												men’s iniquities as the sole 
												cause of God’s hiding his face 
												from them, and not hearing their 
												prayers: see also Deuteronomy 
												5:29. Your goodness is as a 
												morning cloud, &c. — Your 
												goodness is of a short 
												continuance, and gives way to 
												every temptation, like as the 
												cloud of the morning, and the 
												dew, are dispersed at the first 
												approach of the sun.
 
 Verse 5
 Hosea 6:5. Therefore have I 
												hewed them by the prophets — 
												Severely reproved and threatened 
												them; or cut them off, as the 
												word, חצבתי, may be properly 
												rendered: that is, I have 
												denounced against them great 
												destruction. The prophets, and 
												God by the prophets, are said to 
												do those things which they 
												foretel, or denounce: see notes 
												on Jeremiah 1:10; Jeremiah 5:14. 
												I have slain them by the words 
												of my mouth — that is, I have 
												declared, or denounced, the 
												slaughter of them. God’s word is 
												described as sharper than a 
												two-edged sword, because his 
												judgments, denounced by his 
												messengers, are like the 
												sentence of a judge, which shall 
												certainly be followed with 
												execution. And thy judgments are 
												as the light when it goeth forth 
												— These may be considered as the 
												words of the prophet addressing 
												God, and signifying that his 
												judgments against the people 
												were, though gradually, yet as 
												certainly approaching as the 
												morning light; and that the 
												justice of them would appear as 
												clear as the light of the rising 
												sun. Or they may be considered 
												as addressed to Israel, and then 
												the meaning of them must be, The 
												punishment which shall come upon 
												thee, O Israel, will clearly 
												appear to be perfectly just; nor 
												shall any thing happen to thee, 
												but what thou hast been fully 
												and repeatedly warned of. Bishop 
												Horsley, however, connecting 
												these words with the following, 
												gives them a different sense. 
												Taking the word משׁפשׂיךְ, here 
												rendered thy judgments, to 
												signify thy precepts, he renders 
												the clause, And the precepts 
												given thee (namely, given to the 
												people) were as the onward-going 
												light, &c., “that is, as light, 
												of which it is the nature and 
												property to go forth, to 
												propagate itself infinitely, and 
												in all directions; a most 
												expressive image of the 
												clearness of the practical 
												lessons of the prophets.” The 
												word, adds he, in his Critical 
												Notes, “signifies a fixed 
												principle, or rule, in any 
												thing, to which principle and 
												rule can be applied. Here I take 
												it for the practical rules of a 
												moral and godly life, as 
												delivered by the prophets; and 
												so Calvin expounds it: ‘Judicia 
												tua, hoc est, ratio pič 
												vivendi,’ Thy judgments, that 
												is, the method of living 
												piously. Significat hic Deus se 
												regulam pič et sancte vivendi 
												monstrāsse Israelitis, God here 
												signifies that he had shown to 
												the Israelites the rule of a 
												pious and holy life.”
 
 Verse 6
 Hosea 6:6. For I desired mercy, 
												and not sacrifice — That is, 
												rather than sacrifice, this 
												being spoken comparatively. I am 
												better pleased with true 
												goodness than with the most 
												exact observance of the external 
												duties of religion: see Micah 
												6:6-8. The Jews use to express 
												comparison by negatives, or 
												rejecting the thing less worthy: 
												so we are to understand that 
												expression of the Prophet Joel 
												2:13, Rend your heart, and not 
												your garments; and those words 
												of Christ, John 6:27, Labour not 
												for the meat which perisheth, 
												but for that which endureth to 
												everlasting life: that is, for 
												this rather than the former. By 
												mercy is here meant, not only 
												all that is due from man to man, 
												considered as fellow-creatures, 
												and members of civil society; 
												but also those acts of 
												benevolence, which, though not 
												claimable on principles of 
												justice, yet must be performed 
												by us, as we have opportunity, 
												if we would be the children of 
												our Father who is in heaven: see 
												Matthew 5:45. Indeed, the word 
												חסד, here used, and rendered 
												mercy, includes piety toward 
												God, as well as benevolence to 
												man; or the performance of all 
												the duties of the moral law. “I 
												can find no single word,” says 
												Bishop Horsley, “to answer to 
												it, but charity; for charity, in 
												the evangelical sense, is the 
												love of man, founded upon the 
												love of God, and arising out of 
												it.” And the knowledge of God 
												more than burnt-offerings — 
												Namely, that knowledge of God, 
												which is his super natural gift, 
												through the influence of his 
												enlightening Spirit, Ephesians 
												1:17; and which is always 
												productive of a filial 
												confidence in him, love to him, 
												and obedience to his 
												commandments; (see Psalms 9:10; 
												1 John 2:3-4; 1 John 4:7-8;) and 
												which is always attended with a 
												true, sincere, internal, 
												spiritual worship of him, and 
												reverence for him. This is 
												infinitely more pleasing to God, 
												and more essential to true 
												religion, than any ceremonial 
												observances whatever; yea, than 
												all sacrifices and 
												burnt-offerings.
 
 Verse 7
 Hosea 6:7. But they like men 
												have transgressed the covenant — 
												That is, as all corrupt men are 
												prone to do; and as other men, 
												who are not under such strong 
												obligations to keep covenant 
												with me, use to do. In the 
												Hebrew it is, like Adam: and it 
												would have been better, it 
												seems, to have rendered it so; 
												the sense appearing to be, that 
												their transgression of the 
												covenant God had made with them, 
												or of the commandments which he 
												had given them, was very similar 
												to the transgression of Adam in 
												paradise. “As Adam transgressed 
												a plain command, so the 
												Israelites transgressed the 
												plainest and the easiest 
												precepts. As Adam’s crime was 
												not to be excused by any 
												necessity or want, so the 
												Israelites, secure under the 
												protection of Jehovah, had they 
												continued faithful to him, had 
												no excuse in seeking other aids. 
												Adam revolted from God to Satan; 
												so the Israelites forsook God to 
												worship devils. Adam broke that 
												one command, on which the 
												justification of himself and his 
												posterity depended; so the 
												Israelites broke the one precept 
												of charity,” on their observing 
												which depended their continuance 
												in the divine favour, and their 
												right to the blessings of the 
												Mosaic covenant: see Horsley. 
												There have they dealt 
												treacherously against me — 
												There, even in that very 
												delightful and plentiful land, 
												which I gave them to encourage 
												them to obedience, a land like 
												unto Eden itself, they have 
												transgressed my law, as Adam did 
												in paradise, and have behaved 
												themselves falsely and 
												ungratefully toward me; and that 
												even with all the advantages of 
												the prophetic teaching, and in 
												spite of all admonition and all 
												warning.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Hosea 6:8-9. Gilead is a city of 
												them that work iniquity, &c. — 
												Archbishop Newcome translates 
												these two verses very literally 
												thus: Gilead is a city of them 
												that work iniquity: she is 
												marked with footsteps of blood. 
												And as bands wait for a man, a 
												company of priests murder in the 
												way to Shechem. “If Gilead be 
												put here for Ramoth-gilead, (and 
												I know not,” says Bishop 
												Horsley, “what other city can be 
												meant,) it was a city of refuge, 
												Deuteronomy 4:43; and such also 
												was Shechem, or Sichem, Joshua 
												20:7; both, therefore, inhabited 
												by priests and Levites. By 
												describing the first of these 
												two cities as polluted with 
												blood, and the high-road to the 
												other as beset with knots of 
												priests, like robbers, intent on 
												blood, and murdering on the 
												whole length of the way, up to 
												the very walls of the town, the 
												prophet means to represent the 
												priests as seducers of the 
												people to that idolatry which 
												proved the ruin of the nation. 
												Insomuch that, like a man who 
												should be murdered in a place of 
												religious retreat, or upon his 
												way to it, the people, under the 
												influence of such guides, met 
												their destruction in the quarter 
												where, by God’s appointment, 
												they were to seek their safety.” 
												The word שׁכמה, rendered by 
												consent, in Hosea 6:9, signifies 
												toward Shechem. For they commit 
												lewdness — Hebrew, זמה עשׁו, 
												they work enormity, or that 
												which is wicked and abominable.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Hosea 6:10-11. I have seen a 
												horrible thing — Such an 
												apostacy from God as cannot be 
												mentioned without horror. There 
												is the whoredom of Ephraim — Or 
												rather, there, namely, in the 
												house of Israel, BY the whoredom 
												of Ephraim, that is, by the 
												idolatry of Jeroboam, who was of 
												that tribe, and first began the 
												worship of the golden calves; 
												Israel is defiled — The whole 
												ten tribes are corrupted: for 
												they soon all followed the 
												example of Jeroboam in this 
												idolatrous worship. Also, O 
												Judah, he — That is, Ephraim; 
												hath set a harvest for thee — 
												For Ephraim, or Israel, had 
												corrupted Judah by leading them 
												into idolatry, and into the 
												vices connected therewith, in 
												consequence of which they were 
												made ripe for destruction: for 
												that the harvest is often a type 
												of judgment is evident, among 
												many other passages that might 
												be adduced, from those quoted in 
												the margin. When I returned the 
												captivity of my people — Or 
												rather, the Hebrew being in the 
												future tense, when I shall turn, 
												&c., (so the Vulgate,) or, more 
												literally, and as the Seventy 
												render it, in my turning the 
												captivity of my people. 
												According to this 
												interpretation, the phrase of 
												turning the captivity of God’s 
												people is not to be taken in the 
												sense in which the same phrase 
												is generally understood in the 
												Scriptures, namely, for bringing 
												them out of captivity; 
												punishment, and not a blessing, 
												being supposed to be predicted: 
												but the sense of the expression 
												will be, When I shall return to 
												make captives of my people; or, 
												as Archbishop Newcome proposes 
												rendering it, When I lead away 
												the captivity of my people; that 
												is, after I have again caused 
												the Israelites to be carried 
												into captivity. Tiglath-pileser 
												first carried a part of them 
												into captivity; then Shalmaneser 
												carried away the remainder; and 
												after this came Sennacherib, who 
												wasted Judea, and laid siege to 
												Jerusalem. Some eminent 
												commentators, however, are of 
												opinion, that not a judgment, 
												but a blessing, is predicted to 
												be conferred on Judah in this 
												passage. They therefore 
												translate the verse thus: But 
												for thee, O Judah, a harvest is 
												prepared; then when I shall 
												bring back the captivity of my 
												people: see Houbigant and 
												Horsley. Mr. S. Clark’s note on 
												the verse takes in both 
												interpretations, thus: “And as 
												Israel has been drawn to 
												idolatry by Jeroboam, (Hosea 
												6:10,) so hast thou, Judah, too: 
												and therefore God has prepared a 
												harvest of sorrow and sufferings 
												for thee too, by sending thee 
												into captivity; which yet 
												afterward shall be turned into a 
												harvest of joy, when thou shalt 
												be returned out of captivity 
												again.”
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