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												Verse 1Hosea 8:1. Set the trumpet to 
												thy mouth — The Vulgate renders 
												it, In guttere tuo sit tuba; 
												that is, Let thy throat, or 
												mouth, sound like a trumpet. God 
												speaks in these words, says 
												Grotius, to the prophet, and 
												commands him to proclaim, with a 
												very loud voice, both the sins 
												of the people, and the evils 
												about to come upon them. He 
												shall come as an eagle against 
												the house of the Lord — The 
												words, he shall come, are not in 
												the Hebrew, and seem to be 
												improperly supplied by the 
												translators; the sense of the 
												words appearing to be, that the 
												prophet should warn the people, 
												and denounce the judgments of 
												God against them for their sins, 
												with a voice so loud that it 
												might be heard as far as the cry 
												of the eagle, flying over, or 
												sitting upon, the top of the 
												temple. Because they have 
												transgressed — Or rather, that 
												they have transgressed my 
												covenant. “Hoc enim ipsum est 
												quod proclamari vult Deus;” for 
												this is the thing which God 
												commanded to be proclaimed. — 
												Grotius. Namely, that they had 
												transgressed against God’s 
												covenant, and violated his law.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Hosea 8:2-4. Israel shall cry 
												unto me — Namely, when 
												calamities come upon them, My 
												God, we know thee — Thou art our 
												God in covenant with us, and we 
												make profession of thy name, and 
												own thee for the only true God: 
												see Matthew 7:21-22. Israel hath 
												cast off the thing that is good 
												— They have not walked agreeably 
												to their profession, but have 
												cast off obedience to my laws. 
												This is a declaration, that all 
												the worship of Israel, or their 
												crying, My God, was vain, since 
												their actions were wicked, or 
												they had cast off what was good. 
												Christ has made a declaration to 
												the same purpose, to warn us of 
												falling into the like error, in 
												the passage above referred to. 
												They have set up kings — Made a 
												defection from the house of 
												David, formed themselves into a 
												distinct kingdom, and chosen 
												what kings and governors they 
												pleased, without ever asking my 
												advice or consent. Not by me — 
												Not by my warrant or order. 
												Shallum, and Menahem, and Pekah, 
												usurped the kingdom by murder 
												and treason, 2 Kings 15:13-14; 2 
												Kings 15:25, not by any 
												declaration of God’s will, as 
												Jeroboam and Jehu did; nor were 
												any of the kings between 
												Jeroboam and Jehu, nor any after 
												the posterity of Jehu, made by 
												God’s appointment. They have 
												made princes and I knew it not — 
												They have appointed judges, or 
												magistrates, such as I approved 
												not of, and had no hand in 
												raising up to that dignity. Of 
												their silver, &c., they have 
												made themselves idols — They 
												have abused their wealth to 
												idolatry, which will be the 
												occasion of their destruction: 
												see Hosea 2:8.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Hosea 8:5-6. Thy calf, O Samaria 
												— Here God himself, who is the 
												speaker, turns short upon 
												Samaria, or the ten tribes; and, 
												in a tone of dreadful 
												indignation, upbraids their 
												corrupt worship. Hath cast thee 
												off — That is, “will profit thee 
												nothing in dangers.” — Grotius. 
												As if he had said, As the people 
												of Samaria hath cast off that 
												which is good, Hosea 8:3, so the 
												calf, which they worship, shall 
												not protect or deliver them from 
												the evils coming upon them, now 
												my anger is kindled against 
												them. How long will it be ere 
												they attain to innocency? — How 
												long will it be ere they repent 
												and reform? Bishop Horsley 
												renders it, How long will they 
												bear antipathy to pure religion? 
												The Hebrew word, נקיו, signifies 
												purity, or cleanness generally; 
												hence moral purity, innocence. 
												But here, says he, “I think it 
												particularly denotes pure 
												religion, or the purity of 
												worship; pure religion and 
												undefiled, in opposition both to 
												the superstitious practices of 
												idolaters, and the false show of 
												hypocrites. For from Israel was 
												it also — Or, “from Israel came 
												even this; this thing, vile and 
												abominable as it is, was his own 
												invention; not a thing that he 
												had learned or borrowed from any 
												other nations. Archbishop 
												Newcome indeed says, ‘The 
												Israelites may have originally 
												borrowed this superstition from 
												the Egyptians;’ for in Egypt, he 
												observes, ‘this species of 
												animals were worshipped, the 
												Apis at Memphis, and the Mnevis 
												at Heliopolis.’ But the prophet 
												expressly says, that the 
												Israelites borrowed this 
												superstition from nobody; it was 
												all their own. Indeed, what they 
												had seen in Egypt was the 
												worship of a living calf, not of 
												the lifeless image of a calf, or 
												of any other animal.” — Bishop 
												Horsley. The workman made it, 
												therefore it is not God — It is 
												no more than the work of man, 
												and therefore there is no divine 
												power in it. But the calf of 
												Samaria — Or, the calf of 
												Beth-el, in the kingdom of 
												Samaria, shall be broken in 
												pieces — Whereby it shall be 
												proved to all, that there is 
												nothing divine in it. Horsley 
												renders it, Verily, the calf of 
												Samaria shall be reduced to 
												atoms. So also Grotius 
												understands the Hebrew 
												expression, שׁבבים היה, 
												interpreting the noun שׁבב, as 
												signifying, “minimum quidque in 
												re quāvis: ut scintillę, 
												fragmenta, segmenta;” the 
												smallest particle in any thing, 
												as sparks, shivers, shreds; 
												Jerome says, atoms. This was 
												done by the Assyrians, when they 
												made an entire conquest of the 
												ten tribes.
 
 Verse 7
 Hosea 8:7. For they have sown 
												the wind, and they shall reap 
												the whirlwind, &c. — A 
												proverbial expression, to 
												signify, that as men’s works 
												are, so must their reward be; 
												that they who sow iniquity shall 
												reap vanity, Proverbs 22:8. 
												Their labour shall be fruitless, 
												or shall turn to their hurt and 
												damage: As if he had said, All 
												the pains which the kings of 
												Israel and their subjects had 
												taken to enrich themselves, and 
												to strengthen their kingdom, 
												being built upon the foundation 
												of apostacy and idolatry, shall 
												turn to no better account, than 
												countrymen expect from a blasted 
												crop of corn; and whatever 
												advantage they make, it shall at 
												last be a prey to foreigners, to 
												the kings of Syria and Assyria.
 
 Verse 8
 Hosea 8:8. Israel is swallowed 
												up — Under this image the Hebrew 
												language, the Greek, and our 
												own, describe any sudden 
												destruction, so complete as to 
												leave no visible vestige of the 
												thing remaining. The prophet 
												speaks of what was future, as 
												though it were already present; 
												and signifies that the 
												Israelites would be as certainly 
												carried captives into Assyria, 
												as if they were already gone 
												thither into captivity. Now 
												shall they be among the Gentiles 
												as a vessel, &c. — In a short 
												time they shall be despised, as 
												a vessel or utensil that is 
												broken, or become useless. For 
												they are gone up to Assyria — 
												Namely, of their own accord, as 
												the original expression, המה 
												עלו, seems to imply. So do also 
												the versions of the LXX. and the 
												Vulgate; the former read, αυτοι 
												ανεβησαν εις ασσυριους, ipsi 
												ascenderunt ad Assur; they 
												themselves have gone up to 
												Assyria. This is not meant of 
												their going into captivity. The 
												captivity, though near at hand, 
												was yet to come; but this going 
												up was past. It was a voluntary 
												going up, and a crime; a going 
												up both for alliance, and also 
												for idolatrous commerce. The 
												captivity was to be the 
												punishment. A wild ass alone by 
												himself — The meaning is, that 
												Ephraim was such; that is, as 
												Archbishop Newcome interprets 
												it, Ephraim was like the 
												solitary wild ass, he was as 
												untamed to the yoke, and 
												traversed the desert as 
												earnestly in pursuit of idols, 
												as the wild ass in quest of his 
												mates. “Though wild asses,” says 
												Pocock, “be often found in the 
												deserts in whole herds, yet it 
												is usual for some one of them to 
												break away, and separate himself 
												from his company, and run alone 
												at random by himself; and one so 
												doing is here spoken of.” 
												Ephraim hath hired lovers — He 
												alludes to the flagitiousness of 
												adulteresses hiring men to have 
												commerce with them, to which he 
												compares Israel’s procuring 
												foreign allies with great 
												expense, and relying on them, 
												and not on God, for succour and 
												protection. And the reference 
												may be, not only to the bargain 
												with Pul, but to the general 
												profusion of the government in 
												forming foreign alliances; in 
												which the latter kings, both of 
												Israel and Judah, were equally 
												culpable, as appears by the 
												history of the collateral reigns 
												of Ahaz and Pekah. It must be 
												observed, “every forbidden 
												alliance with idolaters was a 
												part of the spiritual 
												incontinence of the nation.” — 
												Horsley.
 
 Verse 10
 Hosea 8:10. Yea, though they 
												have hired — Namely, allies; 
												among the nations — And have 
												been no way solicitous to gain 
												my favour or help; now will I 
												gather them — I will now (though 
												they make so little account of 
												my power) bring those very 
												allies, namely, the Assyrians, 
												against them. Here God tells 
												them, that whatever sums they 
												might offer, or expense they 
												might be at, in order to raise 
												armies of foreign auxiliaries, 
												he would imbody those armies, he 
												would press the men, paid by 
												their money, into his own 
												service against them. And they 
												shall sorrow a little — Or, in a 
												little time; for the burden of 
												the king of princes — “They 
												shall be severely galled by the 
												yoke of the Assyrian king, and 
												of the princes set over his 
												several provinces.” — Newcome. 
												Bishop Horsley, who thinks that 
												the kings and princes, or 
												rulers, of Israel are here 
												intended, renders this clause 
												differently, thus: And ere long 
												they shall sorrow on account of 
												the burden, the king and the 
												rulers: that is, “Ere long the 
												king and the rulers will lament 
												the impolitic expense incurred 
												in gifts and presents to their 
												faithless allies, and the burden 
												of taxes for that purpose laid 
												upon the people.” The reading of
 
 ושׂרים, and rulers, “is 
												supported,” says he, “by such a 
												weight of authority, that I 
												cannot but adopt it; and yet 
												there is no difficulty in the 
												construction of the common text. 
												For it might be thus rendered: 
												And ere long the rulers shall 
												sorrow for the burden of the 
												king, that is, for the burden 
												imposed by the king [namely, the 
												king of Israel] in taxes.”
 
 Verse 11-12
 Hosea 8:11-12. Because Ephraim 
												hath made many altars to sin — 
												“Since the Israelites, forsaking 
												that one altar at which alone 
												God required them to serve him, 
												idolatrously multiplied altars 
												to themselves, — altars against 
												God’s command; (to do which was 
												manifestly a sin in them;) 
												therefore shall those, their 
												beloved altars, be accordingly 
												occasions of great sin, and as 
												such imputed to them to their 
												condemnation.” The meaning is, 
												that
 
 “God would give them up, to run 
												on in their evil courses, till 
												their iniquity was full, and 
												they were ripe for destruction; 
												and then that God would deliver 
												them into the hands of their 
												enemies, who should compel them 
												to do that service at, and to, 
												their idolatrous altars, which 
												should appear a manifest 
												punishment to them for those of 
												their own. So should they be 
												punished by that wherein they 
												had offended.” — Pocock. I have 
												written to him the great things 
												of my law — Or, many things, as 
												רביmay be translated. The 
												Vulgate renders it, multiplices 
												leges meas, my manifold laws. 
												That law which I gave them by 
												Moses, containing rules 
												excellent in themselves, and 
												such as would have made them 
												great in the eyes of their 
												neighbours, they have 
												disregarded, as if it had 
												neither reason nor authority, 
												and did not concern them: see 
												Deuteronomy 4:6; Deuteronomy 
												4:8.
 
 Verse 13
 Hosea 8:13. They sacrifice 
												flesh, &c., and eat it, but the 
												Lord accepteth them not — They 
												offer sacrifices indeed, but 
												their sacrifices are not 
												acceptable to God, not being 
												offered with a pious and devout 
												mind. Dr. Wheeler translates the 
												clause, They have sacrificed the 
												choicest sacrifices, and have 
												eaten flesh: Jehovah taketh not 
												delight therein. Now will he 
												remember their iniquity, &c. — 
												God supported the Jews, that 
												they might support the true 
												religion; which as they had now 
												neglected to do, there was no 
												reason why God should support 
												and defend them against their 
												enemies. They shall return to 
												Egypt — Going into Egypt seems 
												to have been a proverbial 
												expression for extreme misery; 
												and may here denote, that they 
												should go into a state of 
												captivity and bondage as bad as 
												that which their forefathers had 
												suffered in Egypt. Or else, 
												taken literally, it might be 
												intended to signify, that they 
												should seek the alliance and 
												friendship of Egypt, contrary to 
												the faith they had given to the 
												Assyrians, which would bring on 
												their destruction. This proved 
												to be the case, as the reader 
												will see by consulting 2 Kings 
												17:4-5, “The king of Israel sent 
												messengers to So, king of Egypt, 
												and brought no presents to the 
												king of Assyria, as he had done 
												year by year; therefore the king 
												of Assyria shut him up, and 
												bound him in prison. Then the 
												king of Assyria came up 
												throughout the land, took 
												Samaria, and carried Israel away 
												into Assyria.”
 
 Verse 14
 Hosea 8:14. For Israel hath 
												forgotten his Maker — Hath 
												forgotten him who formed them 
												into a people, preserved and 
												advanced them, and conferred on 
												them all those privileges 
												wherein they excelled all other 
												nations: either they have not 
												remembered him at all, or have 
												done it without reverence, 
												gratitude, love, or 
												consideration of the duty and 
												service which they owe him. And 
												buildeth temples — For 
												idolatrous worship. And Judah 
												hath multiplied fenced cities — 
												To secure themselves from the 
												invasion of the enemy. When the 
												Jews saw what incursions were 
												made upon the Israelites, or the 
												ten tribes, by the Assyrians, 
												they diligently set about 
												fortifying their cities, 
												thinking to find security in so 
												doing, and putting greater 
												confidence in their 
												fortifications than in God’s 
												protection. But I will send 
												afire upon his cities — My 
												judgments shall destroy them, as 
												surely as if a fire had been 
												kindled in them. Or the 
												threatening may be interpreted 
												literally; for when Sennacherib 
												took all the fenced cities of 
												Judah, except Jerusalem, he 
												undoubtedly set fire to many of 
												them, as conquerors were wont to 
												do in those days.
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