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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hosea 13:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hosea 13:6

According to their pasture, so were they filled; they were filled, and their heart was exalted; therefore have they forgotten me.

6. According to their pasture, &c.] Rather, When they fed, they waxed full. The idea of the verse is that Israel’s apostasy sprang from his enjoying God’s gifts without thinking of the Giver, comp. Hos 2:8, Hos 4:7, Hos 10:1. The expressions were probably prophetic commonplaces; comp. Deu 8:11-15; Deu 31:20; Deu 32:15; Deu 32:18.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

According to their pasture, so were they filled – o: He implies that their way of being filled was neither good nor praiseworthy, in that he says, they were filled according to their pastures. What or of what kind were these their pastures? What they longed for, what they murmured for, and spoke evil of God. For instance, when they said, who wil give us flesh to eat? We remember the flesh which we did eat in Egypt freely. Our soul is dried up, because our eyes see nothing but this manna Num 11:4-6. Since they desired such things in such wise, and, desiring, were filled with them to loathing, well are they called their pastures. For they sought God, not for Himself, but for them. They who follow God for Himself, things of this sort are not called their pastures, but the word of God is their pasture, according to that, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word, which proceedeth out of the mouth of God Deu 8:3.

These words, according to their pastures, convey strong blame. It is as if he said, in their eating and drinking, they received their whole reward for leaving the land of Egypt and receiving for a time the law of God. It is sin, to follow God for such pastures. Blaming such in the Gospel, Jesus saith, Verily, verily, I say unto you, ye seek Me, not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves and were filled. Labor not for the meat which perisheth, but for that which endureth unto everlasting life Joh 6:26-27. In like way, let all think themselves blamed, who attend the altar of Christ, not for the love of the sacraments which they celebrate, but only to live of the altar. This fullness is like that of which the Psalmist says, The Lord gave them their desire and sent leanness withal into their bones Psa 106:15. For such fullness of the belly generates elation of spirit; such satiety produces forgetfulness of God. It is more difficult to bear prosperity than adversity. They who, in the waste howling wilderness, had been retained in a certain degree of duty, forgat God altogether in the good land which he had given them. Whence it follows;

They were filled, and their heart was exalted; therefore have they forgotten Me – For they owned not that they had all from Him, therefore they were puffed up with pride, and forgot Him in and by reason of His gifts. This was the aggravation of their sin, with which Hosea often reproaches them Hos 2:5; Hos 4:7; Hos 10:1. They abused Gods gifts, (as Christians do now) against Himself, and did the more evil, the more good God was to them. God had forewarned them of this peril, When thou shalt have eaten and be full, beware lest thou forget the Lord which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage (Deu 6:11-12; add Deu 8:11, …). He pictured it to them with the song of Moses; Jeshurun waxed fat and kicked; thou art waxen fat; thou art grown thick; thou art covered with fatness; then he forsook God which made him; thou hast forgotten God that formed thee Deu 32:15, Deu 32:18.

They acted (as in one way or other do most Christians now,) as though God had commanded what he foretold of their evil deeds, or what he warned them against. As their fathers did, so did they Act 7:51. They walked in the statutes of the pagan, whom the Lord cast out from before the children of Israel, and of the kings of Israel which they made. They did wicked things to provoke the Lord to anger. And the Lord testified against Israel and against Judah by all the prophets and by all the seers, saying, turn ye from your evil ways. And they hearkened not, and hardened their necks, like to the neck of their fathers, that did not believe in the Lord their God 2Ki 17:8, 2Ki 17:11, 2Ki 17:13-14. : The words are true also of those rich and ungrateful, whom God hath filled with spiritual or temporal goods. But they, being in honor, and having no understanding, abuse the gifts of God, and, becoming unworthy of the benefits which they have received, have their hearts uplifted and swollen with pride, despising others, glorying as though they had not received, and not obeying the commands of God. Of such the Lord saith in Isaiah, I have nourished and brought up children and they have rebelled against Me.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Hos 13:6

According to their pasture, so were they filled . . . therefore have they forgotten Me.

The conjunction of secular prosperity and spiritual perversity

Here are men in good physical circumstances, in rich pastures well fed, getting thereby proud in heart and forgetful of their God.


I.
It is a common conjunction. Wealth in the sinful heart tends–

1. To promote self-indulgence- the pampering of appetites and the gratification of sinful lusts.

2. To foster indolence. It weakens and generally destroys the motive to industry.


II.
It is an incongruous conjunction. Secular prosperity ought to lead to spiritual devotion.

1. The more temporal good we have, the more means we have for the promotion of spiritual excellence. Property puts us in possession of a power to procure books, leisure, teachers, and all other aids to spiritual improvement.

2. The more temporal good we have, the more motives we have for the cultivation of spiritual excellence. The Bible urges the mercies of God as an incentive to holy life: We beseech you by the mercies of God, etc.

3. The more temporal good we have, the more obligations we have for the cultivation of spiritual improvement. Thus the incongruity of the conjunction.


III.
It is a sinful conjunction. The curse of heaven is on it. It is sinful–

1. Because it is an abuse of Gods blessings.

2. It involves an infraction of Gods laws.

He has commanded us in everything, by prayer and supplication, to make known our requests unto Him. (Homilist.)

Poisoned pastures

The grazing land was beautifully green, and appeared most desirable for flocks and herds. A farmer turned his sheep into the meadow, but after a short time some of them fell sick, and eventually all of them were affected. No one could understand the reason, until it was discovered that a flock of diseased sheep had previously occupied the field, the grass of which had become tainted and the pasture poisoned. How careful all should be of the books they read, the companionships they form, and the amusements in which they indulge! Do they taint the mind and poison the soul? For according to their pasture so is their life.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 6. According to their pasture] They had a rich pasture, and were amply supplied with every good. They became exalted in their heart, forgat their God, and became a prey to their enemies. “He that exalteth himself shall be abased.”

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

According to their pasture, so were they filled; when they were come into Canaan, that land of springs, brooks, and rivers, that land of wheat, barley, vines, olives, and figs, as Deu 8:7-9; when they had abundance of all things for delight, as well as for necessary sustenance; when I had, like a good, careful, and wise shepherd, brought them into this rich pasture; they, like hungry beasts, ate to excess, ran into luxury and riot; epicure like, gorged themselves with sweet wines and delicious fare.

They were filled: either this is a reduplication of the charge to confirm it, I say, they thus luxuriously lived; or else it is elliptical, and to be made out thus,

And so soon as they were filled; and thus it will be parallel to that,

Jeshurun waxed fat, Deu 32:13-15.

Their heart was exalted; grew proud, entertained high thoughts of their progenitors worth, their nobleness by descent, their worthiness and righteousness above other people; they thought of God as of man, that he proportioned his blessings to what excellency was found in those he did good to.

Therefore have they forgotten me; so they have forgotten me, who found them in slavery, poverty, reproach, and tears in Egypt, out of which I saved them; and they have most scandalously made them gods, Worshipped them, and with sacrilegious unthankfulness given the praise of all I did for them to dumb idols, though I warned them of it beforehand, Deu 6:11,12; 8:13,14.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

6. Image from cattle, waxingwanton in abundant pasture (compare Hos 2:5;Hos 2:8; Deu 32:13-15).In proportion as I fed them to the full, they were so satiated that”their heart was exalted”; a sad contrast to the time when,by God’s blessing, Ephraim truly “exalted himself in Israel”(Ho 13:1).

therefore have they forgottenmethe very reason why men should remember God (namely,prosperity, which comes from Him) is the cause often of theirforgetting Him. God had warned them of this danger (Deu 6:11;Deu 6:12).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

According to their pasture, so were they filled,…. When they came into the land of Canaan, which was a land flowing with milk and honey, they were like a flock of sheep brought from short commons to a good pasture; and there they tilled themselves to the fail, and indulged to luxury and excess, pampered themselves, and made provision for the flesh to fulfil its lusts, and became carnal and sensual:

they were filled, and their hearts were exalted: they were elated with their plenty, and grew proud and haughty, and attributed their fulness not to the goodness of God, but to their own excellency and merit; and put their trust and confidence in their affluence, and not in the Lord; and thought themselves safe and secure, and out of all danger, and concluded it would never be otherwise with them:

therefore have they forgotten me; the Author of their beings, the Father of their mercies, and God of all their comforts; they forgot to give him praise and glory for their abundance; to place their trust and have their dependence on him, and to serve and worship him; this was the consequence of their luxury and pride. The Targum is,

“therefore they left my worship;”

they waxed fat, and kicked, and lightly esteemed and forsook the God and Rock of their salvation, De 32:15.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

But prosperity made Israel proud, so that it forgot its God. Hos 13:6. “As they had their pasture, they became full; they became full, and their heart was lifted up: therefore have they forgotten me.” This reproof is taken almost word for word from Deu 8:11. (cf. Deu 31:20; Deu 32:15.). , answering to their pasture, i.e., because they had such good pasture in the land given them by the Lord. The very thing of which Moses warned the people in Deu 8:11 has come to pass. Therefore are the threats of the law against the rebellious fulfilled upon them.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

The Prophet shows here that the people were in every way intractable. He has indeed handled this argument in other places; but the repetition is not superfluous. After he had said that the people were ungrateful in not continuing in the service of their Redeemer, by whom they had been so kindly and bountifully treated in the desert, where they must have perished through famine and want, had not the Lord in an unwonted manner brought them help in their great necessity, he now adds, “The Lord would have also allured you by other means, had you not been of a wholly wild and barbarous disposition: but it is hence manifest, that you are utterly disobedient; for after you have been brought out of the desert, you came to rich pastures.” For the land of Israel is here compared to rich and fertile pastures; as though he said, “God has placed you in an inheritance where you might eat to the full, as when a shepherd leads his sheep to a spot especially fertile.” What did take place? To their pastures they came, and were filled; they were filled, and elevated became their heart, and they forgat me

Since, then, the Israelites had extinguished the memory of their redemption, after the Lord had fed them when hungry in the desert, and since in their fulness they rejected God, and shook off his yoke, and, like ferocious horses, kicked against him, it became evident that their nature was so unnameable, that they could by no means be reduced to obedience or submission. We shall defer the rest till tomorrow.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(6) According to their pasture.Rather, As they pastured. (Comp. the language of Deu. 8:7-18; Deu. 31:20; Deu. 32:15.) The gifts of Divine love concealing the giver.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

6. Jehovah’s care for Israel and the resulting prosperity failed to inspire gratitude; on the contrary, it made the people proud and arrogant and caused them to forget God.

According to their pasture The rich blessings bestowed upon them.

They were filled With prosperity; but they failed to recognize the giver (Hos 2:8; Hos 4:7; Hos 10:1; compare Deu 8:11 ff; Deu 31:20, etc.). The verb is repeated for the sake of emphasis. It is possible, however, that the two verb forms, with a slight change in the second, should be combined to form one expression, “They were completely filled.”

Their heart was exalted Prosperity caused pride and arrogance.

Forgotten me Arrogance led to forgetfulness of God (Hos 8:14; Isa 17:10); they felt that they could get along without the divine help.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Hos 13:6. According to their pasture, so were they filled But they were filled in their pastures. Houbigant.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Hos 13:6 According to their pasture, so were they filled; they were filled, and their heart was exalted; therefore have they forgotten me.

Ver. 6. According to their pasture so were they filled ] Saturity bred security; fulness, forgetfulness. This was a foul fault, and is much complained of, Deu 32:13-14 Psa 78:10-11 . God had brought them out of a place of great drought into large and fat pastures, a land flowing with milk and honey, where he filled their “hearts with food and gladness,” Act 14:17 , where he fed them among the lilies, daily and daintily. But they, as if God had hired them to be wicked, basely abused his bounty to luxury, and having fulness of bread, and abundance of idleness, grew proud as Sodom, and out of measure sinful, Eze 16:49 ; forgetting God and his will, themselves and their duties, and running out into all excess of riot, though they had been fairly warned and commanded to the contrary, Deu 8:10 , &c. Their heart grew fat as grease, and became as a foul stomach, which the more you fill it the more you spill it; or like fed horses, they grew fierce and filthy, Jer 5:7-8 , there was no hoe with them, (Hippoc.). See Eze 34:16 ; Eze 34:18 ; Eze 34:20 . While they were in the wilderness God knew them, yea, he knew their souls in adversity: they both knew God, and were known of him. But now, God neither knew them so much, nor they him; they lived not upon him now, as once in the wilderness; but being “filled, yea, filled,” Gal 3:1-2 , (you have the word here twice together), to note how they fell upon those allowed delights, and even glutted themselves, gorged themselves; they flew upon them, as those in Saul’s time did upon the spoil of the Philistines; they fed without fear, as those Pseudo-Christians in Jude, Jdg 1:12 ; they gormandized, as those flesh mongers before the flood, more like beasts than men, as the Greek word signifieth, , Luk 17:27 . And hereupon

their hearts were exalted ] Prosperity and plenty will easily blow up such a blab as pride, in the best hearts, if care be not taken to the contrary; as Agur knew, and therefore prayed, Give me a mediocrity, “lest I be full and deny,” and proudly ask, “Who is the Lord?” Pro 30:9 ; and as Solomon felt, whose wealth did him more harm than his wisdom did him good, Ecc 2:1-26 ; and as Hezekiah experimented to his cost, Isa 39:1-8 . Indeed of Jehoshaphat it is noted, 2Ch 17:3 , that he walked in the first ways of David his father (for the truth is, David’s first ways were his best ways; neither was he ever so good and tender as when he was hunted as a partridge in the mountains); and of Vespasian it is reported that he was made the better man by being made emperor ( Vespasianus unus accepto imperio melior rectus ); but he was a rare bird and had scarce his fellow again. It is the property of prosperity to turn out the heart and ubi uber, ibi tuber. where there is pleny there is a tumor. See Psa 73:3 ; Psa 73:6 1Ti 6:17 , they eat and are swelled, as being poisoned with pride; they are fatted, but it is for the slaughter.

Therefore have they forgotten me ] Non tam theoretice quam practice, they remember there is a God, but they honour him not as God; they forget their engagements to him, and through the pride of their countenance, they seek not after him, Psa 10:4 , they consider not their distance, their dependence, &c. Now of all things God cannot abide to be forgotten, Isa 1:2-3 , it is a sin that he can hardly pardon, Jer 5:7 . See Trapp on “ Hos 8:14

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

According to their pasture, &c.: i.e. the more I fed them, the more they kicked against Me.

they were filled. Note the Figure of speech Anadiplosis (App-6), repeated for emphasis.

have they forgotten Me. Reference to Pentateuch (Deu 8:12-14; Deu 32:15).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

to: Hos 10:1, Deu 8:12-14, Deu 32:13-15, Neh 9:25, Neh 9:26, Neh 9:35, Jer 2:31

therefore: Hos 8:4, Deu 6:10-12, Deu 32:18, Psa 10:4, Isa 17:10, Jer 2:32

Reciprocal: Deu 31:20 – waxen fat Deu 31:21 – I know Deu 32:15 – then he 2Ch 12:1 – he forsook Job 21:15 – What is Pro 30:9 – I be full Isa 26:10 – favour Jer 3:21 – and they have Jer 5:7 – I had fed Eze 23:35 – Because Eze 23:42 – a voice Eze 28:5 – and thine Hos 2:7 – for Hos 4:6 – seeing Hos 4:7 – they were Hos 8:14 – forgotten 1Ti 5:11 – to wax 1Ti 6:17 – that they

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Hos 13:6. According to their pasture, The Lord provided abundant pasturage for his stock, but the sheep devoured it to excess and then forgot the Shepherd who had done so much for them. Heart was exalted refers to the pride that took possession of the people as a result of their prosperity.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Hos 13:6-8. According to their pasture, &c. As I was their shepherd, and provided pasture for them, so they were fully fed; they had an abundant plenty of all things. And their heart was exalted The consequence of their having this plenty was, that from thence they grew proud and high-minded. Therefore they have forgotten me They so abused my kindness to them, as to make it the occasion of their ingratitude; for in the pride of their heart, which the miraculous supply of their wants for so long a time produced in them, they forgot their benefactor. Therefore I will be unto them as a lion That suddenly seizes upon and tears his prey: that is, I will utterly consume them from being a nation, and give them up into the hands of such enemies as will show them no mercy; as a leopard by the way That lies in wait by the way; will I observe them Watch for them, that I may be sure to take them, or watch all opportunities to destroy them. I will meet them as a bear, &c. In the greatest fury imaginable; bereaved of her whelps A circumstance which adds a particular degree of fierceness. They never venture to fire upon a young bear when the mother is near: for if the cub drop, she becomes enraged to a degree little short of madness; and if she get a sight of the enemy, will only quit her revenge with her life. Cooks Voyage, vol. 3. page 307. And will rend the caul of their heart The seat of the blood, with which wild beasts love to glut themselves. The wild beast shall tear them The Assyrian shall prove as a wild beast to them. The word , here used, signifies, shall cleave them, or rip them. Bishop Horsley renders it, shall tear them limb from limb; observing, The verb expresses a violent distraction and severing of united parts in any manner: and is to be differently rendered with regard to the particular agent and patient. When the agent is a wild beast, and the patient the beasts prey, it must be tearing limb from limb: tearing, by itself, is inadequate.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

When they entered the Promised Land and began to enjoy rich pastures, they soon became self-satisfied, proud, and forgot their God. Prosperity is often a greater temptation to depart from conscious dependence on God than adversity is, and Israel fell into that trap.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)