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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Habakkuk 3:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Habakkuk 3:6

He stood, and measured the earth: he beheld, and drove asunder the nations; and the everlasting mountains were scattered, the perpetual hills did bow: his ways [are] everlasting.

6. stood, and measured ] “Measured” could only mean surveyed, measured with His eyes, and this might be supposed taken up again in “he looked” of next clause; but the parallelism with the next clause rather requires that the effect of His standing or taking His stand should be stated. Possibly the word “measured” has the sense of a similar word used Isa 24:19, he made the earth to rock. Sept. renders in the pass., the earth was shaken. The preceding verses describe the Theophany as seen in heaven, it has not yet touched the earth, though its baleful accompaniments of pestilence and fever-glow are spoken of. Now the tempest in which the Deity is shrouded descends and touches the earth, enfolding the heights within it. “He stood” means He took his stand, He set His foot; 2Sa 20:4; Isa 1:8; Eze 22:30. The earth felt His tread and rocked, Mic 1:3-4. Or, “stood” might describe an apparent stationariness of the storm-cloud during which it discharged itself, making the earth rock. Cf. Psa 29:4-5.

He beheld, and drove asunder ] He looked, and His look scared the nations into violent commotion. The term means to make one spring, up from terror, Job 37:1.

mountains were scattered ] Or, do cleave asunder. The sense is scarcely that the hills were scattered from one another, rather that the individual mountains were cleft. Cf. Zec 14:4, “His feet shall stand on the mount of Olives, and the mount of Olives shall cleave in the midst thereof, toward the east and toward the west.”

perpetual hills did bow ] Or, eternal hills. Gen 49:26; Deu 33:15. Their bowing refers to the sinking and rising motion, as in an earthquake, under the feet of Jehovah in the tempest.

His ways are everlasting ] R.V. his goings were as of old. If this sense were adopted it would decide that the previous description referred to a Theophany about to appear, which is compared to the former historical one, the term “going” being equivalent to way. The term “goings” however might be in apposition to “eternal hills,” and the meaning be that these hills were Jehovah’s eternal pathways the trailing tempests, in which Jehovah moves, are seen passing over the mountains, and thus these are considered the pathways of the Lord. Cf. Amo 4:13, “he treadeth upon the high places of the earth”; Mic 1:3.

The past tenses of A.V. might be retained in the verse, but as the poet feels himself in presence of the imposing phenomenon, it is perhaps better to throw them into the present:

He taketh his stand, and maketh the earth to quake,

He looketh, and causeth the nations to tremble;

And the everlasting mountains are cleft asunder,

The eternal hills do bow;

Even his pathways from of old.

The last line overloads the parallelism, and in whatever sense it be taken rather drags.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

He stood – It is a metaphor of his giving victory to Israel Tanchum.

And measured – So Kimchi, A. E., Rashi, Tanchum, Vulgate. It is borne out by Hithpolel. extended himself, 1Ki 17:21. By an interchange of dentals; might be = , and so the Aramaic and the Septuagint but in no other case do the two forms co-exist in Hebrew.

The earth – Joshua, after he had conquered the land, meted it out and divided it among the people. He who should come, should measure out the earth in its length and breadth, that earth which His glory filleth. He stood, as Stephen saw Him, Act 7:56, standing at the right hand of God. Isaiah saith, Isa 3:13 : The Lord standeth up to plead, and standeth to judge the people. He had not need to go forth, but, in the abode of His glory, He stood and beheld and with His eye measured the earth, as His own, whereas, before the cross, it lay under 1Co 2:5, the Prince of this world, and he had said, Luk 4:6, it is delivered unto me, and unto whomsoever I will, I give it. He measureth it, and gave it to His apostles. Mat 28:18; Mar 16:15 : all power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth. Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature, and, Psa 19:4, their sound is gone out into all lands, and their words into the ends of the world. He measureth it also, surveying and weighing all who dwell therein, their persons, qualities, deeds, good or bad, to requite them, as Judge of quick and dead; as David cast down Moab and measured them with a line, 2Sa 8:2, to put to death and to keep alive.

He beheld, and drove asunder the nations – or, made the nations to tremble. When Israel came out of Egypt and God divided the Red Sea before them, they sang: Exo 15:15-16 The people shall hear and be afraid; terror shall take hold of the inhabitants of Palestine; the mighty men of Moab, trembling shall take hold of them; all the inhabitants of Canaan shall melt away; fear and dread shall fall on them; by the greatness of Thy power they shall be still as a stone. Fear and awe were to be renewed. All nearness of God brings terror to sinful man. When the news came through the wise men, that they had, Mat 2:1-3, seen in the East the star of Him who was born, King of the Jews, not only was Herod the King troubled, but all Jerusalem with him. Pilate Joh 19:8 was afraid when he condemned Jesus; the high priests wondered whereunto this should grow, and expostulated, Act 5:24, Act 5:28, ye have filled Jerusalem with your doctrine, and intend to bring this Mans blood upon us. Pagandom was as a beleaguered city, mastered by an ubiquitous Presence, which they knew not how to meet . The state is beset: the Christians are in their fields. in their forts, in their islands. Every sex, age, condition, and now even rank is going over to this sect. The fierceness of the persecutions was the measure of their fear. They put forth all human might to stamp out the spark, lest their gods, and the greatness of the empire which they ascribed to their gods, should fall before this unknown Power.

And the everlasting mountains were scattered; the perpetual hills did bow – all power, great or small, gave way before Him. All which withstood was scattered asunder, all which in pride lifted itself up was brought low, although before the coming of the Saviour it had ever gone with neck erect, and none could humble its pride. There is something so marvelous about those ancient mountains. There they stood before man was on the earth; they are so solid, man so slight; they have survived so many generations of man; they will long survive us; they seem as if they would stand forever; nothing could stand before the might of God. What symbol could be more apt? To the greater pride the heavier lot is assigned; the mountains lifted on high above the earth and, as it were, looking down upon it, are scattered or dispersed, as when a stone flieth in pieces under the stroke of the hammer. The hills are bowed down only; and this may be the pride of man humbled under the yoke of Christ.

His ways are everlasting – Everlasting is set over against everlasting. The everlasting of the creature, that which had been as long as creation had been, co-existing with its whole duration, its most enduring parts, are as things past and gone; the everlasting mountains, the hills of eternity, have been scattered in pieces and bowed, and are no more. Over against these stands the everpresent eternity of God. His ways are everlasting, ordered everlastingly, existing everlastingly in the Divine Mind, and, when in act among us, without change in Him. The prophet blends in these great words, things seemingly contrary, ways which imply progress, eternity which is unchangeable God ever worketh, and ever resteth; unchangeable, yet changing all; He changeth His works, His purpose unchanged . For Thou art Most High, and art not changed, neither in Thee doth today come to a close; yet in Thee it doth come to a close; because all such things also are in Thee. For they had no way to pass away, unless Thou heldest them together. And since Thy years fail not, Thy years are one Today. How many of ours and our fathers years have flowed away through Thy today; and from it received the measure and the mould of such being as they had; and still others shall flow away, and so receive the mould of their degree of being. But Thou art still the Same; and all things of tomorrow, and all beyond, and all of yesterday, and all behind it, Thou wilt do in this today, Thou hast done in this today

To these His goings, a highway is made by the breaking down of all which exalted itself, as Isaiah had said, The loftiness of man shall be bowed down, and the haughtiness of men shall be made low and the Lord Alone shall be exalted in that day Isa 2:17; and The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low Isa 40:3.

Bernard in Ps. Qui habitat. Serra. xi. 8: The Everlasting ways of the Everlasting God are Mercy and Truth, by these Ways are the hills of the world and the proud demons, the princes of the darkness of this world, bowed down, who knew not the way of mercy and truth nor remembered its paths. What hath he to do with truth, who is a liar and the father of it, and of whom it is written, he abode not in the Truth? But how far he is from Mercy, our misery witnesseth, inflicted on us by him. When was he ever merciful, who was a murderer from the beginning? So then those swelling hills were bowed down from the Everlasting Ways, when through their own crookedness they sunk away from the straight ways of the Lord, and became not so much ways as precipices. How much more prudently and wisely are other hills bowed down and humbled by these ways to salvation! For they were not bowed from them, as parting from their straightness, but the Everlasting Ways themselves bowed down. May we not now see the hills of the world bowed down, when those who are high and mighty with devoted submission bow themselves before the Lord. and worship at His Feet? Are they not bowed down, when from their own destructive loftiness of vanity and cruelty, they are turned to the humble way of mercy and truth?

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 6. He stood, and measured the earth] erets, the land; he divided the promised land among the twelve tribes. This is the allusion; and this the prophet had in his eye. God not only made a general assignment of the land to the Hebrews; but he even divided it into such portions as the different families required. Here were both power and condescension. When a conqueror had subdued a country, he divided it among his soldiers. Among the Romans, those among whom the conquered lands were divided were termed beneficiary; and the lands beneficia, as being held on the beneficence of the sovereign.

He beheld, and drove asunder the nations] The nations of Canaan, the Hittites, Hivites, Jebusites, c., and all who opposed his people. Even his look dispersed them.

The everlasting mountains were scattered] Or, broken asunder. This may refer to the convulsions on Mount Sinai and to the earth quake which announced the descent of the Most High. See Ex 19:18. “God occupied the summit of the eternal Mount Sinai; and led his people over the eternal mountains of Arabia Petraea; and this sense is preferable to the figurative one, that his ways or doings are predetermined front everlasting.” –Newcome.

The epithets ad, and olam, eternal, and everlasting, are applied to mountains and immense rocks, because no other parts of nature are less subject to decay or change, than these immense masses of earth and stone, and that almost indestructible stone, granite, out of which Sinai appears to be formed. A piece of the beautiful granite of this mountain now lies before me. This is a figurative description of the passage of the Israelites through the deserts of Arabia, over mountains, rocks, and through the trackless wilderness; over and through which God, by his power and providence, gave them a safe passage.

The following beautiful piece from the Fragments of AEschylus will illustrate the preceding description, and please the learned reader.


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AESCHYLI Fragm.

Confound not God with man; nor madly deem

His form is mortal, and of flesh like thine.

Thou know’st him not. Sometimes like fire he glows

In wrath severe; sometimes as water flows;

In brooding darkness now his power conceals

And then in brutes that mighty power reveals.

In clouds tempestuous we the Godhead find;

He mounts the storm, and rides the winged wind;

In vivid lightnings flashes from on high;

In rattling thunders rends the lowering sky;

Fountains and rivers, seas and floods obey,

And ocean’s deep abyss yields to his sway;

The mountains tremble, and the hills sink down,

Crumbled to dust by the Almighty’s frown.

When God unfolds the terrors of his eye,

All things with horror quake, and in confusion lie.

J. B. B. CLARKE.

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

He stood; gave his presence with Joshua and others, as one that stood by while the work was done.

Measured: he divided to them their inheritance, and did this without toil or difficulty, his very presence with his people was enough to make it known what he allotted to them. The earth; the Promised Land.

He beheld; looked with a frowning countenance, with anger in his eye.

Drove asunder; cast them out, or caused them to flee, as many did out of that country; his eye did this, for he looked on them and did this.

The nations; the cursed nations.

The everlasting mountains were scattered; either literally understood, as Nah 1:5, and may relate to that the psalmist minds, Psa 114:4,6, when the whole mount, all the mountainous parts of Sinai, tremble, Exo 19:18, &c.; or figuratively, the state of these nations, seeming as immovable as mountains, yet soon shook and dissolved, before the rebuke of the Lord.

The perpetual hills did bow; an elegant immutation of the phrase, to illustrate and confirm the same thing.

His ways are everlasting; the wisdom, goodness, justice, holiness, faithfulness, and power of God, which he showeth in the methods of his governing his church and people, are everlasting, they are the same, and where the same circumstances concur the same effects of his power may be hoped for. So the prophet pursueth the argument; they are everlasting loving-kindnesses with which he embraceth his church.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

6. He stood, and measured theearthJehovah, in His advance, is represented as stoppingsuddenly, and measuring the earth with His all-seeing glance,whereat there is universal consternation. MAURER,from a different root, translates, “rocked the earth”;which answers better to the parallel “drove asunder”; theHebrew for which latter, however, may be better translated,”made to tremble.”

everlasting mountainswhichhave ever been remembered as retaining the same place and form fromthe foundation of the world.

did bowas it were, inreverent submission.

his ways are everlastingHismarvellous ways of working for the salvation of His people mark Hiseverlasting character: such as He was in His workings for themformerly, such shall He be now.

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

He stood and measured the earth,…. This alludes to the ark of the Lord, the symbol of his presence, standing and abiding at Gilgal for the space of fourteen years, while the land of Canaan was subdued by Joshua; and then measured out by him, and divided by lot, as an inheritance to the children of Israel, according to the direction and appointment of the Lord, Jos 13:1 c.: here it may have respect to the mission of the apostles into the various parts of the world, and the distribution of it among them some being sent into one part, and some into another, called their particular line and measure,

2Co 10:14 some into India, others into Ethiopia; some into Asia, and others into Europe; by which means the Gospel was preached everywhere, and great part of the world became Christians:

he beheld, and drove asunder the nations; with a look of his he made them give way; he drove the Canaanites out of the land, and separated them from one another, and scattered them about, to make room for his people Israel, Ps 78:55:

and the everlasting mountains were scattered; or, “were broken” i:

the perpetual hills did bow; the mountains and hills that were from the beginning of the creation, that were settled upon their bases, and never moved, now trembled, shook, and bowed, as Sinai and others did, at the presence of the God of Israel; see Jud 5:5 or rather, figuratively, these may design the kingdoms and states, kings and princes, greater and lesser, belonging to the land of Canaan, which were shaken, moved, and taken by the Israelites, and brought into subjection to them; and in like manner kings and kingdoms, comparable to mountains and hills, through the preaching of the Gospel, and the power of Christ attending it, were brought to yield unto him, at the downfall of Paganism in the Roman empire: this is signified by every mountain and island being moved out of their places, and kings and great men calling to the rocks and mountains to fall on them, and hide them from the wrath of the Lamb, Re 6:14:

his ways [are] everlasting; and what he has done in ages past he can do again; his power, his wisdom, and his grace, are unchangeably the same; and all he does in time, every step he takes, is according to his counsels, purposes, and decrees in eternity, which infallibly come to pass; nor can he be hindered and frustrated in the execution of them; as he has begun, he will go on; as he has set up his kingdom in the world, he will support and maintain it; and though there are many obstructions and remoras in the way of it, he will go on, and remove them, until he has thoroughly established it, and brought it to its highest glory, which he has designed; all mountains and hills are nothing before him; he can soon make them a plain; see

Re 11:15: or, “the ways of the world k are his”; the world is under his government, and all things in it subject to his providence; he can rule and overrule all things for his own glory, and the good of his interest, and he will do it; everything is subject to his control, and under his direction; not a step can be taken without his will. This the prophet observes along with the above things, to encourage the faith and expectation of the saints, that the work of the Lord will be revived, and his kingdom and interest promoted and established in the world; though there may, and will, be many difficulties and distresses previous to it.

i “contriti sunt”, Pagninus, Montanus; so R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel Moed, fol. 95. 1. k “itinera mundi”, Vatablus, Tigurine version.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

“He stands, and sets the earth reeling: He looks, and makes nations tremble; primeval mountains burst in pieces, the early hills sink down: His are ways of the olden time. Hab 3:7. I saw the tents of Cushan under affliction: the curtains of the land of Midian tremble.” God coming from afar has now drawn near and taken His stand, to smite the nations as a warlike hero (cf. Hab 3:8, Hab 3:9, and Hab 3:11, Hab 3:12). This is affirmed in , He has stationed Himself, not “He steps forth or appears.” This standing of Jehovah throws the earth and the nations into trembling. cannot mean to measure here, for there is no thought of any measuring of the earth, and it cannot be shown that madad is used in the sense of measuring with the eye (Ros. and Hitzig). Moreover, the choice of the poel, instead of the piel, would still remain unexplained, and the parallelism of the clauses would be disregarded. We must therefore follow the Chaldee, Ges., Delitzsch, and others, who take as the poel of = , to set in a reeling motion. It is only with this interpretation that the two parallel clauses correspond, in which , the hiphil of , to cause to shake or tremble, answers to . This explanation is also required by what follows. For just as Hab 3:7 unquestionably gives a further expansion of , so does … contain the explanation of . The everlasting hills crumble ( from ), i.e., burst and resolve themselves into dust, and the hills sink down, pass away, and vanish (compare the similar description in Nah 1:5 and Mic 1:4). (= , Deu 33:15) in parallelism with are the primeval mountains, as being the oldest and firmest constituents of the globe, which have existed from the beginning ( , Job 20:4), and were formed at the creation of the earth (Psa 90:2; Job 15:7; Pro 8:25). is not to be taken relatively, and connected with what precedes, “which are the old paths,” according to which the hills of God are called everlasting ways (Hitzig); because this does not yield a sense in harmony with the context. It is a substantive clause, and to be taken by itself: everlasting courses or goings are to Him, i.e., He now goes along, as He went along in the olden time. , the going, advancing, or ways of God, analogous to the , the course of the primitive world (Job 22:15). The prophet had Psa 68:25 floating before his mind, in which halkhoth ‘elohm denote the goings of God with His people, or the ways which God had taken from time immemorial in His guidance of them. As He once came down upon Sinai in the cloudy darkness, the thunder, lightning, and fire, to raise Israel up to be His covenant nation, so that the mountains shook (cf. Jdg 5:5); so do the mountains and hills tremble and melt away at His coming now. And as He once went before His people, and the tidings of His wondrous acts at the Red Sea threw the neighbouring nations into fear and despair (Exo 15:14-16); so now, when the course of God moves from Teman to the Red Sea, the nations on both sides of it are filled with terror. Of these, two are individualized in Hab 3:7, viz., Cushan and Midian. By Cushan we are not to understand the Mesopotamian king named Cushan Rishathaim, who subjugated Israel for eight years after the death of Joshua (Jdg 3:8.); for this neither agrees with , nor with the introduction of Midian in the parallel clause. The word is a lengthened form for Such, and the name of the African Ethiopians. The Midianites are mentioned along with them, as being inhabitants of the Arabian coast of the Red Sea, which was opposite to them (see at Exo 2:15). , the tents with their inhabitants, the latter being principally intended. The same remark applies to , lit., the tent-curtains of the land of Midian, i.e., of the tents pitched in the land of Midian.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

He says that God possessed every power to subdue the earth to himself, and that he could at his will destroy it, yea, dissolve mountains as veil as nations. Some of the Jews understood this of the ark, which stood at that time in Gilead. They then suppose that the Prophet meant this in short—that when God chose a place for the ark of the covenant in Gilgal, that he determined then what he would do, and that he then in his secret counsel divided the land, so that each should have his portion by lot. This, it is true, was accomplished shortly after, for Joshua, as we know, divided it by lot between the tribes. But what the Jews affirm of the ark seems to me strained and frigid. Habakkuk, on the contrary, means by the word stand, that God was openly conspicuous, like him who assumes an erect posture, so that he is seen at a distance. In this sense we are to take the expression that God stood.

The measuring, of the earth is not to be confined to Judea, but is to be extended to the whole world. God, he says, has measured the earth. To measure the earth is what properly belongs to a sovereign king; and it is done that he may assign to each his portion. Except God, then, had a sovereign right over the earth and the whole world, Habakkuk would not have ascribed to him this office; and this we learn from the verse itself, for he immediately subjoins, that the nations, as it were, melted away, that the mountains were destroyed, that the hills were bowed down

We hence see that by earth we are not to understand Judea only, but the whole world; as though he had said, that when God appeared on mount Sinai, he made it fully evident that the earth was under his power and authority, so that he could determine whatever he pleased, and prescribe limits to all nations. For he does not speak of God here as having, like a surveyor, a measuring line; but he says, that he measured the earth as one capable even then of changing the boundaries of the whole world; nay, he intimates that it was he himself who had at first created the earth and assigned it to men. It is indeed true that the nations did not then melt away, nor were the mountains demolished, nor the hills bowed down; but the Prophet simply means, that God’s power then appeared, which was capable of shaking the whole world.

But he calls these the mountains of eternity and the hills ages, which had been from the beginning fixed on their own foundations. For if an earthquake happens on a plain, it seems less wonderful; and then if any of those mountains cleave, which are not so firmly fixed, it may be on account of some hollow places; for when the winds fill the caverns, they are forced to burst, and they cleave the mountains and the earth. But the Prophet relates an unusual thing, and wholly different from the ordinary course of nature—that the mountains of eternity, which had been from the beginning, and had remained without any change, were thus demolished and bowed down. In short, the Prophet intended by all means to raise up to confidence the minds of the godly, so that they should become fully persuaded that God’s power to deliver them would be the same as that which their fathers had formerly experienced; for there is no other support under adverse, and especially under despairing circumstances, than that the faithful should know that they are still under the protection of that God who has adopted them. This is the reason why the Prophet amplifies, in so striking a manner, on the subject of God’s power.

And hence also he subjoins, that the ways of ages are those of God. Some render the clause, “the ways of the world.” The word עולם, oulam, however, means properly an age, or perpetual time. The Prophet, I have no doubt, means by ways of ages, the wonderful means which God is wont to adopt for the defense of his Church; for we are ever wont to reduce God’s wonder to our own understanding, while it is his purpose to perfect, in a manner that is wonderful, the work of our salvation. Hence the Prophet bids the faithful here to raise upwards their thoughts, and to conceive something greater of God’s power than what they can naturally comprehend. If we take the ways of eternity, in this sense, then they are to be understood as in opposition to those means which are known and usual. They are his daily ways, when the sun rises and sets, when the spring succeeds the winter, when the earth produces fruit; though even these are so many miracles, yet they are his common ways. But God has ways of eternity that is he has means unknown to us by which he can deliver us from death, whenever it may please him.

But yet, if any prefer taking the ways of eternity as signifying the continued power of God, which has ever appeared from the beginning, the sense would be appropriate and not less useful: for it especially avails to confirm our faith, when we consider that God’s power has ever been the same from the creation of heaven and earth, that it has never been lessened or undergone any change. Since, then, God has successively manifested his power through all ages, we ought hence to learn that we have no reason to despair, though he may for a time conceal his hand; for he is not on that account deprived of his right. He ever retains the sovereignty of the world. We ought, then, to be attentive to the ways of ages, that is, to the demonstration of that power, which was manifested in the creation of the world, and still continues to be manifested. (55) It follows—

(55) This verse is explained in a very striking manner, but the version is not so strictly correct It may be thus rendered:—

6. He stood, and measured the earth; He looked, and agitated the earth; And burst themselves open did the perpetual mountains, Bend down did the hills of ages; The going of ages were his.

The perpetual mountains” are literally “the mountains of perpetuity,” which had remained the same from the beginning. “The hills of ages” might be rendered the hills of antiquity or of old time, [ עולם ], an indefinite past time. “The goings of ages,” are God’s proceedings, that is, in his works, and may therefore be rendered “deeds;” and they are said to be deeds “of ages,” i.e., of old time, with reference probably to the creation of the world: for he who makes perennial mountains to burst, and perpetual hills to bend downwards, must be their first creator.— Ed.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.]

Hab. 3:7.] Neighbouring nations tremble at his judgments. Saw] in vision.

HOMILETICS

THE MEASURED INHERITANCE.Hab. 3:6-7

These words describe the effects of Gods approach. He stood like a mighty warrior in his conquering career. The earth trembled, and primeval mountains dissolved into dust. We take it in reference to Canaan. As Joshua conquered and divided the land, so God measured and portioned it out to his people.

I. The inheritance measured. He measured the earth. He measured the whole, and the portion for each tribe. It was no scramble, but appointment by lot and rule. He divided them an inheritance by line (Psa. 78:55). God measures the earth by bounds and borders to the various nations that dwell upon it. Thou hast set all the borders of the earth (Psa. 74:17). Lands and seas, continents and islands, are mapped out by him. He defined the shape and weighed the elements of the world. In righteous judgment he observes the ways, and fixes the bounds of mans habitations (Act. 17:26). He ordains our present lot, and will fix our final destiny.

II. The inheritance gained. He beheld, and drove asunder the nations. Notice

1. The ease by which it was gained. He stood in the midst of his glory, without going forth, and simply looked. What was the consequence?

(1) All nations were scattered. Though strong and numerous, and their possession ancient and stable as the everlasting hills.

(2) All opposition was subdued. At his presence, kings and princes, firm and immovable on their thrones, were overcome. The mountains were thrashed, and the hills made small before him (Isa. 41:15).

(3) All enemies were terrified. I saw the tents of Cushan in affliction. The tidings of his wondrous acts threw neighbouring nations into despair (Exo. 15:14-16). So now at the approach of God the sinner trembles in fear. Before his rebuke nations wither away. No shelters, no tents nor curtains can hide from him. The mountains quake at him, and the hills melt, and the earth is burned at his presence, yea, the world, and all that dwell therein.

2. The deliberation by which it was gained. His ways are everlasting. This was no sudden, precipitate work. It was by the eternal purpose and strict Justice of God. The works and ways of God are coherent, unchangeable, and true. They have steps and progress, but no change. His creative and providential acts are the same in all ages. If God could change his purpose, says Charnock, he would change his nature. Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world.

ILLUSTRATIONS TO CHAPTER 3

Hab. 3:4-7. Hiding. Mans knowledge is confined to parts only of Gods ways. The extremities or forthgoings of his administration are visible on earth only. The springs, principles, and anterior steps are above and out of mans sight [Dr. Chalmers].

Hab. 3:6. Measured the earth.

Then stayd the fervid wheels, and in his hand
He took the golden compasses, prepared
In Gods eternal store, to circumscribe
This universe, and all created things.
One foot he centred, and the other turnd
Round through the vast profundity obscure;
And said, Thus far extend, thus far thy bounds,
This be thy just circumference, O world! [Milton].

Hab. 3:9. Bow naked. The drawing of the bow was a mark of great skill and slaughter.

So the great master drew the mighty bow,
And drew with ease. One hand aloft displayd
The bending horns, and one the string essayd. [Popes Homer.]

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(6) He stood, and measured the earth . . .Better, He has taken His stand and measured the earth, He has looked and made the heathen tremble; and the primeval mountains are broken up, the ancient hills sink down; His goings are as of old; i.e., His proceedings are the same as of old time, when He brought up Israel from Egypt. God measures or parcels out the earth; and the usurping invader is put to confusion. The mountains are convulsed, as was Sinai of old. (Comp. Jdg. 5:5, Psa. 68:8.)

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

Hab 3:6. He stood and measured the earth He stood, and measured out the land; he beheld, and scattered the nations: The eternal mountains dispersed, the perpetual hills bowed; the everlasting ways opened their Lord. Green; who observes, that it was customary for a conqueror, as soon as he became possessed of a country, to measure it out, and divide it among his people; thus David, I will triumph and divide Sichem, and measure out the valley of Succoth. Hence Jehovah, who takes possession of the land of Canaan upon the flight and cession of its guilty inhabitants, is represented as dividing it among the tribes of Israel. This passage is extremely poetical; wherein not only the inhabitants of Canaan, but the land itself is represented as struck with conscious terror at the approach of Jehovah. The Hebrew lo, is translated owned their Lord, because the literal sense of it, were for him, or on his side, amounts to the same.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Hab 3:6 He stood, and measured the earth: he beheld, and drove asunder the nations; and the everlasting mountains were scattered, the perpetual hills did bow: his ways [are] everlasting.

Ver. 6. He stood, and measured the earth ] Not Joshua, but God, brought his people into the promised land, and divided it among them, Psa 78:55 . Like as also he had divided the whole earth by bounds and borders to the various nations, Psa 74:17 , and doth still appoint men the bounds of their habitations, Act 17:26 .

He beheld, and drove asunder the nations ] He did it with his looks, as it were; that is, with very little ado. Let the Lord but arise only and his enemies shall be scattered, let him but frown and they fall before him. If Augustus could frown to death Asinius Pollio, and Queen Elizabeth her chancellor Hatton, what shall we think of God’s bended brows?

And the everlasting mountains were scattered ] i.e. Those kingdoms of the Canaanites that were held firm and immoveable as the mountains, yea, riveted as it were upon eternity, see Num 13:28-29 ; Num 13:33 . These were scattered, dissilierunt, fell in pieces, and leaped this way and that way, as stones broken with a great hammer. God threshed these mountains, and beat them small, he made the hills as chaff, Isa 41:15 . No worldly height could stand before him. By mountains here some understand kings and princes, as by hills those of inferior rank.

His ways are everlasting ] Heb. His walks or journeys, that is, his government of the world by his power and wisdom, is perpetual, he never casteth off the care thereof. There are those who refer the word his to the Canaanites, who had of old possessed the land without disturbance ( ); but the former sense is the better.

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

measured the earth: or, caused the earth to tremble. So the Targum and the requirement of the “correspondence” with the next line.

beheld = looked.

drove asunder the nations = caused the nations to shake, or start.

scattered = shattered.

perpetual = ancient, or primeval.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

and measured: Exo 15:17, Exo 21:31, Num 34:1-29, Deu 32:8, Act 17:26

and drove: Jos 10:42, Jos 11:18-23, Neh 9:22-24, Psa 135:8-12

the everlasting: Hab 3:10, Gen 49:26, Deu 33:15, Jdg 5:5, Psa 68:16, Psa 114:4-7, Isa 64:1-3, Nah 1:5, Zec 14:4, Zec 14:5

his: Psa 90:2, Psa 103:17, Isa 51:6, Isa 51:8, Mic 5:8, Mat 24:35, Luk 1:50, Heb 13:8

Reciprocal: 2Sa 22:8 – the earth Job 9:5 – removeth Psa 18:7 – foundations Psa 29:6 – Lebanon Psa 46:6 – earth Psa 65:6 – Which Psa 95:4 – the strength of the hills is his also Psa 97:5 – hills Psa 104:32 – looketh Isa 24:19 – General Isa 42:15 – General Isa 64:3 – the mountains Jer 4:24 – mountains Jer 10:10 – at Jon 2:6 – mountains Mic 1:4 – the mountains Zep 1:16 – day Zec 4:7 – O great Rev 6:14 – and every

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Hab 3:6. Measured is defined “to shake” in the lexicon. That agrees with the verse in general which describes the Lord as having complete control of the earth.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Hab 3:6. He stood and measured the earth It was customary for a conqueror, as soon as he became possessed of a country, to measure it out, and divide it among his people. Thus David, (Psa 60:6,) I will divide Shechem, and mete out the valley of Succoth. Hence Jehovah, who takes possession of the land of Canaan, upon the flight and cession of its guilty inhabitants, is represented as dividing it among the tribes of Israel. Green, who translates the former part of the verse thus: He stood and measured out the land; he beheld and scattered the nations: the eternal mountains dispersed, the perpetual hills bowed. The passage is certainly extremely poetical; representing, not only the inhabitants of Canaan, but the land itself, as struck with conscious terror at the approach of Jehovah. His ways are everlasting His purposes, foreknown from all eternity, will infallibly be executed in their appointed time: or, his wisdom, goodness, justice, holiness, and power, exerted and manifested in governing his people, are immutable and eternal.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

3:6 He stood, and measured the earth: he beheld, and drove asunder the nations; and the everlasting mountains were scattered, the perpetual hills did bow: his {f} ways [are] everlasting.

(f) Signifying that God has wonderful means, and always has a marvellous power when he will deliver his Church.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Standing like the sun at its zenith, God surveyed the whole earth. His downward look, like sunrays, caused the nations to tremble. His glance was enough to make the permanent mountains shatter and the ancient hills collapse. He always causes these reactions since His ways are eternal. What a contrast He is to lifeless idols (cf. Hab 2:18-19)!

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