Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hosea 13:5

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hosea 13:5

I did know thee in the wilderness, in the land of great drought.

5. I did know, &c.] Better, It was I that knew, &c. ‘To know’=‘to take favourable notice of’, as Psa 1:6 and often.

in the land of great drought ] Or, ‘of burning thirst’ (the word occurs nowhere else). Comp. the description in Hos 2:3.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

I did know thee in the wilderness – God so knew them, as to deserve to be known by them. By knowing them, He shewed how He ought to be acknowledged by them. As we love God, because He first loved us, so we come to know and own God, having first been owned and known of Him. God showed His knowledge of them, by knowing and providing for their needs; He knew them in the wilderness, in the land of great drought, where the land yielded neither food nor water. He supplied them with the bread from heaven and with water from the flinty rock. He knew and owned them all by His providence; He knew in approbation and love, and fed in body and soul those who, having been known by Him, knew and owned Him. : No slight thing is it, that He, who knoweth all things and men, should, by grace, know us with that knowledge according to which He says to that one true Israelite, Moses, thou hast found grace in My sight, and I know thee by name Exo 33:17. This we read to have been said to that one; but what He says to one, He says to all, whom now, before or since that time, He has chosen, being foreknown and predestinate, for He wrote the names of all in the book of life. All these elect are known in the wilderness, in the land of loneliness, in the wilderness of this world, where no one ever saw God, in the solitude of the heart and the secret of hidden knowledge, where God alone, beholding the soul tried by temptations, exercises and proves it, and accounting it, when running lawfully, worthy of His knowledge, professes that He knew it. To those so known, or named, He Himself saith in the Gospel, rejoice, because your names are written in heaven Luk 10:20.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Hos 13:5-9

I did know thee in the wilderness, in the land of great drought.

Wilderness-knowledge

God knows His people where nobody else will take any notice of them. You do not know a man until you know him in the wilderness. There is but little revelation of character in laughter. So long as a man is living in rioting and wantonness, in great abundance and prosperity, having only to lift his hand to command a regiment of servants, you cannot really tell what his true quality is. Men show themselves in the darkness; men cry out of their hearts when they are in distress; it is in the nighttime of lifes bitter sorrows that mens true quality is revealed. God never forsakes His people in wilderness and in desert places; He is more God and Father to them there than ever. No man knows God who only knows Him theologically. It is impossible to read much about God; you must read the writing in your own heart The world is within you; you carry the universe in your own bosom. Unless you have the faculty and genius of introspection, and the power to read the small print that is being daily typed upon your inmost life, you can never be scholars in the sanctuary of Christ, you can never attain to high degrees of wisdom in the school of heaven. Men seek God in the wilderness. The wilderness is the school of discipline. In the Bible there lies one great desert land, and it is called that great and terrible wilderness. There could not be two such in any globe; there could not be a duplicate experience in any life. Some things can be done only once; no man can be twice in Gethsemane; no man can be twice crucified. There are acts in life which, having been accomplished, enable the sufferer to say, The bitterness of death is passed; come what will now, it is but a days march into heaven. (Joseph Parker, D. D.)

Known in time of distress

God knew Israel in the wilderness–

(1) In respect of their sin, which He visited.

(2) In regard of their wants, which He provided for.

Observe–

1. Mans wickedness strangely contrasts with Gods goodness; God knew their sin and yet destroyed them not; they receive mercies, and yet sin.

2. It is a great mercy for God to know a man in time of distress. This is Gods way. Men know in prosperity; but let us make God our friend, He will be a friend otherwise than men win he.

3. We should not be dejected in times of trouble; that is the time for God to know thee: be willing to follow God in any estate.

4. Gods knowing us in distress is a mighty engagement. Let us look back to the times when we were in trouble.

5. Let us know Gods cause when it suffers, and know our brethren in their sufferings.

6. Gods knowledge is operative and working; it does us good. Our knowledge of God should be so too. To sin against our knowledge of God is evil, but to sin against Gods knowledge of us is worse. (Jeremiah Burroughs.)

God present with His people in the wilderness


I.
The low and wilderness state of Gods people.

1. It refers to their spiritual wants, weaknesses, and troubles. In their first convictions of sin. In their first, beginning to walk in the ways of the Lord. In after temptations. In seasons of dejection.

2. To their temporal wants, weaknesses, and troubles. In poverty and want; in pain and sickness; in the dangers of life.


II.
What kind of knowledge or notice is it that God takes of his people in that state?

1. It is with pity and compassion.

2. So as to manifest His love to them.

3. So as to bestow His comforts on them.

4. He grants His presence to them.

5. He affords them help.


III.
Lay down the proof and evidence of this.

1. The Word of the Lord often declares it.

2. Gods dealings with His people in all ages further confirm it, e.g., Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Jonah, Hezekiah, ancient Israel.

Application–

1. Let us be concerned to have this God for our God.

2. When in a wilderness state, let us trust in our God.

3. Remember Gods kindness in appearing for you.

4. Despise not those who are in a wilderness state, but weep with those who weep, etc. (T. Hannam.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 5. I did know thee] I approved of thee; I loved thee; and by miraculously providing for thee in that land of drought, I demonstrated my love.

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

I did know, owned, took care of, guided, and supplied, thee, O Israel, in thy fathers,

in the wilderness; through which for forty years together thou wast moving, and foundest nothing for thy sustenance but what my miraculous goodness and power gave thee; through those many deserts thou never didst want.

In the land of great drought; in the parched sands, where were no refreshing showers, no rivers or springs of water, to suffice so many cattle and men; where thou wentest as it were through flames and on sands, scorching as embers of a fire, a place fit for none but fiery serpents, or salamanders (if any such).

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

5. I did know theedidacknowledge thee as Mine, and so took care of thee (Psa 144:3;Amo 3:2). As I knew theeas Mine, so thou shouldest know no God but Me (Ho13:4).

in . . . land of . . .drought (De 8:15).

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

I did know thee in the wilderness,…. Where there were no food nor drink, where were scorpions, serpents, and beasts of prey; there the Lord knew them, owned them, and showed a fatherly affection for them, and care of them; and fed them with manna and quails, and guided and directed them in the way, and protected and preserved them from their enemies, and from all hurt and danger. So the Targum explains it,

“I sufficiently supplied their necessities in the wilderness:”

in the land of great drought; or, “of droughts” c; the word is only used in this place; and is by Aben Ezra interpreted a dry and thirsty land; and so he says it signifies in the Arabic language and the same is observed by the father of Kimchi, and by R. Jonah d; but is by some rendered “torrid” e, or “inflamed”, as if it had the signification of a Hebrew word which signifies a flame: and the Targum takes it to be akin to another, which signifies to “desire”, rendering it,

“in a land in which thou desirest everything;”

that is, wants everything. The first seems best, and is a fit a description of the wilderness, which was a place of drought, wherein was no water, De 8:15.

c “an terra siccitatum”, Vatablus, Drusius, Schmidt. d Apud R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel Moed. fol. 35. 1. e “In terra torridonum locorum”, Montanus; “torridissima”, Junius & Tremellius, Heb. “infammationum”, Piscator.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Ingratitude of Israel.

B. C. 722.

      5 I did know thee in the wilderness, in the land of great drought.   6 According to their pasture, so were they filled; they were filled, and their heart was exalted; therefore have they forgotten me.   7 Therefore I will be unto them as a lion: as a leopard by the way will I observe them:   8 I will meet them as a bear that is bereaved of her whelps, and will rend the caul of their heart, and there will I devour them like a lion: the wild beast shall tear them.

      We may observe here, 1. The plentiful provision God had made for Israel and the seasonable supplies he had blessed them with (v. 5): “I did know thee in the wilderness, took cognizance of thy case and made provision for thee, even in a land of great drought, when thou wast in extreme distress, and when no relief was to be had in an ordinary way.” See a description of this wilderness, Deu 8:15; Jer 2:6, and say, The God that knew them, and owned them, and fed them there, was a friend indeed, for he was a friend at need and an all-sufficient friend, that could victual so vast an army when all ordinary ways of provision were cut off, and where, if miracles had not been their daily bread, they must all have perished. Note, Help at an exigency lays under peculiar obligations and must never be forgotten. 2. Their unworthy ungrateful abuse of God’s favour to them. God not only took care of them in the wilderness, but put them in possession of Canaan, a good land, a large and fat pasture. And (v. 6) according to their pasture so were they filled. God gave them both plenty and dainties, and they did not spare it, but, having been long confined to manna, when they came into Canaan they fed themselves to the full. And this was no hopeful presage; it would have looked better, and promised better, if they had been more modest and moderate in the use of their plenty, and had learned to deny themselves; but what was the effect of it? They were filled, and their heart was exalted. Their luxury and sensuality made them proud, insolent, and secure. The best comment upon this is that of Moses, Deut. xxxii. 13-15. But Jeshurun waxed fat and kicked. When the body was stuffed up with plenty the soul was puffed up with pride. Then they began to think their religion a thing below them, and they could not persuade themselves to stoop to the services of it. The wicked, through the pride of his countenance, will not seek after God. When they were poor and lame in the wilderness they thought it was necessary for them to keep in with God; but when they were replenished and established in Canaan they began to think they had no further need of him: Their heart was exalted, therefore have they forgotten me. Note, Worldly prosperity, when it feeds men’s pride, makes them forgetful of God; for they remember him only when they want him. When Israel was filled, what more could the Almighty do for them? And therefore they said to him, Depart from us, Job xxii. 17. It is sad that those favours which ought to make us mindful of God, and studious what we shall render to him, should make us unmindful of him, and regardless what we do against him. We ought to know that we live upon God when we live upon common providence, though we do not, as Israel in the wilderness, live upon miracles. 3. God’s just resentment of their base ingratitude, Hos 14:7; Hos 14:8. The judgments threatened (v. 3) intimated the departure of all good from them. The threatenings here go further, and intimate the breaking in of all evils upon them; for God, who had so much befriended them, now turns to be their enemy and fights against them, which is expressed here very terribly: I will be unto them as a lion and as a leopard. The lion is strong, and there is no resisting him. The leopard is here taken notice of to be crafty and vigilant: As a leopard by the way will I observe them. As that beast of prey lies in wait by the road-side to catch travellers, and devour them, so will God by his judgments watch over them to do them hurt, as he had watched over them to do them good, Jer. xliv. 27. No opportunity shall be let slip that may accelerate or aggravate their ruin (Jer. v. 6): A leopard shall watch over their cities. A lynx, or spotted beast (and such the leopard is), is noted for quicksightedness above any creature (lynx visu–the eyes of a lynx), and so it intimates that not only the power, but the wisdom of God is engaged against those whom he has a controversy with. Some read it (and the original will bear it), I will be as a leopard in the way of Assyria. The judgments of God shall surprise them just when they are going to the Assyrians to seek for protection and help from them. It is added, I will meet them as a bear that is bereaved, and thereby exasperated and made more cruel (2Sa 17:8; Pro 28:15), which intimates how highly God was provoked, and he would make them feel it: He will rend the caul of their heart. The lion is observed to aim at the heart of the beasts he preys upon, and thus will God devour them like a lion. He will send such judgments upon them as shall prey upon their spirits and consume their vitals. Their heart was exalted (v. 6), but God will take an effectual course to bring it down: The wild beast shall tear them; not only God will be as a lion and leopard to them, but the metaphor shall be fulfilled in the letter, for noisome beasts are one of the four sore judgments with which God will destroy a provoking people, Ezek. xiv. 15.

      Now all this teaches us, 1. That abused goodness turns into the greater severity. Those who despise God and affront him, when he is to them as a careful tender shepherd, shall find he will be even to his own flock as the beasts of prey are. Those whom God has in vain endured with much long-suffering, and invited with much affection, in them he will show his wrath and make them vessels of it, Rom. ix. 22. Patientia lsa fit furorDespised patience will turn into fury. 2. That the judgments of God, when they come with commission against impenitent sinners, will be irresistible and very terrible. They will rend the caul of the heart, will fill the soul with confusion, and tear that in pieces; and we are as unable to grapple with them as a lamb is to make his part good against a roaring lion, for who knows the power of God’s anger? Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord, let us be persuaded to make peace with him; for are we stronger then he?

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

He afterwards adds Thee I knew in the desert, in the land of droughts God here confirms the truth that the Israelites had acted very absurdly in having turned their minds to other gods, for he himself had known them. The knowledge here mentioned is twofold, that of men, and that of God. God declares that he had a care for the people when they were in the desert; and he designates his paternal solicitude by the term, knowledge: I knew thee; that is, “I then chose thee a people for myself, and familiarly manifested myself to thee, as if thou were a near friend to me. But then it was necessary that I should have been also known by thee.” This is the knowledge of men. Now when men are known by God, why do they not apply all their faculties, so that they may remain fixed on him? For when they divert them to other objects, they extinguish, as much as they can, this benefit of God. So also Paul speaks to the Galatians,

After ye have known God, or rather after ye are known by him,’ (Gal 4:9.)

In the first clause, he shows that they had done very wickedly in retaking themselves to various devices after the light of the gospel had been offered to them: but he increases their sin by the next clause, when he says, ‘Rather after ye are known by him;’ as though he said, “God has anticipated you by his gratuitous goodness. Since, then, God has thus first known you, and first favoured you with his grace, how great and how shameful is now your ingratitude in not seeking to know him in return?” We now then see why the Prophet added that the Israelites had been known by God in the desert, in the land of droughts

And there is an express mention made of the desert: for it was then necessary for the people to be sustained miraculously by the Lord; for except God had rained manna from heaven, and had also given water for drink, the people must have miserably perished. Since, then God had thus supported the people contrary to the usual course of nature, so that without his paternal care there could have been no hope of life, the Prophet now rightly adds, In the desert, in the land of droughts; that is, in that dry solitude, where not a grain of corn grew, so that the people could not live except God had, as it were, with his own hand, given them meat, and put it in their mouth. We now see that the extreme impiety of the people is here manifestly proved; for having been taught in God’s law, and been encouraged by so many benefits, they yet went astray after profane superstitions. And the Prophet, at the same time, adds —

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.]

Hos. 13:5. Know] i.e. cared for them, and loved them as his own (Psa. 144:3; Amo. 3:2).

Hos. 13:6.] A reproof from cattle growing wanton in abundant pasture; the very thing against which they were warned (Deu. 8:11; Deu. 32:15).

Hos. 13:7. Therefore] Israel, the flock in the field, shall be devoured by wild beasts, fierce as a lion, swift as a leopard, and savage as a bear robbed of her whelps (1Sa. 17:34; 2Sa. 17:8).

HELP IN THE EXIGENCIES OF LIFE.Hos. 13:5

God loved and provided for his people in the wilderness. In the land of great drought and danger he never forsook them. Hence they should know and follow him. God is with his children now in the exigencies of life.

I. Our sinful condition is a wilderness. A barren and unfruitful land, where no water is. Without God the sinner is destitute of happiness and hope. He can neither quench his thirst nor satisfy his desires in sin. But God leads his people from sin to Christ. He knows the anguish and despair of the penitent, and gives joy and peace in believing.

II. Our outward circumstances are a wilderness. What uncertainty and change! What disappointment and sorrows! We are often led into solitude and distress, and have to cry unto God. We are often thrown into danger and surrounded by enemies. They wandered in the wilderness in a solitary way: they found no city to dwell in. Hungry and thirsty, their soul fainted in them. Then they cried unto the Lord in their trouble, and he delivered them out of their distresses.

III. Our inward experience is a wilderness. We are not self-sufficient. We do not carry our own resources within us. We have neither power to defend nor wisdom to guide us. Day by day we depend upon God, and have to live by faith, hope, and obedience. But God knows our emptiness, and sends manna from heaven. His presence is continually with us, and he provides a table in the wilderness. We are brought safely through a land of deserts and of pits; through a land of drought and of the shadow of death; through a land that no man passed through, and where no man dwelt. Happy art thou, O Israel; who is like unto thee, O people saved of the Lord? Gods goodness forms a marked contrast to the conduct of our fellow-creatures. We should show pity to one another. But, alas! we scarcely know a friend in trouble! Gods goodness should lead us to know and love him. Does God know that we are weaned from the worldin love with the means of grace, and ready to follow and seek him at all times?

DIVINE GOODNESS TURNED INTO DIVINE WRATH.Hos. 13:5-8

God knew and loved Israel in the wilderness, commended them in their low estate, but complained of them in their prosperity. When they were delivered from the privations and hardships of the desert, fixed in the land of vineyards and fig-trees, they forgot God in prosperity and pride, and brought upon them righteous displeasure.

I. Goodness displayed to the helpless. I did know thee in the wilderness. When Israel were a helpless and dependent people, they often cried to God in distress, and he heard and helped them. Their situation yielded no supplies, but God permitted them to want no good thing. He gave them water from the rock and bread from heaven; suffered not their raiment to wax old upon them, nor their foot to swell in travelling; sent them his Holy Spirit to instruct, and ordinances to bless them. He hath not dealt so with any nation. We are under the immediate care of God, who provides for us and defends us. Some one says, Life is a great want, and therefore should be one continual prayer.

II. Goodness displayed to the ungrateful. Therefore have they forgotten me (Hos. 13:6). Their luxury, sensuality, and pride, made them insolent and secure. Worldly prosperity often feeds mens pride, and makes them forget the giver of it. They remember God in want and sickness, but forsake him in plenty and ease. Jeshurun waxed fat and kicked (Deu. 32:15; Deu. 32:18). Men seek pasture, self-gratification, and not God. They abuse every gift, because their hearts are exalted against him. Prosperity, which ought to draw them to him, alienates them from him. They are ungrateful in proportion as they should love and praise him. Thus selfishness ever tends to hardness of heart and ingratitude. If a man lacks gratitude, says Pitt, when there is infinite obligations to excite and quicken it, he will be likely to want all other virtues towards his fellow-creatures, whose utmost gifts are poor compared with those he daily receives from his never-failing Almighty Friend. Then beware lest thou forget the Lord which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage.

III. Goodness turned to wrath. Therefore I will be unto them as a lion, &c. Those who forget God in the gifts of his providence, wax fat and get proud in their prosperity, only prepare themselves a prey to retribution. Ingratitude at all times is most base. Capt. Speke found in the natives of central Africa the belief that ingratitude, or neglecting to thank a person for a benefit conferred, is punishable. If ingratitude from man to man be odious, in the sight of God it is without excuse and despicable. Its guilt is increased in a fourfold proportion, and must be estimated by the greatness of the giver, the unworthiness of the receiver, and by the number and excellency of the blessings bestowed. The ungrateful are a generation of vipers, who sting the bosom in which they have been nursed. How sharper than a serpents tooth is an ungrateful child!

1. Wrath most severe. I will meet them as a bear that is bereaved of her whelps. God is not overcome and carried away by passion as men. He is not vindictive in feeling, and unjust in his proceedings. But these figures set forth his determined opposition to wickedness, and the righteous visitation of judgment upon those who turn mercy into wrath. His anger will be fierce as a leopard watching by the way to seize upon travellers; furious as a bear enraged by the loss of her young; strong as a lion, the most terrible beast of the forest.

2. Wrath most destructive. The very vitals are destroyed. Rend the caul, devour them and tear them. The indignation, the punishment, seems almost beyond description. God can torture the soul, and cause his anger to burn against the sinner. Who knoweth the power of his wrath? He should be feared according to his anger, and praised for his goodness (Psa. 90:11). His mercy should lead us to repentance and gratitude. Those who despise the riches of his goodness, and forbearance, and long-suffering, treasure up unto themselves wrath against the day of wrath, and the revelation of the righteous judgment of God.

HOMILETIC HINTS AND OUTLINES

Hos. 13:6. Therefore have they forgotten me. Ingratitude.

1. A common sin.
2. Most unnatural.
3. Most unreasonable.

4. Most dangerous. How shall I pardon thee for this? thy children have forsaken me, and sworn by them that are no gods: when I fed them to the full they committed adultery (Jer. 5:7). Forgotten me. Forgotten their dependence upon me; their relationship to me; their duties to me. If not theoretically, men practically forget God (Psa. 10:4). Sins often connected with ingratitude, pride, hard-heartedness, selfishness, and idolatry. If men take gifts and feed upon them, in forgetfulness of the Giver, it need not be thought strange if God withholds them. Prosperity abused will be taken away. When God gives thee prosperity, do thou enjoy it with a cheerful and thankful heart, says Bp Reynolds. In all time of our wealth, good Lord, deliver us, is a prayer never out of season in times of ease and plenty.

FirstSelfish indulgence. According to their pasture, so were they filled. God giveth us richly all things to enjoy. But the enjoyment of Christians differs from the excess of the sensual. We are not to feast without fear; to make provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof. Many mistake and suppose everything their own. They are only stewards. The first lesson in the school of Christ is self-denial. Where does this appear in the lives of some? Temperance is one of the graces of the spirit. This consists not only in avoiding drunkenness and gluttony, but in not filling ourselves according to our pasture.

SecondlyPride. They were filled, and their heart was exalted. Hezekiah rendered not according to the benefits received; for his heart was lifted up. The apostle charges them that are rich in the world not to trust in uncertain riches, and shows the tendency there always is in worldly success to gender vanity and false confidence. Hence it is said, Pride compasseth them about as a chain; violence covereth them as a garment. They think highly of their understanding, as if wisdom grew with wealth. They speak with authority, and answer roughly.

ThirdlyUnmindfulness of God. Therefore have they forgotten me. How common for men in the midst of their sufficiency to lose the sense of their obligations to God, dependence upon and need of him! Hence the prayer of Agar against being rich, Lest I should be full and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord? Hence the caution to the Jews when they entered Canaan, Lest thou forget the Lord which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt. The admonition was unavailable. This gives us a very humbling view of human nature. View it, not in the dregs of society, but as seen in common and reputable life. It will not appear so innocent, so amiable so noble as some represent it to be. Lord, what is man, that thou art mindful of him? Let the fact arouse us to caution and circumspection, if Providence smiles upon us, and we are placed in easy and comfortable circumstances. Watch and pray, lest ye enter into temptation. Seek grace which only can help to manage a full estate properly, so as to elude its snares and discharge its duties. It was said of Vespasian, that he was even a better man for being an emperor. So the prosperity of some, instead of destroying them, displays and increases their excellency; they are rich, not only in temporal things, but in faith and good works [Jay].

ILLUSTRATIONS TO CHAPTER 13

Hos. 13:5. Know thee. This cannot mean a mere acquaintance with their condition and circumstances; for what can be hid from him whose understanding is infinite? But it intends two things. First: He knew them so as to provide for them. Secondly: He knew them so as to approve of them and acknowledge them. The word know has this meaning often. The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous [Jay].

Hos. 13:6. Pastures. A curious instance of a change of instinct is mentioned by Darwin. The bees carried to Barbadoes and the Western Islands ceased to lay up honey after the first year. They found the weather so fine, and the materials for honey so plentiful, that they became exceedingly profligate, and ate up their capital, worked no more, and amused themselves by flying about the sugar-houses and stinging the negroes [Bib. Treasury].

Hos. 13:8. Bear. When the female is robbed of her whelps she is said to be more fierce than any other animal; hence many sayings refer to her rage, and are applied to the fury of violent men. I will tear thee to pieces as a bear which has cubbed; Begone, or I will jump upon thee as a bear. When a termagant goes with her children to scold, it is said, There goes the she-bear and her whelps [Roberts]

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

5. The loving care of Jehovah manifested itself in a special manner during the wanderings in the desert, when hunger and thirst threatened to destroy them.

I did know The Hebrew is more emphatic: “It was I (not some other god) who knew thee.” See on Hos 8:4; here in a favorable sense care, protect (Psa 1:6). Some of the ancient versions read, “I shepherded thee,” which is in accord with the figure in Hos 13:6,

Land of great drought Or, of burning thirst (Deu 8:15; Exo 17:1 ff.; etc.).

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

‘I knew you in the wilderness,

In the land of great drought.

According to their pasture,

So were they filled,

They were filled, and their heart was exalted,

Therefore have they forgotten me.’

Furthermore when they had gone into the wilderness, YHWH had known them there. He had watched over them, protected them, provided for them, loved them. he had led them by their leading reins (Hos 11:1; Hos 11:3-4). Even in that land of great drought He had ensured that they were filled, providing them with ‘pasture’ through the manna and the quails. (Alternately the reference is to the produce coming from their later pasture land). But once they were filled their hearts had become exalted, with the result that they had followed their own way, gained too great an opinion of themselves, and had forgotten YHWH.

This was precisely what YHWH had warned against in Deu 8:11-12, when He said, ‘Take heed lest you forget YHWH your God, — lest when you have eaten and are full, — then your heart be exalted and you forget YHWH your God’. It is difficult to avoid the idea that Hosea had been reading Deuteronomy, and saw it as fulfilled here.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Hos 13:5. I did know thee, &c. I fed thee, &c. Houbigant after the LXX.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Hos 13:5 I did know thee in the wilderness, in the land of great drought.

Ver. 5. I knew thee in the wilderness, in a place of great drought ] In terra torridissima, where I gave thee pluviam escatilem et petram aquatilem, as Tertullian phraseth it, where I gave thee bread from heaven, set the flint abroach, kept thy clothes whole and fit, kept back thine enemies, led thee by a pillar of cloud, sent thee in flesh at even and bread in the morning, served thee as never prince was served in his greatest pomp, Psa 78:20 ; Psa 78:24 . And wilt thou yet kiss the calf, qui te nec servat, nec satiat, ut ego? who neither saveth thee, nor satisfieth thee, as I have done? not suffering thee to lack anything, Deu 2:7 , but crowning thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies; insomuch as Moses stands amazed at it, and cries out, “Happy art thou, O Israel: who is like unto thee, O people saved of the Lord?” Deu 33:29 .

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

I did know thee, &c. Reference to Pentateuch (Deu 2:7; Deu 8:15; Deu 32:10). Compare Amo 3:2. The Septuagint reads “I shepherded, or was shepherd to thee”, reading re ithika instead of yeda tika: i.e. (Resh = R) for (Daleth = D).

the land of great drought. Compare Deu 8:15.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

know: Exo 2:25, Psa 1:6, Psa 31:7, Psa 142:3, Nah 1:7, 1Co 8:3, Gal 4:9

in the wilderness: Deu 2:7, Deu 8:15, Deu 32:10, Jer 2:2, Jer 2:6

great drought: Heb. droughts, Psa 63:1

Reciprocal: Num 20:11 – the water Deu 8:12 – Lest when Deu 31:21 – I know Isa 58:11 – and satisfy Hos 12:13 – General Luk 9:12 – for

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Hos 13:5. I did know thee denotes the attention the Lord gave to Israel in the wilderness. There were many times that the nation would have perished for the necessities of life had God not. been good enough to provide food and water for them.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

The Lord also was the one who cared for the Israelites in the wilderness and who kept them alive in that barren wasteland. His provisions of manna and water are only two examples.

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