1Moreover take up a lamentation for the rulers of Israel, 2and say: What is your mother? A lioness: she lay down among the lions; among the young lions she nourished her cubs. 3She brought up one of her cubs, and he became a young lion; he learned to catch prey, and he devoured men. 4The nations also heard of him; he was trapped in their pit, and they brought him with chains to the land of Egypt. 5When she saw that she waited, that her hope was lost, she took another of her cubs and made him a young lion. 6He went around among the lions, and became a young lion; he learned to catch prey; he devoured men. 7He knew their desolate places, and laid waste their cities; the land with its fullness was desolated by the sound of his roaring. 8Then the nations set against him from the provinces on every side, and spread their net over him; he was caught in their pit. 9They put him in a cage with chains, and brought him to the king of Babylon; they brought him in hunting nets, so that his voice should no longer be heard on the mountains of Israel. 10Your mother was like a vine in your blood, planted by the waters, fruitful and full of branches because of many waters. 11She had strong branches for the scepters of rulers. She towered in stature above the thick branches, and was seen in her height amid the abundance of her branches. 12But she was plucked up in fury, she was cast down to the ground, and the east wind dried up her fruit. Her strong branches were broken and withered; the fire consumed them. 13And now she is planted in the wilderness, in a dry and thirsty land. 14Fire has gone out from a staff of her branches and devoured her fruit, so that she has no strong staff; a scepter for ruling. This is a lamentation, and has become a lamentation.
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 Here are, I. Orders given to the prophet to bewail the fall of the royal family, which had long made so great a figure by virtue of a covenant of royalty made with David and his seed, so that the eclipsing and extinguishing of it are justly lamented by all who know what value to put upon the
covenant of our God, as we find, after a very large account of that covenant with David (
Pss 89:3,
Pss 89:20, etc.), a sad lamentation for the decays and desolations of his family (v. 38, 39):
But thou hast cast off and abhorred, hast made void the covenant of thy servant and profaned his crown, etc. The kings of Judah are here called
princes of Israel; for their glory was diminished and they had become but as princes, and their purity was lost; they had become corrupt and idolatrous as the
kings of Israel, whose ways they had learned. The prophet must
take up a lamentation for them; that is, he must describe their lamentable fall as one that did himself lay it to heart, and desired that those he preached and wrote to might do so to. And how can we expect that others should be affected with that which we ourselves are not affected with? Ministers, when they boldly foretel, must yet bitterly lament the destruction of sinners, as those that have not
desired the woeful day. He is not directed to give advice to the princes of Israel (that had been long and often done in vain), but, the decree having gone forth, he must
take up a lamentation for them.
II. Instructions given him what to say. 1. He must compare the kingdom of Judah to a
lioness, so wretchedly degenerated was it from what it had been formerly, when it sat as a queen among the nations,
Ezek 19:2.
What is thy mother? thine, O king? (we read of Solomon's crown wherewith his mother crowned him, that is, his people,
Cant 3:11), thine, O Judah? The royal family is as a mother to the kingdom, a nursing mother. She is a
lioness, fierce, and cruel, and ravenous. When they had left their divinity they soon lost their humanity too; and, when they
feared not God, neither did they
regard man. She
lay down among lions. God had said,
The people shall dwell alone, but they
mingled with the nations and
learned their works. She
nourished her whelps among young lions, taught the young princes the way of tyrants, which was then used by the arbitrary kings of the east, filled their heads betimes with notions of their absolute despotic power, and possessed them with a belief that they had a right to enslave their subjects, that their liberty and property lay at their mercy: thus
she nourished her whelps among young lions. 2. He must compare the kings of Judah to
lions' whelps, Ezek 19:3. Jacob had compared Judah, and especially the house of David, to a
lion's whelp, for its being strong and formidable to its enemies abroad (
Gen 49:9,
He is an old lion; who shall stir him up? ) and, if they had adhered to the divine law and promise, God would have preserved to them the might, and majesty, and dominion of a lion, and does it in Christ, the
Lion of the tribe of Judah. But these
lions' whelps were so to their own subjects, were cruel and oppressive to them, preyed upon their estates and liberties; and, when they thus by their tyranny made themselves a terror to those whom they ought to have protected, it was just with God to make those a terror to them whom otherwise they might have subdued. Here is lamented, (1.) The sin and fall of Jehoahaz, one of the whelps of this lioness. He
became a young lion (
Ezek 19:3); he was made king, and thought he was made so that he might do what he pleased, and gratify his own ambition, covetousness, and revenge, as he had a mind; and so he was soon master of all the arts of tyranny; he
learned to catch the prey and devoured men. When he got power into his hand, all that had before in any thing disobliged him were made to feel his resentments and become a sacrifice to his rage. But what came of it? He did not prosper long in his tyranny:
The nations heard of him (
Ezek 19:4), heard how furiously he drove at his first coming to the crown, how he trampled upon all that is just and sacred, and violated all his engagements, so that they looked upon him as a dangerous neighbour, and prosecuted him accordingly,
as a multitude of shepherds is called forth against a lion roaring on his prey, Isa 31:4. And
he was taken, as a beast of prey,
in their pit. His own subjects durst not stand up in defence of their liberties, but God raised up a foreign power that soon put an end to his tyranny, and
brought him in chains to the land of Egypt. Thither Jehoahaz was carried captive, and never heard of more. (2.) The like sin and fall of his successor Jehoiakim. The
kingdom of Judah for some time expected the return of Jehoahaz out of Egypt, but at length despaired of it, and then
took another of the
lion's whelps, and
made him a young lion, Ezek 19:5. And he, instead of taking warning by his brother's fate to use his power with equity and moderation, and to seek the good of his people, trod in his brother's steps:
He went up and down among the lions, Ezek 19:6. He consulted and conversed with those that were fierce and furious like himself, and took his measures from them, as Rehoboam took the advice of the rash and hot-headed young men. And he soon learned to
catch the prey, and he
devoured men (
Ezek 19:6); he seized his subjects' estates, fined and imprisoned them, filled his treasury by rapine and injustice, sequestrations and confiscations, fines and forfeitures, and swallowed up all that stood in his way. He had got the art of discovering what effects men had that lay concealed, and where the treasures were which they had hoarded up; he
knew their desolate places (
Ezek 19:7), where they his
their money and sometimes hid
themselves; he knew where to find both out; and by his oppression he
laid waste their cities, depopulated them by forcing the inhabitants to remove their families to some place of safety.
The land was desolate, and the country villages were deserted; and though there was great plenty, and a fulness of all good things, yet people quitted it all for fear of
the noise of his roaring. He took a pride in making all his subjects afraid of him, as the lion makes all the beasts of the forest to tremble (
Amos 3:8), and by his terrible roaring so astonished them that they fell down for fear, and, having not spirit to make their escape, became an easy prey to him, as they say the lions do. He hectored, and threatened, and talked big, and bullied people out of what they had. Thus he thought to establish his own power, but it had a contrary effect, it did but hasten his own ruin (
Ezek 19:8):
The nations set against him on every side, to restrain and reduce his exorbitant power, which they joined in confederacy to do for their common safety; and
they spread their net over him, formed designs against him. God brought against Jehoiakim bands of the Syrians, Moabites, and Ammonites, with the Chaldees (
2Kgs 24:2), and he was
taken in their pit. Nebuchadnezzar bound him in fetters to carry him to Babylon, 2Chr 36:6. They put this lion within grates, bound him
in chains, and
brought him to the king of Babylon, 2Chr 36:9. What became of him we know not; but
his voice was nowhere heard roaring
upon the mountains of Israel. There was an end of his tyranny: he was
buried with the burial of an ass (
Jer 22:19), though he had been as a lion,
the terror of the mighty in the land of the living. Note, The righteousness of God is to be acknowledged when those who have terrified and enslaved others are themselves terrified and enslaved, when those who by the abuse of their power to destruction which was given them for edification make themselves as wild beasts, as
roaring lions and ranging bears (for such, Solomon says,
wicked rulers are
over the poor people, Prov 28:15), are treated as such - when those who, like Ishmael, have their
hand against every man, come at last to have
every man's hand against them. It was long since observed that bloody tyrants seldom die in peace, but have blood given them to drink, for they are worthy.
Ad generum Cereris sine caede et sanguine pauci
Descendunt reges et sicca morte tyranni -
How few of all the boastful men that reign
Descend in peace to Pluto's dark domain!
- Juvenal
10 Jerusalem, the mother-city, is here represented by another similitude; she is a vine, and the princes are her branches. This comparison we had before,
Ezek 15:1. Jerusalem is as
a vine; the Jewish nation is so:
Like a vine in they blood (
Ezek 19:10), the blood-royal, like a vine set in blood and watered with blood, which contributes very much to the flourishing and fruitfulness of vines, as if the blood which had been shed had been designed for the fattening and improving of the soil, in such plenty was it shed; and for a time it seemed to have that effect, for she was
fruitful and full of branches by reason of the waters, the
many waters near which she was
planted. Places of great wickedness may prosper for a while; and a vine set in blood may be full of branches. Jerusalem was full of able magistrates, men of sense, men of learning and experience, that were
strong rods, branches of this vine of uncommon bulk and strength, or poles for the support of this vine, for such magistrates are. The boughs of this vine had grown to such maturity that they were fit to make white staves of for
the sceptres of those that bore rule, Ezek 19:11. And those are
strong rods that are fit for
sceptres, men of strong judgments and strong resolutions that are fit for magistrates. When the royal family of Judah was numerous, and the courts of justice were filled with men of sense and probity, then
Jerusalem's stature was exalted among thick branches; when the government is in good able hands a nation is thereby made considerable Then she was not taken for a weak and lowly vine, but
she appeared in her height, a distinguished city,
with the multitude of her branches. Tanquam lenta solent inter viburna cupressi -
Midst humble withies thus the cypress soars. In thy quietness (so some read that,
Ezek 19:10, which we translate
in thy blood ) thou wast such a vine as this. When Zedekiah was quiet and easy under the king of Babylon's yoke his kingdom flourished thus. See how slow God is to anger, how he defers his judgments, and waits to be gracious. 2. This vine is now quite destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar, being highly provoked by Zedekiah's treachery,
plucked it up in fury (
Ezek 19:12), ruined the city and kingdom, and cut off all the branches of the royal family that fell in his way. The vine was
cut off close to the ground, though not plucked up by the roots. The
east wind dried up the fruit that was blasted. The young people fell by the sword, or were carried into captivity. The aspect of it had nothing that was pleasing, the prospect nothing that was promising. Her
strong rods were broken and withered; her great men were cut off, judges and magistrates deposed.
The vine itself is planted in the wilderness, Ezek 19:13. Babylon was as a wilderness to those of the people that were carried captives thither; the land of Judah was as a wilderness to Jerusalem, now that the whole country was ravaged and laid waste by the Chaldean army - a
fruitful land turned into barrenness. It is
burnt with fire (
Pss 80:16) and that fire has
gone out of a rod of her branches (
Ezek 19:14); the king himself, by rebelling against the king of Babylon, has given occasion to all this mischief. She may thank herself for the fire that consumes her; she has by her wickedness made herself like tinder to the sparks of God's wrath, so that her own branches serve as fuel for her own consumption; in them the fire is kindled which
devoured the fruit, the sins of the elder being the judgments which destroy the younger; her
fruit is burned with her own branches, so that she
has no strong rod to be a sceptre to rule, none to be found now that are fit for the government or dare take
this ruin under their hand, as the complaint is (
Isa 3:6,
Isa 3:7), none of the house of David left that have a right to rule, no wise men, or men of sense, that are able to rule. It goes ill with any state, and is likely to go worse, when it is thus deprived of the blessings of government and has
no strong rods for sceptres. Woe unto thee, O land! when thy king is a child, for it is as well to have no rod as not a strong rod. Those strong rods, we have reason to fear, had been instruments of oppression, assistant to the king in
catching the prey and devouring men, and now they are destroyed with him. Tyranny is the inlet to anarchy; and, when the rod of government is turned into the serpent of oppression, it is just with God to say, There shall be no strong rod to be a sceptre to rule; but let men be as
are the fishes of the sea, where the greater devour the less. Note,
This is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation. The prophet was bidden (
Ezek 19:1)
to take up a lamentation; and, having done so, he leaves it to be made use of by others.
It is a lamentation to us of this age, and, the desolations continuing long, it
shall be for a lamentation to those that shall come after us; the child unborn will rue the destruction made of Judah and Jerusalem by the present judgments. They were a great while in coming; the bow was long in the drawing; but now that they have come they will continue, and the sad effects of them will be entailed upon posterity. Note, Those who fill up the measure of their fathers' sins are laying up in store for their children's sorrows and furnishing them with matter for lamentation; and nothing is more so than the overthrow of government.