The New John Gill Exposition of the Entire Bible Nahum 1:7
The Lord [is] good… To Israel, as the Targum adds; to
Hezekiah and his, people, that betook themselves to him, and put their
trust in him; whom he defended and preserved from the king of Assyria,
to whom he was dreadful and terrible, destroying his army in one night
by an angel; and so delivered the king of Judah and the inhabitants of
Jerusalem from that terror that had seized them, and that danger they
were exposed unto; and so the Lord is good in himself, in the
perfections of his nature, in the works of his hands, in all his
persons to his people, that fear him, trust in him, and seek him, and
wait for him, and on him:
a strong hold in the day of trouble; or, he is "good for a strong hold"
{w}… it was a day of trouble, rebuke, and blasphemy, with Hezekiah
and his people, when they were besieged by the army of Sennacherib king
of Assyria, and had received from Rabshakeh by his orders a railing and
reproaching letter; and then the Lord was a strong hold to them, to
whom they betook themselves, and he protected and defended them. The
whole time of this life is a time of trouble to the saints, though it
is but a day, a short time; in which they meet with much from their own
corrupt hearts, and the sin that dwells in them; from Satan and his
temptations; from carnal professors, their principles and practices;
and from a profane and persecuting world; and from the Lord himself,
who sometimes lays his afflicting hand upon them, and hides his face
from them; and yet he is their rock and their refuge, their strong
tower and place of defence; where they find safety and plenty in all
their times of distress and want:
and he knoweth them that trust in him; in his word, as the Targum; and
they are such that know him, and are sensible of the vanity of all
other objects of trust; who betake themselves to him for shelter and
protection; lean and stay themselves upon him, and commit all unto him,
and expect all from him: these he knows, loves, and has the strongest
affection for; he approves of them, and commends their faith and
confidence; he takes notice of them, visits them, and makes himself
known unto them, even in their adversity; he owns and acknowledges them
as his own, claims his right in them now, and will confess them
hereafter; and he takes care of them that they perish not, whoever else
do; see (Psalms 1:6) (2 Timothy 2:18,19) ; he knows the necessities of those that
trust in him, as Jarchi; he knows them for their good, takes care of
them, provides for, them, and watches over them, as Kimchi. The
ancients formerly had their (gnwsthrav) and (munhtav) , "notores" F24,
such as knew them, and were their patrons and defenders; as when a
Roman citizen was condemned to be whipped or crucified in a province
where he was not known, and claimed the Roman privileges, such persons
were his witnesses and advocates; and thus the Lord is represented as
one that knows his people, and is their patron and advocate. The
goodness of God expressed in this text is set off with a foil by the
terribleness of his wrath and vengeance against his enemies.
FOOTNOTES:
F23 (zweml hwhy bwj) "bonus Dominus ad robur", Burkius; "bonus est
Jehovah in arcem", Cocceius.
F24 Dannhaver, apud Burkium in loc. Vid. Turnebi Adversar. l. 29. c. 36.
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The New John Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible Modernised and adapted for the computer by Larry Pierce of Online Bible. All Rightes Reserved, Larry Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario. A printed copy of this work can be ordered from: The Baptist Standard Bearer, 1 Iron Oaks Dr, Paris, AR, 72855
Bibliography Information
Gill, John. "Commentary on Nahum 1:7". "The New John Gill Exposition of the Entire Bible". <http://www.studylight.org/com/geb/view.cgi?book=na&chapter=001&verse=007>. 1999.
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