the Week of Proper 9 / Ordinary 14
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Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari
Yehezkiel 39:1
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Dan engkau, anak manusia, bernubuatlah melawan Gog dan katakanlah: Beginilah firman Tuhan ALLAH: Lihat, Aku akan menjadi lawanmu, hai Gog raja agung negeri Mesekh dan Tubal
Adapun akan engkau, hai anak Adam! bernubuatlah akan hal Juj, katakanlah: Demikianlah firman Tuhan Hua: Bahwasanya Aku akan membalas kepadamu, hai Juj! raja Rus dan Mesekh dan Tubal!
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
son: Ezekiel 38:2, Ezekiel 38:3
Behold: Ezekiel 35:3, Nahum 2:13, Nahum 3:5
the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal: Or, "prince of Rosh, Meshech, and Tubal." Ezekiel 38:2
Reciprocal: Genesis 10:2 - General 1 Chronicles 1:5 - General 1 Chronicles 5:4 - Gog Isaiah 25:5 - shalt bring Isaiah 66:19 - Tubal Jeremiah 29:11 - thoughts Jeremiah 50:31 - I am Ezekiel 5:8 - even I Ezekiel 13:8 - behold Ezekiel 27:13 - Tubal Ezekiel 28:22 - I am against Ezekiel 32:26 - Meshech
Cross-References
And they sate them downe to eate bread: and as they lyft vp their eyes and loked about, and behold there came a company of Ismaelites from Gilead, and their camelles laden with spicerie, bawlme, and mirrhe, and were goyng downe ta cary it to Egypt.
Then as the Madianites marchaunt men passed by, they drewe and lyft Ioseph out of the pit, and solde him vnto the Ismaelites for twentie peeces of syluer. And they brought Ioseph into Egypt.
And the Madianites solde hym in Egypt vnto Putiphar, chiefe officer of Pharaos, and his chiefe stewarde.
And Ioseph sayde vnto his brethren, come neare to me I pray you. And they came neare. And he said, I am Ioseph your brother who ye solde into Egypt.
But he had sent a man before them: euen Ioseph, who was solde to be a bonde seruaunt.
And the patriarkes moued with enuie, solde Ioseph into Egypt: and God was with hym,
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Therefore, thou son of man, prophesy against Gog,.... As he had been ordered to do before, and must still continue to do it:
behold, I am against thee, O Gog; which is repeated for the confirmation of it, and to inject terror into him; for terrible it is to have God against any:
the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal; :-, the Septuagint version adds "Ros" here as there.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The present chapter describes the defeat of Evil and the triumph of God and His people. As the prophet predicted the advance of Evil under the figure of the invasion of an actual army; so he declares the overthrow of Evil by the figure of a host routed and slain, and the consequent purification of a land, partially overrun and disturbed. Some forgetting that this is a figure, have searched history to find out some campaign in the land of Israel, some overthrow of invaders, on which to fix this prophecy, and have assigned localities to the burial-place “Hamon-Gog” Ezekiel 39:11.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
CHAPTER XXXIX
The prophet goes on to denounce the Divine judgments against
Gog and his army, 1-7;
and describes their dreadful slaughter, 8-10,
and burial, 11-16,
in terms so very lofty and comprehensive, as must certainly
denote some very extraordinary interposition of Providence in
behalf of the Jews. And to amplify the matter still more, the
prophet, with peculiar art and propriety, delays the summoning
of all the birds and beasts of prey in nature to feast on the
slain, (in allusion to the custom of feasting on the remainder
of sacrifices,) till after the greater multitudes are buried;
to intimate that even the remainder, and as it were the
stragglers of such mighty hosts, would be more than sufficient
to satisfy their utmost rapacity, 17-20.
The remaining verses contain a prediction of the great
blessedness of the people of God in Gospel times, and of the
stability of the kingdom of Christ, 21-29.
It will be proper to remark that the great northern expedition
against the natural Israel, described in this and the preceding
chapter, is, from its striking resemblance in the main
particulars, put by the writer of the Apocalypse,
(Ezekiel 20:7-10,)
for a much more formidable armament of a multitude of nations
in the four quarters of the earth against the pure Christian
Church, the MYSTICAL Israel; an event still extremely remote,
and which it is thought shall immediately precede the
destruction of the world by fire, and the general judgment.
NOTES ON CHAP. XXXIX