Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Amos 1:3 - 1:3

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Amos 1:3 - 1:3


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Here begins a series of threatenings of vengeance against six other states, followed by one against Judah, and ending with one against Israel, with whom the rest of the prophecy is occupied. The eight predictions are in symmetrical stanzas, each prefaced by “Thus saith the Lord.” Beginning with the sin of others, which Israel would be ready enough to recognize, he proceeds to bring home to Israel her own guilt. Israel must not think hereafter, because she sees others visited similarly to herself, that such judgments are matters of chance; nay, they are divinely foreseen and foreordered, and are confirmations of the truth that God will not clear the guilty. If God spares not the nations that know not the truth, how much less Israel that sins willfully (Luk 12:47, Luk 12:48; Jam 4:17)!

for three transgressions ... and for four - If Damascus had only sinned once or twice, I would have spared them, but since, after having been so often pardoned, they still persevere so continually, I will no longer “turn away” their punishment. The Hebrew is simply, “I will not reverse it,” namely, the sentence of punishment which follows; the negative expression implies more than it expresses; that is, “I will most surely execute it”; God’s fulfillment of His threats being more awful than human language can express. “Three and four” imply sin multiplied on sin (compare Exo 20:5; Pro 30:15, Pro 30:18, Pro 30:21; “six and seven,” Job 5:19; “once and twice,” Job 33:14; “twice and thrice,” Margin; “oftentimes,” English Version, Job 33:29; “seven and also eight,” Ecc 11:2). There may be also a reference to seven, the product of three and four added; seven expressing the full completion of the measure of their guilt (Lev 26:18, Lev 26:21, Lev 26:24; compare Mat 23:32).

threshed - the very term used of the Syrian king Hazael’s oppression of Israel under Jehu and Jehoahaz (2Ki 10:32, 2Ki 10:33; 2Ki 13:7). The victims were thrown before the threshing sledges, the teeth of which tore their bodies. So David to Ammon (2Sa 12:31; compare Isa 28:27).