Habacuc 2:7

7 Ne se lèveront-ils pas soudain, ceux qui te mordront? Ne se réveilleront-ils pas pour te tourmenter? Et tu deviendras leur proie.

Habacuc 2:7 Meaning and Commentary

Habakkuk 2:7

Shall not they rise up suddenly that shall bite thee
Or, "thy usurers", or "creditors" F4, as some render it; the Christians, whose money, goods, and substance, they had spoiled them of, but now should be repaid with great usury and gain; these, that is, their princes and emperors, as Constantine and Theodosius, rose up suddenly, and conquered the heathen emperors, and took away their power and authority from them, and their wealth and riches, and gave them to the Christians, what they and those under them had plundered them of: and awake that shall vex thee,
or "move thee" F5; the emperor, from the throne of the empire; and other subordinate magistrates from their places of dignity, trust, and profit; the priests out of their temples; and change the face of things everywhere; and which is expressed in language agreeable to this, in ( Revelation 6:14 ) , and has respect to the same times and things, "and the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together, and every mountain and island were moved out of their place"; which is to be understood of the fall of the Pagan Roman empire: and thou shalt be for booties unto them?
the wealth and riches found in the Roman empire, as it fell into the hands of Constantine, were converted to the use of the Christians for the building of their temples, and the maintenance of their ministers, the relief of their poor, and for the reparation of losses others had sustained under the persecutions: thus the Christian emperors rose up at once, and exerted themselves; and who before seemed to be asleep awoke, and seized upon the empire, and the riches of it, and divided the spoil among themselves and their people.


FOOTNOTES:

F4 (Kykvn) "foeneratores tui, [seu] creditores tui", Cocceius, Van Till.
F5 (Kyezezm) "qui commoveant te", Pagninus, Vatablus; so R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel Moed, fol. 56. 1. "excutientes", Cocceius, Van Till; "commoventes te", Burkius.

Habacuc 2:7 In-Context

5 Et de plus, le vin est perfide, l'homme arrogant ne se tient pas tranquille; il élargit son âme comme le Sépulcre, il est insatiable comme la mort; il rassemble vers lui toutes les nations, et s'assujettit tous les peuples.
6 Tous ceux-là ne feront-ils pas à son sujet des proverbes, des railleries et des énigmes? On dira: Malheur à celui qui accumule ce qui n'est pas à lui, - jusqu'à quand? - et qui entasse sur soi des gages!
7 Ne se lèveront-ils pas soudain, ceux qui te mordront? Ne se réveilleront-ils pas pour te tourmenter? Et tu deviendras leur proie.
8 Parce que tu as pillé beaucoup de nations, tout le reste des peuples te pillera, à cause du meurtre des hommes et de la violence faite au pays, à la ville et à tous ses habitants.
9 Malheur à celui qui amasse pour sa maison des gains injustes, afin de placer son nid dans un lieu élevé, pour échapper à l'atteinte de la calamité!
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.