Hosea 8:6

6 Want dat is ook uit Israel; een werkmeester heeft het gemaakt, en het is geen God, maar het zal tot stukken worden, het kalf van Samaria.

Hosea 8:6 Meaning and Commentary

Hosea 8:6

For from Israel [was] it also
That is, the calf was from Israel; it was an invention of theirs, as some say; they did not borrow it from their neighbours, as they did other idols, but it was their own contrivance: but this tines not seem to be fact; for the calf, the making of it indeed, was of themselves, but the worship of it they borrowed from the Egyptians; with this difference, the Egyptians worshipped a living cow or ox, these the golden image of a calf: but rather the sense is, that this calf was made by the advice of Israel, by the advice of Jeroboam their king, and of their princes, they assenting to it, so Aben Ezra; or the gold and silver of which it was made was exacted on them, and collected from them, as the Targum and Jarchi; or workmen were employed by them to make it; and so it was of them also, as any other work that was done by their advice and direction, and at their expense; and therefore could never have any divinity in it, any more than other things they did; though this is commonly interpreted as having respect to the making of the golden calf by Aaron, that this also was of Israel as well as that: the workman made it; therefore it [is] not God;
a strong and invincible reason this; for, since the call was the work of an artificer, of the goldsmith or founder, it could not be God; there could not be deity in it; for a creature cannot make a God, or give that which itself has not; if the workman was not God, but a creature, if deity was not in him, he could never give it to a golden image, a lifeless statue fashioned by him: this, one would think, should have been a clear, plain, striking, and convincing argument to them, that their calf was, as the Targum has it,

``a deity in which there was no profit:''
but the calf of Samaria shall be broken to pieces;
or "for F6 the calf of Samaria" being another reason to prove it could not be God; if the former would not convince them, this surely would, when they should see it broke to pieces by the enemy, from whom it could not save itself; and therefore could not be a god that could be of any service to them, or save them. The Vulgate Latin version renders it, "for the calf of Samaria shall become spiders webs": and Jerom says he learned it of a Jew that the word so signifies; but his Jew imposed upon him: it, does not appear to be any where so used, either in the Bible, or in any other writings. Kimchi interprets it shivers, fragments, broken pieces of anything. Jarchi says it signifies, in the Syriac language, beams, planks, and boards, pieces of them; so the Targum and Ben Melech from the Rabbins; or rather the dust which falls from them in sawing, sawdust; to dust as small as that should this calf be reduced, as the golden calf was ground to powder by Moses, to which, it is thought, there is an allusion.
FOOTNOTES:

F6 (yk) "nam", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Cocceius; "quia", Schmidt; "quoniam", Pagninus, Montanus.

Hosea 8:6 In-Context

4 Zij hebben koningen gemaakt, maar niet uit Mij; zij hebben vorsten gesteld, maar Ik heb het niet gekend; van hun zilver en hun goud hebben zij voor zichzelven afgoden gemaakt, opdat zij uitgeroeid worden.
5 Uw kalf, o Samaria! heeft u verstoten; Mijn toorn is tegen hen ontstoken; hoe lang zullen zij de reinigheid niet verdragen?
6 Want dat is ook uit Israel; een werkmeester heeft het gemaakt, en het is geen God, maar het zal tot stukken worden, het kalf van Samaria.
7 Want zij hebben wind gezaaid, en zullen een wervelwind maaien; het zal geen staande koren hebben, het uitspruitsel zal geen meel maken; of het misschien maakte, vreemden zullen het verslinden.
8 Israel is verslonden; nu zijn zij onder de heidenen geworden, gelijk een vat, waar men geen lust toe heeft.
The Dutch Staten Vertaling translation is in the public domain.