Amos 1:9

9 The Lord God saith these things, On three great trespasses of Tyre, and on four, I shall not convert it, for they closed together perfect captivity in Idumea, and had not mind on the bond of peace of brethren. (The Lord God saith these things, For the three great trespasses of Tyre, and for the fourth, I shall not turn away their punishment, for they delivered up, or sold, their Israelite captives to Edom, and did not remember their covenant with their kinsmen.)

Amos 1:9 Meaning and Commentary

Amos 1:9

Thus saith the Lord, for three transgressions of Tyrus
Or Tyre, a very ancient city in Palestine; of which (See Gill on Isaiah 23:1); and for four, I will not turn away [the punishment] thereof;
(See Gill on Amos 1:3); because they delivered up the whole captivity to Edom:
such of the Israelites that fell into their hands, or fled to them for shelter, they delivered up to the Edomites, their implacable adversaries, or sold them to them, as they did to the Grecians, ( Joel 3:6 ) ; and remembered not the brotherly covenant;
either the covenant and agreement that should be among brethren, as the Jews and Edomites were which the Tyrians should have remembered, and persuaded them to live peaceably; and not have delivered the one into the hands of the other, to be used in a cruel manner as slaves: or else the covenant made between Hiram king of Tyre, and David king of Israel, and which was renewed between Hiram and Solomon, on account of which they called each other brethren, ( 2 Samuel 5:11 ) ( 1 Kings 5:1 1 Kings 5:12 ) ( 9:13 ) . The Phoenicians, of whom, the Tyrians were the principal, are noted for being faithless and treacherous {f}. "Punica fides" F7 was the same as "French faith" now; the perfidy of Hannibal is well known F8. Cicero F9 says the Carthaginians, which were a colony of the Tyrians, were a deceitful and lying people; and Virgil F11 calls the Tyrians themselves "Tyrios bilingues", "double tongued Tyrians", which, Servius interprets deceitful, as referring more to the mind than to the tongue; and observes from Livy the perfidy of the Phoenicians in general, that they have nothing true nor sacred among them; no fear of God, no regard to an oath, nor any religion; and which are the three or four transgressions for which they are said here they should be punished; for, besides their ill usage of the Jews, their idolatry no doubt came into the account: the god that was worshipped at Tyre was Hercules, by whom was meant the sun, as Macrobius F12 observes; and as there were several Heathen gods of this name, he whom the Tyrians worshipped is the fourth of the name with Cicero F13; the same is the Melicarthus of Sanchoniatho F14, which signifies the king of the city, by which Bochart F15 thinks Tyre is intended. To be a priest of Hercules was the second honour to that of king, as Justin F16 observes; and so careful were the Tyrians of this deity, that they used to chain him, that he might not depart from them; see ( Jeremiah 10:4 ) ; and a most magnificent temple they had in honour of him, and which, they pretended, was exceeding ancient, as old as the city itself, the antiquity of which they speak extravagantly of Herodotus F17 says he saw this temple, and which was greatly ornamented, and particularly had two pillars, one of gold, and another of emerald; and inquiring of the priests, they told; him it was built when their city was, ten thousand three hundred years before that time; but according to their own historians F18, Hiram, who lived in the days of Solomon, built the temple of Hercules, as well as that of Astarte; for though she is called the goddess of the Sidonians, she was also worshipped by the Tyrians; as he also ornamented the temple of Jupiter Olympius, and annexed it to the city, which deity also it seems had worship paid it in this place.


FOOTNOTES:

F6 Alex. ab Alex. Genial Dier. l. 5. c. 10.
F7 Vid. Reinesiura de Ling. Punic. c. 2. sect. 12.
F8 Vid. Valer. Maxim. l. 9. c. 6.
F9 Contra Rullum, Orat. 16.
F11 Aeneid. l. 1.
F12 Saturnal. l. 1. c. 20.
F13 De Naturn Deorum, l. 3.
F14 Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 2. p. 38.
F15 Canaan, l. 2. col. 709.
F16 E Trogo, l. 18. c. 4.
F17 Euterp, sive l. 2. c. 44.
F18 Meander & Dius apud Joseph. Antiqu. l. 8. c. 5. sect. 3.

Amos 1:9 In-Context

7 And I shall send fire into the wall of Gaza, and it shall devour the houses thereof. (And I shall send fire onto the city walls of Gaza, and it shall devour the houses there.)
8 And I shall lose the dwellers of Ashdod, and him that holdeth the sceptre of Ashkelon; and I shall turn mine hand on Ekron, and the remnants of Philistines shall perish, saith the Lord God. (And I shall destroy the inhabitants of Ashdod, and him who holdeth the sceptre of Ashkelon; and I shall turn my hand against Ekron, and the remnants of the Philistines shall perish, saith the Lord God.)
9 The Lord God saith these things, On three great trespasses of Tyre, and on four, I shall not convert it, for they closed together perfect captivity in Idumea, and had not mind on the bond of peace of brethren. (The Lord God saith these things, For the three great trespasses of Tyre, and for the fourth, I shall not turn away their punishment, for they delivered up, or sold, their Israelite captives to Edom, and did not remember their covenant with their kinsmen.)
10 And I shall send fire into the wall of Tyre, and it shall devour the houses thereof. (And I shall send fire onto the city walls of Gaza, and it shall devour the houses there.)
11 The Lord saith these things, On three great trespasses of Edom, and on four, I shall not convert it, for it pursued by sword his brother, and defouled the mercy of him, and poured further his strong vengeance, and kept his indignation till into without end. (The Lord saith these things, For the three great trespasses of Edom, and for the fourth, I shall not turn away their punishment, for they pursued their own kinsmen with swords, and defiled their own mercy/and gave them no mercy, and poured out more of their strong vengeance, and kept their indignation kindled forevermore.)
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.