Chapter 11:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ezekiel Hosea
Daniel 11
A prediction of the setting up of the Grecian monarchy, ver. 1-4. Of the affairs of Egypt and Syria, ver. 5-20. The rise and
success of Antiochus Epiphanes, ver. 21-29. The mischief he
would do to the Jews, ver. 30-43. His fall, ver. 44, 45.
Verse 2. He - Xerxes was more potent than all the other three, because
his father Darius had gathered an incredible mass for him, which
he himself increased for six years together, before he made his
expedition against Greece. There were more kings of Persia
besides those four, but they had no concern with the people of
God.
Verse 3. A mighty king - Alexander the great.
Verse 4. When he shall stand up - When he is come to his highest point.
Nor according to his dominion - They did not reign as kings at
first, but only as captains; and as to the extent of their dominion, it
was far less than Alexander's, yea, all four fell short of his. Even
for others - Some lesser commanders shared several parts of the
empire.
Verse 5. The king of the south - This king was Ptolemy, the first king of
Egypt after Alexander who is brought in, because he took
Jerusalem by treachery; for the angel minds only those persons
and things which related to the Jews. One of his princes -
Seleucus Nicanor, who overcame Demetrius, and added Asia to
his empire.
Verse 6. They - The successors of those first kings of Egypt and Syria.
Make an agreement - Bernice shall come from Egypt and marry
with Antiochus Theus, who was the son of Antiochus Soter, and
nephew to Seleucus Nicanor; for her father brought her to
Pelusium with an infinite sum of gold and silver for her dowry.
She shall not retain - She continued not in favour and authority.
Nor his arm - His power.
Verse 7. Shall one stand up - Of Bernice shall come Ptolemaeus
Euergetes, who shall revenge the wrong done to his sister. Shall
enter into the fortress - For he invaded Syria, and took many
strong-holds.
Verse 8. He shall continue more years - He continued forty-six years.
Verse 9. Return - So he did with a booty of forty thousand talents of
silver. 10. But his sons - He means the sons of the king of the
north, shall be incensed with the deeds of Ptolemaeus Euergetes,
and his son Ptolemaeus Philopator. One shall come - Antiochus
the great, shall pass through Syria and recover what the king of
Egypt took from his father. Even to his fortress - To Raphia,
which was a strong fortress at the entrance of Egypt.
Verse 11. His hand - Into the hand of Ptolemy.
Verse 12. His heart shall be lifted up - He might have recovered all, but
he grew proud of his victory, and returned again to his luxury.
Verse 16. But he - Antiochus, that comes against Ptolemy. The glorious
land - Judea. Antiochus held all Judea, and with the provision and
product of it, maintained his army.
Verse 17. He shall also set his face - He shall use all the force he can to
master Egypt, and engross it to himself. Upright ones - Many of
the religious Jews joined with him: the rest of his army was a
profane rabble of rude Heathens. He shall give - Antiochus shall
give Cleopatra his daughter to young Ptolemy, called the daughter
of women, for her beauty. Corrupting her - Persuading her to
betray her husband: but she stuck to her husband's interest, and
not her father's.
Verse 18. The isles - The isles and sea-coasts of the Mediterranean and
Aegean sea. But a prince - The Roman ambassador Scipio beat
Antiochus at his own weapons of power and policy, and turned
the reproach upon his own head.
Verse 19. Then - Then he turned his face home-ward, yet was he not in
safety, but was quickly after killed.
Verse 20. A raiser of taxes - Seleucus Philopator, who peeled his
subjects, and spared not to rob the temple. Within few days - For
he lived not out the third part of his father's reign. Not in battle -
Not by open force, but by poison.
Verse 21. A vile person - Antiochus, called Epiphanes by his flatterers,
but the people of God accounted him infamous, base, and
treacherous. They - Neither peers nor people, nor was he the heir,
but his nephew; but he crept in by flatteries.
Verse 22. Overflown - The Egyptian force near Pelusium, where they
fell by the power of Antiochus, with a great slaughter, near the
river Nile. The prince - The high-priest with his place and honour,
for he put out Onias, and set up in his stead, Jason his brother.
Verse 23. After the league - For he made a league with Egypt, and came
with a few, (but chosen men) and took the passes, and put all in
subjection to him.
Verse 24. He shall enter peaceably - He shall come in upon the
Egyptians under pretense of peace, in a plentiful and delicious
country, and among a mass of treasures which the kings
successively had heaped up; the greatest part of which Antiochus
distributed among his confidants, whereby he obliged them the
faster to him. He did herein what his fathers had not done; the
kings of Syria before him, could never attain to this success over
Egypt. Against the strong-holds - Having succeeded thus far, he
shall proceed to the places of greatest strength in that kingdom.
For a time - That is 'till God put a stop to his career, for the
Egyptians found means to deliver themselves from his yoke.
Verse 25. But he shall not stand - He might have prospered, if he had not
been betrayed by Eulaius, Benaeus, and the rest of his nobles,
corrupted by Antiochus.
Verse 26. Yea - His most familiar friends and confidants; for he shall be
overthrown with a great slaughter, as when the Nile overflows the
country.
Verse 27. At one table - They shall meet under pretense of peace. But it
shall not prosper - For neither shall Antiochus gain Egypt by all
his artifice, nor Ptolemy, Syria. At the time appointed - By the
Lord, whose purpose and counsel shall stand.
Verse 28. Then shall he return - Antiochus shall depart with his booty
gotten in Egypt. Against the holy covenant - Against the law of
God, with the people that worshipped God according to his will.
Verse 29. Toward the south - Egypt, to fight against Ptolemy. But - This
shall not be so prosperous as the two former expeditions, but shall
fail both of his victory and booty.
Verse 30. The ships of Chittim - The Roman out of Italy, and the
Archipelago. This made his heart boil with rancor, which he spit
out against the Jews; especially being solicited to it by Jason first,
and Menelaus after, who were apostates, and betrayers of their
brethren.
Verse 31. And arms - Not only of his own army, but many Jews. The
sanctuary - Even the holy of holies. The abomination - The statue
of Jupiter placed in the temple.
Verse 36. The king - Antiochus was an eminent type of antichrist; to
whom many things that follow may be applied by way of
accommodation: altho' they principally refer to Antiochus, and
had their primary accomplishment in him. For that that is
determined - That which God hath decreed to be done by him
shall be done; and that which God hath purposed to be done upon
him.
Verse 38. But in his estate - In the room of his father's God. The God of
forces - This seems to be Jupiter Olympius, never introduced
among the Syrians, 'till Antiochus did it.
Verse 39. With a strange God - Using all art and authority to propagate
his worship.
Verse 41. The children of Ammon - He will not hurt them; because they
helped him against the Jews.
Verse 43. At his steps - He had them at his foot, at his beck.
Verse 45. None shall help him - God shall cut him off in the midst of his
days. And when he destroys, who can help?
Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ezekiel Hosea
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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