Ezekiel 47:16 - Exposition
The four names here mentioned belong to towns or places lying on the road to Zedad, and stretching from west to east. Hamath , called also Hamath the Great ( Amos 6:2 ), situated on the Orontes, north of Hermon and Antilibanus ( Joshua 13:5 ; 3:3 ), was the capital of a kingdom to which also belonged Riblah ( 2 Kings 23:33 ). Originally colonized by the Canaanites ( Genesis 10:18 ), it became in David's time a flourishing kingdom under Toi, who formed an alliance with the Hebrew sore-reign against Hadadezer of Zoba ( 2 Samuel 8:9 ; 1 Chronicles 18:9 ). It was subsequently conquered by the King of Assyria ( 2 Kings 18:34 ). Winer thinks it never belonged to Israel; but Schurer cites 1 Kings 9:19 and 2 Chronicles 8:3 , 2 Chronicles 8:4 to show that at least in Solomon's reign it was temporarily annexed to the empire of David's son. In Ezekiel's chart the territory of united Israel should extend, not to the town of Hamath, but to the southern boundary of the land of Hamath. Berothah was probably the same as Berothai ( 2 Samuel 8:8 ), afterwards called Chun ( 1 Chronicles 18:8 ), if Chun is not a textual corruption. The town in question cannot be identified either with the modern Beirut on the Phoenician coast (Conder), since it must have lain west of Hamath, and therefore at a considerable distance from the sea; or with Birtha , the present day El-Bir , or Birah , on the east bank of the Euphrates, which is too far east; or with the Galilaean Berotha, near Kadesh (Josephus), as this is too far south; but must be sought for between Hamath and Damascus, and most likely close to the former. Sibraim , occurring here only, may, on the other hand, be assumed to have lain nearer Damascus, and may, perhaps, be identified with Ziphron ( Numbers 34:9 ), though the site of this town cannot be where Wetstein placed it, at Zifran , north-east of Damascus, and on the road to Palmyra. Smend compares it with Sepharvaim ( 2 Kings 17:24 ). Damascus was the well-known capital of Syria ( Isaiah 7:8 ), and the principal emporium of commerce between East and West Asia ( Ezekiel 27:18 ). Its high antiquity is testified by both Scripture ( Genesis 14:15 ; Genesis 15:2 ) and the cuneiform inscriptions, in which it appears as Dimaski and Dimaska . Hazar-hatticon ; or, the middle Hazar , was probably so styled to distinguish it from Hazar-enan (verse 17). (On the import of Hatticon, see Exodus 26:28 and 2 Kings 20:4 , in both of which places it signifies "the middle.") The word Hazar ( חֲצַר ), "an enclosure," or "place fenced off," was employed to denote villages or townships, of which at least six are mentioned in Scripture (see Gesenius, 'Lexicon,' sub voce ). Hauran , αὐρανῖτις ( LXX .), "Cave-land," so called because of the number of its caverns, was most likely designed to designate "the whole tract of land between Damascus and the country of Gilead" (Keil).
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