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Introduction

This chapter begins with threatening some hostile invasion in short and broken sentences, full of rapidity, and expressive of sudden danger and alarm: "The trumpet to thy mouth; he cometh as an eagle," Hosea 8:1 . And why? For their hypocrisy, Hosea 8:2 ; iniquity, Hosea 8:3 ; treason (see 2 Kings 15:13 , 2 Kings 15:17 ;) and idolatry, Hosea 8:4 ; particularly the worshipping of the calves of Dan and Bethel, Hosea 8:5 , Hosea 8:6 . The folly and unprofitableness of pursuing evil courses is then set forth in brief but very emphatic terms. The labor of the wicked is vain, like sowing of the wind; and the fruit of it destructive as the whirlwind. Like corn blighted in the bud, their toil shall have no recompense; or if it should have a little, their enemies shell devour it, Hosea 8:7 . They themselves, too, shall suffer the same fate, and shall be treated by the nations of Assyria and Egypt as the vile sherds of a broken vessel, Hosea 8:8 , Hosea 8:9 . Their incorrigible idolatry is again declared to be the cause of their approaching captivity under the king of Assyria. And as they delighted in idolatrous altars, there they shall have these in abundance, Hosea 8:10-14 . The last words contain a prediction of the destruction of the fenced cities of Judah, because the people trusted in these for deliverance, and not in the Lord their God.

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