Verse 13
13. Or for his land Some, not so well, read this expression parenthetically, (when for his land.) It stands rather as a divine providence between the dearth that brings correction and sorrow and the abundance which means mercy, but which is too oft perverted into channels of spiritual blight and apostasy: “so tempered.” says Warburton, “in a long-continued course as to produce that fertility of soil which was to make one of the blessings of the Promised Land, a providence as distinct from the other two of correction and mercy as the genus is from the species.” Divine Legation, vi, sec. 2. In chastisement the world is no less the care of God than when under the more constant regime of mercy. The very clouds, “the most elevating part of nature,” whose design is one of mercy, ever tempering the sun’s intolerable glare frail and evanescent purveyors of heaven’s wondrous gift of rain may by the sins of men be converted into a scourge and blight to the world.
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