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They shall make a spoil of your riches, and make a prey of your merchandise; and they shall break down your walls, and destroy your pleasant houses; and they shall lay your stones and your timber and your dust in the midst of the waters.
Verse Takeaways
1
A Prophecy Beyond One King
Commentators note the prophecy shifts from a single king ('he') to a collective ('they'). This suggests Tyre's ruin wasn't a single event but a long series of calamities. Scholars specifically point to Alexander the Great's later conquest, where he used the city's rubble to build a causeway in the sea, literally fulfilling the prediction that its stones, timber, and dust would be cast into the water.
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Book Overview
Ezekiel
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4
18th Century
Presbyterian
The description of the siege is that of a town invested by land (Ezekiel 26:7).
Nebuchadrezzar (see note on Jeremiah 21:2…
19th Century
Anglican
They shall make. —In Ezekiel 26:12, the nominative changes. It is no longer Nebuchadnezzar who does these things, but “they.” This…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
And they shall make a spoil of your riches The Chaldean army, when they entered the city, and got possession of it, …
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To be secretly pleased with the death or decay of others when we are likely to benefit from it, or with their fall when we may prosper from it, is …