Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 25:9

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 25:9

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

I will open the side of Moab; literally, the shoulder, i.e. the slopes of the mountain of Moab (, ). For Beth-jeshimoth (equivalent to "House of wastes"), see ; ; .

It had been assigned to Reuben, but had been seized by the Moabites. It has been identified by De Sauley with the ruins now known as Suaime, on the northeastern border of the Dead Sea. Baal-moon (), more fully Beth-baal-meon (), or Beth-moon ().

The name is found in ruins of some extent, known as the fortress of Mi'un or Maein, about three miles south of Heshbon ('Dict. Bible,' s.v.). Kiriathaim. The dual form of the name (equivalent to "Two cities") implies, perhaps, the union of an old and new town, or two towns on the opposite sides of a brook or wady.

The name appears in ; ; ; , . It has been identified with El-Teym, about two miles from Medeba (Burckhardt), and with Kurei-yat, on the south side of Jebel Attarus.

Eusebius ('Onom.,' s.v.) describes it as about ten miles from Medeba, and close to the Baris, lint nothing is known as to the last-named place. The three cities all belonged to the region which Sihon and Og had conquered from the Moabites before Israel obtained possession of them, and they were afterwards claimed as belonging to the Israelites by right of conquest ( 11:23), and them may therefore be a touch of irony in Ezekiel's language describing them as Moabite cities.

Collectively they were the glory of the country, the region known as the Belka, in which they were situated, giving the best pasturage, then as now, in Southern Syria. Havernick quotes a Bedouin proverb, "There is no land like Belka".

Kirjath and Baal-meon appear in Mesha's inscription on the Moabite Stone.

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