![]() ![]() We have the patriarchs and prophets of old who used various items as visual stimulants in presenting the message. Historically, visual aids have been used to present the message to the people. Visualizations create permanent records just as written documents do. This vision that he should write was not dictation it was like a cinematic movie played out before him in surround sound. The delivery of the message was audible.īut God told Habakkuk to write, not speak the message given to the him as a vision. Prophets received messages from God, and they were to speak the message, “Thus saith the Lord” (see Ezekiel 25:1-3, 8, 15). These were the instructions given to the prophet Habakkuk. If the contents of a play-bill were to be read as many read the Bible, they would know just as much of the one as they do of the other.“Write the vision and make it plain on tablets, that he may run who reads it” (Habakkuk 2:2, NKJV). He that reads, studies, meditates, and prays, shall understand every portion of this sacred book that relates immediately to his own salvation. ![]() This interpretation has been frequently given and it has been incautiously applied to the whole of the Bible: "God's book is so plain, that he that runs may read " but it is very foolish: God never intends that his words shall be understood by the careless. The prophet does not mean that the words are to be made so plain, that a man running by may easily read them, and catch their meaning. That he may run that readeth it - That he who attentively peruses it may speed to save his life from the irruption of the Chaldeans, by which so many shall be cut off. ![]() Make it plain upon tables - Write it in a full plain, legible hand. Write the vision - Carefully take down all that I shall say. "write the prophecy, and explain it in the book of the law, that he may hasten to obtain wisdom, whoever he is that reads in it.' ![]() That he may run that readeth it may run through the whole without any difficulty, without making any stop, being written in such large capital letters and those cut so well, and made so plain, that a man might run it over at once with ease, or even read it as he was running nor need he stop his pace, or stand to read. In like manner the Jewish prophets used to write and expose their prophecies publicly on tables, either in their own houses, or in the temple, that everyone that passed by might read them. These tables were made of wood, sometimes of one sort, and sometimes of another sometimes they were made of the pine tree, as appears from Euripides but, for the most part, of box, according to the Greek version as above and consisted sometimes of two leaves, for the most part of three or five, covered with wax, on which impressions were easily made, and continued long, and were very legible and these impressions or letters were formed with an iron style or pen see Jeremiah 17:1 this the Greeks and Tuscans first used, but was afterwards forbidden by the Romans, who, instead of it, ordered an instrument of bone to be used: hence these tables were wont to be called "wax", because besmeared with it and so, in wills and testaments written on them, the heirs are said to be written either in the first wax, or in the bottom of the wax, that is, of the will, or in the lowest part of the table, or what we should call the bottom of the leaf or page: and it was a custom among the Romans, as Cicero relates, that the public affairs of every year were committed to writing by the Pontifex Maximus, or high priest, and published on a table, and set to view within doors, that the people might have an opportunity and be able to know them yea, it was usual to hang up laws, approved and recorded, in tables of brass, in their market places, and in their temples, that they might be seen and read the same we call annals. Writing tables are of ancient use they were used in and before the times of Homer, for he speaks of writing very pernicious things on a two leaved table wherefore Josephus must be mistaken when he suggests that letters were not found out in the times of Homer. As he does his ministers and people sooner or later, in one way or another, when they call upon him with humility and reverence, with faith and fervency:Īnd said, Write the vision which the prophet now had from him, concerning the coming of the Messiah, and the destruction of the enemies of the church and people of God: and this he has orders to "write" not only to tell it to the people then present, for their particular information and satisfaction but to write it, that it may be read over and over, and that it may remain, and be of use in times to come:Īnd make it plain upon tables, engrave it in plain legible letters on tables of wood on box tree, as the Septuagint version on which they used to write before paper was found out and used. ![]()
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