Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
O, do not this abominable thing - A strong specimen of affectionate entreaty. One of the finest figures of poetry, when judiciously managed, the anthropopathia, the ascribing human passions to God, is often used by this prophet: so God is said to grieve, to mourn, to have his bowels moved with compassion, to repent, to be angry, etc. Here he is represented as tenderly expostulating: O, do not; or, I entreat you, do not that abominable thing which I hate.
1.Do it not: your God commands.
2.O, do it not: your Father entreats.
3.It is an abominable thing, and should not be done.
4.I hate it, and on that account ye should abstain from it.
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