All Nations Serving The LORD
Psa_22:27; Dan_7:13-14; Dan_7:27.
GOD Beholding The Nations
Psa_66:3-7.
GOD Making All Nations Out Of One Blood
Act_17:23-26.
How States Fall And How States Are Prolonged
Pro_28:1-2.
The LORD Destroying Nations
Job_12:9-23; Psa_110:5-6.
The LORD Gathering The Nations Together
Isa_66:17-18; Joe_3:1-14; Zep_3:8; Zec_12:1-3; Zec_14:1-2; Mat_25:31-33; Rev_16:13-16.
The LORD Judging Among The Nations
Isa_2:3-4; Mic_4:1-3.
The Nation Whose GOD Is The LORD
Psa_33:12.
The Nations That Oppose The LORD
Psa_2:1-6.
The Nations That Forget GOD
Psa_9:17.
The Origin Of The Post-Flood Nations
Gen_9:18-19; Gen_10:1-32.
What Exalts A Nation
Pro_14:34.
What Nations The LORD Shall Destroy
Jer_30:10-11; Jer_46:28; Dan_2:31-44; Amo_9:7-8; Zec_12:8-9.
What The Nations Shall Know
1Ki_8:60; Psa_9:20; Isa_49:26; Eze_38:23; Rom_16:25-26.
Who All Nations Are Blessed In
Gen_12:1-3; Gen_18:18; Gen_22:15-18; Gen_26:3-4; Act_3:25; Gal_3:6-8.
Who Are The Parents Of Many Nations
Gen_17:4-6; Gen_17:15-16.
Who Became A Great Nation
Gen_17:20; Gen_21:8-13; Gen_21:17-18.
NATIONS.—In many places where in the AV
The Heb. (goi) and Greek (ethnos) words denote invariably a nation or a people, never a person. Where in the AV
In the AV
The two words (Heb. and Greek) translated ‘nation’ have their original and literal sense in many parts of the OT and NT, as in Gen 10:5; Gen 10:10 etc., Isa 2:4 (= Mic 4:2 f.), Job 12:23; Job 34:20, Act 17:28, Gal 3:14. In other passages this general meaning is narrowed so as to embrace the descendants of Abraham, e.g. in Gen 12:2; Gen 18:18; Gen 17:4-6; Gen 17:15. But it is the plural that occurs by far the most frequently, standing almost invariably for non-Israelitish nations, generally with the added notion of their being idolatrous and immoral: see Exo 9:24; Exo 34:10, Lev 25:44 ff., Num 14:15, Deu 15:5, 1Ki 4:31, Isa 11:10; Isa 11:12, and often. These are contrasted with Israel ‘the people of Jahweh’ in 2Sa 7:22, 1Ch 17:21 etc.
This contrast between Israel (united or divided into the kingdoms of Israel and Judah) as Jahweh’s people, and all the rest of the human race designated ‘nations,’ runs right through the OT. Such a conception could have arisen only after the Israelites bad developed the consciousness of national unity. At first, even among the Israelites, each nation was thought to be justified in worshipping its deity (see Deu 3:24; Deu 10:17, 1Ki 8:23, Isa 19:1 etc.). As long as this idea prevailed there could be no necessary antagonism between Israelites and foreign nations, except that which was national, for the nation’s god was identified with the national interests. But when the belief in Jahweh’s absolute and exclusive claims possessed the mind of Israel, as it began to do in the time of the earliest literary prophets (see Amo 9:1-15 ff., Mic 7:18 etc.), the nations came to be regarded as worshippers of idols (Lev 18:20), and in Psa 9:5; Psa 9:15; Psa 9:17 (cf. Eze 7:21) ‘nations’ and ‘wicked people’ are, as being identical, put in parallelism. It will be gathered from what has been said, that the hostile feelings with which Israelites regarded other peoples varied at various times. At all periods it would be modified by the laws of hospitality (see art. Stranger), by political alliances (cf. Isa 7:1 ff., and 2Ki 16:5 ff., Ahaz and Assyria against Israel and Syria), and by the needs of commerce (see Eze 27:11 [Tyre], 1Ki 9:28; 1Ki 10:11; 1Ki 22:28 etc.).
The reforms instituted by king Josiah in the Southern Kingdom (2Ki 22:1 f.), based upon the Deuteronomic law newly found in the Temple, aimed at stamping out all syncretism in religion and establishing the pure religion of Jahweb. This reformation, as also the Rechabite movement (Jer 35:1-19), had a profound influence upon the thoughts and feelings of Jews, widening the gulf between them and alien nations. The teaching of the oldest prophets looked in the same direction (see Amo 2:11; Amo 3:15; Amo 5:11; Amo 5:25; Amo 6:8; Amo 8:5, Hos 2:19; Hos 8:14; Hos 9:10; Hos 10:13; Hos 12:7 ff; Hos 14:4, Isa 2:6; Isa 10:4; Isa 17:10, Zep 1:8; Zep 1:11, Jer 35:1 ff; Jer 37:6 f. etc.).
But the Deuteronomic law (about b.c. 620) made legally obligatory what earlier teachers had inculcated. Israelites were not to marry non-Israelites (Deu 7:3), or to have any except unavoidable dealings with them.
The feeling of national exclusiveness and antipathy was intensified by the captivity in Babylon, when the prophetic and priestly instructors of the exiled Jews taught them that their calamities came upon them on account of their disloyalty to Jahweh and the ordinances of His religion, and because they compromised with idolatrous practices and heathen nations. It was in Babylon that Ezekiel drew up the programme of worship and organization for the nation after the Return, laying stress on the doctrine that Israel was to be a holy people, separated from other nations (see Eze 40:1-49; Eze 41:1-26; Eze 42:1-20; Eze 43:1-27; Eze 44:1-31; Eze 45:1-25; Eze 46:1-24; Eze 47:1-23; Eze 48:1-35). Some time after the Return, Ezra and Nehemiah had to contend with the laxity to which Jews who had remained in the home land and others had yielded; but they were uncompromising, and won the battle for nationalism in religion.
Judaism was in even greater danger of being lost in the world-currents of speculation and religion soon after the time of Alexander the Great. Indeed, but for the brave Maccabæan rising in the earlier half of the 2nd cent. b.c., both the religion and the language of the Jew might, humanly speaking, have perished.
The Apocrypha speaks of the ‘nations’ just as do the later writings of the OT. They are ‘uncircumcised,’ ‘having sold themselves to do evil’ (1Ma 1:15); they break the Sabbath, offer no sacrifice to Jahweh, eat unclean food and such as has been offered to idols (2Ma 5:6; 2Ma 5:9; 2Ma 5:18; 2Ma 15:1 f. etc. etc.).
The NT reveals the same attitude towards foreign nations on the part of the Jews (see Act 10:45 et passim). In Rabbinical writings Jewish exclusiveness manifested itself even more decisively (see Eisenmenger, Entdecktes Judenthum, vol. i., esp. ch. xvi.). But, as in the OT a broader spirit shows itself constantly, culminating in the universalism of Christianity, so enlightened and broadminded Jews in all ages have deprecated the fanatical race-hatred which many of their compatriots have displayed.
T. Witton Davies.
