NOTES ON The Book of JEREMIAH
It was the great unhappiness of this prophet, to be a physician to, but that could not
save, a dying state, their disease still prevailing against the remedy; and indeed no
wonder that all things were so much out of order, when the book of the law had been
wanting above sixty years. He was called to be a teacher in his youth, in the days of good
Josiah, being sanctified and ordained by God to his prophetical office from his mother's
womb, chap.1:5, in a very evil time, though the people afterward proved much
worse upon the death of that good king. He setting himself against the torrent of the
corruptions of the times, was always opposed, and unkindly treated by his ungrateful
country - men, as also by false prophets, and the priests, princes, and people, who
encouraged all their impieties and unrighteousness: at length he threatened their
destruction and captivity by the Chaldeans, which he lived to see, but foretells their
return after seventy years; all which accordingly came to pass. He also, notwithstanding
his dreadful threatenings, intermixes divers comfortable promises of the Messiah, and the
days of the gospel; he denounces also heavy judgments against the Heathen nations, that
had afflicted God's people, both such as were near, and also more remote, as Egypt, the
Philistines, Moab, Edomites, Ammonites, Damascus, Kedar, Hazor, Elam, but especially
Babylon herself, that is made so great a type of the Anti - Christian Babylon in the New
Testament. Upon the murder of Gedaliah, whom the Chaldeans had made governor of Judea, he
was forcibly against his will carried into Egypt, where (after he had prophesied from
first to last between forty and fifty years) he probably died; some say he was stoned.
Whatever else we hear mentioned of his writings, they are either counterfeit as the
prophecies of Baruch, &c, or it is likely we have the sum of them in this book, though
possibly some of his sermons might have had some enlargements in that roll, which by his
appointment, was written by Baruch, chap. 36:2, &c.
Chapter I
The pedigree, time, and calling of Jeremiah, confirmed against his excuses, ver. 1
- 10. His visions of an almond - rod and seething pot, ver. 11 - 14. His heavy message
against Judah, ver. 15, 16. God promises him his assistance, ver. 17 - 19.
| 1 |
Anathoth - Was a city three miles from Jerusalem, allotted out of the tribe of
Benjamin for the priests. |
| 2 |
The word - That commission from God that authorized him to his prophetic work, for the
space of forty - one years successively in Judea, viz. from the 13th year of Josiah to the
11th year of Zedekiah, besides the time that he prophesied in Egypt. In the days - During
his reign. Thirteenth - By which it appears that Jeremiah prophesied the last eighteen
years of Josiah's reign; for he reigned thirty - one years, 2Kings 22:1. |
| 3 |
It - The word of the Lord. Jehoiakim - Called at first by Josiah, Eliakim. Jehoahaz
and Jehoiakin, whereof the former reigned before him, the latter succeeded, are conceived
not to be mentioned, because they reigned each of them but three months, and therefore not
considerable. Of Jerusalem - The inhabitants of Jerusalem, under Zedekiah, during all
which time Jeremiah prophesied. Captive - This does not terminate the time of his
prophecies; for he prophesied also both in Judea, and in Egypt afterwards: but only
relates to what he prophesied while the city and temple were standing, the rest seeming to
be added as a supplement. Fifth month - Of that present year; for, tho' the year end not
at the fifth month, yet it might end the year of Zedekiah's reign, because he might begin
his reign at the fifth month of the year. |
| 4 |
Then - When he was first called to his office. |
| 5 |
I sanctified - I ordained thee for this public service. He speaks thus to Jeremiah,
not to the other prophets, because he stood in need of greater encouragement than they,
both in respect of the tenderness of his years, and the difficulties which he was to
encounter with. The nations - To other nations besides the Jews. |
| 7 |
Thou shalt speak - Fear not, I will make thee eloquent and courageous. |
| 9 |
Then - God having excited the prophet by command and promise, now in a vision confirms
him, either by the hand of an angel, or by himself in some visible shape. |
| 10 |
The kingdoms - Having now received his commission, he is directed to whom he is to go;
to the greatest, not only single persons, but whole nations, as the Babylonians, Persians,
and Egyptians. To pull down - That is, to prophecy that I will pull down; which I will as
certainly effect, as if thou hadst done it thyself: for, according to scripture - usage,
the prophets are said to do that which they foretell shall come to pass. To plant -
Metaphors taken from architects and gardeners: either the former words relate to the
enemies of God, and the latter to his friends; or rather to both conditionally: if they
repent, he will build them up, he will increase their families, and settle them in the
land; if they do not, he will root them up, and pull them down. |
| 11 |
Came unto me - This and the boiling caldron, ver.13, is thought to be at
the same time, and in the same vision, when he was first appointed to the work. Almond -
tree - That had leaves, and probably blossoms on it like Aaron's. This is a tree that
blossoms early, and speedily, and so it may point at either God's readiness, to smite,
ver.12, or Israel's ripeness to be smitten; this rod being like a portentous
comet, shewing to Jeremiah the miseries that were at hand, at the death of Josiah, which
soon followed this vision, the taxing them by Pharaoh Necho, presently after the breaking
in of the Chaldees, Syrians, Moabites, and Ammonites, and then the Babylonian captivity. |
| 12 |
Well seen - Or thou hast seen and judged right. Hasten - Word for word, I will almond
- tree it, that is, I will be upon them speedily, in a short time. My word - My
threatening against Judah and its inhabitants. |
| 13 |
Seething - Pot - I see a pot coming, meaning the Babylonian army, who would besiege
Jerusalem as a fire plays round the pot, when it is to be made boil; and reduce the
inhabitants to miserable extremities. Face - Or front of the pot, or furnace, the place
where the fire was put in, or blowed up to make it boil. North - Indicating from whence
their misery should come, namely, from Chaldea, which lay north from Jerusalem. |
| 14 |
North - From Babylon. |
| 15 |
The families - Those nations that were under one lord. Kingdoms - The Babylonians, and
their assistants; the Medes also being in confederacy with them, whose king's daughter
Nebuchadnezzar married. His throne - Their seats, pavilions or tents shall be pitched,
which shall be as so many thrones. Entering - Of the gates, or way leading to them. |
| 17 |
Gird up - It is a speech taken from the custom of the countries where they wore long
garments; and therefore they girt them up about them, that they might not hinder them in
any work that required expedition. Consume thee - Lest I destroy thee even in their sight,
to become their reproach. |
| 18 |
This whole land - All its inhabitants in general; intimating, that though men of all
degrees should set themselves against him, yet God would support him against their all,
and would carry him thro' his work, tho' his troubles would not be only great, but long;
passing thro' several king's reigns. |
Chapter II
God's numerous and continued mercies render the Jews in their idolatry inexcusable,
and unparalleled in any nation; and themselves the causes if their calamities, ver. 1 -
19. Their gross idolatry, ver. 20 - 28. Incorrigibleness, bloodshedding, and hypocrisy,
ver. 29 - 37.
| 2 |
Go - From Anathoth to Jerusalem. Remember - I remind thee of the kindness that was
between us. The love - When I entered into covenant with thee at the giving of the law.
Wilderness - I took such care of thee, in the howling wilderness, a land that was not
sown. |
| 3 |
Holiness - A people dedicated to God. As - As the first fruits were holy to God, so
was Israel. Devour - All that were injurious to him. Offend - Were liable to punishment.
Evil - Evil was inflicted on them from the Lord, as upon the Egyptians, Amalekites,
Midianites, Canaanites. |
| 5 |
Vanity - Idols. Vain - Fools; senseless as the stocks and stones that they made their
idols of. |
| 6 |
Neither - They never concerned themselves about what God had done for them, which
should have engaged them to cleave to him. Of drought - Where they had no water but by
miracle. Death - Bringing forth nothing that might support life, therefore nothing but
death could be expected; and besides, yielding so many venomous creatures, as many enemies
that they went in continual danger of. No man dwelt - As having in it no accommodation for
travellers, much less for habitation. |
| 7 |
My land - Consecrated to my name; by your idols and many other abominations. |
| 8 |
They - They that should have taught others, knew as little as they, or regarded as
little, who are said here to handle the law, the priests and Levites, who were the
ordinary teachers of the law. Pastors - Either teachers, or kings and princes. Prophets -
They that should have taught the people the true worship of God, were themselves
worshippers of Baal. |
| 9 |
Plead - By his judgments, and by his prophets, as he did with their fathers, that they
may be left without excuse. Children - God often visits the iniquities of the parents upon
the children, when they imitate their parents. |
| 10 |
Of Chittim - All the isles in the Mediterranean sea, with the neighbouring coasts; for
the Hebrews call all people, that separated from them by the sea, islanders, because they
came to them by shipping. Kedar - Arabia that lay east - south - east of Judea, as Chittim
did more north or north - west; go from north to south, east to west, and make the
experiment; look to Chittim the most civilized, or Kedar the most barbarous, yet neither
have changed their gods. |
| 11 |
Their glory - The true God, who was their glory; and who always did them good, giving
them cause to glory in him. |
| 12 |
O ye heavens - A pathetical expression, intimating that it is such a thing, that the
very inanimate creatures, could they be sensible of it, would be astonished. Be desolate -
Lose your brightness, as the sun seemed to do when Christ suffered. |
| 13 |
Of living waters - A metaphor taken from springs, called living, because they never
cease, or intermit; such had God's care and kindness been over them. Cisterns - Either
their idols, which are empty vain things, that never answer expectation, or the Assyrians,
and Egyptians. Indeed all other supports, that are trusted to besides God, are but broken
vessels. |
| 14 |
A slave - Slave is here added to home - born to express the baseness of his service,
because the master had power to make those slaves who were born of slaves in his house.
Why - Why is he thus tyrannized over, as if strangers had the same right over him as
owners over their slaves? |
| 15 |
Lions - Understand the Assyrians, Babylonians, and Egyptians, called lions from their
fierceness, and young from their strength. Yelled - Noting the terrible voice that the
lion puts forth, either in seizing the prey, or devouring it. |
| 16 |
Noph, &c. - Two of the kings of Egypt's principal seats. Noph was sometimes called
Memphis, now Cairo. Tahapanes probably took its name from Taphanes queen of Egypt, 1Kings
11:19, called also Hanes: Isa 30:4. The inhabitants of these cities
are called here their children. |
| 17 |
When - By the conduct of providence in the wilderness, keeping thee from all dangers. |
| 18 |
And now - What business hast thou there? Sihor - The Nile: it signifies black, called
Melas by the Greeks, either from the blackness of the land it passed through, or of the
soil it casts up. The waters - Here and by the same words before is meant, to seek help
from either place. River - Euphrates, often called so by way of eminency. |
| 19 |
Thy wickedness - Thy own wickedness is the cause of thy correction. Know - Consider
well, and thou canst not but be convinced. |
| 20 |
Broken - The bondage and tyranny that thou wert under in old time in Egypt, as also
divers times besides. Tree - Under these shades idolaters thought there lay some hidden
deity. Wanderest - The word properly signifies, making hast from one tree to another, or
from one idol to another. Playing - Committing idolatry, which is a spiritual harlotry,
chap.3:1,2. |
| 21 |
A right seed - A right seed of true believers. |
| 22 |
Nitre - Though interpreters do greatly vary in describing what is particularly meant
here by Nitre and Soap, and would be superfluous to mention here; yet all agree, they are
some materials that artists make use of for cleansing away spots from the skin. The blot
of this people is by no art to be taken out; nor expiated by sacrifices; it is beyond the
power of all natural and artificial ways of cleansing. Marked - Thy filthiness is so foul
that it leaves a brand behind which cannot be hid or washed out, but will abide, Jer
17:1. |
| 23 |
Baalim - The word is plural, as comprehensive of all their idols. Thy way - The
filthiness thou hast left behind thee, whereby thou mayst be traced. Valley - Whether of
Hinnom where they burnt their children in sacrifice, or in any valleys where thou hast
been frequent in thy idolatries. Traversing - A metaphor taken from creatures that are
hunted, that keep no direct path. |
| 24 |
A wild ass - Another similitude for the more lively description of the same thing. The
wind - This creature, by the wind, smells afar off which way her male is. In her occasion
- That is, when she has an occasion to run impetuously to her male, she bears down all
opposition. In her month - Perhaps the sense is, though Jerusalem be now madly bent upon
going after her idols, that there is no stopping her, yet the time may come, in their
afflictions, that they may grow more tame, and willing to receive counsel. |
| 25 |
Withhold - Take not those courses that will reduce thee to poverty, to go bare foot,
and to want wherewith to quench thy thirst. No hope - We care not since there is no
remedy. Strangers - Idols. |
| 26 |
Found - Not ashamed of his sin of theft, but that he is at last found. |
| 27 |
Brought me forth - Or begotten me; so is the word used, Gen 4:18. This
denotes the sottish stupidity of this people, to take a lifeless stock or stone to be
their maker, and to give the honour of God unto them, Isa 44:17. Turned -
They turn their faces towards their idols. |
| 28 |
For - Thou hast enough of them, imitating the Heathens, who had, according to Varro,
above thirty thousand deities. Make trial if any, or all of them together, can help thee. |
| 30 |
Children - Your inhabitants in every city, they being frequently called the children
of such a city. Correction - Instruction: though they were corrected, yet they would not
be instructed. Your sword - You have been so far from receiving instruction, that you
have, by the sword, and other ways of destruction, murdered those that I have sent to
reprove you. |
| 31 |
O generation - O ye men of this generation. See - You shall see the thing with your
eyes, because your ears are shut against it. A wilderness - Have I been like the
wilderness of Arabia, have not I accommodated you with all necessaries? A land of darkness
- As it were a land uninhabitable, because of the total want of light. Have I been a God
of no use or comfort to them, that they thus leave me? Have they had nothing from me but
misery and affliction? We - Words of pride and boasting. |
| 32 |
A maid - How unlikely is it, that a maid should forget her ornaments? A bride - Those
jewels which the bridegroom was wont to present his bride with. Forgotten - In the neglect
of my worship; me, who was not only their defence, but their glory. |
| 33 |
Trimmest - Or, deckest, Ezek 23:40, thinking thereby to entice others to
thy help. Taught - Nations that have been vile enough of themselves, by thy example are
become more vile. |
| 34 |
Skirts - Of thy garments: the tokens of cruelty may be seen openly there. Innocents -
In thee is found the murder expressed here by blood of innocent persons, murdering souls
as well as bodies. Search - Heb. by digging; as if the earth had covered the blood, or as
if they had committed their wickedness in some obscure places. These - Upon thy garments,
exposed openly to publick view. |
| 35 |
Behold - I will proceed in my judgment against thee. Because - Because thou justifiest
thyself. |
| 36 |
Why - Why dost thou seek auxiliaries anywhere, rather than cleave to me? Ashamed -
Egypt shall stand thee in no more stead than Assyria hath done. |
| 37 |
Yea - All the help thou canst procure shall not prevent thy captivity, but from hence
thou shalt go. Thy hands - An usual posture of mourning. |
Chapter III
God's forbearance with the idolatry of Judah, who is worse than Israel, ver. 1 -
11. Both called to repent, with gospel promises, ver. 12 - 19. Misery by sin; salvation
only of God, ver. 20 - 25.
| 1 |
Shall be - He cannot take her again according to the law, Deut 24:1 - 4.
Yet I am ready to be reconciled to you. Polluted - Would not so great a sin greatly
pollute a nation? Many - Not with one only, but many idols. |
| 2 |
Lien with - Where there are not the footsteps of thy idolaters. Sat - To assure
passengers. As the Arabian - An allusion to the custom of that people, who were wont to
pitch their tents by the way - sides, that they might meet with their customers to trade,
as they passed along. Wickedness - Not only thy idolatries, but other wicked courses. |
| 3 |
A whore's forehead - For all this, thou didst still remain obstinate, as ashamed of
nothing. |
| 4 |
My father - Wilt thou not as a child call upon me, whom thou hast thus greatly
provoked. The guide - I have been brought up by thee. |
| 5 |
Will he - Will he not be reconciled? |
| 6 |
Israel - The ten tribes who fell off from Judah. |
| 8 |
Given a bill - Delivered her up into the hands of the Assyrian, where God took from
her the title of being his church, 2Kings 17:5,6. |
| 10 |
And yet - Though God saw what she did, and though she saw the shameful idolatry of
Israel, and what she had suffered. |
| 12 |
The north - To Assyria and Media, that lay northward from Judea, whither the ten
tribes were carried by Tiglath - pileser, and Salmanezer. |
| 13 |
Strangers - To other gods, or to idols, running here and there up and down. |
| 14 |
I am married - I am in covenant with you, and this covenant notwithstanding all your
unfaithfulness, I am ready to renew with you. Family - This word is taken frequently for a
country or nation, and this may partly respect the fewness of those that will return. But
chiefly it respects God's exact care of them, that being now married to them, there shall
not be one in a city, or two in a country or tribe, but he will find them out. Zion - The
ten tribes did never return into their own land, therefore this must be understood of a
spiritual going up to Zion, when all Israel shall be saved, Rom 11:26. |
| 16 |
Multiplied - After the growth of the church under the Messiah. The ark - That whole
worship with all the rites and ceremonies belonging to it shall cease, Christ being come,
who was the substance of what the ark, and all other rites shadowed. Covenant - Called
also the ark of the testimony, because the two tables of the law, which were the
testimony, or witness of the covenant were in it. Any more - It shall be no more in use;
neither shall men trouble their thoughts about it, or mention it. |
| 17 |
The throne - Instead of the ark, the church typified by Jerusalem, shall be the place
of God's residence, where by his spirit he will rule and act in his word and ordinances.
Jerusalem - Dwelling in Jerusalem, or where the Lord placed his name, of old in Jerusalem,
but now in the church. Neither - Both Jews and Gentiles shall now conform themselves to
the will of God. |
| 18 |
Judah - The two kingdoms shall become one. Shall come - Of their captivity, a promise
of their enjoying again their ancient possession at their last conversion. |
| 19 |
Put - Esteem thee as my child, 'till thou give some proof, of thy repentance. Give
thee - How shall I put thee into possession of that pleasant land. Of nations - Great
hosts and multitudes of nations, or Gentiles, that shall be joined to them in the gospel
church. Thou shalt - On this condition, that thou wilt own me, and not return any more to
idols. |
| 21 |
A voice - Here the prophet seems to express Israel's repentance. Forgotten - This
expresses, rather the matter or their prayer, than the cause of it. |
| 23 |
The hills - From idols which were worshipped upon hills. Mountains - The multitude of
sacrifices, which they offer in the mountains. |
| 24 |
Shame - Sin, which causes shame, for that brought shame first into the world. Devoured
- This hath been the fruit of our labour. |
| 25 |
Lie down - An expression to set forth the greatness of their repentance and sorrow in
great perplexity, not knowing what to do, throws himself down upon his couch or bed. |
Chapter IV
An invitation to true repentance, by promises, ver. 1 - 4. And judgments coming on
them by the Babylonians, contrary to the predictions of their false prophets, for their
sins, ver. 5 - 18. A grievous lamentation for the miseries of Judah, ver. 19 - 31.
| 1 |
If - If thou wilt return, return; make no longer delay. Remove - Thou shalt not go out
of thine own land into exile. |
| 2 |
Swear - This is put here for the whole worship of God, acknowledging an& owning
God as the only God; which is strongly exprest by this act. In truth - That the matter and
substance of it be true. In judgment - Deliberately, advisedly, and reverently. In
righteousness - That none be injured by it, that the things we engage be both lawful and
possible, and that we look to the performance. The nations - This shall be a means to work
upon the Heathen nations, to come into the same way of worship. They shall think
themselves happy to be incorporated with thee, that it may be with them according to that
promise, Gen 12:3. Glory - Whereas before they gloried in their idols, they
shall glory in God alone. |
| 3 |
For - The Lord turns now his speech from Israel to Judah. Break up - Prepare your
hearts by making them soft, tender, and pliable, fit to embrace my word. A metaphor taken
from plow - men. Thorns - Rid your hearts and hands of what may hinder you of embracing my
word. |
| 4 |
Circumcise - Put away your corruptions. Heart - Let it be inward, not outward in the
flesh only. |
| 5 |
The trumpet - The Lord being now about to bring enemies upon them, speaks in martial
language, warning them of the nature of their approaching judgment. |
| 6 |
Retire - Make haste away. |
| 7 |
The lion - Nebuchadnezzar, so called from his fierceness and strength. |
| 9 |
The heart - They shall have no heart to do any thing, they shall not be able to help
their people, either by their counsel or arms. Prophets - False prophets that had nothing
but visions of peace for them. |
| 10 |
Deceived - Hast suffered them to be deceived by their false prophets. Whereas - To
persuade them it should be well with them, when the sword is at the door, not only ready
to take away the comforts of life, but even life itself. |
| 11 |
At that time - There shall be tidings brought both to the country and city. A dry wind
- A drying wind, such as shall blast and scorch where it comes, without any rain or
moisture. It points at the stormy and furious irruption of the Babylonian army. In the
plain - Where there is no stop in the way to break its fury. Toward - Directly, and
designedly, coming in the way leading to my people. Not - Not such a gentle wind, as is
made choice of to separate the chaff from the wheat; but so boisterous and violent, that
it shall sweep away, and lay waste, all together. |
| 12 |
Full - Heb. Fuller than they. A wind too strong for them. Shall come - It shall
presently come to me, to receive my commission, and do my will. |
| 13 |
As clouds - Denoting the suddenness of them, when not expected, clouds often rising on
a sudden, and overspread the whole face of the heavens; or the great swiftness with which
Nebuchadnezzar should march against them. As a whirlwind - Which, besides the swiftness,
denotes also the confusion and amazement that they will cause. |
| 14 |
Wash - As a means to prevent the judgments that are impending. Vain thoughts - Vain
fancies of safety. |
| 15 |
From Dan - Dan was the first place the Chaldeans came to, being the utmost boundary of
Canaan northward. Ephraim was the innermost border of Israel in the north of Judea,
intimating the march of the Babylonians thro' all Israel. |
| 16 |
Make mention - These words are a proclamation, summoning the nations by the Chaldeans.
Watchers - Chaldean soldiers, who shall so carefully encompass Jerusalem, that none shall
escape. Give out - They give a shout, encouraging the soldiers to battle. |
| 17 |
As keepers - They will watch that none relieve them, and that none get out to escape. |
| 18 |
Bitter - Thy wickedness hath been the cause of bringing such a bitter enemy against
thee, which hath reached unto thy very heart. |
| 19 |
My bowels - Here begins the complaint of the prophet. My heart - Is disturbed within
me. Because - I have heard in the spirit of prophecy; it is as certain, as if I now heard
the trumpet sounding. |
| 20 |
Destruction - Good Josiah slain, and four of his successors carried away, or slain. My
tents - The enemy makes no more of overthrowing my stately cities, than if he were
overturning tents made of curtains. |
| 23 |
I beheld - I Jeremiah saw this in a vision. It - The land was squalid, and ruined,
like the first chaos, for which reason possibly he calls Judah the earth, in allusion to Gen
1:2. The heavens - He seems to proceed in his metaphor of the chaos. Every thing
above and below seemed to be wrapped up in dismal blackness. |
| 24 |
Trembled - He proceeds in his figurative expressions. Behold how the very mountains of
Judea tremble! Moved - As easily as dust, or feathers in a whirl - wind. |
| 25 |
No man - All being either slain, or carried captive, or fled. |
| 27 |
Yet - In the midst of judgment he will remember mercy. |
| 28 |
Mourn - Expressions to set forth the dreadfulness of the judgment; he makes the
elements to personate mourners. |
| 31 |
In travail - When the scripture would express any exquisite sorrow, it doth it by a
woman in travail. First child - Which is usually the most painful. Spreadeth her hands -
According to the use of persons in great anguish, clapping or wringing their hands
together. |
Chapter V
None godly in Judah, ver. 1. They swear falsely, tho' God be a God us truth; they
are incorrigible and senseless, and know not the law, or else wilfully violate it, ver. 1
- 6. Their idolatry, adultery, ver. 7 - 9. Contempt of God's word and prophets, which
should be sadly verified, ver, 10 - 18. They forsake, forget, and fear not God, whose
power is so great, ver. 19 - 24. They are rich through deceit and violence; their false
prophets, ver. 25 - 31.
| 1 |
Run - God gives leave to all the earth to look into the state of Jerusalem, by which
he vindicates himself in the face of the whole world from all severity towards his people,
whatever he brings upon them. In the broad places - Even there, where men meet from all
quarters. A man - It seems worse than Sodom and Gomorrah, for God condescends to pardon
Jerusalem, if there be but one righteous man found in it; there he came no lower than ten.
A man might walk the streets of Jerusalem long enough before he could meet with any one
truly religious. Executeth - Among the magistracy. Seeketh - Among the commonalty, that
deal faithfully and uprightly. |
| 2 |
Though - Though when they swear, they use the form of an oath, and say, the Lord
liveth, or by the living God: yet it is neither in truth nor righteousness. |
| 3 |
O Lord - Dost not thou approve truth and faithfulness. Grieved - They have not
repented. Consumed - God had not only lightly chastised them, but wasted them by several
enemies, yet they have profited nothing by it. |
| 4 |
Poor - The vulgar, that understand but little, of less conscience than the better
sort. Judgment - The methods or ways of his providence. |
| 5 |
But - These are more refractory than the other; no law of God is able to hold them. |
| 6 |
A lion - Nebuchadnezzar and the Chaldean army are here pointed at under the metaphor
of beasts of prey of three kinds; compared to a lion, which denotes his great power,
courage, and pride. A wolf - For their greediness and unsatiableness. A leopard - The
Chaldean army is compared to a leopard, not for its speed only, but for its vigilancy and
subtilty. |
| 7 |
They then - Such is the natural effect of unsanctified prosperity. |
| 10 |
Ye - Ye Babylonians, go execute my vengeance on them. Battlements - Lay her and all
her fortifications level with the ground. For - I disown them. |
| 12 |
Belied - Not believing that these words of the prophet were God's word. |
| 13 |
Became wind - A proverbial expression, all the prophet's threats shall come to
nothing. The word - The prophet's words are not from God. Thus - It shall fall upon their
own heads that have thus threatened us. |
| 14 |
It - The Chaldean army, shall consume and eat them up like fire. |
| 15 |
Israel - By these are meant Judah; for Israel were in captivity before: called the
house of Israel, not only because they descended from Jacob, but because they were the
chief of that stock. |
| 18 |
Nevertheless - I have not done with you yet. |
| 20 |
Judah - By Judah and Jacob we are to understand the two tribes only. |
| 21 |
And hear not - They are wilfully blind, and obstinately deaf, will neither see, nor
hear the word, will, or works of God, of which he giveth two instances in the two
following verses. |
| 22 |
The sand - That need not make rocks for walls unto it, but can give a check to it by
so small a matter as the sand. |
| 23 |
Gone - From me. |
| 24 |
The former rain - The former to prepare the ground for sowing, and the latter to
prepare the corn for ripening. Reserveth - He gives seasonable harvests according to his
appointment. God would let them know what a foolish, as well as wicked thing it is to set
themselves against that God, that keeps the whole order of nature at his own disposal,
which he can order as he sees men behave towards him. |
| 26 |
They catch - Such a trap did Jezebel lay for Naboth, 1Kings 21:9,10. Such
an one was that conspiracy of more than forty men against Paul, Acts 23:13 -
15. |
| 27 |
Their houses - They fill their houses with the goods of those they deceive, and over -
reach. |
| 28 |
Overpass - They go beyond the Heathens themselves in wickedness. |
| 30 |
The land - Heb. This land: aggravating the greatness of the wonder, that such a thing
should be in such a land. |
Chapter VI
God sends and strengthens the Babylonians against Judah, ver. 1 - 5. for her
oppression and spoils, ver. 6 - 8. and obstinacy; which provokes God's wrath, ver. 9 - 12.
Their covetousness, false confidence, and impudence; people and priests refuse to obey
God, ver. 13 - 17. Their hypocritical worship shall not prevent their sure destruction,
ver. 18 - 25. The people called to mourn, ver. 26. The prophet encouraged under their
wickedness, and the fruitlessness of his ministry among them, ver. 27 - 30.
| 1 |
Benjamin - Judah, when the ten tribes fell off, the tribe of Benjamin adhered to
Judah, and was incorporated into them; if it be asked why the prophet rather speaks to
Benjamin than to Judah, the reason probably may be, because he being of Anathoth was of
that tribe, and therefore mentions them as his own countrymen. Gather - Gather yourselves
together by the sound of the trumpet at Tekoa, one of those fenced cities twelve miles
from Jerusalem that Rehoboam built. A sign - Fire a beacon. Beth - haccerem - Signifies
the house of the vineyard, probably some high tower built among the vineyards for the
keepers of them to watch them. |
| 3 |
The shepherds - The Chaldean princes, with their armies, as so many flocks, shall come
into this pleasant land. In his place - Each one in his quarter or station. |
| 4 |
Prepare - These seem to be the words of God calling them to this work. Arise - This
shews how ready they will be to obey God's call. The day goeth - We delay, and tarry too
long, and the day spends apace. The shadows - They were so eagerly set upon it, that they
watched the lengthening of the shadow, which shews the approach of the evening. |
| 5 |
This night - They would lose neither day nor night; which shews that, they were
extraordinarily stirred up by God in this expedition. |
| 6 |
Said - To the Chaldeans: God would have the Jews to know, that they have not so much
to do with the Chaldeans as with him; that they are his rod to scourge them for their
sins. And thus God is said to hiss for such whom he will employ in such work, Isa
5:26 7:18. And he styles himself the Lord of hosts, to shew that it is in vain to
contend in battle with them, whom he sends forth. Trees - Such as you may have need of to
raise up works against the strong places. Cast a mount - Throw up one continued trench, as
a mount round about it. Oppression - There are found in her all kinds of oppression and
injustice. |
| 8 |
Be thou instructed - I would yet willingly spare them if it might be. Depart - Heb. be
disjointed, a most emphatical metaphor, whereby God would express how great grief it is to
him to withdraw himself from them, even like the separating one limb from another. |
| 9 |
Glean - Judah shalt be gleaned over and over, 'till there be a full end, none left.
Turn back - As much as to say, they should not be content with one spoiling, but they
should go back a second and a third time, to carry away both persons and spoil. |
| 10 |
Their ear - An uncircumcised ear, signifies the rejecting of instruction; an
uncircumcised heart, an obstinate and rebellious will. They cannot - They had brought
themselves under that incapacity by their obstinacy and wilfulness. A reproach - They
laugh at it, and scorn it. |
| 11 |
I am full - I am, as it were, filled with the fire of God's wrath, which I am forced
to discharge myself of. Abroad - The streets being the places where children are wont to
sport. The husband - One sex as well as the other, shall be a prey to the enemy. Full of
days - Such as had filled up the number of their days, as were at the edge of the grave. |
| 13 |
Falsely - Heb. doing falsehood, as if that were their whole work, the proper sin of
the priests and prophets, to deceive the people, and to flatter them by false visions. |
| 14 |
They have - This refers peculiarly to the prophets; making light of these
threatenings, daubing over the misery and danger that was coming on the people, by
persuading them, that it should not come, or if it did, it would be easily cured. |
| 15 |
Committed - Both by encouraging the people, and joining with them in their idolatries.
|
| 16 |
Stand - He now turns his speech to the people, and gives them counsel; by a metaphor
taken from travellers, that being in doubt of their way, stand still, and consider,
whether the direction they have received from some false guide, be right or not. |
| 17 |
Trumpet - The voice of his prophet, intimating his loud crying upon the account of
eminent danger. |
| 18 |
Nations - He calls upon the nations round about to be spectators of his severity
against Judah. What - The greatness of their punishment, as the effect of the greatness of
their sins. |
| 20 |
Sheba - A country in Arabia Faelix, to which country frankincense was peculiar. The
sweet cane - The same that is mentioned as an ingredient in the holy oil, Exod 30:23.
To what purpose art thou at this trouble and charge to fetch these ingredients for thy
incense. |
| 21 |
I will say - I will suffer such things to be laid in their way, as shall be the
occasion of their destruction. The neighbour - Men of all sorts and conditions. |
| 22 |
Behold - God shall stir up the Chaldeans like a great storm. The sides - The uttermost
parts of the Babylonian territories. |
| 24 |
We - The prophet personates the peoples affections. |
| 25 |
Go not forth - Expressing the great danger that there would be everywhere. |
| 26 |
Gird thee - The prophet calls upon them to mourn in the deepest manner. |
| 27 |
I have set thee - Here God speaks by way of encouragement to the prophet, and tells
him, he had made him a fortified tower, that he might be safe, notwithstanding all the
attempts against him. And try - As refiners do metals; hereby be is encouraged to reprove
them more freely, God will give him prudence to see what is amiss, and undauntedness to
oppose it. |
| 29 |
The bellows - The prophet prosecutes his metaphor taken from refining of metals,
intimating, that the prophets had spent their breath to no purpose, and their strength was
consumed by their labour. The lead - The judgments which were heavy, as lead upon them,
are all wasted, and do no good. In vain - Let the artist use his greatest skill and
industry, yet is it all in vain. |
| 30 |
Refuse - Such as will be rejected in payments. |
Chapter VII
A call to true repentance, ver. 1 - 7. Not to live in theft, murder, adultery,
perjury, &c., to trust in the outward worship and temple of God, by the example of
Shiloh, ver. 8 - 15. The prophet is forbid to pray for them, ver. 16. Their idolatry, and
its judgment, ver. 17 - 20. Their sacrifices rejected, and obedience required, ver. 21 -
28. They are called to mourn for their abominations in Tophet, and their judgments, ver.
29 - 34.
| 2 |
The gate - The east gate, which was the publick place of going out and coming in, and
where the people were then wont to assemble. Proclaim - Proclaiming signifies both the
authority by which he spake, and the divulging of what he spake plainly and boldly;
possibly, it might be at some publick time, when all the males were to meet. |
| 4 |
Saying - Because this was God's house, they flattered themselves that he would not
suffer the Chaldeans to destroy it, therefore the prophet cautions them not to deceive
themselves, trusting to the temple and its buildings, as the two courts and house, and
holy of holies implied in the word these, which he doth as it were point to with his
finger. The emphasis, in this threefold repetition, seems to relate to the confident, and
reiterated boasts of the temple, that were in their mouths. These - The prophet standing
in the gate at which the people entered, as it were, points at the several buildings
pertaining to the temple. |
| 6 |
Oppress not - Here they are cautioned against three sins, that this people were
generally addicted to, oppression, blood, and idolatry; and instances in the worst of
oppressions, of such as God hath more especially taken into his immediate protection. |
| 9 |
Will ye steal - Can you think that this can be grateful to me, or advantageous to
yourselves, to frequent my house, and yet retain these odious sins. Whom - Such as they
had set up new, and never had any experience of, and therefore could have no reason to
serve them. |
| 10 |
Delivered - After they had appeared before God with their sacrifices, they thought
they were privileged to return to all those wickednesses. |
| 11 |
A den - Do you look upon this house as a sanctuary for robbers and murderers. |
| 12 |
Shiloh - A place in the tribe of Ephraim. Where - Where I did at first give you the
pledges of my presence. What I did - He utterly forsook it. |
| 15 |
Even - The ten tribes. |
| 16 |
Pray not - Certainly the prophet did pray that God would save a remnant, though not
that he would revoke his decree; or save the body of them. |
| 18 |
The children - Here God shews how busily they are employed from the youngest to the
oldest for their idolatry. The queen - As the sun was looked upon as king, so the moon as
the queen of heaven. |
| 20 |
Shall not be quenched - He follows the threatening with shewing his resolution is not
to be revoked. |
| 21 |
Put - Ironical words, take those that are peculiar, and to be all burnt to me, and do
what you will with them, I will have none of them. To your sacrifices - That part of your
sacrifices, which you are allowed to eat, they are but as profane food. |
| 22 |
For - God doth not condemn these offerings, save only comparatively in respect of
obedience, not so much these, as obeying his commands. |
| 25 |
Since the day - The church of God hath never wanted teachers raised up and sent by
God. |
| 28 |
Cut off - There is no believing them in any thing they say. |
| 29 |
Cut off thine hair - This was an usual token of sorrow among the Jews. On high places
- Upon the high places where thou wentest a whoring from me. The generation - A generation
destined to the wrath of God. |
| 30 |
In the house - It was not enough to have their idols abroad in the hills and groves,
but they must bring them into God's house. |
| 31 |
Tophet - It comes from Toph, a drum, because they beat drums to drown the children's
screeches, when they burnt them in sacrifice upon the altars, called here high places, to
Moloch. Tophet was situate in a pleasant valley near Jerusalem, a place in the possession
of the children of one Hinnom, Josh 15:8. |
Chapter VIII
The calamity of the Jews, both dead and alive, ver. 1 - 3. Their brutish
impenitency, ver. 4 - 7. Their vain boast of wisdom: their covetousness, security,
impudence, ver. 8 - 12. Their grievous judgments, ver. 13 - 17. Bewailed by the prophet,
ver. 18 - 22.
| 1 |
The bones - This denotes the utter desolation of the city, not only rasing the walls,
but turning up the very sepulchres which were accounted sacred, and not to be violated. |
| 4 |
Not arise - Will they never think of rising again? Not return - Will he wander for
ever? |
| 5 |
Deceit - Their false prophets, encouraging themselves in their wickedness, and
pleasing themselves, that their miseries should not come upon them. |
| 6 |
I - God. |
| 7 |
Appointed time - The seasons of her going and coming. The judgment - God's vengeance,
hovering over Jerusalem, and Judea. |
| 8 |
How - These things considered where is your wisdom? He speaks to the whole body of the
people. The Lord - This may have a more special eye to the priests. In vain - For any use
they made of it; neither need it ever have been copied out by the scribe. A scribe was a
teacher, one well versed in the scripture, or esteemed to be so. |
| 13 |
Pass away - Shall be taken away by their enemies. |
| 14 |
Why - The people at length seem to bethink themselves, and thus to bespeak each other.
Silent - Keep close within our walls. |
| 16 |
The snorting - The fury of the Chaldeans march is described by the snorting of their
horses, which is a noise they make through their nostrils. Heard - Even to Jerusalem. Have
devoured - It is spoken in a prophetical style, who use to express the certainty of what
shall be, as if it actually were already. |
| 17 |
Shall bite - There will be no appeasing their fury by any method. |
| 18 |
Sorrow - The prophet now seems to speak, how greatly the calamity of this people
affected him. |
| 19 |
Why - As if God should seem to reply; let them not think it strange, seeing they have
turned their backs upon me, and trusted to idols. |
| 21 |
Am I hurt - The prophet here shews how deeply he is affected with the peoples misery.
Black - I am as those that are clad in deep mourning. |
Chapter IX
The prophet's lamentation continues over their adultery, deceit, idolatry, which
God would certainly punish, and they should be laid waste, when they should sufficiently
lament, ver. 1 - 22. No trust in ourselves, but in God, who will punish all nations, ver.
23 - 26.
| 2 |
A lodging place - Some retiring place, though it were but some mean hut in the
wilderness. |
| 5 |
Weary - They use industry, and contrivance in it, they spare no labour. |
| 7 |
Try them - By melting them, I will bring upon them, the fire of the Chaldean war, that
shall purge away those deceits in which they trust, that the remnant may be purified. For
how - I have tried all other means. |
| 10 |
Wailing - The prophet having taken up a lamentation for the slaughter of the people,
now re - assumes it for the desolation of the whole land. The mountains shall not be able
to secure them, nor the valleys to feed them. |
| 12 |
Who is - Is there not a wise man among you, that will search into the cause of all
these threatened judgments. |
| 16 |
A sword - But I will follow them with the sword, 'till they be destroyed, such of them
as were appointed for destruction; for otherwise, they were not all consumed, a full end
was not to be made. |
| 17 |
Women - Who were hired to tear their hair, and beat their breasts, with other mourning
postures, a foolish custom which has obtained in most ages and countries. Cunning - Such
as are most skilful in it. |
| 20 |
Every one - It denotes how large and universal the mourning shall be. |
| 21 |
Death - The unavoidableness of the ruin is expressed metaphorically, alluding to the
storming of a city, wherein there is no respect had to sex, youth, or age. |
| 22 |
As the handful - They shall be no more regarded than a few scattered ears that drop
out of the reapers hand, which either lie on the ground and are eaten by birds, or trod to
dirt by beasts. None - None shall have so much respect to them, as to afford burial. |
| 24 |
Knoweth - Whether we make any curious distinction between understanding God, as if
that be more speculative, whereby we rightly apprehend his nature; and knowing God, as if
that be more practical, as directing the conversation, we need not here enquire; yet
certainly both center in this, that we so know and understand God as to trust in him, and
depend on him alone in all conditions. Exercise - Kindness, as it relates to his own
people; judgment, in punishing the wicked; righteousness, as he deals justly and uprightly
with both. |
Chapter X
They are forbid to be afraid of the tokens of heaven, and consult idols which are
vain, ver. 1 - 5 and not to be compared with the majesty and power of God, who is Jacob's
portion, ver. 6 - 16. The Babylonians destroy the temple; the brutish pastors and the
flocks are scattered, ver. 17 - 22. The prophet's humble supplication, ver. 23 - 25.
| 2 |
Learn not - The Jews being to live among the Chaldeans in their captivity, where many
of them were already, the prophet admonishes them against the Chaldean idolatries, who
were all much addicted to astrology. The signs - This was so common among them, that
Judicial astrologers, of what nation soever, were generally termed Chaldeans. The Heathen
- Leave this to Heathens; it doth not become God's people. |
| 9 |
Tarshish - Is the proper name of a sea - town in Cilicia, and being a noted port, it
is usually put for the ocean, and may signify any place beyond the sea. Uphaz - Probably
the best gold came from thence as the best silver from Tarshish. |
| 10 |
But - All these are but false gods. Living - These are all but dead stocks and stones,
Jehovah is the only living God, having life in himself, and giving life to all things
else. An everlasting king - Time devours them all, but the true God is everlasting. |
| 13 |
When - As in the former verse he relates God's unspeakable power and wisdom in his
creating and fixing the stated order of things, so here he farther sets it forth in his
providential ordering and disposing of them. |
| 14 |
Every man - Every idolator. |
| 15 |
Visitation - When God shall come to reckon with Babylon and her idols. |
| 16 |
Portion - God, who vouchsafes to be the portion of his people. The former - Idols are
things framed or formed, but God is the former of all things. The rod of his inheritance -
So called, because the inheritances of Israel were measured by a line, reed, or rod. |
| 17 |
Gather up - The prophet now enters upon another subject. Thy wares - Every thing thou
hast any advantage by, all thy merchandise, as men use to do in case of invasion by an
enemy. The fortress - The inhabitants of Jerusalem, the chief place of security in Judea. |
| 18 |
Sing out - It denotes with how much violence and ease the Chaldeans shall hurry away
the people into Babylon. And therefore it is said at this once, I will make one thorough
quick work of it. May find it so - Though they would never believe it, yet they shall
actually find the truth of my threatenings. |
| 19 |
Woe is me - Here the prophet personates the complaint of the people of the land. |
| 20 |
My tabernacle - He describes the overthrow of the land, or Jerusalem, by the breaking
of the cords of a tabernacle, the use whereof is to fasten it on every side to stakes in
the ground, which cords being broken the tabernacle falls. |
| 21 |
The pastors - The rulers of church and state. |
| 22 |
Noise - Rumour, report. |
| 23 |
It is not - Lord we know it is not in our power to divert these judgments that are
coming upon us, but thou canst moderate, and limit them as thou pleasest. |
| 24 |
Correct me - Seeing thou wilt punish us, let it be a correction only, not a
destruction. Let it be in measure; in the midst of judgment remember mercy. Anger - Lest
if thou shouldst let out thy fury upon me, thou wouldst utterly consume me. |
| 25 |
The Heathen - Such as do not acknowledge thee for their God. Call not - One part of
worship put for the whole. If thou wilt pour out thy fury, let the effects of it be to
thine enemies, not unto thine own people. |
Chapter XI
God's covenant, ver. 1 - 7. Their disobedience, ver. 8 - 10. Evils to come on them,
ver. 11 - 17. and on the men of Anathoth, for conspiring to kill Jeremiah, ver. 18 - 23.
| 2 |
Of this covenant - The covenant here spoken of, was the covenant of the law of God,
delivered by Moses, to which the people more than once promised obedience. |
| 5 |
So be it - God having ended his speech, the prophet saith, Amen, either asserting the
truth of which God had said, or wishing that the people would do according to their
covenant. |
| 8 |
Did them not - For this God threatens to bring upon them all his words of threatening,
annexed to the covenant of the law. |
| 9 |
A conspiracy - All sorts of people have done alike, as if they had conspired together
to break my law. |
| 11 |
I will not hearken - God will not hear them crying to him in their adversity, who
refuse to hear him speaking to them in their prosperity. |
| 13 |
That shameful thing - Baal, called a shameful thing, because it was what they had
reason to be ashamed of, and what would certainly bring them to shame and confusion. Baal
- Signifies Lord, and was a common name given to more idols than one; the Phoenicians used
the name Baal, the Chaldeans, Bell. Learned men say, that the Asians called the same idol
Baal, whom those of Europe called Jupiter. It is not improbable, that the Heathens
acknowledging one supreme being, worshipped him in several creatures; some mistaking the
Sun, Moon, and Stars to be he, others, other things; these they called Baalim, Lords, as
they called the principal god, Baal. |
| 15 |
My beloved - My people, saith God, though I was formerly their husband, yet have
wrought lewdness with many, that is, committed idolatry with many idols, and now what have
they to do more in my house? The holy flesh - Flesh of their sacrifices, being set before
idols, as well as before God, became polluted, and was abomination to the Lord. Thou
rejoicest - They were not only evil but gloried in their wickedness. |
| 16 |
Fair - The Lord fixed thee when he brought thee first into Canaan, in a flourishing
condition, like a fair olive - tree, fit to bear goodly fruit. Broken - But thou hast so
behaved thyself, that he who planted thee, is about to pluck thee up. God is about to
kindle a fire which will burn thee up, and to break thy branches. |
| 18 |
Thou shewedst me - This may be understood with relation to that conspiracy which is
mentioned in the following verses. |
| 19 |
Let us destroy - We have no other mention of this conspiracy, but it is plain both
from this verse, and what follows, that the men of Anathoth (which was Jeremiah's own
town) were offended at his prophesying, and had conspired to kill him. Let us destroy the
tree with the fruit thereof - Let us not only put an end to his prophesying, but to his
life. |
Chapter XII
The prophet complains of the prosperity of the wicked: by faith sees their ruin,
ver. 1 - 4. God admonishes him of his brethren's treachery against him, and laments his
heritage, ver. 5 - 13. A return from captivity promised to the penitent, ver. 14 - 17.
| 1 |
Talk with thee - Not by way of accusing thee, but for my own satisfaction concerning
thy judicial dispensations in the government of the world. Wherefore - I know thy ways are
just and righteous, but they are dark; I cannot understand why thou doest this. |
| 2 |
Far - Thou art far from their inward parts, they neither fear thee, nor love thee. |
| 4 |
He - They were bold to say, neither the prophet nor any other should see their last
end. |
| 5 |
If - If thou art not able to encounter lesser dangers, how wilt thou be able to
overcome greater? I have greater dangers for thee to encounter than those at Anathoth; if
thou art so disturbed with them, how wilt thou be able to grapple with those at Jerusalem.
Jordan - Anathoth seems to be understood by the land of thy peace, that is, the land of
thy friends wherein thou hadst a confidence: if thy enemies there tire thee, what wilt
thou do in the swellings of Jordan? In a place in which thou art like to meet with greater
troubles, like the swelling of Jordan (which in harvest used to overflow its banks). |
| 6 |
For even - The men of Anathoth, thine own town and country, and those of thy own
family have conspired evil against thee secretly. A multitude - They have exposed thee to
the rage of a multitude. Though - Tho' therefore they give thee fair words, yet repose no
confidence in them. |
| 7 |
My house - God by his house here understands the temple. Heritage - The whole body of
the Israelites, whom God threatens to leave with respect to his special providence. |
| 8 |
As a lion - Those that were my sheep, are become like lions. |
| 9 |
The birds round about - It is usual for other birds to flock about a strange coloured
bird, such as they have not been used to see. |
| 10 |
A wilderness - They have caused God to turn the country which he had chosen for his
portion, into a wilderness. |
| 11 |
They - Heb. He hath made it desolate: but it cannot be meant of God, for it is God
that speaketh, and God is he mentioned in the next words; it must therefore either be
understood of Nebuchadnezzar, the instrumental cause; or (one number being put for
another) of the people or the rulers as the meritorious cause, and in that rueful state
into which their sins had brought it, it cried onto God. Because - And one great cause of
this sore judgment was, the peoples not seriously considering what God had done or was
doing against it. |
| 12 |
Are come - The prophet, as usual, speaks of a thing as already done, which was very
shortly to be done. No flesh - No rank or order of men. |
| 13 |
Shall not profit - All the works of their hands, all their counsels and deliberations
should be of no profit unto them. Because - The fierce anger of God shall be so shewed,
that the returns of their labours or estates, the profits of their trades, shall be so
small, that they shall be ashamed of them. |
| 14 |
Behold - I will bring the sword upon them also, and they shall be led into captivity;
and tho' they may have made inroads upon my people, and carried away some of them, yet I
will fetch them out of their captivity. |
| 16 |
If - If they will leave their idolatries, and learn to worship me, and swear by my
name the Lord liveth, that is, pay that homage which they owe to the Divine being to me,
the living and true God. Then - They shall have a portion among my people, which was
eminently fulfilled in the conversion of the Gentiles. |
Chapter XIII
In the type of a linen girdle God prefigures their destruction, ver. 1 - 11. Under
the parable of bottles filled with wine, is foretold their drunkenness with misery, ver.
12 - 14. He exhorts to prevent these judgments by repentance, ver. 15 - 27.
| 5 |
So - Most think Jeremiah did this in a vision, for it was a very long journey from
Anathoth to Euphrates. |
| 12 |
Do we not know - This is no strange thing. |
| 13 |
Behold - There is a wine of astonishment and confusion, Psa 60:3. With
that wine, saith God, I will fill all orders of persons, kings, priests, prophets, and all
the inhabitants of Jerusalem. |
| 16 |
Give glory - Glorify God, by an humble confession of your sins, by submitting
yourselves to God, humbling yourselves under his word, and under his mighty hand, before
God brings upon you, his great and heavy judgments. |
| 19 |
The cities - The cities of Judah lay southward from Chaldea. |
| 20 |
Where - The prophet speaks to the king, or to the rulers. In the multitude of the
people is the king's honour. |
| 21 |
What wilt thou say - Thou wilt have nothing to say, but be wholly confounded when God
shall visit thee with this sore judgment, for by thy so often calling them to thy
assistance, thou hast taught them to be captains over thee. |
| 22 |
Thy skirts - Probably these phrases are fetched from the usual practice of soldiers
when they have conquered a place and taken prisoners, to strip them. By skirts is meant
the lower part of their bodies covered with the lower part of their garments. |
| 26 |
Therefore - I will expose thee to shame and contempt. |
| 27 |
Thy whoredom - Thy idolatries. |
Chapter XIV
A grievous famine prophesied, its miseries, ver. 1 - 6. The prophet prays, but God
will not be entreated for them, ver. 7 - 12. Lying prophets no excuse for them, ver. 13 -
16. The prophet's complaint, ver. 17 - 22.
| 5 |
The hind - Hinds use not to get their food in fields, but upon mountains and in
wildernesses, but the drought was such, that these creatures came into the lower grounds,
and there brought forth their young. The hinds are loving creatures and as all creatures
love their young, so hinds especially; but their moisture being dried up, they could not
suckle them, but were forced to leave them, running about to seek grass to eat. |
| 6 |
The wild asses - The wild asses wanting water, got upon high places, where was the
coolest air, and sucked in the wind; and this it is said they did like dragons, of whom
Aristotle and Pliny report, that they ordinarily stand upon high places sucking in the
cool air. |
| 7 |
Testify - That thou art righteous in what thou hast done. Do thou it - Do thou what we
stand in need of; give us rain, though not for our sake, we deserve no such kindness from
thee, yet for thy names sake: thy promise, or for thine honour and glory. |
| 9 |
Astonished - In such disorder through some great passion, that he is able to do
nothing. A mighty man - Like a man who in his own nature is strong, but through sickness
so weakened, that he cannot put forth any strength for the succour of his friends. Yet -
Yet (saith the prophet) thou art in the midst of us; of the whole land, according to what
God had declared, Numb 5:3 35:34. Defile not the land which ye shall inhabit,
wherein I dwell: for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel. |
| 10 |
Thus - Here begins the answer to the prophet's complaint and prayer in the nine first
verses. The substance is, that for their manifold sins, he was resolved to punish them.
They loved - They have been fond of their idols, and they have persisted in those sinful
courses, notwithstanding all counsels. |
| 21 |
The throne - The words are either to be understood of the throne of the house of
David, called the Lord's throne, 1Chron 29:23, or else the temple, and the
ark in it, the more special symbol of God's presence. |
| 22 |
Rain - The present judgment under which they groan, was a drought, which he had
described in the six first verses; the prophet imploring God for the removal of it,
argues, from the impossibility of help in this case from any other way, none of the idols
of the Heathens, which he calls vain things, nothing in themselves, and of no use, or
profit to those that ran after them. Give showers - Without thy will? Art not - Lord, art
not thou he alone who is able to do it? The scripture constantly gives God the honour of
giving rain. |
Chapter XV
The Jews rejection, and judgments, especially of four kinds; the sins which
procured them, ver. 1 - 9. The prophet complains, that the people curse and persecute him
for these prophecies; they are threatened, and he instructed and comforted, ver. 10 - 21.
| 1 |
Cast them out - I am not able to abide the sight of them, therefore let them go forth.
|
| 4 |
Manasseh - Manasseh is here named as the son of Hezekiah for his shame, because of his
degeneracy from so good a parent; it is expressly said, 2Kings 23:26, that
not withstanding Josiah's reformation, yet the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his
wrath, kindled against Judah, for the provocations of Manasseh. |
| 6 |
I am weary - I am resolved to bear no longer. |
| 7 |
A fan - Not a purging fan by affliction, to separate their chaff and dross from them,
but a scattering fan. In the gates - This is added in pursuit of the metaphor of fanning,
men usually chusing barn - doors to fan at, that they may have the advantage of the wind. |
| 8 |
Their widows - The prophet still speaks of things to come as if present. In
Jehoiakim's time we read of no such plenty of widows; they were multiplied when the city
was besieged and taken in Zedekiah's time, to a great number, hyperbolically compared to
the sands of the sea. The mother - Jerusalem was the mother of the Jewish people, against
whom, Nebuchadnezzar the spoiler, at noon - day, was sent. |
| 9 |
Seven - Seven signifies many: the prophet complains, that the country of Judah, that
had been very numerous in people, now grew feeble. While - In the midst of her prosperity.
Confounded - A part of them were confounded by the judgments of God which came upon them
before their captivity. |
| 10 |
I have not - I have done them no wrong, yet they speak of me all manner of evil. |
| 11 |
Thy remnant - The latter words of the verse expound the former; for by remnant is
meant the remnant of days that Jeremiah had to live. |
| 12 |
The northern iron - As the northern iron and steel is the hardest, and no iron could
break that, so God having edged and hardened their enemies, the Chaldeans, all opposition
to them would signify nothing. |
| 13 |
The substance - All thy precious things shall be spoiled, there shall be no price
taken for the redemption of them. |
| 15 |
Thou knowest - My sincerity, or my sufferings. Visit me - With thy love. |
| 16 |
Thy words - The words which from time to time thou didst reveal to me, were by me
greedily digested. I am called - I became a prophet by thy authority, therefore, do thou
own and defend me. |
| 17 |
I sat not - God had all along filled his mouth with such dreadful messages, that his
whole prophetical life had been to him a time of mourning and solitude, a time when he sat
alone, mourning and weeping in secret for the wrath of God revealed to him against his
people. |
| 18 |
Why - Jeremiah, though a great prophet, was (as Elijah) a man subject to like passions
with other men. |
| 19 |
If thou - These are God's words to the prophet, rebuking his distrust in God, and
promising him, that if he did return from his distrust in God's providence, he would
restore him to the former favour he had with him, and he should be his prophet to reveal
his mind to the people; and that if he would separate the precious truths of God from the
vile conceits of men, then God would continue him as his prophet, to speak in his name to
the people. But - He charges the prophet to keep his ground, and not to go over to wicked
men. |
| 21 |
The wicked - The wicked Jews. The terrible - And the power of the terrible Chaldeans. |
Chapter XVI
The prophet is commanded to abstain from marriage, from mourning, or festival
assemblies; hereby representing to them their approaching misery, ver. 1 - 9. Their sins
which caused it, ver. 10 - 13. Their strange deliverance from Babylon, ver. 14, 15. After
that their iniquity is recompensed, ver. 16 - 18. The prophet's comfort in the calling of
the Gentiles, ver. 19 - 21
| 5 |
Enter not - Do not go to comfort such as mourn for any relations dead, (for their
feastings upon those occasions were upon a consolatory account) those that die are most
happy, for I will take away the peace of this people, and deprive them of all my mercy and
loving - kindness. |
| 6 |
Nor cut - Cutting themselves and cutting off their hair, were Pagan customs, which God
forbad his own people; but yet it seemed they practised them: but saith God, Men shall die
so fast that they shall have no leisure to cut themselves. |
| 7 |
Deal bread - It was a custom among them, when they had any friend, that had lost his
relations, to send them some meat (for among the Hebrews all things they ate were called
bread) and then to go and sup with them, and speak comfortably to them. The cup - They
were also wont to send wine, that they might forget their sorrows; this is called, The cup
of consolation. |
| 8 |
Go - God did not only forbid his prophet to go into houses of mourning, but forbad him
to go into houses, where they were wont to eat and drink upon a more chearful account. |
| 13 |
Ye shall serve - What is now matter of choice to you, shall then be forced upon you. |
| 14 |
Notwithstanding - God sweetens the dreadful threatenings preceding, with a comfortable
promise of their restoration. |
| 16 |
Fishers - Those enemies whom God made use of to destroy the Jews, hunting them out of
all holes and coverts wheresoever they should take sanctuary. |
| 18 |
I will recompense - Before I will restore them, I will plentifully punish them, (for
so double here signifies, not the double of what their sins deserve.) Defiled - By their
idolatry, blood and cruelty. Detestable - Unclean beasts offered to their idols, or
innocent persons slain by them. |
| 21 |
Therefore - Because all the mercy I have shewed them, will not learn them to know my
might, I will once for all make them to understand it, by the dreadful strokes of my
vengeance. And - They shall know that my name is Jehovah; that I am not such a one as
their idols, but one who have my being from myself, and give life and being to all other
things, and have all might and power in my hand, and can do whatsoever I please. |
Chapter XVII
The captivity of Judah for her sin, ver. 1 - 4. Trust in man cursed: in God,
blessed, ver. 5 - 8. The deceitful heart and most secret practices are known to God, ver.
9 - 11. The salvation of God, ver. 12 - 14. The prophet complains of the mockers of his
prophecies, ver. 15 - 18. Of keeping the sabbath, ver. 19 - 27.
| 1 |
Graven - Nor is it a thing done in secret, but it is engraven upon the horns of their
altars. God's altar was four - square, and at each corner there was a rising part made of
brass, these were called the horns of the altar. Now their sin is said to be engraven upon
the horns of the altar, because the blood of the sacrifices which they offered to idols
was sprinkled there, or because their altars had some inscription upon them, declaring to
what idol that altar was consecrated. |
| 2 |
Their children - This shewed how inveterate they were in this sin of idolatry, that
they taught it their children. |
| 3 |
My mountain - Jerusalem stood at the foot of an hill, and part of it on the side of
it, upon the top of which hills, were many pleasant fields. |
| 4 |
For ever - For a long time; so the word ever is often taken. |
| 9 |
The heart - There is nothing so false and deceitful as the heart of man; deceitful in
its apprehensions of things, in the hopes and promises which it nourishes, in the
assurances that it gives us; unsearchable by others, deceitful with reference to
ourselves, and abominably wicked, so that neither can a man know his own heart, nor can
any other know that of his neighbour's. |
| 11 |
Hatcheth them not - Having lost them, either by some man that has taken them from her,
or by some vermin or wild beast. A fool - Shall lose it again before he dies, and then
shall understand what a fool he was. |
| 13 |
Depart - From what I have revealed to them as thy will, shall have no portion beyond
the earth. |
| 14 |
For thou art - He whom alone I have reason to praise for mercies already received. |
| 15 |
Where - Daring the vengeance of God. |
| 16 |
I hastened not - As I did not seek the office of a prophet, so when thou wast pleased
to call me to it, I did not decline. |
Chapter XVIII
By the parable of a potter, God's absolute power and disposal of nations is set
forth, ver. 1 - 10. Judah's unparalleled revolt: and her judgments, ver. 11 - 17. The
prophet prays against his conspirators, ver. 18 - 23.
| 6 |
Cannot I do - That God hath an absolute sovereign power to do what he pleases with the
work of his hands: but he acts as a just judge, rendering to every man according to his
works. |
| 14 |
Of Lebanon - Lebanon had rocks, and also fruitful valleys; snow fell upon these rocks,
and upon a thaw ran down into the lower places. Reason teaches men not to forsake a
greater good for a less, tho' that greater good was but a poor creature comfort, not to be
compared with God. |
| 15 |
Vanity - Idols. Ancient paths - The ways wherein Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and
all the ancient patriarchs walked. To walk - In a way not cast up, not fit for God's
people to walk in. |
| 16 |
Desolate - Not that this was the end they aimed at, but it was the end these courses
would certainly issue in. |
| 17 |
East wind - The east wind was in those parts the fiercest wind. As the east - wind
scatters the chaff, so saith God, I will scatter them. In their calamity - And when they
shall be in great calamity, I will turn my back upon them, I will not regard their
prayers. |
| 18 |
For - We have the church on our side; the regular priests and the prophets, they know
God's mind as well as he. Let us smite him with the tongue - Expose him, representing him
to be what the people hate. |
| 21 |
Therefore - But is it lawful for God's servants to pray for evil against their
enemies? It is not lawful for Christians. It is doubtless our duty, to pray for the
conversion, forgiveness, and eternal salvation of our worst enemies. |
Chapter XIX
Under the type of breaking a potter's vessel is foreshewn the desolation of the
Jews for their sins committed in the valley of Hinnom, and elsewhere, ver. 1 - 15.
| 4 |
This place - Either this city, or this valley, which they had turned to an use quite
contrary to the end for which God gave it them. |
| 5 |
To burn - This and the following verse, contain another great sin of this people, with
the punishment which God proportions to it. The sin in the general was idolatry, but a
most barbarous species of it, mentioned also chap.7:31 32:35, where it is
said, they made their sons and their daughters pass thro' the fire to Molech; the place
where they did it is called Tophet, ver.19:6, of which also mention is made, Isa
30:33. Baal and Molech, signify the same thing; Baal signifies a Lord, Molech a
King. Both Baal and Molech seem common names to all idols. |
| 7 |
In this place - In this place, among others, I will make void all the counsels that
the men of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, have taken to escape my righteous
judgments. |
| 12 |
As Tophet - That is, a place of slaughter and burials. |
| 14 |
Then - Jeremiah had now dispatched the errand upon which God had sent him to Tophet,
coming back by God's direction, he stands in the court, which was common to all people,
where the most might hear. |
Chapter XX
Pashur smiting Jeremiah for this prophecy, receives a new name, and fearful doom,
ver. 1 - 6. Jeremiah's impatience under their treachery and contempt, ver. 7 - 10.
Rejoices in hope of vengeance, ver. 11 - 13. Curses his birth, ver. 14 - 18.
| 1 |
Immer - The course of Immer was the sixteenth course of the priests, 1Chron
24:14. Pashur was his son, that is descended from him. |
| 3 |
Not called - God's meaning was, not that he should by men be no longer called Pashur,
but that his condition should not answer that name Pashur, which signifies, a flourishing
priest; but Magor - missabib, that is, fear and terror on all sides. |
| 7 |
Hast prevailed - Thou prevailedst against me. Jeremiah at first excused himself to
God, chap.1:6, but the Lord prevailed against him replying, ver.1:7,
Say not, I am a child, for thou shalt go to all that I shall send thee, and whatsoever I
command thee thou shalt speak, ver.1:9. This is all that is here meant,
namely, God's over - ruling him contrary to his own inclinations. |
| 8 |
Since - Since I first began to be a prophet, I have faithfully discharged my office,
and that with warmth and zeal. Spoil - I have prophesied that violence and spoil was
coming. Because - Because of that scorn and derision with which they treated him. |
| 9 |
I said - He did not speak this openly, but in his heart. But - He found in his heart a
constraint to go on. |
| 10 |
Prevail - Desiring nothing more than that I might be enticed to speak or do something
which they might make matter of a colourable accusation. |
| 11 |
But - The prophet recovering himself out of his fit of passion, encourageth himself in
his God, whom he calls the mighty and terrible one, so declaring his faith in the power of
God, as one able to save him, and in the promise and good will of God toward him;
therefore he saith, The Lord is with me; such was the promise of God to this prophet, when
he first undertook the prophetical office, chap.1:8. Be not afraid of their
faces, for I am with thee to deliver thee saith the Lord: from hence be concludes, that
though he had many that pursued after his life, yet they should stumble in their ways of
violence, and should not prevail. Ashamed - That they should be ashamed of what they had
done, or be brought to shame for what they had done; for prosper they should not: or they
acted like fools, and did not deal prudently for themselves (so this word is translated, Isa
52:13,) yea, they should become a reproach, and their reproach should be a lasting
perpetual reproach that should not be forgotten. |
| 14 |
Cursed - This sudden change makes some think that these words proceeded from Jeremiah
rather as a repetition of a former passion into which the abuses of his enemies had put
him, than as the immediate product of his spirit at this time. |
| 16 |
The cities - Sodom and Gomorrah; by the cry in the morning and shouting at noon, he
means the shouts and noises that enemies make when they break in upon a place. |
Chapter XXI
King Zedekiah in the siege sends to Jeremiah to enquire of the event, ver. 1, 2. He
foretells a hard siege and miserable captivity, ver. 3 - 7. He counsels the people to fall
to the Chaldeans, ver. 8 - 10. And upbraids the king's house, ver. 11 - 14.
| 2 |
Enquire - Zedekiah, as he was none of the best, so he was none of the worst of the
kings of Judah. Having some reverence of God, he sends the prophet to enquire of the Lord.
|
| 8 |
Behold - I tell you the way you should take, if you would save your lives. |
| 9 |
His life - This is a proverbial expression, signifying a man's possession of his life
as a prey, or booty recovered from the enemy. |
| 12 |
Execute judgment - That is, justice, without partiality, and do it quickly. |
| 13 |
Of the valley - The inhabitants of the city of Jerusalem are here intended. Jerusalem
itself was built in part upon the rocky mountain of Zion, but a great part was in the
valley, and the higher mountains, about mount Zion, made that mountain itself, in
comparison with them, as a valley. The plain - Though also a rock of the plain, that is,
near to the plain. Which situation of this place, made the Jews think it to be
impregnable. |
| 14 |
The forest - By the forest he either means the forest of Lebanon or their houses, made
of wood cut out of that forest. And it - And this fire shall not end in the destruction of
this city, but in the total destruction of all the country round Jerusalem. |
Chapter XXII
God sends the prophet to court with promises, ver. 1 - 4. and threats against the
king's house and Jerusalem, ver. 5 - 9. The judgment of Shallum, ver. 10 - 12. Of
Jehoiakim, ver. 13 - 19. And of Coniah, ver. 20 - 30.
| 6 |
Gilead - Gilead was a country fertile for pastures; upon which account the Reubenites
and Gadites, being men whose estate lay in cattle, begged it of Moses for their portion.
Lebanon also was a very pleasant place: they were both in the lot of Gad and Manasseh.
Perhaps God compares the king of Judah's house to these places, in regard of the height
and nobleness of the structure, or for the pleasantness and delightfulness of it. |
| 10 |
Weep not - For Josiah your dead prince. Josiah is happy, you need not trouble
yourselves for him; but weep for Jehoahaz, who is to go into captivity. |
| 11 |
Shallum - Most think that this Shallum was Jehoahaz. Went forth - He was carried away
from Jerusalem presently after he was set up, imprisoned at Riblah, and died in Egypt. |
| 16 |
Was not this - They only truly know God who obey him; men vainly pretend to piety who
are defective in justice and charity. |
| 19 |
Of an ass - None attending him to his grave, none mourning for him. |
| 20 |
Lebanon - Jerusalem was the place to which this speech is directed: the inhabitants of
which the prophet calls to go up to Lebanon. Both Lebanon and Bashan were hills that
looked towards Assyria, from whence the Jews looked for help. Abarim - Abarim is the name
of a mountain, as well as Lebanon and Bashan. Go and cry for help from all places, but it
will be in vain; for the Egyptians and Assyrians to whom thou wert wont to fly, are
themselves in the power of the Chaldeans. |
| 22 |
Pastors - Thy rulers and governors, they shall be blasted by my judgments, as plants
are blasted by winds. Thy lovers - And those that have been thy friends, Syria and Egypt. |
| 23 |
Lebanon - Jerusalem is called an inhabitant of Lebanon, because their houses were
built of wood cut down out of the forest of Lebanon. Cedars - Their houses were built of
the Cedars of Lebanon. How gracious - What favour wilt thou find when my judgments come
upon thee, as the pains of a woman in travail come upon her. |
| 24 |
Coniah - By Coniah he means Jehoiakim, whose name was Jeconiah, 1Chron 3:13,
(for all Josiah's sons had two names, and so had his grandchild Jeconiah) here in contempt
called Coniah. The signet - Tho' he were as dear as a signet, which every | |