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Text -- Jeremiah 3:1 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jer 3:1 - -- He cannot take her again according to the law, Deu 24:1-4. Yet I am ready to be reconciled to you.
He cannot take her again according to the law, Deu 24:1-4. Yet I am ready to be reconciled to you.
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Wesley: Jer 3:1 - -- Would not so great a sin greatly pollute a nation? Many - Not with one only, but many idols.
Would not so great a sin greatly pollute a nation? Many - Not with one only, but many idols.
JFB: Jer 3:1 - -- Rather, as Hebrew, "saying," in agreement with "the LORD"; Jer 2:37 of last chapter [MAURER]. Or, it is equivalent to, "Suppose this case." Some copyi...
Rather, as Hebrew, "saying," in agreement with "the LORD"; Jer 2:37 of last chapter [MAURER]. Or, it is equivalent to, "Suppose this case." Some copyist may have omitted, "The word of the Lord came to me," saying.
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Should not the land be polluted if this were done?
Clarke -> Jer 3:1
Clarke: Jer 3:1 - -- If a man put away his wife - It was ever understood, by the law and practice of the country, that if a woman were divorced by her husband, and becam...
If a man put away his wife - It was ever understood, by the law and practice of the country, that if a woman were divorced by her husband, and became the wife of another man, the first husband could never take her again. Now Israel had been married unto the Lord; joined in solemn covenant to him to worship and serve him only. Israel turned from following him, and became idolatrous. On this ground, considering idolatry as a spiritual whoredom, and the precept and practice of the law to illustrate this case, Israel could never more be restored to the Divine favor: but God, this first husband, in the plenitude of his mercy, is willing to receive this adulterous spouse, if she will abandon her idolatries and return unto him. And this and the following chapters are spent in affectionate remonstrances and loving exhortations addressed to these sinful people, to make them sensible of their own sin, and God’ s tender mercy in offering to receive them again into favor.
Calvin -> Jer 3:1
Calvin: Jer 3:1 - -- Many regard this verse as connected with the last, and thus read them connectedly, “God hates false confidences, because he says, “etc. But this ...
Many regard this verse as connected with the last, and thus read them connectedly, “God hates false confidences, because he says, “etc. But this seems not to me to be suitable; for Jeremiah brings before us here a new subject, — that God seeks to be reconciled to his people, according to what a husband does, who desires to receive into favor an unchaste wife, and is ready to grant her full pardon, and to take her again as a chaste and faithful wife. This verse, then, cannot be connected with the foregoing, in which, as we have seen, the people are condemned. The word
As to the main point, there is here no ambiguity: for God shews that he would be reconciled to the Jews, provided they proceeded not obstinately in their sinful courses. But in order to set forth more fully his mercy, he uses a comparison which must be a little more attentively considered. He had before said that he held the place of a husband, that the people occupied the station of a wife; and then he complained of the base perfidy of the people, who had forsaken him, and said that they had acted like a wife who, having despised her husband, prostituted herself to such adulterers as might happen to meet her: but he now adds, “Behold, if a man dismisses his wife, and she becomes the wife of another, he will never receive her again.” And this was forbidden by the law. “But I am ready, “he says, “to receive thee, though I had not given thee the usual divorce at my pleasure, as husbands are wont to do who repudiate their wives, when there is anything displeasing in them.” It is not a simple comparison, as many think; (I know not whether all think so, for I have not read any who seem to understand the true meaning;) for God does not simply compare himself to a husband who has repudiated his wife for adultery; but as I have already said, there are here two clauses. The Jews were then wont to divorce their wives even for slight causes, and for no cause at all.
Now, God speaks thus by Isaiah,
“Shew me the bill of your mother’s divorcement,”
(Isa 50:1)
as though he had said, “I have not repudiated your mother.” For if any one then departed from his wife, the law compelled him to take some blame on himself; for what was the bill of divorcement? It was a testimony to the wife’s chastity; for if any one was found guilty of adultery, there was no need of divorcement, as it was a capital crime. (Lev 20:10; Deu 22:22.) Hence adulteresses were not usually divorced; but if any woman had conducted herself faithfully towards her husband, and he wished to repudiate her, the law constrained him to give her the bill of divorcement: “I repudiate this wife, not because she hath broken or violated the bond of marriage, but because her manners are not agreeable, because her beauty does not please me.” Thus the husbands were then commanded to take some of the blame on themselves. Hence the Lord says by Isaiah,
“Shew me the bill of your mother’s divorcement;”
as though he had said, “She has departed from me; she has broken the bond of marriage by her fornications; I am not then in fault for being alienated from you.”
God then does not mean in this place, that he had divorced the people; for this would have been wrong and unlawful, and could not have been consistent with the character of God. But as I have already said, there is here a twofold comparison. “Though a husband should fastidiously send away his wife, and she through his fault should be led to contract another marriage, and become the partner of another, as though in contempt of him, he could hardly ever bear that indignity, and become reconciled to her: but ye have not been repudiated by me, but are like a perfidious woman, who shamefully prostitutes herself to all whom she may meet with; and yet I am ready to receive you, and to forget all your base conduct.” We now then understand the import of the words.
In the second clause there is a comparison made from the less to the greater. For the return into favor would have been easier, if the repudiated wife had afterwards become acceptable to him, though she had become the wife of another; but when an adulteress finds her husband so willing of himself, and ready to grant free pardon, it is certainly an example not found among mortals. Thus we see that God, by an argument from the less to the greater, enhances his goodness towards the people, in order to render the Jews the less excusable for rejecting so pertinaciously a favor freely offered to them.
But it may be asked, why the Prophet says, By pollution shall not this land be polluted, or, through this? I shall speak first of the words, and then refer to the subject. Almost all give this version, “Is not that land by pollution polluted.” But I know not what sense we can elicit by such a rendering, except, it may be, that God compares a divorced wife to the land, or that he, by an abrupt transition, transfers to the land what he had said of a divorced wife, or rather that he explains the metaphor which had been used. If this sense be approved, then the copulative which follows must be rendered as a causative, which all have rendered adversatively, and rightly too, “But thou.” I then prefer to read
As to the words, we now see that the Prophet does not say without reason, “By this;” that is, when a woman unites herself to one man, and then to another, and afterwards returns to her first husband; for society would thus be torn asunder, and also the sacred bond of marriage, the main thing in the preservation of social order, would be broken.
It is added, But thou hast played the harlot with many companions 73 What we have before observed is here confirmed, — that the people had been guilty, not only of one act of adultery, but that they were become like common strumpets, who prostitute themselves to all without any difference; and this is what will be presently stated. Those whom he calls companions or friends were rivals. He says, Yet return to me, saith Jehovah: by which he intimated, — “Pardon is ready for thee, provided thou repentest.”
An objection may, however, be here raised, — How could God do what he had forbidden in his law? The answer is obvious, — No other remedy could have been given to preserve order in society when men were allowed to repudiate their wives, except by adding this restraint, as a proof that God did not favor their levity and changeableness. It was thus necessary, for the interest of society, to punish such men as were too morose and rigid, by withholding from them the power of recovering the wives whom they had dismissed. It might otherwise have been, that one changed his love the third day, or in a month, or in a year, and demanded his wife. God then intended to put this restraint on divorce, so that no man, who had put away his wife, could take her again. But the case is very different as to God himself: it is therefore nothing strange that he claims for himself the right of being reconciled to the Jews on their repentance. It follows —
TSK -> Jer 3:1
TSK: Jer 3:1 - -- They say : Heb. Saying
If a man : Deu 24:1-4
shall not that : Jer 3:9, Jer 2:7; Lev 18:24-28; Isa 24:5; Mic 2:10
but thou hast : Jer 2:20,Jer 2:23; De...
They say : Heb. Saying
If a man : Deu 24:1-4
shall not that : Jer 3:9, Jer 2:7; Lev 18:24-28; Isa 24:5; Mic 2:10
but thou hast : Jer 2:20,Jer 2:23; Deu 22:21; Jdg 19:2; Eze 16:26, Eze 16:28, Eze 16:29, 23:4-49; Hos 1:2, Hos 2:5-7
yet return : Jer 3:12-14, Jer 3:22, Jer 4:1, Jer 4:14, Jer 8:4-6; Deu 4:29-31; Isa 55:6-9; Eze 33:11; Hos 14:1-4; Zec 1:3; Luk 15:16-24
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jer 3:1
Barnes: Jer 3:1 - -- They say - Or, That is to say. The prophet has completed his survey of Israel’ s conduct, and draws the conclusion that as an adulterous w...
They say - Or, That is to say. The prophet has completed his survey of Israel’ s conduct, and draws the conclusion that as an adulterous wife could not be taken back by her husband, so Israel has forfeited her part in the covenant with God. Apparently the opening word, which literally means "to say,"only introduces the quotation in the margin.
Yet return again to me - Or, "and thinkest thou to return unto me!"The whole argument is not of mercy, but is the proof that after her repeated adulteries, Israel could not again take her place as wife. To think of returning to God, with the marriage-law unrepealed, was folly.
Poole -> Jer 3:1
Poole: Jer 3:1 - -- They say or, Men use to say . If this, with the four following verses, belong to the former chapter, then it seems to express God’ s condescen...
They say or, Men use to say . If this, with the four following verses, belong to the former chapter, then it seems to express God’ s condescension to them: q. d. Though if a woman forsake her husband, and be married to another man, the law will not permit him to receive her again; yet God would receive thee again upon thy returning to him; but thou choosest rather obstinately to adhere to thy other confidences, wherein thou shalt not prosper. But if we look upon them as beginning a new argument, then here God declares his readiness to receive them again upon their repentance, though it be very unusual for husbands so to do, when their wives have proved treacherous unto them, in betaking themselves to other husbands; and so this chapter may very well begin with such a proverbial speech, They say , or, Men use to say , or, It is commonly said. Put away his wife ; or give her a bill of divorce, Deu 24:1 . Shall he return unto her again? q. d. He cannot take her again, according to the law, Deu 24:1-4 . Or rather, will a man do such a thing? If the law were not against it, would any man be so easily wrought upon as to take her again? No, certainly. It is an argument from the less to the greater, to set forth God’ s great lenity towards them: q.d. If a husband should turn away his wife merely because he pleased her not, though she gave him no just cause, and she should bestow herself on another, he would not be reconciled to her, neither might he take her again; but you have gone a whoring from me, and sufficiently provoked me to reject and turn you off. I will dispense with my own law for your sakes, and will act by my prerogative; I am ready to be reconciled, to follow them that fly from me, as in the close of the verse, and Zec 1:3 Mat 3:7 . God will pardon sins of apostacy, and falls after repentance.
Shall not that land be greatly polluted? Heb. in being profane be profaned . Would not so great a sin greatly pollute a state or nation? Lev 18:27,28 . It must needs be polluted by such marriages to and fro, and promiscuous couplings, Deu 24:4 .
With many lovers not with one only, as being sufficient to make thee an adulteress, but a common strumpet, joining in fellowship with divers associates and companions, or many idols.
Haydock -> Jer 3:1
Haydock: Jer 3:1 - -- It. Hebrew, "a saying." Septuagint, "If," &c., Deuteronomy xxiv. 1. (Haydock) ---
Woman. Hebrew, "land." ---
Lovers. Septuagint, "shepherds,...
It. Hebrew, "a saying." Septuagint, "If," &c., Deuteronomy xxiv. 1. (Haydock) ---
Woman. Hebrew, "land." ---
Lovers. Septuagint, "shepherds," (Calmet) seeking aid from idols and foreigners.
Gill -> Jer 3:1
Gill: Jer 3:1 - -- They say, if a man put away his wife,.... Or, "saying" w; wherefore some connect those words with the last verse of the preceding chapter, as if they ...
They say, if a man put away his wife,.... Or, "saying" w; wherefore some connect those words with the last verse of the preceding chapter, as if they were a continuation of what the Lord had been there saying, that he would reject their confidences; so Kimchi; but they seem rather to begin a new section, or a paragraph, with what were commonly said among men, or in the law, and as the sense of that; that if a man divorced his wife upon any occasion,
and she go from him; departs from his house, and is separated from bed and board with him:
and become another man's, be married to another, as she might according to the law:
shall he return unto her again? take her to be his wife again; her latter husband not liking her, or being dead? no, he will not; he might not according to the law in Deu 24:4 and if there was no law respecting this, it can hardly be thought that he would, it being so contrary to nature, and to the order of civil society:
shall not that land be greatly polluted? either Judea, or any other, where such usages should obtain; for this, according to the law, was causing the land to sin, filling it with it, and making it liable to punishment for it; this being an abomination before the Lord. The Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and Arabic versions, render it, "shall not that woman be defiled?" she is so by the latter husband; and that is a reason why she is not to be received by the former again, Deu 24:4,
but thou hast played the harlot with many lovers; or served many idols; the number of their gods having been according to the number of their cities, Jer 2:28,
yet return again to me, saith the Lord; by repentance, and doing their first works, worshipping and serving him as formerly; so the Targum,
"return now from this time to my worship, saith the Lord.''
The Vulgate Latin version adds, "and I will receive thee"; this is an instance of great grace in the Lord, and which is not to be found among men.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jer 3:1 Heb “Returning to me.” The form is the bare infinitive which the KJV and ASV have interpreted as an imperative “Yet, return to me!...
Geneva Bible -> Jer 3:1
Geneva Bible: Jer 3:1 They ( a ) say, If a man shall put away his wife, and she shall go from him, and become another man's, shall he return to her again? shall not that la...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 3:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Jer 3:1-25 - --1 God's great mercy in Judah's vile whoredom.6 Judah is worse than Israel.12 The promises of the gospel to the penitent.20 Israel reproved, and called...
MHCC -> Jer 3:1-5
MHCC: Jer 3:1-5 - --In repentance, it is good to think upon the sins of which we have been guilty, and the places and companies where they have been committed. How gently...
Matthew Henry -> Jer 3:1-5
Matthew Henry: Jer 3:1-5 - -- These verses some make to belong to the sermon in the foregoing chapter, and they open a door of hope to those who receive the conviction of the rep...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jer 3:1-2
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:1-2 - --
As a divorced woman who has become another man's wife cannot return to her first husband, so Judah, after it has turned away to other gods, will not...
Constable: Jer 2:1--45:5 - --II. Prophecies about Judah chs. 2--45
The first series of prophetic announcements, reflections, and incidents th...
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Constable: Jer 2:1--25:38 - --A. Warnings of judgment on Judah and Jerusalem chs. 2-25
Chapters 2-25 contain warnings and appeals to t...
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Constable: Jer 2:1--6:30 - --1. Warnings of coming punishment because of Judah's guilt chs. 2-6
Most of the material in this ...
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Constable: Jer 3:1--4:5 - --Yahweh's call for His people's repentance 3:1-4:4
A passionate plea for repentance follo...
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