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Text -- Jeremiah 13:1-7 (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 13:5
Wesley: Jer 13:5 - -- Most think Jeremiah did this in a vision, for it was a very long journey from Anathoth to Euphrates.
Most think Jeremiah did this in a vision, for it was a very long journey from Anathoth to Euphrates.
JFB: Jer 13:1 - -- Expressing the close intimacy wherewith Jehovah had joined Israel and Judah to Him (Jer 13:11).
Expressing the close intimacy wherewith Jehovah had joined Israel and Judah to Him (Jer 13:11).
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Implying it was the inner garment next the skin, not the outer one.
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JFB: Jer 13:1 - -- Signifying the moral filth of His people, like the literal filth of a garment worn constantly next the skin, without being washed (Jer 13:10). GROTIUS...
Signifying the moral filth of His people, like the literal filth of a garment worn constantly next the skin, without being washed (Jer 13:10). GROTIUS understands a garment not bleached, but left in its native roughness, just as Judah had no beauty, but was adopted by the sole grace of God (Eze 16:4-6). "Neither wast thou washed in water," &c.
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JFB: Jer 13:4 - -- In order to support the view that Jeremiah's act was outward, HENDERSON considers that the Hebrew Phrath here is Ephratha, the original name of Beth-l...
In order to support the view that Jeremiah's act was outward, HENDERSON considers that the Hebrew Phrath here is Ephratha, the original name of Beth-lehem, six miles south of Jerusalem, a journey easy to be made by Jeremiah. The non-addition of the word "river," which usually precedes Phrath, when meaning Euphrates, favors this view. But I prefer English Version. The Euphrates is specified as being near Babylon, the Jews future place of exile.
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Typical of the prisons in which the Jews were to be confined.
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JFB: Jer 13:4 - -- Some well-known rock. A sterile region, such as was that to which the Jews were led away (compare Isa 7:19) [GROTIUS].
Some well-known rock. A sterile region, such as was that to which the Jews were led away (compare Isa 7:19) [GROTIUS].
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JFB: Jer 13:6 - -- Time enough was given for the girdle to become unfit for use. So, in course of time, the Jews became corrupted by the heathen idolatries around, so as...
Time enough was given for the girdle to become unfit for use. So, in course of time, the Jews became corrupted by the heathen idolatries around, so as to cease to be witnesses of Jehovah; they must, therefore, be cast away as a "marred" or spoiled girdle.
Clarke: Jer 13:1 - -- Thus saith the Lord unto me - This discourse is supposed to have been delivered under the reign of Jeconiah, the son and successor of Jehoiakim, who...
Thus saith the Lord unto me - This discourse is supposed to have been delivered under the reign of Jeconiah, the son and successor of Jehoiakim, who came to the throne in the eighteenth year of his age; when the Chaldean generals had encamped near to Jerusalem, but did not besiege it in form till Nebuchadnezzar came up with the great body of the army. In these circumstances the prophet predicts the captivity; and, by a symbolical representation of a rotten girdle, shows the people their totally corrupt state; and by another of bottles filled with wine, shows the destruction and madness of their counsels, and the confusion that must ensue
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Clarke: Jer 13:1 - -- Go and get thee a linen girdle - This was either a vision, or God simply describes the thing in order that the prophet might use it in the way of il...
Go and get thee a linen girdle - This was either a vision, or God simply describes the thing in order that the prophet might use it in the way of illustration
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Clarke: Jer 13:1 - -- Put it not in water - After having worn it, let it not be washed, that it may more properly represent the uncleanness of the Israelites; for they we...
Put it not in water - After having worn it, let it not be washed, that it may more properly represent the uncleanness of the Israelites; for they were represented by the girdle; for "as the girdle cleaveth to the loins of a man, so have I caused to cleave unto me the whole house of Israel, and the whole house of Judah."And as a girdle is as well for ornament as use; God took them for a name, and for a praise, and for a glory, Jer 13:11.
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Clarke: Jer 13:4 - -- Go to Euphrates, and hide it there - Intending to point out, by this distant place, the country into which they were to be carried away captive.
Go to Euphrates, and hide it there - Intending to point out, by this distant place, the country into which they were to be carried away captive.
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Clarke: Jer 13:7 - -- And behold, the girdle was marred; it was profitable for nothing - This symbolically represented the state of the Jews: they were corrupt and abomin...
And behold, the girdle was marred; it was profitable for nothing - This symbolically represented the state of the Jews: they were corrupt and abominable; and God, by sending them into captivity, "marred the pride of Judah, and the great pride of Jerusalem,"Jer 13:9.
Calvin: Jer 13:1 - -- I have said that there is here a new prophecy; for the Prophet is said to buy for himself a girdle or a belt, or, according to some, a truss or breec...
I have said that there is here a new prophecy; for the Prophet is said to buy for himself a girdle or a belt, or, according to some, a truss or breeches; and as mention is made of linen, this opinion may be probable; but
As to the matter in hand, it makes no great difference. The Prophet then is bidden to buy for himself a linen girdle or a linen breeches, and he is also bidden to go to Euphrates, and to hide the girdle in a hole. He is again bidden to go the second time to Euphrates, and to draw the girdle from the hole, and he found it marred. The application follows; for God declares that he would thus deal with the Jews; though he had had them as a belt, he would yet cast them away. As he had adorned them, so he designed them to be an ornament to him; for the glory of God shines forth in his ChurJeremiah The Jews then, as Isaiah says, were a crown of glory and a royal diadem in God’s hand. (Isa 62:3) Hence he compares them here most fitly to a belt or a girdle. Though then their condition was honorable, yet God threatens that he would cast them away; so that, being hidden, they might contract rottenness in a cavern of the Euphrates, that is, in Assyria and Chaldea. This is the meaning of the prophecy.
But no doubt a vision is here narrated, and not a real transaction, as some think, who regard Jeremiah as having gone there; but what can be imagined more absurd? He was, we know, continually engaged in his office of a teacher among his own people. Had he undertaken so long a journey, and that twice, it would have taken him some months. Hence contentious must he be, who urges the words of the Prophet, and holds that he must have gone to the Euphrates and hidden there his girdle. We know that this form of speaking is common and often used by the prophets: they narrate visions as facts.
We must also observe, that God might have spoken plainly and without any similitude; but as they were not only ignorant, but also stupid, it was found necessary to reprove their torpidity by an external symbol. This was the reason why God confirmed the doctrine of his Prophet by an external representation. Had God said, “Ye have been to me hitherto as a belt, ye were my ornament and my glory, not indeed through your merit or worthiness, but because I have united you to myself, that ye might be a holy people and a priestly kingdom; but now I am constrained to cast you away; and as a person throws from him and casts a girdle into some hole, so that after a long time he finds it rotten, so it will be with you, after having been hidden a long time beyond Euphrates; ye shall there contract rottenness, which will mar you altogether, so that your appearance will be very different, when a remnant of you shall come from thence:” This indeed might have been sufficient; but in that state of security and dullness in which we know the Jews were, such a simple statement would not have so effectually penetrated into their hearts, as when this symbol was presented to them. The Prophet, therefore, says, that he was girded with a belt, that the belt was hid in a hole near Euphrates, and that there it became marred; and then he adds, so shall it be done to you. This statement, as I have said, more sharply touched the Jews, so that they saw that the judgment of God was at hand.
With regard to the similitude of girdle or breeches, we know how proudly the Jews gloried in the thought that God was bound to them; and he would have really been so, had they been in return faithful to him: but as they had become so disobedient and ungrateful, how could God be bound to them? He had indeed chosen them to be a people to himself, but this condition was added, that they were to be as a chaste wife, as he had become, according to what we have seen, a husband to them. But they had prostituted themselves and had become shamefully polluted with idols. As then they had perfidiously departed from their marriage engagement, was not God freed from his obligations? according to what is said by Isaiah,
“There is no need to give you a bill of divorcement, for your mother is an adulteress.” (Isa 1:1)
The Prophet then, in this place, meant in a few words to shake off from the Jews those vain boastings in which they indulged, when they said that they were God’s people and the holy seed of Abraham. “True,” he says, “and I will concede more to you, that you were to God even as a belt, by which men usually adorn themselves; but God adopted you, that you might serve him chastely and faithfully; but now, as ye have made void his covenant, he will cast away this belt, which is a disgrace to him and not an ornament, and will throw it into a cavern where it will rot.” Such is the view we are to take of this belt, as we shall hereafter see more clearly.
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Calvin: Jer 13:7 - -- The Prophet, by saying that he went to the Euphrates, confirms what he had narrated: he did not indeed mean that he actually went there, but his obje...
The Prophet, by saying that he went to the Euphrates, confirms what he had narrated: he did not indeed mean that he actually went there, but his object was to give the Jews a vivid representation. It is then what Rhetorians call a scene presented to the view; though the place is not changed, yet the thing is set before the eyes by a lively description. 71 Thus the Prophet, as the Jews were deaf, exhibited to their view what they would not hear. This is the reason why he says that he went. For the same purpose is what follows, that at the end of many days God had bidden him to take out the girdle Here also is signified the length of the exile. As to the hole in a rock, what is meant is disgrace; for without honor and esteem the Jews lived in banishment, in the same manner as though they were cast into a cavern. Hence by the hole is signified their ignoble and base condition, that they were like persons removed from the sight of all men and from the common light of day. By the end of many days, is meant, as I have said, the length of their exile, for in a short time they would not have become putrified, and except indeed this had been distinctly expressed, they would have never been convinced of the grievousness of the calamity which was nigh them. Hence he says that the days would be many, so that they might contract putridity while hidden in the hole.
Defender -> Jer 13:5
Defender: Jer 13:5 - -- Critics have claimed Jeremiah could not have made such a journey. But the upper Euphrates was not more than 500 miles from Jerusalem, and a journey of...
Critics have claimed Jeremiah could not have made such a journey. But the upper Euphrates was not more than 500 miles from Jerusalem, and a journey of this distance was quite possible at that time."
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TSK: Jer 13:2 - -- according : Pro 3:5; Isa 20:2; Eze 2:8; Hos 1:2, Hos 1:3; Joh 13:6, Joh 13:7, Joh 15:14
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TSK: Jer 13:4 - -- go : Intending to point out, by this distant place, the country, Chaldea, into which they were to be carried captive. Jer 51:63, Jer 51:64; Psa 137:1;...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jer 13:1 - -- A linen girdle - The appointed dress of the priestly order (Lev 16:4, ...). Put it not in water - i. e., do not wash it, and so let it re...
A linen girdle - The appointed dress of the priestly order (Lev 16:4, ...).
Put it not in water - i. e., do not wash it, and so let it represent the deep-grained pollution of the people.
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Barnes: Jer 13:4 - -- In a hole of the rock - " In a cleft of the rock."As there are no fissured rocks in Babylonia, the place where Jeremiah hid the girdle must have...
In a hole of the rock - " In a cleft of the rock."As there are no fissured rocks in Babylonia, the place where Jeremiah hid the girdle must have been somewhere in the upper part of the river.
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Many days - The seventy years’ captivity.
Poole: Jer 13:2 - -- According to the word of the Lord that is, according to God’ s command.
And put it on my loins and used it as God commanded me, never disputin...
According to the word of the Lord that is, according to God’ s command.
And put it on my loins and used it as God commanded me, never disputing the reason why God bid me do such a thing.
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Poole: Jer 13:4 - -- God having commanded the prophet to procure such a girdle as was before mentioned, and to tie it upon his loins, he a second time comes to him, and ...
God having commanded the prophet to procure such a girdle as was before mentioned, and to tie it upon his loins, he a second time comes to him, and commandeth him to take this girdle, and carry it to Euphrates. This was one of the four great rivers that the river out of the garden of Eden divided itself into, Gen 2:10,14 . It was the border of the Promised Land, Gen 15:18 Deu 1:7 11:24 1Ch 5:9 . Reuben’ s lot was bounded by it. The prophet was commanded to hide his girdle in the
hole of a
rock in that river. But why there? Were there not other places nearer where the prophet might have hid it? It is judged by some that this command was also to signify unto them that they should be carried out of their own borders into captivity; or rather, that they had corrupted, and were become rotten, by doing after the fashions and manners of the heathens, who lived on the other side of Euphrates always, but having (a hundred years before this) captivated the ten tribes, lived also on this side of it.
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Poole: Jer 13:5 - -- Most think that Jeremiah did this but in a vision, for it was a very long journey for the prophet to take to go from Anathoth or Jerusalem as far as...
Most think that Jeremiah did this but in a vision, for it was a very long journey for the prophet to take to go from Anathoth or Jerusalem as far as Euphrates. Jeremiah was obedient to God’ s command, without any disputing or asking God the meaning of this injunction to him.
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Poole: Jer 13:6 - -- God, who had bidden the prophet go and hide the linen girdle, after some considerable time speaks again to him to go and take it away from the place...
God, who had bidden the prophet go and hide the linen girdle, after some considerable time speaks again to him to go and take it away from the place where he had lodged it.
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Poole: Jer 13:7 - -- Whether the prophet really made such a journey, or all this was but a vision, is very uncertain. When he came to the place, or in his vision, he tho...
Whether the prophet really made such a journey, or all this was but a vision, is very uncertain. When he came to the place, or in his vision, he thought, when he came to the place, that he saw all the girdle rotted; and good for nothing but to be thrown upon a dunghill.
Dark. John xii. 35. ---
Mountains, beyond the Euphrates, resembling clouds.
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Haydock: Jer 13:1 - -- Girdle, usually worn by women. (St. Jerome) (Exodus xxviii. 42.) ---
It denoted the Jews, who became more corrupt during the captivity; (ver. 7, 1...
Girdle, usually worn by women. (St. Jerome) (Exodus xxviii. 42.) ---
It denoted the Jews, who became more corrupt during the captivity; (ver. 7, 11.) so that God delivered them out of his pure mercy. Thus He explains this prophetical action. (Calmet) ---
Loins. God cherished his people. (Menochius) ---
Water. He made choice of them when they were rough and deformed. (St. Jerome) ---
Their sins cause their ruin. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 13:4 - -- Euphrates, above 150 leagues distant. Some think this was only to be done in spirit: but it is generally supposed that the prophet made this long jo...
Euphrates, above 150 leagues distant. Some think this was only to be done in spirit: but it is generally supposed that the prophet made this long journey twice. Bochart suggests that Euphrates (Hebrew Peratha ) may be put for Ephrata, or Bethlehem, as the first syllable is often cut off. (Calmet) ---
Yet a journey to the Euphrates would represent more strikingly the destination of the people; and it would not be difficult for God to convey Jeremias thither in a short time, if requisite, as he sent Habacuc through the air to carry a dinner to Daniel; (xiv. 32.) though this supposition is not here necessary, as the labour to which Jeremias was repeatedly exposed, might shew the people their manifold transgressions and captivities. (Haydock) ---
Such prophetic actions make a deeper impression than words, Hebrews i. The ingratitude of the people is here described, to chap. xxi. (Worthington)
Gill: Jer 13:1 - -- Thus saith the Lord unto me,.... In a vision, and by the spirit of prophecy: when this was said is not certain, very likely in the reign of Jehoiakim;...
Thus saith the Lord unto me,.... In a vision, and by the spirit of prophecy: when this was said is not certain, very likely in the reign of Jehoiakim; the prophet gives an account of what had been done, the present tense is put for the past.
Go and get thee a linen girdle; or, "a girdle of linens" l; a girdle made of flax or fine linen, which the prophet had not used to wear; and having none, is bid to go, perhaps from Anathoth to Jerusalem, to "get" one, or "buy" one: this girdle represents the people of the Jews in their more pure and less corrupted state, when they were a people near unto the Lord, and greatly regarded by him, and had a share in his affections; when they cleaved unto him, and served him, and were to his praise and glory: "and put it upon thy loins"; near the reins, the seat of affection and desire, and that it might be visible and ornamental; denoting what has been before observed: "and" or
but put it not in water or, "bring it not through it" m; meaning either before he put it on his loins; and the sense is, that he was not to wash it, and whiten it, but to wear it just as it was wrought, signifying that those people were originally taken by the Lord of his own mercy, and without any merits of theirs, rough, unwashed, and unpolished as they were: or else, after he had wore it, as Jarchi, when it was soiled with sweat; yet not to be washed, that it might rot the sooner: and so may design the corrupt and filthy state of this people, and the ruin brought thereby upon them, which was not to be prevented.
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Gill: Jer 13:2 - -- So I got a girdle,.... Or, bought n a linen one, as directed:
according to the word of the Lord; his express order and command; the prophet was not...
So I got a girdle,.... Or, bought n a linen one, as directed:
according to the word of the Lord; his express order and command; the prophet was not disobedient to the heavenly vision:
and I put it on my loins; without washing it before or after, and wore it publicly for some time.
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Gill: Jer 13:3 - -- And the word of the Lord,.... The Targum is,
"the word of prophecy from before the Lord:''
came unto me the second time, saying; what distance o...
And the word of the Lord,.... The Targum is,
"the word of prophecy from before the Lord:''
came unto me the second time, saying; what distance of time there was between this order and the former is not known.
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Gill: Jer 13:4 - -- Take the girdle which thou hast got, which is upon thy loins,.... Either he is bid to take it off his loins, on which it was; or to go with it on them...
Take the girdle which thou hast got, which is upon thy loins,.... Either he is bid to take it off his loins, on which it was; or to go with it on them; seeing the taking it off does not seem absolutely necessary; and go with it to the place directed to in the following words:
and arise, go to Euphrates, and hide it there in a hole of the rock; by the river side, where the waters, coming and going, would reach and wet it, and it drying again, would rot the sooner. This signifies the carrying of the Jews captive to Babylon, by which city the river Euphrates ran, and the obscure state and condition they would be in there; and where all their pride and glory would be marred, as afterwards declared.
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Gill: Jer 13:5 - -- So I went and hid it by Euphrates,.... Or, "in" o it; in a hole of the rock, upon the banks of it:
as the Lord commanded me: all this seems to be d...
So I went and hid it by Euphrates,.... Or, "in" o it; in a hole of the rock, upon the banks of it:
as the Lord commanded me: all this seems to be done not really, but visionally; it can hardly be thought that Jeremy should be sent on two such long journeys, on such an account, which would take up a considerable time to perform it in; but rather that he went and came in like manner as Ezekiel did, in the visions of God, from Chaldea to Jerusalem, and from thence to Chaldea again, Eze 8:3, and so Maimonaides p was of opinion, as Kimchi on the place observes, that all this was done in a vision of prophecy.
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Gill: Jer 13:6 - -- And it came to pass after many days,.... When the girdle had lain long in the hole, by the side of Euphrates; this denotes the length of the Babylonis...
And it came to pass after many days,.... When the girdle had lain long in the hole, by the side of Euphrates; this denotes the length of the Babylonish captivity, which was seventy years:
that the Lord said unto me, arise, go to Euphrates, and take the girdle from thence, which I commanded thee to hide there; which may denote the return of these people from captivity, according to the prophecy of Jeremiah; see Jer 25:11, though this seems to be visionally done, in order to express the wretched state and condition these people were in; either before the captivity, which was the cause of it; or at their return from it, when they were no better for it.
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Gill: Jer 13:7 - -- Then I went to Euphrates,.... In a vision; this is the second journey, of which See Gill on Jer 13:5,
and digged; the hole, in process of time, bei...
Then I went to Euphrates,.... In a vision; this is the second journey, of which See Gill on Jer 13:5,
and digged; the hole, in process of time, being stopped up with soil or sand, that were thrown up over it; this digging was in a visionary way; see Eze 8:8,
and took the girdle from the place where I had hid it; which he knew again by some token or another:
and, behold, the girdle was marred; or "corrupted" q; it was become rotten by the washing of the water over it, and its long continuance in such a place:
it was profitable for nothing; it could not be put upon a man's loins, or be wore any more; nor was it fit for any other use, it was so sadly spoiled and so thoroughly rotten. It is in the Hebrew text, "it shall not prosper to all" r things; that is, not "to anything" s, as many render it.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jer 13:1 The fact that the garment was not to be put in water is not explained. A possible explanation within the context is that it was to be worn continuousl...
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NET Notes: Jer 13:2 Heb “upon your loins.” The “loins” were the midriff of the body from the waist to the knees. For a further discussion includin...
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NET Notes: Jer 13:4 The significance of this act is explained in vv. 9-10. See the notes there for explanation.
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NET Notes: Jer 13:5 The translation reads בִּפְרָתָה (bifratah) with 4QJera as noted in W. L. Holladay, Jeremi...
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NET Notes: Jer 13:6 Heb “Get from there.” The words “from there” are not necessary to the English sentence. They would lead to a redundancy later ...
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Geneva Bible -> Jer 13:4
Geneva Bible: Jer 13:4 Take the sash that thou hast bought, which [is] upon thy loins, and arise, go to ( a ) Euphrates, and hide it there in a cleft of the rock.
( a ) Bec...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 13:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Jer 13:1-27 - --1 By the type of a linen girdle, hidden at Euphrates, God prefigures the destruction of his people.12 Under the parable of the bottles filled with win...
MHCC -> Jer 13:1-11
MHCC: Jer 13:1-11 - --It was usual with the prophets to teach by signs. And we have the explanation, Jer 13:9-11. The people of Israel had been to God as this girdle. He ca...
Matthew Henry -> Jer 13:1-11
Matthew Henry: Jer 13:1-11 - -- Here is, I. A sign, the marring of a girdle, which the prophet had worn for some time, by hiding it in a hole of a rock near the river Euphrates. It...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jer 13:1-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 13:1-11 - --
The spoilt girdle. - Jer 13:1. "Thus spake Jahveh unto me: Go and buy thee a linen girdle, and put it upon thy loins, but into the water thou s...
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 11:1--13:27 - --The consequences of breaking the covenant chs. 11-13
This section provides an explanatio...
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