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Text -- Jeremiah 2:20--3:11 (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 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:21; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:28; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:37; Jer 2:37; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:10
Wesley: Jer 2:20 - -- The bondage and tyranny that thou wert under in old time in Egypt, as also divers times besides.
The bondage and tyranny that thou wert under in old time in Egypt, as also divers times besides.
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Under these shades idolaters thought there lay some hidden deity.
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Wesley: Jer 2:20 - -- The word properly signifies, making hast from one tree to another, or from one idol to another.
The word properly signifies, making hast from one tree to another, or from one idol to another.
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Wesley: Jer 2:22 - -- 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...
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:22 - -- Thy filthiness is so foul that it leaves a brand behind which cannot be hid or washed out, but will abide, Jer 17:1.
Thy filthiness is so foul that it leaves a brand behind which cannot be hid or washed out, but will abide, Jer 17:1.
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The word is plural, as comprehensive of all their idols.
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The filthiness thou hast left behind thee, whereby thou mayst be traced.
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Wesley: Jer 2:23 - -- Whether of Hinnom where they burnt their children in sacrifice, or in any valleys where thou hast been frequent in thy idolatries.
Whether of Hinnom where they burnt their children in sacrifice, or in any valleys where thou hast been frequent in thy idolatries.
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A metaphor taken from creatures that are hunted, that keep no direct path.
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Another similitude for the more lively description of the same thing.
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This creature, by the wind, smells afar off which way her male is.
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Wesley: Jer 2:24 - -- That is, when she has an occasion to run impetuously to her male, she bears down all opposition.
That is, when she has an occasion to run impetuously to her male, she bears down all opposition.
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Wesley: Jer 2:24 - -- 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 af...
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:25 - -- Take not those courses that will reduce thee to poverty, to go bare foot, and to want wherewith to quench thy thirst.
Take not those courses that will reduce thee to poverty, to go bare foot, and to want wherewith to quench thy thirst.
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Not ashamed of his sin of theft, but that he is at last found.
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Wesley: Jer 2:27 - -- 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,...
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They turn their faces towards their idols.
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Wesley: Jer 2:28 - -- 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 togeth...
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:30 - -- Your inhabitants in every city, they being frequently called the children of such a city.
Your inhabitants in every city, they being frequently called the children of such a city.
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Instruction: though they were corrected, yet they would not be instructed.
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Wesley: Jer 2:30 - -- 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 reprov...
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:31 - -- You shall see the thing with your eyes, because your ears are shut against it.
You shall see the thing with your eyes, because your ears are shut against it.
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Wesley: Jer 2:31 - -- 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, bec...
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:32 - -- 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.
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.
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Wesley: Jer 2:32 - -- In the neglect of my worship; me, who was not only their defence, but their glory.
In the neglect of my worship; me, who was not only their defence, but their glory.
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Wesley: Jer 2:33 - -- Nations that have been vile enough of themselves, by thy example are become more vile.
Nations that have been vile enough of themselves, by thy example are become more vile.
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Of thy garments: the tokens of cruelty may be seen openly there.
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Wesley: Jer 2:34 - -- In thee is found the murder expressed here by blood of innocent persons, murdering souls as well as bodies.
In thee is found the murder expressed here by blood of innocent persons, murdering souls as well as bodies.
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Wesley: Jer 2:34 - -- Heb. by digging; as if the earth had covered the blood, or as if they had committed their wickedness in some obscure places.
Heb. by digging; as if the earth had covered the blood, or as if they had committed their wickedness in some obscure places.
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Upon thy garments, exposed openly to publick view.
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I will proceed in my judgment against thee.
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Wesley: Jer 2:36 - -- Why dost thou seek auxiliaries anywhere, rather than cleave to me? Ashamed - Egypt shall stand thee in no more stead than Assyria hath done.
Why dost thou seek auxiliaries anywhere, rather than cleave to me? Ashamed - Egypt shall stand thee in no more stead than Assyria hath done.
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Wesley: Jer 2:37 - -- All the help thou canst procure shall not prevent thy captivity, but from hence thou shalt go.
All the help thou canst procure shall not prevent thy captivity, but from hence thou shalt go.
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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.
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Where there are not the footsteps of thy idolaters.
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Wesley: Jer 3:2 - -- 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, a...
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.
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Not only thy idolatries, but other wicked courses.
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For all this, thou didst still remain obstinate, as ashamed of nothing.
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Wilt thou not as a child call upon me, whom thou hast thus greatly provoked.
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The ten tribes who fell off from Judah.
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Wesley: Jer 3:8 - -- Delivered her up into the hands of the Assyrian, where God took from her the title of being his church, 2Ki 17:5-6.
Delivered her up into the hands of the Assyrian, where God took from her the title of being his church, 2Ki 17:5-6.
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Wesley: Jer 3:10 - -- Though God saw what she did, and though she saw the shameful idolatry of Israel, and what she had suffered.
Though God saw what she did, and though she saw the shameful idolatry of Israel, and what she had suffered.
JFB -> Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:21; Jer 2:21; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:28; Jer 2:28; Jer 2:29; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:37; Jer 2:37; Jer 2:37; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:9; Jer 3:9; Jer 3:10; Jer 3:10; Jer 3:11; Jer 3:11
JFB: Jer 2:20 - -- The Hebrew should be pointed as the second person feminine, a form common in Jeremiah: "Thou hast broken," &c. So the Septuagint, and the sense requir...
The Hebrew should be pointed as the second person feminine, a form common in Jeremiah: "Thou hast broken," &c. So the Septuagint, and the sense requires it.
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JFB: Jer 2:20 - -- So the Keri, and many manuscripts read. But the Septuagint and most authorities read, "I will not serve," that is, obey. The sense of English Version ...
So the Keri, and many manuscripts read. But the Septuagint and most authorities read, "I will not serve," that is, obey. The sense of English Version is, "I broke thy yoke (in Egypt)," &c., "and (at that time) thou saidst, I will not transgress; whereas thou hast (since then) wandered (from Me)" (Exo 19:8).
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JFB: Jer 2:20 - -- Rather, "thou hast bowed down thyself" (for the act of adultery: figurative of shameless idolatry, Exo 34:15-16; compare Job 31:10).
Rather, "thou hast bowed down thyself" (for the act of adultery: figurative of shameless idolatry, Exo 34:15-16; compare Job 31:10).
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JFB: Jer 2:22 - -- Not what is now so called, namely, saltpeter; but the natron of Egypt, a mineral alkali, an incrustation at the bottom of the lakes, after the summer ...
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JFB: Jer 2:22 - -- Potash, the carbonate of which is obtained impure from burning different plants, especially the kali of Egypt and Arabia. Mixed with oil it was used f...
Potash, the carbonate of which is obtained impure from burning different plants, especially the kali of Egypt and Arabia. Mixed with oil it was used for washing.
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JFB: Jer 2:22 - -- Deeply ingrained, indelibly marked; the Hebrew, catham, being equivalent to cathab. Others translate, "is treasured up," from the Arabic. MAURER from ...
Deeply ingrained, indelibly marked; the Hebrew, catham, being equivalent to cathab. Others translate, "is treasured up," from the Arabic. MAURER from a Syriac root, "is polluted."
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Plural, to express manifold excellency: compare Elohim.
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JFB: Jer 2:23 - -- Namely, of Hinnom, or Tophet, south and east of Jerusalem: rendered infamous by the human sacrifices to Moloch in it (compare Jer 19:2, Jer 19:6, Jer ...
Namely, of Hinnom, or Tophet, south and east of Jerusalem: rendered infamous by the human sacrifices to Moloch in it (compare Jer 19:2, Jer 19:6, Jer 19:13-14; Jer 32:35; see on Isa 30:33).
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JFB: Jer 2:23 - -- Omit. The substantive that follows in this verse (and also that in Jer 2:24) is in apposition with the preceding "thou."
Omit. The substantive that follows in this verse (and also that in Jer 2:24) is in apposition with the preceding "thou."
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JFB: Jer 2:23 - -- Literally, "enfolding"; making its ways complicated by wandering hither and thither, lusting after the male. Compare as to the Jews' spiritual lust, H...
Literally, "enfolding"; making its ways complicated by wandering hither and thither, lusting after the male. Compare as to the Jews' spiritual lust, Hos 2:6-7.
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JFB: Jer 2:24 - -- Rather, "in her ardor," namely, in pursuit of a male, sniffing the wind to ascertain where one is to be found [MAURER].
Rather, "in her ardor," namely, in pursuit of a male, sniffing the wind to ascertain where one is to be found [MAURER].
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JFB: Jer 2:24 - -- Either from a Hebrew root, "to meet"; "her meeting (with the male for sexual intercourse), who can avert it?" Or better from an Arabic root: "her heat...
Either from a Hebrew root, "to meet"; "her meeting (with the male for sexual intercourse), who can avert it?" Or better from an Arabic root: "her heat (sexual impulse), who can allay it?" [MAURER].
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Whichever of the males desire her company [HORSLEY].
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Have no need to weary themselves in searching for her.
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JFB: Jer 2:24 - -- In the season of the year when her sexual impulse is strongest, she puts herself in the way of the males, so that they have no difficulty in finding h...
In the season of the year when her sexual impulse is strongest, she puts herself in the way of the males, so that they have no difficulty in finding her.
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That is, abstain from incontinence; figuratively for idolatry [HOUBIGANT].
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JFB: Jer 2:25 - -- Do not run so violently in pursuing lovers, as to wear out thy shoes: do not "thirst" so incontinently after sexual intercourse. HITZIG thinks the ref...
Do not run so violently in pursuing lovers, as to wear out thy shoes: do not "thirst" so incontinently after sexual intercourse. HITZIG thinks the reference is to penances performed barefoot to idols, and the thirst occasioned by loud and continued invocations to them.
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JFB: Jer 2:25 - -- (Jer 18:12; Isa 57:10). "It is hopeless," that is, I am desperately resolved to go on in my own course.
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JFB: Jer 2:27 - -- Namely, to God (Psa 78:34; Isa 26:16). Trouble often brings men to their senses (Luk 15:16-18).
Namely, to God (Psa 78:34; Isa 26:16). Trouble often brings men to their senses (Luk 15:16-18).
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JFB: Jer 2:28 - -- God sends them to the gods for whom they forsook Him, to see if they can help them (Deu 32:37-38; Jdg 10:14).
God sends them to the gods for whom they forsook Him, to see if they can help them (Deu 32:37-38; Jdg 10:14).
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JFB: Jer 2:31 - -- The Hebrew collocation is, "O, the generation, ye," that is, "O ye who now live." The generation needed only to be named, to call its degeneracy to vi...
The Hebrew collocation is, "O, the generation, ye," that is, "O ye who now live." The generation needed only to be named, to call its degeneracy to view, so palpable was it.
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JFB: Jer 2:31 - -- In which all the necessaries of life are wanting. On the contrary, Jehovah was a never-failing source of supply for all Israel's wants in the wilderne...
In which all the necessaries of life are wanting. On the contrary, Jehovah was a never-failing source of supply for all Israel's wants in the wilderness, and afterwards in Canaan.
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JFB: Jer 2:31 - -- Literally, "darkness of Jehovah," the strongest Hebrew term for "darkness; the densest darkness"; compare "land of the shadow of death" (Jer 2:6).
Literally, "darkness of Jehovah," the strongest Hebrew term for "darkness; the densest darkness"; compare "land of the shadow of death" (Jer 2:6).
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JFB: Jer 2:31 - -- That is, We are our own masters. We will worship what gods we like (Psa 12:4; Psa 82:6). But it is better to translate from a different Hebrew root: "...
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JFB: Jer 2:33 - -- MAURER translates, "How skilfully thou dost prepare thy way," &c. But see 2Ki 9:30. "Trimmest" best suits the image of one decking herself as a harlot...
MAURER translates, "How skilfully thou dost prepare thy way," &c. But see 2Ki 9:30. "Trimmest" best suits the image of one decking herself as a harlot.
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Accordingly. Or else, "nay, thou hast even," &c.
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JFB: Jer 2:33 - -- Even the wicked harlots, that is, (laying aside the metaphor) even the Gentiles who are wicked, thou teachest to be still more so [GROTIUS].
Even the wicked harlots, that is, (laying aside the metaphor) even the Gentiles who are wicked, thou teachest to be still more so [GROTIUS].
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JFB: Jer 2:34 - -- Not only art thou polluted with idolatry, but also with the guilt of shedding innocent blood [MAURER]. ROSENMULLER not so well translates, "even in th...
Not only art thou polluted with idolatry, but also with the guilt of shedding innocent blood [MAURER]. ROSENMULLER not so well translates, "even in thy skirts," &c.; that is, there is no part of thee (not even thy skirts) that is not stained with innocent blood (Jer 19:4; 2Ki 21:16; Psa 106:38). See as to innocent blood shed, not as here in honor of idols, but of prophets for having reproved them (Jer 2:30; Jer 26:20-23).
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JFB: Jer 2:34 - -- I did not need to "search deep" to find proof of thy guilt; for it was "upon all these" thy skirts. Not in deep caverns didst thou perpetrate these at...
I did not need to "search deep" to find proof of thy guilt; for it was "upon all these" thy skirts. Not in deep caverns didst thou perpetrate these atrocities, but openly in the vale of Hinnom and within the precincts of the temple.
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JFB: Jer 2:36 - -- Runnest to and fro, now seeking help from Assyria (2Ch 28:16-21), now from Egypt (Jer 37:7-8; Isa 30:3).
Runnest to and fro, now seeking help from Assyria (2Ch 28:16-21), now from Egypt (Jer 37:7-8; Isa 30:3).
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JFB: Jer 2:37 - -- In those stays in which thou trustest.
Contrary to all precedent in the case of adultery, Jehovah offers a return to Judah, the spiritual adulteress ...
In those stays in which thou trustest.
Contrary to all precedent in the case of adultery, Jehovah offers a return to Judah, the spiritual adulteress (Jer 3:1-5). A new portion of the book, ending with the sixth chapter. Judah worse than Israel; yet both shall be restored in the last days (Jer. 3:6-25).
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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?
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JFB: Jer 3:1 - -- (Jer 3:22; Jer 4:1; Zec 1:3; compare Eze 16:51, Eze 16:58, Eze 16:60). "Nevertheless," &c. (see on Isa 50:1).
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The scene of idolatries which were spiritual adulteries.
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JFB: Jer 3:2 - -- Watching for lovers like a prostitute (Gen 38:14, Gen 38:21; Pro 7:12; Pro 23:28; Eze 16:24-25), and like an Arab who lies in wait for travellers. The...
Watching for lovers like a prostitute (Gen 38:14, Gen 38:21; Pro 7:12; Pro 23:28; Eze 16:24-25), and like an Arab who lies in wait for travellers. The Arabs of the desert, east and south of Palestine, are still notorious as robbers.
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JFB: Jer 3:3 - -- Essential to the crops in Palestine; withheld in judgment (Lev 26:19; compare Joe 2:23).
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JFB: Jer 3:4 - -- Not referring, as MICHAELIS thinks, to the reformation begun the year before, that is, the twelfth of Josiah; it means--now at once, now at last.
Not referring, as MICHAELIS thinks, to the reformation begun the year before, that is, the twelfth of Josiah; it means--now at once, now at last.
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JFB: Jer 3:4 - -- Contrasted with the "stock" whom they had heretofore called on as "father" (Jer 2:27; Luk 15:18).
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JFB: Jer 3:4 - -- That is, husband (Jer 2:2; Pro 2:17; Hos 2:7, Hos 2:15). Husband and father are the two most endearing of ties.
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JFB: Jer 3:5 - -- "thou," the second person, had preceded. The change to the third person implies a putting away of God to a greater distance from them; instead of repe...
"thou," the second person, had preceded. The change to the third person implies a putting away of God to a greater distance from them; instead of repenting and forsaking their idols, they merely deprecate the continuance of their punishment. Jer 3:12 and Psa 103:9, answer their question in the event of their penitence.
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JFB: Jer 3:5 - -- Rather (God's reply to them), "Thou hast spoken (thus), and yet (all the while) thou hast done evil," &c.
Rather (God's reply to them), "Thou hast spoken (thus), and yet (all the while) thou hast done evil," &c.
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With all thy might; with incorrigible persistency [CALVIN].
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JFB: Jer 3:6 - -- From here to Jer 6:30, is a new discourse, delivered in Josiah's reign. It consists of two parts, the former extending to Jer 4:3, in which he warns J...
From here to Jer 6:30, is a new discourse, delivered in Josiah's reign. It consists of two parts, the former extending to Jer 4:3, in which he warns Judah from the example of Israel's doom, and yet promises Israel final restoration; the latter a threat of Babylonian invasion; as Nabopolassar founded the Babylonian empire, 625 B.C., the seventeenth of Josiah, this prophecy is perhaps not earlier than that date (Jer 4:5, &c.; Jer 5:14, &c.; Jer 6:1, &c.; Jer. 22:1-30); and probably not later than the second thorough reformation in the eighteenth year of the same reign.
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JFB: Jer 3:6 - -- Literally, "apostasy"; not merely apostate, but apostasy itself, the essence of it (Jer 3:14, Jer 3:22).
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JFB: Jer 3:8 - -- I saw that, though (whereas) it was for this very reason (namely), because backsliding (apostate) Israel had committed adultery I had put her away (2K...
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JFB: Jer 3:8 - -- Literally, "a writing of cuttings off." The plural implies the completeness of the severance. The use of this metaphor here, as in the former discours...
Literally, "a writing of cuttings off." The plural implies the completeness of the severance. The use of this metaphor here, as in the former discourse (Jer 3:1), implies a close connection between the discourses. The epithets are characteristic; Israel "apostate" (as the Hebrew for "backsliding" is better rendered); Judah, not as yet utterly apostate, but treacherous or faithless.
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JFB: Jer 3:9 - -- Some take this verse of Judah, to whom the end of Jer 3:8 refers. But Jer 3:10 puts Judah in contrast to Israel in this verse. "Yet for all this," ref...
Some take this verse of Judah, to whom the end of Jer 3:8 refers. But Jer 3:10 puts Judah in contrast to Israel in this verse. "Yet for all this," referring to the sad example of Israel; if Jer 3:9 referred to Judah, "she" would have been written in Jer 3:10, not "Judah." Translate, "It (the putting away of Israel) had come to pass through . . . whoredom; and (that is, for) she (Israel) had defiled the land" &c. [MAURER]. English Version, however, may be explained to refer to Israel.
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JFB: Jer 3:9 - -- "infamy." [EWALD]. MAURER not so well takes it from the Hebrew root, "voice," "fame."
"infamy." [EWALD]. MAURER not so well takes it from the Hebrew root, "voice," "fame."
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JFB: Jer 3:10 - -- Notwithstanding the lesson given in Israel's case of the fatal results of apostasy.
Notwithstanding the lesson given in Israel's case of the fatal results of apostasy.
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JFB: Jer 3:10 - -- The reformation in the eighteenth year of Josiah was not thorough on the part of the people, for at his death they relapsed into idolatry (2Ch 34:33; ...
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JFB: Jer 3:11 - -- Has been made to appear almost just (that is, comparatively innocent) by the surpassing guilt of Judah, who adds hypocrisy and treachery to her sin; a...
Clarke -> Jer 2:20; Jer 2:21; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:28; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:32; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:37; Jer 2:37; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:9; Jer 3:11
Clarke: Jer 2:20 - -- Of old time I have broken thy yoke - It is thought by able critics that the verbs should be read in the second person singular, Thou hast broken thy...
Of old time I have broken thy yoke - It is thought by able critics that the verbs should be read in the second person singular, Thou hast broken thy yoke, Thou hast burst thy bonds; and thus the Septuagint,
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Clarke: Jer 2:21 - -- I had planted thee a noble vine - I gave thee the fullest instruction, the purest ordinances, the highest privileges; and reason would that I should...
I had planted thee a noble vine - I gave thee the fullest instruction, the purest ordinances, the highest privileges; and reason would that I should expect thee to live suitably to such advantages; but instead of this thou art become degenerate; the tree is deteriorated, and the fruit is bad. Instead of being true worshippers, and of a holy life and conversation, ye are become idolaters of the most corrupt and profligate kind. See Isa 5:1, etc., where the same image is used.
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Clarke: Jer 2:22 - -- For though thou wash thee with nitre - It should be rendered natar or natron, a substance totally different from our nitre. It comes from the root ...
For though thou wash thee with nitre - It should be rendered natar or natron, a substance totally different from our nitre. It comes from the root
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Clarke: Jer 2:22 - -- Thine iniquity is marked before me - No washing will take out thy spots; the marks of thy idolatry and corruption are too deeply rooted to be extrac...
Thine iniquity is marked before me - No washing will take out thy spots; the marks of thy idolatry and corruption are too deeply rooted to be extracted by any human means.
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Clarke: Jer 2:23 - -- See thy way in the valley - The valley of Hinnom, where they offered their own children to Moloch, an idol of the Ammonites
See thy way in the valley - The valley of Hinnom, where they offered their own children to Moloch, an idol of the Ammonites
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Clarke: Jer 2:23 - -- A swift dromedary traversing her ways - Dr. Blayney translates, "A fleet dromedary that hath taken to company with her."Dr. Dahler rather paraphrase...
A swift dromedary traversing her ways - Dr. Blayney translates, "A fleet dromedary that hath taken to company with her."Dr. Dahler rather paraphrases, thus: -
Semblable a une dromedaire en chaleur
Qui court d’ une tote a l’ autre
"Like to a dromedary in her desire for the male
Which runs hither and thither.
This is an energetic comparison; and shows the unbridled attachment of those bad people to idolatry, and the abominable practices by which it was usually accompanied.
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Clarke: Jer 2:24 - -- A wild ass used to the wilderness - Another comparison to express the same thing
A wild ass used to the wilderness - Another comparison to express the same thing
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Clarke: Jer 2:24 - -- Snuffeth up the wind - In a high fever from the inward heat felt at such times, these animals open their mouths and nostrils as wide as possible, to...
Snuffeth up the wind - In a high fever from the inward heat felt at such times, these animals open their mouths and nostrils as wide as possible, to take in large draughts of fresh air, in order to cool them
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Clarke: Jer 2:24 - -- In her mouth they shall find her - The meaning is, that although such animals are exceedingly fierce and dangerous when they are in this state; yet,...
In her mouth they shall find her - The meaning is, that although such animals are exceedingly fierce and dangerous when they are in this state; yet, as soon as they have found the male, the desire is satisfied, and they become quiet and governable as before. But it was not so with this idolatrous people: their desires were ever fierce and furious; they were never satiated, one indulgence always leading to an other. The brute beasts had only a short season in which this appetite prevailed; but they acted without restraint or limit.
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Clarke: Jer 2:25 - -- Withhold thy foot from being unshod - When it was said to them, "Cease from discovering thy feet; prostitute thyself no more to thy idols.
Withhold thy foot from being unshod - When it was said to them, "Cease from discovering thy feet; prostitute thyself no more to thy idols.
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Clarke: Jer 2:25 - -- And thy throat from thirst - Drink no more of their libations, nor use those potions which tend only to increase thy appetite for pollution. Thou di...
And thy throat from thirst - Drink no more of their libations, nor use those potions which tend only to increase thy appetite for pollution. Thou didst say, There is no hope: it is useless to advise me thus; I am determined; I have loved these strange pods, and to them will I cleave.
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Clarke: Jer 2:26 - -- As the thief is ashamed - As the pilferer is confounded when he is caught in the fact; so shalt thou, thy kings, princes, priests, and prophets, be ...
As the thief is ashamed - As the pilferer is confounded when he is caught in the fact; so shalt thou, thy kings, princes, priests, and prophets, be confounded, when God shall arrest thee in thy idolatries, and deliver thee into the hands of thine enemies.
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Clarke: Jer 2:27 - -- Thou art my father - By thee we have been produced, and by thee we are sustained. This was the property of the true God; for he is the Author and Su...
Thou art my father - By thee we have been produced, and by thee we are sustained. This was the property of the true God; for he is the Author and Supporter of being. How deeply fallen and brutishly ignorant must they be when they could attribute this to the stock of a tree!
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Clarke: Jer 2:28 - -- According to the number of thy cities are thy gods - Among heathen nations every city had its tutelary deity. Judah, far sunk in idolatry, had adopt...
According to the number of thy cities are thy gods - Among heathen nations every city had its tutelary deity. Judah, far sunk in idolatry, had adopted this custom. The Church of Rome has refined it a little: every city has its tutelary saint, and this saint has a procession and worship peculiar to himself. So here; not much of the old idolatry is lost.
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Clarke: Jer 2:31 - -- Have I been a wilderness unto Israel? - Have I ever withheld from you any of the blessings necessary for your support
Have I been a wilderness unto Israel? - Have I ever withheld from you any of the blessings necessary for your support
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Clarke: Jer 2:31 - -- A land of darkness - Have you, since you passed through the wilderness, and came out of the darkness of Egypt, ever been brought into similar circum...
A land of darkness - Have you, since you passed through the wilderness, and came out of the darkness of Egypt, ever been brought into similar circumstances? You have had food and all the necessaries of life for your bodies; and my ordinances and word to enlighten and cheer your souls. I have neither been a wilderness nor a land of darkness to you
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Clarke: Jer 2:31 - -- We are lords - We wish to be our own masters; we will neither brook religious nor civil restraint; we will regard no laws, human or Divine. It was t...
We are lords - We wish to be our own masters; we will neither brook religious nor civil restraint; we will regard no laws, human or Divine. It was this disposition that caused them to fall in so fully with the whole system of idolatry.
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Clarke: Jer 2:32 - -- Can a maid forget her ornaments - This people has not so much attachment to me as young females have to their dress and ornaments. They never forget...
Can a maid forget her ornaments - This people has not so much attachment to me as young females have to their dress and ornaments. They never forget them and even when arrived at old age, look with pleasure on the dress and ornaments which they have worn in their youth
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Clarke: Jer 2:32 - -- Days without number - That is, for many years; during the whole reign of Manasses, which was fifty-five years, the land was deluged with idolatry, f...
Days without number - That is, for many years; during the whole reign of Manasses, which was fifty-five years, the land was deluged with idolatry, from which the reform by good King Josiah his grandson had not yet purified it.
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Clarke: Jer 2:33 - -- Why trimmest thou thy way - Ye have used a multitude of artifices to gain alliances with the neighboring idolatrous nations
Why trimmest thou thy way - Ye have used a multitude of artifices to gain alliances with the neighboring idolatrous nations
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Clarke: Jer 2:33 - -- Hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways - Ye have made even these idolaters worse than they were before. Dr. Blayney translates, "Therefore h...
Hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways - Ye have made even these idolaters worse than they were before. Dr. Blayney translates, "Therefore have I taught calamity thy ways."A prosopopoeia: "I have instructed calamity where to find thee."Thou shalt not escape punishment.
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Clarke: Jer 2:34 - -- The blood of the souls of the poor innocents - We find from the sacred history that Manasseh had filled Jerusalem with innocent blood; see 2Ki 21:16...
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Clarke: Jer 2:34 - -- I have not found it by secret search, but upon all these - Such deeds of darkness and profligacy are found only in Israel. Dr. Blayney translates, "...
I have not found it by secret search, but upon all these - Such deeds of darkness and profligacy are found only in Israel. Dr. Blayney translates, "I have not found it in a digged hole, but upon every oak."Others cover the blood that it may not appear; but ye have shed it openly, and sprinkled it upon your consecrated oaks, and gloried in it.
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Clarke: Jer 2:35 - -- Because I am innocent - They continued to assert their innocence, and therefore expected that God’ s judgments would be speedily removed
Because I am innocent - They continued to assert their innocence, and therefore expected that God’ s judgments would be speedily removed
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Clarke: Jer 2:35 - -- I will plead with thee - I will maintain my process, follow it up to conviction, and inflict the deserved punishment.
I will plead with thee - I will maintain my process, follow it up to conviction, and inflict the deserved punishment.
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Clarke: Jer 2:36 - -- Why gaddest thou about - When they had departed from the Lord, they sought foreign alliances for support
1. The Assyrians 2Ch 28:1...
Why gaddest thou about - When they had departed from the Lord, they sought foreign alliances for support
1. The Assyrians 2Ch 28:13-21; but they injured instead of helping them
2. The Egyptians: but in this they were utterly disappointed, and were ashamed of their confidence
See Jer 37:7-8 (note), for the fulfillment of this prediction.
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Clarke: Jer 2:37 - -- Thou shalt go forth from him, and thine hands upon thine head - Thou shalt find all thy confidence in vain, - thy hope disappointed; - and thy state...
Thou shalt go forth from him, and thine hands upon thine head - Thou shalt find all thy confidence in vain, - thy hope disappointed; - and thy state reduced to desperation. The hand being placed on the head was the evidence of deep sorrow, occasioned by utter desolation. See the case of Tamar, when ruined and abandoned by her brother Amnon, 2Sa 13:19
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Clarke: Jer 2:37 - -- Thou shalt not prosper in them - They shall all turn to thy disadvantage; and this as we shall see in the history of this people, was literally fulf...
Thou shalt not prosper in them - They shall all turn to thy disadvantage; and this as we shall see in the history of this people, was literally fulfilled. O what a grievous and bitter thing it is to sin against the Lord, and have him for an enemy!
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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.
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Clarke: Jer 3:2 - -- As the Arabian in the wilderness - They were as fully intent on the practice of their idolatry as the Arab in the desert is in lying in wait to plun...
As the Arabian in the wilderness - They were as fully intent on the practice of their idolatry as the Arab in the desert is in lying in wait to plunder the caravans. Where they have not cover to lie in ambush, they scatter themselves about, and run hither and thither, raising themselves up on their saddles to see if they can discover, by smoke, dust, or other token, the approach of any travelers.
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Clarke: Jer 3:3 - -- There hath been no latter rain - The former rain, which prepared the earth for tillage, fell in the beginning of November, or a little sooner; and t...
There hath been no latter rain - The former rain, which prepared the earth for tillage, fell in the beginning of November, or a little sooner; and the latter rain fell in the middle of April, after which there was scarcely any rain during the summer.
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Clarke: Jer 3:4 - -- Wilt thou not - cry unto me, My father - Wilt thou not allow me to be thy Creator and Preserver, and cease thus to acknowledge idols? See on Jer 2:2...
Wilt thou not - cry unto me, My father - Wilt thou not allow me to be thy Creator and Preserver, and cease thus to acknowledge idols? See on Jer 2:27 (note).
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Clarke: Jer 3:5 - -- Will he reserve his anger for ever? - Why should not wrath be continued against thee, as thou continuest transgression against the Lord?
Will he reserve his anger for ever? - Why should not wrath be continued against thee, as thou continuest transgression against the Lord?
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Clarke: Jer 3:6 - -- The Lord said also unto me in the days of Josiah the king - This is a new discourse, and is supposed to have been delivered after the eighteenth yea...
The Lord said also unto me in the days of Josiah the king - This is a new discourse, and is supposed to have been delivered after the eighteenth year of the reign of Josiah. Here the prophet shows the people of Judah the transgressions, idolatry, obstinacy, and punishment of their brethren, the ten tribes, whom he calls to return to the Lord, with the most gracious promises of restoration to their own country, their reunion with their brethren of Judah, and every degree of prosperity in consequence. He takes occasion also to show the Jews how much more culpable they were than the Israelites, because they practiced the same iniquities while they had the punishment and ruin of the others before their eyes. He therefore exhorts them to return to God with all their hearts, that they might not fall into the same condemnation. See the following verses.
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Clarke: Jer 3:7 - -- And I said - By the prophets Elijah, Elisha, Hosea, Amos, etc.; for all these prophesied to that rebellious people, and exhorted them to return to t...
And I said - By the prophets Elijah, Elisha, Hosea, Amos, etc.; for all these prophesied to that rebellious people, and exhorted them to return to the Lord.
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I had put her away - Given them up into the hands of the Assyrians.
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Clarke: Jer 3:9 - -- The lightness of her whoredom - The grossness of her idolatry: worshipping objects the most degrading, with rites the most impure.
The lightness of her whoredom - The grossness of her idolatry: worshipping objects the most degrading, with rites the most impure.
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Clarke: Jer 3:11 - -- Backsliding Israel hath justified herself more - She was less offensive in my eyes, and more excusable, than treacherous Judah. So it is said, Luk 1...
Backsliding Israel hath justified herself more - She was less offensive in my eyes, and more excusable, than treacherous Judah. So it is said, Luk 18:14, the humbled publican went down to his house justified rather than the boasting Pharisee. The one was more to be pitied than the other, and more likely to receive the mercy of God.
Calvin: Jer 2:20 - -- As there are two readings in Hebrew, two meanings are given; for some think the verb to be, עבד ob e d, and others, עבר ob e r, the t...
As there are two readings in Hebrew, two meanings are given; for some think the verb to be,
Now, on the contrary, I think that God here complains that the liberty which he had given to his people was turned into licentiousness: and this view is exactly suitable, as it is evident from the context, — For from old time have I broken thy yoke and burst thy bonds: therefore thou hast said, (the
If any one prefers the other reading, I will not contend with him; and then the sense is, “I have long ago shaken off thy yoke, and burst thy bands; and thou hast said, (he speaks of the people as of a woman, for the feminine gender is used; and this is done, because God sustained the character of a husband towards that people; and whenever he accused them of defection, it was as though a husband charged an unchaste wife with the crime of adultery,) thou hast then said to me, that is, promised to me that thou wouldest not transgress;” or, in other words, “thou hast promised to be faithful to me, and pledged mutual chastity.” Then the particle,
But as I have already said, it seems to me more probable that God is here expostulating with the people, because they availed themselves of the favor of liberty as an occasion for licentiousness and wantonness: and thus the whole passage reads well, and every clause is most suitable, consistent the one with the other.
What God says, that he had broken the yoke and burst the bands, is confined by some to their first redemption: but I approve of what others say, — that the Prophet speaks here of many deliverances. We indeed know that the people were brought out of Egypt but once; but when they were afterwards oppressed, he stretched forth his hand to deliver them: God then had from old time, but at various periods, shaken off the yoke of the people; for this is evident from the book of Judges. As, then, the people were not made free, except through God’s kindness, who redeemed them, ought they not to have devoted themselves to the service of their Redeemer? For on this condition, and for this end, they were redeemed by God, — that they might consecrate themselves wholly to him. God then now condemns the people for their ingratitude, because they thought that the yoke was shaken off, that they might be, as we shall hereafter find, like untamable wild beasts.
That what the Prophet means may be more evident to us, let us remember what Paul teaches us in the sixth chapter of his Epistle to the Romans (Rom 6:0), — that while we serve sin we are free from righteousness; for we go astray after our lusts, and are restrained by no bridle: but when God really sets us free from the miserable bondage of sin, we begin to be his servants, and the servants of righteousness; for being freed from sin we become the servants of righteousness: and this is the end of our redemption. But many turn the favor of God into an occasion for licentiousness, and thus abandon themselves, as though there was no law and no rule for a holy and upright life. God complains that this was the case with the people of Israel: Thou hast said, I will not serve “It is base ingratitude, that thou hast not in the first place regarded me as thy Redeemer; and that in the second place thou hast not considered that I dealt so kindly with thee for this very purpose — that thou mightest be mine: for he who has been redeemed by another’s kindness is no longer his own.” God had redeemed that people; and redemption brought with it an obligation, by which the people were bound willingly to submit to God as their Ruler and King. Thou hast then said, I will not serve Thus God complains that his favor had been ill bestowed on the people, because they had abused their liberty, and turned it into lasciviousness. 49
And the reason that is subjoined more fully explains the meaning, for thou didst run here and there as a harlot, on every high hill and under every shady tree For we know that the Israelites, whenever they departed from God, had some particular places, on hills and under trees, as though greater sanctity were there than anywhere else. And at this day the case is the same with the Papists; for the devotion, or rather the diabolical madness, by which they are carried away, is of a similar kind. “O! this place, they say, “is more favorable to devotion than another; there is in it more sanctity.” Of the same opinion were the Israelites: for they thought that they were nearer heaven when they went up to a mountain; they also thought that they had a more familiar intercourse with God when concealed under shady trees. And we see that the same folly has ever bewitched all heathen nations: for they imagined that God was nigher them on hills, and thought that there was some hidden divinity in fountains and under the shades of trees. As, then, this superstition had long prevailed among the Israelites, God here reproves them, because they ran here and there
But we must further notice the comparison: he says, that they were like harlots, who, having cast off all shame, run here and there, not only because they burn with insane lust, but are also carried away by their own avariciousness. Thou, harlot, he says, didst run here and there on all the high hills, and under all the shady trees; as though he had said, “This is what I have effected in delivering thee! thou thinkest that unbridled liberty has been granted thee! Hence, then, it is that thou art become so wanton as to follow thy base lusts.” It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:21 - -- God here confirms what is said in the last verse; for he condemned the Israelites for having perversely run here and there after their superstitions,...
God here confirms what is said in the last verse; for he condemned the Israelites for having perversely run here and there after their superstitions, when yet they had been redeemed for this end, — that they might be ruled by the hand of God. Hence he says, I planted thee as a choice vine; that is, “When I redeemed thee from thine enemies, I did not give thee permission thus to prostitute thyself without any restraint, without any shame; for I planted thee as a choice vine.”
The metaphor is well known, and often occurs; for God frequently compares his Church to a vine. He calls it generally his heritage, or his land; but as vines excel other possessions, (for they are usually preferred to pasture lands, or to cultivated fields,) as then vines are the most valuable property, God hereby testifies how highly he values his Church; for he calls it his vine rather than his pasture or his field, when he speaks of it. So he does in this place, “I did not deliver thee from Egypt, that I might afterwards throw aside every care of thee; but my purpose was, that thou shouldest strike roots, and become an heritage precious to me, as an exquisite and a noble vine. I, therefore, planted thee a generous vine,
Then he says, a wholly right seed; 50 that is, “I planted thee for this end, — that thou mightest produce fruit acceptable and pleasant to me.” God regards here his own grace, and not the character of the people; for that people, as it is well known, was never a true seed: but God here shews the purpose for which he had redeemed the people, which was, that they might be like a choice vine. How then? he adds. God speaks here of their corruptions with wonder, for the indignity was such as was enough to astonish all men: how then art thou turned to me into degenerations! So I render
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Calvin: Jer 2:22 - -- We have already seen, and the Prophet will often repeat the same thing, — that the people were become so refractory that they would not willingly g...
We have already seen, and the Prophet will often repeat the same thing, — that the people were become so refractory that they would not willingly give way to any reproofs; for they were almost all of such a hard front, and so obdurate in their wickedness, that they dared insolently to raise objections against the prophets; whenever they severely reproved them: “What! Are not we God’s holy people? Has he not chosen us? Are we not the holy seed of Abraham?” It was therefore necessary for the prophets to apply a hard wedge to a hard knot, as they commonly say. As, then, the Israelites were like a knotty wood, it was necessary to strike hard their obstinacy.
On this account Jeremiah now says, Even if thou wert to wash thyself with nitre, and multiply to thee borith, yet thine iniquity would be before me marked; that is, “Ye effect nothing when ye set forth various pretences for the sake of excusing your impiety: wash yourselves, but your iniquity remains marked before me.” The Prophet speaks in the person of God, that he might add more weight to the denunciation he pronounced on the Israelites, and by which he reduced to nothing their self — flatteries, according to what has been already stated.
By nitre and borith they removed stains in cloth; and hence borith is often mentioned in connection with fullers. But there is no need of a laborious inquiry, whether it was an herb or dust, or something of that kind; for as to what is meant, it is generally agreed that the Prophet teaches us by this metaphor, — that hypocrites gain nothing by setting up their pretences, that they may escape, when God condemns them. Hence he says, that all their attempts would be vain and fruitless. How so? Because their iniquity remained unwashed; that is, because they could not remove by washing what is imprinted. Spots or stains can indeed be cleansed or washed away by soap or other things; but when the stain is inward, and imprinted within, washing will avail nothing, for the marks are so deep that some more efficacious remedy must be adopted. So now the Prophet says, that the stains were imprinted, and therefore could not be washed away or cleansed by soap or borith. 52
But the Prophet says, that the stains were marked, or stamped, before God; for it was a common thing with the Israelites to clear themselves from every blame; nay, so great was their audacity, that they openly opposed the prophets, as though some great wrong was done to them; and they called the prophets accusers and slanderers, Hence he says, Thine iniquity is stamped before me? 53 that is, “However thou mayest by self — flatteries deceive thyself, and hidest thy sins before the world, yet thou gainest nothing; for in my sight thine iniquity ever remains stamped. ” He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 2:23 - -- Jeremiah goes on here with his reproof, and dissipates the clouds of hypocrites, under which they thought themselves to be sufficiently concealed: fo...
Jeremiah goes on here with his reproof, and dissipates the clouds of hypocrites, under which they thought themselves to be sufficiently concealed: for hypocrites, when they allege their fallacious pretences, think themselves already hidden from the eyes of God and from the judgment of all men. Hence the Prophet here sharply condemns this supine self — security, and says, How darest thou to boast that thou art not polluted? How darest thou to say, that thou hast not walked after Baalim? that is, after strange gods. I have already said, that by this word were meant inferior gods: for though the Jews acknowledged one Supreme Being, yet they sought for themselves patrons; and hence arose, as it is usual, a great number of gods. The superstitious never lapsed into that degree of impiety and madness, but that they ever confessed that there is some supreme Deity; but they added some inferior gods. And thus they had their Baalim and patrons, like the Papists, who call their patrons saints, for they dare not in their delusions to call them gods. Such was the sophistry of the Jews.
How then, he says, canst thou excuse thyself, and say, that thou hast not walked after Baalim? See, he adds, thy ways, see what thou hast done in the valley, and know at length that thou hast been like a swift dromedary The Prophet could not have fully expressed the furious passions which then raged in the Jews without comparing them to dromedaries: and as he addresses the people in the feminine gender, the female dromedary is mentioned. I consider that she is called swift, not only on account of the celerity of her course, but on account of her impetuous lust, as we shall presently see.
Now this passage teaches us, that the people had become so hardened, that they insolently rejected all reproofs given them by the prophets. Their impiety was openly manifest, and yet they ever dared to allege excuses, for the purpose of shewing that the prophets unjustly condemned them. Nor are we to wonder that such contumacy prevailed in that ancient people, since at this day we find that the Papists, with no less perverseness, resist the clear light of truth. For however gross and shameful their idolatry appears, they yet think that they evade the charge by merely saying, that their statues and images are not idols, and that the people of Israel were, indeed, condemned for inventing statues for themselves, but that they did this, because they were prone to superstition. Hence they cry against us, and say, that the worship which prevails among them is unjustly calumniated. We see, and even children know, that under the Papacy every kind of superstition prevails; and yet they seek to appear innocent, and free from every blame. The same was the case formerly: and as the temple continued, and the people offered sacrifices there, and as some kind of religion remained, whenever the prophets reproved the impious corruptions, which were blended with and vitiated the pure worship of God, and which were called adulteries, as they everywhere declare, “What!” they said, “Do we not worship God?” This very perverseness is what the Prophet now condemns by saying, How darest thou to say, I am not polluted, I have not walked after Baalim? So the Papists say at this day, “Do we not believe in one God? Have we devised for ourselves various gods? Yet they rob God of all his power, and dishonor him in a thousand ways: and at the same time they assert against us, with a meretricious mouth and an iron front, that they worship the one true God. 54 The case was exactly the same with the Jews: but the Prophet here proves their boasting to be vain and grossly false, See, he says, thy ways in the valley; see what thou, a swift dromedary, hast done As they could not be overcome by reasons, their willfulness being so great, the Prophet compares them to wild animals: “Ye are,” he says, “like lascivious dromedaries, which are so carried away by lust, that they forget everything while pursuing their own courses.” It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:24 - -- As Jeremiah had called the people a dromedary, so he now calls them a wild ass: “Thou,” he says, “art both a dromedary and a wild ass.” For w...
As Jeremiah had called the people a dromedary, so he now calls them a wild ass: “Thou,” he says, “art both a dromedary and a wild ass.” For when a wild ass has caught the wind according to her desire, that is, when she has pantingly sought it, and has caught the wind of her occasion, that is, such as may chance to be; for he meant to shew, by this expression, that there is no choice made by beasts, no judgment shewn, no moderation exercised; — when, therefore, she has caught the wind, wherever chance may take her, no one can restrain her from her impetuous course; and he who pursues her will in vain fatigue himself, until he finds her in her month
By these words the Prophet intimates the untamable madness of the people, that they could not by any means be restrained, being like a wild ass, which cannot be tamed nor divested of its wildness, especially when she has caught the wind. For were she shut in, bolts might do something, so as to prevent her headlong course: but when a wild ass is free, and allowed to ramble over hill and dale, when she catches the wind, and catches it according to her desire; that is, when she can wander here and there, and nothing prevents her from rambling in all directions, — when such a liberty is allowed to wild animals that they catch the wind, and the wind of occasion; that is, any wind that may chance to be, there is no reason, as the Prophet seems to intimate, in wild beasts, nor do they keep within any due bounds. When any one of us undertakes a journey, he inquires how far he can go in one day, he avoids weariness, and provides against it as far as he can, and after having fixed the extent of his journey, he thinks of a resting — place; and he also makes inquiries as to the right way, and the best road. The case is different with wild animals; for when they begin to run, they go not to Lyons or to Lausanne, but abandon themselves to a blind impulse: and then when they are fatigued, they cease not to proceed in their course, for lust hurries them on. We now perceive the design of the Prophet.
He then adds, Who can bring her back? As though he had said, that the people could not be stopped or brought back to anything like moderation, for a wildness, yea rather a complete madness, had taken an entire possession of them. 55
It afterwards follows, There is no reason for any one to weary himself, he will at length find her in her month All interpreters agree that this month is to be taken for the time of foaling. When the wild asses are in foal, and the time of parturition draws nigh, they are then restrained by their burden, and may be easily caught, as they retain not their previous swiftness, for they carry a burden. The Prophet then says, that the people were like wild asses, for they could be restrained by no instruction, and nothing could bridle their excesses; but that the time of parturition must be waited for.
Let us now see how this similitude applies to the people. The verse contains two parts. The first shews, as I have already said, that the people could not be turned by any warnings, nor would they obey any counsels, but were carried away by their insane passions, as it were by the wind of occasion, or any wind that might blow. This is the first part. Now as the obstinacy of the people was so great, God here declares to hypocrites, that the time would come when he would put a restraint on them, and break down their impetuous infatuation. How? The time of parturition would come; that is, “when ye shall have done many iniquities, your burden will stop and restrain you.” And he intimates, that it would be the time of his judgment; as though he had said, “you must be dealt with not as sane men, endued with a sound mind; for ye are wild beasts which cannot be tamed.” What, then, remains to be done? As the wild ass is weighed down with her burden when the time of parturition approaches, so I will cause you at length to feel the burden of your iniquities, which will be by its weight intolerable; and though your perverseness is untamable, yet my hand will be sufficient to restrain you; for I shall break you down, as ye will not bend nor obey my instruction.” We now, then, understand the import of the similitude, and how applicable it was to the case of the people; the use of which ought to be learnt, also, by us in the present day. The rest tomorrow.
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Calvin: Jer 2:25 - -- The words of the Prophet, as they are concise, may appear at the first view obscure: but his meaning is simply this, — that the insane people could...
The words of the Prophet, as they are concise, may appear at the first view obscure: but his meaning is simply this, — that the insane people could by no means be reformed, however much God might try to check that excess by which they were led away after idols and superstitions. In the first clause, God relates how he had dealt with the people. All the addresses of the prophets had this as their object — to make the people to rest contented under the protection of God. But he employs other words here, Keep thy foot, he says, from unshodding, and thy throat from thirst For whenever there was any danger they ran, now to Egypt, then to Assyria, as we have already seen. Hence God complains of their madness, because they obeyed not his wise and salutary counsels. Had God bidden them to run here and there, either to the east or to the west, they might have raised an objection, and say, that the journey would be irksome to them; but he only commanded them to remain still and quiet. How great, then, was their madness, that they would not with quietness wait for the help of God, but weary themselves, and that with no benefit? Isaiah says nearly the same thing, but in other words; for he expostulated with them, because they underwent every kind of weariness, when they might have been protected by God, and be in no way wearied.
We now, then, comprehend the design of the Prophet: for God first shews that the people had been admonished, and that in time; but that they were so taken up with their own perverse counsels, that they could not endure the words of the prophets. It was the highest ingratitude in them, that they refused to remain quiet at home, but preferred to undergo great and severe labors without any advantage, according to what is said by Isaiah in another place,
“This is your rest, but ye would not.” (Isa 30:15.)
There is no one who desires not rest and peace; nay, all confess that it is the chief good, which all naturally seek. The Prophet says now, that it was rejected by the people of Israel. It hence follows, that they were wholly insane, for they had lost a desire which is by nature implanted in all men. The Prophet, then, does not here simply teach, but reminds the Jews of what they had before heard from Isaiah, and also from Micah, and from all the other prophets. For God had often exhorted them to remain quiet; and the Prophet now upbraids them with ingratitude, because they gave way to their own mad folly, and rejected the singular benefit offered them by God.
Let us then know that the Prophet states here what others before him had taught, Keep back, he says, thy foot from unshodding. Some render the last word, “from nakedness,” because they wore out their shoes by long journeys; but this I think must be understood of what was commonly done, for they were wont to make journeys unshod: keep then thy foot from being unshod, 56 and thy throat from thirst We know that thirst is very grievous to men: hence the Prophet here reproves the madness of the people, — that they were so seized with the ardor of an impious passion, that they willfully exposed themselves to thirst even by long journeys. As then God required nothing from the people but to ask his counsel, their sin was doubled by their unwillingness to obey his salutary direction. A plausible excuse, as I have already said, might have been alleged, had God dealt in a hard and severe manner with the people; but as he was ready kindly and graciously to preserve them in a complete state of quietness, no kind of excuse remained for them.
It then follows, Thou hast said, There is not a hope, no The Prophet shews here, as to the people, how perverse they were; for they obstinately rejected the kind and friendly admonitions which had been given them. They say first, There is not a hope, or, it is all over; for
Isaiah expostulated with them in another way, and blamed them, because they did not say, “There is not a hope.” (Isa 57:10.) Thus Isaiah and Jeremiah seem to be inconsistent; for our Prophet here reproves the people for saying, “There is not a hope;” and Isaiah, for not having said so. But when the Jews expressly answered, according to this passage, “There is not a hope,” they meant that the prophets spent their labor in vain, as they were determined to follow their own course to the last. Hence by this expression, “There is not a hope,” is set forth the extreme perverseness of the people; and he shews that no hope of repentance remained, since they said openly and without any evasion that it was all over. But Isaiah reproved the people for not saying, that there was not a hope, because they did not acknowledge after long experience that they were proved guilty of folly: for after having often run to Egypt and then to Assyria, and the Lord having really taught them how ill-advised they had been, they ought to have learnt from their very disappointments, that the Lord had frustrated their expectations in order to lead them to repentance. Justly then does Isaiah say, that the people were extremely besotted, because they ever went on in their blind obstinacy, and never perceived that God did set many obstacles in their way, in order to compel them to go back and to cast aside all their vain hopes, by which they deceived themselves. We hence see that there is a complete agreement between the two prophets, though their mode of speaking is different.
Jeremiah then introduces the people here as saying expressly, and thus avowing their own perverseness, There is not a hope; as though they said, “Ye prophets do not cease to stun our ears, but vain and useless is your labor; for we have once for all made up our minds, and we can never be brought to revoke our resolution.” But what does Isaiah say? He reproves the madness of the people, that having been so often deceived by the Egyptians as well as by the Assyrians, they did not understand that they ought by such trials and experiments to have been brought back to the right way, but continued obstinately to follow their own wicked counsels. As to the passage before, we perceive what the Prophet means, — that God had kindly exhorted the Jews to rest quiet and dependent on his aid; but that they were not only stiff-necked, but also insolently rejected the kindness offered to them.
It then follows, For I have loved strangers, and after them will I go Here he exaggerates the sin of the people, for they gave themselves up to strangers; and he retains the similitude which we have already observed. For as God had taken the people under his own protection, so the obligation was mutual: both parties were connected together as by a sacred bond, as the case is between a husband and his wife; as he pledges his faith to her, so she by the law of marriage is bound to him. Jeremiah here retains this similitude, and says that the people were like the basest strumpet, for they would not hear the voice of their husband, though he was willing and anxious to be reconciled to them. Now, a wife must be wholly irreclaimable when she spurns her own husband, who is ready to receive her into favor, and to forgive her all the wickedness she may have done. The Prophet then shews, that there was in the people so great and so hopeless an impiety, that they closed their ears against God who kindly exhorted them to repent; and worse still, they shamelessly boasted that they were resolved to worship idols and their own fictions, and to reject the only true God. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:26 - -- Some render the words in the future tense, “So ashamed shall be the house of Israel,” etc.; and they think that the Prophet is speaking here of t...
Some render the words in the future tense, “So ashamed shall be the house of Israel,” etc.; and they think that the Prophet is speaking here of the punishment which was impending over the people: but I explain the words as they are, — that the impiety of the people was so gross, that there was no need formally to prove it, as it was so very palpable. Hence the Prophet compares the Jews to open thieves, as though he had said, that hypocrites among that people gained nothing by their evasions and subterfuges, for their impiety was quite public: they were like a thief when caught, who cannot deny nor hide his crime. Hence he says that they were caught, as they say, in the very act; that is, their flagitious deeds were so conspicuous, that whatever objections they might raise, they could not clear themselves, but their baseness was known to all. We now then perceive what the Prophet means. We have before seen that the people had recourse to many excuses, but Jeremiah shews here, that they attained nothing by their evasions, except that they more fully discovered their own effrontery, for their dishonesty was evident to all; it was so manifest that they could not cover it by any cloaks and pretences. 58
Nor does he speak only of the common people; but he condemns kings, princes, priests, and prophets, as though he had said, that they were become so corrupt from the least to the greatest, that having cast off all shame, they openly shewed a manifest and gross contempt for God by following their own inventions and superstitions. And yet the Jews no doubt attempted by many excuses to defend themselves; but God here shakes off all those fallacious pretexts, by which they thought to cover their flagitious deeds, and says that they were notwithstanding manifestly thieves.
The Prophet had said before, that the Jews made a different declaration; and now he condemns their effrontery: but there is no inconsistency as to the meaning. The Jews denied that they were apostates and guilty of perfidy, or that they had forsaken the worship of God; they denied this in words; but the Prophet, in now proclaiming their shamelessness, does not refer to words; for they had ready at hand their false pretensions, as it has been already stated: but the Prophet now takes the fact itself as granted, and says that they wickedly and perversely resisted God, so that their wickedness and obstinacy were past all remedy. It now follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:27 - -- The Prophet here confirms what he had before said of the perverse wickedness of the people. He shews that he had not said without reason, that their ...
The Prophet here confirms what he had before said of the perverse wickedness of the people. He shews that he had not said without reason, that their sins were extremely gross, and could not be excused by any evasions: for they say, he adds, to the wood, Thou art my father, and to the stone, Thou hast begotten, me By these words the Prophet shews, that idolatry was so rampant among the people, that they openly ascribed to their statues, made of wood or stone, the honor due to the only true God.
But the Prophet points out here what is especially to be detested in idolatry, and that is, the transferring of the honor, due to God, to statues, not only as to the external act by bending the knee before them, but by seeking salvation from them.
And this is what we ought particularly to notice: for the Papists at this day, though they prostrate themselves before their pictures and statues, do not yet acknowledge themselves guilty of idolatry, when such a charge is brought against them. They say that they worship the statues, not with the honor due to God, but with such honor as a servant renders to his master. 59 They think that they thus exculpate themselves. But were we to grant what they allege, they yet cannot deny but that they address prayers and supplications to statues. As then they ask the very statues to save them, whatever sophistry they may adopt, it is altogether nugatory: for the prophets condemn not merely the outward gesture, the bowing down, and other ceremonious acts, as they are called, when they condemned idolaters. What then? They condemned them, because they said to statues, Thou art my Father; that is, because they ascribed the power, which belongs only to God, to statues made of wood or stone. It is indeed certain, that the Jews never sunk into so great a depth of sottishness as expressly to profess that gods of wood and stone were equal to the true God, and they never said any such thing. Yet the Prophet did not calumniate them, in ascribing what is here said to them: but as it is clearly evident from other places, the Prophet regarded their thoughts rather than their words: for the Jews professed the same thing as the Papists of the present day, when they prostrated themselves before their statues; they said that they worshipped the only true God and sought salvation from him; and yet they thought that the power of God was inherent in the statues themselves: hence they said, Thou art my father, Thou hast begotten me The case is the same with the Papists of the present day. When any one prostrates himself before the statue of Catherine or of Christopher, he says, “Our Father.” When he justifies himself in doing this, he says that it is done in honor to the one true God: and yet thou runnest blindly, now to one statue, and then to another, and muttcrest, “Our Father.” There is not the least doubt but that the superstition which now prevails under the Papacy, is even more gross than that which prevailed among the Jews. But to say nothing of the Papists, because they mutter, “Our Father,” before their statues, there is no doubt but that when they present their prayers to statues, they consider God’s power to be in them.
We must now, then, bear in mind, that the Jews were not only condemned, because they burnt incense and offered sacrifices to idols, but because they transferred the glory of God to their statues, when they asked salvation from them. And as this was not done in express words, the Prophet here brings to light their impious thoughts; for they did not raise up their minds and thoughts to God, but turned them to their statues.
It afterwards follows, They have turned to me the neck 60 and not the face In these words, God again confirms what he had before said, that the apostasy or defection of the people was more manifest than what could be disguised by any colorings. He then adds, Yet (the
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Calvin: Jer 2:28 - -- And hence he adds, Where are your gods? Here God laughs to scorn the false confidence by which the Jews deceived themselves: Where are your gods, ...
And hence he adds, Where are your gods? Here God laughs to scorn the false confidence by which the Jews deceived themselves: Where are your gods, which you have made for yourselves? Let them arise, let us see whether they will help you in the time of your distress. We now understand what the Prophet means: for he shews that the people acted in a most strange manner; for they worshipped idols when they were in safety, and afterwards would have God to be bound to them; and yet they denied the true God when they fell away unto idols. He then shews that they could expect no aid from God; for they robbed him of his own power when they devised idols for themselves. But we must ever remember what he said, that false gods were counted as fathers and authors of salvation by the people.
The same thing is, no doubt, done at this day under the Papacy; for the Papists have their patrons; and when they find that their foolish superstitions can do nothing for them, they would have God to help them, and yet they leave nothing to him: after having taken away all his glory, and divided it as a spoil among dead saints, they would then have God to be their helper. But we see what God’s answer to them is, “Where are your gods?” etc.
Now this truth is of use to us; and we hence learn, that we are not to wait until we are really, and in the last state of despair, compelled to acknowledge that our labors have been useless, while we hoped and prayed for help from idols; but that we ought to come directly to God himself for aid in our distress.
God proceeds farther with the sarcasm or the derision which he has employed, Where are thy gods? Let them now arise that they may help thee; that is, — let them try their utmost whether they can aid thee. According to the number of thy cities have been thy gods, O Judah As the people were not satisfied with one God, every city chose a patron for itself. “Since, then, innumerable gods are invoked by you, how comes it that they do not help you?” We hence see that the unbelief of the people is here sharply reproved; for they did not acquiesce in God alone, but sought to procure for themselves gods without number: there were many cities in the tribe of Judah, and there were as many patrons. The one true God would have been fully sufficient for them, and would have brought them complete deliverance whenever needed; but the one true God they despised, and every city devised a god for itself. “Since ye trust,” he says, “in such a multitude, let them now arise, that they may succor you; for I, who am one, am despised by you.” We now understand what the Prophet means also in this part. It afterwards follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:29 - -- Jeremiah concludes here his previous subject: he says that the Jews gained nothing by alleging against God that they were innocent, and by thinking t...
Jeremiah concludes here his previous subject: he says that the Jews gained nothing by alleging against God that they were innocent, and by thinking that they could by mere words escape his judgment, and not only by doing so, but also by hurrying on to such a degree of presumption as to challenge God himself, and to seek to prove him guilty. But God answers them in one word, and says, that they were perfidious. The meaning then is, that the Jews ill consulted their own interest in hardening themselves in their obduracy; for God would hold them fully convicted of impiety, so that they in vain alleged this or that as an excuse. 61
Now this passage deserves especial notice: for we know how prone we are by nature to hypocrisy; and when God summons us to his tribunal, hardly one in a hundred will acknowledge his guilt and humbly pray for forgiveness; but the greater part complains, nay almost all murmur against God, and still more, they gather boldness, and proudly dare to challenge and defy God. Since, then, hypocrisy thus prevails in us and is deeply fixed in the hearts of almost all, and since hypocrisy generates insolence and pride against God, let us remember what the Prophet says here, — that all who dispute against God gain nothing by their excuses, because he will at length detect their defection and perfidy. It then follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:30 - -- Some expound the beginning of this verse as though the meaning were, — that God chastised the Jews on account of their folly, because they habituat...
Some expound the beginning of this verse as though the meaning were, — that God chastised the Jews on account of their folly, because they habituated themselves to falsehoods: but the latter clause does not correspond. There is therefore no doubt but that God here expostulates with the Jews, because he had tried to bring them to the right way and found them wholly irreclaimable. A similar expostulation is found in Isaiah,
“In vain,” he says, “have I chastised you; for from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head there is no soundness.”
(Isa 1:6)
There God shews that he had tried every remedy, but that the Jews, being wholly refractory in their spirit, were wholly incurable. Jeremiah speaks now on the same subject: and God thus exaggerates the wickedness of the people; for he testifies that he had tried whether they would be taught, not only by words, but also by scourges and chastisements, but that his labor in both instances had been in vain. He spoke before of teaching, “Keep thy foot from being unshod, and thy throat from thirst.” The Prophets, then, had exhorted the Jews by God’s command to rest quietly. This teaching had been useless and unfruitful. God now adds, that he had tried in another way to bring them back to a right mind; but this effort had been also useless and in vain: In vain have I chastised you; for ye have not received correction
But he speaks of children, in order to shew that the whole people were unteachable: for though lusts boil more in youth, yet their obduracy is not so great as in the old; as he who has through his whole life hardened himself in the contempt of God, can hardly be ever healed and be amended by correction; for old age is of itself morose and difficult to be pleased, and the old also think, that wrong is in a manner done them when they are reproved: but when the insolence and obduracy of the young are so great that they reject all correction, it is more strange and monstrous. The Prophet then shews that there was nothing sound or right in that people, since their very children refused correction. 62
We now perceive his object, — that, as God had sent his prophets, and as their labor availed nothing, he now shews, that not only the ears of the people had been deaf to wholesome teaching, but that they were hard — necked and untamable; for he had tried to correct them by scourges, but effected nothing. It follows, their sword has devoured the prophets But I cannot finish now.
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Calvin: Jer 2:31 - -- The prophet assumes the character, no doubt, of one in astonishment, that he might render the sin of the people more detestable: for he speaks as one...
The prophet assumes the character, no doubt, of one in astonishment, that he might render the sin of the people more detestable: for he speaks as one astonished, generation! The word,
For he immediately adds, Have I been a desert to Israel? He makes the Jews themselves the umpires and judges of the cause, whether they had not experienced the bounty of God and had forsaken him, according to his former complaint, when he said that God was the fountain of living waters, and that they had dug for themselves broken cisterns. Hence he says, “How has it happened that ye have departed from me? Have I in vain promised to be bountiful and kind to you? Did I disappoint you or your expectation, while ye served me? Since then I had not been to you a dark and a gloomy land, a land without the light of the sun; but as abundance of blessings had ever been found in me, how has it been that you have departed from me?”
He afterwards mentions another crime, Why has my people said, We are lords The verb
But there are others who take the word more grammatically: for
“Ye are rich, ye have reigned without us, and I would ye did reign.” (1Co 4:8.)
The Corinthians, being inflated with pride on account of the opulence of their city, despised the simplicity of the Gospel; they looked for refined things, and were much addicted to novelties. Hence Paul, seeing that they despised the grace of God, ironically reproved them, and said, that they wished to be rich and to be kings without him, to whom yet as an instrument they owed everything. The same vice is what Jeremiah now condemns in that people, We are lords, we will not come to thee; as though he had said, “Your happiness has hitherto proceeded from me; for whatever you have been, and whatever has been given you, ought to be ascribed to me and to my bounty: but now without me (for God himself speaks) ye are kings, but by what right and by what title? What have you as your own? Why then has my people said, We will come no more to thee?” We now understand the real meaning of the Prophet.
As to the subject itself, he in the first place, as I have already said, is in a manner astonished at the wickedness of the people, as at something monstrous. Hence he exclaims, O generation! as though he had said, that what he saw was incredible. Then he immediately adds, see ye yourselves the word of Jehovah, This was much more severe, than if he had summoned them before God’s tribunal; for he thus proved that their wickedness was extremely gross; for they had, without any cause, nay, without any pretext, and without shame, renounced God, who had been so bountiful towards them. He also in an indirect manner reproved them, because they refused to be instructed; for he commanded them to look on the fact itself, inasmuch as they were deaf, or having ears they closed them against all instruction; for, as we have said, he calls away their attention from the word to the fact itself, and this is what interpreters have not observed.
Then follows an upbraiding, — that God had not been a desert to them; but, as the Prophet had before shewed, abundance of all blessings had flowed to them so as fully to satisfy them. Since then God had enriched them through his blessing, their sin in departing from him was thereby more increased.
In the last part of the verse God expostulates with them on their ingratitude, because they thought themselves to be lords. They were indeed a royal priesthood, but it was through God’s favor. They did not reign through their own right, they did not reign because they had attained power through their own valor or efforts, or through their own merits or their own good fortune; how then? only through the favor of another. Though then they were kings only on the condition of being subject to the supreme King, yet they wished to reign alone, that is, according to their own pleasure; and thus trod under their feet the favor of God. It is with this wickedness then that the Prophet charges them. And the end of the verse is of the same import, we will come no more to thee; as though they stood in no need of God’s aid; for they thought that they could supply themselves with whatever was necessary to support them. As then they were inflated with much pride, they despised the favor of God, as though they stood in no need of the aid of another. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:32 - -- God here confirms what is said in the last verse, and would make his people ashamed, because they valued him less than girls are wont to value their ...
God here confirms what is said in the last verse, and would make his people ashamed, because they valued him less than girls are wont to value their ornaments. The necklaces of young women are indeed nothing but mere trifles, and yet we see that girls are so taken with them through a foolish passion, that they value such trinkets more than their very life. “How then is it, “says God, “that my people have forgotten me? Is there to be found any such ornament? Can anything be found among the most valuable jewels and the most precious stones which can be compared with me?”
God shews by this comparison how perverted the minds of the Jews were, when they renounced and rejected a benefit so invaluable as to have God as their Father, and to be prosperous under his dominion; for nothing necessary for a blessed life had been wanting to them as long as they continued the recipients of that paternal favor, which God had manifested towards them, and wished to shew to them to the end. As then they had found God to have been so bountiful, must they not have been more than mad, when they willfully rejected his favor? while yet young women commonly set their thoughts and affections strongly and permanently on such trifles as are of no value. 64 But the Prophet designedly used this similitude, that he might introduce what is contained in the next verse: his object was to compare the Jews to adulterous women, who being led away by unbridled lust, follow wanton lovers. As then he intended to bring this charge against the Jews, he spoke expressly of the ornaments of young women; and hence it follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:33 - -- This verse is differently explained: but the Prophet simply means; that the Jews were like lascivious women, who not only despise their husbands at h...
This verse is differently explained: but the Prophet simply means; that the Jews were like lascivious women, who not only despise their husbands at home, but ramble here and there in all directions, and also paint their faces and seek for themselves all the charms of wantonness. He says that the Jews had acted in this way; and hence he says that they made beautiful their ways The verb in Hebrew has a wide meaning: it means to prepare, to conciliate favor. But its import here is, as though the Prophet had said, “Why dost thou disguise and paint thyself like strumpets, who use many artifices to allure young men and to inflame their lusts? why then dost thou undertake so much labor to gain a meretricious hire?” We shall hereafter see why he says this; for he upbraids them for applying to the Assyrians and the Egyptians.
It was a common thing with the Prophets to compare the people to lovers; for the Jews, while they ought to have been firmly attached to God, (like a chaste woman, who does not turn her eyes here and there, nor gad about, but has respect to her husband alone,) thought to seek safety now from the Assyrians, then from the Egyptians. This sinful disposition is then what the Prophet here condemns; and hence he speaks of them metaphorically as of an adulterous woman, who despises her husband and rambles after any she can find, and seeks wanton and silly young men in all places, and subjects herself to the gratification of all. We now then understand what the Prophet means.
The words must be noticed: he says, Why makest thou fine thy ways? But he refers here to the care which a wanton woman takes to adorn her person, as though he had said, “Why dost thou thus prepare thyself? and why dost thou seek for thyself what is splendid and elegant, that thy appearance may deceive the eyes of the simple?” For the Jews might have remained safe and secure under God’s protection, and might have been so without any calamity. As a husband is content with the beauty of his wife, and seeks no adventitious and refined elegancies; so God required nothing from that people except fidelity, like a husband, who requires chastity in his wife. The meaning then is, — “As a wife, really attached to her husband, has no need to undergo much labor, for she knows that her own native beauty pleases him, nor does she labor much to gain the heart of her husband, for the best recommendation is her chastity; so ye might have lived without any trouble by only serving me and keeping my law: but now what is your chastity? ye are like wanton women, who labor to gain the hearts of adulterers; for as they burn with lust, so there is no end nor limits to their attempts to seek embellishments; and they torment themselves, only that they might attach adulterers to themselves. Such then are ye (says God;) for ye spend much care and labor in seeking for yourselves strange lovers.”
He afterwards adds, Therefore thou hast also taught lewdnesses He alludes to the words he had before used, Thou hast made fine (or fair) thy ways: and now he says, thou hast also taught wickednesses by thy ways He declares that the Jews were worse than the Assyrians and the Egyptians, as a lascivious woman is far worse than all the adulterers whom she captivates as her paramours. For when a young man is not deceived, and the devil does not apply the fagot, he may continue chaste and pure; but when an impudent and wanton woman entices him, it is all over with him. The Prophet then says, that the Assyrians and the Egyptians were innocent when compared with his own nation. How so? “Because they have been led away,” he says, “by your allurements, like young men, who are destroyed by the fallacious ornaments of strumpets; for it is the same as though they had fallen into snares: the evil then has proceeded from you, and the fault lies with you. 65
We now understand the Prophet’s meaning: for he condemns the Jews, because they afforded an occasion of evil both to the Assyrians and to the Egyptians, while they of their own accord sought their favor. It now follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:34 - -- The Prophet repeats, as I think, what he had before said, — that the wickedness of his nation was incorrigible; for they repented not when warned, ...
The Prophet repeats, as I think, what he had before said, — that the wickedness of his nation was incorrigible; for they repented not when warned, but on the contrary raged like wild beasts against the Prophets and religious teachers. Those interpreters are mistaken who think that the savage cruelty of the Jews in general is here condemned; and all are of this opinion. But the Prophet no doubt enhances this evil, by saying, that the Jews were not only obstinate in their vices, but also raged furiously against the Prophets. Hence he shews again, that God had used all remedies to heal the Jews, but without effect, for what better medicine could have been offered than for the Prophets to reprove the people and to shew to them how wickedly they had departed from God? God then wished thus to correct the vices of his own people; but so far was he from effecting anything, that at Jerusalem and through the whole of Judea, the Prophets were slaughtered, and the whole land was filled with and polluted by their blood.
Hence he says, Even in thy wings has been found the blood of the souls of the poor innocents. He calls the borders of garments wings. He seems to say, that these slaughters were not hid, for the Jews were besprinkled with blood to the very extremities of their garment; as though he had said, “There is no cause for me to deal sharply with you in this instance; for your filthiness is most apparent: ye have not only been rebellious against my teaching, but ye have also cruelly murdered my prophets. If ye ask, Where these slaughters are to be found? Even in your wings, on the borders of your garments; so that your crimes are fully known.” We now perceive what the Prophet means.
We must also notice the import of the particle
He afterwards adds what serves for a confirmation. They have not been found in digging under Some give another explanation; but their opinion is right who think, that the Prophet alludes to what is said by Moses in Exo 22:2, — that if a thief should be found in digging under, (or undermining,) he might be killed with impunity: for he who thus breaks through into the houses of others, is equal to a robber in audacity; and he ought to be counted not only a thief, but also as one guilty of manslaughter and felony. God then says, that the Prophets, who had been slain by the Jews, had not been found in digging up, that is, had not been found guilty of any crime, either of robbery or of murder: for he mentions a particular act, instead of the general crime. But it has been on account of all these things; that is, “because they boldly dared to reprove you, because they severely condemned your vices, because they discovered your baseness, because they were enemies to your perfidy and to your sins: as then the prophets had thus by the divine Spirit carried on war with your sins, they have on this account been murdered by you. 66
We see how well the whole passage reads, provided it be applied to the prophets only. It was not indeed the object of Jeremiah to condemn murders generally among the Jews, but to shew that they were the enemies of the prophets, because they were opposed to every good and sound counsel, and were incapable of receiving instruction. The mistake of other expounders is hereby made evident: for in the last clause they touch neither heaven nor earth. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:35 - -- The Prophet here shews that the Jews were possessed of such a brazen front, that they could not be led by any admonitions to feel any shame. Though t...
The Prophet here shews that the Jews were possessed of such a brazen front, that they could not be led by any admonitions to feel any shame. Though then they were like adulterous women, and though they gave meretricious hire to such as they ran to in all parts, and though also they had murdered the prophets and the pious ministers of God, yet they boasted, as persons conscious of no evil, that they were innocent.
Thou hast yet said; that is, “How darest thou to pretend to be innocent, since thou art proved to be guilty, not by allegations, but by manifest and glaring proofs?” In short, the Prophet shews that the condition of the people was past remedy, for they would not receive any admonition; nay, they dared, as it were with the front of brass, obstinately to boast that they were innocent: Thou hast said, (he still speaks of a woman, in the feminine gender,) Thou hast yet said, surely I am clean Thus hypocrites not only excuse themselves, and allege vain pretences, but dare to come forth publicly, and to fly as it were above the clouds, elated by their own self — confidence. “Who will dare to allege anything against me?” Thus hypocrites willfully and impertinently challenge all the servants of God and seek by their own presumption to close the mouth of all. The Prophet now condemns this petulancy in the Jews; for though they were manifestly proved guilty, yet they boastingly asserted that they were innocent. Only (
Now also in this part we perceive the design of the Prophet: it was to shew, that the Jews not only dared dishonestly and proudly to claim innocency for themselves, but hesitated not to contend with God, and to intimate that he with too much severity oppressed them, and did not treat them justly, but announced a cruel sentence for the purpose of overwhelming them.
Behold, he says, I will judge thee, because thou hast said, I have not sinned Some give this version, “I judge, or, condemn thee.” But there is here no doubt a contrast between the fury of God and his judgment. The people said, that God was too rigorous; this was his fury: God now mentions his judgment. “There is no reason,” he says, “for you to allege such a pretext as this, as it will vanish into nothing; for I will in judgment contend with you;” that is, “I will really prove that I am a just judge and not a tyrant, that I execute just punishments and according to the law, and that I am not like a man in anger, who takes vengeance on his enemies and does so precipitantly and rashly: I will shew,” he says, “that I am a just judge.”
We may hence gather a profitable instruction. Let it in the first place be observed, that nothing is so displeasing to God as this headstrong presumption, that is, when we seek to appear innocent, while our own conscience condemns us. Then in the second place observe, that all who thus perversely rebel and strive dishonestly and shamelessly to defend their own vices, contend at the same time with God: for false excuses have ever this tendency — to charge God with unjust severity. But we see what such men gain for themselves; for God shews that he will be at length their judge, and that he will openly discover the vices of those who thought that they could excuse themselves by evasions and by false charges against himself. They then who thus obstinately resist God, must at length, according to what the Prophet declares, come to this end, — that they will be constrained to acknowledge that God has not been too violently angry with them, but has only executed a just punishment. 67
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Calvin: Jer 2:36 - -- The Prophet goes on with the same subject. He had said before that the people were like an unfaithful wife, who having left her husband rambles here ...
The Prophet goes on with the same subject. He had said before that the people were like an unfaithful wife, who having left her husband rambles here and there to gratify her lusts. For this view he now gives the reason; for he might have appeared to treat the people too severely, had not the fact been pointed out as it were by the finger; and this he does now. He says, that they ran here and there, not in a common manner, but in a way to render evident their shameful levity, such as is seen in strumpets, who without any shame seek either adulterers or fornicators.
But I have already briefly shewn what the Prophet means: When any danger was nigh, the Jews sought aid, now in Egypt, then in Assyria. Yet they knew that this was forbidden them; not that it was in itself an evil or a bad thing to seek help from neighbors; but because it was God’s will that the safety and security of that people should be dependent on him only; for he had taken them under his safeguard. As then the Jews were God’s dependents, they ought to have acquiesced in his protection. When they wandered here and there, it was an evidence of unbelief; and what they attributed to the Egyptians or to Assyrians, they took away from their own God, who had promised that their safety would be the object of his care. Hence he compares these movements to wanton levity; they were like those of strumpets, who ramble in all directions. Now a strumpet must be wholly shameless, when she thus seeks the gratification of her lust: for harlots often wait for the coming of lovers; but when they ramble everywhere, they are altogether abominable. This then is what the Prophet now means, that is, that the Jews ran here and there; and thus it was, that they changed their ways
There remains indeed often in harlots some natural love; but it is a proof of a brutish, shameless, and monstrous lust, when a woman seeks the company of any one she may see, or when a man lusts after any woman he may meet with. When there is such a shamelessness as this, it appears that no modesty remains, nor even what is natural; for as I have already said, it ought to be deemed monstrous, when a woman is inflamed with lust at the sight of any one. And yet this lewdness is what the Prophet reprobates in the Jews when he says, that they ran here and there to change their ways: so that their love never continued, but they lusted after any they met with; nay, they went here and there to allure them. This subject is spoken of oftener and more at large by Ezekiel; and we shall find this comparison used also in other parts of this book. But it is enough for me to mention briefly the design of the Prophet. 68
He then adds, Ashamed shalt thou also be of the Egyptians, as ashamed thou hast been of the Assyrians Before the time of Hezekiah, the Jews had made a treaty with the Assyrians against the Syrians and the Israelites, as it is well known; and then against the Egyptians; for soon after a war arose between them and the Egyptians, who had been their confederates, and changing their policy, they went for help to Assyria. They afterwards reconciled themselves to their ancient enemies; but this second treaty also turned out unhappily. Hence the Prophet says, that the end would be the same with what they had before experienced. God had indeed chastised their ungodly defection when they went to Assyria. He now says, that no better success would attend the help of the Egyptians than what attended the help of the Assyrians. The Jews, we know, were ever subjected to plunder, and suffered more loss from their associates than from their open enemies. It was the just reward of their impiety and defection. God then declares that he would be the avenger of this second defection, as he had been of the former. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 2:37 - -- He expresses more clearly what he had said of the shameful character of his own nation, — that the Jews, who thought that their safety would be sec...
He expresses more clearly what he had said of the shameful character of his own nation, — that the Jews, who thought that their safety would be secured by the Egyptians, were seeking their own entire ruin. This seemed to them indeed incredible; for as the Egyptians were neighbors, and as the Jews then only feared the Assyrians and Chaldeans, who were afar off, they thought that they had the best prospect: “What! our enemies are distant from us twenty or thirty days’ journey; and those who are prepared to help us will be soon with us at the shortest warning.” Hence the Jews thought, as we have said, that they were quite safe. But the Prophet here declares, that they were greatly mistaken; for on account of this wickedness, that is, because they trusted in their unlawful and accursed treaty, and promised themselves peace from their enemies, or thought that they could easily overcome them; on this account, he says, thou shalt go forth: but nothing could have been less credible to the Jews than what the Prophet said; for as the Egyptians opposed themselves as a wall against the Chaldeans, and were deemed unassailable, who could have otherwise thought but that the Jews would be preserved quiet in their own country? But he says, Go forth shalt thou, and thine hands on thy head 69
By this gesture he means extreme despair; for women did either strike or extend their arms when any great calamity happened, as we see it done often in the present day; for when a woman, not able to keep within due bounds, either loses a husband, or expects some very great calamity, she beats her breast, or raises up her hands, according to what is said here. Jeremiah then mentions this gesture as an evidence of extreme despair; as though he had said, “The treaty which fills the Jews with so much confidence shall be so far from being advantageous to them, that it will, on the contrary, bring on them utter ruin and disgrace. 70 But the reason which follows ought especially to be observed, because abhor does Jehovah thy confidences The Prophet here shews why he had spoken so severely. It might have appeared that he spoke hyperbolically when he said, that the people were like an abandoned harlot, who rambled here and there in all directions: but the reason here given ought to have been sufficient to take away all evasions, and that is, that they foolishly trusted in those fallacious helps which they knew were condemned by God. Had this been permitted by God, they would not have been so severely reprimanded; but as God had forbidden them to flee to the Egyptians, it was in the first place a disallowed confidence; and in the second place, they thus despised the aid of God, and cast aside, as it were, all his promises: for as their hearts were fixed on the Egyptians, and as they thought that their safety would be secured by them; so their prayer to God became not only cold, but almost wholly extinguished.
We hence see that the Prophet did not exceed due limits when he spoke against the Jews with so much displeasure, and condemned them in such reproachful terms; for they had transferred the glory due to God to the Egyptians, when they considered them to be the authors of their safety; and they had thus despised the promises of God, so that there was no attention given to prayer: Abhor, then, does Jehovah thy confidences 71
He then adds, Thou shalt not prosper in them. It ought to be carefully observed, that whatever we resolve to do that is not approved by God, cannot possibly succeed; for God will subvert all our hopes. Let us then know that here is set before us the punishment of all unbelievers, who, being not content with God’s protection, wander after vain and false objects of trust, and prefer to have men propitious to them rather than God himself. Now follows —
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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 —
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Calvin: Jer 3:2 - -- As the Prophet had charged the Jews with being wanton in a loose and promiscuous manner, as it is the case with abandoned women, after having cast aw...
As the Prophet had charged the Jews with being wanton in a loose and promiscuous manner, as it is the case with abandoned women, after having cast away all shame, that they might not evade the charge and object, that they were not conscious of any crime, he makes them in a manner the judges themselves, Raise up, he says, thine eyes to the high places and see; that is, “I bring forward witnesses sufficiently known to thee; there is no hill in the land where thou hast not been connected with idols.” We have already said, and we shall find the same thing often mentioned by this Prophet, — that superstitions are deemed idolatries by God. But it was a customary thing with the Jews to ascend high places, as though they were there nearer to God. This is the reason why the Prophet bids them to turn their eyes to all the hills: See, he says, whether is there any hill free from thy fornications. For as strumpets seek hiding — places to perpetrate their obscenities, so the Jews sought hills as their brothels. And thus their impiety was the more execrable as they went forth openly, and especially as they wished their flagitious acts to be seen at a distance, ascending, as they did, elevated places; but strumpets, having found adulterers or paramours, are wont to seek some secret retreats. The Prophet then cuts off from the Jews every occasion for evading the charge, when he bids them to raise up their eyes to the high places; for when they prostrated themselves before their idols, it was the same as when strumpets commit acts of adultery.
And he adds, that they sat by the ways, as the Arabian in the desert He again repeats what we have before observed, — that the Jews were not led away by the enticement of others to violate the conjugal pledge which they had given to God, but were, on the contrary, moved by their own wantonness, so that they of themselves sought base and filthy gratifications, he had before said, “Thou hast corrupted others by thy wickedness;” and now he confirms the same, “Thou hast sat, he says, “by all the ways.” This also is what is done by vile strumpets, who, as it has been said, have lost all shame. But the Prophet enhances this crime by another comparison, As an Arabian in the desert, who lies in wait for travelers, that he may rob and kill them: thus hast thou sat by the ways 74
We then see here a double comparison; one taken from strumpets, who having in time past made gain, when they find themselves neglected, besiege the ways, and offer themselves to any they may meet with. This is the first comparison; the other is, that they were like robbers, who lie in wait for travelers; as though he had said, that the Chaldeans and Egyptians were excusable when compared with the Jews, because they had been drawn by their wicked arts into illicit treaties, like a traveler who passing by is enticed by a robber, — “What art thou but a helpless man; but if thou joinest me, and engagest to be my companion, there is the best prospect of gain, and new spoils will fall into our hands daily.” Such a robber is twice and three times more wicked than the other. So also, the Prophet says of the Jews, that they were like old robbers, who had become hardened in intrigues, in plunders, and in every kind of wickedness, and had enticed to themselves both the Egyptians and the Assyrians. It afterwards follows —
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Calvin: Jer 3:3 - -- Jeremiah proceeds with his severe reproof, — that the Jews were wholly given to wickedness, for they had altogether devoted themselves to superstit...
Jeremiah proceeds with his severe reproof, — that the Jews were wholly given to wickedness, for they had altogether devoted themselves to superstitions, and also to unlawful alliances, and had in both instances despised God. He now shews how great and how strong was their obstinacy. Restrained, he says, have been the rains, there has not been the latter rain; yet the front of a harlot has been thine; as though he had said, that the Jews had not in any degree been subdued by punishment. It was a most atrocious wickedness to give no ear to pious warnings, when the prophets continually cried to them, and endeavored to restore them to the right way. That they thus hardened themselves against the addresses of the prophets, was a proof of the greatest impiety. But God tried also to restore them to himself by punishments, and those very heavy. He punished them with sterility; and the drought of which the Prophet speaks was no doubt so uncommon, that the Jews might perceive, had they a particle of a sound mind, that God was at war with them. It often happens that not a drop of rain fails from heaven; for we see that many summers are hot and dry: there is no doubt but that God then reminds us of our sins and exhorts us to repent. But as familiarity makes us to overlook God’s judgments, he sometimes punishes us in a new and unusual manner. I doubt not then but that the Prophet, by saying, Restrained have been rains from them, refers to some extraordinary instance of God’s vengeance, whereby the Jews might have perceived, except they were extremely besotted, that God was opposed to and displeased with them. 75
The import of what is said is, — that the Jews had not only run here and there through a mad impulse, according to their own wills and inclinations, but that they had also been checked by evident judgments, since God had from heaven openly shewed himself to be the vindicator of his own glory, and as there had been so great a drought, that it appeared clear that the curse of the law had been fulfilled towards them,
“I will make heaven iron to you, and the earth brass.”
(Lev 26:19)
As to the latter rain, we have said elsewhere that by this word is meant the rain which falls just before harvest; and it is called “latter” with reference to the harvest. For, as there is great heat in those eastern parts, they want rain before the harvest commences; the extreme heat of the sun would otherwise scorch up the grain. Hence, they especially look for the latter rain, which comes shortly before harvest — time. The other rain, in September and October, is called, on account of the sowing — time, a seasonable rain; for it soaks and moistens the seed, that it may strike roots and gather rigor and strength. The object is to shew, that God had from heaven given to the Jews manifest tokens of his displeasure, and yet without any benefit; for they had the front of a harlot, and felt no shame; that is, they were moved by no judgments of God, and could not bear to be corrected.
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Calvin: Jer 3:4 - -- God, after having set forth the wickedness of his people, and severely reproved them as they deserved, now kindly invites them to repentance, Wilt t...
God, after having set forth the wickedness of his people, and severely reproved them as they deserved, now kindly invites them to repentance, Wilt thou not say to me hereafter, he says, My Father! Some incorrectly render the words, “Wilt thou say to me, My Father,” as though God would reject what they said: and they give the meaning, — that the Jews would act dishonestly in thus glorying in God’s name, from whom they were so alienated. But very different is the meaning of the Prophet: for God mitigates the severity of the reproof which we have observed, and shews that he would be ready to be reconciled to them, if they repented: nay, he waits not for their repentance, but of his own accord meets and allures these perfidious apostates: “What!” says God, “shall there be no more any union between us?” For God expresses here the feeling of one grieving and lamenting, when he saw the people perishing; and he seems anxious, if possible, to restore them.
It is with this design that he asks, “Will they not again call on me as their Father and the guide of their youth?” And by this periphrastic way of speaking, he intimates that he was the husband of that people; for most tender is that love which a youth has for a young virgin in the flower of her age. God, then, makes use now of this comparison, and says, that he still remembered the love which he had manifested towards his people. In short, he shews here that pardon was ready, if the people sought reconciliation; and he confirms the same thing when he adds —
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Calvin: Jer 3:5 - -- God shews that it was the fault of the Jews, that he did not receive them into favor. And here he takes the argument from his own nature, and speaks ...
God shews that it was the fault of the Jews, that he did not receive them into favor. And here he takes the argument from his own nature, and speaks of himself in the third person; and it is the same as though the Prophet had interposed this reasoning, “God is not inexorable, for he is as ready to forgive as he is long — suffering: now, then, what prevents you from living happily again under his government? for he will spare you, provided he finds in you genuine repentance.” We now then see, what the Prophet means here: for as God had kindly exhorted the people to repent, the Prophet speaks now generally of God’s own nature, — that he keeps not for ever, nor reserves perpetually
These words, when put alone, mean that he does not cherish vengeance, and in our language we imitate the Hebrews, Il lui garde. This garde, when put without anything added to it, means, as I have said, that vengeance is cherished within. But nothing is more contrary than this to the nature of God. It hence follows, that the Jews had no obstacle in their way, except that they shunned God, and that being addicted to their own vices, they were unwilling to receive the pardon that was freely offered to them.
As to the second clause, it admits of being explained in two ways. We may regard an adversative particle to be understood, “though thou hast spoken and hast done, “etc.; as if God had said, that he would be propitious to the Jews, however atrociously they might have sinned. But another view is more simple, — that God here complains that there was no hope of amendment, as they had become hardened in their vices, “Thou hast spoken,” he says, “thou hast done, and thou hast been able.” And interpreters further vary in their views: for the copulative is explained by some as a particle of comparison, in the sense of
I therefore give this explanation: God had before put on, as it were, the character of one in grief and sorrow, and kindly exhorted the people to repent, and testified that he would be ready to pardon them, and at the same time shewed in general that he would be propitious, as he is by nature inclined to mercy. After having set forth these things, he now adds, that he despaired of that people, because they gloried in their own wickedness: for to speak and to do means the same as if he had said, that the people were so impudent, that they boasted of their rebellion against God, and dared to call darkness light; for the superstitious, we know, glory against God without any shame. Now, such was the state of the people; for God, by his prophets, condemned this especially in them — that they had corrupted the pure worship of the law; but they with a meretricious front dared to set up against him their own devotions and good intentions, as they are commonly called. As then, they thus presumptuously defended their wicked deeds, God here complains that they were in no way healable, and so he leaves them as past remedy. This I regard as the real meaning of the Prophet: and of similar import is the verb
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Calvin: Jer 3:6 - -- Here the Prophet enters on a new discourse: he relates what God had committed to him, and mentions the time, even in the reign of Josiah. It is indee...
Here the Prophet enters on a new discourse: he relates what God had committed to him, and mentions the time, even in the reign of Josiah. It is indeed well known, that the land was then cleansed from superstitions; for that pious king labored to restore the true worship of God, and to remove all the filth and defilements, by which the temple and the whole of religion had been corrupted. He strenuously exerted himself, and no doubt there was an improved appearance of religion throughout the land; but we shall see that a great portion of the people were under the influence of hypocrisy and deceit., as it is usually the case when rulers seek to support the pure worship of God, and to free it from all corruptions; for there are many hypocrites, who for a time dissemble, while the same antipathy to God still remains. Such was then the condition of the people.
And this ought to be carefully observed; for Jeremiah might have appeared to have dealt somewhat too sharply and rigorously with his own nation, as reform was in the mouth of all, according to what we find to be the case with many now, who having left the superstitions of the Papacy, seemed at first to embrace the doctrines of the Gospel, but all now wish to be satisfied with any kind of reformation; at the same time, they shake off the yoke of Christ and can bear submission to no discipline: in short, their object, is to subvert all order; and yet they boldly claim to be the advocates of reformation, whenever their impiety is reproved. This was no doubt the contest which Jeremiah had to carry on, the same with that by which the Lord tries his servants at this day. He therefore says, that he received this commission in the days of Josiah, that is, when that king was laboring to establish the pure worship of God, and no one dared to oppose; for we find that God was then worshipped by the whole people without any external corruptions.
But what is contained in this commission? Hast thou seen, he says, what apostate Israel hath done? God here compares the ten tribes with the tribe of Judah, with whom was united, as it is well known, the half tribe of Benjamin: he then compares Israel with the tribe of Judah, “Do you not see what rebellious Israel hath done?” But he introduces the kingdom of Israel, as well as the kingdom of Judah, under the character of women; for God, as it has already appeared, represents himself as the husband of his people. He then says that he had two wives, even Israel and Judah. God had indeed espoused to himself the whole seed of Abraham by one contract; but Jeremiah speaks here in a popular manner. Though the Israelites had departed from God, yet he had not wholly rejected them. The kingdom of Israel had then become adulterous; but God for a time bore with that sin, so that the covenant, in part, remained. For this reason he acknowledges as his wives both Israel and Judah. Hence he says, “Hast thou not seen what estranged Israel hath done?” The word
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Calvin: Jer 3:7 - -- He afterwards adds, Yet I said; God here states, that he had long suspended his judgment before he punished the people of Israel. He then extols he...
He afterwards adds, Yet I said; God here states, that he had long suspended his judgment before he punished the people of Israel. He then extols here his patience, that he had not immediately visited the Israelites as they deserved, but bore with them and for a long time waited to see whether they could be reclaimed: I said, then, after she had done all these things, Return to me If we read in the third person, the sense will be the same, “I hoped indeed that they would return to the right way, though they had thus fallen away, yea though they had denied me by an impious defection, and had become alienated from the faith and from piety.” But I am more inclined to another view, — that God here records the fact, that he had recalled to himself the ten tribes by his servants the Prophets, though they had by their many crimes provoked his wrath. Here then God shews how perverse the Israelites had been; for he had tried to restore them, if possible, to himself, but had spent all his labor in vain. I thus explain, I said, of the prophetic instruction: “Though then the Israelites had plunged themselves into impieties, I yet ceased not to try whether they could be restored to me.” He intimates, in short, that he had been unlike those husbands, who will not be reconciled to their wives, burning with jealousy, because they see that they had been exposed to so much disgrace. God then shews that though the Israelites had departed from him, he yet sent his prophets, and of his own free will sought reconciliation with them, but that they had refused to return. 78
He then adds, See did she, that is, the whole kingdom of Judah, that, for al1 this, because the rebellious Israel had played the harlot, etc. We shall hereafter find the design of this comparison; for he amplifies the sin of the kingdom of Judah, inasmuch she had time enough to observe what he now relates, and was able to see it at a distance as it were from a watchtower; yet she saw it without any advantage. God then intended to shew how great was the hardness of the Jews, who had seen the defection of the ten tribes, and had seen how severely they had been reproved by the prophets.
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Calvin: Jer 3:8 - -- He then says, And I saw As he had said that the kingdom of Judah had seen what happened to Israel, so he now says, that he had seen both, See the...
He then says, And I saw As he had said that the kingdom of Judah had seen what happened to Israel, so he now says, that he had seen both, See then did I Now, what does he declare that he had seen? Even that Judah had played the harlot; for he now speaks of Judah as of a woman. Then God says, that it was not a thing hid from him that Judah had surpassed the crimes of her sister, not through ignorance or deception, but through deliberate wickedness: See, he says, did I, that notwithstanding all these things, she played the harlot He thus explains more fully what he had briefly touched upon before. He had said, that Judah had seen, but this on account of its brevity might have appeared ambiguous: he therefore explains it more at large; “ See did Judah that I gave a bill of divorcement to her sister, because she had played the harlot; and yet she feared not;” that. is, she thought not of repenting, when she had such a striking example of vengeance set before her eyes.
But it may be here asked, how could it be said that a bill of divorce had been given to the Israelites, when he denies by the Prophet Isaiah that he had given it? (Isa 50:1.) But the Prophet here takes another view of the subject; for he does not speak here of the bills of divorce, such as were usually given, when a husband repudiated a wife who had been chaste and faithful; but he speaks of that lawful divorce, when a woman, convicted of adultery, is liable to a capital punishment. God then by his prophet Isaiah denies that he had given a bill of divorcement; but he says here that he had given it, because he had repudiated an adulterous woman. It was not indeed at that time customary among the Jews to divorce an adulteress, for she was led to execution. But we have seen at the beginning of the chapter that there is a difference between God and husbands. As then God did not deal, as he might have justly done, with the Israelites, and did not execute a capital punishment, as he might rightly have done, and what was usually done, he says that he had given a bill of divorce, that is, that he had repudiated that people. But by the bill of divorce he means exile; for when the ten tribes were banished, it was the same as though God openly shewed that he had no connection with that people: as long as they continued in the holy land and in the promised inheritance, some kind of union remained; but when they were dispersed here and there, and every sort of worship had ceased among them, and also when the very kingdom of Israel had no longer an existence, God had then divorced them.
See then did her sister Judah, and she feared not It was indeed an instance of great insensibility, not to learn wisdom at the expense of others; and it is a complaint found everywhere in the prophets, — that the Jews were not stimulated to repentance, while God spared them, and at the same time set before them examples which ought in all reason to have terrified them. For what ought they to have considered, but that God would punish those many transgressions by which they provoked his wrath, since he had not spared their brethren? They saw that the kingdom of Israel had been abolished, and yet all of them derived their origin from the same father, even Abraham: how was it then that they so heedlessly despised God’s judgment, which had been for a long time before their eyes? Hence he complains that they feared not It now follows —
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Calvin: Jer 3:9 - -- Here the Prophet completes his charge, — that so far was it that the punishment which God had inflicted on the Israelites, had any effect on the tr...
Here the Prophet completes his charge, — that so far was it that the punishment which God had inflicted on the Israelites, had any effect on the tribe of Judah, that she surpassed by her levity and lustfulness the whoredomes of her sister. She has polluted, he says, the land, or made the land to sin, that is, rendered the land guilty. It is indeed what greatly exaggerates the crime, when it is said that the land became guilty or contaminated. The land, we know, was in itself pure, and could contract no pollution from the vices of men; but that the impiety of men might be exhibited the more detestable, the land is said to have been contaminated by them:
Or, it may be said that the land was made guilty. How so? The reason why they are said to have contaminated the land or to have made it guilty or to have implicated it in their own vices, he gives in these words, she has played the harlot with stone and with wood 79 Of this metaphor of playing the harlot it is not necessary now to speak; for we have said already, that this similitude is often repeated, because God had united that people to himself and bound them to him, as it were, by the sacred bond of marriage. Hence whenever the people departed from the pure worship of God, they were justly said to have played the harlot, for they violated their pledged faith: as simplicity of faith is spiritual chastity, so apostasy is that shamelessness and perfidy, when a wife becomes unfaithful to her husband by following adulterers. It afterwards follows —
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Calvin: Jer 3:10 - -- He goes on with the same subject, — that the Jews were not moved by any fear when they saw the dreadful vengeance executed on their brethren on acc...
He goes on with the same subject, — that the Jews were not moved by any fear when they saw the dreadful vengeance executed on their brethren on account of their sins. Her perfidious sister, he says, returned not to me, that is, after so many warnings by the prophets and such an example of punishment. He however adds an explanation, — she turned not with her whole heart, but feignedly and falsely. 80
The Prophet anticipates here such objections as the Jews might have alleged, “What! thou deniest that we have returned! Is not the whole land cleansed from idolatries? Is not God worshipped according to the requirements of the law? Is there any more an altar seen under the shades of trees or on hills?” As then they might have thus evaded the charge as they usually did, the Prophet obviates such an evasion and says, “Though they have ill appearance given some tokens of repentance, yet they have only put on a disguise and have acted falsely towards God; for there is no integrity in them.” We now more clearly see why he had before specifically mentioned the time of Josiah; for the Jews then returned feignedly to God: there was in the king and in a few a right feeling, but in the rest dissimulation only. God then in a few words shews, that he cares not for that reformation which is false and feigned, but that he requires a genuine feeling within: hence he thus concludes —
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Calvin: Jer 3:11 - -- We now see more clearly for what purpose Jeremiah compared the ten tribes with the kingdom of Judah; it was done in order to shew that the Jews, who ...
We now see more clearly for what purpose Jeremiah compared the ten tribes with the kingdom of Judah; it was done in order to shew that the Jews, who wished to be deemed far more holy than others, were yet more perfidious and deserved a heavier punishment, because they acted so deceitfully with God.
It may be here asked, why he pronounces the Jews worse than the Israelites, while they still continued in a sort of middle state of things. We indeed know that the kingdom of Judah was become so corrupt, that hardly any religion remained there; yet the temple was still standing and the priesthood still existed at Jerusalem. But the Prophet condemns the Jews more than the Israelites for other reasons, even because they ought to have become wise through the calamities of others, and they ought to have been confirmed in true religion when they saw their brethren falling away from the pure worship of God: these things they ought to have maturely considered. It was this supine sottishness that rendered them worse than all their brethren, and also their pride, the chief cause of their condemnation, for they boasted that they remained perfect, while the ten tribes had become degenerated. These were the reasons why he says that Israel, though a perfidious woman, was yet more righteous than her sister Judah.
The language indeed is not to be strictly taken when it is said, that she justified her soul; for God does not here excuse the Israelites, nor does he free or absolve them from guilt, (for he had severely punished them;) but this way of speaking is commonly used by the prophets; — Sodom was righteous in comparison with Jerusalem; and Tyre and Sidon were just when compared with the Jews. (Eze 16:47.) Justified then has she her soul, 81 even the treacherous or the apostate Israel, in comparison with the perfidious Judah; that is, for the reasons which I have stated. The obstinacy of the Jews was greater and less excusable: the external worship of God, which they had retained, ought to have been a bridle to check them; and they had also seen how severe a judge God had been towards the ten tribes; but the judgments of God they despised, and derived no benefit from them.
Defender -> Jer 2:27
Defender: Jer 2:27 - -- Such a belief is the folly and tragedy of evolutionary pantheism. Even more absurd than the ancient belief that life evolved from sticks and stones is...
Such a belief is the folly and tragedy of evolutionary pantheism. Even more absurd than the ancient belief that life evolved from sticks and stones is the modern dogma that all living creatures have evolved from non-living chemicals. Only the living God can create life."
TSK: Jer 2:20 - -- For of : Jer 30:8; Exo 3:8; Lev 26:13; Deu 4:20,Deu 4:34, Deu 15:15; Isa 9:4, Isa 10:27, Isa 14:25; Nah 1:13
and thou saidst : Exo 19:8, Exo 24:3; Deu...
For of : Jer 30:8; Exo 3:8; Lev 26:13; Deu 4:20,Deu 4:34, Deu 15:15; Isa 9:4, Isa 10:27, Isa 14:25; Nah 1:13
and thou saidst : Exo 19:8, Exo 24:3; Deu 5:27, Deu 26:17; Jos 1:16, Jos 24:16-24; 1Sa 12:10
transgress : or, serve
when upon : Jer 3:6; Deu 12:2; 1Ki 12:32; Psa 78:58; Isa 57:5-7; Eze 16:24, Eze 16:25, Eze 16:31; Eze 20:28
playing : Jer 3:1, Jer 3:6-8; Exo 34:14-16; Deu 12:2; Isa 1:21; Eze 16:15, Eze 16:16, Eze 16:28, Eze 16:41, Eze 23:5; Hos 2:5, Hos 3:3
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TSK: Jer 2:21 - -- Yet I : Exo 15:17; Psa 44:2, Psa 80:8; Isa 5:1, Isa 5:2, Isa 60:21, Isa 61:3; Mat 21:33; Mar 12:1; Luk 20:9; Joh 15:1
wholly : Gen 18:19, Gen 26:3-5, ...
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TSK: Jer 2:22 - -- For though : Job 9:30,Job 9:31
yet thine iniquity : Jer 16:17, Jer 17:1; Deu 32:34; Job 14:17; Psa 90:8, Psa 130:3; Hos 13:12; Amo 8:7
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TSK: Jer 2:23 - -- How canst : Jer 2:34, Jer 2:35; Gen 3:12, Gen 3:13; 1Sa 15:13, 1Sa 15:14; Psa 36:2; Pro 28:13, Pro 30:12, Pro 30:20; Luk 10:29; Rom 3:19; 1Jo 1:8-10; ...
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TSK: Jer 2:24 - -- A wild ass : or, O wild ass, etc. Jer 14:6; Job 11:12, Job 39:5-8
used : Heb. taught
her pleasure : Heb. the desire of her heart
turn her away : or, r...
A wild ass : or, O wild ass, etc. Jer 14:6; Job 11:12, Job 39:5-8
used : Heb. taught
her pleasure : Heb. the desire of her heart
turn her away : or, reverse it
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TSK: Jer 2:25 - -- Withhold : Jer 13:22; Deu 28:48; Isa 20:2-4; Lam 4:4; Hos 2:3; Luk 15:22, Luk 16:24
There is no hope : or, Is the case desperate, Jer 18:12; Isa 57:10...
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TSK: Jer 2:26 - -- the thief : Jer 2:36, Jer 3:24, Jer 3:25; Pro 6:30,Pro 6:31; Isa 1:29; Rom 6:21
their kings : Jer 32:32; Ezr 9:7; Neh 9:32-34; Dan 9:6-8
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TSK: Jer 2:27 - -- to a stock : Jer 10:8; Psa 115:4-8; Isa 44:9-20, Isa 46:6-8; Hab 2:18, Hab 2:19
brought me forth : or, begotten me
for they : Eze 8:16, Eze 23:35
thei...
to a stock : Jer 10:8; Psa 115:4-8; Isa 44:9-20, Isa 46:6-8; Hab 2:18, Hab 2:19
brought me forth : or, begotten me
for they : Eze 8:16, Eze 23:35
their back : Heb. the hinder part of the neck
but in the time : Jer 2:24, Jer 22:23; Jdg 10:8-16; Psa 78:34-37; Isa 26:16; Hos 5:15, Hos 7:14
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TSK: Jer 2:28 - -- But where : Deu 32:37; Jdg 10:14; 2Ki 3:13; Isa 45:20, Isa 46:2, Isa 46:7
trouble : Heb. evil
to the number : Jer 11:13; 2Ki 17:30,2Ki 17:31; Hos 10:1
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TSK: Jer 2:29 - -- will ye plead : Jer 2:23, Jer 2:35, Jer 3:2
ye all have : Jer 5:1, Jer 6:13, Jer 9:2-6; Dan 9:11; Rom 3:19
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TSK: Jer 2:30 - -- In vain : Jer 5:3, Jer 6:29, Jer 6:30, Jer 7:28, Jer 31:18; 2Ch 28:22; Isa 1:5, Isa 9:13; Eze 24:13; Zep 3:2; Rev 9:20,Rev 9:21, Rev 16:9
your own swo...
In vain : Jer 5:3, Jer 6:29, Jer 6:30, Jer 7:28, Jer 31:18; 2Ch 28:22; Isa 1:5, Isa 9:13; Eze 24:13; Zep 3:2; Rev 9:20,Rev 9:21, Rev 16:9
your own sword : Jer 26:20-24; 1Ki 19:10,1Ki 19:14; 2Ch 24:21, 2Ch 36:16; Neh 9:26; Mat 21:35, Mat 21:36; Mat 23:29, Mat 23:34-37; Mar 12:2-8; Luk 11:47-51, Luk 13:33, Luk 13:34; Act 7:52; 1Th 2:15
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TSK: Jer 2:31 - -- see ye : Amo 1:1; Mic 6:9
Have I been : Jer 2:5, Jer 2:6; 2Sa 12:7-9; 2Ch 31:10; Neh 9:21-25; Hos 2:7, Hos 2:8; Mal 3:9-11
We are lords : Heb. We have...
Have I been : Jer 2:5, Jer 2:6; 2Sa 12:7-9; 2Ch 31:10; Neh 9:21-25; Hos 2:7, Hos 2:8; Mal 3:9-11
We are lords : Heb. We have dominion, Deu 8:12-14, Deu 31:20, Deu 32:15; Psa 10:4, Psa 12:4; Pro 30:9; Hos 13:6; 1Co 4:8; Rev 3:15-17
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TSK: Jer 2:32 - -- a maid : Jer 2:11; Gen 24:22, Gen 24:30,Gen 24:53; 2Sa 1:24; Psa 45:13, Psa 45:14; Isa 61:10; Eze 16:10-13; 1Pe 3:3-5; Rev 21:2
yet my people : Jer 3:...
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TSK: Jer 2:33 - -- Why : Jer 2:23, Jer 2:36, Jer 3:1, Jer 3:2; Isa 57:7-10; Hos 2:5-7, Hos 2:13
hast : 2Ch 33:9; Eze 16:27, Eze 16:47, Eze 16:51, Eze 16:52
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TSK: Jer 2:34 - -- Also : Jer 7:31, Jer 19:4; 2Ki 21:16, 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:37, Psa 106:38; Isa 57:5, Isa 59:7; Eze 16:20,Eze 16:21, Eze 20:31
I : Jer 6:15, Jer 8:12; Eze...
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TSK: Jer 2:35 - -- Because : Jer 2:23, Jer 2:29; Job 33:9; Pro 28:13; Isa 58:3; Rom 7:9
I will : Jer 2:9; 1Jo 1:8-10
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TSK: Jer 2:36 - -- gaddest : Jer 2:18, Jer 2:23, Jer 2:33, Jer 31:22; Hos 5:13, Hos 7:11, Hos 12:1
thou also shalt : Jer 37:7; Isa 20:5, Isa 30:1-7, Isa 31:1-3; Lam 4:17...
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TSK: Jer 2:37 - -- thine hands : 2Sa 13:19
for the Lord : Jer 2:36, Jer 17:5, Jer 37:7-10; Isa 10:4; Eze 17:15-20
and thou : Jer 32:5; Num 14:41; 2Ch 13:12
thine hands : 2Sa 13:19
for the Lord : Jer 2:36, Jer 17:5, Jer 37:7-10; Isa 10:4; Eze 17:15-20
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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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TSK: Jer 3:2 - -- Lift : Jer 2:23; Eze 8:4-6; Luk 16:23
unto : Jer 2:20; Deu 12:2; 1Ki 11:3; 2Ki 23:13; Eze 16:16, Eze 16:24, Eze 16:25, Eze 20:28
In the : Gen 38:14; P...
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TSK: Jer 3:3 - -- the showers : Jer 9:12, Jer 14:4, Jer 14:22; Lev 26:19; Deu 28:23; Isa 5:6; Joe 1:16-20; Amo 4:7; Hag 1:11
latter rain : Jer 5:24
a whore’ s : Je...
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TSK: Jer 3:4 - -- Wilt thou : Jer 3:19, Jer 31:9, Jer 31:18-20; Hos 14:1-3
My father : Jer 2:27
the guide : Jer 2:2; Psa 48:14, Psa 71:5, Psa 71:17, Psa 119:9; Pro 1:4,...
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TSK: Jer 3:5 - -- he reserve : Jer 3:12; Psa 77:7-9, Psa 85:5, Psa 103:8, Psa 103:9; Isa 57:16, Isa 64:9
thou hast spoken : Eze 22:6; Mic 2:1, Mic 7:3; Zep 3:1-5
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TSK: Jer 3:6 - -- am 3292, bc 612
backsliding : Jer 3:8, Jer 3:11-14, Jer 2:19, Jer 7:24; 2Ki 17:7-17; Eze 23:11
she is : Jer 2:20; Isa 57:7; Eze 16:24, Eze 16:25, Eze ...
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TSK: Jer 3:7 - -- Turn thou : 2Ki 17:13, 2Ki 17:14; 2Ch 30:6-12; Hos 6:1-4, Hos 14:1
her treacherous : Jer 3:8-11; Eze 16:46, Eze 23:2-4
Turn thou : 2Ki 17:13, 2Ki 17:14; 2Ch 30:6-12; Hos 6:1-4, Hos 14:1
her treacherous : Jer 3:8-11; Eze 16:46, Eze 23:2-4
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TSK: Jer 3:8 - -- when for : Jer 3:1; 2Ki 17:6-18, 2Ki 18:9-11; Eze 23:9; Hos 2:2, Hos 2:3, Hos 3:4, Hos 4:15-17, Hos 9:15-17
and given her : Deu 24:1; Isa 50:1
feared ...
when for : Jer 3:1; 2Ki 17:6-18, 2Ki 18:9-11; Eze 23:9; Hos 2:2, Hos 2:3, Hos 3:4, Hos 4:15-17, Hos 9:15-17
and given her : Deu 24:1; Isa 50:1
feared not : 2Ki 17:19; Eze 23:11-21; Hos 4:15
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TSK: Jer 3:9 - -- lightness : or, fame, Eze 23:10
she defiled : Jer 3:2, Jer 2:7
committed : Jer 2:27, Jer 10:8; Isa 57:6; Eze 16:17; Hos 4:12; Hab 2:19
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TSK: Jer 3:10 - -- Judah : 2Ch 34:33, 35:1-18; Psa 78:36, Psa 78:37; Isa 10:6; Hos 7:14
feignedly : Heb. in falsehood, Psa 18:44, Psa 66:3 *marg.
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jer 2:20 - -- Transgress - Rather, as in marg. If the "yoke"and "bands"refer to the slavery in Egypt from which Yahweh freed Israel, the sense is - "For of o...
Transgress - Rather, as in marg. If the "yoke"and "bands"refer to the slavery in Egypt from which Yahweh freed Israel, the sense is - "For of old time I Yahweh broke thy yoke, I burst thy bands,"not that thou mightest be free to do thy own will, but that thou mightest serve me: "and thou saidst, I will not serve."
When ... - " For ... under every leafy tree thou"layest thyself down as a harlot. The verb indicates the eagerness with which she prostrates herself before the objects of her idolatrous worship.
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Barnes: Jer 2:21 - -- A noble vine - Properly, a Sorek vine (see Isa 5:2), which produced a red wine Pro 23:31, and had a lasting reputation Gen 49:11. A right ...
A noble vine - Properly, a Sorek vine (see Isa 5:2), which produced a red wine Pro 23:31, and had a lasting reputation Gen 49:11.
A right seed - literally, "a seed of truth,"i. e., true, genuine seed, not mixed with weeds, nor with seed of an inferior quality. Compare Mat 13:24.
How then art thou turned - Or, "How then"hast thou changed thyself "unto me"(i. e., to my hurt or vexation) "into the degenerate"branches "of a strange vine?"The stock, which was God’ s planting, was genuine, and of the noblest sort: the wonder was how such a stock could produce shoots of a totally different kind Deu 32:32.
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Barnes: Jer 2:22 - -- Nitre - Or, natron, a mineral alkali, found in the Nile valley, where it effloresces upon the rocks and surfaces of the dykes, and in old time ...
Nitre - Or, natron, a mineral alkali, found in the Nile valley, where it effloresces upon the rocks and surfaces of the dykes, and in old time was carefully collected, and used to make lye for washing (see Pro 25:20).
Sope - A vegetable alkali, now called "potash,"because obtained from the ashes of plants. Its combination with oils, etc., to form soap was not known to the Hebrews until long after Jeremiah’ s time, but they used the lye, formed by passing water through the ashes. Thus then, though Israel use both mineral and vegetable alkalies, the most powerful detergents known, yet will she be unable to wash away the stains of her apostasy.
Thine iniquity is marked - i. e., as a stain.
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Barnes: Jer 2:23 - -- In their defense of themselves (compare Jer 2:35), the people probably appealed to the maintenance of the daily sacrifice, and the Mosaic ritual: an...
In their defense of themselves (compare Jer 2:35), the people probably appealed to the maintenance of the daily sacrifice, and the Mosaic ritual: and even more confidently perhaps to Josiah’ s splendid restoration of the temple, and to the suppression of the open worship of Baal. All such pleas availed little as long as the rites of Moloch were still privately practiced.
Thy way in the valley - i. e., of Hinnom (see 2Ki 23:10 note). From the time of Ahaz it had been the seat of the worship of Moloch, and the prophet more than once identifies Moloch with Baal. "Way"is put metaphorically for "conduct, doings."
Traversing - Interlacing her ways. The word describes the tangled mazes of the dromedary’ s course, as she runs here and there in the heat of her passion.
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Barnes: Jer 2:24 - -- A wild donkey used to the wilderness - The type of an untamed and reckless nature. Snuffeth up the wind - The wind brings with it the sce...
A wild donkey used to the wilderness - The type of an untamed and reckless nature.
Snuffeth up the wind - The wind brings with it the scent of the male. Israel does not wait until temptation comes of itself, but looks out for any and every incentive to idolatry.
Occasion ... month - i. e., the pairing season.
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Barnes: Jer 2:25 - -- God the true husband exhorts Israel not to run barefoot, and with parched throat, like a shameless adulteress, after strangers. There is no hop...
God the true husband exhorts Israel not to run barefoot, and with parched throat, like a shameless adulteress, after strangers.
There is no hope - i. e., It is in vain.
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Barnes: Jer 2:27 - -- "Stone"being feminine in Hebrew is here represented as the mother. Arise, and save us - Whether it be idolatry or infidelity, it satisfies onl...
"Stone"being feminine in Hebrew is here represented as the mother.
Arise, and save us - Whether it be idolatry or infidelity, it satisfies only in tranquil and prosperous times. No sooner does trouble come, than the deep conviction of the existence of a God, which is the witness for Him in our heart, resumes its authority, and man prays.
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Barnes: Jer 2:28 - -- A question of bitter irony. Things are made for some use. Now is the time for thy deities to prove themselves real by being useful. When every city ...
A question of bitter irony. Things are made for some use. Now is the time for thy deities to prove themselves real by being useful. When every city has its special deity, surely among so many there might be found one able to help his worshippers.
O Judah - Hereto the argument had been addressed to Israel: suddenly the prophet charges Judah with the habitual practice of idolatry, and points to the conclusion, that as Jerusalem has been guilty of Samaria’ s sin, it must suffer Samaria’ s punishment.
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Barnes: Jer 2:30 - -- Your own sword hath detoured your prophets - An allusion probably to Manasseh 2Ki 21:16. Death was the usual fate of the true prophet Neh 9:26;...
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Barnes: Jer 2:31 - -- Or, "O generation"that ye are! An exclamation Of indignation at their hardened resistance to God. A land of darkness - This word is written in...
Or, "O generation"that ye are! An exclamation Of indignation at their hardened resistance to God.
A land of darkness - This word is written in Hebrew with two accents, as being a compound, signifying not merely darkness, but the darkness of Yahweh, i. e., very great darkness.
We are lords - Others render it: We rove about, wander about at our will, go where we like.
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Barnes: Jer 2:32 - -- A bride treasures all her life the girdle, which first indicated that she was a married woman, just as brides now treasure the wedding ring; but Isr...
A bride treasures all her life the girdle, which first indicated that she was a married woman, just as brides now treasure the wedding ring; but Israel, Yahweh’ s bride Jer 2:2, cherishes no fond memorials of past affection.
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Barnes: Jer 2:33 - -- Why trimmest thou thy way - literally, "Why makest thou thy way good,"a phrase used here of the pains taken by the Jews to learn the idolatries...
Why trimmest thou thy way - literally, "Why makest thou thy way good,"a phrase used here of the pains taken by the Jews to learn the idolatries of foreign nations.
The wicked ones ... - Or, "therefore thou hast taught"thy ways wickednesses."
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Barnes: Jer 2:34 - -- I have not found it ... - Rather, thou didst not find them breaking into thy house. The meaning is, that these poor innocents had committed no ...
I have not found it ... - Rather, thou didst not find them breaking into thy house. The meaning is, that these poor innocents had committed no crime: they were not thieves caught in the act, whom the Law permitted men to slay Exo 22:2, and therefore Israel in killing them was guilty of murder. The one crime here of theft is put for crime generally.
Upon all these - Or, because of all this. Thou killedst the poor innocents, not for any crime, but because of this thy lust for idolatry.
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Barnes: Jer 2:35 - -- Because I am innocent - Rather, But "I am innocent,"or, "I am acquitted."Those blood-stains cannot be upon my skirts, because now, in king Josi...
Because I am innocent - Rather, But "I am innocent,"or, "I am acquitted."Those blood-stains cannot be upon my skirts, because now, in king Josiah’ s days, the idolatry of Manasseh has been put away.
Shall turn from me - Or, has turned away "from me."
Plead - Or, enter into judgment.
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Barnes: Jer 2:36 - -- To change thy way - The rival parties at Jerusalem looked one to Assyria, the other to Egypt, for safety. As one or other for the time prevaile...
To change thy way - The rival parties at Jerusalem looked one to Assyria, the other to Egypt, for safety. As one or other for the time prevailed, the nation "changed its way,"sending its embassies now eastward to Nineveh, now westward to Memphis.
Thou also ... - literally, also of Egypt "shalt thou be ashamed."This was literally fulfilled by the failure of the attempt to raise the siege of Jerusalem Jer 37:5.
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Barnes: Jer 2:37 - -- From him - From it, from this Egypt, which though fem. as a land, yet as a people may be used as a masc. (compare Jer 46:8). Now that Nineveh i...
From him - From it, from this Egypt, which though fem. as a land, yet as a people may be used as a masc. (compare Jer 46:8). Now that Nineveh is trembling before the armies of Cyaxares and Nabopalassar, thou hastenest to Egypt, hoping to rest upon her strength: but thou shalt retrace thy steps, with thy hands clasped upon thy head, disgraced and discarded.
Confidences - Those in whom thou confidest.
In them - literally, "with respect to them."
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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.
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Barnes: Jer 3:2 - -- These words are not the language of consolation to the conscience-stricken, but of vehement expostulation with hardened sinners. They prove, therefo...
These words are not the language of consolation to the conscience-stricken, but of vehement expostulation with hardened sinners. They prove, therefore, the truth of the interpretation put upon the preceding verse.
As the Arabian ... - The freebooting propensities of the Bedouin had passed in ancient times into a proverb. As eager as the desert-tribes were for plunder, so was Israel for idolatry.
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Barnes: Jer 3:4 - -- Or, Hast thou Not from this time called "me, My Father, thou art the"husband "of my youth?"i. e., from the time of Josiah’ s reforms in his eig...
Or, Hast thou Not from this time called "me, My Father, thou art the"husband "of my youth?"i. e., from the time of Josiah’ s reforms in his eighteenth year, in opposition to "of old time"Jer 2:20.
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Barnes: Jer 3:5 - -- Rather, "Will he, the young husband,"retain, "keep up His anger forever!"These words should be joined to Jer 3:4. Behold ... - Rather, "Behold...
Rather, "Will he, the young husband,"retain, "keep up His anger forever!"These words should be joined to Jer 3:4.
Behold ... - Rather, "Behold, thou hast spoken"thus, but thou hast "done evil things"persistently. The King James Version translates as if Judah’ s words and deeds were both evil. Really her words were fair, but her deeds proved them to be false.
And here ends the prophecy, most interesting as showing what was the general nature of Jeremiah’ s exhortations to his countrymen, during the 14 years of Josiah’ s reign. He sets before them God and Israel united by a covenant of marriage, to the conditions of which Yahweh is ever true, while Israel practices with zest every form of idolatry. Therefore, the divine blessing is withheld. It is an honest and manly warning, and the great lesson it teaches us is, that with God nothing avails but a real and heartfelt repentance followed by a life of holiness and sincere devotion to His service.
Jer. 3:6\endash 4:4 - "The Call to Repentance"
The former prophecy ended with the denunciation of God’ s perpetual anger because of Israel’ s obstinate persistence in sin. Now there is an invitation to repentance, and the assurance of forgiveness. The argument is as follows: Israel had been guilty of apostasy, and therefore God bad put her away. Unwarned by this example her more guilty sister Judah persists in the same sins Jer 3:6-11. Israel therefore is invited to, return to the marriage-covenant by repentance Jer 3:12-14, in which case she and Judah, accepted upon the like condition, shall become joint members of a spiritual theocracy. Jer 3:15-18. The repentance which God requires must be real Jer. 3:19\endash 4:4.
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Barnes: Jer 3:6 - -- Backsliding Israel - The original is very strong: Hast thou seen Apostasy? i. e., Israel: as though Israel were the very personificatiom of the...
Backsliding Israel - The original is very strong: Hast thou seen Apostasy? i. e., Israel: as though Israel were the very personificatiom of the denial of God.
She is gone up - Rather, she goes; it is her habitual practice.
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Barnes: Jer 3:7 - -- Or, "And I said (i. e., within myself), After she has done all these things, she will return to me."But she did not return. Treacherous - lite...
Or, "And I said (i. e., within myself), After she has done all these things, she will return to me."But she did not return.
Treacherous - literally, "Falsehood,"i. e., false, faithless. The character of the two sisters is plainly marked. Samaria is apostate; she abandons Yahweh’ s worship altogether. Judah maintains the form only; her secret desires are set upon the orgies of pagan worship.
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Barnes: Jer 3:8 - -- Rather, "And I saw"that because apostate "Israel"had "committed adultery, I had put her away, and given her"the writing of her divorcement, "yet"fal...
Rather, "And I saw"that because apostate "Israel"had "committed adultery, I had put her away, and given her"the writing of her divorcement, "yet"false "Judah her sister feared not."...The expression, "For all the causes whereby,"is probably the actual formula with which writings of divorcement commenced.
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Barnes: Jer 3:9 - -- Lightness - Others render as in the margin. Defiled - Rather, profaned. The land especially consecrated to Yahweh’ s service was tre...
Lightness - Others render as in the margin.
Defiled - Rather, profaned. The land especially consecrated to Yahweh’ s service was treated by Judah as a common land.
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Barnes: Jer 3:10 - -- Her treacherous sister Judith - These words are a sort of refrain, thrice Jer 3:7-8, Jer 3:10 repeated before God finally pronounces Judah more...
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Barnes: Jer 3:11 - -- Hath justified herself - Judah had had the benefit of the warning given by Israel’ s example. Both abandon Yahweh’ s service for idol...
Hath justified herself - Judah had had the benefit of the warning given by Israel’ s example. Both abandon Yahweh’ s service for idolatry, but Israel is simply "apostate,"Judah is also false.
The verse is important,
(1) as accounting for the destruction of Jerusalem so soon after the pious reign of Josiah. Manasseh’ s crimes had defiled the land, but it was by rejecting the reforms of Josiah that the people finally profaned it, and sealed their doom:
(2) As showing that it is not by the acts of its government that a nation stands or falls. Ahaz and Manasseh lent the weight of their influence to the cause of idolatry: Hezekiah and Josiah to the cause of truth. But the nation had to determine which should prevail. Excepting a remnant it embraced idolatry, and brought upon itself ruin: in the remnant the nation again revived Jer 24:5, Jer 24:7.
Poole: Jer 2:20 - -- Of old time I have broken thy yoke i.e. the bondage and tyranny that thou wert under in old time in Egypt, as also divers times besides, as appears t...
Of old time I have broken thy yoke i.e. the bondage and tyranny that thou wert under in old time in Egypt, as also divers times besides, as appears through the Book of Judges. The Hebrew elam, that signifies everlasting, is sometimes used for a long time to come, and also for a long time past; so here, and Gen 6:4 Isa 57:11 .
And burst thy bands a double allusion, either to the bands and fetters with which prisoners are wont to be bound, Jer 40:4 , or those bands wherewith the ends of the yoke of beasts were wont to be bound. See Poole "Isa 58:6" .
Thou saidst, I will not transgress when the deliverance was fresh, thou didst put on good resolutions. Heb.
serve i.e. serve or worship idols: the word is of the feminine gender, because God speaks of his people as of a woman promising faithfulness, but breaking covenant. Some understand thee; I will not serve time, q.d. which thou madest appear,
when upon every hill & c. And thus he accuseth them of their ingratitude, who owed themselves to their Redeemer. But this doth not so well agree with their engagement, Exo 19:8 . When; or, notwithstanding all thy promises.
Upon every high hill: idolaters were wont to sacrifice upon the tops of high hills, because there they thought themselves nearer heaven; nay, some have esteemed high hills to be gods, as the Indians of Peru at this day.
Under every green tree: under these shades idolaters thought there lay some hidden deity, with which they conversed.
Thou wanderest viz. changing thy way to gad after idols, as one that hast broken covenant. See on Isa 57:8 . The word properly signifies to go from one’ s place, as harlots use to do, instigated either by unbridled lust, or covetousness; i.e. making great haste from one tree to another, or from one idol to another. See Jer 2:23,24 . Others, thou liest down, or, thou settest thyself.
Playing the harlot committing idolatry, which is a spiritual harlotry, Jer 3:1,2 . This is frequent. Some read the former part of the text otherwise, making it the daring boast of the people, Thou hast said, I have broken , &c. and saidst, I will not serve , i.e. I will not obey. But this will not suit well with the rest of the text.
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Poole: Jer 2:21 - -- A noble vine a usual metaphor for the church, Psa 80:8,9 , &c. See Poole "Isa 5:1" . The Hebrew is Sorek , and may refer to the place or to the pla...
A noble vine a usual metaphor for the church, Psa 80:8,9 , &c. See Poole "Isa 5:1" . The Hebrew is Sorek , and may refer to the place or to the plant. With reference to the place, it may be taken either for a proper name, as Carmel for any fruitful place; so here noting either the place whence, viz. a vine of the same kind with those that come from Sorek; possibly that country where Samson saw Delilah, Jud 16:4 : or, the place where planted, viz. in a fruitful land, Exo 15:17 . See Poole "Isa 1:2" . If it be referred to the plant, then it points at the excellency of its kind; and this the next clause seems to favour: and thus it notes both God’ s care; he had as great a care of it as of the choicest plant; see on Isa 27:2,3 ; and also his expectation, that it should prove so, Isa 5:4 . And the sense is, I planted thee, that thou shouldst bring forth choice fruit to me.
A right seed a right seed of true believers, as ill the days of the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Or supposing with to be understood before right seed, (as it often is in the Hebrew,) we may understand it of the ordinances of his church, which are said to be the plants or seed that God furnisheth it withal, Mat 13:24 ; and these are called right , Neh 9:13 , not false or counterfeit.
The degenerate plant: though there be only degenerate or declining in the Hebrew text, yet the supplement is necessary in regard of the metaphor.
Strange: this must here be taken in a bad sense, as the word
degenerate going before intimates, though it be sometimes for what is rare and excellent: here it notes their apostacy and infidelity, and other wickednesses, where God speaks after the manner of man, both in a way of wonder and reproof.
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Poole: Jer 2:22 - -- Though interpreters do greatly vary. in describing what is particularly meant here by
nitre and soap and it would be superfluous to mention here; ...
Though interpreters do greatly vary. in describing what is particularly meant here by
nitre and soap and it would be superfluous to mention here; yet all agree they are some materials that artists make use of for the cleansing away spots from the skin, clothes, or other things; and the sense is plain, that the blot of his people is by no art to be taken out: it cannot be covered by excuses; Though thou wouldst dissemble thy idolatries, thou canst not deceive me: nor expiated by sacrifices; it is beyond the power of all superstitious or religious washings to cleanse away, which may be understood by these natural and artificial ways of cleansing.
Thine iniquity is marked: the meaning seems to be either, Thy filthiness is so foul that it leaves a brand behind it that cannot be hid or washed out, but will abide: see Jer 17:1 . Or, according to another acceptation of the word,
it is laid up with God See the like Deu 32:34 Hos 13:12 . Purge thee, wash thee, do what thou wilt, thou canst by no means conceal thy wickedness from me, Job 9:20 . They that would see greater variety of interpretations, let them consult the Synopsis.
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Poole: Jer 2:23 - -- How canst thou say? with what face canst thou go about to excuse thyself, or deny what is so evident, and so truly charged upon thee? Jer 2:20 .
I h...
How canst thou say? with what face canst thou go about to excuse thyself, or deny what is so evident, and so truly charged upon thee? Jer 2:20 .
I have not gone after Baalim: the word is plural, as comprehensive of all their idols, Hos 11:2 , and is a name usually given to several of them, as Baal-zebub, 2Ki 1:16 , and Baal-peor, Num 25:3 , and therefore their worshipping of many. Because they had the temple and sacrifices, &c., they still persuaded themselves that they worshipped the true God, though they joined their idolatries with it; as the papists though they make use of idols in worship, yet would not be accounted idolaters.
Thy way the filthiness thou hast left behind thee, whereby thou mayst be traced, where thou leftest, as it were, thy footsteps, and monuments of thy frequent idolatries.
Thy way in the valley thy frequent course in the valleys, whether of Hinnom, where they burnt their children’ s bones in sacrifice, Jer 7:31 , or in any valleys where thou hast been frequent in thy idolatries; it seems to be thus largely taken.
Know what thou hast done look on and consider thy ways, as Jer 2:19 .
Thou art a swift dromedary or, thou art as , &c.; or, O dromedary , a beast much used by carriers in Arabia, being rife there. See on Isa 60:6 .
Traversing a metaphor taken from creatures that are hunted, that keep no direct path; alluding to the nature of the she dromedary, which in gendering time runs capering this way, and crossing that way, making many vagaries to find out sometimes one male, sometimes another, without any rule or order; setting forth hereby the disposition of this people, that were so mad upon their idols, that they ran sometimes after this, and sometimes after that, called wandering , Jer 2:20 , and that with great eagerness, fitly termed traversing, much like the description of a whore, Pro 7:11,12 ; the word being no where found but here, and being derived from a word that signifies a shoe-latchet, If any be curious, let the learned consult Synop. Critic., and the English reader the English Annotations on the place.
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Poole: Jer 2:24 - -- A wild ass or, O wild ass ; another similitude for the more lively description of the same thing; neither need we be solicitous about the variety or...
A wild ass or, O wild ass ; another similitude for the more lively description of the same thing; neither need we be solicitous about the variety or extravagancies of conjectures about this beast; or you may consult as before. It is said to be wild and untamed, as being
used to the wilderness doth also imply; and as to satisfying its lust, much of the nature of the other.
That snuffeth up the wind: this snuffing properly appertains to the sense of smelling, by which certain creatures, by a natural sagacity, find out what they miss, which huntsmen express by a proper term of
winding or having in the wind; and thus it is understood here; for this creature, by the wind; smells afar off which way her male is; for there is another sense of
snuffing up the wind viz. for the service of health, as allaying inward heat and drought, &c., Jer 14:6 .
At her pleasure as her desire or lust serves when it runs out after the male; implying also that no choice, or judgment, or measure is observed in these beasts, when carried out after their lusts.
In her occasion who can turn her away? i.e. when she is set upon it, and hath an occasion and opportunity to run impetuously to her male for the satisfying her pleasure, she bears down all opposition before her; there is none can stop or put a bridle upon her raging lust.
Will not weary themselves i.e. either they need not weary themselves; (speaking of Jerusalem, to which all the rest also is to be applied as in an allegory;) they that have a mind to be filthy with her may easily trace her, Jer 2:23 , she refuges none: or rather, they will not bestow their labour in vain, when she is hot upon her lust, but let her take her course until she be satisfied, and wait their time and opportunity; and this agrees with the next words.
In her month they shall find her: if this relate to the former sense of not wearying themselves, it notes her impudence and unsatiableness; you may have her at any time, even in her months or new moons, a season wherein such acts are abhorrent even to nature itself. Some understand this of the idolatry they committed every new moon; but it more properly points at the month of her breeding, or growing big and weighty; month put collectively for months , such as Job speaks of, Job 39:1,2 . Or, in her last month, because they grow then unwieldy. That this creature sleeps one month in the year, and that is the month she may be taken, is generally deemed but a fancy. The sense of the verse is, that though Jerusalem be now madly bent upon going after her idols, and other unclean courses, that there is no stopping or controlling of her, as in the next verse, and Jer 2:31 22:21 ; yet the time may come, in their afflictions, that they may grow more tame, and willing to receive counsel, as Jer 2:27 , and Hos 5:15 .
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Poole: Jer 2:25 - -- Withhold thy foot from being unshod good counsel given them by the prophet to tarry at home; either that they do not go a gadding after their spiritu...
Withhold thy foot from being unshod good counsel given them by the prophet to tarry at home; either that they do not go a gadding after their spiritual or corporal adulteries, or seek foreign aids, thereby to wear out their shoes; a metonymy of the effect, Jos 9:13 : or, that thou put not off thy shoes to go into the bed of lust, or uncover thy feet; a modest Hebrew expression, as also of other languages, for
exposing thy nakedness Eze 16:25 : or, take not those courses that will reduce thee to poverty, to go bare-foot, and bare-legged, and to want wherewith to quench thy thirst, as in the next clause, Pr 6 26 Isa 20:2,4 . See Isa 5:13 . There is no hope : she seems to return a cross answer, the word pointing at somewhat that is desperate, Ecc 2:20 . It either expresseth the desperateness of their condition: q.d. We are as bad as we can be, and there is no hope that God should receive us into favour. Or, else by way of interrogation, Is there no hope? May we not hold on still, and prosper? Must we desist from our ways? No, we will not; but we will go after other gods, and they shall defend us, Isa 57:10 Jer 18:12 . Or the desperateness of their resolution upon it: q.d. We care not since there is no remedy; you lose your labour to go about to reclaim us; which agrees with the next clause. Strangers, viz. idols, or strange gods.
After them will I go come what will of it.
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Poole: Jer 2:26 - -- Ashamed when he is found not ashamed of his sin of theft, but that he is found, that his shifts and blinds would serve him no longer, especially if h...
Ashamed when he is found not ashamed of his sin of theft, but that he is found, that his shifts and blinds would serve him no longer, especially if he have had the reputation of an honest man.
The house of Israel or families, the twelve tribes; a metonymy of the subject.
Ashamed or, confounded, in the passive voice; viz. when they shall be taken by Nebuchadnezzar, then their idols, which they went a whoring after, shall be discovered, and so put them to shame: in the active voice, their inability to help them, Jer 2:28 Isa 1:29 Hos 4:19 ; and their shame will be the more, because they had the repute of being my people.
Their kings, their princes, and their priests, and their prophets rulers and teachers, such as should have given better examples, and better instruction.
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Poole: Jer 2:27 - -- A stone idol; a metonymy of the matter, because idols are made of these materials, Dan 5:4 .
Brought me forth or, begotten me; so is the word used,...
A stone idol; a metonymy of the matter, because idols are made of these materials, Dan 5:4 .
Brought me forth or, begotten me; so is the word used, Gen 4:18 . This notes 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 . They that make them are like unto them, as senseless as they, Psa 115:8 .
They have turned their back unto me, and not their face they turn their faces wholly towards their idols: it notes the openness of their apostacy, Jer 7:24 .
Arise, and save us the usual language of God’ s children in distress, Psa 3:7 , and often elsewhere; then they found the vanity of their idols, and their own folly in relying on them, that cannot help or save, and rejecting me, Jer 2:31 , then they will come to me, Jud 10:10 Hos 5:15 ; the same thing with finding her in her month, Jer 2:24 ; herein abusing God’ s gentleness, making him their necessity, not their choice.
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Poole: Jer 2:28 - -- Thy gods thy idols, viz. gods of thy own making; what do they do for thee? Isa 31:3 .
Let them arise: either by way of challenge, let them produce ...
Thy gods thy idols, viz. gods of thy own making; what do they do for thee? Isa 31:3 .
Let them arise: either by way of challenge, let them produce their idols now, to help them, if they can, whom they call their fathers and their makers; or by way of scoff, as Elijah to Baal’ s priests: see Jud 10:14 . Besides, in this word arise there is an insinuation of their lifelessness and deadness, Isa 46:7 Jer 10:15 . And further, there may be a secret reply couched in it: q.d. In your trouble you will say to me, Arise, save us; now say so to them, and see if they can arise, and save you.
According to the number of thy cities are thy gods: q.d. Thou hast them near to thee, and enough of them, imitating the heathens, who had according to Varro above thirty thousand deities; no marvel if I, who am but one, be slighted, when thou hast in every city at least one, 2Ki 17:29-31 , and in Jerusalem one in every street, Jer 11:13 . It is a hard case if none nor all these thy tutelar gods can help thee: see Deu 32:37-39 . Make trial if any, or all of them together, can help thee.
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Poole: Jer 2:29 - -- Wherefore will ye plead with me? ye all: q.d. You are all at my mercy, why will you contend? all this that I charge you with is clear and evident, an...
Wherefore will ye plead with me? ye all: q.d. You are all at my mercy, why will you contend? all this that I charge you with is clear and evident, and all makes against you, Jer 2:23,34 . Wherefore do you expostulate, and put me to my proofs? This they were good at, Jer 16:10 . There is nothing that you can justly reply, Jer 2:19 .
Ye all have transgressed against me i.e. some of all sorts; there is not any one sort of you innocent.
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Poole: Jer 2:30 - -- Your children either your posterity, that you breed up like yourselves; or rather, your inhabitants in every city, they being frequently called the c...
Your children either your posterity, that you breed up like yourselves; or rather, your inhabitants in every city, they being frequently called the children of such a city, or such a place: children of Seir , 2Ch 25:14 , children , of the province, Ezr 2:1 , and children of thy people , Lev 19:18 , and abundance more the like; and thus it is comprehensive both of parents and children.
Correction i.e. The fruit of correction, viz. instruction. The same word is rendered correction , Pro 23:13 , which signifies instruction , Pro 5:12 , and in other places; and so to be taken here: it notes their refractoriness, that though they were corrected, yet they would not be instructed; though God did smite them, yet the rod prevailed as little with them as the word.
Your own sword hath devoured your prophets either the sword that I have sent to destroy you hath destroyed your false prophets together with you, Hos 4:5 , and so it is both a prophecy and a threatening; or rather, you have been so far from receiving counsel and instruction, that you have, by the sword, and other ways of destruction, (which is to be understood by the sword,) murdered those that I sent to reprove your follies in the days of Asa, Joash, Manasseh, &c., Neh 9:26 . See Mat 23:34,35 .
Devoured or, eaten up; a metaphor. Hence we read of the edge of the sword , which both in Hebrew and Greek is called the mouth of the sword , Jer 21:7 Luk 21:24 . Like a destroying lion ; without respect or pity; with all manner of savage usage; see Psa 7:2 ; laying aside all humanity.
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Poole: Jer 2:31 - -- O generation or, O ye men of this generation, a note of admiration; or rather, O generation, a note of compellation: it is to you I speak,
see ye th...
O generation or, O ye men of this generation, a note of admiration; or rather, O generation, a note of compellation: it is to you I speak,
see ye the word of the Lord i.e. look well to it, consider it; as the rod is to teach, and therefore ought to be heard, Mic 6:9 , so the word is to be considered of, and therefore ought to be looked into, Jer 2:19 . He speaketh here not so much of the doctrine of the word as of the thing itself: q.d. You shall see the thing with your eyes, because you give the doctrine the hearing only, as we use to say, i.e. your ears are shut against it.
Have I been a wilderness? here God challengeth them again to tell him what unkindness he had showed them, as before, Jer 2:5 . Have I been like the wilderness of Arabia? have not I accommodated you with all necessaries at all times? Deu 32:13,14 Eze 34:13-15 ; nay, in the wilderness itself I was not a wilderness unto you: an account whereof Nehemiah gives, Neh 9:15-23 . And you have the story of it Ps 78 .
A land of darkness: divers interpreters derive this word from a different root, and accordingly render the sense variously. Some from a root that signifies to fade or fall , as a land where fruits fall off before they be ripe, bringing nothing to perfection; and so Tremelius and Junius translate it, Isa 28:1,4 : q.d. Have you found me to fail your expectations in any thing that I have promised you? Jos 21:45 23:14 . Others derive it from a word that signifies late, as a land that brings forth its fruit late in the year, which either ripeneth not, or ripeneth unkindly: q.d. Have you found me backward in any thing to do you good? have I not fed you to the full? Others from darkness , properly thick darkness, Exo 10:22 Joe 2:2 . And it is the more significant, because Jah , the name of God, is added to it; q.d. the darkness of God ; as a sleep of God, for a deep sleep , 1Sa 26:12 ; flame of God, for a vehement flame , Son 8:6 ; as if it were a land uninhabitable, because of the total want of light: q.d. 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? as this notion of darkness may import, Isa 8:22 Lam 3:2 . Hence the LXX. express it by a land bringing forth thorns . Or this expression, a land of darkness , may be put by apposition to the former.
Say i.e. in their heart.
We are lords words of pride and boasting: God had endeavoured to make them sensible that all their happiness they owed to him, and now, q.d. you rule as lords without us; see 1Co 4:8 ; now you cast me off: or rather, We are well enough established in our government by foreign aids, and compacts with the Egyptians, and Assyrians, &c., and have rulers of our own; we have no such great need of thee. Hence the LXX. render it in the passive voice, We will not be ruled; which agrees with the text words of the verse, Deu 32:15,16 . Something of this appeared in Uzziah, 2Ch 26:15,16 , and Hezekiah, 2Ch 32:25 ; neither was David wholly clear, Psa 30:6 .
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Poole: Jer 2:32 - -- Can a maid forget her ornaments? how seldom is it, and how unlikely, that a maid should forget her ornaments!
Or a bride her attire? whether it bel...
Can a maid forget her ornaments? how seldom is it, and how unlikely, that a maid should forget her ornaments!
Or a bride her attire? whether it belongs to the head, or the breast, or arms, whether bracelets or jewels, wherever worn, is not worth the disputing; but understand those rich jewels which the bridegroom was wont to present his bride with, partly for a general obligation, and partly of particular signification, and all of them ornamental, whatever may render her amiable in the eyes of her bridegroom; virgins, and especially brides, will not usually neglect any thing that may make them comely.
Have forgotten me viz. in the neglect of my worship; me, who was not only their defence, but their glory, Jer 2:11 , &c., that for which other nations honoured them, Psa 148:14 Eze 16:10-14 .
Days without number i.e. for a long time past, time out of mind, or, as the Hebrew, days of which there is no number.
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Poole: Jer 2:33 - -- Why trimmest or deckest , Eze 23:40 , thinking thereby to entice others to thy help? thus is the word used, Jer 4:30 . Or, Why dost thou use so much...
Why trimmest or deckest , Eze 23:40 , thinking thereby to entice others to thy help? thus is the word used, Jer 4:30 . Or, Why dost thou use so much art and skill, and take so much pains, to go and send here and there to contract a friendship with foreign people, and to bring them to thy embraces, Isa 57:9,10 , or thinking to set a good face or gloss upon the matter, and excuse thyself, as if thou couldst delude God, whereas all thou dost is to get acquaintance with other idolaters?
To seek love i.e. to commit filthiness with thy idols; a synecdoche of the kind.
Therefore hast thou also taught the wicked ones i.e. thou art become so vile, that even strumpets themselves may come to learn of thee, 2Ch 33:9 . Or by thy example; nations that have been vile enough of themselves, by thy example are become more vile.
Thy ways i.e. thy actions; a metaphor.
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Poole: Jer 2:34 - -- In thy skirts viz. of thy garments; a synecdoche of the kind; the tokens of thy cruelty may be seen openly there: or, in thy hands , as the LXX.: or...
In thy skirts viz. of thy garments; a synecdoche of the kind; the tokens of thy cruelty may be seen openly there: or, in thy hands , as the LXX.: or a metaphor from birds of rapine, whose wings are bloody with their prey; but not so well. Is found the blood of the souls of the poor innocents , i.e. in thee is found the murders expressed here by blood of innocent persons, meant here by souls, comprising both their sacrificing of their little children to their idols, Psa 106:37,38 Eze 16:20,21,36 , murdering souls as well as bodies; and also all those cruelties, oppressions, and murders that they executed upon poor innocent persons, which were not a few in what Manasseh did, 2Ki 21:16 Eze 7:23 9:9 , and in special the prophets, Jer 2:30 , that came in God’ s name to reclaim them; which notes their desperate malice as well as cruelty, to slay their physicians.
By secret search Heb. by digging ; as if the earth had covered the blood, or as if they had committed their wickedness in some obscure places.
But upon all these upon thy garments openly enough, as exposed to public view. There needs no such strict scrutiny to be made.
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Poole: Jer 2:35 - -- Yet thou sayest or interrogatively, Darest thou say? hast thou the impudence to affirm it?
Innocent clear of this whole charge. Shall turn ; shall...
Yet thou sayest or interrogatively, Darest thou say? hast thou the impudence to affirm it?
Innocent clear of this whole charge. Shall turn ; shall not break out against me, Isa 5:25 .
I will plead with thee I will proceed in my judgment against thee, Jer 2:9 Jer 25:31 . Or it is a soft expression, wherein he shows that he will not act like a tyrant, carried on rashly and furiously; but as a judge, regularly and righteously, Eze 20:35 ; and it shows that he will convince her.
Because thou sayest, I have not sinned because thou dost justify thyself, as if I had no cause to be angry with thee. God is not angry with her so much because she hath sinned, as because she will not acknowledge her sin.
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Poole: Jer 2:36 - -- Thy way i.e. thy actions; a metaphor. See Poole "Jer 2:33" . Why dost thou shuffle thus with me, to seek auxiliaries any where, rather than to cleav...
Thy way i.e. thy actions; a metaphor. See Poole "Jer 2:33" . Why dost thou shuffle thus with me, to seek auxiliaries any where, rather than to cleave to me, Jer 2:18 ; See Poole "Isa 52:9" , See Poole "Isa 52:10" . Or, like strumpets, whose love is never fixed, but sometimes set on one, sometimes on another.
Thou also shalt be ashamed of Egypt: thou hast run to Assyria, and then to Egypt, and they shall both make thee ashamed by their disappointing of thee; thou shalt be ashamed of Egypt, as others have been, Isa 36:6 . Or rather, Egypt shall stand thee in no more stead than Assyria hath done, Isa 30:3,5 . And how Tilgath-pilneser served them, see 2Ch 28:20 . Before Hezekiah’ s time the Jews made a league with the Assyrians against the Syrians and the Israelites, and then against the Egyptians; neither prospered. He tells them they must expect no better success from Egypt.
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Poole: Jer 2:37 - -- Thou shalt go forth from him: some apply it to the sad and ineffectual return of the ambassadors, being disappointed in their expectation from the ki...
Thou shalt go forth from him: some apply it to the sad and ineffectual return of the ambassadors, being disappointed in their expectation from the king of Egypt; but rather, All the help thou canst procure from abroad shall not prevent thy captivity, but from hence thou shalt go.
Thine hands upon thine head a usual posture of sadness and mourning, 2Sa 13:19 , suited here to her going into captivity.
Rejected thy confidences refused to give success unto them, 2Ch 16:7 . Or, rejected thee for thy confidences; or, he disapproves thy confidences, viz. all thy refuges which thou seekest out of God.
Thou shalt not prosper in them viz. in thy refuges and dependencies.
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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.
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Poole: Jer 3:2 - -- Lift up thine eyes do but look, and consider whether I do charge thee wrongfully or no.
Unto the high places: he directs her to the places of her w...
Lift up thine eyes do but look, and consider whether I do charge thee wrongfully or no.
Unto the high places: he directs her to the places of her whoredoms and idolatries, called
high places being principally upon hills, 2Ki 21:3 , and divers other places, though sometimes in valleys, Jer 2:23 ; which notes also her impudence, that whereas other whores affected privacy, she should be filthy in the open view.
And see where thou hast not been lien with thy filthiness has been every where so frequent, that thou canst scarce show a place that hath been free from thy pollutions, Jer 3:6,13 , where there are not the footsteps of thy fornications and idolatries.
In the ways viz. to allure passengers, see Eze 16:24,25 and waiting for them, viz. thy associates; not being drawn by others’ allurements, but thine own lasciviousness.
As the Arabian an allusion to the manner and custom of that people, either lying in wait by the way for passengers, as robbers use to do, Hos 6:9 , they being noted for robbers. Or rather, in way of traffic, that were wont to pitch their tents by the way-sides, that they might meet with their customers to trade, as they passed along; very properly pointing out the practice of harlots. See Pro 7:11,12 . Thy wickedness; not only thy idolatries, but all other thy wicked courses.
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Poole: Jer 3:3 - -- Therefore the showers have been withholden viz. by me, according to my threatening, Lev 26:19 Deu 28:23,24 , i.e. a drought sent upon thee, either as...
Therefore the showers have been withholden viz. by me, according to my threatening, Lev 26:19 Deu 28:23,24 , i.e. a drought sent upon thee, either as a punishment of thy wickedness; thus public sins bring public judgments; or as an aggravation of it; and then it must be read though , as it often is; q. d. notwithstanding the great drought; and this the last words of the verse seem to favour. There hath been no latter rain : this, added to showers before mentioned, seems to imply there had been no former nor latter rain, the former for the springing of the corn, the latter for the plumping and ripening it; this coming a little before harvest.
Thou hadst a whore’ s forehead: for all this, thou didst still remain impudent and obstinate, as ashamed of nothing, Jer 6:15 ; thus proverbially expressed, because shame doth first and mostly appear in the forehead. Thus antichrist’ s impudence is expressed, Rev 17:5 . And some ancient heretics were called effrontes .
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Poole: Jer 3:4 - -- Wilt thou not from this time viz. that I have withholden showers? Some refer this,
1. To the time to come; Wilt thou not yet be wise, and for the fu...
Wilt thou not from this time viz. that I have withholden showers? Some refer this,
1. To the time to come; Wilt thou not yet be wise, and for the future seek to me, having found all thy other ways successless? Isa 9:13 Jer 8:14 .
2. To the time present; How canst thou challenge me for my present severity, and continuing it towards thee, when thou still retainest thy filthiness, thy whore’ s forehead, Jer 3:3 . Thou still continuest worshipping idols, and yet fanciest thyself faithful to me.
3. To the time past, i.e. Hast thou not all along pretended kindness to me, and as if thou hadst walked close with me? 2Ki 17:32,33 Eze 23:39 .
Cry unto me, My father wilt thou not as a child call upon, me, whom thou hast thus greatly provoked, and own me as a father? Jer 3:19 ; for such have I been to thee, Psa 103:13 Mal 1:6 3:17 .
The guide of my youth either on whom I have depended, as being brought up by thee; or the submissive expression of a wife seeking to be reconciled to her husband, that God would be to her as he had been in the days of her youth; such a case as is expressed 1Co 7:11 ; words of flattery usual with hypocrites: or rather, being married to thee in thy youth; a periphrasis for husband, Pro 2:17 ; which argues great tenderness towards her, Jer 3:2 . Thus the tenderness of this relation is expressed Mal 2:14 , and so God is said to espouse them to himself Eze 16:8 .
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Poole: Jer 3:5 - -- Will he reserve his anger for ever? here being a defect of the noun, the Jews supply it with thy sin , Isa 43:25 , but the most and best, as we do, ...
Will he reserve his anger for ever? here being a defect of the noun, the Jews supply it with thy sin , Isa 43:25 , but the most and best, as we do,
his anger Compare it with Jer 3:12 Psa 103:9 Nah 1:2 , in which texts there is a defect of the same word. This may seem to be the words of the prophet, and so the connexion is easy with the foregoing words: q.d. If thou wouldst do so, try me now, &c.: would he reserve his anger? would he not be reconciled? but thou hast taken quite another course. Or they may be the words of God, as it were, teaching his people how they should accost him: God is more forward and earnest for reconciliation than sinners themselves.
The end the same with the former for ever.
Behold, thou hast spoken and done evil things as thou couldest: God’ s challenge of the people, charging them, either with their resolved wickedness, that they had made good all their evil words by their evil actions, they had even done as they said; or rather, with their hypocrisy: q.d. Notwithstanding all thy former promises, yet thou persistest still in thy lewdness and obstinacy, Isa 58:2 Hos 7:14 .
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Poole: Jer 3:6 - -- The Lord said also, or again showing that here begins a new sermon, in which the prophet from God,
1. Declares Israel’ s apostacy, and how it f...
The Lord said also, or again showing that here begins a new sermon, in which the prophet from God,
1. Declares Israel’ s apostacy, and how it fared with them for it.
2. Aggravates Judah’ s sin for not taking warning.
3. Issues forth an invitation of them both to repentance, with a promise of acceptation, and reuniting them under the Messiah.
4. Relates the compliance of the faithful among them with this invitation.
Unto me viz. by revelation; for he speaks of things that Israel had done when they were carried away by the king of Assyria, 2Ki 17:5-13 , long before Jeremiah was born; therefore he saith, Hast thou not seen, i.e. considered, wherefore God gave her a bill of divorce?
In the days of Josiah the king when he would have purged the land, and restored the pure worship of God.
Hast thou seen that which backsliding Israel hath done viz. the ten tribes, who fell off from Judah, and set up a distinct kingdom of their own under Jeroboam? what they did, viz. in their idolatries? expressed in the next words, and Jer 2:20 ; see there; when they openly apostatized from God, and that with one common consent, insomuch that all their kings proved wicked and idolatrous; and possibly it may look as far back as Solomon’ s defection, 1Ki 11:4 , &c., which may now come in remembrance.
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Poole: Jer 3:7 - -- Turn thou unto me viz. by repentance, Act 3:19 . Although she had been so vile and abominable, yet the Lord waited in expectation of her return.
Her...
Turn thou unto me viz. by repentance, Act 3:19 . Although she had been so vile and abominable, yet the Lord waited in expectation of her return.
Her treacherous sister Judah: Benjamin is also here comprised, but Judah being the chief is only named, these two abiding together after the other ten revolted to Jeroboam; called Israel’ s
sister because they were all descended from the patriarch Jacob, Eze 16:46 ; compare Eze 23:2,4 ; and treacherous, or the treacherous one , because of her frequent revolts, 2Ch 21:6 , &c.; 2Ch 24:17,18 , and many other times, and after as frequent renewed covenants and promises, both in conjunction with the rest of the tribes, Deu 5:2,3,23 , &c.; Deu 29:10-12 , &c., and afterwards, 2Ch 13:9,10 , &c.; 2Ch 15:12 , &c.; 2Ch 23 16 29:10 . Saw it , i.e. they were not strangers to it, but knew it, as the word is, Psa 40:3 . They could not but know how I had dealt with Israel.
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Poole: Jer 3:8 - -- I saw: q.d. That which others discern not I saw well enough, viz. both her hypocrisy and dissimulation, and her incorrigibleness notwithstanding what...
I saw: q.d. That which others discern not I saw well enough, viz. both her hypocrisy and dissimulation, and her incorrigibleness notwithstanding what had befallen Israel, whose correction should have been her instruction; thus God speaks of the notice he took of both, Jer 23:13,14 . Israel is said to be backsliding, but Judah
treacherous because she retained the worship of God, though she did often privately and closely embrace idols. and sometimes publicly, under Manasseh, and Ahaz, and other wicked kings:
When for all the causes or notwithstanding all the ground and reason I had to deal so with Israel in regard of her adulteries, as to put her away.
Given her a bill of divorce delivered her up into the hands of the Assyrian, where God took from her the title of being his church, 2Ki 17:5,6 , &c., which he calls here a bill of divorce; not such a one as the Jews were allowed to give upon every slight ground, (for such a one God denies that ever he gave them, and challengeth them to produce it, Isa 1:1 ) but upon just and great occasion, viz. her playing the adulteress against him in her idolatries. Feared not, i.e. was neither afraid of giving me offence, nor of the like punishment. But went and played the harlot also; although she had seen the judgment of God executed upon Israel before her eyes, which made it the more stupendous, that she would take no warning by her sister’ s sufferings, Pro 28:14 , yet she went on still, Eze 23:11,12 , &c.
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Poole: Jer 3:9 - -- The lightness of her whoredom whether of Judah’ s or of Israel’ s is not agreed upon, but the right applying of it doth depend much upon th...
The lightness of her whoredom whether of Judah’ s or of Israel’ s is not agreed upon, but the right applying of it doth depend much upon the right acceptation of the word lightness , which comes from a Hebrew word that signifies voice ; and so it may refer either to the noise or fame of it, that would fly abroad, and thus it is applied to Israel, i.e. though Israel’ s whoredoms were never so much blazed abroad, yet Judah regarded it not. Or it may be taken for the heinousness of it, a crying voice, as Gen 4:10 , and so by an hypallage, her whoredoms of fame , or notorious whoredoms; and is not ill expressed here by
lightness of her whoredom noting her impudence in it, as we use to term a common harlot a light woman; and thus it is applied to Judah, both the foregoing and following words seeming to be an aggravation of Judah’ s refractoriness.
Defiled the land brought the whole land under the imputation of filthiness.
With stones and with stocks i.e. with idols made of stone and wood, a metonymy of the matter, to note the baseness of the fact.
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Poole: Jer 3:10 - -- Though God saw what she did, and though she saw the shameful idolatry of Israel, and what she had suffered, yet she was not warned; see Jer 3:8 ; bu...
Though God saw what she did, and though she saw the shameful idolatry of Israel, and what she had suffered, yet she was not warned; see Jer 3:8 ; but fell to idolatry under Manasseh, who undid what Hezekiah had done, 2Ch 33:3 , though under fair pretences she dissembled with God in the days of Josiah, 2Ch 34:32,33 , as appeared by her sudden revolt, viz. in less than three months after Josiah’ s death, 2Ki 23:31,32 .
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Poole: Jer 3:11 - -- Was less vile, hath more to say for herself; Judah’ s sin being greatly aggravated compared with Israel, Eze 16:51 23:11 . See Luk 18:14 . For ...
Was less vile, hath more to say for herself; Judah’ s sin being greatly aggravated compared with Israel, Eze 16:51 23:11 . See Luk 18:14 . For though Israel’ s sins were more, and their idolatry continued, yet in Judah it was more heinous,
1. Because of their unruly headstrongness, that broke the reins and restraint which their external worship ought to have had upon them.
2. Because of their stupid security in not being warned by the judgments that they had seen befall Israel for the very same things.
3. Because of their intolerable pride, boasting that their state was still unshaken.
4. Because of their gross perfidiousness in making promises, and breaking them, which Israel did not, because she brought not herself under such solemn and frequent obligations: see Jer 3:7 . LastLy, Because they were a great deal more zealous in their idolatries than Israel was, viz. under Manasseh, when they slew all the prophets of the Lord.
Haydock: Jer 2:20 - -- Thou. Septuagint. Yet Hebrew and Chaldean have, "I have permissively broken," or foretold this infidelity.
Thou. Septuagint. Yet Hebrew and Chaldean have, "I have permissively broken," or foretold this infidelity.
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Haydock: Jer 2:21 - -- Chosen. Hebrew, Sorek, Judges xvi. 4., and Isaias v. 2., and xvi. 8. (Calmet) ---
God created all things good, planted his Church in justice, and ...
Chosen. Hebrew, Sorek, Judges xvi. 4., and Isaias v. 2., and xvi. 8. (Calmet) ---
God created all things good, planted his Church in justice, and no evil proceeds from Him. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Jer 2:22 - -- Borith. An herb used to clean clothes, and take out spots and dirt, (Challoner) like kali, soda, (Calmet) or soap. (Langius.) ---
Protestants, "...
Borith. An herb used to clean clothes, and take out spots and dirt, (Challoner) like kali, soda, (Calmet) or soap. (Langius.) ---
Protestants, "and take thee much soap." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 2:23 - -- Valley of Hinnom, under the very walls of Jerusalem. (Calmet) ---
Runner. Hebrew, "dromedary," which takes its name from its swiftness. (Haydock...
Valley of Hinnom, under the very walls of Jerusalem. (Calmet) ---
Runner. Hebrew, "dromedary," which takes its name from its swiftness. (Haydock) ---
The female camel continues all day with the male, and cannot be approached. (Aristotle; Pliny, [Natural History?] x. 63.) ---
Juda is represented as no less libidinous. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 2:24 - -- Away. The female may easily be found by the poisonous hippo-manes. (Georg. iii.) ---
Thus Jerusalem is an impudent prostitute. (Haydock)
Away. The female may easily be found by the poisonous hippo-manes. (Georg. iii.) ---
Thus Jerusalem is an impudent prostitute. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 2:25 - -- Foot, and the parts which modesty covers. My exhortations are slighted. (Calmet) ---
Despair opens the door to every sort of impurity, Ephesians i...
Foot, and the parts which modesty covers. My exhortations are slighted. (Calmet) ---
Despair opens the door to every sort of impurity, Ephesians iv. 19. (Haydock)
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Cities. All were abandoned, Ezechiel xvi. 24., and Osee x. 1.
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Haydock: Jer 2:30 - -- Prophets; Zacharias, (2 Paralipomenon xxiv. 21.) Isaias, &c., Matthew xxiii. 34. (Calmet) ---
Punishment is designed by God to cause people to repe...
Prophets; Zacharias, (2 Paralipomenon xxiv. 21.) Isaias, &c., Matthew xxiii. 34. (Calmet) ---
Punishment is designed by God to cause people to repent. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Jer 2:31 - -- See, or hear. The sword seems to be animated. (Calmet) ---
Lateward. Hebrew, "darksome land." Have I not heaped blessings on my people? ---
...
See, or hear. The sword seems to be animated. (Calmet) ---
Lateward. Hebrew, "darksome land." Have I not heaped blessings on my people? ---
Revolted. Protestants, "Lords." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 2:33 - -- Thou who. Hebrew, "Therefore have I." (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways." (Haydock) ---
Thou hast opened...
Thou who. Hebrew, "Therefore have I." (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways." (Haydock) ---
Thou hast opened a school of vice.
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Haydock: Jer 2:34 - -- Innocent children, immolated to Moloc, or people murdered, whose blood thou hast not concealed, 4 Kings xxi. 16.
Innocent children, immolated to Moloc, or people murdered, whose blood thou hast not concealed, 4 Kings xxi. 16.
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Haydock: Jer 2:37 - -- Head, like the violated Thamar, 2 Kings xiii. 19. The king of Egypt was routed, when coming to assist Sedecias, chap. xxxvii. 3, 10. (Calmet)
Head, like the violated Thamar, 2 Kings xiii. 19. The king of Egypt was routed, when coming to assist Sedecias, chap. xxxvii. 3, 10. (Calmet)
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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.
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Haydock: Jer 3:2 - -- High. Literally, "straight forward." (Haydock) ---
On the hills, idolatry and immorality prevailed. ---
Ways, where harlots used to sit, Genesis...
High. Literally, "straight forward." (Haydock) ---
On the hills, idolatry and immorality prevailed. ---
Ways, where harlots used to sit, Genesis xxxviii. 14., and Proverbs vii. 9., and xxxiii. 27. ---
Robber; "Arab," (Chaldean, &c.) or "crow." (Septuagint) (Calmet) ---
No sin is so great as to be irremissible to the true penitent. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Jer 3:3 - -- Rain; about November, Deuteronomy xi. 14. This drought happened under Josias, (chap. v. 24.) and was different from that specified, chap. viii. 13.,...
Rain; about November, Deuteronomy xi. 14. This drought happened under Josias, (chap. v. 24.) and was different from that specified, chap. viii. 13., and xiv. 1.
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Guide. Husband, Proverbs ii. 16., and Joel i. 8.
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Haydock: Jer 3:5 - -- Wilt. Hebrew, "will he," &c. The faithless people will not use this language, but do all the evil possible.
Wilt. Hebrew, "will he," &c. The faithless people will not use this language, but do all the evil possible.
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Haydock: Jer 3:6 - -- Days, before the 18th year. God now pronounces sentence (Calmet) on all. (Haydock) ---
Rebellious, a faithless wife. The kingdom of Israel gave ...
Days, before the 18th year. God now pronounces sentence (Calmet) on all. (Haydock) ---
Rebellious, a faithless wife. The kingdom of Israel gave way to idolatry first. But the people were less favoured than Juda, which had many prophets and good kings, the temple, &c. Moreover, the misfortunes of Israel did not open the eyes of their brethren. (Calmet) ---
Both the ten tribes, and the two tribes (Worthington) which adhered to the line of David, prevaricated. (Haydock)
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Falsehood. Their reform was only apparent, under Joas, &c. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 3:11 - -- Soul, and appeared comparatively innocent, ver. 6., and Ezechiel xvi. 51. (St. Jerome) ---
Yet neither of them was excusable. (Worthington)
Soul, and appeared comparatively innocent, ver. 6., and Ezechiel xvi. 51. (St. Jerome) ---
Yet neither of them was excusable. (Worthington)
Gill: Jer 2:20 - -- For of old time I have broken thy yoke, and burst thy bands,.... The yoke of the people, as the Targum expresses it, that was upon their necks, and th...
For of old time I have broken thy yoke, and burst thy bands,.... The yoke of the people, as the Targum expresses it, that was upon their necks, and the bands in which they were bound by them; referring to the deliverance of them of old from Egyptian bondage by the hands of Moses, and out of their several captivities among their neighbours by the means of the judges, and in their time; though the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "of old thou hast broken my yoke, and burst my bands"; or "thy yoke", and "thy bands", as the Septuagint and Arabic versions; the yoke of the law that the Lord put upon them, and the bands of statutes and ordinances which he enjoined them; but the former sense is best:
and thou saidst, I will not transgress; here is a double reading; the Cetib or writing is
"and ye said, we will not add any more to transgress thy word;''
and by Jarchi and Kimchi, who interpret it of transgressing the words and commands of God; both have one and the same sense. For whether it be read, "I will not serve"; the meaning is, as Kimchi observes, "I will not serve idols"; or no other god, as the Syriac version: or whether, "I will not transgress"; that is, the command of the Lord, by serving other gods. Hillerus p reconciles the writing and reading after this manner, rendering
upon every high hill, and under every green tree, thou wanderest, playing the harlot; that is, committing spiritual whoredom or idolatry with idols, set on high hills and mountains, and under green trees, groves, and shady places; going from one idol to another, as harlots go from one stew to another; or as whoremongers go from harlot to harlot.
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Gill: Jer 2:21 - -- Yet I had planted thee a noble vine, wholly a right seed,.... It is usual to compare the people of the Jews to a vineyard, and to vines; and their set...
Yet I had planted thee a noble vine, wholly a right seed,.... It is usual to compare the people of the Jews to a vineyard, and to vines; and their settlement in the land of Canaan to the planting of vines in a vineyard; see Isa 5:1. Kimchi says this is spoken concerning Abraham; no doubt respect is had to the Jewish fathers, such as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the twelve patriarchs, Moses, Joshua, and Caleb, and the like; who, having the true and right seed of grace in them, became like choice and noble vines, and brought forth much fruit, and were deserving of imitation by their posterity:
how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me? like a vine that grows in the woods, and brings forth wild grapes; so these, their sons, degenerating in practice from their fathers, became corrupt in themselves, and unprofitable to God. The Targum of the whole is,
"I set you before me as the plant of a choice vine, all of you doing truth; but how are you changed before me in your corrupt works? ye have declined from my worship, ye are become as a vine in which there is no profit.''
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Gill: Jer 2:22 - -- For though thou wash thee with nitre,.... The word נתר, "nitre", is only used in this place and in Pro 25:20 and it is hard to say what it is. Kimc...
For though thou wash thee with nitre,.... The word
and take thee much soap. The Septuagint render it, "herb"; and the Vulgate Latin version, "the herb borith"; which is the Hebrew word here used; and about the sense of which there is some difficulty. Kimchi and Ben Melech say some take it to be the same with what is called "soap"; so Jarchi; and others, that it is an herb with which they wash, the same that is called fullers' herb; but whether it is soap, or fullers' herb, or fullers' earth, as others, it is certain it is something fullers used in cleaning garments, as appear from Mal 3:2, where the same word is used, and fullers made mention of as using what is signified by it. It has its name from
yet thine iniquity is marked before me, saith the Lord God; or, "will retain its spots" x these remain; the filth is not washed away; the iniquity is not hid and covered; it appears very plain and manifest;
yea, shines like gold; or, "is gilded" y; as the word used signifies. It is of too deep a die to be removed by such external things; nothing but the blood of Christ can cleanse from sin, take away its filth, removes its guilt, and cover it out of the sight of God, so that it can be seen no more. The Targum is,
"for if you think to be cleansed from your sins, as they cleanse with nitre, or make white with "borith", or soap; lo, as the mark of a spot which is not clean, so are your sins multiplied before me, saith the Lord God.''
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Gill: Jer 2:23 - -- How canst thou say, I am not polluted,.... No man can say this; for all are defiled with sin; but this was the cast and complexion of these people in ...
How canst thou say, I am not polluted,.... No man can say this; for all are defiled with sin; but this was the cast and complexion of these people in all ages; they were a generation of men that were pure in their own eyes, but were not cleansed from their filthiness; they fancied that their ceremonial washings and sacrifices cleansed them from moral impurities, when those only sanctified to the purifying of the flesh; still their iniquity remained marked before the Lord; they acted the part of the adulterous woman in Pro 30:20 to whom they are compared in the context; and, therefore, as wondering at their impudence, they having a whore's forehead, this question is put, how and with what face they could affirm this, and what follows:
I have not gone after Baalim? or, "the Baalim"; the idols of the people, as the Targum interprets it; for there were many Baals, as Baalzephon, Baalpeor, Baalzebub, and others:
see thy way in the valley; where idols were set up and worshipped; or through which the way lay, as Kimchi observes, to the hills and mountains where idolatry was frequently committed; perhaps no particular valley is meant, but any in which idols were worshipped, or which they passed through to the worshipping of them; though the Targum interprets it of the valley in which they dwelt, over against Baalpeor, so Jarchi and Abarbinel, when they worshipped that idol; and seems to design the valley of Shittim, Num 25:1, but rather, if any particular valley is intended, the valley of Hinnom seems to bid fair for it; and to this it may be the Septuagint version has respect, rendering it
know what thou hast done; in the valley, especially in the valley of Hinnom, where they caused their children to pass through the fire to Molech:
thou art a swift dromedary. The Targum, Jarchi, and Kimchi, interpret it a young camel; and so the word in the Arabic language signifies; and the epithet "swift" better agrees with that than with the dromedary. Curtius z makes mention of dromedary camels of great swiftness; but it may be this is to be understood, not of its swiftness in running, but of its impetuous lust, as Calvin observes; and, indeed, each of these creatures are very libidinous; and therefore these people are compared to them; See Gill on Mic 1:13, it follows:
traversing her ways; running about here and there after the male, burning with lust, sometimes one way, and sometimes another; and so these people sometimes run after one idol, and sometimes another, and followed a multitude of them. The Targum renders it, "which corrupts or depraves her ways". De Dieu observes, that the word
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Gill: Jer 2:24 - -- A wild ass used to the wilderness,.... That is, one that has been brought up in the wilderness, and has been accustomed to live, and run, and range ab...
A wild ass used to the wilderness,.... That is, one that has been brought up in the wilderness, and has been accustomed to live, and run, and range about there; as men in general are compared to this creature for its ignorance, stupidity, folly, stubbornness, and unteachableness, Job 11:12, so the Jewish people are represented as like unto it, for its wantonness and lust:
that snuffeth up the wind at her pleasure; draws it in at her nostrils, and snuffs it up; or opens her mouth, and takes it in with her breath; drinks it in, and swallows it up at her pleasure: or, "with the desire of her soul" c; it being grateful and delightful to her. Some read this clause in connection with
"drinking the wind as a dragon;''
and so Jarchi, who compares it with Jer 14:6 "they snuffed up the wind like dragons"; and so the Syriac version, "thou hast drawn up the wind like a wild dog"; others render it, "gathering the wind of her occasion"; or, "of her meeting" d; taking it in, and snuffing it up, as she occasionally met with it in running. The Vulgate Latin version is, "she drew the wind of her love"; it is reported of the wild ass, that it can smell its mate afar off, and, by the wind it snuffs, knows where it is; for which purpose it runs up the hills and mountains to get the scent, which, when it has, its lust is so violent that there is no stopping of it till it comes to the place where its mate is: wherefore it follows,
in her occasion who can turn her away? when this violent fit is upon her, there is no turning her away from pursuing the enjoyment of it; which is expressive of the eager desire of the Jews after the worshipping of idols, how bent upon it, and not to be reclaimed from it:
all they that seek her will not weary themselves; knowing that they can not overtake her, or stop her in her career, or hinder her gratification of her lust. This may be understood either of those who sought to commit spiritual adultery or idolatry with the Jews, they need not weary themselves, being easy to be found by them; or of the prophets that sought to reclaim them, who, perceiving how stubborn, and untractable, and irreclaimable they were, would not weary themselves with their admonitions and reproofs, seeing they were in vain:
in her month they shall find her; not that this creature sleeps one whole month in a year, as Jarchi dreams, when it may be easily taken; but the sense is, that when it is with young, and in the last month, and so is heavy with its burden, it may easily be found and taken; so when the people of Israel should have filled up the measure of their iniquity, and the judgment of God was fallen and lay heavy upon them; then those that sought to return them from their evil ways might find them, and hope to succeed in reclaiming them, and bringing them to repentance; agreeably the Septuagint render it, "in her humiliation"; when chastised and humbled by the Lord for her sins. This is not to be understood of the month of Ab, in which Jerusalem was destroyed, both by Nebuchadnezzar and Titus; in which month the Jews are sure to be found confessing their sins, and humbling themselves, as Kimchi, Abarbinel, and Ben Melech interpret it; nor of the new moon, as others; at everyone of which, those who sought to join with them in idolatrous practices might be sure to find them at them.
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Gill: Jer 2:25 - -- Withhold thy foot from being unshod,.... That it may not be unshod, be naked and bare. The sense is, either, as some, do not take long journeys into f...
Withhold thy foot from being unshod,.... That it may not be unshod, be naked and bare. The sense is, either, as some, do not take long journeys into foreign countries for help, as into Assyria and Egypt, whither they used to go barefoot; or wore out their shoes by their long journeys, and so returned without; or refrain from idolatry, as Jarchi interprets it, that thou mayest not go naked into captivity; or this is an euphemism, as others think, forbidding adulterous actions, showing the naked foot, the putting off of the shoes, in order to lie upon the bed, and prostitute herself to her lovers; and is to be understood of idolatry:
and thy throat from thirst; after wine, which excites lust; abstain from eager and burning lust after adulterous, that is, idolatrous practices; so the Targum,
"refrain thy feet from being joined with the people, and thy mouth from worshipping the idols of the people.''
The words are paraphrased in the Talmud e thus,
"withhold thyself from sinning, that thy foot may not become naked; (the gloss is, "when thou goest into captivity") refrain thy tongue from idle words, that thy throat may not thirst:''
this was said by the Lord, or by the prophets of the Lord sent unto them, to which the following is an answer:
but thou saidst, there is no hope; of ever being prevailed upon to relinquish those idolatrous practices, or of being received into the favour of God after such provocations: no; I will never refrain from them; I will not be persuaded to leave them:
for I have loved strangers; the strange gods of the nations:
and after them will I go; and worship them; so the Targum,
"I love to he joined to the people, and after the Worship of their idols will I go.''
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Gill: Jer 2:26 - -- As the thief is ashamed when be is found,.... Taken in the fact, or convicted of it; that is, as the Targum explains it, one that has been accounted f...
As the thief is ashamed when be is found,.... Taken in the fact, or convicted of it; that is, as the Targum explains it, one that has been accounted faithful, and is found a thief; for, otherwise, those who have lost their character, and are notorious for their thefts and robberies, are not ashamed when they are found out, taken, and convicted:
so is the house of Israel ashamed: of their idolatry, or ought to be; or "shall be", as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions render it; though not now, yet hereafter, sooner or later:
they, their kings, their princes, and their priests and their prophets; all being guilty; kings setting ill examples, and the people following them; the priests being priests of Baal, and the prophets false ones.
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Gill: Jer 2:27 - -- Saying to a stock,.... "To a tree" f; to a piece of wood; that is, to an image made of it; so the Targum,
"they say to an image of wood;''
what ...
Saying to a stock,.... "To a tree" f; to a piece of wood; that is, to an image made of it; so the Targum,
"they say to an image of wood;''
what follows:
thou art my father; ascribing that to the idol which belongs to God, who was their Father that made them, and upheld them, was the author of their beings, and the God of their mercies:
and to a stone; an image of stone:
thou hast brought me forth: into being; affirming it to be his former and maker; so the Targum,
"to that which is made of stone, thou hast created me:''
for they have turned their back unto me, and not their face; they turned their faces to images of wood and stone, and worshipped them; and they turned their backs upon the Lord, his worship and ordinances, and apostatized from him; which the Targum thus expresses,
"for they turned their backs on my worship, and did not put my fear before their faces:''
but in the time of their trouble; when any calamity befalls them, as famine, pestilence, sword, captivity, and the like:
they will say, arise, and save us; not that they will say so to their idols, but they will say so to the true God; for notwithstanding they worshipped idols in time of prosperity, forgetting God their Saviour; yet in adversity they are brought to their senses, and find that none but God can save them, and therefore apply to him; to which agrees the Targum,
"and in the time that evil comes upon them, they deny their idols, and confess before me, and say, have mercy on us, and save us.''
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Gill: Jer 2:28 - -- But where are thy gods that thou hast made thee?.... This is, or would be, the Lord's answer to them, what is become of your gods? why do not you appl...
But where are thy gods that thou hast made thee?.... This is, or would be, the Lord's answer to them, what is become of your gods? why do not you apply to them for help in time of trouble? the gods that you have chosen for yourselves and worshipped; the gods, not that made you, but whom you yourselves have made:
let them arise, if they can save thee in the time of thy trouble; call upon them to arise, those statues of wood and stone, those lifeless and senseless images; let them rise off their seats, and move out of their places, if they can, and see whether they can save in a time of trouble and distress; for there is enough of them, if numbers will do:
for according to the number of thy cities are thy gods, O Judah; in imitation of the Heathens, who had not only in every country, but in every city and town, a different god, the patron and tutelar deity of the place; see 2Ki 17:29. The Septuagint and Arabic versions "add, according to the number of the ways, or streets, of Jerusalem", they sacrificed to Baal; see Jer 11:13.
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Gill: Jer 2:29 - -- Wherefore will ye plead with me?.... Strive and contend, chide, murmur, and complain, when evil came upon them, as if the Lord dealt hardly with them,...
Wherefore will ye plead with me?.... Strive and contend, chide, murmur, and complain, when evil came upon them, as if the Lord dealt hardly with them, and as if they had never sinned against him; when their case would not bear to be brought into judgment and examined openly; what would they get by that but shame and disgrace?
ye all have transgressed against me, saith the Lord; high and low, rich and poor, great and small; men of all ranks, degrees, and character; kings, priests and prophets; and therefore ought not to contend with God, and charge him with injustice or unkindness, but themselves with folly and wickedness.
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Gill: Jer 2:30 - -- In vain have I smitten your children,.... Or, "for vanity" g; for vain speaking, for making vain oaths and vows; so it is explained in the Talmud h; b...
In vain have I smitten your children,.... Or, "for vanity" g; for vain speaking, for making vain oaths and vows; so it is explained in the Talmud h; but the sense is, that the rod of chastisement was used in vain; the afflictions that came upon them had no effect on them to amend and reform them; they were never the better for them:
they received no correction; or instruction by them; see Jer 5:3,
your own sword hath devoured your prophets; as Isaiah, Zechariah, and Uriah, who were sent to them to reprove and correct them, but they were so far from receiving their correction, that they put them to death; though Kimchi mentions it as the sense of his father, and which he approves of, that this is to be understood, not of the true prophets of the Lord, but of false prophets; wherefore it is said, "your prophets"; and they had no prophets but false prophets, whose prophecy was the cause of the destruction of souls, and this brought ruin upon the prophets themselves; and this sense of the words Jerom gives into; it follows:
like a destroying lion; that is, the sword of the Lord, according to the latter sense; the judgments of God, by which the people fall, and their false prophets with them, were like a lion that destroys and devours all that come near it. The Septuagint and Arabic versions add,
and ye were not afraid; which confirms what was before said, that chastisement and correction were in vain.
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Gill: Jer 2:31 - -- O generation, see ye the word of the Lord,.... Take notice of it, consider it; or, hear it, as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions. Jarchi and...
O generation, see ye the word of the Lord,.... Take notice of it, consider it; or, hear it, as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions. Jarchi and Kimchi think i the pot of manna was brought out, and shown them, to be looked at by them, for the conviction of them, and confirmation of what follows:
have I been a wilderness unto Israel? no: the Israelites were plentifully supplied by him when in the wilderness, and since they were brought into a land flowing with milk and honey; so that they stood in need of nothing; they had a constant supply of all good things:
or a land of darkness? of misery, distress, and poverty; where no light of joy, comfort, and prosperity, is; a land that never sees the light, or enjoys the benefit of the sun, and so is barren and unfruitful; "a land of thorns", as the Septuagint version; or, "a desert and uncultivated land", as the Targum, and Syriac and Arabic versions. It may be rendered, "a land of the darkness of God" k; that is, of the greatest darkness, of thick and gross darkness, alluding to that in Egypt; as the flame of God, and mountains of God, Son 8:6, as Ben Melech and Kimchi observe:
wherefore say my people, we are lords; and can reign without thee; or we have kings and princes, and have no need of thee, so Kimchi; but the word used seems to have another meaning, and to require another sense. The Targum is, "we are removed"; and the Vulgate Latin version, "we have gone back"; to which agrees the Jewish Midrash l, mentioned by Jarchi, and confirmed with a passage out of the Misna m, "we are separated from thee"; we have departed from thee, turned our backs on thee, have forsaken thee, and left thy ways and worship; and to do so was very ungrateful, when the Lord had so richly supplied them, that they had not lacked any good thing; and this sense agrees with what follows:
we will come no more unto thee? some render it, "we have determined" n; as having the same sense with the Arabic word, which signifies to "will" or determine anything; and then the meaning is, we are determined, we are resolved to come no more to thee, to attend thy worship and service any more; and so the Targum,
"we will not return any more to thy worship.''
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Gill: Jer 2:32 - -- Can a maid forget her ornaments,.... Which she has provided for her wedding day, and is then to wear, and which may be the next; such as ear rings, br...
Can a maid forget her ornaments,.... Which she has provided for her wedding day, and is then to wear, and which may be the next; such as ear rings, bracelets, and jewels, which are never out of her mind, and can scarce sleep for thinking of them, how richly she shall be adorned with them; wherefore it follows:
or a bride her attire? or, "her bindings" o; her knots about her head or breast. The word is rendered "head bands" in Isa 3:20 and here, by the Septuagint version, "her stomacher"; set with sparkling precious stones; see Isa 61:10, these things her heart being set upon, and priding herself with, cannot be forgotten by her, at least not long:
yet, my people have forgotten me days without number; which shows great stupidity and ingratitude; the Lord not being so much to them, from whom they had received so many favours, as the ornaments of a maid, and the attire of a bride, are to them.
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Gill: Jer 2:33 - -- Why trimmest thou thy way to seek love?.... To seek the love, and gain the affections and esteem, of the idolatrous nations; as a lascivious woman dre...
Why trimmest thou thy way to seek love?.... To seek the love, and gain the affections and esteem, of the idolatrous nations; as a lascivious woman dresses herself out in the best manner to excite the lust and move the affections of her lovers; and as Jezebel, who painted her face, and tired her head, 2Ki 9:30 or dressed it in the best manner, where the same word is used as here; so the Targum,
"why dost thou make thy way beautiful, to procure loves (or lovers) to be joined to the people?''
or the sense is, why art thou so diligent and industrious to make thy way, which is exceeding bad, look a good one, by sacrifices and ceremonies, oblations and ablutions, in order to seek and obtain my love and favour, which is all in vain? it is not to be gained by such methods:
therefore hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways; the wicked idolatrous nations, to whom they joined themselves; these they taught their ways of sacrificing, their rites, ceremonies, and superstitions; or, as Jarchi interprets it, thou hast taught thyself the worst way among them all; that is, thou hast used thyself to it: there is a double reading in this clause. The Cetib, or writing, is
that thy ways are evil; or, as Kimchi explains it,
"I have taught thee by thy ways that they are evil, and evil shall come unto thee because of them.''
The Keri, or reading, is
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Gill: Jer 2:34 - -- Also in thy skirts is found the blood of the souls of the poor innocents,.... Either of the innocent infants of poor persons, who were sacrificed to M...
Also in thy skirts is found the blood of the souls of the poor innocents,.... Either of the innocent infants of poor persons, who were sacrificed to Moloch; or of the poor prophets of the Lord, whom they slew, because they faithfully reproved them for their sins; and the blood of those being found in their skirts is expressive of the publicness and notoriety of their sin, and also of the large quantity of blood shed, inasmuch as the skirts of their garments were filled with it, as if they had trod and walked in blood; see Isa 63:3.
I have not found it by secret search; or, "by digging" q; there was no need to dig for it; it lay above ground; it was upon their skirts, public enough: or, "in ditches", as the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin r versions; as when murders are privately and secretly committed; but these were done openly. Some read the words, "thou didst not find them with a digging instrument" s; so Jarchi interprets the words,
"you did not find them with a digging instrument, or in digging, when you slew them;''
you did not find them prepared as thieves to break up your houses, or digging down your walls, and breaking through into your houses, then you would have been justified by the law in slaying them, Exo 22:2, but this was not the case:
but upon all these; upon all their skirts, and not in ditches, or under ground; or, "for all these"; thou hast so done; not for their sins, for theft, or any other; but for their faithful reproofs and rebukes; so Jarchi, for all these words with which they reproved thee; or for all these, the idols on whose account, in the worship of them, the blood of the innocents was shed.
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Gill: Jer 2:35 - -- Yet thou sayest, because I am innocent,.... Or, "that I am innocent"; though guilty of such flagrant and notorious crimes, acting like the adulterous ...
Yet thou sayest, because I am innocent,.... Or, "that I am innocent"; though guilty of such flagrant and notorious crimes, acting like the adulterous woman, Pro 30:20 to whom the Jews are all along compared in this chapter; which shows the hardness of their hearts, and their impudence in sinning:
surely his anger shall turn from me; the anger of God, since innocent; or, "let his anger be turned from me", as the Septuagint and Arabic versions; pleading for the removing of judgments upon the foot of innocency, which is pretended:
behold, I will plead with thee; enter into judgment with thee, and examine the case closely and thoroughly:
because thou sayest, I have not sinned; it would have been much better to have acknowledged sin, and pleaded for mercy, than to insist upon innocence, when the proof was so evident; nothing can be got by entering into judgment with God, upon such a foundation; and to sin, and deny it, is an aggravation of it: the denial of sin is a double sin, as the wise man says, whom Kimchi cites.
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Gill: Jer 2:36 - -- Why gaddest thou about so much to change thy way?.... Or, "by changing thy way" t; sometimes going one way, and sometimes another; sometimes to Egypt,...
Why gaddest thou about so much to change thy way?.... Or, "by changing thy way" t; sometimes going one way, and sometimes another; sometimes to Egypt, and then to Assyria; seeking sometimes to the one for help, and sometimes to the other; at one time serving the gods of the one, in order to curry favour with them, and then the gods of the other, like a lascivious woman that gads about from place to place to increase her lovers, and satisfy her lust. The Vulgate Latin version is, "how exceeding vile art thou become, changing thy ways"; and so Jarchi says, the word
thou also shalt be ashamed of Egypt; as they were in the times of Jehoahaz and Jehoiakim, when Pharaohnecho king of Egypt took the former, and put him in bands, and carried him into Egypt; and set the latter upon the throne, and took tribute of him, for which the land was taxed, 2Ki 23:33.
as thou wast ashamed of Assyria; in the times of Ahaz, who sent to the king of Assyria for help, when Judah was smitten by the Edomites, and invaded by the Philistines; but when he came to him, he distressed him, and strengthened and helped him not, 2Ch 28:16.
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Gill: Jer 2:37 - -- Yea, thou shalt go forth from him,.... From the Egyptian, without any help, and with shame; or, "from this" u; that is, from this place, from Jerusale...
Yea, thou shalt go forth from him,.... From the Egyptian, without any help, and with shame; or, "from this" u; that is, from this place, from Jerusalem, and from the land of Judea, into captivity; notwithstanding all the promised and expected help from Egypt,
and thine hands upon thine head; plucking and dishevelling the hair, as women in distress; so Tamar, when abused by her brother, laid her hand on her head, and went out crying, 2Sa 13:19,
for the Lord hath rejected thy confidences; those in whom they trusted, as the Egyptians; so that they should be of no service to them; or them, because of their trust and confidence in men, when it ought to have been placed above in himself:
shalt not prosper in them; or because of them, as Kimchi; but shalt go into captivity.
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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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Gill: Jer 3:2 - -- Lift up thine eyes unto the high places,.... Where idols were set and worshipped; either places naturally high, as hills and mountains, which were cho...
Lift up thine eyes unto the high places,.... Where idols were set and worshipped; either places naturally high, as hills and mountains, which were chosen for this service; or high places, artificially made and thrown up for this purpose; see 2Ki 17:9, Jarchi interprets the word
and see where thou hast not been lien with; see if there is a hill or mountain, or any high place, where thou hast not committed idolatry; the thing was so notorious, and the facts and instances so many, there was no denying it; every hill and mountain witnessed to their idolatry; to which agrees the Targum,
"see where thou hast not joined thyself to worship idols:''
in the ways hast thou sat for them; for the idolaters, waiting for them, to join with them in their idolatries; as harlots used to sit by the wayside to meet with their lovers, to be picked up by them, or to offer themselves to them as prostitutes, Gen 38:14 which shows that these people were not drawn into idolatry by the temptations and solicitations of others: but they put themselves in the way of it, and solicited it, and others to join with them in it:
as the Arabian in the wilderness; who dwelt in tents in the wilderness, and sat by the wayside to trade with those that passed by; or else lay in wait in desert and by places to rob all that passed by them; and so the Vulgate Latin version renders it,
in the ways thou didst sit, expecting them as a thief in the wilderness; the Arabians being noted for thieves and robbers. The Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions, render it,
as a crow, or raven, of the desert; the same word signifying a "raven" and an "Arabian": see 1Ki 17:4,
and thou hast polluted the land with thy whoredoms and with thy wickedness; the land of Judea, where idolatry was so openly and frequently committed, which brought a load of guilt upon it, and exposed it to the wrath and judgments of God; so the Targum,
"thou hast made the land guilty with thine idols and with thy wickedness.''
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Gill: Jer 3:3 - -- Therefore the showers have been withholden, and there hath been no latter rain,.... There were two seasons of the year when rain in common fell upon t...
Therefore the showers have been withholden, and there hath been no latter rain,.... There were two seasons of the year when rain in common fell upon the land of Israel, called the former and the latter rain, and both are designed here. The former by
and thou hadst a whore's forehead; was impudent and unconcerned, repented not of sin, or blushed for it, though such judgments were upon them; hence the Rabbins x say rains are not withheld but for impudence, according, to this Scripture:
thou refusedst to be ashamed; to be made ashamed by the admonitions of the prophets, or by the judgments of God; see Jer 5:3.
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Gill: Jer 3:4 - -- Wilt thou not from this time cry unto me,.... These words are either a confirmation and proof of that impudence with which these people are charged; f...
Wilt thou not from this time cry unto me,.... These words are either a confirmation and proof of that impudence with which these people are charged; for had they not been impudent, or had not a forehead like a whorish woman; or were they truly ashamed, they would have cried to the Lord henceforward; called upon him; claimed their relation to him; and owned his favours in time past: or, if they had not been impudent, they would not have dared from this time to have called God their Father and their guide, when they had so wickedly sinned against him; so that this is a charge of hypocrisy and deceit, calling God their Father and guide, when they were at the same time worshipping idols: or rather they are expressive of the wondrous grace and goodness of God towards this people, that had so highly offended him, yet he expostulates with them, puts words into their mouths to return unto him with, saying:
my father; I have sinned against thee, and am not worthy of the relation, yet receive me as a returning prodigal:
thou art the guide of my youth; or, "hast been": I acknowledge the favours I have received in time past, which is an aggravation of my sin; reject me not, but receive me graciously into thy favour; see Hos 14:2, so the Targum interprets the words as a prayer,
"wilt thou not from this time pray before me, saying, thou art my Lord, my Redeemer, which art of old?''
or else they point to them their duty, what they ought to do from henceforward; that seeing the Lord had withheld from them the former and latter rain for their idolatry, it became them to return to him by repentance; and to call upon him, who had been their Father and their guide in time past, to have mercy on them, and avert his judgments from them.
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Gill: Jer 3:5 - -- Will he reserve his anger for ever?.... These words may be considered as a continuation of the speech put into their mouths to make to the Lord and pl...
Will he reserve his anger for ever?.... These words may be considered as a continuation of the speech put into their mouths to make to the Lord and plead with him, as well as what follows:
will he keep it to the end? that is, his anger: no; he will not: this is not according to the nature of God; he retains not his anger for ever, Mic 7:18, though, according to some versions, this is to be understood of the sins of these people being reserved and kept forever, as their impudence and obstinacy; so the Syriac and Arabic versions; and to which agrees the Targum,
"is it possible that thy sins should be kept for thee for ever, or the stroke (of punishment) be strengthened upon thee to the end?''
so Kimchi,
"says the prophet, if thou dost this (call him my father, &c.) will God reserve thine iniquity for thee for ever, or keep thy sin unto the end? he will not do so; but when thou returnest unto him, he will return unto thee, and do thee good; but thou hast not done so.''
The sense is much the same:
behold, thou hast spoken, and done evil things as thou couldest; which were enough to cause the Lord to reserve and keep his anger for ever. There is a double reading here; the Cetib, or writing, is
and thou hast prevailed z; as the last clause may be rendered; that I cannot turn away mine anger from thee, but must reserve it, and keep it for ever. The Keri, or reading, is
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Gill: Jer 3:6 - -- The Lord said also unto me, in the days of Josiah the king,.... For in his time Jeremiah began to prophesy, even in the thirteenth year of his reign, ...
The Lord said also unto me, in the days of Josiah the king,.... For in his time Jeremiah began to prophesy, even in the thirteenth year of his reign, Jer 1:2,
hast thou seen that which backsliding Israel hath done? the ten tribes; that is, hast thou not heard? or dost thou not know the idolatry of the ten tribes, which was the cause of their captivity? as Kimchi explains it; for the facts, or the idolatrous actions of the ten tribes, were not done in Josiah's and Jeremiah's time; for they were carried captive in the sixth year of Hezekiah, ninety years or more before Jeremiah began to prophesy, and their idolatry was before their captivity, and therefore could not be properly seen by him; only it had been heard of by him, it was known by him, it was notorious enough, being well attested:
she is gone upon every high mountain, and under every green tree; that is, she did so, when in her own land, before she was carried captive, as Jarchi observes; for this respects not what she did in Josiah's and Jeremiah's time, or when in captivity, but before, which was the reason of it:
and there hath played the harlot: or committed idolatry, which was usually done in such places; so the Targum,
"and worshipped idols of wood.''
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Gill: Jer 3:7 - -- And I said, after she had done these things,.... All these idolatries, in the several places mentioned, after she had repeated them over and over; the...
And I said, after she had done these things,.... All these idolatries, in the several places mentioned, after she had repeated them over and over; the Lord sent to them by the Prophets Hosea, Amos, Micah, and others, who prophesied before the captivity of the ten tribes, and entreated them, saying,
turn unto me: to my worship, as the Targum; from their idols, to him the living God; they were not without admonitions, exhortations, and declarations of grace, and so were without excuse:
but she returned not; to fear and serve the Lord, but remained in idolatry, obstinate and inflexible:
and her treacherous sister Judah saw it; her treachery and breach of covenant, as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions add, for explanation sake; Judah, or the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin, and who were allied to the ten tribes by birth and by religion, and equally treacherous to God, the husband of them both, saw all the idolatry of Israel, and the aggravations of it, and what followed upon it, namely, their captivity in Babylon, yet did not learn and take warning hereby.
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Gill: Jer 3:8 - -- And I saw, when for all the causes, whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery,.... Not only Judah saw, but God, who sees all things, saw the idola...
And I saw, when for all the causes, whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery,.... Not only Judah saw, but God, who sees all things, saw the idolatry of the ten tribes which apostatized from him, and all the springs, causes, reasons, and occasions of it, and its consequences; and also the treachery, hardness, and idolatry of Judah:
I had put her away, and given her a bill of divorce; as men did, when they put away their wives, as they might lawfully do in case of adultery; and here being that which answered to it, spiritual adultery or idolatry, the Lord, who was married to this people, put them away from him, and caused them to be carried captive out of their own land into another, 2Ki 17:6 which is meant by the bill of divorce; so the Targum,
"I caused them to go into captivity, as those that give a bill of divorce (to their wives) and dismiss them:''
yet her treacherous sister Judah feared not; to commit idolatry and offend the Lord, nor stood in awe of his righteous judgments; had no reverence of God, nor fear of punishment; so hardened and daring was she: but went and played the harlot; committed idolatry, as the ten tribes did, taking no warning by what befell them.
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Gill: Jer 3:9 - -- And it came to pass, through the lightness of her whoredom,.... Or the "swiftness" b of it; when it was once set on foot, it ran through the land pres...
And it came to pass, through the lightness of her whoredom,.... Or the "swiftness" b of it; when it was once set on foot, it ran through the land presently one taking it from and following the example of another; or it became a light thing with her to commit idolatry; it was looked upon as a small thing, a trivial offence at most: so the Targum,
"it came to pass that her idols were light in her eyes;''
not lightly esteemed of, but it was a light thing to commit idolatry with them; interpreting the word as the Masora, which it follows: and to the same sense the Septuagint version, "her fornication was for nothing"; it stood for nothing, it was not reckoned as a sin: the Arabic version is, "her fornication was with nothing"; with an idol, which is nothing in the world, 1Co 8:4, some choose to render it, "because of the voice or fame of her whoredom" c, or idolatry; it sounded forth, and the fame, or rather infamy of it, went out through the whole land: wherefore it follows,
that she defiled the land; polluted it with sin, involved it in guilt, and exposed it to punishment:
and committed adultery with stones and with stocks; that is, with images made of stone and wood, which they served and worshipped as gods; and is the adultery or idolatry they are charged with, and by which the land was defiled. The Targum is,
"she erred or committed idolatry with the worshippers of stone and wood.''
This, by what follows, seems to be understood not of Judah, but of Israel.
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Gill: Jer 3:10 - -- And yet for all this,.... Though the two tribes saw the lightness and filthiness of the sin Israel was guilty of, and how the land was defiled with it...
And yet for all this,.... Though the two tribes saw the lightness and filthiness of the sin Israel was guilty of, and how the land was defiled with it, the stupidity of it, and the punishment inflicted on account of it:
her treacherous sister Judah hath not turned unto me with her whole heart, but feignedly, saith the Lord; there was a show of reformation in Josiah's time, but it was but a show; there was no true, hearty cordial repentance for the sin of idolatry, only a feigned one; there was an outward removal of it, and reformation from it, but inwardly the desires of the heart were to it; the good king, with some few others, were hearty in it, but the greater part played the hypocrite; the following reigns proved the truth of this.
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Gill: Jer 3:11 - -- And the Lord said unto me,.... To the Prophet Jeremiah, as in Jer 3:6 and at or about the same time:
the backsliding Israel hath justified herself ...
And the Lord said unto me,.... To the Prophet Jeremiah, as in Jer 3:6 and at or about the same time:
the backsliding Israel hath justified herself more than treacherous Judah; that is, was comparatively more righteous; of the two she appeared the most righteous; though neither of them could vindicate their conduct, or justify themselves before God; see Luk 18:14. Judah was most to blame, because that after Israel committed idolatry, and was carried captive, she took no warning by it, but fell into the same sin; and in Manasseh's time committed greater idolatries, and more wickedness, than ever Israel did; and more than even the Amorites themselves, and other Heathen nations, had done, 2Ki 21:6 and though a reformation was made in Josiah's time, it was only feignedly, it was not cordial and hearty; and therefore she is all along here charged with perfidy and treachery.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:20; Jer 2:21; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:22; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:23; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:24; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:25; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:26; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:27; Jer 2:28; Jer 2:29; Jer 2:30; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:31; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:33; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:34; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:37; Jer 2:37; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:1; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:2; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:4; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:5; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:6; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:8; Jer 3:9; Jer 3:9; Jer 3:10; Jer 3:10; Jer 3:11; Jer 3:11
NET Notes: Jer 2:20 Heb “you sprawled as a prostitute on….” The translation reflects the meaning of the metaphor.
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NET Notes: Jer 2:21 Heb “I planted you as a choice vine, all of it true seed. How then have you turned into a putrid thing to me, a strange [or wild] vine.” T...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:23 The metaphor is intended to depict Israel’s lack of clear direction and purpose without the Lord’s control.
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NET Notes: Jer 2:24 The metaphor is intended to depict Israel’s irrepressible desire to worship other gods.
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NET Notes: Jer 2:25 Heb “It is useless! No!” For this idiom, see Jer 18:12; NEB “No; I am desperate.”
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NET Notes: Jer 2:26 The words “for what they have done” are implicit in the comparison and are supplied in the translation for clarification.
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NET Notes: Jer 2:28 This is an attempt to render the Hebrew particle כִּי (ki, “for, indeed”) contextually.
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NET Notes: Jer 2:29 This is still part of the Lord’s case against Israel. See 2:9 for the use of the same Hebrew verb. The Lord here denies their counter claims tha...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:30 Heb “Your sword devoured your prophets like a destroying lion.” However, the reference to the sword in this and many similar idioms is mer...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:31 Or more freely, “free to do as we please.” There is some debate about the meaning of this verb (רוּד, rud) because...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:34 KJV and ASV read this line with 2:34. The ASV makes little sense and the KJV again erroneously reads the archaic second person feminine singular perfe...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:35 This is an attempt to render the Hebrew particle often translated “behold” (הִנֵּה, hinneh) in a meani...
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NET Notes: Jer 2:36 Heb “You will be ashamed/disappointed by Egypt, just as you were ashamed/ disappointed by Assyria.”
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NET Notes: Jer 2:37 Heb “The Lord has rejected those you trust in; you will not prosper by/from them.”
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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!...
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NET Notes: Jer 3:2 Heb “by your prostitution and your wickedness.” This is probably an example of hendiadys where, when two nouns are joined by “and,...
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NET Notes: Jer 3:4 Heb “Have you not just now called out to me, ‘[you are] my father!’?” The rhetorical question expects a positive answer.
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NET Notes: Jer 3:5 Heb “You do the evil and you are able.” This is an example of hendiadys, meaning “You do all the evil that you are able to do.”...
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NET Notes: Jer 3:6 Heb “she played the prostitute there.” This is a metaphor for Israel’s worship; she gave herself to the worship of other gods like a...
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NET Notes: Jer 3:7 The words “what she did” are not in the text but are implicit from the context and are supplied in the translation for clarification.
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NET Notes: Jer 3:8 Heb “she played the prostitute there.” This is a metaphor for Israel’s worship; she gave herself to the worship of other gods like a...
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NET Notes: Jer 3:9 Heb “because of the lightness of her prostitution, she defiled the land and committed adultery with stone and wood.”
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NET Notes: Jer 3:11 A comparison is drawn here between the greater culpability of Judah, who has had the advantage of seeing how God disciplined her sister nation for hav...
Geneva Bible: Jer 2:20 For of old time I have broken thy yoke, [and] burst thy bands; and thou saidst, ( f ) I will not transgress; when upon every high hill and under every...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:22 For though thou shalt wash thee with ( g ) lye, and take thee much soap, [yet] thy iniquity is marked before me, saith the Lord GOD.
( g ) Though you...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:23 How canst thou say, I am not polluted, I have not ( h ) gone after Baalim? see thy way in the valley, know what thou hast done: [thou art] a swift ( i...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:24 A wild ( k ) donkey used to the wilderness, [that] snuffeth up the wind at her pleasure; in her occasion who can turn her away? all they that seek her...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:25 Withhold thy foot from ( m ) being unshod, and thy throat from thirst: but thou saidst, There is no hope: no; for I have loved strangers, and after th...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:26 As the ( n ) thief is ashamed when he is found, so is the house of Israel ashamed; they, their kings, their princes, and their priests, and their prop...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:27 Saying to a tree, Thou [art] my ( o ) father; and to a stone, Thou hast brought me forth: for they have turned [their] back to me, and not [their] fac...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:28 But where [are] thy gods that thou hast made for thyself? let them arise, if they can save thee in the time of thy trouble: for [according ( p ) to] t...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:29 Why will ( q ) ye plead with me? ye all have transgressed against me, saith the LORD.
( q ) As though I did you injury in punishing you, seeing that ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:30 In vain have I smitten your children; they have received no correction: your ( r ) own sword hath devoured your prophets, like a destroying lion.
( r...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:31 O generation, see ye the word of the LORD. Have I been a ( s ) wilderness to Israel? a land of darkness? why say my people, We are lords; ( t ) we wil...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:33 Why trimmest thou thy way to ( u ) seek love? therefore hast thou also taught the wicked ones thy ways.
( u ) With strangers.
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:34 Also in thy ( x ) skirts is found the blood of the souls of the poor innocents: I have not found it by secret search, but upon all these.
( x ) The p...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:36 Why dost thou go about so much to change thy way? thou also shalt be ashamed of Egypt, ( y ) as thou wast ashamed of Assyria.
( y ) For the Assyrians...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 2:37 Yea, thou shalt go forth from him, and thy hands upon ( z ) thy head: for the LORD hath rejected thy confidences, and thou shalt not prosper in them. ...
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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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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:2 Lift up thy eyes to the high places, and see where thou hast not been lain with. In the ways hast thou sat for them, as the ( e ) Arabian in the wilde...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:3 Therefore the showers have been withheld, and there hath been no ( f ) latter rain; and thou hadst an ( g ) harlot's forehead, thou didst refuse to be...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:4 Wilt thou not from this time cry ( h ) to me, My father, thou [art] the guide of my youth?
( h ) He shows that the wicked in their miseries will cry ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:6 The LORD said also to me in the days of Josiah the king, Hast thou seen [that] which backsliding ( i ) Israel hath done? she hath gone up upon every h...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:8 And I saw, when for all the causes by which backsliding Israel committed adultery I had put ( k ) her away, and given her a bill of divorce; yet her t...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:9 And it came to pass through the ( l ) lightness of her harlotry, that she defiled the land, and committed adultery with stones and with trees.
( l ) ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:10 And yet for all this her treacherous sister Judah hath not turned to me with ( m ) her whole heart, but deceitfully, saith the LORD.
( m ) Judah pret...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 3:11 And the LORD said to me, The backsliding Israel hath ( n ) justified herself more than treacherous Judah.
( n ) Israel has not declared herself as wi...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 2:1-37; Jer 3:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Jer 2:1-37 - --1 God having shewed his former kindness, expostulates with the Jews on their causeless and unexampled revolt.14 They are the causes of their own calam...
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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 2:20-28 - --Notwithstanding all their advantages, Israel had become like the wild vine that bears poisonous fruit. Men are often as much under the power of their ...
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MHCC: Jer 2:29-37 - --The nation had not been wrought upon by the judgements of God, but sought to justify themselves. The world is, to those who make it their home and the...
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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...
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MHCC: Jer 3:6-11 - --If we mark the crimes of those who break off from a religious profession, and the consequences, we see abundant reason to shun evil ways. It is dreadf...
Matthew Henry: Jer 2:20-28 - -- In these verses the prophet goes on with his charge against this backsliding people. Observe here, I. The sin itself that he charges them with - ido...
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Matthew Henry: Jer 2:29-37 - -- The prophet here goes on in the same strain, aiming to bring a sinful people to repentance, that their destruction might be prevented. I. He avers t...
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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...
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Matthew Henry: Jer 3:6-11 - -- The date of this sermon must be observed, in order to the right understanding of it; it was in the days of Josiah, who set on foot a blessed work ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jer 2:20-25; Jer 2:26-28; Jer 2:29-32; Jer 2:33-34; Jer 2:35; Jer 2:36; Jer 2:37; Jer 3:1-2; Jer 3:3; Jer 3:4-5; Jer 3:6-10; Jer 3:7; Jer 3:11-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:20-25 - --
All along Israel has been refractory; it cannot and will not cease from idolatry. Jer 2:20. " For of old time thou hast broken thy yoke, torn off th...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:26-28 - --
And yet idolatry brings to the people only disgrace, giving no help in the time of need. Jer 2:26. " As a thief is shamed when he is taken, so is th...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:29-32 - --
Judah has refused to let itself be turned from idolatry either by judgments or by the warnings of the prophets; nevertheless it holds itself guiltle...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:33-34 - --
In Jer 2:33 the style of address is ironical. How good thou makest thy way! i.e., how well thou knowest to choose out and follow the right way to se...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:35 - --
Yet withal the people holds itself to be guiltless, and deludes itself with the belief that God's wrath has turned away from it, because it has for ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:36 - --
Yet in spite of its proud security Judah seeks to assure itself against hostile attacks by the eager negotiation of alliances. This thought is the l...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 2:37 - --
Also from this, i.e., Egypt, shalt thou go away (come back), thy hands upon thy head, i.e., beating them on thy head in grief and dismay (cf. for th...
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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...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:3 - --
But the idolatrous race was not to be brought to reflection or turned from its evil ways, even when judgment fell upon it. God chastised it by withh...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:4-5 - --
Henceforward, forsooth, it calls upon its God, and expects that His wrath will abate; but this calling on Him is but lip-service, for it goes on in ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:6-10 - --
Israel's backsliding and rejection a warning for Judah . - Jer 3:6. " And Jahveh spake to me in the days of King Josiah, Hast thou seen what the ba...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:7 - --
And I said, sc. to myself, i.e., I thought. A speaking by the prophets (Rashi) is not to be thought of; for it is no summons, turn again to me, but ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 3:11-12 - --
Israel's return, pardon, and blessedness. - Jer 3:11. " And Jahveh said to me, The backsliding one, Israel, is justified more than the faithless on...
Constable -> Jer 2:1--45:5; Jer 2:1--25:38; Jer 2:1--6:30; Jer 2:1-37; Jer 2:20-25; Jer 2:26-28; Jer 2:29-37; Jer 3:1--4:5; Jer 3:1-5; Jer 3:6-10; Jer 3:11-18
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 2:1-37 - --Yahweh's indictment of His people for their sins ch. 2
"The whole chapter has strong rem...
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Constable: Jer 2:20-25 - --Evidences of Israel's ingratitude 2:20-25
Baal worship fascinated the Israelites, but it was futile.
2:20 The Lord had broken the yoke of Egypt off Hi...
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Constable: Jer 2:26-28 - --Israel's shame because of her apostasy 2:26-28
2:26 Yahweh had uncovered Israel's sins and had shamed her, as when someone exposes a thief. All her le...
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Constable: Jer 2:29-37 - --Israel's hardness of heart 2:29-37
Israel deserved judgment, and this pericope shows why. Jeremiah presented a series of pictures of the nation's irre...
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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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Constable: Jer 3:1-5 - --The spiritual unfaithfulness of Judah 3:1-5
3:1 God posed the question to His people of what happens in a divorce. The answer to His rhetorical questi...
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Constable: Jer 3:6-10 - --The persistent harlotry of Israel and Judah 3:6-10
3:6 Yahweh previously had a conversation with Jeremiah along the same lines that took place during ...
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