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Text -- Jeremiah 4:24-31 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
He proceeds in his figurative expressions.
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As easily as dust, or feathers in a whirl - wind.
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All being either slain, or carried captive, or fled.
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In the midst of judgment he will remember mercy.
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Wesley: Jer 4:28 - -- Expressions to set forth the dreadfulness of the judgment; he makes the elements to personate mourners.
Expressions to set forth the dreadfulness of the judgment; he makes the elements to personate mourners.
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Wesley: Jer 4:31 - -- When the scripture would express any exquisite sorrow, it doth it by a woman in travail.
When the scripture would express any exquisite sorrow, it doth it by a woman in travail.
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Wesley: Jer 4:31 - -- According to the use of persons in great anguish, clapping or wringing their hands together.
According to the use of persons in great anguish, clapping or wringing their hands together.
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JFB: Jer 4:25 - -- No vestige of the human, or of the feathered creation, is to be seen (Eze 38:20; Zep 1:3).
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JFB: Jer 4:26 - -- Hebrew, "the wilderness," in contrast to "the fruitful place"; the great desert, where Carmel was, there is now the desert of Arabia [MAURER].
Hebrew, "the wilderness," in contrast to "the fruitful place"; the great desert, where Carmel was, there is now the desert of Arabia [MAURER].
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In contrast to the fruitful place or field.
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JFB: Jer 4:27 - -- Utter destruction: I will leave some hope of restoration (Jer 5:10, Jer 5:18; Jer 30:11; Jer 46:28; compare Lev 26:44).
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JFB: Jer 4:29 - -- Jerusalem: to it the inhabitants of the country had fled for refuge; but when it, too, is likely to fall, they flee out of it to hide in the "thickets...
Jerusalem: to it the inhabitants of the country had fled for refuge; but when it, too, is likely to fall, they flee out of it to hide in the "thickets." HENDERSON translates, "every city."
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The mere noise of the hostile horsemen shall put you to flight.
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Rather, "thou, O destroyed one" [MAURER].
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JFB: Jer 4:30 - -- Oriental women paint their eyes with stibium, or antimony, to make them look full and sparkling, the black margin causing the white of the eyes to app...
Oriental women paint their eyes with stibium, or antimony, to make them look full and sparkling, the black margin causing the white of the eyes to appear the brighter by contrast (2Ki 9:30). He uses the term "distendest" in derision of their effort to make their eyes look large [MAURER]; or else, "rentest," that is, dost lacerate by puncturing the eyelid in order to make the antimony adhere [ROSENMULLER]. So the Jews use every artifice to secure the aid of Egypt against Babylon.
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Namely, occasioned by the attack of the enemy.
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JFB: Jer 4:31 - -- There is peculiar beauty in suppressing the name of the person in trouble, until that trouble had been fully described [HENDERSON].
There is peculiar beauty in suppressing the name of the person in trouble, until that trouble had been fully described [HENDERSON].
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Rather, "draweth her breath short" [HORSLEY]; "panteth."
The mountains - hills - Princes, rulers, etc., were astonished and fled.
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Clarke: Jer 4:25 - -- The birds of the heavens were fled - The land was so desolated that even the fowls of heaven could not find meat, and therefore fled away to another...
The birds of the heavens were fled - The land was so desolated that even the fowls of heaven could not find meat, and therefore fled away to another region. How powerfully energetic is this description
See Zep 1:3.
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Clarke: Jer 4:30 - -- Though thou rentest thy face with painting - This probably refers to the custom of introducing stibium a preparation of antimony, between the eye a...
Though thou rentest thy face with painting - This probably refers to the custom of introducing stibium a preparation of antimony, between the eye and the lids, in order to produce a fine lustre, which occasions a distension of the eye-lid in the time of the operation. In order to heighten the effect from this some may have introduced a more than ordinary quantity, so as nearly to rend the eye-lid itself. Though thou make use of every means of address, of cunning, and of solicitation, to get assistance from the neighboring states, it will be all in vain. Reference is here particularly made to the practice of harlots to allure men.
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Clarke: Jer 4:31 - -- Bringeth forth her first child - In such a case the fear, danger, and pain were naturally the greatest
Bringeth forth her first child - In such a case the fear, danger, and pain were naturally the greatest
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Clarke: Jer 4:31 - -- Spreadeth her hands - The gesture indicated by nature to signify distress, and implore help. We have met with this figure in other parts, and among ...
Spreadeth her hands - The gesture indicated by nature to signify distress, and implore help. We have met with this figure in other parts, and among the classic writers it is frequent.
Calvin: Jer 4:24 - -- Jeremiah descends afterwards from heaven to mountains, and says that they trembled, and that all the hills moved or shook; some say, destroyed, bu...
Jeremiah descends afterwards from heaven to mountains, and says that they trembled, and that all the hills moved or shook; some say, destroyed, but I know not for what reason, for the Prophet no doubt confirms the same thing by another phrase: and as he had said, that mountains trembled, so he also adds, that hills shook; and this is the proper meaning of the verb. Now the reason why he speaks of mountains and hills is evident; for a greater stability seems to belong to them than to level grounds, inasmuch as mountains are for the most part stony, and have their roots most firmly fixed in rocks. Were indeed the whole world to be thrown into confusion, the mountains seem to be so firmly based that no commotion could affect them: but the Prophet says, that they trembled, and that the hills shook
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Calvin: Jer 4:25 - -- What he saw the third time was solitude; for he says that there were no men, and that all birds had fled away. The principal ornament of the world...
What he saw the third time was solitude; for he says that there were no men, and that all birds had fled away. The principal ornament of the world, we know, consists of men and of living creatures. For why was the earth made so productive, that it brings forth fruits, so many and so various, except for the sake of men and of animals? Though, then, the earth appears very beautiful on account of its trees, herbs, and every kind of fruit, yet its principal ornaments are men and animals. By stating a part for the whole, the Prophet, by mentioning birds, includes all earthly animals: he says then, that the earth was emptied of its inhabitants.
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Calvin: Jer 4:26 - -- What he saw the fourth time was this — that the fertile land was turned into a desert. I indeed think that Carmel is to be taken here as meaning...
What he saw the fourth time was this — that the fertile land was turned into a desert. I indeed think that Carmel is to be taken here as meaning the place. That part of the holy land, we know, received its name from its fertility: Carmel means any rich and fruitful spot of ground. But, as I have just said, the mount was so called because it abounded in all kinds of produce; for there were on it fruitful pastures and fertile fields, and every part of it was remarkably pleasant and delightful. I am therefore inclined to consider Carmel itself to be meant here; and my reason is, because he immediately adds, that its cities were destroyed; and this can be more fitly applied to Carmel than generally to all fruitful regions. As to myself, I think that the Prophet speaks of Carmel; and yet he alludes to what the word means. 120 Even in this verse he mentions a part for the whole, as though he had said, that Carmel, which excelled in fertility, had become like a desert. When Isaiah speaks of the renovation of the Church, he says,
“The desert shall be as Carmel,“ (Isa 32:15)
as though he had said, that the blessing of God would be so abundant through the whole world, that deserts would bear fruit like Carmel, or those regions which are remarkable for their fertility. But Jeremiah, speaking here of a curse, says, that Carmel would be like the desert; and that all its cities would be demolished, even at the presence of Jehovah, and by the great heat of his wrath
Some render
Now, as to the sum of what is here said, the Jews at that time no doubt enjoyed great abundance and indulged their pleasures; in short, they were fully pleased with their condition. But the Prophet here declares that he saw at a distance what these blind Jews did not see, even God’s vengeance approaching, which would deprive them of that abundance, on account of which they were so swollen with pride, and which would reduce them all into such a state of desolation that nothing would remain above or below, but a disordered confusion, such as existed before nature was brought to order, when the earth was not separated from the heavens, and there was only a confused mass, including all the elements, and without any light. He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 4:27 - -- The Prophet briefly explains here what he understood by the four things which he had seen and of which he had spoken. He then declares, as it were in...
The Prophet briefly explains here what he understood by the four things which he had seen and of which he had spoken. He then declares, as it were in the person of God, that there would be a dreadful desolation throughout Judea; Wasted, he says, shall be the whole land, or, in the whole land there shall be desolation. Some explain what afterwards follows, as though he mitigated the severity of his language. Hence, as they think, a mitigation is added, which was to relieve the faithful with some hope of mercy, lest they should wholly despond. And indeed were he to threaten only he might fill a hundred worlds with terror. Lest then despair should so overwhelm the faithful as to restrain them from fleeing to God for mercy, it is often added by way of mitigation, that God would not consume the whole land.
The word
Some perhaps may approve of reading the sentence as a question, and think that the object is to beat down the pride of the ungodly, and to dissipate the boasting of those who relied on the hope of impunity; as though he had said, “Do ye still deny that I shall make a consummation?”
Now, though the former exposition contains a richer truth, yet I prefer to take
“Behold I will make a consummation;” yet he afterwards adds, “The consummation shall bring forth fruit,”
that is, what remained of the consummation. The prophets elsewhere compare the Church of God to olive — trees when shaken, or to vines after vintage, (Isa 17:6; Isa 24:13;) for some grapes ever remain which escape the eyes of the gatherers; so also, when the olive — trees are shaken, some fruit remain on the highest branches. Thus God says, that the consummation he makes in his Church is like the vintage or the shaking of olive — trees, when some fruit remain and escape the eyes of the gatherers. We now perceive what the Prophet means, — that there would be the ruin of the whole people, so that they would have neither a name nor existence as a body; which thing also happened, when they were driven as exiles into Babylon; for the people, as a civil community, then ceased to exist, so that there was an end made of them.
I indeed allow that God’s threatenings cannot avail for our salvation, unless connected with the promise of pardon, so that being raised up by the hope of salvation we may flee to him: for as long as we deem God inexorable, we shun every access to him; and thus despair drives us into a rage like that of fiends. Hence it is that the reprobate rage so much against God, and make a great clamor: and they would willingly thrust him from his throne. It is therefore necessary that a hope of salvation should be set before us, so that we may be touched with repentance: and as this promise is perpetual, whatever may happen, even if earth and heaven were mixed together, and ruin on every side were filling us with dread, we must still remember that there will be ever some remnant according to the passages we have referred to in the first and tenth chapters of Isaiah. But as the people were not prepared to receive consolation, the design of the Prophet here is different, for he only mentions punishment. He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 4:28 - -- Jeremiah proceeds here with the same subject, and still introduces God as the speaker, that what is said might produce a greater effect. For this, h...
Jeremiah proceeds here with the same subject, and still introduces God as the speaker, that what is said might produce a greater effect. For this, he says, the land shall mourn. The mourning of the land is to be taken for its desolation; but he refers to what he had said before. He does not speak of the inhabitants of the land; for they who thus explain the passage, diminish much the force of the expression; for the Prophet here ascribes terror and sorrow to the very elements, which is much more striking than if he said, that all men would be in sorrow and grief. The same also must be thought of the heavens. Indeed, the latter clause proves that he does not speak of the inhabitants, but of the land itself, which, though without reason, seems yet to dread God’s vengeance. And thus the Prophet upbraids men with their insensibility; for when God appeared as judge from heaven, they were not touched with any fear. Mourn then shall the land, and covered shall be the heaven with darkness; that is, though men remain stupid, yet both heaven and earth shall feel how dreadful God’s judgment will be.
He afterwards adds, Because I have spoken. Some consider
But that they might not think that God had thus spoken to cause a false alarm, (for hypocrites flatter themselves with this pretense, that God does not speak seriously, but that he frightens them with bugbears, as children are wont to be,) he says, that he had purposed. He had said before that he had spoken, that is, by his prophets; but what he means now by this word is, that the predictions which he had made known as to their destruction proceeded from his own secret counsel: “This,” he says, “has been decreed by me.”
He then adds, It has not repented me, and I will not turn from it. He briefly shews, that the Jews were now given up to death, that they might not think that God could be pacified as long as they followed their vices; for God had decreed to destroy them; and he had not only declared this by his prophets, but had also resolved within himself to do so. By the term repent, is to be understood a change; for God cannot, strictly speaking, repent, as nothing is hid from him; but he speaks, as I have lately stated, after a human manner: and every ambiguity is removed by the next phrase, when he says, I will not turn from it, that is, “I will not retract my sentence.” 122 It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 4:29 - -- By saying, that at the voice or sound of horsemen and bowmen, there would be an universal flight, he means, that the enemies would come with such ...
By saying, that at the voice or sound of horsemen and bowmen, there would be an universal flight, he means, that the enemies would come with such impetuosity, that the Jews would not dare to wait for their presence, but would flee here and there before they were attacked: for the word voice or sound, no doubt, is set here in opposition to wounds. They did swell, we know, with amazing pride; hence the Prophet ridicules that false confidence by which they were so inebriated as not to dread God’s judgment: “The sound alone of enemies,” he says, “will frighten you; so that all the cities, being left by their inhabitants, will easily fall into their hands, for walls will not defend themselves; nay, the gates will be open.” Flee then will every city; that is, all the cities will have recourse to flight. Then it follows, Ascend will they into the clouds, or into thicknesses: this may be applied to the enemies, to shew that they would be so nimble and active as to fly, as it were, to the clouds, and climb the highest rocks. But I prefer to connect this sentence with the former, as intimating, that to ascend the clouds would not be too arduous for the Jews in their anxious flight. Inasmuch as the tops of mountains were often covered with thick trees, in order to form a dark shade, this passage may mean, that they fled to such places. However this may have been, the Prophet here, no doubt, refers to such high situations. Hence, the meaning would be more evident if we retain the word, clouds. As to what is intended, we see that that is clear; which is, that the enemies of the Jews would in swiftness be equal to the eagles while pursuing them; or, what is more commonly thought, that the terror felt by the Jews would be so great, that in their flight they would not seek recesses nigh at hand, but would flee to the highest tops of mountains, and hide themselves there among the trees, as though they had climbed into the clouds. They would ascend into craggy rocks, as they could not think themselves otherwise safe from the attacks of their enemies. 123
He then adds, that every city would be forsaken, so that no one would dwell in them. We see that the Prophet had ever this in view — to rouse the Jews, who had deaf ears and stony hearts, so that they felt no concern for their own calamities, and even boldly despised God, as though they had made a covenant with death, according to what is said in another place. (Isa 28:15.) He afterwards subjoins —
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Calvin: Jer 4:30 - -- The Prophet boldly ridicules the Jews, in order to cast down their pride and haughtiness. It was indeed his object to check that pride with which the...
The Prophet boldly ridicules the Jews, in order to cast down their pride and haughtiness. It was indeed his object to check that pride with which they were elated against God. The Prophet could not have done this without assuming a higher strain than usual, and by rendering his discourse more striking by using metaphorical words. It is indeed the language of derision; he exclaims, What wilt thou do, thou wretched one? The Jews had hitherto been inflated with contempt towards God, and their high spirits had not been subdued. Since, then, their haughtiness continued untamed, the Prophet cries out and says, “Thou wretched, what wilt thou do?” as though he had said, “In vain do they flatter themselves and promise themselves aid from this and from that quarter, for their condition is past any remedy.” 124
He afterwards adds, Though, etc.; for so I consider the connection of the verse; and they seem right to me who do not separate the words of the Prophet. But the view which others take appears frigid, “Who now adornest thyself, who now clothest thyself in scarlet, who adornest thyself with ornaments of gold, who paintest thy eyes black.” To no purpose do they introduce the relative, for it renders the meaning of the Prophet different from what it really is.
These parts follow one another, and the principal verb is found in these words, In vain dost thou adorn thyself; and the particle
There are those who consider ceremonies to be intended, as hypocrites think that they are by these protected against God’s judgment: but this view is unsuitable and wholly alien to what is here set forth. It is indeed true, that ceremonies are to hypocrites dens of thieves, as we shall hereafter see, (Jer 7:11;) but the Prophet in this place refers to meretricious ornaments; for the people, as it had before appeared, were become like an adulterous woman. God had formed with them as it were a marriage — contract; they had violated it; and this perfidy was like the defection of an adulteress, who leaves her husband and wanders here and there, and lives as a prostitute. As then harlots, for the purpose of enticement, are wont to dress themselves elegantly, to paint their faces, and to use other allurements, the Prophet says, “In vain wilt thou adorn thyself; though thou puttest on scarlet, though thou shinest with gold even from the head to the feet, yet all this will be superfluous and useless; and though, in addition to all this, thou paintest thy face, 125 it will yet avail thee nothing.”
Now, we know whom he understands by lovers, even the Egyptians and the Assyrians. For the Jews, when oppressed by the Egyptians, were wont to seek help from the Assyrians; and again, when attacked by the Assyrians, they became suppliants to the Egyptians. The prophets compared this sort of conduct to that of strumpets; for whenever they courted the aid of either of these parties, they broke the bond of marriage, by which they were connected with God, and perfidiously violated their pledged faith. Hence, the Prophet says, “Even if the Egyptians promise wonderful things to thee, as a lover allured by thy beauty and by thy meretricious ornaments, yet they will deceive thee; and if the Assyrians shew themselves ready to bring aid, they also will disappoint thy hope: so that thou shalt be like a destitute strumpet, reduced to extreme want.” I cannot finish today: I must therefore defer the rest until to-morrow.
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Calvin: Jer 4:31 - -- By these words Jeremiah confirms what the latter part of the preceding verse contains: nor was it for the sake of elucidating his subject that he enl...
By these words Jeremiah confirms what the latter part of the preceding verse contains: nor was it for the sake of elucidating his subject that he enlarged on it; but when he saw his own nation so hard and almost like stones, he employed many words and set forth in various ways what he might have expressed in one sentence: and what he taught would have been often coldly received, had he not added exhortations and threatenings. It was on this account that he now expresses in other words what he had previously said, I have heard, he says, the voice as of one in labor This hearing, no doubt, is to be taken consistently with the representation which had been made to him; for Jeremiah could not hear in a way different from others; but he speaks according to the discovery made to him of the approaching judgment of God, which was then unheeded by the people; and he had this discovery, that he might by such a representation as this make it known to them. He then says, that he had heard, as though he had witnessed already all that was to come. He then exaggerates the evil; for he puts distress,
He sets forth at the same time, as already said, the greatness or the extremity of their grief by this similitude, The voice of the daughter of Sion, who complains, etc.; for the relative may be here added. Some take the verb to be in the second person, “Thou wilt lament and extend, “or rend, “thy hands;” but this is not suitable, because the third person is immediately used, “thy hands.” Then what he says is, that the voice of the daughter of Sion would be an evidence of her extreme grief, for she would lament; and he adds, at the same time, the smiting of the hands. This verb is variously rendered; but as
He then concludes by saying, Woe to me, for failed has my soul on account of murderers Here the Prophet intimates, that all the rest were blind in the midst of light, yet God’s judgment, which the ungodly and wicked laughed at, or at least disregarded, was seen clearly by him. His soul, he says, fainted for the slain; and yet no one had hitherto been slain: but by this mode of speaking, he shews, that he had as it were before his eyes what was hid from others, and hence their hearts were not affected. 127 Now follows —
Defender -> Jer 4:24
Defender: Jer 4:24 - -- The coming waves of invasion and destruction by the armies of Babylon would also be punctuated with earthquakes and storms (Jer 4:28), finally leaving...
The coming waves of invasion and destruction by the armies of Babylon would also be punctuated with earthquakes and storms (Jer 4:28), finally leaving the land desolate."
TSK: Jer 4:24 - -- mountains : Jer 8:16, Jer 10:10; Jdg 5:4, Jdg 5:5; 1Ki 19:11; Psa 18:7, Psa 77:18, Psa 97:4, Psa 114:4-7; Isa 5:25; Eze 38:20; Mic 1:4; Nah 1:5, Nah 1...
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TSK: Jer 4:26 - -- the fruitful : Jer 12:4, Jer 14:2-6; Deu 29:23-28; Psa 76:7, Psa 107:34; Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10, Isa 7:20-25; Mic 3:12
the fruitful : Jer 12:4, Jer 14:2-6; Deu 29:23-28; Psa 76:7, Psa 107:34; Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10, Isa 7:20-25; Mic 3:12
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TSK: Jer 4:27 - -- The : Jer 4:7, Jer 7:34, Jer 12:11, Jer 18:16; 2Ch 36:21; Isa 6:11, Isa 6:12, Isa 24:1, Isa 24:3-12; Eze 6:14, Eze 33:28
yet : Jer 5:10,Jer 5:18, Jer ...
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TSK: Jer 4:28 - -- the earth : Jer 4:23-26, Jer 12:4, Jer 23:10; Isa 24:4, Isa 33:8, Isa 33:9; Hos 4:3; Joe 1:10
the heavens : Isa 5:30, Isa 34:4, Isa 50:3; Joe 2:30,Joe...
the earth : Jer 4:23-26, Jer 12:4, Jer 23:10; Isa 24:4, Isa 33:8, Isa 33:9; Hos 4:3; Joe 1:10
the heavens : Isa 5:30, Isa 34:4, Isa 50:3; Joe 2:30,Joe 2:31; Mat 27:45; Mar 15:33; Luk 23:44; Rev 6:12
because : Jer 7:16, Jer 14:11, Jer 14:12, Jer 15:1-9; Num 23:19; 1Sa 15:29; Isa 14:24-27, Isa 46:10,Isa 46:11; Eze 24:14; Hos 13:14; Eph 1:9, Eph 1:11; Heb 7:21
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TSK: Jer 4:29 - -- shall flee : Jer 39:4-6, Jer 52:7; 2Ki 25:4-7; Isa 30:17; Amo 9:1
they shall go : 1Sa 13:6; 2Ch 33:11; Isa 2:19-21; Luk 23:30; Rev 6:15-17
every : Jer...
shall flee : Jer 39:4-6, Jer 52:7; 2Ki 25:4-7; Isa 30:17; Amo 9:1
they shall go : 1Sa 13:6; 2Ch 33:11; Isa 2:19-21; Luk 23:30; Rev 6:15-17
every : Jer 4:27
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TSK: Jer 4:30 - -- And when : Jer 5:31, Jer 13:21; Isa 10:3, Isa 20:6, Isa 33:14; Heb 2:3
Though : Eze 23:40,Eze 23:41, Eze 28:9, Eze 28:13; Rev 17:4
face : Heb. eyes, 2...
And when : Jer 5:31, Jer 13:21; Isa 10:3, Isa 20:6, Isa 33:14; Heb 2:3
Though : Eze 23:40,Eze 23:41, Eze 28:9, Eze 28:13; Rev 17:4
face : Heb. eyes, 2Ki 9:30
in vain : Jer 22:20-22; Lam 1:2, Lam 1:19, Lam 4:17; Eze 16:36-41, Eze 23:9, Eze 23:10,Eze 23:22-24, Eze 23:28, Eze 23:29; Rev 17:2, Rev 17:13, Rev 17:16-18
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TSK: Jer 4:31 - -- I have heard : Jer 6:24, Jer 13:21, Jer 22:23, Jer 30:6, Jer 48:41, Jer 49:22, Jer 49:24, Jer 50:43; Isa 13:8, Isa 21:3; Hos 13:13; 1Th 5:3
the voice ...
I have heard : Jer 6:24, Jer 13:21, Jer 22:23, Jer 30:6, Jer 48:41, Jer 49:22, Jer 49:24, Jer 50:43; Isa 13:8, Isa 21:3; Hos 13:13; 1Th 5:3
the voice : Jer 6:2, Jer 6:23; Mat 21:5
spreadeth : Isa 1:15; Lam 1:17
Woe : Jer 10:19, Jer 15:18, Jer 45:2; Psa 120:5; Isa 6:5; Mic 7:1; 1Co 9:16
because : Jer 14:18, Jer 18:21; Lam 1:20, Lam 2:21; Eze 9:5, Eze 9:6, Eze 23:46, Eze 23:47
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jer 4:23-26 - -- In four verses each beginning with "I beheld,"the prophet sees in vision the desolate condition of Judaea during the Babylonian captivity. Jer ...
In four verses each beginning with "I beheld,"the prophet sees in vision the desolate condition of Judaea during the Babylonian captivity.
Without form, and void - Desolate and void (see Gen 1:2 note). The land has returned to a state of chaos (marginal reference note).
And the heavens - And upward to the heavens. The imagery is that of the last day of judgment. To Jeremiah’ s vision all was as though the day of the Lord had come, and earth returned to the state in which it was before the first creative word (see 2Pe 3:10).
Moved lightly - " Reeled to and fro,"from the violence of the earthquake.
The fruitful place - The Carmel Jer 2:7, where the population had been most dense, and the labors of the farmer most richly rewarded, has become the wilderness.
At the presence - i. e., because of, at the command of Yahweh, and because of His anger.
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Barnes: Jer 4:27 - -- Desolate - a waste. One of the most striking points of prophecy is, that however severe. may be the judgment pronounced against Judah, there is...
Desolate - a waste.
One of the most striking points of prophecy is, that however severe. may be the judgment pronounced against Judah, there is always the reservation, that the ruin shall not be complete Jer 3:14.
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Barnes: Jer 4:28 - -- For ... - Because of this doom upon Judah. I have purposed it - The Septuagint arrangement restores the parallelism: For I have spoken, a...
For ... - Because of this doom upon Judah.
I have purposed it - The Septuagint arrangement restores the parallelism:
For I have spoken, and will not repent,
I have purposed, and will not turn back from it.
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Barnes: Jer 4:29 - -- The whole city ... - Rather, Every city is fleeing. All the inhabitants of the tokens flee to Jerusalem for protection, or seek refuge in the w...
The whole city ... - Rather, Every city is fleeing. All the inhabitants of the tokens flee to Jerusalem for protection, or seek refuge in the woods and rocks.
The horsemen and bowmen - The cavalry Jer 4:13 and bowmen formed the chief strength of the Assyrian armies.
They shall go - They have gone.
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Barnes: Jer 4:30 - -- Translate, And thou, O plundered one, what effectest thou, that "thou clothest thyself with"scarlet, that "thou deckest"thyself "with ornaments of g...
Translate, And thou, O plundered one, what effectest thou, that "thou clothest thyself with"scarlet, that "thou deckest"thyself "with ornaments of gold,"that thou enlargest thine eyes with antimony (2Ki 9:30 note)? "In vain"dost thou beautify thyself; "thy lovers"despise"thee, they"seek "thy life."Jerusalem is represented as a woman who puts on her best attire to gain favor in the eyes of her lovers, but in vain.
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Barnes: Jer 4:31 - -- For a cry have I heard as of one writhing in vain: Anguish as of one that bringeth forth her first-born: The cry of the daughter of Zion. She gasps...
For a cry have I heard as of one writhing in vain:
Anguish as of one that bringeth forth her first-born:
The cry of the daughter of Zion.
She gasps for breath: she stretches out her palms:
Woe is me! for my soul faints before the murderers.
Poole: Jer 4:24 - -- He proceeds in his figurative elegancies: q.d. Behold how the mountains of Judea tremble! a like expression Psa 18:7,8 Isa 5:25 ; as if the very sen...
He proceeds in his figurative elegancies: q.d. Behold how the mountains of Judea tremble! a like expression Psa 18:7,8 Isa 5:25 ; as if the very senseless creatures were astonished at the greatness of God’ s anger; and he mentions these as being the most stable part of the earth, yet shake before him.
All the hills moved lightly as easily as if they were some very light matter, or as dust or feathers in a whirlwind. See Psa 114:4,6 . Or these may be said hyperbolically to tremble and move by reason of the multitudes of trampling and prancing horses and chariots furiously passing over them.
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Poole: Jer 4:25 - -- There was no man quite depopulated and laid waste, all either slain, or carried captive, or fled; for after the flight of men, women, and children in...
There was no man quite depopulated and laid waste, all either slain, or carried captive, or fled; for after the flight of men, women, and children into Egypt, upon the death of Gedaliah, scarce a Jew was left in Judea.
All the birds of the heavens were fled such birds as are used to inhabited places, that live, feed, and build among men; (others indeed, both birds and beasts, would continue, which implies but the greater desolation and waste of the land, as is threatened against Babylon, Isa 13:19-22 )
fled either to seek provisions, here being no food left for them, or frighted with the hideous noises and clatterings that do attend armies; as we have read, that such hath been the concussion of the air by the loud clamours and noises of armies, that birds have fallen down to the earth, Jer 9:10 Zep 1:2,3 .
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Poole: Jer 4:26 - -- The fruitful place Heb. Carmel , either properly, for that part of the land so called for its fruitfulness; or rather appellatively, for not only th...
The fruitful place Heb. Carmel , either properly, for that part of the land so called for its fruitfulness; or rather appellatively, for not only their most pleasant, but most fruitful lands, that were kept dressed and occupied for food, both for necessity and delight, Jer 4:27 Isa 29:17 33:9 .
All the cities thereof were broken down no place left for men to inhabit, Isa 1:7 .
By his fierce anger that which the enemy could not have done with all his fury and fierceness, had it not been for the anger of the Lord, which by their great provocation they had brought upon them. selves, 2Ki 24:3 Jer 9:12,13 .
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Poole: Jer 4:27 - -- Some expound it, Neither shall this punishment suffice, nor my fury stop here; I will not thus have done with them; and so look to what they were fu...
Some expound it, Neither shall this punishment suffice, nor my fury stop here; I will not thus have done with them; and so look to what they were further to endure in their long captivity. See Lev 26:36,39 . But it seems rather to be a word of comfort, that they shall not be utterly extinct, he will preserve a remnant, Jer 5:10 Isa 1:9 24:13 : q.d. Though I am greatly moved with anger, yet I will not be inexorable, I will remember my covenant, Jer 30:11 : in the midst of judgment he will remember mercy; after seventy years’ captivity he brought them back again.
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Poole: Jer 4:28 - -- For this shall the earth mourn, and the heavens above be black expressions to set forth the dreadfulness of the judgment; he makes the elements to pe...
For this shall the earth mourn, and the heavens above be black expressions to set forth the dreadfulness of the judgment; he makes the elements to personate mourners, a sad face of things above and below, a metaphor, and therein to shame the stupidity of his people.
Because I have spoken it: q.d. You would not believe either that my prophets spake, or what they said; now I tell you I speak myself, and what I have resolved upon I will not revoke; see Eze 24:13,14 , and Jer 15:6 ; for I have purposed it; I have not spoken in my heat or fury, but upon mature deliberation; an anthropopathy; or, what the prophets have denounced I will ratify.
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Poole: Jer 4:29 - -- The whole city shall flee the inhabitants of all ranks and qualities shall seek to escape the fury of this Chaldean army, Jer 39:4 .
For the noise ...
The whole city shall flee the inhabitants of all ranks and qualities shall seek to escape the fury of this Chaldean army, Jer 39:4 .
For the noise either upon the report of their coming, hereby as it were deriding their confidence; or rather at the approach of their vast armies, for they were close besieged before they fled, as appears, 2Ki 25:4 .
They shall go into thickets, and climb up upon the rocks such a consternation there shall be upon them, that they shall run into every hole to hide themselves: thus Manasseh was taken among the thorns, 2Ch 33:11 . The Hebrew is abim , the clouds , possibly alluding to dark places on the tops of hills, reaching as it were to the clouds, or among the cloudy shades of trees and groves that usually grew there. The LXX. render it caves , and so the rocks for shelter, or the clefts, caves, and hiding-places in the rocks. See Isa 2:21 .
Every city shall be forsaken and not a man dwell therein; there shall be an utter desolation, their cities quite forsaken, not any to inhabit them, Jer 4:25,26 .
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Poole: Jer 4:30 - -- When thou art spoiled which will certainly come upon thee; or when this destruction shall come upon thee, which is very near thee.
What wilt thou do...
When thou art spoiled which will certainly come upon thee; or when this destruction shall come upon thee, which is very near thee.
What wilt thou do? viz. when thou, O daughter of Zion, as Jer 4:31 , art besieged by the Babylonians, what course wilt thou take? It is not to be avoided. A kind of an insulting way of speech, as it were upbraiding them with their pride and confidence: q.d. Your condition is desperate.
Crimson or scarlet, 2Sa 1:24 : see on See Poole "Isa 1:18" .
Though thou deckest thee with ornaments though thou dost superinduce those ornaments, or jewels of gold, that may reader thy attire the most rich and splendid, 2Sa 1:24 .
Though thou rentest thy face with painting: it is observed that they that paint much make their skins withered. Face , Heb. eyes , the wantonness thereof being possibly set out more by painting; see Isa 3:16 ; or rather, face and eyes, being sometimes put one for the other see 1Sa 16:12 Isa 25:8 , compared with Rev 21:4 .
In vain shalt thou make thyself fair all thy tricking up thyself, thinking thereby to ingratiate thyself with the Chaldeans, will be to no purpose, for they will work thy ruin, as in the close of the verse, and Jer 19:7 .
Thy lovers will despise thee they will slight thee more than ever; they that have doted on time, thy unchaste paramours, their lust being satisfied, shall abhor thee; see 2Sa 13:15 ; and the pronoun, being not in the original, it may signify that no lovers at all will look after thee; thou shalt be cast off by all. See thus of Tyre, Isa 23:15,16 . Those that were in confederacy with thee, and thy professed friends, Hos 2:5 , shall not only forsake time, but join with thine enemies to destroy thee, Lam 1:2 . And thus is Babylon to be dealt withal, Rev 17:16,17 . The sense is, That notwithstanding all thy allurings and enticements, either to obtain the help of thy friends and allies the Egyptians, whom thou takest to be thy lovers, and didst forsake me to cleave to them, or to stop the fury of thine enemies, the Chaldeans; (possibly alluding to Jezebel’ s practice, in painting herself to stop the fury of Jehu, 2Ki 9:30 O yet shall it advantage thee nothing; thou shalt be no more regarded than a forsaken strumpet, Eze 16:36,37 Eze 23
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Poole: Jer 4:31 - -- A voice as of a woman in travail: when the Scripture would express any exquisite sorrow, exceeding all other pains, it doth it by a woman in travail,...
A voice as of a woman in travail: when the Scripture would express any exquisite sorrow, exceeding all other pains, it doth it by a woman in travail, Isa 13:8,9 Jer 6:24 30:6,7 . The anguish as of her that bringeth forth her first child , which of all seems to be the most painful, both from natural causes, and because they have less patience to bear, having not had former experience of the like.
The daughter of Zion viz. Jerusalem, Isa 1:8 .
That spreadeth her hands in her great distress she either reacheth them out to God for some help, Isa 1:15 ; or rather, according to the use of persons in great anguish, clapping or wringing their hands together, as both the former expression of bewailing herself, fetching of deep sighs and lamentations, and the following woe is me , intimates. See Jer 2:37 .
Woe is me now! or, the time of my woe is at hand; it draws near.
My soul is wearied because of murderers there is no more spirit left within me, I am ready to sink under my distress, considering not only that my destruction is so near, but that those of whom I have been so fond, and whose idols I have so zealously served, should become my murderers, Jer 4:30 , and that I should fall into the hands of such as will have no compassion, 2Ch 36:17 .
Haydock: Jer 4:26 - -- Carmel: the beautiful country of Palestine, (Haydock) Jerusalem, (Theodoret) or the mountain so called.
Carmel: the beautiful country of Palestine, (Haydock) Jerusalem, (Theodoret) or the mountain so called.
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Haydock: Jer 4:27 - -- Destroy, when Jechonias was led captive. God allowed the people still eleven years to repent; and he afterwards restored the Jews. (Calmet) ---
He...
Destroy, when Jechonias was led captive. God allowed the people still eleven years to repent; and he afterwards restored the Jews. (Calmet) ---
He will never suffer his church to perish. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Jer 4:28 - -- Repented. Only a finite being can do this. God's resolution is here unconditional and fixed.
Repented. Only a finite being can do this. God's resolution is here unconditional and fixed.
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Haydock: Jer 4:30 - -- Stone, or antimony, like Jazabel, (4 Kings ix. 30.) to darken and enlarge the eye-lids. ---
Lovers. Infidel nations of Egypt, &c.
Stone, or antimony, like Jazabel, (4 Kings ix. 30.) to darken and enlarge the eye-lids. ---
Lovers. Infidel nations of Egypt, &c.
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Haydock: Jer 4:31 - -- Child. Hebrew and Septuagint, "a first-born," when the pains are most acute. (Calmet)
Child. Hebrew and Septuagint, "a first-born," when the pains are most acute. (Calmet)
Gill: Jer 4:24 - -- I beheld the mountains, and, lo, they trembled,.... At the presence of God, at the tokens of his displeasure, and at his awful vengeance in the destru...
I beheld the mountains, and, lo, they trembled,.... At the presence of God, at the tokens of his displeasure, and at his awful vengeance in the destruction of the Jews, as they are sometimes said to do, Psa 68:8,
and all the hills moved lightly; so Kimchi's father says the word used has the signification of lightness; though Jarchi, from Menachem, explains it, they were plucked up, and thrown out of their place; and some render it, were pulled down and destroyed, so the Targum. Mountains and hills are most stable, and not easily moved, wherefore this is said, to aggravate the desolation and destruction.
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Gill: Jer 4:25 - -- And I beheld, and, lo, there was no man,.... No people dwelling in it, as the Targum; the land was without inhabitants, they were either killed with t...
And I beheld, and, lo, there was no man,.... No people dwelling in it, as the Targum; the land was without inhabitants, they were either killed with the sword, or taken and carried captive into Babylon, or fled into Egypt and other countries:
and all the birds of the heavens were fled; at the sound of the trumpet, the alarm of war; at the blackness of the heavens, filled with smoke; at the barrenness of the earth, there being no seed sown; and the earth, as at the first creation, having no herb, nor trees bearing fruit, and so no food for birds; and therefore they went elsewhere, both wild and tame.
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Gill: Jer 4:26 - -- I beheld, and, lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness,.... Or, "I beheld, and, lo, Carmel was a wilderness"; which was a particular part of the land ...
I beheld, and, lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness,.... Or, "I beheld, and, lo, Carmel was a wilderness"; which was a particular part of the land of Israel, and was very fertile, and abounded in pastures and fruit trees, and yet this, as the rest, became desolate as a wilderness; see Isa 32:15 though it may be put for the whole land, which was very fruitful; and so the Targum,
"I saw, and, lo, the land of Israel, which was planted as Carmel, was turned to be as a wilderness:''
and all the cities thereof; not of Carmel only, but of the whole land:
were broken down at the presence of the Lord, and by his fierce anger; for though this was done by the Chaldeans, yet it was by the will and appointment of God, and as a token of his fierce anger against the people of the Jews, for their sins and transgressions. Jarchi cites a Midrash Agadah, or an allegorical exposition of this place, which interprets the "mountains", the Jewish fathers; the "hills", the mothers, and their merits; "no man", the worthiness of Moses, who was meeker than any man; and "Carmel", Elijah; without any manner of foundation.
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Gill: Jer 4:27 - -- For thus hath the Lord said,.... What follows is an explanation and confirmation of the above vision the prophet had:
the whole land shall be desol...
For thus hath the Lord said,.... What follows is an explanation and confirmation of the above vision the prophet had:
the whole land shall be desolate; as he had seen; it should not be manured, ploughed, and sown, or bring forth fruit; and should be without inhabitants, at least have very few:
yet I will not make a full end; there should be some inhabitants, who, with those that should hereafter return from captivity, would repeople it, rebuild the temple, and restore it to its pristine form and order, both as to things natural, civil, and ecclesiastical; but though a full end of them, as a church and people, was not to be made now by the Chaldeans, yet it would be; as it has been done by the Romans, in the times of Vespasian and Hadrian.
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Gill: Jer 4:28 - -- For this shall the earth mourn,.... That is, for the full end that will be made hereafter, though not now; the earth may be said to mourn when the inh...
For this shall the earth mourn,.... That is, for the full end that will be made hereafter, though not now; the earth may be said to mourn when the inhabitants of it do; or when it is destroyed, and is become desolate, as the Targum, Jarchi, and Kimchi, explain it; when it is uncultivated and uninhabited:
and the heavens above be black; with thick clouds, and storms, and tempests; in allusion to mourners, that are clothed with black: these figures, of the earth's mourning, and the heavens being clothed in black, denote the horribleness of that dispensation, when there would be an utter destruction of the Jewish nation, church, and polity, of which Daniel prophesies, Dan 9:27,
because I have spoken it; in my word, as the Targum; in the Scriptures of the Old Testament, by Moses and the prophets:
I have purposed it; or I have thought of it, in my counsel, as the Targum; it was a thing deliberately devised and determined, and therefore can never be frustrated, or made void:
and will not repent; of what was purposed and predicted:
neither will I turn back from it; revoke, or retract it; it shall surely come to pass: the Jews, upon their return from the Babylonish captivity, and afterwards, might flatter themselves that a full end would not be made of them, because it was not then done; and therefore these several strong expressions are used, to confirm and assure them of it; for the word of God cannot fail, his counsel shall stand; he is not a man, that he should lie or repent; he will do all his pleasure.
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Gill: Jer 4:29 - -- The whole city shall flee,.... Or, "every city"; for not Jerusalem only is meant, but every city, or the inhabitants of every city; and so the Targum ...
The whole city shall flee,.... Or, "every city"; for not Jerusalem only is meant, but every city, or the inhabitants of every city; and so the Targum paraphrases it,
"all the inhabitants of the land,''
who would be put into a panic, and flee: "for" or
at the noise of the horsemen and bowmen; of which the army of the enemy would greatly consist: it intimates that the inhabitants of Judea would not stand a battle; but at hearing the sound of the trampling of the horses, and the clattering of the bows and arrows, that the men upon them had, they would flee at once:
they shall go into the thickets, and climb upon the rocks; that is, either the horsemen and bowmen, who would pursue the inhabitants into those places: or rather the inhabitants themselves, who would flee thither to hide themselves from their enemies; namely, get into woods and forests, and among the thick trees, and cover themselves; and upon the highest mountains and rocks, and into the holes and caverns of them, and secure themselves from the enemy; see Mat 24:16, the word for "thickets" signifies "clouds" i; and Kimchi interprets it of places as high as the clouds, as the tops of some mountains are, so that going up to them is like entering into the clouds; and which are sometimes covered with thick trees, and look like clouds; but the Targum explains it of woods or forests:
every city shall be forsaken; of its inhabitants:
and not a man dwell therein; as the prophet had seen in his vision, Jer 4:25, this was to be when a full end was made, not by the Babylonians, but by the Romans.
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Gill: Jer 4:30 - -- And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do?.... Or, "O thou spoiled" k, wasted, and undone creature, how wilt thou help thyself? by what means dost ...
And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do?.... Or, "O thou spoiled" k, wasted, and undone creature, how wilt thou help thyself? by what means dost thou think thou canst be delivered? it suggests that her ruin was inevitable; that she could not be recovered from it by herself, or any other:
though thou clothest thyself with crimson; and so look like some rich and noble person; hoping thereby to find mercy, and to have quarter given and kindness shown:
though thou deckest thee with ornaments of gold; as a person of high and princely dignity: or rather all this is to be understood of the manner of harlots, who dress rich and grand, in order to allure men; since it follows,
though thou rendest thy face with painting; or, eyes l; which painting dilates as Jezebel did, 2Ki 9:30,
in vain shalt thou make thyself fair; so as to be loved and admired: far from it:
thy lovers will despise thee; as an old harlot is despised by her former gallants, notwithstanding all her dressing and painting; yea, their love is often turned into hatred and abhorrence, as would be the case here,
they will seek thy life; to take it away; so far would there be from being any ground of expectations of help and deliverance from them.
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Gill: Jer 4:31 - -- For I have heard a voice as of a woman in travail,.... So the distress of the Jews, at the time of their destruction, is compared to the sorrows of a ...
For I have heard a voice as of a woman in travail,.... So the distress of the Jews, at the time of their destruction, is compared to the sorrows of a woman in travail; and a word, that signifies that is used to express it, Mat 24:8,
and the anguish as of her that bringeth forth her first child; whose time is more difficult, her pains sharper, her anguish greater, and, having less experience, the more impatient:
the voice of the daughter of Zion, that bewaileth herself; her unhappy condition, and miserable circumstances:
that spreadeth her hands; as persons in distress do, and particularly women in travail: saying,
woe is me now, for my soul is wearied because of murderers: these abounded: under the second temple, and was the reason, the Jews say: m, of the sanhedrim removing from their usual place in the temple; and why they ceased from the beheading of the red heifer n.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Jer 4:31 Heb “Woe, now to me!” See the translator’s note on 4:13 for the usage of “Woe to…”
Geneva Bible: Jer 4:27 For thus hath the LORD said, The whole land shall be desolate; yet will I ( u ) not make a full end.
( u ) But for his mercies sake, he will reserve ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 4:30 And [when] thou [art] laid waste, what wilt thou do? Though thou ( x ) clothest thyself with crimson, though thou deckest thee with ornaments of gold,...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 4:31 For I have heard a voice as of a woman in travail, [and] the anguish as of her that bringeth forth her first child, the voice of the daughter of Zion,...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 4:1-31
TSK Synopsis: Jer 4:1-31 - --1 God calls Israel by his promise.3 He exhorts Judah to repentance by fearful judgments.19 A grievous lamentation for Judah.
MHCC -> Jer 4:19-31
MHCC: Jer 4:19-31 - --The prophet had no pleasure in delivering messages of wrath. He is shown in a vision the whole land in confusion. Compared with what it was, every thi...
Matthew Henry -> Jer 4:19-31
Matthew Henry: Jer 4:19-31 - -- The prophet is here in an agony, and cries out like one upon the rack of pain with some acute distemper, or as a woman in travail. The expressions a...
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 4:3-31 - --
Threatening of Judgment upon Jerusalem and Judah. - If Judah and Jerusalem do not reform, the wrath of God will be inevitably kindled against them (...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 4:19-26 - --
Grief at the desolation of the land the infatuation of the people . - Jer 4:19. " My bowels, my bowels! I am pained! the chambers of my heart - my ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 4:27-31 - --
The devastation of Judah, though not its utter annihilation, is irrevocably decreed, and cannot be turned away by any meretricious expedients. - J...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 4:30 - --
In vain will Jerusalem attempt to turn away calamity by the wiles of a courtesan. In Jer 4:31 the daughter of Zion is addressed, i.e., the community...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 4:31 - --
Jer 4:31, as giving a reason, is introduced by כּי . Zion's attempts to secure the goodwill of the enemy are in vain, for already the prophet hea...
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 4:5--7:1 - --Yahweh's declaration of divine judgment 4:5-6:30
The Judahites having sinned greatly (ch...
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Constable: Jer 4:23-26 - --A vision of the coming destruction 4:23-26
"In one of the most magnificent lyrical passages in the entire prophecy [vv. 23-31], Jeremiah experiences a...
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