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Text -- Jeremiah 6:5-30 (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 6:5; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:13; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:15; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:17; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:20; Jer 6:20; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:22; Jer 6:22; Jer 6:24; Jer 6:25; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:30
Wesley: Jer 6:5 - -- They would lose neither day nor night; which shews that, they were extraordinarily stirred up by God in this expedition.
They would lose neither day nor night; which shews that, they were extraordinarily stirred up by God in this expedition.
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Wesley: Jer 6:6 - -- To the Chaldeans: God would have the Jews to know, that they have not so much to do with the Chaldeans as with him; that they are his rod to scourge t...
To the Chaldeans: God would have the Jews to know, that they have not so much to do with the Chaldeans as with him; that they are his rod to scourge them for their sins. And thus God is said to hiss for such whom he will employ in such work, Isa 5:26, Isa 7:18. And he styles himself the Lord of hosts, to shew that it is in vain to contend in battle with them, whom he sends forth.
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Such as you may have need of to raise up works against the strong places.
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Throw up one continued trench, as a mount round about it.
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There are found in her all kinds of oppression and injustice.
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I would yet willingly spare them if it might be.
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Wesley: Jer 6:8 - -- Heb. be disjointed, a most emphatical metaphor, whereby God would express how great grief it is to him to withdraw himself from them, even like the se...
Heb. be disjointed, a most emphatical metaphor, whereby God would express how great grief it is to him to withdraw himself from them, even like the separating one limb from another.
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Judah shalt be gleaned over and over, 'till there be a full end, none left.
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Wesley: Jer 6:9 - -- As much as to say, they should not be content with one spoiling, but they should go back a second and a third time, to carry away both persons and spo...
As much as to say, they should not be content with one spoiling, but they should go back a second and a third time, to carry away both persons and spoil.
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Wesley: Jer 6:10 - -- An uncircumcised ear, signifies the rejecting of instruction; an uncircumcised heart, an obstinate and rebellious will.
An uncircumcised ear, signifies the rejecting of instruction; an uncircumcised heart, an obstinate and rebellious will.
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Wesley: Jer 6:10 - -- They had brought themselves under that incapacity by their obstinacy and wilfulness.
They had brought themselves under that incapacity by their obstinacy and wilfulness.
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Wesley: Jer 6:11 - -- I am, as it were, filled with the fire of God's wrath, which I am forced to discharge myself of.
I am, as it were, filled with the fire of God's wrath, which I am forced to discharge myself of.
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The streets being the places where children are wont to sport.
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One sex as well as the other, shall be a prey to the enemy.
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Wesley: Jer 6:11 - -- Such as had filled up the number of their days, as were at the edge of the grave.
Such as had filled up the number of their days, as were at the edge of the grave.
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Wesley: Jer 6:13 - -- Heb. doing falsehood, as if that were their whole work, the proper sin of the priests and prophets, to deceive the people, and to flatter them by fals...
Heb. doing falsehood, as if that were their whole work, the proper sin of the priests and prophets, to deceive the people, and to flatter them by false visions.
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Wesley: Jer 6:14 - -- This refers peculiarly to the prophets; making light of these threatenings, daubing over the misery and danger that was coming on the people, by persu...
This refers peculiarly to the prophets; making light of these threatenings, daubing over the misery and danger that was coming on the people, by persuading them, that it should not come, or if it did, it would be easily cured.
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Both by encouraging the people, and joining with them in their idolatries.
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Wesley: Jer 6:16 - -- He now turns his speech to the people, and gives them counsel; by a metaphor taken from travellers, that being in doubt of their way, stand still, and...
He now turns his speech to the people, and gives them counsel; by a metaphor taken from travellers, that being in doubt of their way, stand still, and consider, whether the direction they have received from some false guide, be right or not.
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Wesley: Jer 6:17 - -- The voice of his prophet, intimating his loud crying upon the account of eminent danger.
The voice of his prophet, intimating his loud crying upon the account of eminent danger.
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Wesley: Jer 6:18 - -- He calls upon the nations round about to be spectators of his severity against Judah.
He calls upon the nations round about to be spectators of his severity against Judah.
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Wesley: Jer 6:18 - -- The greatness of their punishment, as the effect of the greatness of their sins.
The greatness of their punishment, as the effect of the greatness of their sins.
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A country in Arabia Faelix, to which country frankincense was peculiar.
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Wesley: Jer 6:20 - -- The same that is mentioned as an ingredient in the holy oil, Exo 30:23. To what purpose art thou at this trouble and charge to fetch these ingredients...
The same that is mentioned as an ingredient in the holy oil, Exo 30:23. To what purpose art thou at this trouble and charge to fetch these ingredients for thy incense.
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Wesley: Jer 6:21 - -- I will suffer such things to be laid in their way, as shall be the occasion of their destruction.
I will suffer such things to be laid in their way, as shall be the occasion of their destruction.
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God shall stir up the Chaldeans like a great storm.
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The uttermost parts of the Babylonian territories.
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The prophet personates the peoples affections.
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Expressing the great danger that there would be everywhere.
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The prophet calls upon them to mourn in the deepest manner.
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Wesley: Jer 6:27 - -- Here God speaks by way of encouragement to the prophet, and tells him, he had made him a fortified tower, that he might be safe, notwithstanding all t...
Here God speaks by way of encouragement to the prophet, and tells him, he had made him a fortified tower, that he might be safe, notwithstanding all the attempts against him.
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Wesley: Jer 6:27 - -- As refiners do metals; hereby be is encouraged to reprove them more freely, God will give him prudence to see what is amiss, and undauntedness to oppo...
As refiners do metals; hereby be is encouraged to reprove them more freely, God will give him prudence to see what is amiss, and undauntedness to oppose it.
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Wesley: Jer 6:29 - -- The prophet prosecutes his metaphor taken from refining of metals, intimating, that the prophets had spent their breath to no purpose, and their stren...
The prophet prosecutes his metaphor taken from refining of metals, intimating, that the prophets had spent their breath to no purpose, and their strength was consumed by their labour.
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Wesley: Jer 6:29 - -- The judgments which were heavy, as lead upon them, are all wasted, and do no good.
The judgments which were heavy, as lead upon them, are all wasted, and do no good.
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Let the artist use his greatest skill and industry, yet is it all in vain.
JFB -> Jer 6:4-5; Jer 6:4-5; Jer 6:4-5; Jer 6:4-5; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:12; Jer 6:12; Jer 6:13; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:15; Jer 6:15; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:17; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:22; Jer 6:23; Jer 6:23; Jer 6:24; Jer 6:25; Jer 6:25; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:30
The invading soldiers encourage one another to the attack on Jerusalem.
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JFB: Jer 6:4-5 - -- Literally, "Sanctify" war, that is, Proclaim it formally with solemn rites; the invasion was solemnly ordered by God (compare Isa 13:3).
Literally, "Sanctify" war, that is, Proclaim it formally with solemn rites; the invasion was solemnly ordered by God (compare Isa 13:3).
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JFB: Jer 6:4-5 - -- The hottest part of the day when attacks were rarely made (Jer 15:8; Jer 20:16). Even at this time they wished to attack, such is their eagerness.
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JFB: Jer 6:4-5 - -- The words of the invaders, mourning the approach of night which would suspend their hostile operations; still, even in spite of the darkness, at night...
The words of the invaders, mourning the approach of night which would suspend their hostile operations; still, even in spite of the darkness, at night they renew the attack (Jer 6:5).
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JFB: Jer 6:6 - -- Hebrew, "pour out"; referring to the emptying of the baskets of earth to make the mound, formed of "trees" and earthwork, to overtop the city walls. T...
Hebrew, "pour out"; referring to the emptying of the baskets of earth to make the mound, formed of "trees" and earthwork, to overtop the city walls. The "trees" were also used to make warlike engines.
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JFB: Jer 6:6 - -- Or join "wholly" with "visited," that is, she is altogether (in her whole extent) to be punished [MAURER].
Or join "wholly" with "visited," that is, she is altogether (in her whole extent) to be punished [MAURER].
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JFB: Jer 6:7 - -- Rather, a well dug, from which water springs; distinct from a natural spring or fountain.
Rather, a well dug, from which water springs; distinct from a natural spring or fountain.
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JFB: Jer 6:7 - -- Causeth to flow; literally, "causeth to dig," the cause being put for the effect (2Ki 21:16, 2Ki 21:24; Isa 57:20).
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JFB: Jer 6:8 - -- Hebrew, "be torn away"; Jehovah's affection making Him unwilling to depart; His attachment to Jerusalem was such that an effort was needed to tear Him...
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The Jews are the grapes, their enemies the unsparing gleaners.
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JFB: Jer 6:9 - -- Again and again bring freshly gathered handfuls to the baskets; referring to the repeated carrying away of captives to Babylon (Jer 52:28-30; 2Ki 24:1...
Again and again bring freshly gathered handfuls to the baskets; referring to the repeated carrying away of captives to Babylon (Jer 52:28-30; 2Ki 24:14; 2Ki 25:11).
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JFB: Jer 6:10 - -- Closed against the precepts of God by the foreskin of carnality (Lev 26:41; Eze 44:7; Act 7:51).
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His denunciations against Judah communicated to the prophet.
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JFB: Jer 6:11 - -- The former means one becoming old; the latter a decrepit old man [MAURER] (Job 5:26; Isa 65:20).
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JFB: Jer 6:12 - -- The very punishments threatened by Moses in the event of disobedience to God (Deu 28:30).
The very punishments threatened by Moses in the event of disobedience to God (Deu 28:30).
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JFB: Jer 6:14 - -- As if it were but a slight wound; or, in a slight manner, pronouncing all sound where there is no soundness.
As if it were but a slight wound; or, in a slight manner, pronouncing all sound where there is no soundness.
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JFB: Jer 6:14 - -- Namely, the prophets and priests (Jer 6:13). Whereas they ought to warn the people of impending judgments and the need of repentance, they say there i...
Namely, the prophets and priests (Jer 6:13). Whereas they ought to warn the people of impending judgments and the need of repentance, they say there is nothing to fear.
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JFB: Jer 6:14 - -- Including soundness. All is sound in the nation's moral state, so all will be peace as to its political state (Jer 4:10; Jer 8:11; Jer 14:13; Jer 23:1...
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JFB: Jer 6:15 - -- ROSENMULLER translates, "They ought to have been ashamed, because . . . but," &c.; the Hebrew verb often expressing, not the action, but the duty to p...
ROSENMULLER translates, "They ought to have been ashamed, because . . . but," &c.; the Hebrew verb often expressing, not the action, but the duty to perform it (Gen 20:9; Mal 2:7). MAURER translates, "They shall be put to shame, for they commit abomination; nay (the prophet correcting himself), there is no shame in them" (Jer 3:3; Jer 8:12; Eze 3:7; Zep 3:5).
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JFB: Jer 6:15 - -- They shall fall with the rest of their people who are doomed to fall, that is, I will now cease from words; I will execute vengeance [CALVIN].
They shall fall with the rest of their people who are doomed to fall, that is, I will now cease from words; I will execute vengeance [CALVIN].
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JFB: Jer 6:16 - -- Image from travellers who have lost their road, stopping and inquiring which is the right way on which they once had been, but from which they have wa...
Image from travellers who have lost their road, stopping and inquiring which is the right way on which they once had been, but from which they have wandered.
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JFB: Jer 6:16 - -- Idolatry and apostasy are the modern way; the worship of God the old way. Evil is not coeval with good, but a modern degeneracy from good. The forsaki...
Idolatry and apostasy are the modern way; the worship of God the old way. Evil is not coeval with good, but a modern degeneracy from good. The forsaking of God is not, in a true sense, a "way cast up" at all (Jer 18:15; Psa 139:24; Mal 4:4).
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JFB: Jer 6:17 - -- Prophets, whose duty it was to announce impending calamities, so as to lead the people to repentance (Isa 21:11; Isa 58:1; Eze 3:17; Hab 2:1).
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JFB: Jer 6:18 - -- Parallel to "nations"; it therefore means the gathered peoples who are invited to be witnesses as to how great is the perversity of the Israelites (Je...
Parallel to "nations"; it therefore means the gathered peoples who are invited to be witnesses as to how great is the perversity of the Israelites (Jer 6:16-17), and that they deserve the severe punishment about to be inflicted on them (Jer 6:19).
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JFB: Jer 6:18 - -- What deeds are committed by the Israelites (Jer 6:16-17) [MAURER]. Or, "what punishments are about to be inflicted on them" [CALVIN].
What deeds are committed by the Israelites (Jer 6:16-17) [MAURER]. Or, "what punishments are about to be inflicted on them" [CALVIN].
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JFB: Jer 6:19 - -- Literally, "and (as to) My law they have rejected it." The same construction occurs in Gen 22:24. Literally, "To what purpose is this to Me, that ince...
Literally, "and (as to) My law they have rejected it." The same construction occurs in Gen 22:24. Literally, "To what purpose is this to Me, that incense cometh to Me?"
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JFB: Jer 6:19 - -- (Isa 43:24; Isa 60:6). No external services are accepted by God without obedience of the heart and life (Jer 7:21; Psa 50:7-9; Isa 1:11; Mic 6:6, &c....
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Antithesis. Your sweet cane is not sweet to Me. The calamus.
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JFB: Jer 6:21 - -- Instruments of the Jews' ruin (compare Mat 21:44; Isa 8:14; 1Pe 2:8). God Himself ("I") lays them before the reprobate (Psa 69:22; Rom 1:28; Rom 11:9)...
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JFB: Jer 6:22 - -- The ancients were little acquainted with the north; therefore it is called the remotest regions (as the Hebrew for "sides" ought to be translated, see...
The ancients were little acquainted with the north; therefore it is called the remotest regions (as the Hebrew for "sides" ought to be translated, see on Isa 14:13) of the earth. The Chaldees are meant (Jer 1:15; Jer 5:15). It is striking that the very same calamities which the Chaldeans had inflicted on Zion are threatened as the retribution to be dealt in turn to themselves by Jehovah (Jer 50:41-43).
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JFB: Jer 6:23 - -- Not that they were like warriors, for they were warriors; but "arrayed most perfectly as warriors" [MAURER].
Not that they were like warriors, for they were warriors; but "arrayed most perfectly as warriors" [MAURER].
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JFB: Jer 6:25 - -- He addresses "the daughter of Zion" (Jer 6:23); caution to the citizens of Jerusalem not to expose themselves to the enemy by going outside of the cit...
He addresses "the daughter of Zion" (Jer 6:23); caution to the citizens of Jerusalem not to expose themselves to the enemy by going outside of the city walls,
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Literally "there is a sword to the enemy"; the enemy hath a sword.
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JFB: Jer 6:26 - -- (Jer 25:34; Mic 1:10). As they usually in mourning only "cast ashes on the head," wallowing in them means something more, namely, so entirely to cove...
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Literally, "lamentation expressed by beating the breast."
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JFB: Jer 6:27 - -- (Jer 1:18), rather, "an assayer (and) explorer." By a metaphor from metallurgy in Jer 6:27-30, Jehovah, in conclusion, confirms the prophet in his of...
(Jer 1:18), rather, "an assayer (and) explorer." By a metaphor from metallurgy in Jer 6:27-30, Jehovah, in conclusion, confirms the prophet in his office, and the latter sums up the description of the reprobate people on whom he had to work. The Hebrew for "assayer" (English Version, "tower") is from a root "to try" metals. "Explorer" (English Version, "fortress") is from an Arabic root, "keen-sighted"; or a Hebrew root, "cutting," that is, separating the metal from the dross [EWALD]. GESENIUS translates as English Version, "fortress," which does not accord with the previous "assayer."
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JFB: Jer 6:28 - -- Literally "contumacious of the contumacious," that is, most contumacious, the Hebrew mode of expressing a superlative. So "the strong among the mighty...
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JFB: Jer 6:28 - -- That is, copper. It and "iron" being the baser and harder metals express the debased and obdurate character of the Jews (Isa 48:4; Isa 60:17).
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JFB: Jer 6:29 - -- So intense a heat is made that the very bellows are almost set on fire. ROSENMULLER translates not so well from a Hebrew root, "pant" or "snort," refe...
So intense a heat is made that the very bellows are almost set on fire. ROSENMULLER translates not so well from a Hebrew root, "pant" or "snort," referring to the sound of the bellows blown hard.
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JFB: Jer 6:29 - -- Employed to separate the baser metal from the silver, as quicksilver is now used. In other words, the utmost pains have been used to purify Israel in ...
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JFB: Jer 6:29 - -- In the Chetib, or Hebrew text, the "consumed" is supplied out of the previous "burned." Translating as ROSENMULLER, "pant," this will be inadmissible;...
In the Chetib, or Hebrew text, the "consumed" is supplied out of the previous "burned." Translating as ROSENMULLER, "pant," this will be inadmissible; and the Keri (Hebrew Margin) division of the Hebrew words will have to be read, to get "is consumed of the fire." This is an argument for the translation, "are burned."
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JFB: Jer 6:29 - -- Answering to the dross which has no good metal to be separated, the mass being all dross.
Answering to the dross which has no good metal to be separated, the mass being all dross.
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JFB: Jer 6:30 - -- Silver so full of alloy as to be utterly worthless (Isa 1:22). The Jews were fit only for rejection.
The prophet stood at the gate of the temple in o...
Silver so full of alloy as to be utterly worthless (Isa 1:22). The Jews were fit only for rejection.
The prophet stood at the gate of the temple in order that the multitudes from the country might hear him. His life was threatened, it appears from Jer 26:1-9, for this prophecy, denouncing the fate of Shiloh as about to befall the temple at Jerusalem. The prophecy given in detail here is summarily referred to there. After Josiah's death the nation relapsed into idolatry through Jehoiakim's bad influence; the worship of Jehovah was, however, combined with it (Jer 7:4, Jer 7:10).
Clarke: Jer 6:5 - -- Arise, and let us go by night - Since we have lost the day, let us not lose the night; but, taking advantage of the darkness, let us make a powerful...
Arise, and let us go by night - Since we have lost the day, let us not lose the night; but, taking advantage of the darkness, let us make a powerful assault while they are under the impression of terror.
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And cast a mount - That may overlook the city, on which to place our engines
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Clarke: Jer 6:6 - -- This is the city to be visited - We are sure of success, for their God will deliver it into our hands, for it is full of oppression, and he has cons...
This is the city to be visited - We are sure of success, for their God will deliver it into our hands, for it is full of oppression, and he has consigned it to destruction.
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Clarke: Jer 6:7 - -- As a fountain casteth out her waters - The inhabitants are incessant in their acts of iniquity; they do nothing but sin.
As a fountain casteth out her waters - The inhabitants are incessant in their acts of iniquity; they do nothing but sin.
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Clarke: Jer 6:8 - -- Be thou instructed - Still there is respite: if they would even now return unto the Lord with all their heart, the advancing Chaldeans would be arre...
Be thou instructed - Still there is respite: if they would even now return unto the Lord with all their heart, the advancing Chaldeans would be arrested on their march and turned back.
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Clarke: Jer 6:9 - -- They shall thoroughly glean the remnant of Israel as a vine: turn back thine hand - The Chaldeans are here exhorted to turn back and glean up the re...
They shall thoroughly glean the remnant of Israel as a vine: turn back thine hand - The Chaldeans are here exhorted to turn back and glean up the remnant of the inhabitants that were left after the capture of Jerusalem; for even that remnant did not profit by the Divine judgments that fell on the inhabitants at large.
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Clarke: Jer 6:10 - -- The word of the Lord is unto them a reproach - It is an object of derision; they despise it.
The word of the Lord is unto them a reproach - It is an object of derision; they despise it.
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Clarke: Jer 6:11 - -- I am full of the fury of the Lord - God has given me a dreadful revelation of the judgments he intends to inflict: my soul is burdened with this pro...
I am full of the fury of the Lord - God has given me a dreadful revelation of the judgments he intends to inflict: my soul is burdened with this prophecy. I have endeavored to suppress it; but I must pour it forth upon the children, on the young people, on husbands and wives, on the old and the super-annuated. All must partake in these judgments.
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Clarke: Jer 6:14 - -- They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly - Of the daughter is not in the text, and is here improperly added: it is, howe...
They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly - Of the daughter is not in the text, and is here improperly added: it is, however, in some MSS
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Clarke: Jer 6:14 - -- Peace, peace - Ye shall have prosperity - when there was none, and when God had determined that there should be none. Here the prophets prophesied f...
Peace, peace - Ye shall have prosperity - when there was none, and when God had determined that there should be none. Here the prophets prophesied falsely; and the people continued in sin, being deceived by the priests and the prophets.
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Clarke: Jer 6:16 - -- Thus saith the Lord, Stand ye in the ways, and see - Let us observe the metaphor. A traveler is going to a particular city; he comes to a place wher...
Thus saith the Lord, Stand ye in the ways, and see - Let us observe the metaphor. A traveler is going to a particular city; he comes to a place where the road divides into several paths, he is afraid of going astray; he stops short, - endeavors to find out the right path: he cannot fix his choice. At last he sees another traveler; he inquires of him, gets proper directions - proceeds on his journey - arrives at the desired place - and reposes after his fatigue. There is an excellent sermon on these words in the works of our first poet, Geoffrey Chaucer; it is among the Canterbury Tales, and is called Chaucer’ s Tale. The text, I find, was read by him as it appears in my old MS. Bible: - Standith upon weies and seeth, and asketh of the olde pathes; What is the good weie? and goth in it, and gee schul fynden refreschimg to your soulis. The soul needs rest; it can only find this by walking in the good way. The good way is that which has been trodden by the saints from the beginning: it is the old way, the way of faith and holiness. Believe, Love, Obey; be holy, and be happy. This is the way; let us inquire for it, and walk in it. But these bad people said, We will not walk in it. Then they took another way, walked over the precipice, and fell into the bottomless pit; where, instead of rest, they find: -
- a fiery deluge, fe
With ever-burning sulfur, unconsumed.
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I set watchmen - I have sent prophets to warn you.
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Clarke: Jer 6:20 - -- Incense frown Sheba - Sheba was in Arabian famous for the best incense. It was situated towards the southern extremity of the peninsula of Arabia; a...
Incense frown Sheba - Sheba was in Arabian famous for the best incense. It was situated towards the southern extremity of the peninsula of Arabia; and was, in respect of Judea, a far country
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Clarke: Jer 6:20 - -- And the sweet cane from a far country - The calamus aromaticus , which, when dried and pulverized, yields a very fine aromatic smell; see on Isa 43:...
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Clarke: Jer 6:23 - -- They shall lay hold on bow and spear - Still pointing out the Chaldeans: or according to Dahler, the Scythians, who had before their invasion of Pal...
They shall lay hold on bow and spear - Still pointing out the Chaldeans: or according to Dahler, the Scythians, who had before their invasion of Palestine overrun many parts of Asia, and had spread consternation wherever their name was heard.
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Clarke: Jer 6:27 - -- I have set thee for a tower and a fortress - Dr. Blayney translates, I have appointed thee to make an assay among my people. The words refer to the ...
I have set thee for a tower and a fortress - Dr. Blayney translates, I have appointed thee to make an assay among my people. The words refer to the office of an assayer of silver and gold; and the manner of assaying here intended is by the cupel, a flat broad iron ring filled with the ashes of burnt bones. To separate the alloy from the silver they add a portion of lead; and when all is fused together, and brought into a state of ebullition, the cupel absorbs the lead, and with it the dross or alloy, and the silver is left pure and motionless on the top of the cupel. The people are here represented under the notion of alloyed silver. They are full of impurities; and they are put into the hands of the prophet, the assayer, to be purified. The bellows are placed, the fire is lighted up, but all to no purpose: so intensely commixed is the alloy with the silver, that it can not be separated. The nozzle of the bellows is even melted with the intensity of the fire used to effect the refinement; and the lead is carried off by the action of the heat; and the assayer melteth in vain, for the alloy still continues in union with the metal. The assayer gives up the process, - will not institute one more expensive or tedious - pronounces the mass unfit to be coined, and denominates it reprobate silver, Jer 6:30. Thus, the evil habits and dispositions of the Israelites were so ingrained that they would not yield to either the ordinary or extraordinary means of salvation. God pronounces them reprobate silver, - not sterling, - full of alloy; - having neither the image nor the superscription of the Great King either on their hearts or on their conduct. Thus he gave them up as incorrigible, and their adversaries prevailed against them. This should be a warning to other nations, and indeed to the Christian Church; for if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he spare these.
Calvin: Jer 6:5 - -- He afterwards adds, Arise ye, and let us ascend in the night; that is, “As we cannot take the city in six hours, (from mid-day to night were six h...
He afterwards adds, Arise ye, and let us ascend in the night; that is, “As we cannot take the city in six hours, (from mid-day to night were six hours, for they divided the day into twelve hours, and the first hour began at the rising of the sun, and the twelfth hour closed the day,) as then we cannot take the city in six hours, let us attack it in the night.” We see here how graphically is described the extreme ardor of their enemies; for they were urged on by the hidden power of God; and this is what Jeremiah intended to express. 165 He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 6:6 - -- The Prophet now points out the cause why a near calamity awaited both the city and the whole of Judea. Two things were necessary to be done: as the J...
The Prophet now points out the cause why a near calamity awaited both the city and the whole of Judea. Two things were necessary to be done: as the Jews had hardened themselves in their thoughtlessness, so that they disregarded all the threatenings of the prophets, it was necessary to expose and reprove this stupidity. This is what the Prophet has hitherto done. But the other thing needful to be done was, to make the Jews to know that they had not to do with the Chaldeans or other nations, but with God himself, with whom they had for a long time carried on war. The Prophet then, after having set before the eyes of his own kindred the calamity which was then nigh at hand, shews now that God was its author.
Thus saith Jehovah of hosts. He reminds them here of the judgment of God, lest they thought that they could overcome their enemies, even if they fought with the greatest ardor and the greatest courage, for they could not overcome God. Thus then saith the God of hosts; as though he had said, “The Chaldeans will indeed bring their forces, which shall be great and strong; but the contest will be now with God, whom ye have so often and for a long time and so pertinaciously provoked.” Thus then saith now the God of hosts, —
Cut ye down wood; that is, “The Chaldeans will not of themselves attack you, but they will fight for God, and serve him as hired soldiers.” As we have seen elsewhere that God blows the trumpet, and sends by a hiss for whomsoever he pleases; so also he says now that the Chaldeans would carry on war under the authority and banner of God. Command them then did God to cut down wood and to cast up a mound. We indeed know that warlike engines were made of timber, but the most suitable word here, as it is evident, is mound.
It follows, She is the city of visitation. Jeremiah shews here that God would justly act towards the Jews, though with much severity, because they had nearly become putrid in their vices; for this reason he calls it the city of visitation. They therefore who render the words, “that it may be laid waste, “or, “it is laid waste, “misconceive the meaning; and indeed they touch neither heaven nor earth, for they consider not the Prophet’s design, but only dwell on the words. But it is certain, that Jerusalem is called the city of visitation, because God had exercised long patience and suspended punishment, until the ripened time of vengeance came, so that it could no longer be endured, inasmuch as it had become more and more corrupt through the forbearance of God. It is, he says, the city of visitation; that is, “The time of extreme vengeance is now come; for I have tried all means to see whether there was any hope of repentance; but I now find that she is wholly irreclaimable. She is then the city of visitation; its ruin cannot be suspended any longer.”
The Prophet obviates here, as I have already said, all those complaints which the Jews were ever ready to make; for they were wont to murmur when any severity appeared, and say, “God deals cruelly with us; where is his covenant? where is that paternal kindness which he has promised to us?” As then the Jews were wont thus to expostulate with God, the Prophet says that it was the city of visitation, and the whole of it, and not a part only. As then there was nothing pure in it, he says that it could no longer be spared: and he adds one kind of evil; but stating a part for the whole, he means (as it is said elsewhere, Jer 7:11) that Jerusalem was a den of thieves: he therefore says that it was full of rapines, and that oppression was in its very bowels. 166 It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:7 - -- The Prophet enlarges on what he had said in the last verse; for he had shewn, by mentioning one kind of evil, that Jerusalem was a den of thieves, as...
The Prophet enlarges on what he had said in the last verse; for he had shewn, by mentioning one kind of evil, that Jerusalem was a den of thieves, as oppression dwelt in the midst of it. But he now, by a comparison, amplifies his former statement, and says, that violence, oppression, devastation, grief, and smiting, streamed forth like waters from a fountain. It is possible for many vices to break out from a place, but repentance afterwards follows; but when men cease not, and heap vices on vices, it then appears that they swell with wickedness, and even burst with it, as they cannot repress it: they are like a fountain, which ever bubbles up, and cannot contain its own waters. We hence see the object of the Prophet.
The word
But with regard to what is taught, we sufficiently understand that what the Prophet means is, — that the Jews had so given up themselves to their vices, that they were ever contriving some new way of doing evil, as waters never cease to stream forth from the fountain; and it is a proof, as I have said, that a nation is wholly irreclaimable, when there is no cessation from evil deeds, when there is no intermission of injuries, when men ever indulge in their vices; and as the Jews could not deny that such was the atrocity of their wickedness, the Prophet again assumes the name of God, and says, Heard have been oppressions, and smitings are before me; as though he had said, “They will gain nothing by evasions, for if they make a hundred excuses before men, it will be wholly useless to them when they shall come before God’s tribunal.” And he again adds the adverb dymt, tamid, continually, which answers to the perpetual streaming of waters. 167 It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:8 - -- Though the Prophet had spoken as though there was no remedy for the evils of Jerusalem, he yet exhorts it to seek peace with God, and addresses men p...
Though the Prophet had spoken as though there was no remedy for the evils of Jerusalem, he yet exhorts it to seek peace with God, and addresses men past remedy in his name. It is then the same as though God was stopping in the middle course of his wrath, and saying, “What is to be done? Shall I destroy the city which I have chosen?” He then attributes here to God a paternal feeling, as we also find in several other places: God appeared as unwilling to proceed to extreme rigor in punishing his people.
“Alas! I will now take vengeance on mine enemies,”
he says by Isaiah. (Isa 1:24)
He called them enemies, and justly too; for as it was said before, they ceased not to carry on war against him; but he spoke with grief: “Alas! must I take vengeance on mine enemies; I would, however, willingly spare them, were it possible.” God is not indeed subject to grief or to repentance; but his ineffable goodness cannot be otherwise expressed to us but by such mode of speaking. So also, in this place, we see that God as it were restrains himself; for he had previously commanded the enemies to ascend quickly the walls, to overturn the towers, and to destroy the whole city; but now, as though he had repented, he says, Be instructed, 168 Jerusalem; that is, “Can we not yet be reconciled?” It is like the conduct of an offended father, who intends to punish his son, and yet desires to moderate his displeasure, and to blend some indulgence with rigor. Be then instructed; that is, “There is yet room for reconciliation, if thou wishest; provided thou shewest thyself willing to relinquish that perverseness by which thou hast hitherto provoked me, I will in return prove myself to be a father.”
There is no doubt but the object of the threatenings of the prophets was to lead the people to know their sins, and suppliantly to seek pardon; for why were the unbelieving threatened, except that God thereby proved whether they were healable? It is indeed true that the reprobate are known by God, and that God does not try or seek to find what is in their hearts, as though he did not know their obstinacy; but as I have already said, God speaks here after the manner of men: and he also shews what is the end of teaching, which is to lead men to repentance; and this cannot be done without giving them the hope of pardon and reconciliation. The Prophet thus briefly shews here for what purpose he had hitherto so dreadfully threatened the Jews, even to lead them at length to repentance.
Lest torn shall be my soul from thee 169 Here God more clearly shews that he was as yet restrained by love. He alludes no doubt to a similitude which we have observed in another place; for God sustains the character of a spouse to his Church; and hence he shews, that he had not yet divested himself of that love which a husband has towards his wife. For a husband, when grievously offended at his wife, cannot immediately throw aside his conjugal affection; some feeling of this kind will ever remain. And we have seen in the fourth chapter, that God surpasses all husbands in kindness; for he says there, “When a repudiated wife has found another husband, will the former receive her again? Return to me, thou harlot, return to me, thou strumpet and adulteress, and I am ready to pardon thee.” It is the same course that God pursues here, “Be instructed, Jerusalem, lest my soul wholly depart from thee;” as though he had said, “Even though I am now angry, and have resolved severely to punish thy perfidy and rebellion, I shall yet be reconciled to thee, provided thou returnest.” And it is added, Lest I make thee a desolate land, a land uninhabited
The Prophet in short shews in this verse, that however grievously offended God was with his people, there was yet a hope of pardon; for he would be propitious to the people, if they turned and humbly confessed their sins, and sought to return into favor with him. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:9 - -- God here confirms the former statement, as though he had said, that he dreaded a sight so sad and mournful, which yet the Jews disregarded. He then s...
God here confirms the former statement, as though he had said, that he dreaded a sight so sad and mournful, which yet the Jews disregarded. He then shews, that he did not in vain exhort the Jews, even though late, to repent, for he foresaw how dreadful would be their calamities. Hence he says, Thus saith Jehovah of hosts, Gleaning they shall glean; for the word here does not mean to gather the vintage, but to glean, grapiller, after the vintage. As after the harvest the poor follow and gather ears of corn here and there, until nothing remains in the field; so also in vintages when there is a gleaning, nothing remains. Hence God in the law forbade the vineyards to be gleaned, that there might be something left for the poor. (Lev 19:10; Deu 24:21.) But he says here, “Gleaning they shall glean as a vine;” he speaks not of the people but of the remnant.
The ten tribes had been plundered, and at length their whole country had been laid waste, most of them had been led into exile, but a few had sought hiding — places for a time: and he says that they were like gleanings: “though, “he says, “there be a few grapes, yet these shall follow.” In short, the Prophet sets before the Jews that vengeance of God, which was known already to them as much as to the Israelites, the ten tribes: and yet he shews that God’s vengeance was not completed, for there were still a few remaining, a gleaning: “What then shall come of you? What indeed! ye have seen that your brethren have been plundered, ye have seen that they and their children have been slain; ye have seen that all kinds of cruelty have been exercised towards them; and yet after the name of Israel has been obliterated, and their country now deserted, has become a waste, God will still punish the remnant, and ye shall see that his judgment will shortly overtake them; and what do ye, wretched beings, yet look for? and how great is your torpidity, which never comes to an end? why do you not seek to be reconciled to God, when such an opportunity is offered to you?”
We now then apprehend the Prophet’s object. And then he says, Return thy hand as a vintager to the baskets; that is, “Behold the vintagers, they stimulate one another; so that there is no end of gleaning, as they ever return to their baskets, until they gather everything, until there remains not a grape on the vine.” 170
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Calvin: Jer 6:10 - -- The Prophet here shews there was no reason for him to labor any longer in trying to reform the people, for he spoke to the deaf. He had said before, ...
The Prophet here shews there was no reason for him to labor any longer in trying to reform the people, for he spoke to the deaf. He had said before, according to our lecture yesterday, that God was still ready to be reconciled to the Jews, if they repented; but now, referring to himself, he says that his words were wholly lost. Hence he asks a question as respecting a thing strange or unexpected. To whom, he says, shall I speak? and to whom shall I protest? He had indeed, as we found yesterday, exhorted the people to repent: but there is nothing inconsistent in all this; for he wished, as far as he could, to secure, the safety of the people. Even God had commanded this; and it was his will, as it was yesterday stated, that a testimony should be borne, that it was not his fault, according to what had been taught, that he was not reconciled to the people.
We now then see that the whole passage harmonizes; for Jeremiah performed his office in trying to find out whether the people were healable; but when he saw that such were their obstinacy that it allowed of no remedy, he exclaims as one astonished, To whom shall I speak? and to whom shall I protest? The meaning is, that the people were so given up to impiety, that the prophets spent their labor in vain while endeavoring to reform them. And the first clause he confirms by another, To whom shall I protest? He intimates that they had despised not only what had been plainly taught them, but also protestations, which possess much greater power. He means that their wickedness could be cured by no remedies, that they had not only rejected plain truth and serious warnings, but had also perversely resisted solemn protestations.
That they may hear, he says. He intimates, that though he had faithfully performed his office, yet his labor was without any fruit, for all the Jews were deaf. Hence he adds, Behold, uncircumcised is their ear This metaphor is common in the prophets. The uncircumcised ear is that which rejects all true doctrine. An uncircumcised heart is that which is perverse and rebellious. But we ought to understand the reason of this: as circumcision was an evidence of obedience, so the Scripture calls those uncircumcised who are unteachable, who cast away every fear of God and all sense of religion, and follow their own lusts and desires. But to be thus called was greatly disliked by the Jews; for circumcision gave them no common ground of confidence, since it was the symbol and pledge of adoption, and since they knew that they were thereby separated from other nations so as to be called God’s holy people. But the Prophet divested them of this vain conceit by calling them uncircumcised in heart and ears, for they had dealt perfidiously with God when they promised to be obedient to his will.
The external sign was of itself nothing, when the end was disregarded. It was God’s will to consecrate his ancient people to himself by circumcision: but when they became satisfied with the visible sign only, there was no longer the reality, and God’s covenant was profaned. It is the same at this day with respect to baptism; they who wish to be deemed Christians, boast of it, while at the same time they shew no fear of God, and while their whole life obliterates the true character of baptism. It is hence evident, that they are sacrilegious, for they pollute what is holy. And for this reason Paul calls the letter [the outward rite] of circumcision, a sign without the reality. (Rom 2:27.) So at this day baptism may be called the letter in all the profane, who have no regard to its design: for God receives us into his Church on the condition that we are the members of Christ, and that being ruled by his Spirit we renounce the lusts of our flesh. But when we seek under the cloak of baptism to associate God with the Devil, it is a most detestable sacrilege. Such was the stupid presumption of the Jews. This was the reason why the prophets so often charged them with being uncircumcised in hearts and ears: “Ye are God’s holy people; give a proof of this: ye indeed boast that you have been circumcised; surely, the cutting off of a small pellicle does not satisfy God; shew that your hearts and ears have been circumcised: but uncircumcision remains in your hearts, and it remains in your ears; ye are then heathens.”
We now then see the meaning of the Prophet, and also the reason why Scripture speaks so much of the uncircumcision of the hearts and ears, and it was this, — to prove the Jews guilty of profaning that sign, which ought to have been a pledge of their adoption, and to have served as a profession of a new life.
It was not to lessen their guilt that Jeremiah said, They could not attend or give ear. If any one objects and asks, “Ought it to be deemed a crime that they could not attend?” The Prophet, as I have said, did not extenuate their guilt, but on the contrary shewed that they were so sunk in their vices, that they were not masters of themselves; as the case is with a drunkard, who is not in his right mind; but as he has contracted this vice of intemperance, his going astray or his ignorance is in no way excusable. So also the Prophet says, that the Jews could not attend to the word of the Lord, because they had surrendered themselves up to the Devil, so that they were become his slaves; as Paul says of those who were without the grace of God, that they were sold under sin, (Rom 7:14;) and the Scripture says elsewhere the same.
In short, Jeremiah here teaches us, that such was the habit of sinning contracted by the Jews, that they were no longer free to do what was right; for the Devil led them here and there at his pleasure, as though they were bound in his chains. And thus he sets forth their depravity as hopeless. Even Aristotle, though he is of no authority as to the power of the will, for he holds free-will, (he knew nothing of original sin and of the corruption of nature,) yet allows that those who are otherwise wholly free cannot do what is right, when they become so hardened in their vices, that intemperance,
And this we learn more fully from what follows; for he says, Behold, the word of Jehovah has been to them a reproach; and it has not pleased them, or they have not delighted in it; for
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Calvin: Jer 6:11 - -- The prophet here rises higher; for it was not enough simply to set forth the truth to refractory men, but it was necessary to stimulate them even sha...
The prophet here rises higher; for it was not enough simply to set forth the truth to refractory men, but it was necessary to stimulate them even sharply, and sometimes to wound them, for they could not otherwise be roused, so great was their hardness. Hence the Prophet proceeds in the same strain with what we observed yesterday; and he declares that he was full of the indignation of God. This may be taken passively and actively, — that the Prophet was indignant with holy zeal, because he undertook the cause of God, — or, that he dreaded the judgment, which the Jews nevertheless in no way heeded. But he speaks here no doubt according to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, as though he said, that he did not announce what his own mind suggested, but what was dictated by the Spirit of God. This indignation is, in short, to be applied to what was taught, as though he had said, “If I address you with great vehemence, think not that as a man I forget moderation, being influenced by wrath; but the Spirit of God leads and impels me. Whatever indignation then is found in my language, whatever vehemence and sharpness and menacing, all this is from God’s Spirit, and not from my own feelings as a man.” It was on this account that he says, that he was filled with the indignation of God.
What follows confirms this statement; for he says, that he was wearied with restraint; as though he said, that so great was the impulse of God’s wrath, that it could not be withheld from breaking out into vehemence. And hence we learn, as I have said, that the Prophet declares no other thing than that he was not moved by his own indignation, or by any feeling of his own nature, but that he of necessity followed where he was led by the hidden influence of God’s Spirit, lest what he taught might be despised; for the Jews had long accustomed themselves to use their taunts and to say, that they were not to be frightened like children. That the Jews then might not thus trifle, Jeremiah declares, that he was so filled with the indignation of God, that he could contain himself no longer, but must denounce on his own kindred what God had committed to his charge. As we shall elsewhere see the same mode of speaking, and in more express terms, I shall proceed without making any farther remarks.
He afterwards says, I shall pour it out, etc. He no doubt continues the same subject. He then says, that since he could no longer suppress the vengeance of God, whose herald he was, he would now pour it out, and that upon the children, he says, in the streets He doubtless means by these words that there was nothing pure among the people, for the very children were involved in the same guilt. Since, then, impiety so prevailed that even children in their tender age were not exempt from it, it was an evidence of a hopeless condition. This is what the Prophet means by saying, that he would pour wrath upon children. Then he adds, upon the assembly, etc. The word
For the husband, he says, with his wife shall be taken, the aged with the full of days Some think that the full of days was the decrepit: but by
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Calvin: Jer 6:12 - -- One kind of vengeance only he mentions, — that the Jews would be deprived of their land, which they thought would ever remain in peace to them. Ina...
One kind of vengeance only he mentions, — that the Jews would be deprived of their land, which they thought would ever remain in peace to them. Inasmuch as it had been said,
“This is my rest for ever, here will I dwell,” (Psa 132:14)
they imagined that they could not be driven out of it: and they entertained the thought, that their dwelling in the land of Canaan was as certain as that of the sun and moon in the heavens. As then they deceived themselves by this foolish confidence, the Prophet says, that there would be a change, that God would transfer their houses to foreign nations.
He then mentions their fields and their wives All this seemed incredible to the Jews: but it was necessary to denounce on them so dreadful a vengeance, that they might at length be awaked. And then he subjoins the reason why: For God will extend his hand. The Prophet here reprobates their obstinacy, because it made God their enemy; as though he had said, that there was no cause for them to think that the possession of the land would be undisturbed, for God was offended with them. Whence, indeed, did the possession of the land come to them, except from God’s gratuitous favor? Now, if God was adverse to them, what hope remained for them? We now, then, see that the Prophet at the end of the verse mentions the cause, that the Jews might know that what he said of the transfer of their houses, lands, and wives to others was not incredible. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:13 - -- The Prophet now again declares, that it was nothing strange that God resolved to deal with so much severity with that people, and to execute on them ...
The Prophet now again declares, that it was nothing strange that God resolved to deal with so much severity with that people, and to execute on them extreme vengeance; for no part was whole and sound, but impiety had pervaded all ranks. It might, indeed, be ascribed to the young, as well as to the old, for he says, From the small to the great; but I prefer to understand the first clause of the poor and the lower orders, and the second of the higher ranks, who excelled in power and wealth among the people. He says, then, that contempt of God and every kind of wickedness prevailed, not only in one part but in the whole community, so that there was no soundness from the head to the soles of the feet. We now, then, perceive what the Prophet means by saying, From the small to the great 173
And this appears still clearer from the end of the verse, where he says, From the prophet to the priest He amplifies here what he had said of the small and the great. Hence we see, that by the great he understands not those of mature or advanced age, but such as were in dignity and honor, who were in esteem on account of their wealth or of other endowments. So also, on the other hand, he does not call those small who were young, but such as were despised, who were of the lowest order, and formed as it were the dregs of society: for as I have said, he amplifies what he had said, by adducing the prophets and the priests. Even though the king and his court were extremely wicked, yet some care for religion ought to have prevailed among the prophets and the priests; there ought at least to have been among them some decency; for they were appointed for the purpose of carrying light for others. As, then, even these were apostates, and had degenerated from the true worship of God, what could have been found among the rest of the people?
We now, then, see that the mouth of the ungodly was here closed, so that they could not expostulate with God or blame his severity, for they had all arrived at the highest pitch of impiety, inasmuch as the prophets and the priests were no less corrupt than the common people.
By saying that all coveted covetousness, he refers to frauds and base gain; in that he includes every kind of avariciousness. 174 By saying that the priests and the prophets wrought falsehood, or acted fraudulently, he means the same thing, but in other words, even that there was no integrity in those teachers who ought to have been leaders to the blind: for God had ordained them that they might, as I have said, carry light to all others and shew them the way of salvation. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:14 - -- This is to be applied to the prophets and priests alone; they not only corrupted the people by their bad example, but also shook off every fear of Go...
This is to be applied to the prophets and priests alone; they not only corrupted the people by their bad example, but also shook off every fear of God, and by their impostures and false boasting took away every regard and respect for the teaching of the true prophets. He then says, that they healed to no purpose, or with levity or slightness, 175 the wound of the people He says, by way of concession, that they had healed the wounds of the people: but it was no cure, when the evil was increasing. They were like the unskillful, who by rashly applying false remedies, cause inflammation, even when the disease is not serious; or like those who are only bent on easing pain, and cause the increase of the disease within, which is the more dangerous as it is more hidden. This is not to heal, but to kill. But the Prophet, as I have said, concedes to them the work of healing, and then states the issue, — that they were executioners and not physicians. They have healed, he says, the wound of my people: He takes the words, as it were, from their mouth, “Ye are verily good physicians! for by your flatteries ye have soothed my people: there was need not only of sharp medicine to stimulate and to cause pain, but also of caustics and of amputations; but ye have only applied lenients. This is your way of healing! ye have thus healed the wound of my people, even by plasters and ointments to drive inward the disease; but what has been the effect?”
He then immediately shews what sort of healing it was: It was saying, Peace, peace The evil we know is an old one, common almost to all ages; and no wonder, for no one wishes otherwise than to please himself; and what we observe daily as to the ailments of the body, is the same as to the diseases of the soul. No sick person willingly submits to the advice of his physician, if he prohibits the use of those things which he desires: “What am I then to do? it were better to die than to follow this advice.” And then, if the physician bids him to take a bitter dose, he will say, “I would rather a hundred times endure any pain than to drink that draught.” And when it comes to bleeding and other more painful operations, as caustics and things of this kind, O the sick man can stand it no longer, and wishes almost any evil to his physicians. What then experience proves to be true as to bodily diseases, is also true, as I have said, as to the vices of the mind. All wish to deceive themselves; and thus it happens that they wish for such prophets as promise them large vintages and an abundant harvest, according to what is said by the Prophet Micah:
“Behold,” says God, “ye wish to have prophets who will speak to you of rich provisions and of every kind of affluence; and ye do not wish them to prophesy evil; ye would not have them to denounce on you the punishment which you fully deserve.” (Mic 2:11)
As, then, the despisers of God wished to be soothed by flatteries, and reject the best and the most salutary remedies, hence God has from the beginning given loose reins to Satan, and hence impostors have gone forth, whose preaching has been, Peace, peace; but to no purpose; for there is nothing real in such healing, for the Lord says, there is no peace
The bolder any one is who professes to heal, if he be unskillful, the more disastrous will be the issue. Hence the Prophet shews that the cause of the extreme calamity of the Jews was, because they were deceived by their own priests and teachers. He does not at the same time, as it has been elsewhere observed, excuse them, as though the whole blame belonged to their false teachers. For how was it that the false prophets thus fascinated them? Even because they knowingly and willfully destroyed themselves; for they would not receive honest and skillful physicians: it was therefore necessary to give them up to such as killed them. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:15 - -- Jeremiah turns now his discourse to the whole people. In the last verse he reproved only the priests and the prophets; he now speaks more generally, ...
Jeremiah turns now his discourse to the whole people. In the last verse he reproved only the priests and the prophets; he now speaks more generally, and says, that they had put off all shame. “Behold,” he says, “they are sufficiently proved guilty, their wickedness is manifest, and yet there is no shame. Their disgrace is visible to heaven and earth; angels and all mortals are witnesses of their corruption; but they have such a meretricious front that they are touched by no sense of shame.” He means, in these words, that the wickedness of the people was past all remedy; for they had arrived to that degree of stupor, of which Paul speaks, when he calls those
This, then, is what the Prophet means when he says, Have they been ashamed? But a question is much more emphatical, than if it was a simple reprobation or affirmation. They have not been even ashamed, he says. In their very shame, they knew not what it was to be touched by any shamefacedness. This may be classed with those reproofs, by which they had not been subdued; as though he had said, “Efforts having been made to expose their effrontery, in not humbling themselves under the hand of God; they shall therefore fall among the fallen;” that is, “I will dispute no longer with them, nor contend in words, but will execute on them my judgment.” Fall, then, shall they among the fallen; as though he had said, “I have more than sufficiently denounced war on them: had they been healable it would have availed to their conversion, that they had been so often warned; and still more, that I have so sharply stimulated them to come to me: but I will now no more employ words, on the contrary, I will execute my vengeance, so that the calamity which they have derived may devour them.” 176
They shall wholly fall, he says, in the day of their visitation From this second clause we understand more clearly what it is or what he means when he speaks of falling among the fallen, which is, that they should wholly fall, when God would come as it were with a drawn sword to destroy them, having been wearied with giving them so many warnings.
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Calvin: Jer 6:16 - -- The Prophet teaches us here that the fault of the people could not be extenuated as though they had sinned through ignorance; for they had been warne...
The Prophet teaches us here that the fault of the people could not be extenuated as though they had sinned through ignorance; for they had been warned more than necessary by God. The same sentiment is found in Isaiah,
“This is your rest; but they would not hear.” (Isa 28:12.)
But our Prophet more at large condemns the Jews; for God had commanded them to stand in the ways, to look and to inquire respecting all the old paths. He uses a similitude: and we ought not to doubt respecting the way, since it has been shewn to us by the mouth of God. But the impiety of the people is exposed and reproved, because they did not so much as open their eyes, when God shewed them the way and allowed them a free choice: for he introduces God here, not strictly as one who commands, but as one who shews so much indulgence, that the people were free to choose the way they approved and thought best. When God deals so kindly with men, and so condescendingly sets before them what is useful and expedient, it is the basest ingratitude to reject such kindness on God’s part.
We now then understand the Prophet’s design in saying, that God had commanded them to stand in the ways and to consider what was best to be done. Consider, he says, and ye shall find rest, that is, that ye may find rest (for the copulative here denotes the end) to your souls 177 Here the Prophet means, that it remained only with the Jews to secure prosperity and a quiet state; for if they had obeyed the counsel of God, rest would have been provided for them: in short, he means, that they were miserable through their own willfulness; for God had set before them the prospect of a happy condition, but this favor had been despised by them, and wantonly despised, as these words intimate, And they said, We will not walk in it
We see that the people’s perverseness is here discovered; because they might have otherwise objected and said, that they had been deceived, and that if they had been in time warned, they would have obeyed good and wise counsels. In order to cut off this handle, Jeremiah says, that they from deliberate wickedness had rejected the rest offered them by God: they have said, We will not walk in it. This resolution deafly shews that they obstinately remained in their sins; so that the rest, which was within their reach, was not chosen by them.
This passage contains a valuable truth, — that faith ever brings us peace with God, and that not only because it leads us to acquiesce in God’s mercy, and thus, as Paul teaches us, (Rom 5:1,) produces this as its perpetual fruit; but because the will of God alone is sufficient to appease our minds. Whosoever then embraces from the heart the truth as coming from God, is at peace; for God never suffers his own people to fluctuate while they recumb on him, but shews to them how great stability belongs to his truth. If it was so under the Law and the Prophets, as we have seen from Isaiah, how much more shall we obtain rest under Christ, provided we submit, to his word; for he has himself promised it, “Come unto me all ye who labor and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you.” And ye shall find rest, he says here, to your souls. This passage then serves to commend this celestial truth, that it avails to pacify consciences, so that there is no perplexity nor doubt. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:17 - -- This is an explanation of the last verse, yet not simply so; for the Prophet by a similitude aggravates the obstinacy of the people, who were not onl...
This is an explanation of the last verse, yet not simply so; for the Prophet by a similitude aggravates the obstinacy of the people, who were not only deaf to the Prophet’s admonitions, but would not be roused by the sound of the trumpet, nor even attend to it. The sound of the trumpet ought to have penetrated into their minds more than anything else for two reasons, — because it was louder than any voice of man, — and also, because we do not usually hear the trumpet sounding, except when war is at hand, or when there is the fear of war.
We hence see why the Prophet, after having announced his message, mentions the sound of the trumpet; as though he had said, that not only the prophets were despised, while teaching the people, but that the sound of the trumpet, announcing the approach of war, was not attended to by them. The stupidity of the people, and not only their stupidity, but as I have said, their perverseness also, was more fully proved, than if the Prophet had simply said, that they had resolved not to hear. It now follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:18 - -- He turns now to address the nations, which had never heard anything of true religion. But the design of the apostrophe was, to make the Jews ashamed ...
He turns now to address the nations, which had never heard anything of true religion. But the design of the apostrophe was, to make the Jews ashamed of their insensibility and deafness, for more attention and understanding were found among heathen nations. This was surely very great shame: the Jews had been plainly taught by the Law and by the Prophets, God had continued morning and evening to repeat the same things to them, that the nations, who had never heard the prophets and to whom the Law had not been given, should still be endued with more understanding and judgment than the Jews — this was very shameful and really monstrous. Thus the Prophet’s design was to expose their disgraceful conduct by addressing the nations, and saying, Hear, ye nations
Then he says, Know, thou assembly The words used are
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Calvin: Jer 6:19 - -- He then adds, Hear, thou earth This is general, as though he said, “Hear ye, all the inhabitants of the earth: “ Behold, I am bringing an evil ...
He then adds, Hear, thou earth This is general, as though he said, “Hear ye, all the inhabitants of the earth: “ Behold, I am bringing an evil on this people He would have directly addressed the Jews, had they ears to hear; but as their vices and contempt of God had made them deaf, it was necessary for him to address the earth. Now, God testifies here that he should not act cruelly in visiting with severity this people, as he would only reward them as they deserved. The sum of what is said then is, that however grievous might be the punishment he would inflict, yet the people could not complain of immoderate rigor, for they should only receive what their works justly deserved. But Jeremiah not only speaks of their works, but he mentions the fruit of their thoughts; for they concocted their wickedness within, so that they did not offend God through levity or ignorance. By thoughts, then, he means that daily meditation on evil, to which the Jews had habituated themselves. So then their interior wickedness and obstinacy are here set forth.
He afterwards adds, Because they have not to my words attended, and for nothing have they esteemed my law. We ever see that the guilt of the Jews was increased by the circumstance, that God had exhorted them by his servants, and that they had rejected all instruction. That they then would not hearken, and that they counted the law and instruction as nothing, made it evident that their sin could not by any pretense be excused; for they knowingly and openly carried on war with God himself, according to what is said of the giants.
We may learn from this passage, that nothing is more abominable in the sight of God than the contempt of divine truth; for his majesty, which shines forth in his word, is thereby trampled under foot; and further, it is art extreme ingratitude in men, when God himself invites them to salvation, willfully to seek their own ruin and to reject his favor. It is no wonder then that God cannot endure the contempt of his word; by which his majesty, as I have said, is dishonored, and his goodness, by which he would secure the salvation of men, is treated with the basest ingratitude. He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 6:20 - -- The Prophet here replies to those hypocrites, who thought that they made an expiation when they had offered incense and sacrifices, as though that wa...
The Prophet here replies to those hypocrites, who thought that they made an expiation when they had offered incense and sacrifices, as though that was all that was necessary in serving God: and hence we shall hereafter see, that the Temple had become the den of thieves; for when they sedulously offered incense every day and performed other ceremonies, they thought that God was pacified. Thus hypocrites ever mock God with their fopperies and regard God as extremely cruel, when not satisfied with external display. This was a perpetual evil, with which the prophets had to contend: and hence the notion is often found referred to by our Prophet,
“I desired not sacrifices; I commanded not your fathers, when I stretched forth my hand to bring them out of Egypt, to offer burnt — offerings to me, but only to obey my voice,”
(Jer 7:21)
So we find in other prophets: the Psalmist says,
“If I hunger, I will not tell thee,” (Psa 50:12)
It is said also by Micah,
“What does God require of thee, but to humble thyself before him? He seeks not thousands of rams nor thousands of oxen from thy herds,” (Mic 6:7)
And we see at this day, that men cannot be rightly taught, except we carry on war against that external splendor with which they will have God to be satisfied. As then men deceive themselves with such trifles, it is necessary to shew that all those things which hypocrites obtrude on God, without sincerity of heart, are frivolous trumperies. This is the import of what is here taught.
There is, then, no doubt but that the Jews punctually offered their sacrifices, and observed the legal rites. All this might have appeared very commendable; but God gives this answer, To what purpose does frankincense come to me from the Sabeans, and a sweet cane 180 (that is, odoriferous) from a far country? Thus the Prophet here anticipates hypocrites, that he might not leave them — what they might have objected: for while they spent a large sum of money on their forms of worship, they thought that God was as it were bound to them: and where they also bestowed much labor, they supposed that their’ toil could not be superfluous or useless. And under the Papacy we observe the same thing: when any one builds a splendid church, and adorns it with gold and silver and supplies it with rich furniture, and then provides a revenue for saying masses, he thinks that lie holds in his hands all the keys of the kingdom of heaven, so that he can push in even against the will of God. Similar is the madness of the Papists, when they undertake pilgrimages: when they labor and toil, they think that every step they take must be numbered before God, and that God would be unjust, were he not to approve of what is offered to him with so much trouble. Such was also the conceit of the Jews. As their incense, brought from the Sa-beans, that is, from the east, even from Persia, was precious, and cost a considerable sum of money, they wished that this should be deemed a satisfaction for all their sins; and they looked for the same benefit from the cane: as the most odoriferous cane was bought at, a high price, they expected that it would be of account before God, and that it would avail to compensate for their punishment. This is the folly which God here treats with contempt. “What are they to me, “he says, “your expenses? I indeed count as nothing all that ye spend in buying incense and sweet cane.” And then he speaks of the Sabeans and of a far country.
He afterwards adds, Please me do not your burnt — offerings, and your sacrifices are not acceptable Under one kind Jeremiah includes the whole worship according to the law; and yet it had been divinely appointed: this is indeed true, but for another purpose. Fasting does not of itself displease God; but it becomes an abomination to him, when it is thought to be a meritorious work, or when some holiness is connected with it. The same is true as to sacrifices; for they who sought to pacify God by victims robbed Christ of his honor: it was to transfer the favor, which comes from Christ, to a calf or to a goat: and what a sacrilege was this, and how abominable? When, therefore, the Jews set such a high value on their sacrifices, they sought first childishly to trifle with God, as though these were expiations to pacify him; and then to offer burnt — offerings, to slay an animal, for pacifying God, was to change his nature; and lastly, it was, as I have said, to rob Christ of his honor: for expiation is to be sought by no other means than through his blood, by which we are cleansed from every stain through the Holy Spirit, who sprinkles it on our hearts. But when this was attributed to sacrifices, they substituted the victim, or the ram, for Christ, according to what has been stated.
Now there ought to have been in sacrifices the exercise of the duty of repentance: but when they became more and more hardened, and thought that by their ceremonies they obtained a greater license to sin, and that God required no more from them, as though they had settled matters with him, they completely neutralized the design of God: for sacrifices, as it has been already said, had been enjoined for this end, — that they might exercise penitence.
We now then see that this answer given by Jeremiah was not in vain, — that their sacrifices did not please God. There is a severer language used elsewhere, — that God nauseated them, that he was wearied in bearing them, that he was constrained to be troubled with them, while they thus profaned his name. (Isa 1:14.) The meaning here is the same, — that God never required sacrifices for their own sake, but for another end; and also, that all external rites are of themselves mere trumperies and mockeries, nay, a profanation of God’s name; so that they could not pacify him, but, on the contrary, provoke his wrath. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:21 - -- Here God, in plain words, declares what vengeance he would execute on the people. He says first, that he would lay for them stumbling blocks He no ...
Here God, in plain words, declares what vengeance he would execute on the people. He says first, that he would lay for them stumbling blocks He no doubt compares the judgments which were nigh to nets or traps; for the Jews hoped to escape. He therefore says, that they would be ensnared: “Wherever ye go, “he says, “ye shall meet with those nets by which God will catch you: Fall, therefore, shall both fathers and sons, the neighbor and his friend ”
He means by these words, that however they might conspire together, they would yet be exposed to the same punishment. For when sons follow the examples of their fathers, they think themselves innocent; and also when any one has many associates, he thinks himself safe in his licentiousness. As, then, consent or society hardens the ungodly, so that they fear not the wrath of God, the Prophet on this account includes sons with their fathers, and a neighbor with his friend, as those who were to perish together, and without any difference. The word “stumbling blocks” is indeed metaphorical; but in the next verse the Prophet speaks without a figure, and says —
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Calvin: Jer 6:22 - -- It was no useless repetition when the Prophet said so often that God said. He might have said only, “Behold, a nation shall come from the north;...
It was no useless repetition when the Prophet said so often that God said. He might have said only, “Behold, a nation shall come from the north;” but he premises by saying that he derived this message from God, and not only so, but he introduces God as the speaker, that his message might be more impressive. In the former verse he had also said, Thus saith Jehovah, and elsewhere: but he now repeats the same words, that the holy name of God might more powerfully rouse their minds.
Behold, he says, a people shall come from the land of the north For forty years Jeremiah ceased not to proclaim war against the Jews, and also openly to name their enemies: we yet see that so much preaching was without fruit. This was dreadful indeed: but we may thus see, as it were in a mirror, how great is our hardness and stupor, and how great is our fury and madness against God. He then designates here the Chaldeans as a northern nation, and says that it was a great nation: and yet he shews, that the Chaldeans would not of themselves come; it shall be roused, he says. This act is to be applied to God; for though ambition and avarice impelled the Chaldeans to lay waste nations and lands far and wide, yet that war was carried on under the guidance of God himself: he armed and impelled the Chaldeans, and used them as the scourges of his wrath. We may learn this from the verb
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Calvin: Jer 6:23 - -- He adds other particulars, in order more fully to render the Chaldeans objects of dread: They shall lay hold, he says, on the bow and the lance T...
He adds other particulars, in order more fully to render the Chaldeans objects of dread: They shall lay hold, he says, on the bow and the lance They who render the last word shield, do not sufficiently attend to the design of the Prophet. For there is no mention here made of defense; but it is the same as though the Prophet had said, that they would come furnished with bows and spears, that they might shoot at a distance. The word
He afterwards adds, that they would be cruel, according to what Isaiah says, when he speaks of the Persians and Medes,
“They will covet neither gold nor silver,” (Isa 13:17)
and yet they were a rapacious people. This is indeed true; but the Prophet meant both these things, that as the Persians and Medes were to be the executioners of divine vengeance, they would come with a new disposition and character, despising gold and silver, and other kinds of spoil, and seeking only blood. And they will shew, he says, no mercy; and then he adds, their voice shall make an uproar, or sound, like the sea He touches, I have no doubt, on the stupor of the people in not attending to the voice of God; for the teaching of Jeremiah had for many years sounded in their ears: Isaiah and others had preceded him; but the people had continued deaf. He says now, “Ye shall hereafter hear other teachers; they will not warn you, nor give you counsel, nor be satisfied with reproofs and threatenings, but they will come like a tempest on the sea; their voice shall make an uproar ”
He adds, Ascend shall they on horses, 183 and be set in order as a man for war; that is, “Thou, Jerusalem, shalt find that thou wilt have to do with military men.” The Prophet means, in short, that the Jews most foolishly trusted in their own strength, and thus heedlessly despised the threatenings of the prophets. But as their security was of this kind, he says that they would at length really find out how stupid they had been, for the Chaldeans would come with dreadful violence, prepared for war — against whom? Against thee, he says, O daughter of Sion I cannot proceed further, on account of some other business.
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Calvin: Jer 6:24 - -- Jeremiah proceeds in the same strain; for he sets before the eyes of the Jews the judgment of God, and draws them, as it were against their will, int...
Jeremiah proceeds in the same strain; for he sets before the eyes of the Jews the judgment of God, and draws them, as it were against their will, into the middle of the scene. And this was done by the prophets, as it has been already said, because by plain words they could not move the hearts of the people on account of their contempt of God, and of the long obduracy in which they had settled. Hence he says, that heard had been the report of the enemy, and that immediately dissolved had their hands When the Prophet spoke, the Jews did not think that their enemies were so near. But the phrase is to be thus explained: “As soon as ye shall hear the report, your hands shall be relaxed, and lay hold on you shall distress.”
The similitude of a woman in travail is often found in Scripture; and what is to be understood in most places is sudden and unexpected pain: but in this place the Prophet refers rather to the violence of pain; though the other meaning, which I have just stated, is not to be excluded; for it is probable, that when he saw that the hardness and obstinacy of the people were so great, he adopted this similitude, in order to shew, that however heedlessly they despised the punishment due to them, it could not yet be avoided, as it would seize them suddenly like that of a woman in childbearing. He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 6:25 - -- He confirms the previous verse. For the Jews, as it has been said, regarded all threatenings as nothing: it was hence necessary that they should be t...
He confirms the previous verse. For the Jews, as it has been said, regarded all threatenings as nothing: it was hence necessary that they should be taught, not by words only, but be constrained to fear, by having the scene set before their eyes, that being thus constrained they might at least entertain some fear on account of the nearness of God’s vengeance. The Prophet then denounces war, and speaks as though they were already besieged, Go ye not forth, he says, into the field, etc., for the terror of the enemy and fear is on every side; 184 not that the Chaldeans were already laying waste Judea, or that they had even departed from their own country. But we have briefly explained the design of the Prophet: he intended thus vehemently to deal with a hardened and obstinate people, that they might know that he spoke seriously to them, and that his threatenings would not be evanescent. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:26 - -- The Prophet seems to use more words than necessary; for in a clear matter he appears to extend his discourse too far: but we must consider the design...
The Prophet seems to use more words than necessary; for in a clear matter he appears to extend his discourse too far: but we must consider the design which has been mentioned; for he could not rouse the Jews without urging the matter on them with great vehemence. Known and sufficiently common is the term, “daughter of my people, “as applied to the whole community. Daughter of my people, he says, be thou girded with sackcloth, and roll thyself in the dust It is doubtful whether the Prophet exhorts them to repent, or whether he denounces mourning on the irreclaimable and the hopeless; for ashes and sackcloth are often mentioned, when there is no hope of conversion or of repentance. However, if this view be approved, I will not object, that is, that the Prophet still makes the trial, whether the Jews would return to a sane mind.
Make thee a mourning, he says, as for an only-begotten Thus the Hebrews speak of the greatest and bitterest mourning: for when any one loses an only son, he grieves far more for his death than if he had many children; for when some remain, some comfort still remains; but when one is wholly bereaved, a greater grief, as I have said, is felt by parents. For this reason the Hebrews call it a mourning for an only son, when things are in a hopeless state. He afterwards adds, the mourning of bitternesses, signifying the same thing; because suddenly shall come upon us the waster
If repentance be thought to be intended here, we know that sackcloth and ashes are, of themselves, of no account before God, but that they were formerly evidences of repentance when God’s wrath was humbly deprecated; and hence the prophets often designated the thing signified by the sign. We must yet remember what Joel says, that hearts, and not garments, are to be rent. (Joe 2:13.) But the prophets assume this principle as granted, that we are not to deal falsely with God, but with sincerity. Then by sackcloth and ashes they did not understand false protestations, as it is said, but real manifestations of what they felt, when really and from the heart they sought God’s mercy. But as the Prophet seems here to assume the character of a herald, denouncing war, I know not whether repentance is what is here meant. So then I rather understand him as saying, that nothing but extreme mourning remained for the Jews: and hence he says, that destroyers would suddenly come upon them; for they had for many years so misused the forbearance of God, that they thought that they could sin with impunity. As, then, they had long indulged this false confidence, the Prophet made use of this word, “suddenly,”
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Calvin: Jer 6:27 - -- The Prophet says, that he was set by God as a watchtower, which was also fortified, that he might observe the wickedness of the people. In order t...
The Prophet says, that he was set by God as a watchtower, which was also fortified, that he might observe the wickedness of the people. In order to gain more authority for his prophecy, he introduces God as the speaker. He had spoken hitherto in his own person; but now God himself comes forth, and says, I have made thee a citadel. Jerome renders the last word “probation.” The verb
But the word fortress is also added: for it behooved Jeremiah to watch without fear, and not to be exposed to the threats, calumnies, or clamors of the people. Jeremiah intimates that two things are required in God’s servants, even knowledge and undaunted courage; for it was not enough for the prophets to see clearly what was needful, except they were firmly prepared to discharge their office. Both these things seem to be included, when he says, that he was set as a watchtower, and also as a fortress
Why was he thus set? That thou mayest know, he says, and prove their way Let us now see what was the intention of this. The Prophet no doubt here claims power and credit to himself, that he might not only freely but authoritatively reprove the people: for objections, we know, were ever in their mouths, that they might be at liberty to despise the Prophet’s teaching, as though it did not proceed from God. This then was the reason why God here declares that Jeremiah was like a citadel, and that a fortified one; he was made so, that he might observe and know the way of the people. Hence it followed, that however obstinately they might defend themselves, it availed them nothing; for Jeremiah was endued with the highest authority, even that which was divine, in order to perform his office of a judge in condemning them: for it immediately follows —
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Calvin: Jer 6:28 - -- The Prophet now shews what he found the Jews to be, whose manners and proceedings he had been commanded to observe. Had he said this at first, either...
The Prophet now shews what he found the Jews to be, whose manners and proceedings he had been commanded to observe. Had he said this at first, either the fury of the people would have been kindled, or his judgment would have been treated with contempt: but when God shewed what he had known through his servant, it had more weight, and then the fury of the people was also repressed, when they understood that it would avail them nothing to fight against God.
He says, that they were all the apostates of apostates, or the transgressors of transgressors. Some read
He afterwards adds, that they walked in slander The same mode of speaking, if I mistake not, is found in Lev 19:16,
“Go not,” or walk not, “among thy people with slander.”
Yet this phrase may be otherwise explained, that is, that they walked in calumnies, or that they perverted everything. But in this place, the word slander, seems too feeble, as the Prophet, in my judgment, means more, even the audacity of the people, so that they allowed themselves every liberty in sinning, and thus walked in their own wickedness.
He adds, Brass and iron 185 Many render the words, “Brass mixed with iron;” that is, that the noble and the vulgar were mingled together, so that there was a common consent among them. Of this meaning I do not wholly disapprove: but as it is rather refined, I know not whether it be well — founded. I therefore prefer to regard this as designating their hardness: They were like brass and iron, for they were inflexible. The Prophet then after having called them transgressors who had alienated themselves from God, and after having said, that they walked in their own depravity, now adds, that they were untamable, not capable of any improvements; and hence he compares them to brass and iron.
He at last adds, that they were all corrupters This, as I think, is to be referred to their habits: for thus are enemies called, who plunder everything, and commit all excesses. But they are corrupters here, who not only like thieves plunder the goods of all, but who are leaders to others in wickedness: so that all things were in confusion, as it is wont to be said, from the head to the feet. 186 He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 6:29 - -- He says, that the bellows was consumed by the fire and without any advantage. The whole sentence is metaphorical. Interpreters refer it simply to...
He says, that the bellows was consumed by the fire and without any advantage. The whole sentence is metaphorical. Interpreters refer it simply to what was taught; and hence they consider the mouth of the Prophet to be the bellows, by which the fire was kindled. So the meaning would be, — that the Prophet was as it were burnt, through his incessant crying, like the bellows, which by being continually used is at length consumed, especially when the fire burns fiercely. They then suppose that the Prophet complains that his throat had dried up, like the bellows, which being burnt by the fire can no longer do its work. But what if we refer this to the punishments and judgments by which God had chastised his people, and yet without benefit? For so he complains in the first chapter of Isaiah, and in other places.
“In vain, “he says, “have I chastised thee:”
and Jeremiah has before said,
“In vain have I chastised my children; they have not received correction.” (Jer 2:30)
So also it is said by Isaiah,
“Alas! vengeance must I take on my enemies,” (Isa 1:24)
but to what purpose? He afterwards adds, that it was without any benefit, because their wickedness was incurable.
The first meaning, however, is not to be rejected, for it was not unsuitable to say, that the tongue of the Prophet was worn out with constant crying, that his throat was nearly dried up. But I approve more of what I have just stated. Let each make his own choice. If we consider prophetic teaching to be here intended, we may also draw another meaning, — that the Prophet’s mouth was consumed by God’s terrors; for it was like burning, whenever God threatened the people with final destruction. The Prophet then does not without reason say, that his throat was burnt by fire, even the threatenings of God.
He afterwards adds, that the lead was entire This sentence rather favors the view, that Jeremiah is speaking of the judgments by which God sought to humble the people and to lead them to repentance; for it cannot be suitably applied to doctrine or teaching, that the lead was unmixt. By lead I understand dross. Some consider it to be silver, and say that lead was mixed with silver, in order that the silver might more easily be melted. As I am not skillful in that art, I cannot say whether this is done or not. But the Prophet says that the lead was unmixt; that is, that nothing was found but dross and filth.
He then adds, In vain has the melter melted, for evils have not been purged away; that is, the dross had not been removed so as to leave behind the pure metal. He means, in short, that there was nothing but dross and filth in the people, and not a particle of pure silver. It hence followed, that they had been as it were in vain melted. Now, this applies more fitly to punishment than to teaching, as all must see. I hence do not doubt but that the Prophet shews here, that the Jews were not only wicked and apostates and despisers of God, but were also so obstinate that God had often tried in vain to purify them. And it is a kind of speaking, we know, which occurs often in the prophets and throughout Scripture, that God is said to melt, to purge, to refine men, when he chastises them. But the Prophet says that there was only filth in that people, that lead was found, and that they were not melted. And hence we learn how great was their hardness: though they were tried by fire, they yet melted not, but continued in their perverseness. 187 He afterwards adds —
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Calvin: Jer 6:30 - -- Jeremiah concludes his subject by saying, — that if the Jews had been cast a hundred times into the furnace, they would not be improved, as they wo...
Jeremiah concludes his subject by saying, — that if the Jews had been cast a hundred times into the furnace, they would not be improved, as they would never become softened on account of their hopeless obstinacy. He uses the word silver, by way of concession; for they were not worthy of that name, and we have already seen that there was nothing soft or tender in them.
But the prophets often conceded some things to hypocrites; yet not without some appearance of a taunt, as the case seems to be here. The Jews wished to be regarded as silver, and to appear as such: “Let them then be silver, “that is, “Let them claim the name, by boasting themselves as the holy seed of Abraham; but they are a reprobate silver;” according to what we say, Faux or faux argent; which yet is neither silver nor gold; but the words are used not in their strict meaning, and we afterwards shew that what we have so called is not silver. Even so does the Prophet say, “They are silver in their own esteem, and take pride in the title: but they are a reprobate silver. ” How so? For Jehovah has rejected them He shews that it belongs to God to pronounce sentence on men, and that they gain nothing by their vain flatteries, and by securing some esteem in the world: for God alone is the true judge. The Prophet then shews that the Jews were a reprobate silver, in order that they might know that they in vain gloried, while they boasted themselves to be God’s people and heritage. Now follows —
Defender -> Jer 6:14
Defender: Jer 6:14 - -- The false prophets of Judah were assuring the people that they were safe in their sins, only "slightly" rebuking them, just as do many modern religiou...
The false prophets of Judah were assuring the people that they were safe in their sins, only "slightly" rebuking them, just as do many modern religious leaders. There may be outward freedom from calamity for a time, but there can be no real peace among men until there is true peace between men and God."
TSK: Jer 6:5 - -- let us destroy : Jer 9:21, Jer 17:27, Jer 52:13; 2Ch 36:19; Psa 48:3; Isa 32:14; Hos 8:14; Amo 2:5; Amo 3:10,Amo 3:11; Zec 11:1
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TSK: Jer 6:7 - -- a fountain : Pro 4:23; Isa 57:20; Jam 3:10-12
violence : Jer 20:8; Psa 55:9-11; Eze 7:11, Eze 7:23, Eze 22:3-12, Eze 24:7; Mic 2:1, Mic 2:2, Mic 2:8-1...
a fountain : Pro 4:23; Isa 57:20; Jam 3:10-12
violence : Jer 20:8; Psa 55:9-11; Eze 7:11, Eze 7:23, Eze 22:3-12, Eze 24:7; Mic 2:1, Mic 2:2, Mic 2:8-10; Mic 3:1-3, Mic 3:9-12, Mic 7:2, Mic 7:3
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TSK: Jer 6:8 - -- Be thou : Jer 4:14, Jer 7:3-7, Jer 17:23, Jer 31:19, Jer 32:33, Jer 35:13-15; Deu 32:29; Psa 2:10, Psa 50:17; Psa 94:12; Pro 4:13; Zep 3:7
lest : Eze ...
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TSK: Jer 6:10 - -- To whom : Jer 5:4, Jer 5:5; Isa 28:9-13, Isa 53:1
give : Eze 3:18-21, Eze 33:3, Eze 33:9; Mat 3:7; Col 1:28; Heb 11:7
their ear : Jer 4:4, Jer 7:26; E...
To whom : Jer 5:4, Jer 5:5; Isa 28:9-13, Isa 53:1
give : Eze 3:18-21, Eze 33:3, Eze 33:9; Mat 3:7; Col 1:28; Heb 11:7
their ear : Jer 4:4, Jer 7:26; Exo 6:12; Deu 29:4; Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10, Isa 42:23-25; Act 7:51, Act 7:60
the word : Jer 20:8, Jer 20:9; 2Ch 36:15, 2Ch 36:16; Amo 7:10; Luk 11:45, Luk 20:19; Joh 7:7, Joh 9:40; 2Ti 4:3
delight : Psa 1:2, Psa 40:8, Psa 119:16, Psa 119:24, Psa 119:35, Psa 119:70,Psa 119:77, Psa 119:174; Rom 7:22
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TSK: Jer 6:11 - -- Therefore : Jer 20:9; Job 32:18, Job 32:19; Eze 3:14; Mic 3:8; Act 4:20, Act 17:16, Act 18:5
I will : Jer 9:21, Jer 18:21; Rev 16:1
for even : Eze 9:6...
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TSK: Jer 6:12 - -- And their : Jer 8:10; Deu 28:30-33, Deu 28:39-43; Isa 65:21, Isa 65:22; Lam 5:3, Lam 5:11; Zep 1:13
I will : 1Ch 21:16; Isa 5:25, Isa 9:12, Isa 9:17, ...
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TSK: Jer 6:13 - -- For : Jer 8:10, Jer 14:18, Jer 22:17, Jer 23:11; Isa 56:9-12, Isa 57:17; Eze 22:12, Eze 33:31; Mic 2:1, Mic 2:2, Mic 3:2, Mic 3:3, Mic 3:5, Mic 3:11; ...
For : Jer 8:10, Jer 14:18, Jer 22:17, Jer 23:11; Isa 56:9-12, Isa 57:17; Eze 22:12, Eze 33:31; Mic 2:1, Mic 2:2, Mic 3:2, Mic 3:3, Mic 3:5, Mic 3:11; Zep 3:3, Zep 3:4; Luk 16:14; 1Ti 3:3; 2Pe 2:3, 2Pe 2:14, 2Pe 2:15
and : Jer 2:8, Jer 2:26, Jer 5:31, Jer 23:11, Jer 23:14, Jer 23:15, Jer 26:7, Jer 26:8, Jer 32:32; Isa 28:7; Lam 4:13; Eze 22:25-28; Zep 3:4
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TSK: Jer 6:14 - -- healed : Jer 8:11, Jer 8:12; Eze 13:10
hurt : Heb. bruise, or breach, Jer 14:17; Isa 1:6, Isa 30:26
Peace : Jer 4:10, Jer 5:12, Jer 14:13, Jer 23:17, ...
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TSK: Jer 6:15 - -- Were : Jer 3:3, Jer 8:12; Isa 3:9
blush : Eze 2:4, Eze 16:24, Eze 16:25, Eze 24:7; Zep 3:5; Phi 3:19
therefore : Jer 23:12; Pro 29:1; Isa 10:4; Eze 14...
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TSK: Jer 6:16 - -- Stand : Jer 18:15; Deu 32:7; Son 1:7, Son 1:8; Isa 8:20; Mal 4:4; Luk 16:29; Joh 5:39; Joh 5:46, Joh 5:47; Act 17:11; Rom 4:1-6, Rom 4:12; Heb 6:12, 1...
Stand : Jer 18:15; Deu 32:7; Son 1:7, Son 1:8; Isa 8:20; Mal 4:4; Luk 16:29; Joh 5:39; Joh 5:46, Joh 5:47; Act 17:11; Rom 4:1-6, Rom 4:12; Heb 6:12, 11:2-40, Heb 12:1
and walk : Jer 7:23; Isa 2:5, Isa 30:21; Joh 12:35, Joh 13:17; Col 2:6
ye shall : Isa 28:12; Mat 11:28, Mat 11:29
We will : Jer 2:25, Jer 18:12, Jer 22:21, Jer 44:16; Mat 21:28-32
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TSK: Jer 6:17 - -- I : Jer 25:4; Isa 21:11, Isa 56:10; Eze 3:17-21, Eze 33:2-9; Hab 2:1; Act 20:27-31; Heb 13:17
Hearken : Isa 58:1; Hos 8:1; Amo 3:6-8
We : Zec 7:11
I : Jer 25:4; Isa 21:11, Isa 56:10; Eze 3:17-21, Eze 33:2-9; Hab 2:1; Act 20:27-31; Heb 13:17
Hearken : Isa 58:1; Hos 8:1; Amo 3:6-8
We : Zec 7:11
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TSK: Jer 6:19 - -- O earth : Jer 22:29; Deu 4:26, Deu 30:19, Deu 32:1; Isa 1:2; Mic 6:2
even : Jer 4:4, Jer 17:10; Pro 1:24-31, Pro 15:26; Isa 59:7, Isa 66:18; Hos 10:13...
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TSK: Jer 6:20 - -- To what : Psa 40:6, Psa 50:7-13, Psa 50:16, Psa 50:17, Psa 66:3; Isa 1:11, Isa 66:3; Eze 20:39; Amo 5:21, Amo 5:22; Mic 6:6-8
Sheba : 1Ki 10:1, 1Ki 10...
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TSK: Jer 6:21 - -- I will : Jer 13:16; Isa 8:14; Eze 3:20; Rom 9:33, Rom 11:9; 1Pe 2:8
fathers : Jer 9:21, Jer 9:22, Jer 15:2-9, Jer 16:3-9, Jer 18:21, Jer 19:7-9, Jer 2...
I will : Jer 13:16; Isa 8:14; Eze 3:20; Rom 9:33, Rom 11:9; 1Pe 2:8
fathers : Jer 9:21, Jer 9:22, Jer 15:2-9, Jer 16:3-9, Jer 18:21, Jer 19:7-9, Jer 21:7; 2Ch 36:17; Isa 9:14-17; Isa 24:2, Isa 24:3; Lam 2:20-22; Eze 5:10, Eze 9:5-7
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TSK: Jer 6:22 - -- a people : Jer 6:1, Jer 1:14, Jer 1:15, Jer 5:15, Jer 10:22, Jer 25:9, Jer 50:41-43
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TSK: Jer 6:23 - -- They shall : Jer 5:16, Jer 50:42; Isa 13:18; Eze 23:22-25; Hab 1:6-10
cruel : Jer 30:14; Isa 13:18, Isa 19:4
their : Jer 4:13; Isa 5:26-30; Luk 21:25,...
They shall : Jer 5:16, Jer 50:42; Isa 13:18; Eze 23:22-25; Hab 1:6-10
cruel : Jer 30:14; Isa 13:18, Isa 19:4
their : Jer 4:13; Isa 5:26-30; Luk 21:25, Luk 21:26
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TSK: Jer 6:24 - -- We have : Jer 4:6-9, Jer 4:19-21; Isa 28:19; Eze 21:6, Eze 21:7; Hab 3:16
anguish : Jer 4:31, Jer 13:21, Jer 22:23, Jer 30:6, Jer 49:24, Jer 50:43; Ps...
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TSK: Jer 6:25 - -- Go not : Jer 4:5, Jer 8:14, Jer 14:18; Jdg 5:6, Jdg 5:7
the sword : Jer 4:10, Jer 20:3, Jer 20:4 *marg. Jer 20:10, Jer 49:29; 2Ch 15:5; Job 18:11; Psa...
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TSK: Jer 6:26 - -- daughter : Jer 6:14, Jer 4:11, Jer 8:19, Jer 8:21, Jer 8:22, Jer 9:1, Jer 14:17; Isa 22:4; Lam 2:11, Lam 3:48, Lam 4:3, Lam 4:6, Lam 4:10
gird : Jer 4...
daughter : Jer 6:14, Jer 4:11, Jer 8:19, Jer 8:21, Jer 8:22, Jer 9:1, Jer 14:17; Isa 22:4; Lam 2:11, Lam 3:48, Lam 4:3, Lam 4:6, Lam 4:10
gird : Jer 4:8, Jer 25:33, Jer 25:34; Isa 32:11; Eze 27:30,Eze 27:31; Mic 1:8-10
make thee : Jer 9:1, Jer 9:10,Jer 9:17-22, Jer 13:17; Isa 22:12; Lam 1:2, Lam 1:16; Eze 7:16-18; Zec 12:10; Luk 7:12; Jam 4:9, Jam 5:1
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TSK: Jer 6:28 - -- all grievous : Jer 5:23; Isa 1:5, Isa 31:6
walking : Jer 9:4, Jer 18:18, Jer 20:10; Psa 50:20
they are brass : Jer 6:30; Eze 22:18-22
corrupters : Isa...
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TSK: Jer 6:29 - -- the founder : Jer 9:7; Pro 17:3; Zec 13:9; Mal 3:2, Mal 3:3; 1Pe 1:7, 1Pe 4:12
in vain : Isa 49:4; Eze 24:13; Hos 11:7
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TSK: Jer 6:30 - -- Reprobate silver : or, Refuse silver, Psa 119:119; Pro 25:4; Isa 1:22, Isa 1:25; Eze 22:18, Eze 22:19; Mat 5:13
the Lord : Jer 14:19; Lam 5:22; Hos 9:...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jer 6:5 - -- Up! and we will make the assault "by night!" And destroy "her palaces." The generals delay the assault until the next morning. The soldiers consider...
Up! and we will make the assault "by night!"
And destroy "her palaces."
The generals delay the assault until the next morning. The soldiers consider themselves aggrieved at this, and clamour for a night attack.
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Barnes: Jer 6:6 - -- Hew ye down trees - Rather, her trees: for the simple purpose of clearing the approaches. Cast a mount - literally, pour: the earth was e...
Hew ye down trees - Rather, her trees: for the simple purpose of clearing the approaches.
Cast a mount - literally, pour: the earth was emptied out of the baskets, in which it was carried to the required spot upon the backs of laborers.
Wholly - Or,
"She "is the city"that is visited:
"Wholly oppression"is "in the midst of her!"
She is visited, - i. e., punished; she is ripe for punishment.
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Barnes: Jer 6:7 - -- As a fountain casteth out - Better, As a cistern "cooleth." Before me ... - Before My face continually there is disease and wounding: Dis...
As a fountain casteth out - Better, As a cistern "cooleth."
Before me ... - Before My face continually there is disease and wounding: Disease as the result of poverty and want: wounding, or, the commission of deeds of actual violence.
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Barnes: Jer 6:8 - -- Be thou instructed - Be thou chastised: learn the lesson which chastisement is intended to teach thee. Lest my soul - Lest I Myself - not...
Be thou instructed - Be thou chastised: learn the lesson which chastisement is intended to teach thee.
Lest my soul - Lest I Myself - not "depart from thee,"God does not willingly leave His people, but - "be torn from thee."
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Barnes: Jer 6:9 - -- They ... - Each word indicates the completeness of Judah’ s ruin. Turn back thine hand - Addressed perhaps to Nebuchadnezzar as God&...
They ... - Each word indicates the completeness of Judah’ s ruin.
Turn back thine hand - Addressed perhaps to Nebuchadnezzar as God’ s servant Jer 25:9. He is required to go over the vine once again, that no grapes may escape.
Into the baskets - Better, "upon the tendrils."While the Jews carried captive to Babylon escaped, misery gleaned the rest again and again.
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Barnes: Jer 6:10 - -- Give warning - Rather testify. Reproach - They make the Word of God the object of their ridicule.
Give warning - Rather testify.
Reproach - They make the Word of God the object of their ridicule.
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Barnes: Jer 6:11 - -- Or, But I am filled with "the fury of Yahweh: I am weary with holding"it "in."Pour it out "upon the children"in the street, and upon the company of ...
Or, But I am filled with "the fury of Yahweh: I am weary with holding"it "in."Pour it out "upon the children"in the street, and upon the company of youths "together;"for both man and "wife shall be taken;"the older and he whose days are full. With emphatic abruptness Jeremiah bids himself give full utterance to God’ s message. And the message is to reach all. Five stages of human life are successively marked out.
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Barnes: Jer 6:12 - -- Turned - Violently transferred. Houses, fields, wives, all they most valued, and most jealously kept to themselves - are gone.
Turned - Violently transferred. Houses, fields, wives, all they most valued, and most jealously kept to themselves - are gone.
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Barnes: Jer 6:13 - -- Given to covetousness - literally, everyone has gained gains. The temper of mind which gains the world is not that which gains heaven. Fal...
Given to covetousness - literally, everyone has gained gains. The temper of mind which gains the world is not that which gains heaven.
Falsely - Rather, "fraudulently."
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Barnes: Jer 6:14 - -- Healed - Rather, "tried to heal." Of the daughter - These words are omitted by a majority of manuscripts, but found in most of the versio...
Healed - Rather, "tried to heal."
Of the daughter - These words are omitted by a majority of manuscripts, but found in most of the versions.
Slightly - literally, "according to,"i. e., as if it were, a "trifle: making nothing"of it. This cry of "peace"was doubtless based upon Josiah’ s reforms.
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Barnes: Jer 6:15 - -- They are brought to shame because They have "committed abomination:" Shame nevertheless they feel not; To blush nevertheless they know not; "Therefo...
They are brought to shame because
They have "committed abomination:"
Shame nevertheless they feel not;
To blush nevertheless they know not;
"Therefore they shall fall among"the falling;
"At the time"when "I visit them, they shall"stumble,
"Saith Yahweh."
The fact is expressed that their conduct was a disgrace to them, though they did not feel it as such. "Abomination"has its usual meaning of idolatry Jer 4:1.
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Barnes: Jer 6:16 - -- The sense is: God’ s prophet has declared that a great national calamity is at hand. "Make inquiries; stand in the ways; ask the passers by. Yo...
The sense is: God’ s prophet has declared that a great national calamity is at hand. "Make inquiries; stand in the ways; ask the passers by. Your country was once prosperous and blessed. Try to learn what were the paths trodden in those days which led your ancestors to happiness. Choose them, and walk earnestly therein, and find thereby rest for your souls."The Christian fathers often contrast Christ the one goodway with the old tracks, many in number and narrow to walk in, which are the Law and the prophets.
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Barnes: Jer 6:17 - -- Watchmen - The prophets Isa 52:8. The second of the trumpet - This was the signal for flight Jer 6:1; Amo 3:6. Similarly the prophet̵...
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Barnes: Jer 6:18 - -- God summons three witnesses to hear His sentence. (1) the Gentiles. (2) all mankind, Jews and Gentiles. (3) nature (see Jer 6:19). What is amon...
God summons three witnesses to hear His sentence.
(1) the Gentiles.
(2) all mankind, Jews and Gentiles.
(3) nature (see Jer 6:19).
What is among them - Rather, "what happens"in them; i. e., "Know what great things I will do to them."
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Barnes: Jer 6:19 - -- The fathers understood this to be the decree rejecting the Jews from being the Church.
The fathers understood this to be the decree rejecting the Jews from being the Church.
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Barnes: Jer 6:20 - -- The sweet cane - The same as the scented cane of Exo 30:23 (see the note). Your burnt offerings - The rejection of ritual observances is ...
The sweet cane - The same as the scented cane of Exo 30:23 (see the note).
Your burnt offerings - The rejection of ritual observances is proclaimed by the two prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah, who chiefly assisted the two pious kings, Hezekiah and Josiah, in restoring the temple-service. God rejects not the ceremonial service, but the substitution of it for personal holiness and morality. Compare 1Sa 15:22; Isa 1:11; Mic 6:6-8.
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Barnes: Jer 6:21 - -- "Behold,"I give unto "this people"causes of stumbling, And they shall stumble against them: Fathers and sons together, "The neighbor and his friend ...
"Behold,"I give unto "this people"causes of stumbling,
And they shall stumble against them:
Fathers and sons together,
"The neighbor and his friend shall perish."
This is the natural consequence of their conduct. Their service of Yahweh was a systematic hypocrisy: how then could they walk uprightly with their fellow-men? When God lays stumblingblocks in men’ s way, it is by the general action of His moral law Jam 1:13-14, by which willful sin in one point reacts upon the whole moral nature Jam 2:10.
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Barnes: Jer 6:22 - -- Raised - Or, awakened, to undertake distant expeditions. The sides of the earth - Or ends, the most distant regions (see Jer 25:32).
Raised - Or, awakened, to undertake distant expeditions.
The sides of the earth - Or ends, the most distant regions (see Jer 25:32).
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Barnes: Jer 6:23 - -- Spear - Properly, a javelin for hurling at the enemy (see 1Sa 17:6 note): an ordinary weapon of the Babylonians. Cruel - ruthless, inhuma...
Spear - Properly, a javelin for hurling at the enemy (see 1Sa 17:6 note): an ordinary weapon of the Babylonians.
Cruel - ruthless, inhuman. In the Assyrian monuments warriors put the vanquished to death; rows of impaled victims hang round the walls of the besieged towns; and men collect in heaps hands cut from the vanquished.
Horses, set in array - A full stop should be put after horses. It - the whole army, and not the cavalry only - is "set in array."
As men for war against thee - Rather, as a warrior for battle "against thee."
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Barnes: Jer 6:24 - -- The effect upon the Jewish people of the news of Nebuchadnezzars approach. Wax feeble - Are relaxed. It is the opposite of what is said in Jer...
The effect upon the Jewish people of the news of Nebuchadnezzars approach.
Wax feeble - Are relaxed. It is the opposite of what is said in Jer 6:23 of the enemy, "They lay hold etc."Terror makes the hands of the Jews hold their weapons with nerveless grasp.
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Barnes: Jer 6:25 - -- For the sword of the enemy - literally, "for to the enemy a sword; i. e., for the enemy is armed,"he has a commission from God to execute judgm...
For the sword of the enemy - literally, "for to the enemy a sword; i. e., for the enemy is armed,"he has a commission from God to execute judgment. See Jer 12:12; Isa 10:5, and Psa 17:13 note.
Fear is on every side - Magor-Missabib, Jeremiah’ s watchword (compare Jer 20:3, Jer 20:10). The "and"before it should be omitted.
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Barnes: Jer 6:26 - -- Wallow thyself in ashes - Violent distress is accustomed to find relief in eccentric actions, and thus the wallowing in ashes shows that Jerusa...
Wallow thyself in ashes - Violent distress is accustomed to find relief in eccentric actions, and thus the wallowing in ashes shows that Jerusalem’ s grief is unbearable.
The spoiler - Nebuchadnezzar.
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Barnes: Jer 6:27 - -- Render it: I have set thee among My people as a prover of ore, And thou shalt know and try their way. They are all of them rebels of rebels (i. e., ...
Render it:
I have set thee among My people as a prover of ore,
And thou shalt know and try their way.
They are all of them rebels of rebels (i. e., utter rebels):
Slander-walkers, were copper and iron,
Corrupters all of them.
The bellows glow: from their fire lead only!
In vain hath the smelter smelted,
And the wicked are not separated.
Refuse-silver have men called them:
For Yahweh hath refused them.
The intermixture throughout of moral words and metallurgical terms is remarkable.
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Barnes: Jer 6:29 - -- The bellows are burned - Worn out by continual blowing. The prophet has exhausted all his efforts. His heart, consumed by the heat of divine in...
The bellows are burned - Worn out by continual blowing. The prophet has exhausted all his efforts. His heart, consumed by the heat of divine inspiration, can labor no more. Others translate "The bellows snort,"i. e., blow furiously. More probably, "The bellows glow"with the strong heat of the fire.
Plucked away - Separated. The smelter’ s object is to separate the metal from the dross.
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Barnes: Jer 6:30 - -- Reprobate - See the margin; not really silver, but the dross. The Lord hath rejected them - This then is the end. The smelter is God̵...
Reprobate - See the margin; not really silver, but the dross.
The Lord hath rejected them - This then is the end. The smelter is God’ s prophet: the bellows the breath of inspiration: the flux his earnestness in preaching. But in vain does the fervour of prophecy essay to melt the hearts of the people. They are so utterly corrupt, that no particle even of pure metal can be found in them. All the refiner’ s art is in vain. They have rejected all God’ s gifts and motives for their repentance, and therefore Yahweh has rejected them as an alloy too utterly adulterate to repay the refiner’ s toil.
Poole: Jer 6:5 - -- Let us go by night or, this night . They were set upon it, they would lose neither day nor night; which shows that they were extraordinarily stirred...
Let us go by night or, this night . They were set upon it, they would lose neither day nor night; which shows that they were extraordinarily stirred up by God in this expedition.
Let us destroy her palaces: this was the bait or motive that they propounded to themselves, viz. to have the spoil of all the stately palaces and rich houses of the nobles and great ones.
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Poole: Jer 6:6 - -- Said viz. to the Chaldeans. Here God declares whence they have their commission: q.d. They come not up on their own heads: see Jer 5:14,15 . God woul...
Said viz. to the Chaldeans. Here God declares whence they have their commission: q.d. They come not up on their own heads: see Jer 5:14,15 . God would have the Jews to know that they have not so much to do with the Chaldeans as with him; that they are his rod to scourge them for their sins, Jer 1:15,16 . See 2Ki 18:25 . And thus God is said to hiss for such whom he will employ in such work, Isa 5:26 7:18 . And he styles himself the Lord of hosts, to show that it is in vain to contend in battle with them, whom he sends forth, and will be, as it were, the captain of their hosts.
Hew ye down trees Heb. a tree , collectively taken: q.d. Cut them down all as one tree, not sparing their very fruit trees, which indeed were to be spared in such a case, Deu 20:19 ; either such as lie in the way of your march, or all round about Jerusalem; or such as you may have need of there or elsewhere for your use, either to raise up works against the strong places, Deu 20:20 , or to make other instruments of war.
Cast a mount throw up one continued trench, as a mount round about it. See on Isa 37:38 . Heb. pour out the engine ; of that see 2Sa 20:15 .
To be visited God is said to visit sometimes in mercy, Ge 1 24 Zep 2:7 , and sometimes in judgment, as here, and Jer 5:9 23:2 . They are ripe for it, Eze 7:10-12 ; see 1Th 2:16 ; and it is decreed against them, and ready to come upon them, chap, 23:12 Hos 9:7. All attempts have failed, and now there is no remedy. She is wholly oppression; in the abstract, she doth nothing but oppress; there are found in her all kinds of oppression and injustice; a synecdoche for all other cruelties, 2Ki 24:3,4 Eze 7:23 ; even in that city which was once full of judgment, and righteousness lodged in it, Isa 1:21 , swallowed up with oppression.
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Poole: Jer 6:7 - -- In this verse God aggravates their sin of oppression, mentioned in the former.
As a fountain casteth out her waters, so she casteth out her wickedn...
In this verse God aggravates their sin of oppression, mentioned in the former.
As a fountain casteth out her waters, so she casteth out her wickedness a metaphor, to express how natural all manner of wickedness is to her, how full she is of it, and how incessant in it, noting her impudence, a fountain being not able to retain its water; and the expression of casting it out seems to imply her violence in her filthiness, as it is said of the sea, that it casteth out mire and dirt, Isa 57:20 , and favoured by the next clause.
Violence and spoil is heard in her: q.d. This is all she busieth herself about, Jer 20:8 . It is the general complaint of her inhabitants.
Before me continually is grief and wounds viz. that the poor sustain: wherever I go or look, I can hear and see nothing but the sad complaints and grievances of the poor, lamenting over oppression and cruelties that are used against them, Psa 69:26 , this being so expressly against God’ s command, Exo 22:22-24 , &c.; Isa 3:14,15 Jas 5:4 ; for this refers rather to their sin than to their sufferings from the enemy, as some would carry it.
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Poole: Jer 6:8 - -- Be thou instructed Heb. corrected : q.d. By the correction thou hast felt, and what is threatened, be persuaded to repentance before it be too late,...
Be thou instructed Heb. corrected : q.d. By the correction thou hast felt, and what is threatened, be persuaded to repentance before it be too late, Pro 29:15 . God doth here
in the midst of judgment remember mercy as it were suddenly putting a stop to his fury, seeking if by any means it may yet be prevented by their repentance: q.d. I would yet willingly spare them, if it might be.
Lest my soul depart from thee Heb. be disjointed ; a most emphatical metaphor, whereby God would express how great grief it is to him to withdraw himself from them, could it possibly be avoided, (his great affection to them being here expressed by soul, which is the seat of it, Psa 42:1,2 ) even like the separating one limb from another: hereby is intimated the near communion that God hath with the faithful, and how ready he is to return, if they will return.
Lest I make thee desolate, a land not inhabited lest he make them not a people.
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Poole: Jer 6:9 - -- Though gleaning be a term proper for all kind of harvest, yet the word used here is appropriated to the vintage, and implies the thorough riddance t...
Though gleaning be a term proper for all kind of harvest, yet the word used here is appropriated to the vintage, and implies the thorough riddance that the Chaldeans shall make, contrary to the law for gathering the vintage, though it may seem to allude to it, Lev 19:10 . Judah shall be gleaned over and over, till there be a full end, none left; as the Israelites gleaned the Benjamites, Jud 20:45 ; for thus they picked them up at several times, both before, 2Ki 24:2 , and also at thee time of Zedekiah’ s reign, 2Ki 25:6,7,11,15,19 ; and this seems to be intimated in the next words. See Hab 1:9 .
Turn back thine hand as much as to say, they should not be content with one spoiling, but they should go back a second and a third time, again and again, to carry away both persons and spoil, leaving nothing behind them worth carrying away, Jer 52:28-30 ; the first carrying away being as the vintage, the second the gleaning; carrying away first the principal, and afterwards the more inferior sort.
As a grape gatherer into the baskets as the grapegatherers do, filling one basket after another. Whether these be the words of the Babylonians calling upon and stirring up one another to do it, as some; or the words of God to the Babylonians, as most; it comes much to the same thing; for what they did; as by God’ s commission.
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Poole: Jer 6:10 - -- Give warning Heb. make protestation ; noting with what earnestness the prophet would bespeak them in his warning of them: see Jer 11:7 . The prophet...
Give warning Heb. make protestation ; noting with what earnestness the prophet would bespeak them in his warning of them: see Jer 11:7 . The prophet taking notice of their obstinacy, speaks as one astonished, and highly makes complaint, being greatly grieved that he can find none that will take warning; the like Jer 7:23,24 ; he labours to persuade, but all is in vain; they turn a deaf ear to him, as the next expression intimates.
Their ear is uncircumcised a figurative kind of speech frequent with the prophets: an uncircumcised ear signifying the rejecting of instruction; an uncircumcised heart , an obstinate and rebellious will: hence circumcision was for a testimony of obedience; and therefore the prophet doth tacitly insinuate their falseness to God, to whom they had promised to be obedient, 2Ki 11:17 23:3 . And the Scripture calls those that are void of the fear of God, and carried out to all manner of lusts, uncircumcised, Eze 44:7,9 ; for uncircumcision was abominable among the Jews; so that it notes both their sin and their shame, their ear being stopped, unfit for hearing, as if it were with a foreskin or film over it, Act 7:51 .
They cannot hearken: the prophet doth not here lessen their crimes by their inability and want of power, but rather aggravates it, inasmuch as they had brought themselves under that incapacity by their obstinacy and willfulness; as a drunken man that hath deprived himself of his reason by excess, renders the want of his understanding the more inexcusable.
A reproach either they reproach it in the messenger’ s mouth, Luk 11:45 , or rather they laugh at it and scorn it, they cannot bear counsel, they look upon reproving them to be reproaching them; they take no delight in hearing such things: a further reason of their impotency and obstinacy; all their admonitions and instructions seemed insipid, and therefore were they so stupid, according to the next words, Pro 15:12 . See Jer 5:31 2Ti 4:3 .
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Poole: Jer 6:11 - -- Therefore Heb. And ; which seems to be a better connexion; for that which putteth him upon this work seems rather to be that Spirit of prophecy that...
Therefore Heb. And ; which seems to be a better connexion; for that which putteth him upon this work seems rather to be that Spirit of prophecy that is in him than any consideration drawn from them.
I am full of the fury of the Lord I am, as it were, filled with the fire of God’ s wrath and curses against this people, which I am forced to discharge myself of; a metonymy of the subject. See Eze 3:3 Jer 4:19 . He doth not only complain of their stupidity, as in the former verse, but stirs up his indignation against them.
I am weary with holding in but he can contain himself no longer, which implies his great unwillingness to denounce these curses: q.d. The wrath of God, by the impulse of his Spirit, acting so violently with mine, that it will break out: see the like Job 32:18,19 . Whereby it appears the prophet is not carried on by his own private spirit, but by the Spirit of God; he hath no delight in it, but is forced to be the messenger himself of his wrath; therefore if he be sharp against them, they must not impute; it to him, but to the Spirit of God, that constrains him thus to speak.
I will pour it out viz. in prophesying, noting the great plenty of it; a metaphor from violent rains, that we say do pour down upon the earth, Jer 7:20 Rev 16:1 .
Upon the children abroad the streets being the places where usually little children are wont to sport themselves, Zec 8:5 . The same word used Psa 8:2 .
Upon the assembly of young men together their secret meetings, whether in harlots’ houses, Jer 5:7 , or for mirth and jollity, or to join either their strength or counsel together, which children are not capable of; for the Hebrews do not only call them youths that are past their childhood, possibly at fifteen or sixteen years of age, but men of twenty or thirty, grown to their full strength and maturity, in the flower of their years; yet it shall advantage them nothing.
The husband with the wife Heb. man with woman ; the wife shall be taken as well as the husband, one sex as well as the other shall be a prey to the enemy.
The aged with him that is full of days not only men that may be termed old, as they may be from fifty to eighty, which are then said to be waxing old; but such as had upon the point filled up the number of their days, at the edge of the grave, Isa 65:20 , called very aged, as Barzillai, 2Sa 19:32,34,35 . The sense is, that all sorts, from the children to the decrepit old man, had so corrupted their ways, see Jer 6:13 , that their condition was desperate, and God would bring an enemy upon them should spare or pity none, of what sex or age soever.
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Poole: Jer 6:12 - -- Their houses shall be turned unto others i.e. their houses and their lands shall be devolved or turned over to strangers, Jer 8:10 , even that land w...
Their houses shall be turned unto others i.e. their houses and their lands shall be devolved or turned over to strangers, Jer 8:10 , even that land which they thought had been entailed upon them, and they so firmly fixed in for ever, Psa 132:13,14 .
Their wives their most desirable things; howbeit it need not be restrained precisely to wives, the Hebrew signifying women largely, Jer 7:18 , comprising
maids, wives, or concubines and this according to the threatening, Deu 28:30 Jer 8:10 .
I will stretch out my hand viz. to smite, to give you a sorer blow, Isa 5:25 ; a synecdoche of the kind, spoken after the manner of men. Here the prophet gives them the reason of this their unexpected calamity, that they might not think it an impossibility; namely, because God was become their enemy.
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Poole: Jer 6:13 - -- From the least of them not respecting so much their age as degree and quality, poor and rich; the prophet notes the generality of their corruption as...
From the least of them not respecting so much their age as degree and quality, poor and rich; the prophet notes the generality of their corruption as the reason of God’ s severity against them, as Jer 6:6 ; observing also that it was even among the greatest, who ought to have given better examples, no soundness from head to foot.
Covetousness in which possibly all their wickednesses, as cruelty, oppression, injustice, &c., may be comprised, it being the root of all evil, 1Ti 6:10 , and may also speak the justice of God, in the Chaldeans taking them and all their substance away, that had by violence and fraud wrested it from others, Mic 2:2 .
Dealeth falsely Heb. doing falsehood ; as if that were their whole work, the proper and peculiar sin of the priests and prophets, to deceive the people, and to flatter them by false visions, as in the next verse; not that they were not also guilty of the other sins, Isa 56:11 , and the princes and people of this, Mic 3:9 Jer 5:31 , for they were all involved in the same wickedness; but the prophet mentions those sins that were most peculiar to each party. See the same Jer 8:10 .
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Poole: Jer 6:14 - -- They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly: this refers peculiarly to the prophets; either slighting or making light of the...
They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly: this refers peculiarly to the prophets; either slighting or making light of these threatenings, tending to the reproach either,
1. Of the prophets of God, bringing their message into contempt; or,
2. The people, deceiving of them, and rendering their hopes vain, Jer 8:11 . Or here the prophet shows wherein their false dealing consists, viz. in daubing over their misery and danger that was coming on them, by persuading them that it should not come, or if it did, it would be easily cured; as some physicians do with their patients, that make light of a wound, and so neglect the true method of cure; but either by lenitives give some ease for the present, by a superficial skinning over a sore while the corruption is in it; or stupefactives, making them senseless, not feeling their pain, Jer 23:14 Eze 13:10 16:22 ; and so the prophet makes this the cause of their last destruction.
Saying, Peace, peace the Chaldeans shall not come, all things shall be prosperous with you; all kind of prosperity being included in the word peace . They promise you peace, but you shall come short of it, as in the next words.
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Poole: Jer 6:15 - -- Were they viz. the false prophets, ashamed? Some read it actively, as sometimes it is taken, Did they put the people to shame? but that is not so pro...
Were they viz. the false prophets, ashamed? Some read it actively, as sometimes it is taken, Did they put the people to shame? but that is not so proper here; it rather notes how bold and confident, or rather impudent, they were in their flatteries, and deceiving the people, a great aggravation of their sin. The form of the interrogation chargeth them home with the guilt, as do also the next words,
neither could they blush q.d. they had not the least show of shame, usually discovered by blushing.
Committed abomination or, the thing to be abominated, (a metonymy of the effect,) both by encouraging the people, and joining with them in their idolatries. See Jer 3:3 .
Therefore they shall fall among them that fall therefore they shall perish with those whom they have deceived, as in the following expressions. To fall signifies to be slain , Psa 63:10 Luk 21:24 . Visit them , viz. punish them, inflict punishment on them: see Jer 6:6 .
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Poole: Jer 6:16 - -- Having told the false prophets their doom, he now turns his speech to the people, and gives them counsel; for he rather propounds than commands, by ...
Having told the false prophets their doom, he now turns his speech to the people, and gives them counsel; for he rather propounds than commands, by a metaphor taken from travellers, that being in doubt of their way, do stand still, pause, and consider, whether the direction they have received from some ignorant person or false guide be right or not.
The old paths Heb. paths of antiquity , such as their godly forefathers of old were wont to walk in, the ancient paths, Jer 18:15 . Or, the oracles of God , what directions his word gives, Isa 8:20 . Or, the providence of God . Observe what hath been God’ s ways and method in times past, with reference to sin and punishment, Deu 4:3,4 Jud 5:6,8 Jer 22:15,16 , and what have been want to be the best courses, called here the
good way or the best way to continue mercies and prevent judgments, Deu 32:7 , he.: see 1Th 5:21 .
Walk therein when you have found what was best and most prosperous, keep it, stick to it.
Ye shall find rest you will find God to stand by you, and be a sanctuary to you, Deu 33:12,29 . See Mat 11:29 . You will find things mend with you; it will be well with you, as it hath been with others; you will be satisfied and quiet; you will not doubt any longer which way to follow: see 1Ki 18:21 .
We will not walk therein it notes their great wilfulness and obstinacy, that though the prophets had directed them in the right way, and though they knew others had experimented it to be so, yet they would not be persuaded to walk in it, but deliberately refused those favours offered, Isa 8:11-13 Jer 18:11,12 .
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Poole: Jer 6:17 - -- Watchmen viz. prophets and messengers, that sought their good, and endeavoured to prevent their miseries by foretelling what was coming upon them, Ez...
Watchmen viz. prophets and messengers, that sought their good, and endeavoured to prevent their miseries by foretelling what was coming upon them, Eze 3:17 33:7 A metaphor from watchmen , that are usually set upon high places to espy out dangers afar off.
The sound of the trumpet either the voice of his prophets, which is compared to a trumpet, Isa 58:1 , intimating his loud crying upon the account of imminent danger; for men do not use to sound the trumpet till danger be approaching; or the trumpet of that enemy, Jer 4:19,21 .
We will not hearken more of their obstinacy suitable to their carriage, Jer 6:16 .
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Poole: Jer 6:18 - -- Ver. 18, Hear, ye nations: he calls upon the nations round about to be as so many spectators of his severity against Judah, though they were his own...
Ver. 18, Hear, ye nations: he calls upon the nations round about to be as so many spectators of his severity against Judah, though they were his own people.
1. Partly to vindicate the justice of his proceedings, that they may not think him too severe.
2. Partly to shame them, if thereby tie may bring them to repentance; and therefore he makes them witnesses as well of their sin as of their punishment, Jer 6:19 . Besides,
3. It is a secret upbraiding them, as if the nations were more ready to understand than they.
Know, O congregation either of Israel, and then the next words must be which are among them; or rather, of all nations, as supposing them gathered all together, Psa 7:7 . God is willing that all the world should be witness of the equity of his proceedings.
What is among them or, that which is among them ; the relative put for the antecedent; either the height of their wickedness, or the severity of their judgments; understand it either way, or both ways, and then it is the greatness of their punishment, as the effect of the greatness of their sins.
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Poole: Jer 6:19 - -- Hear, O earth the inhabitants of the earth; or else God having spoken to the rational, he now speaks to the very senseless creatures to observe his p...
Hear, O earth the inhabitants of the earth; or else God having spoken to the rational, he now speaks to the very senseless creatures to observe his proceedings, Eze 36:4 .
I will bring evil the Chaldean army, with all the direful effects of it. The fruit of their thoughts : q.d. They may thank themselves for what is come upon them, being the fruit of all these contrivances and wicked imaginations that their hearts were full of, Pro 1:29-31 ; see Isa 59:7 Jer 4:14 ; by which phrase is also intimated that their sins were not some slight oversights, but meditated and digested wickedness; and therefore God will bring upon them the just punishment for their doings.
My words those messages that I so frequently and earnestly sent unto them by my prophets, Pro 1:24,25 .
But rejected it as it were bidding open defiance to me, scorning to be ruled by me.
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Poole: Jer 6:20 - -- To what purpose? an interrogation of expostulation and contempt, wherein God by the prophet meets with their hypocrisy, who pleased themselves with t...
To what purpose? an interrogation of expostulation and contempt, wherein God by the prophet meets with their hypocrisy, who pleased themselves with their outward oblations and sacrifices, and thought God would be pleased with them too; but he tells them plainly they are to no purpose; as he speaks particularly in the close of the verse, Jer 7:21,22 Eze 20:39 .
Incense from Sheba: that this was the product of Sheba, a country in Arabia Felix, to which country frankincense was peculiar, See Poole "Isa 60:6" . The sweet cane , or, cane , i.e. good, or the best cane; the article
From a far country not that it was brought from the remotest parts of the world, as from India, as some; for it was known to the Jews in Moses’ s time, Exo 30:23 ; but because it grew not in their own land, but was fetched or brought to them from Sheba, Isa 60:6 , where it did grow, as Diodorus testifies, lib. 3. p. 125, and Strabo, lib. 16; 1Ki 10:2, compared with Joe 3:8 ; who is called the queen of the south , and to come from the uttermost parts of the earth , Mat 12:42 , because the South Sea did bound the country. To what purpose art thou at this trouble and charge to fetch these ingredients for thy incense?
Are not acceptable not likely to atone me; they will not be for acceptance; I cannot take delight in them, Hos 9:4 , as the next expression: q.d. Away with these childish trifles, whereby you think to pacify me. By these species he understands the whole legal worship.
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Poole: Jer 6:21 - -- I will lay stumbling-blocks God gives this name to all the occasions of the Jews’ ruin; he exposeth them, or suffereth such things to be laid i...
I will lay stumbling-blocks God gives this name to all the occasions of the Jews’ ruin; he exposeth them, or suffereth such things to be laid in their way, as shall be the occasion of their destruction; such things which they shall not get over. Or an hypallage, I will bring destruction upon them; as the Hebrews use to speak, They have sent a city into the fire , i.e. They have sent fire into the city . Or God doth here compare his judgments to traps, wherein they shall be taken, which they thought easily to have evaded. What these stumbling-blocks are seem to be expressed in the following verses.
The fathers and the sons together as well the fathers, that have more prudence and policy, as the children, that are more inadvertent, or possibly may count themselves less guilty, shall perish by these stumbling-blocks; no recovering for themselves, Isa 8:14,15 .
The neighbour and his friend men of all sorts and conditions, the greatest intimates and associates, though all lay their heads together for counsel, yet shall they not be able to help one another, but a promiscuous destruction there shall be, Jer 6:11 Jer 13:14 .
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Poole: Jer 6:22 - -- Now the prophet is showing what these destructive stumbling-blocks shall be, of which he had prophesied forty years already, and yet they would not ...
Now the prophet is showing what these destructive stumbling-blocks shall be, of which he had prophesied forty years already, and yet they would not be warned. The north country: see Jer 6:1 .
A great nation shall be raised God shall stir up the Chaldeans like a great storm or tempest, Jer 1:15 25:32 . See Eze 23:22 .
From the sides of the earth the remote and uttermost parts of the Babylonian territories, though at the greatest distance, yet God will bring them: which may note the greatness of God’ s displeasure against Judah, this circumstance being noted among the curses, Deu 28:49 . See Isa 5:25,26 , &c.; Jer 5:15 .
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Poole: Jer 6:23 - -- They shall lay hold on bow and spear or, They shall carry ; they shall not want military ammunition of all sorts for the despatch of this great work...
They shall lay hold on bow and spear or, They shall carry ; they shall not want military ammunition of all sorts for the despatch of this great work; synecdochically expressed for all sorts of weapons. So Psa 35:2,3 .
Have no mercy see Jer 50:42 ; not be entreated, or have any pity to sex or age, poor or rich, Jer 21:7 . See the like Isa 13:17,18 . And this was as duly executed as here prophesied, 2Ch 36:17 .
Their voice roareth like the sea which, as it is very violent, so it causeth great consternation by its noise, compared to the roaring of the devils, Jam 2:19 . Possibly it may intimate, they would not hearken to the voice of his prophets, now they shall hear the terrifying noise of armies, like the roaring of the sea.
They ride upon horses which is a creature in especial manner adapted by God for war, as he is described. Job 9:19,20 , &c.; implying their speed, strength, and fierceness, Jer 50:42 .
Set in array the whole nation set as it were in battalia against them, that they may perceive they have to do with soldiers. The LXX. reading
O daughter of Zion or Jerusalem; for these two titles are promiscuously used for the same place; and the term daughter is often given to cities and countries, as Psa 45:12 137:8 Isa 23:12 47:1 .
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Poole: Jer 6:24 - -- We have heard the fame thereof: our hands wax feeble The prophet personates the people’ s affections: q.d. At the very report of the. approach a...
We have heard the fame thereof: our hands wax feeble The prophet personates the people’ s affections: q.d. At the very report of the. approach and fierceness of this people we are dismayed and discouraged, our hearts melt within us; all warlike courage is taken from us, 2Sa 4:1 ; or he modestly reckons himself among the rest.
Anguish hath taken hold of us, and pain, as of a woman in travail a description of the exquisiteness of their sufferings, Jer 13:21 .
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Poole: Jer 6:25 - -- Go not forth into the field, nor walk by the way expressing the great danger that there would be every where, there would be no stirring out of their...
Go not forth into the field, nor walk by the way expressing the great danger that there would be every where, there would be no stirring out of their fenced cities or houses, Jer 8:14 , but great danger to them that go out, and to those that come in, they would find death every where; now seek out some by-ways, venture hot in common roads, Jud 5:6 .
The sword of the enemy and fear is on every side: the language of one speaking to another: it seems to be a proverbial speech, frequently used to express unavoidable dangers, Psa 31:13 Jer 20:3,10 49:29 . All places will be full of soldiers, so that all attempts will be very difficult, Lam 5:9 .
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Poole: Jer 6:26 - -- O daughter of my people i.e. O my people, that art beloved as a daughter .
Gird thee with sackcloth and wallow thyself in ashes: he calls upon the...
O daughter of my people i.e. O my people, that art beloved as a daughter .
Gird thee with sackcloth and wallow thyself in ashes: he calls upon them to mourning in the deepest manner wherein they can express it, girding with sackcloth, close mourning, Jer 4:8 , wallowing in ashes, Jer 25:34 Mic 1:10 , lying low in humiliation, and prostrating themselves before him: he further describes the nature of it in the following expression, such as is for the death of a child, a son, an only son, Amo 8:10 ; and then seems to sum it up in this bitter,
most bitter lamentation Heb. wailing of bitternesses , noting the highest degrees of lamentation; he seems to want words to express it. See Jer 9:17,18 . And it is likely the prophet doth not so designedly exhort them to repent, as rather describe the state of persons in a lost and despairing condition. For here the prophet takes upon himself thee person of one denouncing war; and sackcloth and ashes is often mentioned where there is net hope of conversion or repentance.
The spoiler the king of Babylon and his army, Jer 4:8 .
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Poole: Jer 6:27 - -- Here God speaks by way of encouragement to the prophet, and tells him he had made him a fortified tower, that he might both discover the carriages o...
Here God speaks by way of encouragement to the prophet, and tells him he had made him a fortified tower, that he might both discover the carriages of his people, which is one use of a high tower, Isa 21:5,8 Hab 2:1 ; and also to assure him, though they shall make several attempts against him, yet he shall be kept safe, os in a castle or fortress, Jer 15:20 .
That thou mayest know and try their way their courses, actions, and manners, and which way they stand affected; thou mayest bring all to thy strict observation and scrutiny, as goldsmiths or refiners do metals; for so is the word try used, Psa 66:10 , and elsewhere. Hereby he shall be encouraged to reprove them more freely, and with authority, because God doth promise to defend him, that they shall not hurt him; God will give him prudence to see what is amiss, and undauntedness to oppose it.
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Poole: Jer 6:28 - -- Grievous revolters obstinate and refractory, Isa 31:6 Jer 5:3,23 .
Walking with slanders being their main business to detract from thee and the oth...
Grievous revolters obstinate and refractory, Isa 31:6 Jer 5:3,23 .
Walking with slanders being their main business to detract from thee and the other prophets, Jer 18:18 20:10 ; a sin expressly forbidden, Lev 19:16 .
They are brass and iron: this to the end of the chapter is all metaphorical; either they are impudent, as brass doth sometimes signify, or they are obstinate and inflexible, as iron notes: see both Isa 48:4 : or it signifies their corrupt estate; they are not pure metal, as silver or gold, but base and mean, as brass and iron mixed together, Eze 22:18 .
They are all corrupters: this relates to their manners; they propagate their corruption, Isa 1:4 ; they strengthen one another in wickedness.
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Poole: Jer 6:29 - -- The bellows are burned: the prophet prosecutes his metaphor taken from refining of metals, intimating herein that the prophets had spent their lungs ...
The bellows are burned: the prophet prosecutes his metaphor taken from refining of metals, intimating herein that the prophets had spent their lungs to no purpose; see the like Psa 22:15 69:3 ; and their strength was consumed by their so much labour and pains: q.d. The terror of the Lord is as a fire in my throat.
The lead is consumed some read it, the lead was entire, viz. their dross did still remain in them, the lead put for their dross; but I see no reason for nor need of this reading, but rather hereby is understood either that means which was used to prevail with them, his words compared to lead for the weight of them, and the use of them; or the judgments, which were heavy as lead, that God mixed among them, the more easily to prevail with them; it was all upon them; as lead is used in melting silver, that it may melt the easier; it is all wasted, and doth no good.
The founder melteth in vain let the artist use his greatest skill and industry, yet is it all in vain; He can make nothing of it: the prophets did but lose their labour in all the pains they took, Psa 58:5 , after they had wearied themselves.
The wicked are not plucked away or drawn away, as the word is, Jos 8:16 Jud 20:32 . Their dross and corruption, their wickedness and filthiness, is not removed, Isa 32:6 : for wicked may be read wickedness.
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Poole: Jer 6:30 - -- Reprobate silver or, Refuse silver ; such as will be rejected in payments; they are not to be purged or reformed.
Shall men call them or, be call...
Reprobate silver or, Refuse silver ; such as will be rejected in payments; they are not to be purged or reformed.
Shall men call them or, be called , i.e. they shall be esteemed such as will not pass for current before God or good men, Lam 3:45 .
Because the Lord hath rejected them the prophet gives the reason of their being accounted such refuse stuff, viz. because God, who knew their hypocrisy in boasting of themselves, had rejected them, Lam 5:22 ; therefore every one else would.
Cold. Hebrew, "come forth." All the citizens imitate her vices.
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Haydock: Jer 6:8 - -- Instructed, by afflictions and prosperity, by public and internal admonitions. Willful ignorance is criminal, and drives God away, chap. li. 9., and...
Instructed, by afflictions and prosperity, by public and internal admonitions. Willful ignorance is criminal, and drives God away, chap. li. 9., and Psalm lxxx. 12.
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Haydock: Jer 6:9 - -- Basket. Chaldeans, destroy all. Nabuchodonosor took Joakim twice, and afterwards Jechonias and Sedecias, chap. xxix. 2.
Basket. Chaldeans, destroy all. Nabuchodonosor took Joakim twice, and afterwards Jechonias and Sedecias, chap. xxix. 2.
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Haydock: Jer 6:10 - -- Uncircumcised. Impure and deaf. (Calmet) ---
Non vocat impossibilitas supplicio quז de contemptu et infidelitate descendit. (St. Jerome)
Uncircumcised. Impure and deaf. (Calmet) ---
Non vocat impossibilitas supplicio quז de contemptu et infidelitate descendit. (St. Jerome)
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Haydock: Jer 6:11 - -- In. Jeremias is indignant. The Lord then orders him to pour, or declare what will ensue. (Calmet)
In. Jeremias is indignant. The Lord then orders him to pour, or declare what will ensue. (Calmet)
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Prophet. Septuagint, "false prophet," chap. iv. 31. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 6:14 - -- Disgracefully. They shall be ashamed, when the contrary to what they declared shall come to pass, chap. viii. 11.
Disgracefully. They shall be ashamed, when the contrary to what they declared shall come to pass, chap. viii. 11.
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Haydock: Jer 6:16 - -- Paths, of patriarchs, and of Moses. Avoid novelty in religion. (Calmet) ---
This advice is very applicable to the present generation. (Haydock)
Paths, of patriarchs, and of Moses. Avoid novelty in religion. (Calmet) ---
This advice is very applicable to the present generation. (Haydock)
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Watchmen. Prophets, Ezechiel iii. 17., and xxxiii. 2.
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Haydock: Jer 6:18 - -- Congregation. Septuagint, "shepherds feeding their flocks have heard." The Chaldeans are apprised of my resolution against Juda. (Calmet) ---
Aft...
Congregation. Septuagint, "shepherds feeding their flocks have heard." The Chaldeans are apprised of my resolution against Juda. (Calmet) ---
After the Jews had been called repeatedly in vain, the Gentiles obey, Matthew x. 5. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Jer 6:20 - -- To me. For want of proper dispositions; otherwise the offerings of the best things were enjoined, and commendable. The Jews are taught not to depen...
To me. For want of proper dispositions; otherwise the offerings of the best things were enjoined, and commendable. The Jews are taught not to depend on external observances, while they neglect the heart. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 6:22 - -- North. As Babylon lay with respect to Jerusalem, (Worthington) or rather to the east. (Haydock)
North. As Babylon lay with respect to Jerusalem, (Worthington) or rather to the east. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 6:26 - -- Only son. Let thy grief be extraordinary, Amos viii. 10., and Zacharias xii. 10.
Only son. Let thy grief be extraordinary, Amos viii. 10., and Zacharias xii. 10.
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Trier of my people, as of gold in the furnace, Job xxii. 25.
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Haydock: Jer 6:29 - -- Bellows, or crucible. ---
Lead, which was intermixed to purify the dross (St. Jerome) of gold and silver. But brass and iron could not be thus pur...
Bellows, or crucible. ---
Lead, which was intermixed to purify the dross (St. Jerome) of gold and silver. But brass and iron could not be thus purified. All would be lost labour. Afflictions do not correct the obstinate. (Calmet)
Gill: Jer 6:5 - -- Arise, and let us go up by night,.... Since they could not take the city at noon, and by day, as they expected, they propose to attempt it by night; t...
Arise, and let us go up by night,.... Since they could not take the city at noon, and by day, as they expected, they propose to attempt it by night; they would lose no time, but proceed on, day and night, until they had accomplished their end; this shows how much they were resolved upon it, and that nothing could discourage from it; and that they were sure of carrying their point: and therefore it follows,
and let us destroy her palaces; the tower and strong hold of Zion, the temple of Jerusalem, the king's palace, the houses of the high priest, judges, counsellors, and other civil magistrates, as well as the cottages of the meaner sort of people; for the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "her houses"; which, notwithstanding her strong walls, were not secure from the enemy.
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Gill: Jer 6:6 - -- For thus hath the Lord of hosts said,.... To the Chaldeans; for as it was the Lord that brought them out of their own country, and directed them to Je...
For thus hath the Lord of hosts said,.... To the Chaldeans; for as it was the Lord that brought them out of their own country, and directed them to Jerusalem, and ordered them to prepare war against it; so they were as an army under his command, and he it was that ordered them to do this, and that, and the other thing: the whole affair was of the Lord, and the Jews had more to fear from him, who is the Lord of armies, than from the army of the Chaldeans; for, as they could do nothing without his divine permission, so, having that, there was a certainty of succeeding:
hew ye down trees, and cast a mount against Jerusalem: in the Hebrew text it is, "pour out a mount" q; the reason of which is, because there were a ditch or ditches about the city; and into these they poured in stones, and dirt, and trees, and pieces of wood, and so filled them up, and cast up a mount, on which they could raise their batteries, and demolish the walls and houses; hence mention is made of hewing down of trees, in order to cast the mount; for these were to be cut down, not so much to make battering rams, and other instruments of war, as to fill up the ditch, and raise the mount, so that the walls might be more easily battered and scaled: though some r interpret it of taking precise, fixed, determined counsel, about the war, and the manner of carrying it:
this is the city to be visited; or punished; not only that deserves to be so visited, but which would certainly be visited, and that immediately; its punishment was not far off; vengeance would soon be taken on it, and that for its sins: and so the Targum,
"this is the city whose sins are visited;''
as it follows:
she is wholly oppression in the midst of her; there were nothing but oppression and oppressors in her; not only full of oppressors, but oppression itself. This is instanced in for all kind of wickedness; the meaning is, that she was a sink of sin, and very wickedness itself.
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Gill: Jer 6:7 - -- As a fountain casteth out her waters,.... In great abundance, and continually:
so she casteth out her wickedness; this metaphor expresses the multi...
As a fountain casteth out her waters,.... In great abundance, and continually:
so she casteth out her wickedness; this metaphor expresses the multitude of her sins, the frequent and constant commission of them, and the source and spring of them, the corrupt fountain of the heart; see Mat 12:34,
violence and spoil is heard in her; that is, the cry of those that are oppressed and spoiled is heard, and that by the Lord himself, whose ears are open to the cries of the oppressed, and will avenge them:
before me continually is grief and wounds; the poor, who were grieved and wounded by their oppressors; the Lord was an eye and ear witness of their grievances, and would redress them; nor could their enemies expect to escape his wrath, since they were all known to him; or else the sense is, that because of their violence and spoil of the poor, it was continually before the Lord, in his mind and purpose, and he was just ready to bring upon them, by way of punishment for these things, what would grieve and wound them; so Jarchi interprets it, which Kimchi mentions; and to it the Targum agrees,
"the voice of robbers and plunderers is heard in her before me continually, therefore will I bring upon her evil and smiting.''
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Gill: Jer 6:8 - -- And be thou instructed, O Jerusalem,.... Or "corrected" s; receive discipline or instructions by chastisements and corrections, return by repentance, ...
And be thou instructed, O Jerusalem,.... Or "corrected" s; receive discipline or instructions by chastisements and corrections, return by repentance, that the evils threatened may not come: this shows the affection of the Lord to his people, notwithstanding all their sins; that their amendment, and not their destruction, were pleasing to him; that it was with reluctance he was about to visit them in the manner threatened; and that even now it was not too late, provided they were instructed and reformed; but, if not, they must expect what follows:
lest my soul depart from thee; his Shechinah, or divine Presence, and all the tokens of his love, favour, and good will. The Targum interprets it of the Word of the Lord,
"lest my Word cast thee off;''
see Rom 11:1, or, "lest my soul pluck itself from thee"; or "be plucked" t, and separated from thee: the phrase denotes an utter separation, a forcible one, joined with the utmost abhorrence and detestation. In Eze 23:18, it is rendered, "my mind was alienated"; it denotes disunion and disaffection.
Lest I make thee desolate, a land not inhabited; the Targum adds, by way of illustration,
"as the land of Sodom;''
so that not a man should dwell in it; see Jer 4:25.
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Gill: Jer 6:9 - -- Thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... Finding that all his threatenings, admonitions, and expostulations, were in vain, he says of the Chaldeans, with res...
Thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... Finding that all his threatenings, admonitions, and expostulations, were in vain, he says of the Chaldeans, with respect to the Israelites,
they shall thoroughly glean the remnant of Israel as a vine; by "the remnant of Israel" are meant the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin, who were left in the land when the ten tribes were carried captive; and these the Chaldeans should come and carry away also, just as the poor come into a vineyard, after the vintage has been gathered in, and pick off and glean what is left upon the branches:
turn back thine hand as a grapegatherer into the baskets; these words, according to Kimchi, are the words of the Chaldeans to one another, to turn their hands to the spoil, and to the prey, again and again, just as the grape gatherer does; he gathers a bunch of grapes, and puts it into his basket, and then turns his hand, time after time, till he has gleaned the whole vine: and, according to Jarchi, it seems to be his sense, that they are the words of God unto them; and so Abarbinel; and it is as if he should say, O thou enemy, turn thine hand to the spoil a second time, as a grape gatherer turns his hand to the baskets; and who observes that so it was, that when Jehoiakim was carried captive, and slain, Jeconiah was made king: then, at the end of three months, the enemy returned, and carried him captive; and, at the end of twelve years, returned again, and carried Zedekiah captive; nay, even of the poor of the people, and it may be observed, that they were carried away at different times; see Jer 52:15.
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Gill: Jer 6:10 - -- To whom shall I speak, and give warning, that they may hear?.... These are the words of the prophet, despairing of any success by his ministry; sugges...
To whom shall I speak, and give warning, that they may hear?.... These are the words of the prophet, despairing of any success by his ministry; suggesting that the people were so universally depraved, that there were none that would hear him; that speaking to them was only beating the air, and that all expostulations, warnings, remonstrances, and testimonies, would signify nothing:
behold, their ear is uncircumcised, and they cannot hearken; their ears were stopped with the filth of sin naturally, and they wilfully stopped their ears like the adder; and so being unsanctified, they neither could hear nor desired to hear the word of the Lord, as to understand it; see Act 7:51,
behold, the word of the Lord is unto them a reproach; they reproached it, and blasphemed it, as a novel and false doctrine, and thought it a dishonour to them to receive and profess it; and just so the Jews vilified the Gospel, in the times of Christ and his apostles; and as many do now, who treat it with contempt, as unworthy of God, as contrary to reason, as opening a door to licentiousness, and think it a scandal to preach or profess it:
they have no delight in it; they see no beauty nor glory in it; they taste nothing of the sweetness of it; its doctrines are insipid things to them, they having never felt the power of it in their hearts; whereas such who are the true circumcision, who are circumcised in heart and ears, who are born again, these desire the sincere milk of the word; it is to them more than their necessary food; and, with this Prophet Jeremiah, they find it, and eat it, and it is the joy and rejoicing of their hearts, Jer 15:16.
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Gill: Jer 6:11 - -- Therefore I am full of the fury of the Lord,.... Either of zeal for the Lord, for the glory of his name, and the honour of his word; or rather of the ...
Therefore I am full of the fury of the Lord,.... Either of zeal for the Lord, for the glory of his name, and the honour of his word; or rather of the prophecy of the Lord, as the Targum interprets it, concerning the wrath of God, that should come upon this people for their sins:
I am weary with holding it; the prophecy, the message he was sent with to them, to pronounce the judgments of God upon them; which being a disagreeable task to him, he refrained from doing it as long as he could; but being highly provoked with the sins of the people, and particularly with their contempt of the word of God, and especially he being obedient to the divine will, he could forbear no longer making a full declaration of it; see Jer 20:9.
I will pour it upon the children abroad; or, "in the street" u; that are playing there:
and upon the assembly of young men together; that are met together for their pleasure and diversion; and the sense is, that the prophet would declare in a prophetic manner, and denounce, according to his office and commission, the wrath of God, which should come upon persons of every age, and of every relation in life, as follows: though the words may be rendered, "pour it upon the children", &c. w; and so it is a prayer of the prophet's to the Lord, that he would execute the vengeance on them which he had threatened them with by him:
for even the husband with the wife shall be taken; and carried captive:
the aged with him that is full of days; the old and the decrepit, such as are advanced in years, and also those that are just upon the brink of the grave, ready to die: the meaning is, that children should not be spared for their tender age, nor young men for their strength, nor husbands and wives on account of their relation, nor any because of their hoary hairs; seeing the corruption was so general, and prevailed in persons of every age, and of every station.
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Gill: Jer 6:12 - -- And their houses shall be turned unto others,.... To strangers, to the Chaldeans; they shall be transferred unto them, come into their hands, and beco...
And their houses shall be turned unto others,.... To strangers, to the Chaldeans; they shall be transferred unto them, come into their hands, and become their property:
with their fields and wives together: not only their houses and lands shall be taken away from them, and put to the use of others, but even their wives; than which nothing could be more distressing:
for I will stretch out my hand upon the inhabitants of the land, saith the Lord; the inhabitants of the land of Judea; and so the Septuagint render it, "upon them that inhabit this land"; and so the Arabic version: wherefore, since the Lord would exert himself in this affair, and stretch out his hand of almighty power, as the Targum paraphrases it,
"I will lift up the stroke of my power;''
it might be depended upon that all this destruction threatened would come on them.
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Gill: Jer 6:13 - -- For from the least of them even unto the greatest of them,.... From the least in age to the oldest among them; or rather, from persons of the lowest c...
For from the least of them even unto the greatest of them,.... From the least in age to the oldest among them; or rather, from persons of the lowest class of life, and in the meanest circumstances, to those that are in the highest places of trust and honour, and are in the greatest affluence of riches and wealth; so that as men of every age and station had sinned, old and young, high and low, rich and poor, it was but just and right that they should all share in the common calamity:
everyone is given to covetousness; which is mentioned particularly, and instead of other sins, it being the root of evil, and was the prevailing sin among them:
from the prophet even unto the priest everyone dealeth falsely; the false prophet, as Kimchi interprets it, and so the Septuagint and other versions; and the priest of Baal, as the same interpreter; both acted deceitfully; the one in prophesying lies to the people, the other in drawing them off from the pure worship of God. The Targum is,
"from the scribe to the priest;''
from the lowest order of teachers to the highest in ecclesiastical office. The whole shows a most general and dreadful corruption.
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Gill: Jer 6:14 - -- They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly,.... That is, the false prophets and lying priests, who pretended to be physician...
They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly,.... That is, the false prophets and lying priests, who pretended to be physicians, and to heal the sickly and distempered state of the people; and they did do it, in their way, but not thoroughly; they did not search the wound to the bottom; they drew a skin over it, and made a scar of it, and called it a cure; they made light of the hurt or wound; they healed it,
making nothing of it; or "despising it", as the Septuagint: or they healed it "with reproach", as the Vulgate Latin version; in such a manner, as that it was both a reproach to them, and to the people: or, as the Targum,
"they healed the breach of the congregation of my people with their lying words;''
which are as follow:
saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace; promising them all prosperity, plenty of good things, and a continuance in their own land; when in a short time there would be none of these things, but sudden destruction would come upon them; see 1Th 5:3.
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Gill: Jer 6:15 - -- Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination?.... This seems chiefly, and in the first place, to respect the false prophets and wicked priest...
Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination?.... This seems chiefly, and in the first place, to respect the false prophets and wicked priests; who when they committed idolatry, or any other sin, and led the people into the same by their doctrine and example, yet, when reproved for it, were not ashamed, being given up to a judicial hardness of heart:
nay, they were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush; they were men of impudent faces, they had a whore's forehead; there was not the least sign or appearance of shame in them; when charged with the foulest crimes, and threatened with the severest punishment, they were not moved by either; they had neither shame nor fear:
therefore they shall fall among them that fall; meaning that the prophets and priests should perish among the common people, and with them, who should be slain, and fall by the sword of the Chaldeans; the sacredness of their office would not exempt them; they should fare no better than the rest of the people:
at the time that I visit them they shall be cast down, saith the Lord; that is, when the city and temple should be destroyed by the Chaldeans, these would be cast down from their excellency, the high office in which they were, and fall into ruin, and perish with the rest.
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Gill: Jer 6:16 - -- Thus saith the Lord, stand ye in the ways, and see,.... These are the words of the Lord to the people, whom he would have judge for themselves, and no...
Thus saith the Lord, stand ye in the ways, and see,.... These are the words of the Lord to the people, whom he would have judge for themselves, and not be blindly led by the false prophets and priests; directing them to do what men should, when they are in a place where two or more ways meet, and know not which way to take; they should make a short stop, and look to the way mark or way post, which points whither each path leads, and so accordingly proceed. Now, in religious things, the Scriptures are the way mark to direct us which way we should take: if the inquiry is about the way of salvation, look up to these, which are able to make a man wise unto salvation; these show unto men that the way of salvation is not works of righteousness done by them, but Christ only: if the question is about any doctrine whatever, search the Scriptures, examine them, they are profitable for doctrine; they tell us what is truth, and what is error: if the doubt is about the matter or form of worship, and the ordinances of it, look into the Scriptures, they are the best directory to us what we should observe and do:
and ask for the old paths; of righteousness and holiness, which Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and others, walked in, and follow them; and the way of salvation by Christ, which, though called a new way, Heb 10:20, yet is not newly found out, for it was contrived in eternity; nor newly revealed, for it was made known to Adam and Eve immediately after the fall; nor newly made use of, for all the Old Testament saints were saved by the same grace of Christ, and justified by his righteousness, and their sins pardoned through his blood, and expiated by his sacrifice, as New Testament saints; only of late, or in these last days, it has been more clearly made known; otherwise there is but one way of salvation; there never was any other, nor never will be; inquire therefore for this old path, which all true believers have trodden in:
where is the good way, and walk therein; or, "the better or best way" x, and more excellent way, which is Christ, Joh 14:6, he is the way of access to God, and acceptance with him, and the way of conveyance of all the blessings of grace; he is the way to the Father, and to eternal happiness; he is the living way which always continues, and is ever the same; and is a plain, pleasant, and safe way, and therefore a good one; there is no one better, nor any so good; and therefore this must be the right way to walk in, and to which there is great encouragement, as follows:
and ye shall find rest for your souls; there is rest and peace enjoyed in the ways of God, and in the ordinances of the Gospel; wisdom's ways are ways of peace, which are the lesser paths; and in the doctrines of the Gospel, when the heart is established with them, the mind is tranquil and serene, and at rest, which before was fluctuating and wavering, and tossed to and fro with every wind; but the principal rest is in Christ himself, in whom the true believer, that walks by faith in him, has rest from the guilt and dominion of sin, from the curse and bondage of the law, and from the wrath of God in his conscience; and enjoys a spiritual peace, arising from the blood, sacrifice, and righteousness of Christ, Mat 11:28,
but they said, we will not walk therein; in the old paths, and in the good way but in their own evil ways, which they chose and delighted in; and therefore, as their destruction was inevitable, it was just and righteous.
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Gill: Jer 6:17 - -- Also I set watchmen over you,.... That is, prophets, as Jarchi; true prophets, as Kimchi; such an one was Ezekiel, Jer 3:17. The Targum interprets it ...
Also I set watchmen over you,.... That is, prophets, as Jarchi; true prophets, as Kimchi; such an one was Ezekiel, Jer 3:17. The Targum interprets it teachers; such were the apostles and first ministers of the Gospel; and all faithful preachers of it, who teach men good doctrine and watch for their souls, give them warning of their danger, and exhort them to flee to Christ for rest and safety; and these are of the Lord's appointing, constituting, and setting in his churches; see 1Co 12:28.
Saying, hearken to the sound of the trumpet; to their voice, lifted up like a trumpet, Isa 58:1, to the word preached by them; to the law, which lays before them their sin and danger; and to the Gospel, which is a joyful sound, and gives a certain one, and proclaims peace, pardon, and salvation, by Christ:
but they said, we will not hearken; so the Jews, in the times of Christ and his apostles, turned a deaf ear to their ministry, contradicted and blasphemed the Gospel, and judged themselves unworthy of it, and of eternal life, brought to light by it. Perhaps here it may regard the punishments threatened the Jews by the prophets, which they would not believe were coming upon them, but put away the evil day far from them.
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Gill: Jer 6:18 - -- Therefore hear, ye nations,.... Since the Jews refused to hearken to the word of the Lord, the Gentiles are called upon to hear it, as in Act 13:45, t...
Therefore hear, ye nations,.... Since the Jews refused to hearken to the word of the Lord, the Gentiles are called upon to hear it, as in Act 13:45, this is a rebuke to the Jews, that the Gentiles would hear, when they would not:
and know, O congregation; either of Israel, as the Targum and Kimchi explain it; or of the nations of the world, the multitude of them; or the church of God in the midst of them:
what is among them; among the Jews: either what evil is among them; what sins and transgressions are committed by them; which were the cause of the Lord's threatening them with sore judgments, and bringing them upon them; so Jarchi and Kimchi interpret the words; to which agrees the Targum,
"and let the congregation of Israel know their sins;''
or the punishments the Lord inflicted on them: so the Vulgate Latin version, "and know, O congregation, what I will do unto them"; which sense is confirmed by what follows:
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Gill: Jer 6:19 - -- Hear, O earth: behold, I will bring evil upon this people,.... The people of the Jews; the evil of punishment, for the evil of sin committed by them; ...
Hear, O earth: behold, I will bring evil upon this people,.... The people of the Jews; the evil of punishment, for the evil of sin committed by them; wherefore the earth, and the inhabitants of it, are called upon to bear witness to, the righteousness of such a procedure:
even the fruit of their thoughts; which they thought of, contrived, and devised; which shows that they did not do what they did inadvertently, but with thought and design. Kimchi interprets it of sinful deeds and actions, the fruit of thoughts; but his father, of thoughts themselves. The Talmudists, y comment upon it thus,
"a thought which brings forth fruit, the holy blessed God joins it to an action; but a thought in which there is no fruit, the holy blessed God does not join to action;''
that is, in punishment; very wrongly. For the sense is, that God would bring upon them the calamities and distresses their thoughts and the evil counsels of their minds deserved. The Targum renders it,
"the retribution or reward of their works.''
Because they have not hearkened unto my words; spoken to them by the prophets:
nor to my law, but rejected it; neither hearkened to the law, nor to the prophets, but despised both. The Targum is,
"because they obeyed not the words of my servants, the prophets, and abhorred my law.''
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Gill: Jer 6:20 - -- To what purpose cometh there to me incense from Sheba,.... In Persia or Arabia, from whence incense was brought, and perhaps the best; see Isa 60:6, a...
To what purpose cometh there to me incense from Sheba,.... In Persia or Arabia, from whence incense was brought, and perhaps the best; see Isa 60:6, and yet the offering of this was of no esteem with God, when the words of the prophet, and the law of his mouth, were despised; see Isa 1:13,
and the sweet cane from a far country? either from the same place, Sheba, which was a country afar off, Joe 3:8, or from India, as Jerom interprets it; this was one of the spices in the anointing oil, Exo 30:23 and though this was of divine appointment, and an omission of it is complained of, Isa 43:24 yet when this was brought with a hypocritical heart, and to atone for neglects of the moral law, and sins committed against that, it was rejected by the Lord:
your burnt, offerings are not acceptable, nor your sacrifices sweet unto me: being offered up with a wicked mind, and without faith in Christ, and in order to expiate the guilt of black crimes unrepented of, and continued in; they were not grateful to God, nor could he smell a sweet savour in them, but loathed and abhorred them; see Isa 1:11.
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Gill: Jer 6:21 - -- Therefore thus saith the Lord,.... Because of their immorality and hypocrisy, their contempt of his word, and confidence in legal rites and ceremonies...
Therefore thus saith the Lord,.... Because of their immorality and hypocrisy, their contempt of his word, and confidence in legal rites and ceremonies:
behold, I will lay stumblingblocks before this people; by which may be meant the judgments of God upon them, raising up enemies against them, and suffering them to invade their land; particularly the Assyrians, as the following words show. Moreover, the prophecies of the false prophets, and the doctrines which they were permitted to spread among the people, were snares and stumblingblocks unto them, they being given up to believe their lies, and to be hardened by them; nay, even true doctrines, the doctrines of justification and salvation by Christ, yea, Christ himself, were a rock of offence, and a stumbling stone to these people, Isa 8:14.
and the fathers and the sons together shall fall upon them; or, "by them" z; the latter following the examples of the forager; and so it denotes, that as the corruption was general, the punishment would be:
and the neighbour and his friend shall perish; in the same calamity, being involved in the guilt of the same iniquity, in which they encouraged and hardened one another. The Septuagint and Arabic versions by "stumblingblocks" understand an "infirmity" or "disease", which should come upon the people, and make a general desolation among them. Kimchi interprets the whole of the wickedness of fathers and children, neighbours and friends, and such as were in trade and partnership, and of their delight in mischief; that though they were aware of the stumblingblocks, yet would not give each other warning of them. The whole, according to the accents, should be rendered thus, "and they shall fall upon them, the fathers and the sons together, the neighbour and his friend, and they shall perish"; falling and perishing are said of them all.
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Gill: Jer 6:22 - -- Thus saith the Lord, behold, a people cometh from the north country,.... The Assyrians from Babylon, which lay north of Judea, as in Jer 1:14,
and ...
Thus saith the Lord, behold, a people cometh from the north country,.... The Assyrians from Babylon, which lay north of Judea, as in Jer 1:14,
and a great nation shall be raised; that is, by the Lord, who would stir them up to this undertaking. The Targum is,
"many people shall come openly:''
from the sides of the earth; afar off, as Babylon was, Jer 5:15.
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Gill: Jer 6:23 - -- They shall lay hold on bow and spear,.... That is, everyone of them should be furnished with both these pieces of armour, that they might be able to f...
They shall lay hold on bow and spear,.... That is, everyone of them should be furnished with both these pieces of armour, that they might be able to fight near and afar off; they had bows to shoot arrows at a distance, and spears to strike with when near. The Targum renders it bows and shields. "They are cruel, and have no mercy"; this is said, to strike terror into the hearts of the hardened Jews:
their voice roareth like the sea; the waves of it, which is terrible, Luk 21:25,
and they ride upon horses; which still made them more formidable, as well as suggests that their march would be quick and speedy, and they would soon be with them:
set in array as men for war; prepared with all sorts of armour for battle: or, "as a man" a; as one man, denoting their conjunction, ardour, and unanimity; being not only well armed without, but inwardly, resolutely bent, as one man, to engage in battle, and conquer or die; see Jdg 20:8,
against thee, O daughter of Zion; the design being against her, and all the preparation made on her account; which had a very dreadful appearance, and threatened with ruin, and therefore filled her with terror and distress, as follows.
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Gill: Jer 6:24 - -- We have heard the fame thereof,.... Meaning not the prophet's report then, but the rumour of the enemy's coming from another quarter, at the time he w...
We have heard the fame thereof,.... Meaning not the prophet's report then, but the rumour of the enemy's coming from another quarter, at the time he was actually coming. These are the words of the people, upon such a rumour spread; or the words of the prophet, joining himself with them, describing their case, when it would be strongly reported, and they had reason to believe it, that the enemy was just coming, and very near:
our hands wax feeble; have no strength in them, shake and tremble like men that have a palsy, through fear and dread:
anguish hath taken hold of us; tribulation or affliction; or rather anguish of spirit, on hearing the news of the near approach of the enemy:
and pain, as of a woman in travail; which comes suddenly, and is very sharp; and this denotes that their destruction would come suddenly upon them, before they were aware, and be very severe.
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Gill: Jer 6:25 - -- Go not forth into the field,.... Either for pleasure, or for business; to take a walk in it for the air, or to till it, plough, sow, or reap; but keep...
Go not forth into the field,.... Either for pleasure, or for business; to take a walk in it for the air, or to till it, plough, sow, or reap; but keep within the city and its walls, there being danger:
nor walk by the way; in the high road from Jerusalem, to any town or village near it:
for the sword of the enemy: or, "because there is a sword for the enemy" b; or, "the enemy has a sword"; and that drawn; the enemy is in the field, and in the ways, and there is no escaping him:
and fear is on every side; all round the city, being encompassed by the Assyrian army: or, the enemy's sword "is fear on every side" c; causes fear in all parts round the city. The Targum is,
"because the sword of the enemy kills those who are gathered round about;''
or on every side.
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Gill: Jer 6:26 - -- O daughter of my people, gird thee with sackcloth,.... Either as a token of repentance for sin; so the king of Nineveh and his subjects did, to show t...
O daughter of my people, gird thee with sackcloth,.... Either as a token of repentance for sin; so the king of Nineveh and his subjects did, to show their repentance, Jon 3:6 or as a sign of mourning, for the calamities coming on them, Gen 37:34.
and wallow thyself in ashes; or roll thyself in them, as a token of the same. The Targum is,
"cover your heads with ashes.''
Make thee mourning as for an only son; which of all is the most bitter: and therefore it is added,
most bitter lamentation; see Zec 12:10.
For the spoiler shall suddenly come upon us; namely, Nebuchadnezzar, that would spoil their cities, towns, villages, and houses, and them of all their wealth and substance, and carry it away.
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Gill: Jer 6:27 - -- I have set thee for a tower,.... Or "in" one d; in a watch tower, to look about and observe the actions of the people, their sins and transgressions, ...
I have set thee for a tower,.... Or "in" one d; in a watch tower, to look about and observe the actions of the people, their sins and transgressions, and reprove them for them; as well as to descry the enemy, and give notice of danger; see Hab 2:1 or, "for a trier"; since the word used comes from one which signifies to "try" metals, as gold and silver; and the rather this may be thought to be the meaning here, since the verb is made use of in this sense in the text; and the metaphor is carried on in the following words; though the word is used for towers in Isa 23:13 and may well enough be understood of a watchtower, agreeably with the office of the prophet; who is here addressed as a watchman, and was one to the house of Israel: and as the faithful discharge of his work required courage, as well as diligence and faithfulness, it follows, and
for a fortress among my people; not to defend them, but himself against them; or he was to consider himself as so under the divine protection, that he was as a fortress or strong tower, impregnable, and not to be dismayed and terrified with their calumnies and threatenings; see Jer 1:18,
that thou mayest know and try their way; their course and manner of life, whether good or bad; which he would be able to do, being in his watch tower, and in the discharge of his duty; for the ministry of a good man is as a touchstone, by which the principles and practices of men are tried and known; for if it is heard and attended to with pleasure, it shows that the principles and practices of men are good; but if despised and rejected, the contrary is evident, see 1Jo 4:5.
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Gill: Jer 6:28 - -- They are all grievous revolters,.... From the right way of God and his worship: or,
they are all revolters of revolters e; of all, the greatest rev...
They are all grievous revolters,.... From the right way of God and his worship: or,
they are all revolters of revolters e; of all, the greatest revolters, the greatest sinners and transgressors, the most stubborn and disobedient; or sons of revolters; fathers and children are alike. The Targum, is,
"all their princes rebel;''
and so the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions: "walking with slanders": of one another; or with deceit, as the Targum; in a hypocritical and fraudulent manner; playing the hypocrite with God, or tricking and deceiving their neighbours. They are "brass and iron"; as vile and mean as those metals, and not as gold and silver; or as hard and inflexible as they are; or they deal as insincerely
"as he that mixes brass with iron;''
so the Targum:
they are all corrupters; as such that mix metals are; they are corrupters of themselves and of others, of the doctrines and manners of men, and of the ways and worship of God.
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Gill: Jer 6:29 - -- The bellows are burnt,.... Which Kimchi interprets of the mouth and throat of the prophet, which, through reproving the people, were dried up, and bec...
The bellows are burnt,.... Which Kimchi interprets of the mouth and throat of the prophet, which, through reproving the people, were dried up, and become raucous and hoarse, and without any profit to them; and so the Targum,
"lo, as the refiner's blower, that is burnt in the midst of the fire, so the voice of the prophets is silent, who prophesied to them, turn to the law, and they turned not;''
or the judgments and chastisements of God upon the Jews may be meant, which were inflicted upon them to no purpose:
the lead is consumed of the fire; lead being used formerly, as is said f, instead of quicksilver, in purifying of silver; which being consumed, the refining is in vain: or it may be rendered,
out of the fire it is perfect lead g; or wholly lead, a base metal, no gold and silver in it, to which the Jews are compared:
the founder melteth in vain; to whom either the prophet is likened, whose reproofs, threatenings, and exhortations, answered no end; or the Lord himself, whose corrections and punishments were of no use to reform this people:
for the wicked are not plucked away; from their evil way, as Jarchi; or from good men, they are not separated the one from the other; or, "evils (sins) are not plucked away" h; from sinners: their dross is not purged away from them; neither the words of the prophet, nor the judgments of God, had any effect upon them. The Targum of the latter part of the verse is,
"and as lead which is melted in the midst of the furnace, so the words of the prophets which prophesied to them were nothing in their eyes; and without profit their teachers taught them and they did not leave their evil works.''
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Gill: Jer 6:30 - -- Reprobate silver shall men call them,.... Or, "call ye them" i, as the Targum; so the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and Arabic versions; by whom are mean...
Reprobate silver shall men call them,.... Or, "call ye them" i, as the Targum; so the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and Arabic versions; by whom are meant the Jews, who thought themselves of some account, as silver; being the seed of Abraham, and having the law, the covenant and promises, and service of God; when those that tried them, as the prophets, found them to be nothing but dross; and therefore, if they must be called silver, they could call them no other than reprobate silver; or what is of no account and value; and which is confirmed by the following reason, which contains the judgment and conduct of him that cannot err:
for the Lord hath rejected them; from being his people; and therefore cast them out of their own land, and caused them to go into captivity.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:6; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:7; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:8; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:9; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:10; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:11; Jer 6:12; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:14; Jer 6:15; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:16; Jer 6:17; Jer 6:17; Jer 6:17; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:18; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:19; Jer 6:20; Jer 6:20; Jer 6:20; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:21; Jer 6:22; Jer 6:23; Jer 6:24; Jer 6:24; Jer 6:25; Jer 6:25; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:26; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:27; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:30
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NET Notes: Jer 6:8 The wordplay begun with “sound…in Tekoa” in v. 1 and continued with “they will pitch” in v. 3 is concluded here with ...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:9 Heb “Pass your hand back over the branches like a grape harvester.” The translation is intended to clarify the metaphor that Jeremiah shou...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:12 Heb “I will reach out my hand.” This figure involves both comparing God to a person (anthropomorphism) and substitution (metonymy) where h...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:17 Heb “Pay attention to the sound of the trumpet.” The word “warning” is not in the Hebrew text, but is implied.
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NET Notes: Jer 6:18 Heb “Know, congregation [or witness], what in [or against] them.” The meaning of this line is somewhat uncertain. The meaning of the noun ...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:20 Heb “Your burnt offerings are not acceptable and your sacrifices are not pleasing to me.” “The shift from “your” to R...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:21 The words “and fall to their destruction” are implicit in the metaphor and are supplied in the translation for clarity.
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NET Notes: Jer 6:24 Or “We have lost our strength to do battle”; Heb “Our hands hang limp [or helpless at our sides].” According to BDB 951 s.v. &...
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NET Notes: Jer 6:30 This translation is intended to reflect the wordplay in the Hebrew text where the same root word is repeated in the two lines.
Geneva Bible: Jer 6:7 As a fountain casteth out her waters, so she casteth out her wickedness: ( g ) violence and destruction is heard in her; before me continually [are] g...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:8 Be thou instructed, O ( h ) Jerusalem, lest my soul depart from thee; lest I make thee desolate, a land not inhabited.
( h ) He warns them to amend b...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:9 Thus saith the LORD of hosts, They shall thoroughly glean the remnant of Israel as a vine: turn ( i ) back thy hand as a grapegatherer into the basket...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:10 To whom shall I speak, and give warning, that they may hear? behold, their ear [is] ( k ) uncircumcised, and they cannot hearken: behold, the word of ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:11 Therefore I am full of the fury of the LORD; I am weary with holding in: ( l ) I will pour it out upon the ( m ) children abroad, and upon the assembl...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:14 They have healed also the hurt [of the daughter] of my people slightly, saying, ( n ) Peace, peace; when [there is] no peace.
( n ) When the people b...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:16 Thus saith the LORD, Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the ( o ) old paths, where [is] the good way, and walk in it, and ye shall find rest f...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:17 Also I set ( p ) watchmen over you, [saying], Hearken to the sound of the trumpet. But they said, We will not hearken.
( p ) Prophets who would warn ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:18 Therefore hear, ye ( q ) nations, and know, O congregation, what [is] among them.
( q ) God takes all the world to witness and the insensible creatur...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:20 To what purpose cometh there to me ( r ) incense from Sheba, and the sweet cane from a distant country? your burnt offerings [are] not acceptable, nor...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:22 Thus saith the LORD, Behold, a people cometh from the ( s ) north country, and a great nation shall be raised from the sides of the earth.
( s ) From...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:24 We have heard the report of it: our hands become ( t ) feeble: anguish hath taken hold of us, [and] pain, as of a woman in travail.
( t ) For fear of...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:27 I have set ( u ) thee [for] a tower [and] a fortress among my people, that thou mayest know and try their way.
( u ) Meaning, Jeremiah, whom God had ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 6:29 The ( x ) bellows is burned, the lead is consumed by the fire; the founder melteth in vain: for the wicked are not plucked away.
( x ) All the pain a...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 6:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Jer 6:1-30 - --1 The enemies sent against Judah,4 encourage themselves.6 God sets them on work because of their sins.9 The prophet laments the judgments of God becau...
MHCC: Jer 6:1-8 - --Whatever methods are used, it is vain to contend with God's judgments. The more we indulge in the pleasures of this life, the more we unfit ourselves ...
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MHCC: Jer 6:9-17 - --When the Lord arises to take vengeance, no sinners of any age or rank, or of either sex escape. They were set upon the world, and wholly carried away ...
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MHCC: Jer 6:18-30 - --God rejects their outward services, as worthless to atone for their sins. Sacrifice and incense were to direct them to a Mediator; but when offered to...
Matthew Henry: Jer 6:1-8 - -- Here is I. Judgment threatened against Judah and Jerusalem. The city and the country were at this time secure and under no apprehension of danger; t...
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Matthew Henry: Jer 6:9-17 - -- The heads of this paragraph are the very same with those of the last; for precept must be upon precept and line upon line. I. The ruin of Judah and ...
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Matthew Henry: Jer 6:18-30 - -- Here, I. God appeals to all the neighbours, nay, to the whole world, concerning the equity of his proceedings against Judah and Jerusalem (Jer 6:18,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jer 6:1-8; Jer 6:9-15; Jer 6:16-21; Jer 6:22-25; Jer 6:26-27; Jer 6:28; Jer 6:29; Jer 6:30
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:1-8 - --
The Judgment is Irrevocably Decreed. - A hostile army approaches from the north, and lays siege to Jerusalem, in order to storm the city (Jer 6:1-8)...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:9-15 - --
This judgment will fall unsparingly on Jerusalem, because they listen to no warning, but suffer themselves to be confirmed in their shameless cours...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:16-21 - --
The judgment cannot be turned aside by mere sacrifice without a change of heart. - Jer 6:16. "Thus hath Jahveh said: Stand on the ways, and look, ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:22-25 - --
A distant, cruel people will execute the judgment, since Judah, under the trial, has proved to be worthless metal. - Jer 6:22. "Thus hath Jahveh s...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:26-27 - --
Sorest affliction will seize the inhabitants of Jerusalem. As to "daughter of my people," cf. Jer 4:11; on "gird thee with sackcloth," cf. Jer 4:8. ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:28 - --
Jer 6:28 gives a statement as to the moral character of the people. "Revolters of revolters" is a kind of superlative, and סרי is to be derived ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:29 - --
The trial of the people has brought about no purification, no separation of the wicked ones. The trial is viewed under the figure of a long-continue...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 6:30 - --
The final statement of the case: They call them (the whole people) rejected silver, i.e., they are recognised as such; for Jahveh has rejected them,...
Constable -> Jer 2:1--45:5; Jer 2:1--25:38; Jer 2:1--6:30; Jer 4:5--7:1; Jer 6:1-8; Jer 6:9-15; Jer 6:16-21; Jer 6:22-26; Jer 6:27-30
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 6:1-8 - --The siege of Jerusalem predicted 6:1-8
"The striking feature of this chapter is its rapidity of movement leading to the gathering storm of invasion so...
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Constable: Jer 6:9-15 - --The breadth of Judah's guilt 6:9-15
6:9 The sovereign Lord promised that the coming enemy would remove the people of Judah from their land as a grape ...
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Constable: Jer 6:16-21 - --The inadequacy of mere ritual worship 6:16-21
6:16 Yahweh commanded the Judahites to compare the paths in which they could walk. Then they should ask ...
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Constable: Jer 6:22-26 - --The people's response to the invader's attack 6:22-26
6:22 Again Yahweh announced that people from a great and distant land would descend on Judah fro...
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