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Text -- Jeremiah 7:1-15 (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 7:2 - -- The east gate, which was the publick place of going out and coming in, and where the people were then wont to assemble.
The east gate, which was the publick place of going out and coming in, and where the people were then wont to assemble.
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Wesley: Jer 7:2 - -- Proclaiming signifies both the authority by which he spake, and the divulging of what he spake plainly and boldly; possibly, it might be at some publi...
Proclaiming signifies both the authority by which he spake, and the divulging of what he spake plainly and boldly; possibly, it might be at some publick time, when all the males were to meet.
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Wesley: Jer 7:4 - -- Because this was God's house, they flattered themselves that he would not suffer the Chaldeans to destroy it, therefore the prophet cautions them not ...
Because this was God's house, they flattered themselves that he would not suffer the Chaldeans to destroy it, therefore the prophet cautions them not to deceive themselves, trusting to the temple and its buildings, as the two courts and house, and holy of holies implied in the word these, which he doth as it were point to with his finger. The emphasis, in this threefold repetition, seems to relate to the confident, and reiterated boasts of the temple, that were in their mouths.
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Wesley: Jer 7:4 - -- The prophet standing in the gate at which the people entered, as it were, points at the several buildings pertaining to the temple.
The prophet standing in the gate at which the people entered, as it were, points at the several buildings pertaining to the temple.
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Wesley: Jer 7:6 - -- Here they are cautioned against three sins, that this people were generally addicted to, oppression, blood, and idolatry; and instances in the worst o...
Here they are cautioned against three sins, that this people were generally addicted to, oppression, blood, and idolatry; and instances in the worst of oppressions, of such as God hath more especially taken into his immediate protection.
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Wesley: Jer 7:9 - -- Can you think that this can be grateful to me, or advantageous to yourselves, to frequent my house, and yet retain these odious sins.
Can you think that this can be grateful to me, or advantageous to yourselves, to frequent my house, and yet retain these odious sins.
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Wesley: Jer 7:9 - -- Such as they had set up new, and never had any experience of, and therefore could have no reason to serve them.
Such as they had set up new, and never had any experience of, and therefore could have no reason to serve them.
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Wesley: Jer 7:10 - -- After they had appeared before God with their sacrifices, they thought they were privileged to return to all those wickednesses.
After they had appeared before God with their sacrifices, they thought they were privileged to return to all those wickednesses.
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Do you look upon this house as a sanctuary for robbers and murderers.
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Where I did at first give you the pledges of my presence.
JFB: Jer 7:2 - -- That is, the gate of the court of Israel within that of the women. Those whom Jeremiah addresses came through the gate leading into the court of the w...
That is, the gate of the court of Israel within that of the women. Those whom Jeremiah addresses came through the gate leading into the court of the women, and the gate leading into the outer court, or court of the Gentiles ("these gates").
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JFB: Jer 7:4 - -- The Jews falsely thought that because their temple had been chosen by Jehovah as His peculiar dwelling, it could never be destroyed. Men think that ce...
The Jews falsely thought that because their temple had been chosen by Jehovah as His peculiar dwelling, it could never be destroyed. Men think that ceremonial observances will supersede the need of holiness (Isa 48:2; Mic 3:11). The triple repetition of "the temple of Jehovah" expresses the intense confidence of the Jews (see Jer 22:29; Isa 6:3).
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JFB: Jer 7:7 - -- Joined with "to dwell," not with the words "gave to your fathers" (compare Jer 3:18; Deu 4:40).
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"Will ye steal . . . and then come and stand before Me?"
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JFB: Jer 7:9-10 - -- Ye have no grounds of "knowing" that they are gods; but I have manifested My Godhead by My law, by benefits conferred, and by miracles. This aggravate...
Ye have no grounds of "knowing" that they are gods; but I have manifested My Godhead by My law, by benefits conferred, and by miracles. This aggravates their crime [CALVIN] (Jdg 5:8).
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JFB: Jer 7:10 - -- Namely, from all impending calamities. In spite of the prophet's threats, we have nothing to fear; we have offered our sacrifices, and therefore Jehov...
Namely, from all impending calamities. In spite of the prophet's threats, we have nothing to fear; we have offered our sacrifices, and therefore Jehovah will "deliver" us.
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JFB: Jer 7:10 - -- Namely, those enumerated (Jer 7:9). These words are not to be connected with "we are delivered," but thus: "Is it with this design that ye come and st...
Namely, those enumerated (Jer 7:9). These words are not to be connected with "we are delivered," but thus: "Is it with this design that ye come and stand before Me in this house," in order that having offered your worthless sacrifices ye may be taken into My favor and so do all these abominations (Jer 7:9) with impunity? [MAURER].
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JFB: Jer 7:11 - -- Do you regard My temple as being what robbers make their den, namely, an asylum wherein ye may obtain impunity for your abominations (Jer 7:10)?
Do you regard My temple as being what robbers make their den, namely, an asylum wherein ye may obtain impunity for your abominations (Jer 7:10)?
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JFB: Jer 7:11 - -- Namely, that ye treat My house as if it were a den of thieves. Jehovah implies more than is expressed, "I have seen and will punish it" (Isa 56:7; Mat...
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JFB: Jer 7:12 - -- God caused His tabernacle to be set up in Shiloh in Joshua's days (Jos 18:1; Jdg 18:31). In Eli's time God gave the ark, which had been at Shiloh, int...
God caused His tabernacle to be set up in Shiloh in Joshua's days (Jos 18:1; Jdg 18:31). In Eli's time God gave the ark, which had been at Shiloh, into the hands of the Philistines (Jer 26:6; 1Sa 4:10-11; Psa 78:56-61). Shiloh was situated between Beth-el and Shechem in Ephraim.
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JFB: Jer 7:12 - -- Implying that Shiloh exceeded the Jewish temple in antiquity. But God's favor is not tied down to localities (Act 7:44).
Implying that Shiloh exceeded the Jewish temple in antiquity. But God's favor is not tied down to localities (Act 7:44).
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JFB: Jer 7:12 - -- Israel was God's people, yet He spared it not when rebellious: neither will He spare Judah, now that it rebels, though heretofore it has been His peop...
Israel was God's people, yet He spared it not when rebellious: neither will He spare Judah, now that it rebels, though heretofore it has been His people.
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JFB: Jer 7:13 - -- Implying unwearied earnestness in soliciting them (Jer 7:25; Jer 11:17; 2Ch 36:15).
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JFB: Jer 7:14 - -- And I therefore can revoke the gift for it is still Mine (Lev 25:23), now that ye fail in the only object for which it was given, the promotion of My ...
And I therefore can revoke the gift for it is still Mine (Lev 25:23), now that ye fail in the only object for which it was given, the promotion of My glory.
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JFB: Jer 7:14 - -- As I ceased to dwell there, transferring My temple to Jerusalem; so I will cease to dwell at Jerusalem.
As I ceased to dwell there, transferring My temple to Jerusalem; so I will cease to dwell at Jerusalem.
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JFB: Jer 7:15 - -- They were superior to you in numbers and power: they were ten tribes: ye but two. "Ephraim," as the leading tribe, stands for the whole ten tribes (2K...
They were superior to you in numbers and power: they were ten tribes: ye but two. "Ephraim," as the leading tribe, stands for the whole ten tribes (2Ki 17:23; Psa 78:67-68).
Clarke: Jer 7:1 - -- The word that came to Jeremiah - This prophecy is supposed to have been delivered in the first year of the reign of Jehoiakim, son of Josiah, who, f...
The word that came to Jeremiah - This prophecy is supposed to have been delivered in the first year of the reign of Jehoiakim, son of Josiah, who, far from following the example of his pious father, restored idolatry, maintained bad priests and worse prophets, and filled Jerusalem with abominations of all kinds.
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Clarke: Jer 7:2 - -- Stand in the gate of the Lord’ s house - There was a show of public worship kept up. The temple was considered God’ s residence; the usual...
Stand in the gate of the Lord’ s house - There was a show of public worship kept up. The temple was considered God’ s residence; the usual ceremonies of religion restored by Josiah were still observed; and the people were led to consider the temple and its services as sacred things, which would be preservatives to them in case of the threatened invasion.
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Clarke: Jer 7:4 - -- The temple of the Lord - In the Chaldee the passage stands thus: - "Do not trust in the words of lying prophets, which say, Before the temple of the...
The temple of the Lord - In the Chaldee the passage stands thus: - "Do not trust in the words of lying prophets, which say, Before the temple of the Lord ye shall worship; Before the temple of the Lord ye shall sacrifice; Before the temple of the Lord ye shall adore; thrice in the year ye shall appear before it."This the Targumist supposes to have been the reason why the words are here thrice repeated. They rather seem to express the conviction which the people had, that they should be safe while their temple service continued; for they supposed that God would not give it up into profane hands. But sacred places and sacred symbols are nothing in the sight of God when the heart is not right with him.
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Clarke: Jer 7:5 - -- If ye throughly amend your ways - Literally, If in making good ye fully make good your ways. God will no longer admit of half-hearted work. Semblanc...
If ye throughly amend your ways - Literally, If in making good ye fully make good your ways. God will no longer admit of half-hearted work. Semblances of piety cannot deceive him; he will not accept partial reformation; there must be a thorough amendment.
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Clarke: Jer 7:9 - -- Will ye steal, murder - Will you continue to commit such abominations, and pretend to worship me; and thus defile the place that is called by my nam...
Will ye steal, murder - Will you continue to commit such abominations, and pretend to worship me; and thus defile the place that is called by my name; and so make my house a den of robbers? I have seen this, - and can you expect to escape condign punishment? Ye shall not escape.
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Clarke: Jer 7:12 - -- But go ye now unto my place which was in Shiloh - See what I did to my tabernacle and ark formerly: after a long residence at Shiloh, for the iniqui...
But go ye now unto my place which was in Shiloh - See what I did to my tabernacle and ark formerly: after a long residence at Shiloh, for the iniquity of the priests and the people, I suffered it to fall into the hands of the Philistines, and to be carried captive into their land, and to be set up in the house of their idols. And because of your iniquities, I will deal with you and this temple in the same way; for as I spared not Shiloh, though my ark was there, but made it a victim of my wrath, so will I do to Jerusalem and her temple.
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Clarke: Jer 7:15 - -- The whole seed of Ephraim - Taken here for all the ten tribes, that of Ephraim being the principal.
The whole seed of Ephraim - Taken here for all the ten tribes, that of Ephraim being the principal.
Calvin: Jer 7:2 - -- Here the Prophet gives a short account of the sermon, in which he severely reproved the people, because his labor had been useless, though he had sha...
Here the Prophet gives a short account of the sermon, in which he severely reproved the people, because his labor had been useless, though he had sharply and severely reproved them. He says then, that he had a command from above to stand at the gate of the Temple. This was indeed usually done by the prophets: but God seems to have intended that this reproof should be heard by all. He says further, that he was commanded to address the whole tribe of Judah
It is hence probable, and what may be easily concluded, that this discourse was delivered on a feast — day, when there was the usual assembly of the people. He could not indeed have made this address on other days; for then the inhabitants of the city only frequented the Temple. But on the feast — days they usually came from the neighboring towns and from the whole country to celebrate God’s rightful worship, which had been prescribed in the law. Since then Jeremiah addressed the whole tribe of Judah, we hence conclude, that he spoke not only to the inhabitants of the city, but also to the whole tribe, which came together to keep the feast — day.
Now the object of his sermon was, to exhort them seriously to repent, if they wished God to be reconciled to them. So the Prophet shews, that God did not regard their sacrifices and external rites, and that this was not the way, as they thought, of appeasing him. For after they had celebrated the feast, every one returned home, as though they all, after having made an expiation, had God propitious to them. The Prophet shews here, that the way of worshipping God was very different, which was to reform their lives.
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Calvin: Jer 7:3 - -- Make good, he says, your ways and your doings, then will I dwell in this place 189 This promise contains an implied contrast; for the Prophet intima...
Make good, he says, your ways and your doings, then will I dwell in this place 189 This promise contains an implied contrast; for the Prophet intimates, that the people would not long survive, unless they sought in another way to pacify God. “I will dwell, “he seems to say, — in this place, when your life is changed.” It then follows on the other hand, “God will drive you into exile, except you change your life: in vain then do you seek a quiet and happy state through offering your sacrifices. God indeed esteems as nothing this external worship, except it be preceded by inward sincerity, unless integrity of life accompanies your profession.” This is one thing.
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Calvin: Jer 7:4 - -- Then the Prophet comes closer to them when he says, Trust ye not in words of falsehood. For had not this been expressly said, the Jews might, accor...
Then the Prophet comes closer to them when he says, Trust ye not in words of falsehood. For had not this been expressly said, the Jews might, according to their usual way, have found out some evasion: “Have we then lost all our labor in celebrating our festivals with so much diligence, in leaving our homes and families to present ourselves before God? We have spared no expense, we have brought sacrifices and spent our money; and is all this of no value before God?” For hypocrites always magnify their trumperies, as we find in the fifty-eighth chapter of Isaiah, where they expostulated with God, as though he were unkind to them, “We have from day to day sought the Lord.” To this the Lord answered, “In vain ye seek me from day to day and search for my ways.” Hence the Lord disregarded that diligence with which hypocrites sought to render him propitious without real sincerity of heart. It is for the same purpose that the Prophet now adds, Trust ye not, etc. It is an anticipation in order to prevent them from making their usual objection, “What then? Has the Temple been built in vain?” But he says, “Is not God worshipped here in vain? They are words of falsehood, when religious sincerity is absent.”
We hence see that external rites are here repudiated, when men seek in a false way to gain favor before God, and seek to redeem their sins by false compensations, while yet their hearts continue perverse. This truth might be enlarged upon, but as it often occurs in the prophets, I only notice it shortly. It is enough to regard the main point, — that while the Jews were satisfied with the Temple, the ceremonies and the sacrifices, they were self — deceivers, for their boasting was fallacious: “the words of falsehood” are to be taken as meaning that false and vain glorying in which the Jews indulged, while they sought to ward off God’s vengeance by external rites, and at the same time made no effort to return into favor by ameliorating their life.
With regard to the expressions The Temple, etc. , some explain them thus, — they were “words of falsehood, “when they said that they came to the Temple; and so the supplement is, “when they said that they came, “for the pronoun demonstrative is plural. 190 Hence they understand this of the people; not that the Jews called themselves the Temple of God, but that they boasted that they came to the Temple and there worshipped God. But I rather agree with others, who explain this of the three parts of the Temple. There was, we know, the court, then the Temple, and, lastly, the interior part, the Holy of holies, where was the Ark of the Covenant. The prophets often speak of the Temple only; but when they spoke distinctly of the form of the Temple, they mentioned the court, as I have said, where the people usually offered their sacrifices, and then the holy place, into which the priests entered alone; and, lastly, the secret place, which was more hidden, and was called the Holy of holies. It seems then that this passage of the Prophet is to be understood as meaning that the people said that the court, the Temple, and the interior part, were the Temples of God, as though they had a triple Temple.
But we must observe the design of the Prophet, which interpreters have omitted. The Prophet then made this repetition especially, because the Temple was as it were a triple defense to hypocrites, like a city, which, when surrounded, not by one, but by three walls, is deemed impregnable. Since, then, the Jews exalted their Temple, consisting of three parts, it was the same as they set up a triple wall or a triple rampart against God’s judgments! “We are invincible; how can enemies come to us? how can any calamity reach us? God dwells in the midst of us, and here he has his habitation, and not one and single fort, but a triple fort; he has his court, his Temple, and his Holy of holies.” We now then understand why the Prophet made this repetition, and used also the plural number.
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Calvin: Jer 7:5 - -- Interpreters do not agree as to the meaning of this passage. Some render כי אם , ki am, “But rather, “or, “But.” I indeed allow that it...
Interpreters do not agree as to the meaning of this passage. Some render
The purport of the whole is, — that sacrifices are of no importance or value before God, unless those who offer them wholly devote themselves to God with a sincere heart. The Jews sought to bind God as it were by their own laws: he shews that he was thus impiously put under restraint. He therefore lays down a condition, as though he had said, “it belongs to me to prescribe to you what is right. Away, then, with your ceremonies, by which ye think to expiate your sins; for I regard them not, and esteem them as nothing.” What then is to be done? He now shews then, “If you will rightly order your life, ye shall dwell in this place.”
For yesterday the Prophet exhorted the people to repent; and he employed the sentiment which he now repeats. He commanded the people to come to God with an upright and pure mind; he afterwards added another sentence, “Trust not in words of falsehood, saying, The Temple of the Lord, “etc. He now again repeats what he had said, “If ye will make your ways good.” He shews now more clearly that no wrong was done to the people when God repudiated their ceremonies; for he required a pure heart, and external rites without repentance are vain and useless. This then is what the Prophet had in view: “Though God seems to treat you with great severity, he yet promises to be kind to you, if you order your lives according to his law: is this unjust? Can the condition which is proposed to you by God be liable to any calumnies, as though God treated you cruelly!” This then is the meaning of the Prophet.
If ye will make good your ways, that is, if your life be amended; and if ye will do judgment, etc. He now comes to particulars; and first he addresses the judges, whose duty it was to render to every one his right, to redress injuries, to pronounce what was just and right when any contention arose. If then, he says, ye will do justice between a man and his neighbor, that is, if your judgments be right, without favor or hatred, and if no bribes lead you from what is right and just, while pronouncing judgment on a case between a man and his brother.
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Calvin: Jer 7:6 - -- Then he adds, if ye will not oppress the stranger and the orphan and the widow This also belonged to the judges: but God no doubt shews here genera...
Then he adds, if ye will not oppress the stranger and the orphan and the widow This also belonged to the judges: but God no doubt shews here generally, that injustice greatly prevailed among the people, as he condemns the cruelty and perfidy of the judges themselves.
As to strangers and orphans and widows, they are often mentioned; for strangers as well as orphans and widows were almost destitute of protection, and were subject to many wrongs, as though they were exposed as a prey. Hence, whenever a right government is referred to, God mentions strangers and orphans and widows; for it might hence be easily understood of what kind was the public administration of justice; for when others obtain their right, it is no matter of wonder, since they have advocates to defend their cause, and they have also the aid of friends. Thus every one who defends his own cause, obtains at least some portion of his right. But when strangers and orphans and widows are not unjustly dealt with, it is an evidence of real integrity; for we may hence conclude, that there is no respect of persons among the judges. But as this subject has been handled elsewhere, I only touch on it lightly here.
And if ye will not shed, he says, innocent blood in this place Here the Prophet accuses the judges of a more heinous crime, and calls them murderers. They had, however, no doubt some plausible pretences for shedding the blood of the innocent. But the Prophet, speaking here in the name of God and by the dictates of his Spirit, overlooks all these as altogether vain, though the judges might have thought them sufficient excuses. By saying, in this place, he shews how foolish was their confidence in boasting of God’s worship, sacrifices, and Temple, while yet they had polluted the Temple with their cruel murders. 191
He then passes to the first table of the law, If ye will not walk after foreign gods to your evil By stating a part for the whole, he condemns every kind of impiety: for what is it to walk after alien gods but to depart from the pure and legitimate worship of the true God and to corrupt it with superstitions? We see then what the Prophet means: he recalls the Jews to the duty of observing the law, that they might thereby give a veritable evidence of their repentance: “Prove, “he says, “that you have repented from the heart.” He shews how they were to prove this, even by observing the law of God. And, as I have said, he refers to the first Table by stating a part for the whole. As to the second Table, he mentions some particulars which were intended to shew that they violated justice and equity, and also that cruelty and perfidiousness, frauds and rapines, prevailed greatly among them.
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Calvin: Jer 7:7 - -- Then follows the latter part, Then I will make you to dwell, 192 etc. God sets this clause in opposition to the false confidence of the people, as t...
Then follows the latter part, Then I will make you to dwell, 192 etc. God sets this clause in opposition to the false confidence of the people, as though he had said, “Ye wish me to be propitious to you; but mock me not by offering sacrifices without sincerity of heart, without a devout feeling; be consistent; and think not that I am pacified by you, when ye come to the Temple with empty display, and pollute your sacrifices with impure hands. I therefore do not allow this state of things; but if ye come on the condition of returning into favor with me, then I will make you to dwell in this place and in the land which I gave to your fathers.” The last part of the verse, from age to age, ought to be connected with the verb, “I will make you to dwell, “
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Calvin: Jer 7:8 - -- He again teaches what we observed yesterday, — that the glorying of the Jews was foolish, while they boasted of the Temple and of their sacrifices ...
He again teaches what we observed yesterday, — that the glorying of the Jews was foolish, while they boasted of the Temple and of their sacrifices to God. He calls their boastings the words of falsehood, as we have explained, because they wholly turned to a contrary end what God had instituted. It was his will that sacrifices should be offered to him in the Temple — to what purpose? To preserve unity of faith among the whole people. And sacrifices, what was their design? To shew the people that they deserved eternal death, and also that they were to flee to God for mercy, there being no other expiation but the blood of Christ. But there was no repentance, they were not sorry for their sins; nay, as we shall presently see, they took liberty to indulge more in them on account of their ceremonies, which yet ought to have been the means of leading them to repentance. They were then the words of falsehood when they separated the signs from their ends. The reality and the sign ought indeed to be distinguished the one from the other; but it is an intolerable divorce, when men lay hold on naked signs and overlook the reality. There was in the sacrifices the reality which I have now mentioned: they were reminded by the spectacle that they were worthy of eternal death; and then, they were to exercise penitence, and thus to flee to God’s mercy. As there was no account made of Christ, no care for repentance, no sorrow for sins, no fear of God, no humility, it was an impious separation of what ought to have been united.
We now then more clearly see why the Prophet designates as words of falsehood, that false glorying in which hypocrites indulge, in opposition to God, when they would have him satisfied with naked ceremonies. Hence he adds, that they were words that could not profit, as though he had said, “As ye seek to trifle with God, so he will also frustrate your design.” It is indeed certain that they dealt dishonestly with God, when they attempted to satisfy his judgment by frigid ceremonies. He therefore shews that a reward was prepared for them; for they would at length find, that no fruit would come from their false dealings. It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 7:9 - -- The meaning seems to be suspended in the first verse, when he says, Whether to steal, to kill, and to commit adultery, etc.; but there is nothing a...
The meaning seems to be suspended in the first verse, when he says, Whether to steal, to kill, and to commit adultery, etc.; but there is nothing ambiguous in the passage. For though there is something abrupt in the words, we yet infer this to be the meaning, “Will you steal, “etc.? Verbs in the infinitive mood, we know, are often to be considered as verbs in the future tense: “Will you steal, murder, commit adultery, burn incense to Baal, “etc.? The Prophet shews how foolishly the Jews sought to make an agreement with God, so that they might with impunity provoke him by their many vices. When they entered the Temple, they thought him to be under a necessity to receive them, as though that was a proper reconciliation. But the Prophet exposes this folly. For what can be more absurd than that God should allow men to commit murders, thefts, and adulteries, with impunity? Hypocrites do not in words express this; but when they make external ceremonies a sort of expiation, and seek by such means to bury their sins, do they not make God their associate? Do they not make him a partaker, as it were, with them, when they would have him to cover their adulteries? When they take sacrifices from their plunders, to expiate their crimes, do they not make him a participator in their robberies? The Prophet, therefore, plainly condemns hypocrites in this place, because they acted most contumeliously towards God, in implicating him in their own vices, as though he was the associate of thieves, murderers, and adulterers.
Will you steal, he says, and then, will you kill, commit adultery, and swear falsely? These four sins are against the Second Table, in which God forbids us to steal, to kill, to commit adultery, and to deceive our neighbors by false swearing. These four vices are mentioned, in order that the Prophet might shew that all the duties of love were wholly disregarded by the Jews. He then adds things which belong to the First Table, even the offering of incense to Baal, and the walking after alien gods, which yet were unknown to them. By these two clauses he proves their impiety. He mentions one kind of idolatry, — that they offered incense to Baal. The Prophets often refer in the plural number to Baalim, regarded by the Jews as advocates, by whose intercession, as they thought, they gained favor with God; as the case is at this day under the Papacy, whose Baalim are angels and dead men: for they regard them not as gods, but think that by employing these as advocates they conciliate God, and obtain his favor. Such was the superstition which prevailed among the Jews. But the Prophet here includes all idols under the word Baal. There is afterwards a general complaint, — that God was neglected, and that they had perfidiously departed from him, for they walked after alien gods; and he exaggerates the crime by saying that they were unknown
The Prophet, no doubt, intimates here a contrast with the sure knowledge, which is the basis of true religion: for God had given evident proofs of his glorious power by many miracles, when the Israelites were redeemed; and he had afterwards confirmed the same by many blessings; and the law had been proclaimed, accompanied with many signs and wonders. (Exo 20:18; Deu 5:22.) Hence the Jews could not have pleaded involuntary error, for after so many proofs there could have been no excuse on the ground of ignorance. Now, as to alien gods, how came they to know that they were gods? There was no proof, they had no reason to believe them to be so. We hence see how grievously wicked were the Jews; for they had departed from the worship of the true God, who had made himself known to them by many miracles, and who had confirmed the authority of his law, so that it could not be questioned, and they had gone after unknown gods!
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Calvin: Jer 7:10 - -- The Prophet now adds, Ye come, that is, after ye have allowed yourselves to steal, and to murder, and to commit adultery, and to corrupt the whole ...
The Prophet now adds, Ye come, that is, after ye have allowed yourselves to steal, and to murder, and to commit adultery, and to corrupt the whole worship of God, — at last, Ye come and stand before me in this temple. God proceeds with the same subject; for it was not only his purpose in this place to condemn the Jews as murderers, and thieves, and adulterers, but he proceeds farther, even to shew their shameless effrontery in coming with an unblushing front and entering the Temple, as though they were the true worshippers of God. “What do you mean, “he says, “by this? Ye bring with you murders, and thefts, and adulteries, and abominable filth; ye are contaminated with the most disgraceful things: by and bye ye enter the Temple, and think that you are at liberty to do anything.” Similar is the language we find in the first chapter of Isaiah, verses 12 and 15 (Isa 1:12): God complains there that they trod the pavement of his Temple, and brought hands polluted with blood. So also in this place, Ye come, he says, intimating his detestation, and ye stand before me in this Temple Though God was not inclosed in that Temple, yet we know that the Ark of the Covenant was the symbol of his presence. Hence, we often meet in the law with this expression, “Ye shall stand before me.” Here then, God shews that it was a detestable and monstrous thing, that the Jews dared to rush into his presence, when polluted and contaminated with so many vices.
And he adds, In this house, on which is called my name, that is, which has been dedicated to me; for to call God’s name on the Temple, means nothing else, but that the Temple was consecrated to him, so that he was there worshipped. When God is truly worshipped, they who seek him find that he himself is present by his grace and power. As then God had commanded the Temple to be built for him, that he might there be worshipped, he says his name was there called, that is, according to its first and sacred appointment. Absurdly indeed did the Jews call on his name, for there was in them no religion, no piety: but according to God’s institution, his name was called upon in the Temple, as he had consecrated it to himself. Hence God reminds them of the first institution, which was holy and ought to have continued inviolable: “Know ye not, that this place has been chosen by me, that my name might be there invoked? Ye stand before me in the holy place, and ye stand polluted; and though polluted, not with one kind of vices, but my whole law has been violated by you, and my Tables despised, ye yet stand!” We hence see the design of the Prophet: for he condemns the effrontery and frowardness of the Jews, because they thus dared to rush into God’s presence in all their pollutions.
And ye say, he adds, that is, while standing in the Temple; ye say, O, we are freed to do all these abominations; that is, “Ye think that the Temple is a covert for you to hide all your vices; and so ye think, that you have escaped from my hand, as though no account is any more to be made of your sins, my Temple being regarded by you as an asylum, under whose shade ye take shelter.” It is indeed certain, that the Jews did not thus speak; for had they been asked whether their life was abominable, they would have denied it to be so. He speaks of the fact itself, and he speaks in the person of God, and according to his command. He therefore condemns hypocrites for thinking themselves freed, because they came to the Temple, and for thinking that all those abominations which he had mentioned, their impiety towards God and their injustice towards their neighbors, would be unpunished. 193
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Calvin: Jer 7:11 - -- He afterwards adds, Is this house, which is called by my name, a den of robbers? This is the conclusion of the passage, which contains an amplifica...
He afterwards adds, Is this house, which is called by my name, a den of robbers? This is the conclusion of the passage, which contains an amplification of their vices. For the Prophet had allowed the Jews to form a judgment, as though he had been discussing an obscure or doubtful subject, “Behold, be ye yourselves judges in your own case; is it right for you to steal, to murder, and to commit adultery? and then to come into this Temple, and to boast that impunity is granted to you as to all your evils?” This indeed ought to have been enough; but as the obstinacy and stupor of the Jews were so great, that they would not have given way without being most fully and in various ways proved guilty, the Prophet adds this sentence, Is this house, which is called by my name, a den of robbers? that is, “Have I chosen this place for myself, that ye might worship me, in order that ye might be more licentious than if there was no religion? For what purpose is religion? Is it not that men may by this bridle restrain themselves, that they may not be libertines? For surely the worship and fear of God are the directors of equity and justice. Now, would it not be better to have no Temple and no sacrifices, than that men should take more liberty to sin by making their ceremonies as an excuse? Away then with your ceremonies: conscience shews that it is a wretched thing to oppress or injure a neighbor; all are constrained by common sense to own that adultery is a filthy and a detestable thing; and men think the same of rapines and murders. As to superstitions, when they are seen as such, all are constrained to allow the worship of God ought to be preserved in its purity. Well then, had there been no Temple among you, this truth must have been impressed on your minds, — that God ought to be worshipped in purity. Now, because the Temple has been built at Jerusalem, because ye offer sacrifices there, ye are thieves, ye are adulterers, ye are murderers; and ye think that I am in some sort blind, that I am no longer the avenger of so many and of such atrocious evils. A den of robbers then is my house become to you.” But this sentence is to be read interrogatively, “Can it be, that this Temple, this sanctuary, is become a den of robbers?” 194
But we must consider the import of the comparison: Robbers, though they are most audacious and wholly savage, do not yet dare openly to use their sword; they dare not kill helpless men. Why? they fear the punishment allotted to them by the laws; they are cautious. But when they seize on men in some hidden place, then they take more liberty in their robberies; they kill men, and then take their property. We hence see that dens and hidden places have in them more safety for robbers. The comparison then is most suitable, when the Prophet says that the Jews made the Temple of God the den of robbers: for had there been no Temple, some integrity might have remained, secured by the common feeling of men. But when they covered their baseness with sacrifices, they thought that they thus escaped all judgment.
And hence, Christ applied this prophecy to his time; for the Jews had even then profaned the Temple. Though they presumptuously and falsely called on God’s name, they yet sought the Temple as an asylum for impurity. This folly Christ exposed, as the Prophet had done.
He afterwards adds, Even I, behold I see, saith Jehovah Jeremiah here no doubt touches ironically on the false confidence with which the Jews deceived themselves: for hypocrites seem to themselves to know whatever is necessary. And hence also it is, that as they think themselves to be acute, they are bolder and more presumptuous in contriving deceitful schemes, by which they seek to delude God and men. And hence the Prophet here tauntingly touches them to the quick, by intimating that they wished to make God as it were blind, Even I, behold I see, he says. It would not yet be sufficiently evident how emphatical the phrase is, were it not for a similar passage in Isa 29:15,
“I also am wise.” The Prophet had said, “Woe to the crafty and the wise, who have dug pits for themselves.”
He there condemns ungodly men, who thought that they could somehow by their falsehoods deceive God; which seems to be and is monstrous: and yet it is an evil which commonly prevails among men. For hardly a man in a hundred can be found who does not seek coverings to hide himself from the eyes of God. This is the case especially with courtiers and clever men, who assume to themselves so much clear-sightedness, that God sees nothing in comparison with them. The Lord therefore, by Isaiah, gives this answer, “I also am wise: if ye are wise, allow me at least some portion of wisdom, and think not that I am altogether foolish.” So also in this place, “Before my eyes, this house is made a den of robbers;” that is, “If there be any sense in you, does it not appear evident that you have made a den of robbers of my Temple? and can I be yet blind? If you think that you are very clear-sighted, I also do see, saith the Lord.”
We hence see what force there is in the particle
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Calvin: Jer 7:13 - -- The Prophet confirms by an example what he said yesterday, — that the Jews deceived themselves in thinking that they were covered by the shadow of ...
The Prophet confirms by an example what he said yesterday, — that the Jews deceived themselves in thinking that they were covered by the shadow of the Temple, while yet they disclosed themselves, and when the whole world were witness of their impious rebellion. He therefore mentions what had before happened. The Ark of the Covenant, as it is well known, had long rested in Shiloh. Now the Temple did not excel in dignity on its own account, but on account of the Ark of the Covenant and the altar. It was indeed splendidly adorned; but the holiness of the Temple was derived from the Ark of the Covenant, the altar, and the sacrifices. This Ark had been in Shiloh. 196 Hence Jeremiah shews how foolish were the Jews in being proud, because they had among them the Ark of the Covenant and the altar, for the first place, where sacrifices had been offered to God, was not preserved in safety. This is the import of the whole.
But he did not in vain say, Even go to Shiloh The
See, he says, what I did to that place for the iniquity of my people Israel. He calls here Israel his people, not for honor’s sake, but that he might again remind the Jews that they were only equal to the Israelites; and yet that it profited all the tribes nothing, that they were wont to assemble there to worship God. 197 For when we reason from example, we must always see that there be no material difference. Jeremiah then shews that the Israelites were equal to the Jews, and that if the Jews claimed a superiority, the claim was neither just nor right, for Israel were also the people of God, inasmuch as it was God’s will to fix there the Ark of the Covenant, that sacrifices might be there offered to him; and then antiquity was in its favor, for it was a holy place before it was known that God had chosen Mount Sion as a situation for his Temple.
Hence he draws this conclusion, Now, then, as ye have done all these works, that is, as ye have become like the Israelites, therefore, etc. But he first amplifies their crime, — that they had not only imitated the wickedness of the twelve tribes, but had also perversely despised all warnings, I spake to you, he says, and rose up early By this metaphor he intimates, that he was as solicitous for preserving the kingdom of Judah, as parents are wont to be for the safety of their children: for as a father rises early to see what is necessary for his family, so also God says, that he rose early, inasmuch as he had been assiduous in exhorting them. He appropriates to his own person what properly belonged to his prophets: but as he had roused them by his Spirit and employed them in their work, he justly claims to himself whatever he had done by them as his instruments: and it was an exaggeration of their guilt, that they were slothful, nay, stupid, when God sedulously labored for their safety.
He adds, I spoke, and ye heard not; I cried to you, and ye did not answer, he inveighs more at large against their hardness; for had he only once warned them, some pretense might have been made; but as God, by rising early every day, labored to restore them to himself, and as he had not only employed instruction, but also crying, (for by crying he doubtless means exhortations and threatenings, which ought to have produced greater effect upon them,) there appeared in this contumacy the highest degree of mad audacity. The meaning is, — that God had tried all means to restore the Jews to a sound mind, but that they were wholly irreclaimable; for he had called them not only once, but often; and he had also endued his prophets with power to labor strenuously in the discharge of their office: he had not only shewed by them what was useful and necessary, but he had cried, that is, had employed greater vehemence, in order to correct their tardiness. Since then God, in using all these means, could effect nothing, what remained for them was miserably to perish, as they willfully sought their own destruction.
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Calvin: Jer 7:14 - -- Therefore, he says, I will do to this house, which is called by my name, etc. He anticipates, no doubt, all objections, as though he had said, “I k...
Therefore, he says, I will do to this house, which is called by my name, etc. He anticipates, no doubt, all objections, as though he had said, “I know what you will say, — that this place is sacred to God, that his name is invoked here, and that sacrifices are here offered: all these things, he says, are alleged to no purpose, for in Shiloh also was his name invoked, and he dwelt there. Though then ye foolishly trust in this place, it shall not yet escape that judgment which happened to the former place.” He adds, which I gave to you and to your fathers Be it so; for this is to be considered as a concession; and at the same time objections are anticipated, in order that the Jews might understand that it availed them nothing, that God had chosen to build his sanctuary on Mount Sion; for the object was to promote religion. But as the place was converted to a wholly different purpose, and as God’s name was there shamefully profaned, he says, “Though I gave this place to you and your fathers, yet nothing better shall be its fate than the fate of Shiloh.” 198 It follows —
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Calvin: Jer 7:15 - -- He concludes the former verse. The Prophet had indeed sufficiently explained himself; but this confirmation was necessary for a people so refractory....
He concludes the former verse. The Prophet had indeed sufficiently explained himself; but this confirmation was necessary for a people so refractory. He then alleges nothing new, but only shews that there would be no defense to his own people against God’s vengeance any more than to the Israelites: and hence he now calls them their brethren, as he had previously said that they were his people; for the state of the ten tribes was the same, until it had pleased God to remove the Ark of the Covenant to Mount Sion, that he might have his throne in the tribe of Judah. All the children of Abraham were indeed equal; but the Israelites were superior in number and in power. And he says, the whole seed. This is significantly added; for the Jews had with them only the half of the tribe of Manasse. The ten tribes had perished; in nothing could they exalt themselves; and they were in this respect inferior, because they were only one tribe and half, and the ten tribes were larger in number. 199
He calls them the seed of Ephraim, because of their first king, and also because that tribe was more illustrious than the other nine tribes. And in the Prophets Ephraim is in many places named for Israel, that is, for that second kingdom, which yet flourished more in wealth and power. We now perceive the meaning of the Prophet.
But we may hence learn this important truth, — that God had never so bound himself to any people or place, that he was not at liberty to inflict punishment on the impiety of those who had despised his favors, or profaned them by their ingratitude and their sins. And this ought to be carefully noticed; for we see that it is an evil as it were innate in us, that we become elated and proud whenever God deals bountifully with us; for we so abuse his favors as to think that more liberty is given us, because God has bestowed on us more than on others. But there is nothing more groundless than this presumption; and yet we become thus insolent whenever God honors us with peculiar favors. Let us therefore bear in mind what is taught here by the Prophet, — that God is ever at liberty to take vengeance on the ungodly and the ungrateful.
Hence also it appears how foolish is the boasting of the Papists; for whenever they bring against us the name of the apostolic throne, they think that God’s mouth is closed; they think that all authority is to be taken away from his word. In short, they harden themselves against God, as though they had a legitimate possession, because the gospel had been once preached at Rome, and because that place was the first seat of the Church in Italy as well as in Europe. But God never favored Rome with such a privilege, nor has he said that his habitation was to be there. If the Pope and his adherents had what the Jews then possessed, (which really belonged to Mount Sion,) who could bear their fury, I say not, their pride? But we see what Jeremiah says of Mount Sion, of which yet it had been said,
“This is my rest for ever; here will I dwell,
because I have chosen it.” (Psa 132:14)
Go now, he says, to Shiloh Now, since Shiloh and Jerusalem, and so many celebrated cities, where the gospel formerly flourished, have been taken away from us, it is not to be doubted, but that a dreadful vengeance and destruction await all those who reject the doctrine of salvation, and despise the treasure of the gospel. Since then God has shewn by so many proofs and examples that he is not bound to any places, how stupid is their madness who seek, through the mere name of an apostolic seat, to subvert all truth and all fear of God, and whatever belongs to true religion. Let us now proceed —
TSK: Jer 7:2 - -- am 3394, bc 610
Stand : Jer 17:19, Jer 19:2, Jer 19:14, Jer 22:1, Jer 26:2, Jer 36:6, Jer 36:10; Pro 1:20,Pro 1:21, Pro 8:2, Pro 8:3; Joh 18:20; Act 5...
am 3394, bc 610
Stand : Jer 17:19, Jer 19:2, Jer 19:14, Jer 22:1, Jer 26:2, Jer 36:6, Jer 36:10; Pro 1:20,Pro 1:21, Pro 8:2, Pro 8:3; Joh 18:20; Act 5:20,Act 5:42
Hear : Jer 2:4, Jer 10:1, Jer 19:3, Jer 34:4, Jer 44:24; 1Ki 22:19; Isa 1:10; Eze 2:4, Eze 2:5; Hos 5:1; Amo 7:16; Mic 1:2, Mic 3:1, Mic 3:9; Mat 13:9; Rev 2:7, Rev 2:11, Rev 2:17, Rev 2:29, Rev 3:6, Rev 3:13; Rev 3:22
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TSK: Jer 7:3 - -- Amend : Jer 7:5-7, Jer 18:11, Jer 26:13, Jer 35:15; Pro 28:13; Isa 1:16-19, Isa 55:7; Eze 18:30,Eze 18:31; Eze 33:4-11; Mat 3:8-10; Jam 4:8
Amend : Jer 7:5-7, Jer 18:11, Jer 26:13, Jer 35:15; Pro 28:13; Isa 1:16-19, Isa 55:7; Eze 18:30,Eze 18:31; Eze 33:4-11; Mat 3:8-10; Jam 4:8
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TSK: Jer 7:4 - -- Trust : Jer 7:8, Jer 6:14, Jer 28:15, Jer 29:23, Jer 29:31; Eze 13:19; Mat 3:9, Mat 3:10
The temple : Jer 7:9-12; 1Sa 4:3, 1Sa 4:4; Mic 3:11; Zep 3:11...
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TSK: Jer 7:5 - -- For if : Jer 7:3, Jer 4:1, Jer 4:2; Isa 1:19
if ye thoroughly : Jdg 5:1, Jdg 21:12; 1Ki 6:12, 1Ki 6:13; Isa 16:3; Eze 18:8, Eze 18:17
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TSK: Jer 7:6 - -- oppress : Jer 22:3, Jer 22:4, Jer 22:15, Jer 22:16; Exo 22:21-24; Deu 24:17, Deu 27:19; Job 31:13-22; Psa 82:3, Psa 82:4; Zec 7:9-12; Mal 3:5; Jam 1:2...
oppress : Jer 22:3, Jer 22:4, Jer 22:15, Jer 22:16; Exo 22:21-24; Deu 24:17, Deu 27:19; Job 31:13-22; Psa 82:3, Psa 82:4; Zec 7:9-12; Mal 3:5; Jam 1:27
and shed : Jer 2:30,Jer 2:34, Jer 22:17, Jer 26:15, Jer 26:23; 2Ki 21:6, 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:38; Isa 59:7; Lam 4:13; Eze 22:3-6; Mat 23:35-37, Mat 27:4, Mat 27:25
neither walk : Jer 13:10; Deu 6:14, Deu 6:15, Deu 8:19, Deu 11:28; Eze 18:6
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TSK: Jer 7:7 - -- will I : Jer 17:20-27, Jer 18:7, Jer 18:8, Jer 25:5
in the land : Jer 3:18; Deu 4:40; 2Ch 33:8
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TSK: Jer 7:8 - -- ye trust : Jer 7:4, Jer 4:10, Jer 5:31, Jer 8:10, Jer 14:13, Jer 14:14, Jer 23:14-16, Jer 23:26, Jer 23:32; Isa 28:15, Isa 30:10; Eze 13:6-16
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TSK: Jer 7:9 - -- steal : Jer 9:2-9; Psa 50:16-21; Isa 59:1-8; Eze 18:10-13, Eze 18:18, Eze 33:25, Eze 33:26; Hos 4:1-3; Mic 3:8-12; Zep 1:5; Zec 5:3, Zec 5:4; Mal 3:5;...
steal : Jer 9:2-9; Psa 50:16-21; Isa 59:1-8; Eze 18:10-13, Eze 18:18, Eze 33:25, Eze 33:26; Hos 4:1-3; Mic 3:8-12; Zep 1:5; Zec 5:3, Zec 5:4; Mal 3:5; Rom 2:2, Rom 2:17-29; 1Co 6:9, 1Co 6:10; Gal 5:19-21; Eph 5:5-7; 2Ti 3:2-5; Jam 4:1-4; Rev 21:8; Rev 22:15
and burn : Jer 11:13, Jer 11:17, Jer 32:29; 1Ki 18:21
and walk : Jer 7:6, Jer 13:10, Jer 44:3; Exo 20:3; Deu 32:17; Jdg 5:8
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TSK: Jer 7:10 - -- come : Pro 7:14, Pro 7:15, Pro 15:8; Isa 1:10-15, Isa 48:2, Isa 58:2-4; Eze 20:39, Eze 23:29, Eze 23:37, Eze 23:39; Eze 33:31; Mat 23:14; Joh 13:18, J...
come : Pro 7:14, Pro 7:15, Pro 15:8; Isa 1:10-15, Isa 48:2, Isa 58:2-4; Eze 20:39, Eze 23:29, Eze 23:37, Eze 23:39; Eze 33:31; Mat 23:14; Joh 13:18, Joh 13:26, Joh 13:27, Joh 18:28
which is called : etc. Heb. whereupon my name is called, Jer 7:11, Jer 7:14, Jer 7:30, Jer 32:34, Jer 34:15; 2Ki 21:4; 2Ch 33:4, 2Ch 33:7
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TSK: Jer 7:11 - -- this : 2Ch 6:33; Isa 56:7; Mat 21:13; Mar 11:17; Luk 19:45, Luk 19:46; Joh 2:16
even : Jer 2:34, Jer 16:16, Jer 16:17, Jer 23:24; Heb 4:13; Rev 2:18, ...
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TSK: Jer 7:12 - -- my place : Jos 18:1; Jdg 18:31; 1Sa 1:3
where : Deu 12:5, Deu 12:11
and see : Jer 26:6; 1Sa 4:3, 1Sa 4:4, 1Sa 4:10,1Sa 4:11, 22-6:21; Psa 78:60-64
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TSK: Jer 7:13 - -- and I spake : Jer 7:25, Jer 11:7, Jer 25:3, Jer 35:15, Jer 44:4; 2Ch 36:15, 2Ch 36:16; Neh 9:29, Neh 9:30
and I called : Pro 1:24; Isa 50:2, Isa 65:12...
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TSK: Jer 7:14 - -- wherein : Jer 7:4, Jer 7:10; Deu 28:52; Mic 3:11; Act 6:13, Act 6:14
as : Jer 26:6-9, Jer 26:18, Jer 52:13-23; 1Sa 4:10,1Sa 4:11; 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:8; 2K...
wherein : Jer 7:4, Jer 7:10; Deu 28:52; Mic 3:11; Act 6:13, Act 6:14
as : Jer 26:6-9, Jer 26:18, Jer 52:13-23; 1Sa 4:10,1Sa 4:11; 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:8; 2Ki 25:9; 2Ch 7:21; 2Ch 36:18, 2Ch 36:19; Psa 74:6-8, Psa 78:60; Isa 64:11; Lam 2:7, Lam 4:1; Eze 7:20-22; Eze 9:5-7, Eze 24:21; Mic 3:12; Mat 24:1, Mat 24:2
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TSK: Jer 7:15 - -- I will : Jer 3:8, Jer 15:1, Jer 23:39, Jer 52:3; 2Ki 17:18-20,2Ki 17:23, 2Ki 24:20; Hos 1:4, Hos 9:9, Hos 9:16, Hos 9:17; Hos 13:16
the whole : 2Ch 15...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jer 7:1-2 - -- In Jer. 7\endash 10 he addresses the people as they flocked into Jerusalem from the country, to attend the solemn services in the temple upon a fast...
In Jer. 7\endash 10 he addresses the people as they flocked into Jerusalem from the country, to attend the solemn services in the temple upon a fastday. Jehoiakim Jer. 26 had just ascended the throne, and was so incensed at this sermon that he would have put Jeremiah to death but for the influence of Ahikam. With the accession of Jehoiakim all hope of averting the ruin of the country had passed away. He represented the reverse of his father’ s policy, and belonged to that faction, who placed their sole hope of deliverance in a close alliance with Pharaoh-Necho. As this party rejected the distinctive principles of the theocracy, and the king was personally an irreligious man, the maintenance of the worship of Yahweh was no longer an object of the public care. At this time upon a public fast-day, appointed probably because of the calamities under which the nation was laboring, Jeremiah was commanded by Yahweh to stand at the gate of the temple, and address to the people as they entered words of solemn warning. The whole sermon divides itself into three parts;
In Jer. 7\endash 10 he addresses the people as they flocked into Jerusalem from the country, to attend the solemn services in the temple upon a fastday. Jehoiakim Jer. 26 had just ascended the throne, and was so incensed at this sermon that he would have put Jeremiah to death but for the influence of Ahikam. With the accession of Jehoiakim all hope of averting the ruin of the country had passed away. He represented the reverse of his father’ s policy, and belonged to that faction, who placed their sole hope of deliverance in a close alliance with Pharaoh-Necho. As this party rejected the distinctive principles of the theocracy, and the king was personally an irreligious man, the maintenance of the worship of Yahweh was no longer an object of the public care. At this time upon a public fast-day, appointed probably because of the calamities under which the nation was laboring, Jeremiah was commanded by Yahweh to stand at the gate of the temple, and address to the people as they entered words of solemn warning. The whole sermon divides itself into three parts;
(1) It points out the folly of the superstitious confidence placed by the people in the temple, while they neglect the sole sure foundation of a nation’ s hope. A sanctuary long polluted by immorality must inevitably be destroyed Jer. 7:2\endash 8:3.
(2) complaints follow of a more general character, in which the growing wickedness of the nation and especially of the leaders is pointed out Jer. 8:4\endash 9:24.
(3) lastly the prophet shows the possibility of averting the evils impending upon the nation Jer. 9:25\endash 10:25.
Jer 10:1-2. The temple had several entrances 2Ch 4:9; and the gate or door here mentioned is probably that of the inner court, where Baruch read Jeremiah’ s scroll Jer 36:10. The prophet stood in the doorway, and addressed the people assembled in the outer court.
All ye of Judah - Better, literally all Judah (compare Jer 26:2).
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Barnes: Jer 7:3 - -- If the people repented, instead of being led into captivity, God would maintain their national existence. It is a promise of the continuance of an o...
If the people repented, instead of being led into captivity, God would maintain their national existence. It is a promise of the continuance of an old blessing.
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Barnes: Jer 7:4 - -- The temple of the Lord - Thrice repeated, to emphasize the rejection of the cry ever upon the lips of the false prophets. In their view the mai...
The temple of the Lord - Thrice repeated, to emphasize the rejection of the cry ever upon the lips of the false prophets. In their view the maintenance of the temple-service was a charm sufficient to avert all evil.
These - The buildings of the temple, to which Jeremiah is supposed to point. The Jews put their trust in the material buildings.
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Barnes: Jer 7:5-7 - -- A summary of the conditions indispensable on man’ s part, before he can plead the terms of the covenant in his favor. Jer 7:6 In this...
A summary of the conditions indispensable on man’ s part, before he can plead the terms of the covenant in his favor.
In this place - i. e., in Jerusalem. The prophet refers to innocent blood shed there judicially. Of one such judicial murder Jehoiakim had already been guilty Jer 26:23.
Why then do not the Jews still possess a land thus eternally given them? Because God never bestows anything unconditionally. The land was bestowed upon them by virtue of a covenant Gen 17:7; the Jews had broken the conditions of this covenant Jer 7:5-6, and the gift reverted to the original donor.
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Barnes: Jer 7:10 - -- We are delivered - Jeremiah accuses them of trusting in the ceremonial of the temple instead of leading holy lives. "You break,"he says, "the T...
We are delivered - Jeremiah accuses them of trusting in the ceremonial of the temple instead of leading holy lives. "You break,"he says, "the Ten Commandments, and then you go to the Temple; and when the service is over you say, We are delivered. We have atoned for our past actions, and may start afresh with easy minds upon a new course of wickedness."
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Barnes: Jer 7:11 - -- Robbers - literally, tearers, those who rob with violence. The temple was the place which sheltered them. It had been consecrated to God. Now t...
Robbers - literally, tearers, those who rob with violence. The temple was the place which sheltered them. It had been consecrated to God. Now that it harbors miscreants, must it not as inevitably be destroyed as a den of robbers would be by any righteous ruler?
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Barnes: Jer 7:12 - -- Go ye unto my place in Shiloh - This argument roused the indignation of the people Jer 26:8-9, Jer 26:11. The ark, Jeremiah shows, had not alwa...
Go ye unto my place in Shiloh - This argument roused the indignation of the people Jer 26:8-9, Jer 26:11. The ark, Jeremiah shows, had not always been at Jerusalem. The place first chosen, as the center of the nation’ s worship, was Shiloh, a town to the north of Bethel, situated in the powerful tribe of Ephraim (Jos 18:1 note). The ruin of Shiloh is ascribed Psa 78:58-64 to the idolatry which prevailed in Israel after the death of Joshua; a similar ruin due to similar causes should fall on Jerusalem Jer 7:14. The site of Shiloh is identified with Seilun, the ruins of which are so insignificant as to bear out Jerome’ s remark, "At Silo, where once was the tabernacle and ark of the Lord, there can scarcely be pointed out the foundation of an altar."
At the first - In the first stage, the first period of the existence of the Jewish commonwealth, Shiloh was to the Judges what Jerusalem subsequently was to the kings; and as the fall of Shiloh through the wickedness of Eli’ s sons marked the period when the government by Judges was to pass away, and the second stage begin; so the power of the kings perished at the fall of Jerusalem, and left the way clear for the third stage of Jewish polity, government by the scribes.
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Barnes: Jer 7:13 - -- Rising up early and speaking - A proverbial expression for "speaking zealously and earnestly."It is used only by Jeremiah.
Rising up early and speaking - A proverbial expression for "speaking zealously and earnestly."It is used only by Jeremiah.
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Barnes: Jer 7:15 - -- The whole seed of Ephraim - i. e., the whole of the nine northern tribes. Their casting out was a plain proof that the possession of the symbol...
The whole seed of Ephraim - i. e., the whole of the nine northern tribes. Their casting out was a plain proof that the possession of the symbols of God’ s presence does not secure a Church or nation from rejection, if unworthy of its privileges.
Poole: Jer 7:2 - -- Stand in the gate viz. the east gate, which was chiefly frequented; this being the public place of going out and coming in, and where the people were...
Stand in the gate viz. the east gate, which was chiefly frequented; this being the public place of going out and coming in, and where the people were then wont to assemble, Jer 26:2,10 ; and he is said to stand , because he was to execute the office of a preacher, Jer 26:2 , not of a judge, where the posture would rather have been sitting .
The Lord’ s house the temple, Jer 7:4,10 .
Proclaim there: the place notes the vanity of their confidence, who, notwithstanding all their provocations, yet placed their safety much in the privileges of the temple, glorying much in that; and the manner. proclaiming, signifies both the authority by which he spake, and the divulging of what he spake plainly and boldly, which as it was in a public place, viz. the court of the people, not the court of the priests, (from which it is distinguished, 2Ch 4:9 ) and therefore said at these gates, viz. the several gates that were in the wall of the court, of which there were six, three on the south side and three on the north; so, possibly, it might be at some public time of the people’ s resorting thither from all quarters, Psa 122:4,5 , when all the males were to meet, Exo 23:17 ; see Joh 7:37 ; and therefore said,
all ye of Judah This word; the message that I send thee with.
The word of the Lord: see Jer 2:4 .
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Poole: Jer 7:3 - -- Amend your ways and your doings i.e. mend your manners. Amending signifies both to turn from our evil works, and make our good better.
I will cause ...
Amend your ways and your doings i.e. mend your manners. Amending signifies both to turn from our evil works, and make our good better.
I will cause you to dwell in this place you shall not go into captivity, implying that otherwise they should; he will continue their habitations to them from age to age, as Jer 7:7 . The doing of a thing in Scripture often implies the continuance of it: Lev 26:11 ,
I will set my tabernacle i.e. I will continue it.
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Poole: Jer 7:4 - -- Because this was God’ s house, wherein he had promised to dwell, and that for ever, Psa 132:13,14 , they flattered themselves that he could dwe...
Because this was God’ s house, wherein he had promised to dwell, and that for ever, Psa 132:13,14 , they flattered themselves that he could dwell no where else, and would not depart, and certainly would not suffer the Chaldeans to destroy this, and therefore that no evil could befall them, as they promised themselves, Mic 3:11 ; therefore the prophet cautions them not to deceive themselves in trusting to the temple and its buildings, as the two courts, and house, and holy of holies, implied in the word these, which he doth as it were point to with his finger; (for where the prophets speak distinctly of the form of the temple, they reckon the court, where the people did sacrifice, and the holy place, or house, whereinto the priests only did enter, and the oracle, or holy of holies, wherein was the ark of the covenant, and into which only the high priest entered, and that but once a year;) which these hypocrites looked upon themselves secured by, as it were, by a treble wall, fort, or bulwark, that they could not miscarry; but he would have them to know that neither these, nor the services belonging to them, will be able to secure them, Jer 7:8 Jer 4:14 ; and it is likely their false prophets did thus persuade them, whose prophecies he calls here these
lying words but God will have them know that he doth not choose a nation for the place’ s sake, but the place for the nation’ s sake; the like caution the apostle gives them, 1Co 10:2 , &c. The emphasis that may be in this threefold repetition seems rather to relate to the confident and often reiterated brags and boasts of the temple that were in their mouths, than the worth and excellency of it, in regard of God’ s owning it.
These the prophet, standing in the gate at which the people entered, doth as it were point at the several buildings appertaining to the temple, viz. the courts, house, oracle, &c.
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Poole: Jer 7:5 - -- He tells them, it is not their vain confidence in their privileges, and boasting of the temple, but only their serious and thorough repentance in tu...
He tells them, it is not their vain confidence in their privileges, and boasting of the temple, but only their serious and thorough repentance in turning to God, both in point of piety and equity, that can secure them.
Between a man and his neighbour i.e. impartially among one another, between man and man, without favour or hatred.
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Poole: Jer 7:6 - -- Here they are cautioned against three sins that this people were generally addicted to, oppression, blood, and idolatry; and he instanceth in the wo...
Here they are cautioned against three sins that this people were generally addicted to, oppression, blood, and idolatry; and he instanceth in the worst of oppressions, viz. of such as God hath more especially taken into his immediate protection, because these are most void of help, and most obnoxious to injuries; the
stranger Exo 22:21 , the
fatherless and widow, Jer 7:22-24 ; see them all three together, Deu 10:18 27:19 : see on Isa 10:1,2 : and where God speaks of right administering of justice, he usually makes mention of these three, to prove the integrity and impartiality of justice; and though this may more properly respect the princes and great ones, yet I conceive here the prophet doth not so restrain it.
Shed not innocent blood either by murder or unrighteous sentence; being one of those sins in special mentioned for which God expresseth his high displeasure, and will send the Chaldeans upon them, 2Ki 24:4 .
In this place either in this city in special, or the whole land in general; see Jer 7:3 ; and there he would show what a foolish thing it is that they should boast of their security in this place, and yet shed blood, which pollutes every place, Num 35:31 , &c.
Neither walk after other gods abstain from your idolatrous courses and depart not from my pure and uncorrupted worship, unto your superstitious and hypocritical service; and he adds to
your hurt or your own hurt, to show that they will be the only sufferers by it, not God, Jer 7:19 . God is neither benefited nor damaged by any thing that we can do, Job 35:6-8 .
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Poole: Jer 7:7 - -- Then i.e. upon this condition, that you will return unto me, then either I will establish and fix you in the land; or, as anciently read, sachanti ...
Then i.e. upon this condition, that you will return unto me, then either I will establish and fix you in the land; or, as anciently read, sachanti in kal , I will dwell, viz. amongst you in this place, otherwise not.
In this place viz. Judea, both in Jerusalem and the whole country, as the next words manifest.
For ever and ever i.e. from age to age, as your fathers did before you from the days of Joshua until now.
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Poole: Jer 7:8 - -- Behold take notice of it, and think of it seriously.
Ye trust in lying words either flattering yourselves with your own conceits, whereby, in your ...
Behold take notice of it, and think of it seriously.
Ye trust in lying words either flattering yourselves with your own conceits, whereby, in your discourses, you strengthen one another; or depending upon the delusions of your false prophets, Jer 5:31 23:26,27 ; or rather, bolstering yourselves up upon your privileges or bare ceremonies, which you so much boast of, as Jer 7:4 ; all which he tells them will profit them nothing.
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Poole: Jer 7:9 - -- Here the prophet mentions divers of those sins in which they were notorious, they were thieves, murderers, adulterers , perjured idolaters , &c, :...
Here the prophet mentions divers of those sins in which they were notorious, they were thieves, murderers, adulterers , perjured idolaters , &c, :q.d. Can you think that this can be grateful unto me, or any whit advantageous to yourselves, to frequent my house, and yet retain these odious sins, as if I were a companion for thieves, murderers, &c.?
Gods whom ye know not such as they had set up new, and never had any experience of, and therefore could have no reason to serve them; therefore called new gods, Deu 32:17 Jud 5:8 : but of his power and goodness they had had ample proof, in their deliverance from Egypt, and the wonderful miracles and signs that God had shown them in the wilderness, and his victorious arm for them in Canaan; of which things these Jews could not be ignorant, and therefore the more inexcusable. Four of these sins respect the second table, these two last the first. The name of
Baal is here put for all idols.
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Poole: Jer 7:10 - -- And come and stand before me in this house in the temple; either as if they had done no such thing, like the whore, that wipes her mouth, and saith s...
And come and stand before me in this house in the temple; either as if they had done no such thing, like the whore, that wipes her mouth, and saith she hath done no wickedness, Pro 30:20 , noting their deep hypocrisy; or else that barely this would expiate for all their abominations, as if they could make God amends for their sins by their duties; and their posture of standing notes their service, 1Ki 10:8 Pro 22:29 .
Which is called by my name that is acknowledged to bc my house, and bears my name, dedicated to me.
We are delivered to do all these abominations that is, after they had appeared before God with their sacrifices, either they thought themselves safe from all danger, and freed from God’ s judgments, Mal 3:15 ; or rather privileged to return to all those wickednesses again, hereby noting their impudence. See Isa 1:12 , &c. LXX. read it, we have abstained from all these abominations , as if these were the lying words in which they trusted.
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Poole: Jer 7:11 - -- Robbers Heb. breakers through . The word is taken in a large notion for all sorts of plunderers, whether in house, Eze 7:22 , or field, highway-men,...
Robbers Heb. breakers through . The word is taken in a large notion for all sorts of plunderers, whether in house, Eze 7:22 , or field, highway-men, Dan 11:14 . Do yon look upon this house as a sanctuary and refuge for robbers and murderers ? do you esteem it so, and is it so in your eyes? so the phrase is used Num 13:33 , &c.; hereby making me an abettor of all your lewdness, Mat 21:13 ; a metaphor taken from wild beasts and mischievous persons, that do both secure themselves and hide their prey in holes and caves of the earth, Psa 10:8,9 .
I have seen it: q.d. As crafty as you are, you cannot hide these things from me, nor all those workings of your thoughts about them, Psa 10:11,13,14 Eze 18:12 . He checks their foolish vain confidences, whereby they deceive themselves, Isa 29:15 . God will not be blinded by all their vain oblations.
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Poole: Jer 7:12 - -- Shiloh a place that did belong to the tribe of Ephraim, Psa 78:60 , compare Psa 78:67 ; the situation whereof see Jud 21:19 ; and called God’ s...
Shiloh a place that did belong to the tribe of Ephraim, Psa 78:60 , compare Psa 78:67 ; the situation whereof see Jud 21:19 ; and called God’ s house , as the temple is, 1Sa 1:3,7 : he sends them hither for an example, which had the same privileges and holiness with the temple; not to go thither locally, but to cast their thoughts back, and consider of it, that they might know that God’ s presence is not tied to places, Act 7:48 .
Where I set my name at the first where I did at first give you the token and pledges of my presence among you, when you first entered into the pleasant land, noting the antiquity of Shiloh before the temple.
What I did to it i.e. he utterly forsook it; he did not only deliver up his people into the Philistines’ hands, but the ark also, the token of his presence, which never returned to Shiloh more; and afterwards delivered the ten tribes, wherein Shiloh was situate, into captivity to the Assyrian; see Jer 7:14,15 ; wherein he upbraids them for their folly ill thinking that the ark or altar in the temple should any more privilege them than it did Shiloh.
For the wickedness of my people he gives them the reason of it in these words, the wickedness of his people , and chiefly the priests, Hophni and Phinehas, Eli’ s sons, 1Sa 2:12 , &c.; and why should they think to escape, who did equal, if not exceed them?
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Poole: Jer 7:13 - -- These works either the same, or as bad, or worse than they did at Shiloh; or particularly those mentioned Jer 7:9 .
Rising up early a metaphor take...
These works either the same, or as bad, or worse than they did at Shiloh; or particularly those mentioned Jer 7:9 .
Rising up early a metaphor taken from persons that are diligent in their business, they use to rise up early: q.d. I did not only speak by my prophets, but they in my name used all diligence to reclaim you, Jer 11:7,8 25:3,4 , calling earnestly unto you; by which he means his exhortations and menaces, which ought to have had some efficacy upon them; but you slighted, and disregarded, and would not come at my call, Pro 1:24 . See Poole "2Ch 36:15" , See Poole "2Ch 36:16" , and See Poole "Isa 1:2" .
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Poole: Jer 7:14 - -- Therefore because they have added this their obstinate refusing of all admonitions to the rest of their provocations,
will I do unto this house viz...
Therefore because they have added this their obstinate refusing of all admonitions to the rest of their provocations,
will I do unto this house viz. cause the consecrated things of the temple to be taken away by the hand of the Babylonians. The place , see Jer 7:7 , which I gave to you, viz. upon condition of your obedience, Psa 105:44,45 , and therefore may justly, upon the breach of the condition, take from you again, nay, by virtue of my sovereignty, Job 1:21 .
Shiloh: see Jer 7:12 .
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Poole: Jer 7:15 - -- You shall have my presence with and watchful eye over you no more, but I will send you into captivity to Babylon. as I did your brethren into Assyri...
You shall have my presence with and watchful eye over you no more, but I will send you into captivity to Babylon. as I did your brethren into Assyria. See on 2Ki 17:6,18 . And he terms them here
brethren to let them know that they and Israel proceeded from the same stock, and therefore had no reason to expect but it should fare alike with them, seeing their sins were alike, 2Ki 21:13,14 , &c.
Ephraim viz. the ten tribes, Isa 7:1,2 , compared; called by this name often, because that was the most numerous and potent of all of them; Jeroboam their first king was of that tribe.
Haydock: Jer 7:1 - -- High. People lamented in such places, chap. ix. 13., and Judges xi. 35. (Calmet) ---
Wrath, which he treats with the utmost severity. (Haydock)
High. People lamented in such places, chap. ix. 13., and Judges xi. 35. (Calmet) ---
Wrath, which he treats with the utmost severity. (Haydock)
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Gate, before all the people. This discourse ends [in] chap. xiii. (Calmet)
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Dwell. Hebrew, "make you dwell here." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Jer 7:4 - -- Lord. The triple repetition shews the vain confidence of the people, who blindly imagined that the temple would screen them, (Calmet) and that exter...
Lord. The triple repetition shews the vain confidence of the people, who blindly imagined that the temple would screen them, (Calmet) and that external sacrifices would suffice. But they were rejected with the temple. (Worthington)
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Not, which have done you no good, and deserve not to be styled gods. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 7:10 - -- Because. Hebrew also, "although," (Sa; Grotius) "to perform," (Chaldean; Montanus) or "by doing." God must surely approve of our conduct, since we ...
Because. Hebrew also, "although," (Sa; Grotius) "to perform," (Chaldean; Montanus) or "by doing." God must surely approve of our conduct, since we are unmolested. (St. Thomas Aquinas; Lyranus) ---
But the Vulgate seems preferable, and the people attribute their success to idols, chap. xliv. 17., and 2 Paralipomenon xxviii. 23.
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Haydock: Jer 7:11 - -- Robbers. Our Saviour alludes to this, Matthew xxi. 13. ---
Seen. Think not to hide yourselves, as in a den. My temple shall not be an asylum fo...
Robbers. Our Saviour alludes to this, Matthew xxi. 13. ---
Seen. Think not to hide yourselves, as in a den. My temple shall not be an asylum for wretches. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 7:12 - -- Beginning, under Josue. (Haydock) ---
The sins of a few priests caused this place to be abandoned, (1 Kings ii. 22., and iii. 4., and Psalm lxxviii...
Beginning, under Josue. (Haydock) ---
The sins of a few priests caused this place to be abandoned, (1 Kings ii. 22., and iii. 4., and Psalm lxxviii. 60.) and shall the crimes of a whole people escape? (Calmet) ---
It is true, that place and Jerusalem were once sanctified: but the people being criminal, God retires. (Worthington)
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Early. Sparing no opportunity of reclaiming you. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jer 7:15 - -- Ephraim. The ten tribes (Worthington) had been led into captivity in the days of Ezechias, the great-grandfather of Josias. (Calmet)
Ephraim. The ten tribes (Worthington) had been led into captivity in the days of Ezechias, the great-grandfather of Josias. (Calmet)
Gill: Jer 7:1 - -- The word that came to Jeremiah,.... The Word of prophecy, as the Targum:
from the Lord, saying; this begins a new prophecy. This verse, and the beg...
The word that came to Jeremiah,.... The Word of prophecy, as the Targum:
from the Lord, saying; this begins a new prophecy. This verse, and the beginning of the next, are wanting in the Septuagint version.
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Gill: Jer 7:2 - -- Stand in the gate of the Lord's house,.... That is, of the temple, and the court of it. This gate, as Kimchi says, was the eastern gate, which was the...
Stand in the gate of the Lord's house,.... That is, of the temple, and the court of it. This gate, as Kimchi says, was the eastern gate, which was the principal gate of all; see Jer 26:2,
and proclaim there this word, and say; with a loud voice, as follows:
hear ye the word of the Lord, all ye of Judah; the inhabitants of the several parts of Judea, which came to the temple to worship; very probably it was a feast day, as Calvin conjectures; either the passover, or pentecost, or feast of tabernacles, when all the males in Israel appeared in court:
that enter in at these gates to worship the Lord; there were seven gates belonging to the court, three on the north, three on the south, and one in the east, the chief of all, as Kimchi, Abarbinel, and Ben Melech observe; and this agrees with the account in the Misna k. The names of them were these; on the south side were these three, the watergate, the gate of the firstlings; or the gate of offering, and the gate of kindling; on the north were these three, the gate Nitzotz, called also the gate of the song, the gate Korban, sometimes called the gate of women, and Beth Moked; and the gate in the east was the gate Nicanor, and this gate was the most frequented; and therefore Jeremiah was ordered to stand here, and deliver his message.
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Gill: Jer 7:3 - -- Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel,.... The Lord of armies above and below in general, and the God of Israel in particular; wherefore the...
Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel,.... The Lord of armies above and below in general, and the God of Israel in particular; wherefore they ought to hearken to what he was about to say, and to be obedient to him:
amend your ways and your doings; or, "make them good" l; which shows that they were bad, and were not agreeable to the law and will of God, to which they ought to have been conformed; and the way to amend them was to act according to the rule of the divine word they were favoured with:
and I will cause you to dwell in this place; to continue to dwell in Jerusalem, and in Judea, the land of their nativity, and in the temple, the house of God, and place of religious worship; but, if not, it is suggested that they should not continue here, but be carried captive into a strange land.
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Gill: Jer 7:4 - -- Trust ye not in lying words,.... In the words of the lying prophets, as the Targum; and to the same purpose is the Arabic version,
"do not trust in...
Trust ye not in lying words,.... In the words of the lying prophets, as the Targum; and to the same purpose is the Arabic version,
"do not trust in lying words, for the false prophets do not profit you in anything;''
the things in which they trusted, and in which the false prophets taught them to place their confidence, were their coming up to the temple at certain times for religious exercises, and their attendance on temple service and worship, offering of sacrifices, and the like. The Septuagint version is, "trust not in yourselves, in lying words"; see Luk 18:9, in their external actions of devotion, in their ritual performances, taking them for righteousness; and adds, what is not in the Hebrew text, "for they altogether profit you not"; in the business of justification before God, and acceptance with him:
saying, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, are these; that is, the people that hypocritically worshipped there, as the false prophets told them; and so the Syriac version, "ye are the temple of the Lord"; though that begins the next verse, with the last clause of this,
if ye amend your ways, &c. see 1Co 3:16 or rather the temple of the Lord are those gates through which they entered, Jer 7:2 or those buildings which were pointed at with the finger; or
"who say (i.e. the false prophets), before the temple of the Lord ye worship; before the temple of the Lord ye sacrifice; before the temple of the Lord ye bow; three times in a year ye appear before him.''
Kimchi's father, R. Joseph, is of opinion, that it refers to the three parts of the temple, the porch, the holy place, and the holy of holies; but Kimchi himself takes it that these words are trebled for the greater confirmation of them; and they may denote the vehemence and ardour of affection for the temple.
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Gill: Jer 7:5 - -- For if ye thoroughly amend your ways and your doings,.... Or, "if ye make your ways good, and do your works well", which is what is exhorted to Jer 7:...
For if ye thoroughly amend your ways and your doings,.... Or, "if ye make your ways good, and do your works well", which is what is exhorted to Jer 7:3, and respects the duties of the moral law; which are more acceptable to God than legal sacrifices, when done from right principles, and with right views, from love, in faith, and to the glory of God; which is doing good works well; the particulars of which follow:
if you thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbour; without respect to persons, without favour and affection, without bribery and corruption; passing a righteous sentence, and making an equitable decision of the case between them, according to the law of God, and the rules of justice and equity: this respects judges and civil magistrates.
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Gill: Jer 7:6 - -- If ye oppress not the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow,.... Who have none to help them, and who ought to have mercy and compassion shown them, ...
If ye oppress not the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow,.... Who have none to help them, and who ought to have mercy and compassion shown them, as well as justice done them; and should not be injured by private men in their persons and properties, and much less oppressed in courts of judicature by those who should be the patrons and defenders of them:
and shed not innocent blood in this place: in the temple, where the sanhedrim, or great court of judicature, sat; for this does not so much respect the commission of murder by private persons, as the condemnation of innocent men to death by the judges, which is all one as shedding their blood; and by which actions they defiled that temple they cried up, and put their trust in; to shed innocent blood in any place, Kimchi observes, is an evil; but to shed it in this place, in the temple, was a greater evil, because this was the place of the Shechinah, or where the divine Majesty dwelt:
neither walk after other gods to your hurt; the gods of e people, as the Targum; "for this", as the Arabic version renders it, "is pernicious to you"; idolatry was more hurtful to themselves than to God; and therefore it is dissuaded from by an argument taken from their own interest.
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Gill: Jer 7:7 - -- Then will I cause you to dwell in this place,.... In the land of Judea, and not suffer them to be carried captive, which they had been threatened with...
Then will I cause you to dwell in this place,.... In the land of Judea, and not suffer them to be carried captive, which they had been threatened with, and had reason to expect, should they continue in their sins, in their impenitence and vain confidence:
in the land that I gave to your fathers; to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, by promise; and to the Jewish fathers in the times of Joshua, by putting them in actual possession of it:
for ever and ever: for a great while; a long time, as Kimchi explains it; from the days of Abraham for ever, even all the days of the world, provided they and their children walked in the ways of the Lord. This clause may either be connected with the word "dwell", or with the word give; and the sense is, either that they should dwell in it for ever and ever; or it was given to their fathers for ever and ever.
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Gill: Jer 7:8 - -- Behold, ye trust in lying words,.... What they are dissuaded from, Jer 7:4, is here affirmed they did, and which is introduced with a note of assevera...
Behold, ye trust in lying words,.... What they are dissuaded from, Jer 7:4, is here affirmed they did, and which is introduced with a note of asseveration, attention, and admiration; it being a certain thing that they did so; and was what was worthy of their consideration and serious reflection upon; and it was astonishing that they should, since so to do was of no advantage to them, but the contrary:
that cannot profit; temple worship and service, legal sacrifices and ceremonies, could not take away sin, and expiate the guilt of it; or justify men, and render them acceptable to God; these, without faith in the blood and sacrifice of Christ, were of no avail; and especially could never be thought to be of any use and profit, when such gross abominations were indulged by them as are next mentioned.
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Gill: Jer 7:9 - -- Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely,.... At the same time they offered sacrifices, and trusted in them, they did those thing...
Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely,.... At the same time they offered sacrifices, and trusted in them, they did those things, which would not be grateful to the Lord, nor profitable to them; or, "ye do steal", &c.; so the Septuagint, and all the Oriental versions; and likewise the Targum; as charging them with them; these are sins against the second table of the law, as what follow are against the first:
and burn incense to Baal, and walk after other gods whom ye know not; for they not only burnt incense to Baal, which was an act of idolatrous worship; but served other strange gods they had not known before; whose names they had never heard of, and of whose help and assistance they now had no experience, nor received any benefit from, as they had on the one and only true God; and therefore it was great folly and ingratitude in them to forsake the Lord, and walk after these.
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Gill: Jer 7:10 - -- And come and stand before me in this house,.... In the temple; this they did after they had been guilty of such immoralities and idolatry; thinking by...
And come and stand before me in this house,.... In the temple; this they did after they had been guilty of such immoralities and idolatry; thinking by their appearance there, and their performance of a few ceremonies, and offering of some sacrifices, that all were atoned for: or this denotes their impudence, that, after the commission of such notorious crimes, they should have the front to come into the house of God, and stand before him, as if they had never departed from him, and were his people, and the true worshippers of him:
which is called by my name; the temple of God, the house of God, the sanctuary of the Lord; and where his name was also called upon, being a house of prayer; or where prayer was made to the Lord:
and say, we are delivered; from the punishment of the above sins, by coming into the temple, and standing before the Lord in it; by calling on his name, and offering sacrifices, though with impure hearts and hands, and in a hypocritical way
to do all these abominations; before mentioned; theft, murder, adultery, perjury, and idolatry. The sense is, either we are delivered and freed from punishment, that we may do these things with impunity; this is the use we make of, and the inference we draw from, our deliverance from evil: or we are delivered, though we commit these abominations, and therefore in them: or, seeing we are delivered, therefore do we these things; not that they really said these words, but this was the language of their actions. The Syriac version is, "deliver us, while we commit all these sins".
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Gill: Jer 7:11 - -- Is this house, which is called by my name,.... Meaning the temple:
become a den of robbers in your eyes? or do you look upon it, and make use of it...
Is this house, which is called by my name,.... Meaning the temple:
become a den of robbers in your eyes? or do you look upon it, and make use of it, as thieves do of dens; who, when they have robbed and murdered men, betake themselves to them, not only to share their spoil, but to hide themselves? just so those thieves, murderers adulterers, perjurers, and idolaters, after they had committed such gross enormities, came into the temple and offered sacrifices; thinking hereby to cover their sins, and expiate the guilt of them, and to be looked upon as good men, and true worshippers of God, when they were no better than thieves and robbers; and such were the Pharisees in Christ's time, and such was the temple as made by them; see Mat 21:13,
behold, even I have seen it, saith the Lord; not only all the abominations committed by them, but the use they made of the temple and the worship of it; all the hypocrisy of their hearts, and the inward thoughts of them, and their views and intentions in their offerings and sacrifices; as well as what ruin and destruction the Lord designed to bring shortly upon them, and upon that house which they had made a den of robbers; as follows:
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Gill: Jer 7:12 - -- But go ye now unto my place, which was in Shiloh,.... A city in the tribe of Ephraim, on the north of Bethel, and the south of Lebonah, and not far fr...
But go ye now unto my place, which was in Shiloh,.... A city in the tribe of Ephraim, on the north of Bethel, and the south of Lebonah, and not far from Shechem, Jdg 21:19 here were the tabernacle, the ark and altar of the Lord, and the sacrifices; and therefore the tabernacle is called the tabernacle of Shiloh, Psa 78:60, and here the Lord calls it his place; the place of the house of his Shechinah, as the Targum paraphrases it; and where he would have those people go; which is not to be understood locally, but of their taking this place into the consideration of their minds, and observe what was done to it, and became of it; though it was once the place where the Lord dwelt, and where his name was called formerly; as follows:
where I set my name at the first; when the children of Israel first entered into Canaan's land, the tabernacle was set up and established in Shiloh, in Joshua's time, Jos 18:1 and there it continued to the times of Eli:
and see what I did to it, for the wickedness of my people Israel; he refused and forsook his tabernacle there; he suffered the ark, which was fetched from thence in the times of Eli, to be taken and carried captive, and that because of the sins of his people, Psa 78:60. Jerom m says, in his time, the altar that was pulled down was shown, though scarce the foundations of it were to be seen. Now the Lord would have these people consider what was done to Shiloh; that though this was the first place where the tabernacle was set in the land of Canaan, and so the inhabitants of it had antiquity on their side; yet this did not secure them, nor the tribe it was in, from being rejected by the Lord, when they sinned against him; nor should the tribes of Judah and Benjamin think themselves secure because of the temple of the Lord, since they might expect he would do to them for their sins what he had done to others before.
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Gill: Jer 7:13 - -- And now, because ye have done all these works, saith the Lord,.... Meaning evil works, such as theft, murder, adultery, perjury, and idolatry, mention...
And now, because ye have done all these works, saith the Lord,.... Meaning evil works, such as theft, murder, adultery, perjury, and idolatry, mentioned Jer 7:8 or the same which were done by the people of Israel, on account of which the tabernacle at Shiloh was left:
and I spake unto you, rising up early; that is, by his servants the prophets, whom he sent unto them, and by whom he spoke, as the Targum paraphrases it, and as it is in Jer 7:25, which shows the Lord's great concern for this people, his early care of them, in sending his servants betimes to warn, rebuke, and reclaim them:
and speaking, but ye heard not; would not listen to the words of the prophets, and of the Lord by them; but turned a deaf ear to them, which aggravates their stubbornness, obstinacy, and wickedness, that so much respect should be shown them, so much pains should be taken with them, and that so early, and yet to no purpose:
and I called you, but ye answered not; this call was by the external ministry of the prophets, and was with great vehemence in them, but not with divine energy; however, it was sufficient to leave the Jews without excuse; and their inattention to it exposes their hardness and wilful obstinacy; see Pro 1:24.
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Gill: Jer 7:14 - -- Therefore will I do unto this house, which is called by my name,.... The temple, as in Jer 7:11, for though it was called by his name, and his name wa...
Therefore will I do unto this house, which is called by my name,.... The temple, as in Jer 7:11, for though it was called by his name, and his name was called upon in it, yet this could not secure it from desolation; for so the name of the Lord was set in the tabernacle at Shiloh, and yet he forsook it through the wickedness of the people:
wherein ye trust; they trusted in the sacrifices there offered up, and the service there performed; in the holiness of the place, and because it was the residence of the divine Majesty; wherefore they thought this would be a protection and defence of them; and this was trusting in lying words, as in Jer 7:4,
and unto the place which I gave unto you and your fathers; meaning either Jerusalem; and so the Syriac version renders it, "and to the city"; or the whole land of Judea, as in Jer 7:7,
as I have done to Shiloh; See Gill on Jer 7:12.
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Gill: Jer 7:15 - -- And I will cast you out of my sight,.... Or, "from before my face", or "faces" n; out of the land of Judea, and cause them to go into captivity; and s...
And I will cast you out of my sight,.... Or, "from before my face", or "faces" n; out of the land of Judea, and cause them to go into captivity; and so the Targum paraphrases it,
"I will cause you to remove out of the land of the house of my majesty:''
as I have cast out all your brethren, even the whole seed of Ephraim; or Israel, as the Targum; that is, the ten tribes so called, because Ephraim, a principal tribe, and the metropolis of the kingdom, was in it, and Jeroboam, the first king of the ten tribes, was of it: now, as they were carried captive into Babylon, so should the Jews; or they of the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin; who could not expect to fare better than their brethren, who were more in number than they; and especially since they were guilty of the same sins.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Jer 7:1; Jer 7:2; Jer 7:2; Jer 7:3; Jer 7:3; Jer 7:3; Jer 7:3; Jer 7:4; Jer 7:4; Jer 7:4; Jer 7:5; Jer 7:5; Jer 7:6; Jer 7:6; Jer 7:6; Jer 7:6; Jer 7:7; Jer 7:7; Jer 7:7; Jer 7:8; Jer 7:8; Jer 7:8; Jer 7:9; Jer 7:9; Jer 7:10; Jer 7:10; Jer 7:11; Jer 7:11; Jer 7:11; Jer 7:12; Jer 7:12; Jer 7:13; Jer 7:13; Jer 7:14; Jer 7:14; Jer 7:14; Jer 7:15
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NET Notes: Jer 7:2 That is, all those who have passed through the gates of the outer court and are standing in the courtyard of the temple.
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NET Notes: Jer 7:4 Heb “The temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord are these (i.e., these buildings).” Elsewhere triple repetitio...
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NET Notes: Jer 7:5 Heb “you must do justice between a person and his fellow/neighbor.” The infinitive absolute precedes the finite verb for emphasis.
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NET Notes: Jer 7:7 Heb “gave to your fathers [with reference to] from ancient times even unto forever.”
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NET Notes: Jer 7:9 Heb “You go/follow after.” See the translator’s note at 2:5 for an explanation of the idiom involved here.
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NET Notes: Jer 7:10 Or “‘We are safe!’ – safe, you think, to go on doing all those hateful things.” Verses 9-10 are all one long sentence in...
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NET Notes: Jer 7:12 The place in Shiloh…see what I did to it. This refers to the destruction of Shiloh by the Philistines circa 1050 b.c. (cf. Ps 78:60). The destru...
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NET Notes: Jer 7:13 Heb “I called to you and you did not answer.” The words “to repent” are not in the text but are supplied in the translation fo...
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NET Notes: Jer 7:14 Heb “I will do to this house which I…in which you put…and to this place which…as I did to Shiloh.”
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NET Notes: Jer 7:15 Heb “the descendants of Ephraim.” However, Ephraim here stands (as it often does) for all the northern tribes of Israel.
Geneva Bible: Jer 7:4 Trust ye not in ( a ) lying words, saying, The temple of the LORD, The temple of the LORD, The temple of the LORD, [are] these.
( a ) Believe not the...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 7:7 Then ( b ) will I cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I gave to your fathers, for ever and ever.
( b ) God shows on what condition he ...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 7:11 Is this house, which is called by my name, become ( c ) a den of robbers in your eyes? Behold, even I have seen [it], saith the LORD.
( c ) As thieve...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 7:12 But go ye now to my place which [was] in Shiloh, ( d ) where I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my people Isra...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 7:13 And now, because ye have done all these works, saith the LORD, and I spoke to you, ( e ) rising early and speaking, but ye heard not; and I called you...
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Geneva Bible: Jer 7:15 And I will cast ( g ) you out of my sight, as I have cast out all your brethren, [even] the whole seed of Ephraim.
( g ) I will send you into captivi...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jer 7:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Jer 7:1-34 - --1 Jeremiah is sent to call to true repentance, to prevent the Jews' captivity.8 He rejects their vain confidence,12 by the example of Shiloh.17 He thr...
MHCC -> Jer 7:1-16
MHCC: Jer 7:1-16 - --No observances, professions, or supposed revelations, will profit, if men do not amend their ways and their doings. None can claim an interest in free...
Matthew Henry -> Jer 7:1-15
Matthew Henry: Jer 7:1-15 - -- These verses begin another sermon, which is continued in this and the two following chapters, much to the same effect with those before, to reason t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jer 7:1-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Jer 7:1-15 - --
The vanity of trusting in the temple. - Jer 7:1. "The word that came to Jeremiah from Jahveh, saying, Jer 7:2. Stand in the gate of the house ...
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 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 7:1--10:25 - --2. Warnings about apostasy and its consequences chs. 7-10
This is another collection of Jeremiah...
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Constable: Jer 7:1--8:4 - --Aspects of false religion 7:1-8:3
All the messages in this section deal with departure f...
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