The scope of this chapter is much the same with
that of the 17th, to foretel and lament the ruin of the house of
David, the royal family of Judah, in the calamitous exit of the
four sons and grandsons of Josiah—Jehoahaz, Jehoiakim, Jeconiah,
and Zedekiah, in whom that illustrious line of kings was cut off,
which the prophet is here ordered to lament,
1 Moreover take thou up a lamentation for the princes of Israel, 2 And say, What is thy mother? A lioness: she lay down among lions, she nourished her whelps among young lions. 3 And she brought up one of her whelps: it became a young lion, and it learned to catch the prey; it devoured men. 4 The nations also heard of him; he was taken in their pit, and they brought him with chains unto the land of Egypt. 5 Now when she saw that she had waited, and her hope was lost, then she took another of her whelps, and made him a young lion. 6 And he went up and down among the lions, he became a young lion, and learned to catch the prey, and devoured men. 7 And he knew their desolate palaces, and he laid waste their cities; and the land was desolate, and the fulness thereof, by the noise of his roaring. 8 Then the nations set against him on every side from the provinces, and spread their net over him: he was taken in their pit. 9 And they put him in ward in chains, and brought him to the king of Babylon: they brought him into holds, that his voice should no more be heard upon the mountains of Israel.
Here are, I. Orders given to the prophet to
bewail the fall of the royal family, which had long made so great a
figure by virtue of a covenant of royalty made with David and his
seed, so that the eclipsing and extinguishing of it are justly
lamented by all who know what value to put upon the covenant of
our God, as we find, after a very large account of that
covenant with David (
II. Instructions given him what to say. 1.
He must compare the kingdom of Judah to a lioness, so
wretchedly degenerated was it from what it had been formerly, when
it sat as a queen among the nations,
10 Thy mother is like a vine in thy blood, planted by the waters: she was fruitful and full of branches by reason of many waters. 11 And she had strong rods for the sceptres of them that bare rule, and her stature was exalted among the thick branches, and she appeared in her height with the multitude of her branches. 12 But she was plucked up in fury, she was cast down to the ground, and the east wind dried up her fruit: her strong rods were broken and withered; the fire consumed them. 13 And now she is planted in the wilderness, in a dry and thirsty ground. 14 And fire is gone out of a rod of her branches, which hath devoured her fruit, so that she hath no strong rod to be a sceptre to rule. This is a lamentation, and shall be for a lamentation.
Jerusalem, the mother-city, is here
represented by another similitude; she is a vine, and the princes
are her branches. This comparison we had before,