In this chapter the approaching ruin of the land
of Israel is most particularly foretold in affecting expressions
often repeated, that if possible they might be awakened by
repentance to prevent it. The prophet must tell them, I. That it
will be a final ruin, a complete utter destruction, which would
make an end of them, a miserable end,
1 Moreover the word of the Lord came unto me, saying, 2 Also, thou son of man, thus saith the Lord God unto the land of Israel; An end, the end is come upon the four corners of the land. 3 Now is the end come upon thee, and I will send mine anger upon thee, and will judge thee according to thy ways, and will recompense upon thee all thine abominations. 4 And mine eye shall not spare thee, neither will I have pity: but I will recompense thy ways upon thee, and thine abominations shall be in the midst of thee: and ye shall know that I am the Lord. 5 Thus saith the Lord God; An evil, an only evil, behold, is come. 6 An end is come, the end is come: it watcheth for thee; behold, it is come. 7 The morning is come unto thee, O thou that dwellest in the land: the time is come, the day of trouble is near, and not the sounding again of the mountains. 8 Now will I shortly pour out my fury upon thee, and accomplish mine anger upon thee: and I will judge thee according to thy ways, and will recompense thee for all thine abominations. 9 And mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity: I will recompense thee according to thy ways and thine abominations that are in the midst of thee; and ye shall know that I am the Lord that smiteth. 10 Behold the day, behold, it is come: the morning is gone forth; the rod hath blossomed, pride hath budded. 11 Violence is risen up into a rod of wickedness: none of them shall remain, nor of their multitude, nor of any of theirs: neither shall there be wailing for them. 12 The time is come, the day draweth near: let not the buyer rejoice, nor the seller mourn: for wrath is upon all the multitude thereof. 13 For the seller shall not return to that which is sold, although they were yet alive: for the vision is touching the whole multitude thereof, which shall not return; neither shall any strengthen himself in the iniquity of his life. 14 They have blown the trumpet, even to make all ready; but none goeth to the battle: for my wrath is upon all the multitude thereof. 15 The sword is without, and the pestilence and the famine within: he that is in the field shall die with the sword; and he that is in the city, famine and pestilence shall devour him.
We have here fair warning given of the destruction of the land of Israel, which was now hastening on apace. God, by the prophet, not only sends notice of it, but will have it inculcated in the same expressions, to show that the thing is certain, that it is near, that the prophet is himself affected with it and desires they should be so too, but finds them deaf, and stupid, and unaffected. When the town is on fire men do no seek for fine words and quaint expressions in which to give an account of it, but cry about the streets, with a loud and lamentable voice, "Fire! fire!" So the prophet here proclaims, An end! an end! it has come, it has come; behold, it has come. He that hath ears to hear let him hear.
I. An end has come, the end has come
(
II. An evil, an only evil, behold, has
come,
III. The time has come, the set
time, for the inflicting of this only evil and the making of
this full end; for to all God's purposes there is a
time, a proper time, and that prefixed, in which the purpose
shall have its accomplishment; particularly the time of reckoning
with wicked people, and rendering to them according to their
desserts, is fixed, the day of the revelation of the righteous
judgment of god; and he sees, whether we see it or no,
that his day is coming. This they are here told of again and
again (
IV. All this comes from God's wrath, not
allayed, as sometimes it has been, with mixtures of mercy. This is
the fountain from which all these calamities flow; and this is
the wormwood and the gall in the affliction and the
misery, which make it bitter indeed (
V. All this is the just punishment of their
sins, and it is what they have by their own folly brought upon
themselves. This is much insisted on here, that they might be
brought to justify God in all he had brought upon them. God never
sends his anger but in wisdom and justice; and therefore it
follows, "I will judge thee according to thy ways,
VI. There is no escape from these judgments
nor fence against them, for they shall be universal and shall bear
down all before them, without remedy. 1. Death in its various
shapes shall ride triumphantly, both in town and in country, both
within the city and without it,
16 But they that escape of them shall escape, and shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys, all of them mourning, every one for his iniquity. 17 All hands shall be feeble, and all knees shall be weak as water. 18 They shall also gird themselves with sackcloth, and horror shall cover them; and shame shall be upon all faces, and baldness upon all their heads. 19 They shall cast their silver in the streets, and their gold shall be removed: their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the Lord: they shall not satisfy their souls, neither fill their bowels: because it is the stumbling-block of their iniquity. 20 As for the beauty of his ornament, he set it in majesty: but they made the images of their abominations and of their detestable things therein: therefore have I set it far from them. 21 And I will give it into the hands of the strangers for a prey, and to the wicked of the earth for a spoil; and they shall pollute it. 22 My face will I turn also from them, and they shall pollute my secret place: for the robbers shall enter into it, and defile it.
We have attended the fate of those that are
cut off, and are now to attend the flight of those that have an
opportunity of escaping the danger; some of them shall
escape (
I. They shall have no comfort or
satisfaction in their own minds, but be in continual anguish and
terror; for, wherever they go, they carry about with them guilty
consciences, which make them a burden to themselves. 1. They shall
be always solitary and under prevailing melancholy; they shall not
be in the cities, or places of concourse, but all alone upon the
mountains, not caring for society, but shy of it, as being
ashamed of the low circumstances to which they are reduced. 2. They
shall be always sorrowful. Those have reason to be so that are
under the tokens of God's displeasure; and God can make those so
that have been most jovial and have set sorrow at defiance. Those
that once thought themselves as the lions of the mountains, so
daring were they, now become as the doves of the valleys, so
timid are they, and so dispirited, ready to flee when none
pursues and to tremble at the shaking of a leaf. They are all
of them mourning (not with a godly sorrow, but with the
sorrow of the world, which works death), every one for
his iniquity, that is, for those calamities which they now see
their iniquity has brought upon them, not only the iniquity of the
land, but their own: they shall then be brought to acknowledge what
they have each of them contributed to the national guilt. Note,
Sooner or later sin will have sorrow of one kind or other; and
those that will not repent of their iniquity may justly be left to
pine away in it; those that will not mourn for it as it is an
offence to God shall be made to mourn for it as it is a shame and
ruin to themselves, to mourn at the last, when the flesh and the
body are consumed, and to say, How have I hated instruction!
II. They shall have no benefit from their
wealth and riches, but shall be perfectly sick of them,
III. God's temple shall stand them in no
stead,
23 Make a chain: for the land is full of bloody crimes, and the city is full of violence. 24 Wherefore I will bring the worst of the heathen, and they shall possess their houses: I will also make the pomp of the strong to cease; and their holy places shall be defiled. 25 Destruction cometh; and they shall seek peace, and there shall be none. 26 Mischief shall come upon mischief, and rumour shall be upon rumour; then shall they seek a vision of the prophet; but the law shall perish from the priest, and counsel from the ancients. 27 The king shall mourn, and the prince shall be clothed with desolation, and the hands of the people of the land shall be troubled: I will do unto them after their way, and according to their deserts will I judge them; and they shall know that I am the Lord.
Here is, I. The prisoner arraigned: Make a chain, in which to drag the criminal to the bar, and set him before the tribunal of divine justice; let him stand in fetters (as a notorious malefactor), stand pinioned to receive his doom. Note, Those that break the bands of God's law asunder, and cast away those cords from them, will find themselves bound and held by the chains of his judgments, which they cannot break nor cast from them. The chain signified the siege of Jerusalem, or the slavery of those that were carried into captivity, or that they were all bound over to the righteous judgment of God, reserved in chains.
II. The indictment drawn up against the
prisoner: The land is full of bloody crimes, full of the
judgments of blood (so the word is), that is, of the guilt of
blood which they had shed under colour of justice and by forms of
law, with the solemnity of a judgment. The innocent blood which
Manasseh shed, probably thus shed, by the judgment of the
blood, was the measure-filling sin of Jerusalem,
III. Judgment given upon this indictment.
God will reckon with them not only for the profaning of his
sanctuary, but for the perverting of justice between man and man;
for, as holiness becomes his house, so the righteous Lord
loves righteousness and is the avenger of unrighteousness. Now
the judgment given is, 1. That since they had walked in the way of
the heathen, and done worse than they, God would bring the worst
of the heathen upon them to destroy them and lay them waste,
the most barbarous and outrageous, that have the least compassion
to mankind and the greatest antipathy to the Jews. Note, Of the
heathen some are worse than others, and God sometimes picks out the
worst to be a scourge to his own people, because he intends them
for the fire when the work is done. 2. That since they had filled
their houses with goods unjustly gotten, and used their pomp and
power for the crushing and oppressing of the weak, God would give
their houses to be possessed and all the furniture of them to be
enjoyed by strangers, and make the pomp of the strong to
cease, so that their great men should not dazzle the eyes of
the weak-sighted with their pomp, nor with their might at any time
prevail against right, as they had done. 3. That, since they had
defiled the holy places with their idolatries, God would
defile them with his judgments, since they had set up the images of
other gods in the temple, God would remove thence the tokens of the
presence of their own God. When the holy places are deserted by
their God they will soon be defiled by their enemies. 4. Since they
had followed one sin with another, God would pursue them with one
judgment upon another: "Destruction comes, utter destruction
(