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<p>Here, 1. Jeremiah persists in his plain preaching; what he had many a time said, he still says (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.3" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.3">Jer. 38:3</a>): <i>This city shall be given into the hand of the king of Babylon</i>; though it hold out long, it will taken at last. Nor would he have so often repeated this unwelcome message but that he could put them in a certain way, though not to save the city, yet to save themselves; so that every man might have his own life given him for a prey if he would be advised, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.2" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.2">Jer. 38:2</a>. Let him not stay in the city, in hopes to defend that, for it will be to no purpose, but let him <i>go forth to the Chaldeans</i>, and throw himself upon their mercy, before things come to extremity, and then he <i>shall live</i>; they will not put him to the sword, but give him quarter (<i>satis est prostrasse leoni—it suffices the lion to lay his antagonist prostrate</i>) and he shall escape the <i>famine and pestilence</i>, which will be the death of multitudes within the city. Note, Those do better for themselves who patiently submit to the rebukes of Providence than those who contend with them. And, if we cannot have our liberty, we must reckon it a mercy to have our lives, and not foolishly throw them away upon a point of honour; they may be reserved for better times. 2. The princes persist in their malice against Jeremiah. He was faithful to his country and to his trust as a prophet, though he had suffered many a time for his faithfulness; and, though at this time he ate the kings bread, yet that did not stop his mouth. But his persecutors were still bitter against him, and complained that he abused the liberty he had of walking in the court of the prison; for, though he could not go to the temple to preach, yet he vented the same things in private conversation to those that came to visit him, and therefore (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.4" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.4">Jer. 38:4</a>) they represented him to the king as a dangerous man, disaffected to his country and to the government he lived under: <i>He seeks not the welfare of this people, but the hurt</i>—an unjust insinuation, for no man had laid out himself more for the good of Jerusalem than he had done. They represent his preaching as having a bad tendency. The design of it was plainly to bring men to repent and turn to God, which would have been as much as any thing a strengthening to the hands both the soldiery and of the burghers, and yet they represented it <i>as weakening their hands</i> and discouraging them; and, if it did this, it was their own fault. Note, It is common for wicked people to look upon Gods faithful ministers as their enemies, only because they show them what enemies they are to themselves while they continue impenitent. 3. Jeremiah hereupon, by the kings permission, is put into a dungeon, with a view to his destruction there. Zedekiah, though he felt a conviction that Jeremiah was a prophet, sent of God, had not courage to own it, but yielded to the violence of his persecutors (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.5" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.5">Jer. 38:5</a>): <i>He is in your hand</i>; and a worse sentence he could not have passed upon him. We found in Jehoiakims reign that the princes were better affected to the prophet than the king was (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.36.25" href="/passage/?search=Jer.36.25">Jer. 36:25</a>); but now they were more violent against him, a sign that they were ripening apace for ruin. Had it been in a cause that concerned his own honour or profit, he would have let them know that the king is he who can do what he pleases, whether they will or no; but in the cause of God and his prophet, which he was very cool in, he basely sneaks, and truckles to them: <i>The king is not he that can do any thing against you</i>. Note, Those will have a great deal to answer for who, though they have a secret kindness for good people, dare not own it in a time of need, nor will do what they might do to prevent mischief designed them. The princes, having this general warrant from the king, immediately put poor <i>Jeremiah into the dungeon of Malchiah, that was in the court of the prison</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.6" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.6">Jer. 38:6</a>), a deep dungeon, for they <i>let</i> him <i>down</i> into it <i>with cords</i>, and a dirty one, for <i>there was no water</i> in it, <i>but mire</i>; and he <i>sunk in the mire, up to the neck</i>, says Josephus. Those that put him here doubtless designed that he should die here, die for hunger, die for cold, and so die miserably, die obscurely, fearing, if they should put him to death openly, the people might be affected with what he would say and be incensed against them. Many of Gods faithful witnesses have thus been privately made away, and starved to death, in prisons, whose blood will be brought to account in the day of discovery. We are not here told what Jeremiah did in this distress, but he tells us himself (<a class="bibleref" title="Lam.3.55,Lam.3.57" href="/passage/?search=Lam.3.55,Lam.3.57"><span class="bibleref" title="Lam.3.55">Lam. 3:55</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Lam.3.57">57</span></a>), <i>I called upon thy name, O Lord! out of the low dungeon, and thou drewest near, saying, Fear not</i>. 4. Application is made to the king by an honest courtier, <i>Ebed-melech</i>, one of the gentlemen of the bed-chamber, in behalf of the poor sufferer. Though the princes carried on the matter as privately as they could, yet it came to the ear of this good man, who probably sought opportunities to do good. It may be he came to the knowledge of it by hearing Jeremiahs moans out of the dungeon, for it was in the kings house, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.7" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.7">Jer. 38:7</a>. <i>Ebed-melech</i> was an Ethiopian, a <i>stranger to the commonwealth of Israel</i>, and yet had in him more humanity, and more divinity too, than native Israelites had. Christ found more faith among Gentiles than among Jews. Ebed-melech lived in a wicked court and in a very corrupt degenerate age, and yet had a great sense both of equity and piety. God has his remnant in all places, among all sorts. There were <i>saints</i> even <i>in Caesars household</i>. The king was now <i>sitting in the gate of Benjamin</i>, to try causes and receive appeals and petitions, or perhaps holding a council of war there. Thither Ebed-melech went immediately to him, for the case would not admit delay; the prophet might have perished if he had trifled or put it off till he had an opportunity of speaking to the king in private. Not time must be lost when life is in danger, especially so valuable a life. He boldly asserts the Jeremiah had a great deal of wrong done him, and is not afraid to tell the king so, though they were princes that did it, though they were now present in court, and though they had the kings warrant for what they did. Whither should oppressed innocency flee for protection but to the throne, especially when great men are its oppressors? Ebed-melech appears truly brave in this matter. He does not mince the matter; though he had a place at court, which he would be in danger of losing for his plain dealing, yet he tells the king faithfully, let him take it as he will, <i>These men have done ill in all that they have done to Jeremiah</i>. They had dealt unjustly with him, for he had not deserved any punishment at all; and they had dealt barbarously with him, so as they used not to deal with the vilest malefactors. And they needed not to have put him to this miserable death; for, if they had let him alone where he was, he was <i>likely to die for hunger in the place where he was</i>, in the court of the prison to which he was confined, <i>for there was not more bread in the city</i>: the stores out of which he was to have his allowance (<a class="bibleref" title="Jer.37.21" href="/passage/?search=Jer.37.21">Jer. 37:21</a>) were in a manner spent. See how God can raise up friends for his people in distress where they little thought of them, and animate men for his service even beyond expectation. 5. Orders are immediately given for his release, and Ebed-melech takes care to see them executed. The king, who but now durst do nothing against the princes, had his heart wonderfully changed on a sudden, and will now have Jeremiah released in defiance of the princes, for therefore he orders no less than thirty men, and those of the lifeguard, to be employed in fetching him out of the dungeon, lest the princes should raise a party to oppose it, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.10" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.10">Jer. 38:10</a>. Let this encourage us to appear boldly for God—we may succeed better that we could have thought, for <i>the hearts of kings are in the hand of God</i>. Ebed-melech gained his point, and soon brought Jeremiah the good news; and it is observable how particularly the manner of his drawing him out of the dungeon is related (for <i>God is not unrighteous to forget</i> any <i>work or labour of love</i> which is shown to his people or ministers, no, nor any circumstance of it, <a class="bibleref" title="Heb.6.10" href="/passage/?search=Heb.6.10">Heb. 6:10</a>); special notice is taken of his great tenderness in providing old soft rags for Jeremiah to put under his arm-holes, to keep the cords wherewith he was to be drawn up from hurting him, his arm-holes being probably galled by the cords wherewith he was let down. Nor did he throw the rags down to him, lest they should be lost in the mire, but carefully let them down, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.11,Jer.38.12" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.11,Jer.38.12"><span class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.11">Jer. 38:11</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.12">12</span></a>. Note, Those that are in distress should not only be relieved, but relieved with compassion and marks of respect, all which shall be placed to account and abound to a good account in the day of recompence. See what a good use even old rotten rags may be put to, which therefore should not be made waste of, any more than broken meat: even in the kings house, and <i>under the treasury</i> too, these were carefully preserved for the use of the poor or sick. Jeremiah is brought up out of the dungeon, and is now where he was, <i>in the court of the prison</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.38.13" href="/passage/?search=Jer.38.13">Jer. 38:13</a>. Perhaps Ebed-melech could have made interest with the king to get him his discharge thence also, now that he had the kings ear; but he though him safer and better provided for there than he would be any where else. God can, when he pleases, make a prison to become a refuge and hiding-place to his people in distress and danger.</p>