720 lines
51 KiB
XML
720 lines
51 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Jer.x" n="x" next="Jer.xi" prev="Jer.ix" progress="31.28%" title="Chapter IX">
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<h2 id="Jer.x-p0.1">J E R E M I A H.</h2>
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<h3 id="Jer.x-p0.2">CHAP. IX.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Jer.x-p1" shownumber="no">In this chapter the prophet goes on faithfully to
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reprove sin and to threaten God's judgments for it, and yet
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bitterly to lament both, as one that neither rejoiced at iniquity
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nor was glad at calamities. I. He here expresses his great grief
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for the miseries of Judah and Jerusalem, and his detestation of
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their sins, which brought those miseries upon them, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.1-Jer.9.11" parsed="|Jer|9|1|9|11" passage="Jer 9:1-11">ver. 1-11</scripRef>. II. He justifies God in
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the greatness of the destruction brought upon them, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.9-Jer.9.16" parsed="|Jer|9|9|9|16" passage="Jer 9:9-16">ver. 9-16</scripRef>. III. He calls upon
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others to bewail the woeful case of Judah and Jerusalem, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.17-Jer.9.22" parsed="|Jer|9|17|9|22" passage="Jer 9:17-22">ver. 17-22</scripRef>. IV. He shows them the
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folly and vanity of trusting in their own strength or wisdom, or
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the privileges of their circumcision, or any thing but God only,
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<scripRef id="Jer.x-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.23-Jer.9.26" parsed="|Jer|9|23|9|26" passage="Jer 9:23-26">ver. 23-26</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Jer.x-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9" parsed="|Jer|9|0|0|0" passage="Jer 9" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Jer.x-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.1-Jer.9.11" parsed="|Jer|9|1|9|11" passage="Jer 9:1-11" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Jer.x-p1.7">
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<h4 id="Jer.x-p1.8">The Prophet's Lamentation; Wickedness of
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Judah. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p1.9">b. c.</span> 606.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Jer.x-p2" shownumber="no">1 Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a
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fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of
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the daughter of my people! 2 Oh that I had in the wilderness
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a lodging place of wayfaring men; that I might leave my people, and
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go from them! for they <i>be</i> all adulterers, an assembly of
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treacherous men. 3 And they bend their tongues <i>like</i>
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their bow <i>for</i> lies: but they are not valiant for the truth
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upon the earth; for they proceed from evil to evil, and they know
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not me, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p2.1">Lord</span>. 4
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Take ye heed every one of his neighbour, and trust ye not in any
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brother: for every brother will utterly supplant, and every
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neighbour will walk with slanders. 5 And they will deceive
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every one his neighbour, and will not speak the truth: they have
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taught their tongue to speak lies, <i>and</i> weary themselves to
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commit iniquity. 6 Thine habitation <i>is</i> in the midst
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of deceit; through deceit they refuse to know me, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p2.2">Lord</span>. 7 Therefore thus saith the
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<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p2.3">Lord</span> of hosts, Behold, I will melt
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them, and try them; for how shall I do for the daughter of my
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people? 8 Their tongue <i>is as</i> an arrow shot out; it
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speaketh deceit: <i>one</i> speaketh peaceably to his neighbour
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with his mouth, but in heart he layeth his wait. 9 Shall I
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not visit them for these <i>things?</i> saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p2.4">Lord</span>: shall not my soul be avenged on such a
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nation as this? 10 For the mountains will I take up a
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weeping and wailing, and for the habitations of the wilderness a
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lamentation, because they are burned up, so that none can pass
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through <i>them;</i> neither can <i>men</i> hear the voice of the
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cattle; both the fowl of the heavens and the beast are fled; they
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are gone. 11 And I will make Jerusalem heaps, <i>and</i> a
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den of dragons; and I will make the cities of Judah desolate,
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without an inhabitant.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p3" shownumber="no">The prophet, being commissioned both to
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foretel the destruction coming upon Judah and Jerusalem and to
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point out the sin for which that destruction was brought upon them,
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here, as elsewhere, speaks of both very feelingly: what he said of
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both came from the heart, and therefore one would have thought it
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would reach to the heart.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p4" shownumber="no">I. He abandons himself to sorrow in
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consideration of the calamitous condition of his people, which he
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sadly laments, a one that preferred Jerusalem before his chief joy
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and her grievances before his chief sorrows.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p5" shownumber="no">1. He laments the slaughter of the persons,
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the blood shed and the lives lost (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.1" parsed="|Jer|9|1|0|0" passage="Jer 9:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>): "<i>O that my head were
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waters,</i> quite melted and dissolved with grief, that so <i>my
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eyes</i> might be <i>fountains of tears,</i> weeping abundantly,
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continually, and without intermission, still sending forth fresh
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floods of tears as there still occur fresh occasions for them!" The
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same word in Hebrew signifies both <i>the eye</i> and <i>a
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fountain,</i> as if in this land of sorrows our eyes were designed
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rather for weeping than seeing. Jeremiah wept much, and yet wished
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he could weep more, that he might affect a stupid people and rouse
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them to a due sense of the hand of God gone out against them. Note,
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It becomes us, while we are here in this vale of tears, to conform
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to the temper of the climate and to sow in tears. <i>Blessed are
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those that mourn, for they shall be comforted</i> hereafter; but
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let them expect that while they are here the <i>clouds will still
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return after the rain.</i> While we find our hearts such fountains
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of sin, it is fit that our eyes should be fountains of tears. But
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Jeremiah's grief here is upon the public account: he would <i>weep
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day and night,</i> not so much for the death of his own near
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relations, but <i>for the slain of the daughter of his people,</i>
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the multitudes of his countrymen that fell by the sword of war.
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Note, When we hear of the numbers of the slain in great battles and
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sieges we ought to be much affected with the intelligence, and not
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to make a light matter of it; yea, though they be not of the
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daughter of our people, for, whatever people they are of, they are
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of the same human nature with us, and there are so many precious
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lives lost, as dear to them as ours to us, and so many precious
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souls gone into eternity.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p6" shownumber="no">2. He laments the desolations of the
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country. This he brings in (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.10" parsed="|Jer|9|10|0|0" passage="Jer 9:10"><i>v.</i>
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10</scripRef>), for impassioned mourners are not often very
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methodical in their discourses: "Not only for the towns and cities,
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but <i>for the mountains, will I take up a weeping and wailing"</i>
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(not barren mountains, but the fruitful hills with which Judea
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abounded), and for <i>the habitations of the wilderness,</i> or
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rather <i>the pastures of the plain,</i> that used to be <i>clothed
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with flocks</i> or <i>covered over with corn,</i> and a goodly
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sight it was; but now <i>they are burnt up</i> by the Chaldean army
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(which, according to the custom of war, destroyed to the custom of
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war, destroyed the forage and carried off all the cattle), so that
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no one dares to pass through them, for fear of meeting with some
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parties of the enemy, no one cares to pass through them, every
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thing looks so melancholy and frightful, no one has any business to
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pass through them, for they <i>hear not the voice of the cattle</i>
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there as usual, the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of the
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oxen, that grateful music to the owners; nay, <i>both the fowl of
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the heavens</i> and the <i>beasts have fled.</i> either frightened
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away by the rude noises and terrible fires which the enemies make,
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or forced away because there is no subsistence for them. Note, God
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has many ways of turning <i>a fruitful land into barrenness for the
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wickedness of those that dwell therein;</i> and the havoc war makes
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in a country cannot but be for a lamentation to all tender spirits,
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for it is a tragedy which destroys the stage it is acted on.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p7" shownumber="no">II. He abandons himself to solitude, in
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consideration of the scandalous character and conduct of his
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people. Though he dwells in Judah where God is known, in Salem
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where his tabernacle is, yet he is ready to cry out, <i>Woe is me
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that I sojourn in Mesech!</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.120.5" parsed="|Ps|120|5|0|0" passage="Ps 120:5">Ps. cxx.
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5</scripRef>. While all his neighbours are fleeing to the defenced
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cities, and Jerusalem especially, in dread of the enemies' rage
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(<scripRef id="Jer.x-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.4.5-Jer.4.6" parsed="|Jer|4|5|4|6" passage="Jer 4:5,6"><i>ch.</i> iv. 5, 6</scripRef>) he
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is contriving to retire into some desert, in detestation of his
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people's sin (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.2" parsed="|Jer|9|2|0|0" passage="Jer 9:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>):
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"<i>O that I had in the wilderness a lodging-place of wayfaring
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men,</i> such a lonely cottage to dwell in as they have in the
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deserts of Arabia, which are uninhabited, for travellers to repose
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themselves in, <i>that I might leave my people and go from
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them!</i>" Not only because of the ill usage they gave him (he
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would rather venture himself among the wild beasts of the desert
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than among such treacherous barbarous people), but principally
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because his <i>righteous soul was vexed from day to day,</i> as
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Lot's was in Sodom, with the <i>wickedness of their
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conversation,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p7.4" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.2.7-2Pet.2.8" parsed="|2Pet|2|7|2|8" passage="2Pe 2:7,8">2 Pet. ii. 7,
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8</scripRef>. This does not imply any intention or resolution that
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he had thus to retire. God had cut him out work among them, which
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he must not quit for his own ease. We must not <i>go out of the
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world,</i> bad as it is, before our time. If he could not reform
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them, he could bear a testimony against them; if he could not do
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good to many, yet he might to some. but it intimates the temptation
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he was in to leave them, involves a threatening that they should be
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deprived of his ministry, and especially expresses the holy
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indignation he had against their abominable wickedness, which
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continued notwithstanding all the pains he had taken with them to
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reclaim them. It made him even weary of his life to see them
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dishonouring God as they did and destroying themselves. Time was
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when the place which God had chosen to put his name there was the
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desire and delight of good men. David, in a wilderness, longed to
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be again in the courts of God's house; but now Jeremiah, in the
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courts of God's house (for there he was when he said this), wishes
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himself in a wilderness. Those have made themselves very miserable
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that have made God's people and ministers weary of them and willing
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to get from them. Now, to justify his willingness to leave them, he
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shows,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p8" shownumber="no">1. What he himself had observed among
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them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p9" shownumber="no">(1.) He would not think of leaving them
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because they were poor and in distress, but because they were
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wicked. [1.] They were filthy: <i>They are all adulterers,</i> that
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is, the generality of them are, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.5.8" parsed="|Jer|5|8|0|0" passage="Jer 5:8"><i>ch.</i> v. 8</scripRef>. They all either practised
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this sin or connived at those that did. Lewdness and uncleanness
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constituted that crying sin of Sodom at which righteous Lot was
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vexed in soul, and it is a sin that renders men loathsome in the
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eyes of God and all good men; it makes men an abomination. [2.]
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They were false. This is the sin that is most enlarged upon here.
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Those that had been unfaithful to their God were so to one another,
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and it was a part of their punishment as well as their sin, for
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even those that love to cheat, yet hate to be cheated.
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<i>First,</i> Go into their solemn meetings for the exercises of
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religion, for the administration of justice, or for commerce—to
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church, to court, or to the exchange—and they are <i>an assembly
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of treacherous men;</i> they are so by consent, they strengthen one
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another's hands in doing any thing that is perfidious. There they
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will cheat deliberately and industriously, with design, with a
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malicious design, for (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.3" parsed="|Jer|9|3|0|0" passage="Jer 9:3"><i>v.</i>
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3</scripRef>) <i>they bend their tongues, like their bow, for
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lies,</i> with a great deal of craft; their tongues are fitted for
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lying, as a bow that is bent is for shooting, and are as constantly
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used for that purpose. Their tongue turns as naturally to a lie as
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the bow to the strong. <i>But they are not valiant for the truth
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upon the earth.</i> Their tongues are like a bow strung, with which
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they might do good service if they would use the art and resolution
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which they are so much masters of in the cause of truth; but they
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will not do so. They appear not in defence of the truths of God,
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which were delivered to them by the prophets; but even those that
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could not deny them to be truths were content to see them run down.
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In the administration of justice they have not courage to stand by
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an honest cause that has truth on its side, if greatness and power
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be on the other side. Those that will be faithful to the truth must
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be valiant for it, and not be daunted by the opposition given to
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it, nor fear the face of man. <i>They are not valiant for the truth
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in the land,</i> the land which has truth for the glory of it.
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Truth has fallen in the land, and they dare not lend a hand to help
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it up, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.59.14-Isa.59.15" parsed="|Isa|59|14|59|15" passage="Isa 59:14,15">Isa. lix. 14,
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15</scripRef>. We must answer, another day, not only for our enmity
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in opposing truth, but for our cowardice in defending it.
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<i>Secondly,</i> Go into their families, and you will find they
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will cheat their own brethren (<i>every brother will utterly
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supplant</i>); they will trip up one another's heels if they can,
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for they lie at the catch to seek all advantages against those they
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hope to make a hand of. Jacob had his name from <i>supplanting;</i>
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it is the word here used; they followed him in his name, but not in
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his true character, <i>without guile.</i> So very false are they
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that you cannot <i>trust in a brother,</i> but must stand as much
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upon your guard as if you were dealing with a stranger, with a
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Canaanite that has <i>balances of deceit in his hand.</i> Things
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have come to an ill pass indeed when a man cannot put confidence in
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his own brother. <i>Thirdly,</i> Go into company and observe both
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their commerce and their conversation, and you will find there is
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nothing of sincerity or common honesty among them. <i>Nec hospes ab
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hospite tutus—The host and the guest are in danger from each
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other.</i> The best advice a wise man can give you is <i>to take
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heed every one of his neighbour,</i> nay, of his <i>friend</i> (so
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some read it), of him whom he has befriended and who pretends
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friendship to him. No man thinks himself bound to be either
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grateful or sincere. Take them in their conversation and <i>every
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neighbour will walk with slander;</i> they care not what ill they
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say one of another, though ever so false; that way that the slander
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goes they will go; they will <i>walk with</i> it. They will walk
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about from house to house too, carrying slanders along with them,
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all the ill-natured stories they can pick up or invent to make
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mischief. Take them in their trading and bargaining, and <i>they
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will deceive every one his neighbour,</i> will say any thing,
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though they know it to be false, for their own advantage. Nay, they
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will lie for lying sake, to keep their tongues in use to it, for
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<i>they will not speak the truth,</i> but will tell a deliberate
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lie and laugh at it when they have done.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p10" shownumber="no">(2.) That which aggravates the sin on this
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false and lying generation is, [1.] That they are ingenious to sin:
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<i>They have taught their tongue to speak lies,</i> implying that
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through the reluctances of natural conscience they found it
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difficult to bring themselves to it. Their tongue would have spoken
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truth, but they <i>taught it to speak lies,</i> and by degrees have
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made themselves masters of the art of lying, and have got such a
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habit of it that use has made it a second nature to them. They
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learnt it when they were young (for <i>the wicked are estranged
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from the womb, speaking lies,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.58.3" parsed="|Ps|58|3|0|0" passage="Ps 58:3">Ps.
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lviii. 3</scripRef>), and now they have grown dexterous at it. [2.]
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That they are industrious to sin: <i>They weary themselves to
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commit iniquity;</i> they put a force upon their consciences to
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bring themselves to it; they tire out their convictions by offering
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them continual violence, and they take a great deal of pains, till
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they have even spent themselves in bringing about their malicious
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designs. They are wearied with their sinful pursuits and yet not
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weary of them. The service of sin is a perfect drudgery; men run
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themselves out of breath in it, and put themselves to a great deal
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of toil to damn their own souls. [3.] That they grow worse and
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worse (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.3" parsed="|Jer|9|3|0|0" passage="Jer 9:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>): <i>They
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proceed from evil to evil,</i> from one sin to another, from one
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degree of sin to another. They began with less sins. <i>Nemo
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repente fit turpissimus—No one reaches the height of vice at
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once.</i> They began with equivocating and bantering, but at last
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came to downright lying. And they are now proceeding to greater
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sins yet, for <i>they know not me, saith the Lord;</i> and where
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men have no knowledge of God, or no consideration of what they have
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known of him, what good can be expected from them? Men's ignorance
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of God is the cause of all their ill conduct one towards
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another.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p11" shownumber="no">2. The prophet shows what God had informed
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him of their wickedness, and what he had determined against
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them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p12" shownumber="no">(1.) God had marked their sin. He could
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tell the prophet (and he speaks of it with compassion) what sort of
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people they were that he had to deal with. <i>I know thy works, and
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where thou dwellest,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.2.13" parsed="|Rev|2|13|0|0" passage="Re 2:13">Rev. ii.
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13</scripRef>. So here (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.6" parsed="|Jer|9|6|0|0" passage="Jer 9:6"><i>v.</i>
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6</scripRef>): "<i>Thy habitation is in the midst of deceit,</i>
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all about thee are addicted to it; therefore stand upon thy guard."
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If <i>all men are liars,</i> it concerns us to <i>beware of
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men,.</i> and to be <i>wise as serpents.</i> They are deceitful
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men; therefore there is little hope of thy doing any good among
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them; for, make things ever so plain, they have some trick or other
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wherewith to shuffle off their convictions. This charge is enlarged
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upon, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.8" parsed="|Jer|9|8|0|0" passage="Jer 9:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>. Their
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tongue was a <i>bow bent</i> (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.3" parsed="|Jer|9|3|0|0" passage="Jer 9:3"><i>v.</i>
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3</scripRef>), plotting and preparing mischief; here it is <i>an
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arrow shot out,</i> putting in execution what they had projected.
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It is as a <i>slaying arrow</i> (so some readings of the original
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have it); their tongue has been to many an instrument of death.
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They <i>speak peaceably to their neighbours,</i> against whom they
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are at the same time <i>lying in wait;</i> as Joab kissed Abner
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when he was about to kill him, and Cain, that he might not be
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suspected of any ill design, <i>talked with his brother,</i> freely
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and familiarly. Note, Fair words, when they are not attended with
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||
good intentions, are despicable, but, when they are intended as a
|
||
cloak and cover for wicked intentions they are abominable. While
|
||
they did all this injury to one another they put a great contempt
|
||
upon God: "Not only they <i>know not me,</i> but (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.6" parsed="|Jer|9|6|0|0" passage="Jer 9:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>) <i>through deceit,</i>
|
||
through the delusions of the false prophets, <i>they refuse to know
|
||
me;</i> they are so cheated into a good opinion of their own ways,
|
||
the ways of their own heart, that they desire not the knowledge of
|
||
my ways." Or, "They are so wedded to this sinful course which they
|
||
are in, and so bewitched with that, and its gains, that they will
|
||
by no means admit the <i>knowledge of God,</i> because that would
|
||
be a check upon them in their sins." This is the ruin of sinners:
|
||
they might be taught the good knowledge of the Lord and they will
|
||
not learn it; and where no knowledge of God is, what good can be
|
||
expected? <scripRef id="Jer.x-p12.6" osisRef="Bible:Hos.4.1" parsed="|Hos|4|1|0|0" passage="Ho 4:1">Hos. iv. 1</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p13" shownumber="no">(2.) He had marked them for ruin, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.7 Bible:Jer.9.9 Bible:Jer.9.11" parsed="|Jer|9|7|0|0;|Jer|9|9|0|0;|Jer|9|11|0|0" passage="Jer 9:7,9,11"><i>v.</i> 7, 9, 11</scripRef>. Those that
|
||
will not know God as their lawgiver shall be made to know him as
|
||
their judge. God determines here to bring his judgments upon them,
|
||
for the refining of some and the ruining of the rest. [1.] Some
|
||
shall be refined (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.7" parsed="|Jer|9|7|0|0" passage="Jer 9:7"><i>v.</i>
|
||
7</scripRef>): "Because they are thus corrupt, <i>behold I will
|
||
melt them and try them,</i> will bring them into trouble and see
|
||
what that will do towards bringing them to repentance, whether the
|
||
furnace of affliction will purify them from their dross, and
|
||
whether, when they are melted, they will be new-cast in a better
|
||
mould." He will make trial of less afflictions before he brings
|
||
upon them utter destruction; for he <i>desires not the death of
|
||
sinners.</i> They shall not be <i>rejected as reprobate silver</i>
|
||
till <i>the founder has melted in vain,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.6.29-Jer.6.30" parsed="|Jer|6|29|6|30" passage="Jer 6:29,30"><i>ch.</i> vi. 29, 30</scripRef>. <i>For how shall I
|
||
do for the daughter of my people?</i> He speaks as one consulting
|
||
with himself what to do with them that might be for the best, and
|
||
as one that could not find in his heart to cast them off and give
|
||
them up to ruin till he had first tried all means likely to bring
|
||
them to repentance. Or, "<i>How else shall I do for them?</i> They
|
||
have grown so very corrupt that there is no other way with them but
|
||
to put them into the furnace; what other course can I take with
|
||
them? <scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.4" osisRef="Bible:Isa.5.4-Isa.5.5" parsed="|Isa|5|4|5|5" passage="Isa 5:4,5">Isa. v. 4, 5</scripRef>. It is
|
||
<i>the daughter of my people,</i> and I must do something to
|
||
vindicate my own honour, which will be reflected upon if I connive
|
||
at their wickedness. I must do something to reduce and reform
|
||
them." A parent corrects his own children because they are his own.
|
||
Note, When God afflicts his people, it is with a gracious design to
|
||
mollify and reform them; it is but when need is and when he knows
|
||
it is the best method he can use. [2.] The rest shall be ruined
|
||
(<scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.9" parsed="|Jer|9|9|0|0" passage="Jer 9:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>): <i>Shall I
|
||
not visit for these things?</i> Fraud and falsehood are sins which
|
||
God hates and which he will reckon for. "<i>Shall not my soul be
|
||
avenged on such a nation as this,</i> that is so universally
|
||
corrupt, and, by its impudence in sin, even dares and defies divine
|
||
vengeance? The sentence is passed, the decree has gone forth
|
||
(<scripRef id="Jer.x-p13.6" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.11" parsed="|Jer|9|11|0|0" passage="Jer 9:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>): <i>I will
|
||
make Jerusalem heaps</i> of rubbish, and lay it in such ruins that
|
||
it shall be fit for nothing but to be <i>a den of dragons;</i> and
|
||
<i>the cities of Judah</i> shall be <i>a desolation.</i>" God makes
|
||
them so, for he gives the enemy warrant and power to do it: but why
|
||
is the holy city made a heap? The answer is ready, Because it has
|
||
become an unholy one?</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Jer.x-p13.7" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.12-Jer.9.22" parsed="|Jer|9|12|9|22" passage="Jer 9:12-22" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Jer.x-p13.8">
|
||
<h4 id="Jer.x-p13.9">Punishment Predicted. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p13.10">b. c.</span> 606.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Jer.x-p14" shownumber="no">12 Who <i>is</i> the wise man, that may
|
||
understand this? and <i>who is he</i> to whom the mouth of the
|
||
<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.1">Lord</span> hath spoken, that he may
|
||
declare it, for what the land perisheth <i>and</i> is burned up
|
||
like a wilderness, that none passeth through? 13 And the
|
||
<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.2">Lord</span> saith, Because they have
|
||
forsaken my law which I set before them, and have not obeyed my
|
||
voice, neither walked therein; 14 But have walked after the
|
||
imagination of their own heart, and after Baalim, which their
|
||
fathers taught them: 15 Therefore thus saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.3">Lord</span> of hosts, the God of Israel; Behold,
|
||
I will feed them, <i>even</i> this people, with wormwood, and give
|
||
them water of gall to drink. 16 I will scatter them also
|
||
among the heathen, whom neither they nor their fathers have known:
|
||
and I will send a sword after them, till I have consumed them.
|
||
17 Thus saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.4">Lord</span> of
|
||
hosts, Consider ye, and call for the mourning women, that they may
|
||
come; and send for cunning <i>women,</i> that they may come:
|
||
18 And let them make haste, and take up a wailing for us, that our
|
||
eyes may run down with tears, and our eyelids gush out with waters.
|
||
19 For a voice of wailing is heard out of Zion, How are we
|
||
spoiled! we are greatly confounded, because we have forsaken the
|
||
land, because our dwellings have cast <i>us</i> out. 20 Yet
|
||
hear the word of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.5">Lord</span>, O ye
|
||
women, and let your ear receive the word of his mouth, and teach
|
||
your daughters wailing, and every one her neighbour lamentation.
|
||
21 For death is come up into our windows, <i>and</i> is
|
||
entered into our palaces, to cut off the children from without,
|
||
<i>and</i> the young men from the streets. 22 Speak, Thus
|
||
saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p14.6">Lord</span>, Even the carcases of
|
||
men shall fall as dung upon the open field, and as the handful
|
||
after the harvestman, and none shall gather <i>them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p15" shownumber="no">Two things the prophet designs, in these
|
||
verses, with reference to the approaching destruction of Judah and
|
||
Jerusalem:—1. To convince people of the justice of God in it,
|
||
that they had by sin brought it upon themselves and that therefore
|
||
they had no reason to quarrel with God, who did them no wrong at
|
||
all, but a great deal of reason to fall out with their sins, which
|
||
did them all this mischief. 2. To affect people with the greatness
|
||
of the desolation that was coming, and the miserable effects of it,
|
||
that by a terrible prospect of it they might be awakened to
|
||
repentance and reformation, which was the only way to prevent it,
|
||
or, at least, mitigate their own share in it. This being
|
||
designed,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p16" shownumber="no">I. He calls for the thinking men, by them
|
||
to show people the equity of God's proceedings, though they seemed
|
||
harsh and severe (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.12" parsed="|Jer|9|12|0|0" passage="Jer 9:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>): "<i>Who,</i> where, <i>is the wise man,</i> or the
|
||
prophet, <i>to whom the mouth of the Lord hath spoken?</i> You
|
||
boast of your wisdom, and of the prophets you have among you;
|
||
produce me any one that has but the free use of human reason or any
|
||
acquaintance with divine revelation, and he will soon understand
|
||
this himself, and it will be so clear to him that he will be ready
|
||
to declare it to others, that there is a just ground of God's
|
||
controversy with this people." Do these wise men enquire, <i>For
|
||
what does the land perish?</i> What is the matter, that such a
|
||
change is made with this land? It used to be a land that God cared
|
||
for, and he had his eyes upon it for good (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.11.12" parsed="|Deut|11|12|0|0" passage="De 11:12">Deut. xi. 12</scripRef>), but it is now a land that he
|
||
has forsaken and that his face is against. It used to flourish as
|
||
the garden of the Lord and to be replenished with inhabitants; but
|
||
now it is burnt up like a wilderness, that <i>none passeth
|
||
through</i> it, much less cares to settle in it. It was supposed,
|
||
long ago, that it would be asked, when it came to this,
|
||
<i>Wherefore has the Lord done thus unto this land? What means the
|
||
heat of this great anger?</i> (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.29.24" parsed="|Deut|29|24|0|0" passage="De 29:24">Deut.
|
||
xxix. 24</scripRef>), to which question God here gives a full
|
||
answer, before which all flesh must be silent. He produces out of
|
||
the record,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p17" shownumber="no">1. The indictment preferred and proved
|
||
against them, upon which they had been found guilty, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.13-Jer.9.14" parsed="|Jer|9|13|9|14" passage="Jer 9:13,14"><i>v.</i> 13, 14</scripRef>. It is charged
|
||
upon them, and it cannot be denied, (1.) That they have revolted
|
||
from their allegiance to their rightful Sovereign.
|
||
<i>Therefore</i> God has <i>forsaken their land,</i> and justly,
|
||
because they have <i>forsaken his law,</i> which he had so plainly,
|
||
so fully, so frequently <i>set before them,</i> and had not
|
||
observed his orders, not <i>obeyed his voice,</i> nor <i>walked
|
||
in</i> the ways that he had appointed. Here their wickedness began,
|
||
in the omission of their duty to their God and a contempt of his
|
||
authority. But it did not end here. It is further charged upon
|
||
them, (2.) That they have entered themselves into the service of
|
||
pretenders and usurpers, have not only withdrawn themselves from
|
||
their obedience to their prince, but have taken up arms against
|
||
him. For, [1.] They have acted according to the dictates of their
|
||
own lusts, have set up their own will, the wills of the flesh, and
|
||
the carnal mind, in competition with, and contradiction to the will
|
||
of God: <i>They have walked after the imagination of their own
|
||
hearts;</i> they would do as they pleased, whatever God and
|
||
conscience said to the contrary. [2.] They have worshipped the
|
||
creatures of their own fancy, the work of their own hands,
|
||
according to the tradition received from their fathers: <i>They
|
||
have walked after Baalim:</i> the word is plural; they had many
|
||
Baals, Baal-peor and Baal-berith, the Baal of this place and the
|
||
Baal of the other place; for they had <i>lords many,</i> which
|
||
<i>their fathers taught them</i> to worship, but which the God of
|
||
their fathers had again and again forbidden. This was it for which
|
||
<i>the land perished.</i> The King of kings never makes war thus
|
||
upon his own subjects but when they treacherously depart from him
|
||
and rebel against him, and it has become necessary by this means to
|
||
chastise their rebellion and reduce them to their allegiance; and
|
||
they themselves shall at length acknowledge that he is just in all
|
||
that is brought upon them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p18" shownumber="no">2. The judgment given upon this indictment,
|
||
the sentence upon the convicted rebels, which must now be executed,
|
||
for it was righteous and nothing could be moved in arrest of it:
|
||
<i>The Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, hath said it</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Jer.x-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.15-Jer.9.16" parsed="|Jer|9|15|9|16" passage="Jer 9:15,16"><i>v.</i> 15, 16</scripRef>), and
|
||
who can reverse it? (1.) That all their comforts at home shall be
|
||
poisoned and embittered to them: <i>I will feed this people with
|
||
wormwood</i> (or rather with <i>wolf's-bane,</i> for it signifies a
|
||
herb that is not wholesome, as wormwood is though it be bitter, but
|
||
some herb that is both nauseous and noxious), <i>and</i> I will
|
||
<i>give them water of gall</i> (or <i>juice of hemlock</i> or some
|
||
other herb that is poisonous) <i>to drink.</i> Every thing about
|
||
them, till it comes to their very meat and drink, shall be a terror
|
||
and torment to them. God will <i>curse their blessings,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Jer.x-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.2" parsed="|Mal|2|2|0|0" passage="Mal 2:2">Mal. ii. 2</scripRef>. (2.) That their
|
||
dispersion abroad shall be their destruction (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p18.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.16" parsed="|Jer|9|16|0|0" passage="Jer 9:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>): <i>I will scatter them among
|
||
the heathen.</i> They were corrupted and debauched by their
|
||
intimacy with the heathen, with whom they <i>mingled</i> and
|
||
<i>learned their works;</i> and now they shall lose themselves,
|
||
where they lost their virtue, <i>among the heathen.</i> They set up
|
||
gods which <i>neither they nor their fathers had known,</i> strange
|
||
gods, new gods (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p18.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.17" parsed="|Deut|32|17|0|0" passage="De 32:17">Deut. xxxii.
|
||
17</scripRef>); and now God will put them among neighbours whom
|
||
<i>neither they nor their fathers have known,</i> whom they can
|
||
claim no acquaintance with, and therefore can expect no favour
|
||
from. And yet, though they are scattered so as that they will not
|
||
know where to find one another. God will know where to find them
|
||
all out (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p18.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.21.8" parsed="|Ps|21|8|0|0" passage="Ps 21:8">Ps. xxi. 8</scripRef>) with
|
||
that evil which still pursues impenitent sinners: <i>I will send a
|
||
sword after them,</i> some killing judgment or other, <i>till I
|
||
have consumed them;</i> for when God judges he will overcome, when
|
||
he pursues he will overtake. And now we see for what the land
|
||
perishes; all this desolation is the desert of their deeds and the
|
||
performance of God's words.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p19" shownumber="no">II. He calls for the mourning women, and
|
||
engages them, with the arts they practise to affect people and move
|
||
their passions, to lament these sad calamities that had come or
|
||
were coming upon them, that the nation might be alarmed to prepare
|
||
for them: <i>The Lord of hosts</i> himself <i>says, Call for the
|
||
mourning women, that they may come,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.17" parsed="|Jer|9|17|0|0" passage="Jer 9:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. the scope of this is to show
|
||
how very woeful and lamentable the condition of this people was
|
||
likely to be. 1. Here is work for the counterfeit mourners: <i>Send
|
||
for cunning women,</i> that know how to compose mournful ditties,
|
||
or at least to sing them in mournful tunes and accents, and
|
||
therefore are made use of at funerals to supply the want of true
|
||
mourners. Let these <i>take up a wailing</i> for us, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.18" parsed="|Jer|9|18|0|0" passage="Jer 9:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>. The deaths and funerals
|
||
were so many that people wept for them till they <i>had no power to
|
||
weep,</i> as those, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.30.4" parsed="|1Sam|30|4|0|0" passage="1Sa 30:4">1 Sam. xxx.
|
||
4</scripRef>. Let those therefore do it now whose trade it is. Or,
|
||
rather, it intimates the extreme sottishness and stupidity of the
|
||
people, that laid not to heart the judgments they were under, nor,
|
||
even when there was so much blood shed, could find in their hearts
|
||
to shed a tear. <i>They cry not when God binds them,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.36.13" parsed="|Job|36|13|0|0" passage="Job 36:13">Job xxxvi. 13</scripRef>. God sent his mourning
|
||
prophets to them, to call them to weeping and mourning, but his
|
||
word in their mouths did not work upon their faith; rather
|
||
therefore than they shall go laughing to their ruin, let the
|
||
mourning women come, and try to work upon their fancy, <i>that
|
||
their eyes may</i> at length <i>run down with tears, and their
|
||
eyelids gush out with waters.</i> First or last, sinners must be
|
||
weepers. 2. Here is work for the real mourners. (1.) There is that
|
||
which is a lamentation. The present scene is very tragical
|
||
(<scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.19" parsed="|Jer|9|19|0|0" passage="Jer 9:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>): <i>A voice
|
||
of wailing is heard out of Zion.</i> Some make this to be the song
|
||
of the mourning women: it is rather an echo to it, returned by
|
||
those whose affections were moved by their wailings. In Zion the
|
||
voice of joy and praise used to be heard, while the people kept
|
||
closely to God. But sin has altered the note; it is now the
|
||
<i>voice of lamentation.</i> It should seem to be the voice of
|
||
those who fled from all parts of the country to the castle of Zion
|
||
for protection. Instead of rejoicing that they had got safely
|
||
thither, they lamented that they were forced to seek for shelter
|
||
there: "<i>How are we spoiled!</i> How are we stripped of all our
|
||
possessions! <i>We are greatly confounded,</i> ashamed of ourselves
|
||
and our poverty;" for that is it that they complain of, that is it
|
||
that they blush at the thoughts of, rather than of their sin: <i>We
|
||
are confounded</i> because <i>we have forsaken the land</i> (forced
|
||
so to do by the enemy), not because we <i>have</i> forsaken the
|
||
Lord, being drawn aside of <i>our own lust and enticed—because our
|
||
dwellings have cast us out,</i> not because our God has cast us
|
||
off. Thus unhumbled hearts lament their calamity, but not their
|
||
iniquity, the procuring cause of it. (2.) There is more still to
|
||
come which shall be for a lamentation. Things are bad, but they are
|
||
likely to be worse. Those whose land has <i>spued them out</i> (as
|
||
it did their predecessors the Canaanites, and justly, because they
|
||
trod in their steps, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.6" osisRef="Bible:Lev.18.28" parsed="|Lev|18|28|0|0" passage="Le 18:28">Lev. xviii.
|
||
28</scripRef>) complain that they are driven into the city, but,
|
||
after a while, those of the city, and they with them, shall be
|
||
forced thence too: <i>Yet hear the word of the Lord;</i> he has
|
||
something more to say to you (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.7" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.20" parsed="|Jer|9|20|0|0" passage="Jer 9:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>); let <i>the women</i> hear it,
|
||
whose tender spirits are apt to receive the impressions of grief
|
||
and fear, for the men will not heed it, will not give it a patient
|
||
hearing. The prophets will be glad to preach to a congregation of
|
||
women that <i>tremble at God's word. Let your ear receive the word
|
||
of God's mouth,</i> and bid it welcome, though it be a word of
|
||
terror. Let the women <i>teach their daughters wailing;</i> this
|
||
intimates that the trouble shall last long, grief shall be entailed
|
||
upon the generation to come. Young people are apt to love mirth,
|
||
and expect mirth, and are disposed to be gay and airy; but let the
|
||
elder women teach the younger to be serious, tell them what a vale
|
||
of tears they must expect to find this world, and train them up
|
||
among the mourners in Zion, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.8" osisRef="Bible:Titus.2.4-Titus.2.5" parsed="|Titus|2|4|2|5" passage="Tit 2:4,5">Tit. ii.
|
||
4, 5</scripRef>. Let <i>every one teach her neighbour
|
||
lamentation;</i> this intimates that the trouble shall spread far,
|
||
shall go from house to house. People shall not need to sympathize
|
||
with their friends; they shall all have cause enough to mourn for
|
||
themselves. Note, Those that are themselves affected with the
|
||
terrors of the Lord should endeavour to affect others with them.
|
||
The judgment here threatened is made to look terrible. [1.]
|
||
Multitudes shall be slain, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.9" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.21" parsed="|Jer|9|21|0|0" passage="Jer 9:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>. Death shall ride in triumph, and there shall be no
|
||
escaping his arrests when he comes with commission, neither within
|
||
doors nor without. Not within doors, for let the doors be shut ever
|
||
so fast, let them be ever so firmly locked and bolted, <i>death
|
||
comes up into our windows,</i> like a thief in the night; it steals
|
||
upon us ere we are aware. Nor does it thus boldly attack the
|
||
cottages only, but it has <i>entered into our palaces,</i> the
|
||
palaces of our princes and great men, though ever so stately, ever
|
||
so strongly built and guarded. Note, No palaces can keep out death.
|
||
Nor are those more safe that are abroad; death <i>cuts off</i> even
|
||
<i>the children from without and the young men from the
|
||
streets.</i> The children who might have been spared by the enemy
|
||
in pity, because they had never been hurtful to them, and the young
|
||
men who might have been spared in policy, because capable of being
|
||
serviceable to them, shall fall together by the sword. It is usual
|
||
now, even in the severest military executions, to put none to the
|
||
|
||
sword but those that are found in arms; but then
|
||
even the boys and girls playing in the streets were sacrificed to
|
||
the fury of the conqueror. [2.] Those that are slain shall be left
|
||
unburied (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.10" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.22" parsed="|Jer|9|22|0|0" passage="Jer 9:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>Speak, Thus saith the Lord</i> (for the confirmation and
|
||
aggravation of what was before said), <i>Even the carcases of men
|
||
shall fall as dung,</i> neglected, and left to be offensive to the
|
||
smell, as dung is. Common humanity obliges the survivors to bury
|
||
the dead, even for their own sake; but here such numbers shall be
|
||
slain, and those so dispersed all the country over, that it shall
|
||
be an endless thing to bury them all, nor shall there be hands
|
||
enough to do it, nor shall the conquerors permit it, and those that
|
||
should do it shall be overwhelmed with grief, so that they shall
|
||
have no heart to do it. The dead bodies even of the fairest and
|
||
strongest, when they have lain awhile, become dung, such vile
|
||
bodies have we. And here such multitudes shall fall that their
|
||
bodies shall lie as thick as heaps of dung <i>in the furrows of the
|
||
field,</i> and no more notice shall be taken of them than of the
|
||
<i>handfuls</i> which <i>the harvestman</i> drops for the gleaners,
|
||
for <i>none shall gather them,</i> but they shall remain in sight,
|
||
monuments of divine vengeance, that the eye of the impenitent
|
||
survivors may affect their heart. <i>Slay them not,</i> bury them
|
||
not, <i>lest my people forget,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p19.11" osisRef="Bible:Ps.59.11" parsed="|Ps|59|11|0|0" passage="Ps 59:11">Ps.
|
||
lix. 11</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Jer.x-p19.12" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.23-Jer.9.26" parsed="|Jer|9|23|9|26" passage="Jer 9:23-26" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Jer.x-p19.13">
|
||
<h4 id="Jer.x-p19.14">Punishment Predicted. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p19.15">b. c.</span> 606.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Jer.x-p20" shownumber="no">23 Thus saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p20.1">Lord</span>, Let not the wise <i>man</i> glory in his
|
||
wisdom, neither let the mighty <i>man</i> glory in his might, let
|
||
not the rich <i>man</i> glory in his riches: 24 But let him
|
||
that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me,
|
||
that I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p20.2">Lord</span> which
|
||
exercise lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the earth:
|
||
for in these <i>things</i> I delight, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p20.3">Lord</span>. 25 Behold, the days come, saith the
|
||
<span class="smallcaps" id="Jer.x-p20.4">Lord</span>, that I will punish all <i>them
|
||
which are</i> circumcised with the uncircumcised; 26 Egypt,
|
||
and Judah, and Edom, and the children of Ammon, and Moab, and all
|
||
<i>that are</i> in the utmost corners, that dwell in the
|
||
wilderness: for all <i>these</i> nations <i>are</i> uncircumcised,
|
||
and all the house of Israel <i>are</i> uncircumcised in the
|
||
heart.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p21" shownumber="no">The prophet had been endeavouring to
|
||
possess this people with a holy fear of God and his judgments, to
|
||
convince them both of sin and wrath; but still they had recourse to
|
||
some sorry subterfuge or other, under which to shelter themselves
|
||
from the conviction and with which to excuse themselves in the
|
||
obstinacy and carelessness. He therefore sets himself here to drive
|
||
them from these refuges of lies and to show them the insufficiency
|
||
of them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p22" shownumber="no">I. When they were told how inevitable the
|
||
judgment would be they pleaded the defence of their politics and
|
||
powers, which, with the help of their wealth and treasure, they
|
||
thought made their city impregnable. In answer to this he shows
|
||
them the folly of trusting to and boasting of all these stays,
|
||
while they have not a God in covenant to stay themselves upon,
|
||
<scripRef id="Jer.x-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.23-Jer.9.24" parsed="|Jer|9|23|9|24" passage="Jer 9:23,24"><i>v.</i> 23, 24</scripRef>. Here
|
||
he shows, 1. What we may not depend upon in a day of distress:
|
||
<i>Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom,</i> as if with the
|
||
help of that he could outwit or countermine the enemy, or in the
|
||
greatest extremity find out some evasion or other; for a man's
|
||
wisdom may fail him when he needs it most, and he may fail him when
|
||
he needs it most, and he may be taken in his own craftiness.
|
||
Ahithophel was befooled, and counsellors are often <i>led away
|
||
spoiled.</i> But, if a man's policies fail him, yet surely he may
|
||
gain his point by might and dint of courage. No: <i>Let not the
|
||
strong man glory in his strength,</i> for the battle is not always
|
||
to the strong. David the stripling proves too hard for Goliath the
|
||
giant. All human force is nothing without God, worse than nothing
|
||
against him. But may not the <i>rich man's wealth be his strong
|
||
city?</i> (money answers all things) No: <i>Let not the rich man
|
||
glory in his riches,</i> for they may prove so far from sheltering
|
||
him that they may expose him and make him the fairer mark. Let not
|
||
the people boast of the <i>wise men, and mighty men, and rich
|
||
men</i> that they have among them, as if they could make their part
|
||
good against the Chaldeans because they have wise men to advise
|
||
concerning the war, mighty men to fight their battles, and rich men
|
||
to bear the charges of the war. Let not particular persons think to
|
||
escape the common calamity by their wisdom, might, or money; for
|
||
all these will prove but <i>vain things for safety.</i> 2. He shows
|
||
what we may depend upon in a day of distress. (1.) Our only comfort
|
||
in trouble will be that we have done our duty. Those that
|
||
<i>refused to know God</i> (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.6" parsed="|Jer|9|6|0|0" passage="Jer 9:6"><i>v.</i>
|
||
6</scripRef>) will boast in vain of their wisdom and wealth; but
|
||
those that <i>know God,</i> intelligently, that <i>understand</i>
|
||
aright <i>that he is the Lord,</i> that have not only right
|
||
apprehensions concerning his nature, and attributes, and relations
|
||
to man, but receive and retain the impressions of them, may
|
||
<i>glory in this</i> it will be their rejoicing in the day of evil.
|
||
(2.) Our only confidence in trouble will be that, having through
|
||
grace in some measure done our duty, we shall find God a God
|
||
all-sufficient to us. We may <i>glory in this,</i> that, wherever
|
||
we are, we have an acquaintance with an interest in a God that
|
||
<i>exercises lovingkindness, and judgment, and righteousness in the
|
||
earth,</i> that is not only just to all his creatures and will do
|
||
no wrong to any of them, but kind to all his children and will
|
||
protect them and provide for them. <i>For in these things I
|
||
delight.</i> God delights to show kindness and to execute judgment
|
||
himself, and is pleased with those who herein are <i>followers of
|
||
him as dear children.</i> Those that have such knowledge of the
|
||
glory of God as to be changed into the same image, and to partake
|
||
of his holiness, find it to be their perfection and glory; and the
|
||
God they thus faithfully conform to they may cheerfully confide in,
|
||
in their greatest straits. But the prophet intimates that the
|
||
generality of this people took no care about this. Their wisdom,
|
||
and might, and riches, were their joy and hope, which would end in
|
||
grief and despair. But those few among them that had the knowledge
|
||
of God might please themselves with it, and boast themselves of it;
|
||
it would stand them in better stead than <i>thousands of gold and
|
||
silver.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Jer.x-p23" shownumber="no">II. When they were told how provoking their
|
||
sins were to God they vainly pleaded the covenant of their
|
||
circumcision. They were undoubtedly the people of God; as they had
|
||
the temple of the Lord in their city, so they had the mark of his
|
||
children in their flesh. "It is true that Chaldean army has laid
|
||
such and such nations waste, because they were uncircumcised, and
|
||
therefore not under the protection of the divine providence, as we
|
||
are." To this the prophet answers, That the days of visitation were
|
||
now at hand, in which God would punish all wicked people, without
|
||
making any distinction between the circumcised and uncircumcised,
|
||
<scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.25-Jer.9.26" parsed="|Jer|9|25|9|26" passage="Jer 9:25,26"><i>v.</i> 25, 26</scripRef>. They
|
||
had by sin profaned the crown of their peculiarity, and lived in
|
||
common with the uncircumcised nations, and so had forfeited the
|
||
benefit of that peculiarity and must expect to fare never the
|
||
better for it. God will <i>punish the circumcised with the
|
||
uncircumcised.</i> As the ignorance of the uncircumcised shall not
|
||
excuse their wickedness, so neither shall the privileges of the
|
||
circumcised excuse theirs, but they shall be punished together.
|
||
Note, The Judge of all the earth is impartial, and none shall fare
|
||
the better at his bar for any external advantages, but he will
|
||
render to every man, circumcised or uncircumcised, according to his
|
||
works. The condemnation of impenitent sinners that are baptized
|
||
will be as sure as, nay, and more severe than, that of impenitent
|
||
sinners that are unbaptized. It would affect one to find here Judah
|
||
industriously put between Egypt and Edom, as standing upon a level
|
||
with them and under the same doom, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.26" parsed="|Jer|9|26|0|0" passage="Jer 9:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>. These nations were forbidden a
|
||
share in the Jews' privileges (<scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.23.3" parsed="|Deut|23|3|0|0" passage="De 23:3">Deut.
|
||
xxiii. 3</scripRef>); but the Jews are here told that they shall
|
||
share in their punishments. Those <i>in the utmost corners, that
|
||
dwell in the wilderness,</i> are supposed to be the Kedarenes and
|
||
those of the kingdoms of Hazor, as appears by comparing <scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.49.28-Jer.49.32" parsed="|Jer|49|28|49|32" passage="Jer 49:28-32"><i>ch.</i> xlix. 28-32</scripRef>. Some
|
||
think they are so called because they dwelt as it were in a corner
|
||
of the world, others because they had <i>the hair of their head
|
||
polled into corners.</i> However that was, they were of those
|
||
nations that were uncircumcised in flesh, and the Jews are ranked
|
||
with them and are as near to ruin for their sins as they; for
|
||
<i>all the house of Israel are uncircumcised in the heart:</i> they
|
||
have the sign, but not the thing signified, <scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.4.4" parsed="|Jer|4|4|0|0" passage="Jer 4:4"><i>ch.</i> iv. 4</scripRef>. They are heathens in their
|
||
hearts, strangers to God, and enemies in their minds by wicked
|
||
works. Their hearts are disposed to idols, as the hearts of the
|
||
uncircumcised Gentiles are. Note, The seals of the covenant, though
|
||
they dignify us, and lay us under obligations, will not save us,
|
||
unless the temper of our minds and the tenour of our lives agree
|
||
with the covenant. That only is circumcision, and that baptism,
|
||
which is <i>of the heart,</i> <scripRef id="Jer.x-p23.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.28-Rom.2.29" parsed="|Rom|2|28|2|29" passage="Ro 2:28,29">Rom.
|
||
ii. 28, 29</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |