Verse 1-2
Jeremiah 1:1-2. The words of
Jeremiah — That is, the sermons
or prophecies, the contents of
which he received from God, that
he might declare them unto the
people, and which are comprised
in this book under his name. See
on Isaiah 2:1. The son of
Hilkiah — Some have supposed
this to have been Hilkiah the
high-priest, by whom the book of
the law was found in the temple,
in the reign of Josiah; but for
this opinion there is no better
ground than his being of the
same name, which was not an
uncommon one among the Jews;
whereas, had he been in reality
the high-priest, he would
doubtless have been mentioned by
that distinguishing title, and
not put upon a level with the
priests of an ordinary and
inferior class. Besides this,
Hilkiah dwelt at Anathoth, which
was indeed one of the cities
allotted to the priests, but not
the place of residence of the
high-priest, who always lived at
Jerusalem. It may be observed
here, that Jeremiah, being of
the family of Aaron, would have
been a teacher of the people
even if he had not been called
to the extraordinary office of
prophesying. To whom the word of
the Lord came — Not only a
charge and commission to
prophesy, but also a revelation
of the things themselves which
he was to deliver; in the days
of Josiah — That young but good
king, who, in the twelfth year
of his reign, began a work of
reformation, applying himself
with all sincerity and diligence
to purge Judah and Jerusalem of
the groves, the images, and the
high places, 2 Chronicles 34:3.
Now the very next year was this
young prophet seasonably raised
up to assist and encourage the
young king in that good work.
And it might have been expected
that, by the joint efforts of
such a prince and such a
prophet, both young, and likely
to continue long to be useful,
such a complete reformation
would have been effected, as
would have prevented the ruin of
the church and state. But, alas!
it proved quite otherwise: and
their united labours, with
respect to the generality of
their countrymen, only served to
aggravate their guilt and
accelerate their destruction.
Verse 3
Jeremiah 1:3. It came also —
Namely, the word of the Lord, as
Jeremiah 1:2; in the days of
Jehoiakim — Called at first by
Josiah, Eliakim, 2 Kings 23:34.
It must be observed, that
Jehoahaz, who reigned before
him, (2 Kings 28:8,) and
Jehoiakim, who succeeded him,
are not mentioned here, because
each of them reigned only three
months, and could hardly be said
to be established in the
government. Unto the end of the
eleventh year of Zedekiah — The
meaning is, that he prophesied
not only during the reigns of
Josiah and Jehoiakim, but also
during the whole reign of
Zedekiah, which was eleven
years: unto the carrying away of
Jerusalem captive — That great
event of which he had so often
prophesied. He continued,
indeed, to prophesy after that,
(Jeremiah 40:1,) but the
computation of the time is here
made to end with that event,
because it was the
accomplishment of many of his
predictions: and from the
thirteenth year of Josiah to the
captivity was just forty years.
It is observed from Dr.
Lightfoot, that as Moses was
forty years a teacher of the
Israelites in the wilderness,
till they entered into their own
land; Jeremiah was so long a
teacher in their own land before
they were sent into the
wilderness of the heathen: and
he thinks that therefore a
special mark is set upon the
last forty years of the iniquity
of Judah, which Ezekiel bore
forty days, a day for a year,
because, during all that time,
they had Jeremiah prophesying
among them, which was a great
aggravation of their
impenitency.
Verse 4-5
Jeremiah 1:4-5. Then the word of
the Lord came unto me — With a
satisfying assurance to himself,
that it was the word of the
Lord, and not a delusion. Before
I formed thee in the belly —
That is, the womb. Having spoken
before on the time of his call,
he now speaks of the manner of
it. I knew thee — That is, I had
thee in my view, or approved
thee as a fit minister for this
work, in the same sense as it is
said, Acts 15:18, Known unto God
are all his works from the
foundation of the world; he
contemplated the plan of them,
and approved it in his mind,
before he created and brought
them into being. I sanctified
thee — I set thee apart in my
counsel for executing the office
of a prophet. We have examples
of a similar designation with
that mentioned here, in John the
Baptist and St. Paul, as the
reader will see if he consult
the texts referred to in the
margin. And ordained thee a
prophet unto the nations — He
speaks thus to Jeremiah, not to
the other prophets, because he
stood in need of greater
encouragement than they, both in
respect to the tenderness of his
years, and the difficulties
which he was to encounter. And
ordained thee a prophet to the
nations — To other nations
besides the Jews.
Verse 6
Jeremiah 1:6. Then said I, Ah,
Lord God, &c. — He modestly
excuses himself from a
consideration of the weight of
the work, and the tenderness of
his age, as in the next
expression. Behold, I cannot
speak; for I am a child — We
cannot infer from this, that
Jeremiah was within the years of
what is properly called
childhood. For he might call
himself a child by way of
extenuating his abilities; as
Solomon calls himself a little
child, 1 Kings 1:7, although at
that time he was married, and
must have been at least twenty
years of age. And the word
child, or youth, is elsewhere
used of those who were arrived
at the first years of manhood.
Verse 7-8
Jeremiah 1:7-8. But the Lord
said unto me, &c. — God refuses
to accept of his excuse, and
renews his commission to him to
execute the prophetic office.
Thus God refused to accept the
excuse of Moses, made on a like
occasion. See Exodus 6:30; and
Exodus 7:1-2. Thou shalt go to
all that I shall send thee —
This is not so much a command as
a promise: as much as to say, I
will enable thee,
notwithstanding thy youth, to go
with proper boldness to those to
whom I send thee, and to declare
my commands with that dignity
and precision wherewith they
ought to be uttered. Be not
afraid of their faces: for I am
with thee, &c. — The style of
God’s commission to his prophets
and messengers commonly runs in
these words, I am with thee,
(see the margin,) importing that
God, who sent them, would enable
them to discharge the office he
had committed to them, and would
give them strength
proportionable to the work in
which they engaged. To reprove
the faults of all persons, of
the high as well as the low, the
rich as well as the poor, with
that plainness and impartiality
which the prophets used,
required a more than ordinary
degree of courage, as well as of
prudence, for which cause the
promise of God’s presence with
them was particularly necessary,
to encourage them in the
discharge of their duty.
Verse 9-10
Jeremiah 1:9-10. Then the Lord
put forth his hand, and touched
my mouth — This appeared to the
prophet to be done in his
vision; whereby he was taught
that the divine help should go
along with him, that the gift of
utterance should be bestowed
upon him, and that he should be
able to declare the divine
commands in a proper spirit and
manner: compare Isaiah 6:7; and
Isaiah 51:16. Behold, I have put
my words in thy mouth — By the
seeing of this symbolical action
in his vision, and the hearing
of these words, Jeremiah could
not but be assured that he
should be able to speak in the
proper language of a prophet, or
with words becoming his office,
and that he should have that
firmness and boldness given him
which were necessary for the
purpose. Jeremiah does not
indeed equal Isaiah in eloquence
of speech, but he seems to have
been no way inferior to him in
firmness of mind. See, I have
this day set thee over the
nations — Namely, to speak to
them in my name, for this is all
that is meant here by being set
over them. To root out and to
pull down, &c. — In the style of
Scripture the prophets are said
to do what they declare shall be
done; and therefore Jeremiah is
here said to root out, &c.,
because he was authorized to
make known the purposes of God,
and because the events here
mentioned would follow in
consequence of his prophecies.
See Isaiah 6:9; and Bishop
Newton on the Prophecies, vol.
1.
Verse 11-12
Jeremiah 1:11-12. Moreover the
word of the Lord came unto me —
Probably at the same time, and
in the same vision, wherein he
was first appointed to his
office; saying, What seest thou
— Here, by symbolical
representations, the meaning of
which God immediately
interpreted, future things were
presented to his view. This
method of instruction or
information sinks deeper into
the mind, and leaves a more
lasting impression there, than
any mere words can do; and
therefore the prophets
frequently received
communications from God in this
way. And I said, I see a rod of
an almond-tree — Namely, which
had leaves, and possibly
blossoms on it, like Aaron’s
rod; otherwise the prophet could
not so readily have discerned of
what kind of wood it was. The
almond-tree is one of the first
that wakes and rises from its
winter repose, flowering, in the
warm southern countries, in the
month of January, and by March
bringing its fruits to maturity.
From this circumstance, which is
mentioned by Pliny, lib. 16.
cap. 42, it is supposed to have
received its name, שׁקד, shaked,
as being intent, and, as it
were, on the watch to seize the
first opportunity of emitting
its buds and blossoms: which is
the proper sense of the verb,
from which that noun is derived.
A branch of this tree,
therefore, with buds or leaves,
and blossoms upon it, was a
proper emblem to denote God’s
hastening the execution of the
predictions which he declared by
this prophet, who lived to see
most of his prophecies
fulfilled. There is also in the
original a remarkable
paranomasia, or affinity in
sound, between shaked, an
almond-tree, and shoked,
hastening, which makes the words
more striking than they can
possibly be in any translation.
For not only the nature of the
almond-tree, but the very sound
of the Hebrew word, which
signifies it, denoted God’s
hastening to fulfil the
prophecies which Jeremiah
uttered by his directions. Thou
hast well seen — Or, thou hast
seen and judged right. Hebrew,
הישׂבת לראות, Thou hast done
well to see, that is, in seeing
so. For I will hasten my word —
Literally, I will act like the
almond-tree respecting my word;
namely, my word of threatening,
against Judah and Jerusalem, to
perform it.
Verse 13
Jeremiah 1:13. I see a
seething-pot — Or, a pot
boiling. The steam of this
boiling pot represented God’s
judgments, which are often
compared to a fire, as the
afflictions of Israel were to a
smoking furnace. Genesis 15:17.
And the face thereof was toward
the north — The steam was
represented to the prophet as
raised by a fire, or driven by a
wind coming from the north. Thus
interpreted, the pot or caldron
denoted Judea or Jerusalem,
expressed by the same figure,
Ezekiel 11:3; Ezekiel 11:7;
Ezekiel 24:3. But the Hebrew
פניו מפני צפונה, seems to be
more exactly rendered by Blaney;
The face thereof is turned from
the north, or, as it is
expressed in the margin, from
the face of the north. For it
appears from the next verse,
that the evil was to come from
the north; and therefore the
steam, which was designed for an
emblem of that evil, must have
issued from that quarter.
According to this
interpretation, the pot denoted
the empire of the Chaldeans,
lying to the north of Judea, and
pouring forth its multitudes
like a thick vapour.
Verse 15-16
Jeremiah 1:15-16. For lo, I will
call — Or, I am upon calling,
or, about to call; all the
families of the kingdoms of the
north — By these seem to be
meant the different nations who
were subject to Nabopolassar and
Nebuchadnezzar, and who served
in their armies, such as the
Medes, Armenians, Chaldeans,
inhabitants of Mesopotamia, and
Syrians. The kings of Assyria
were formerly troublesome to the
Jews, chiefly under Ahaz and
Hezekiah; but they do not seem
to be spoken of here, but only
those people who, from the
thirteenth year of Josiah, when
Jeremiah had this vision,
grievously harassed Judea, until
the taking of Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar, to whom the
kings of the north were either
tributaries or auxiliaries. And
they shall set every one his
throne, &c. — To set up a throne
in, or over, any place, denotes
taking full possession of it, as
appears from Jeremiah 43:10;
Jeremiah 49:38 : but, by thrones
here, seats, pavilions, or tents
pitched, may be intended; and so
this prophecy was fulfilled when
the city was taken by
Nebuchadnezzar: see Jeremiah
39:3. And I will utter my
judgments against them — Namely,
against the Jews, for this is
spoken of them, and not of the
kings or people, mentioned in
the foregoing verse; touching
their wickedness — Then I will
no longer speak unto them by my
prophets, whose threatenings
they have disregarded; but the
judgments which I will bring
upon them shall declare their
wickedness, and the vengeance
due unto them for it.
Verse 17
Jeremiah 1:17. Thou therefore
gird up thy loins — Prepare to
do the work to which I call and
appoint thee. For, it being the
custom of the eastern people to
wear long garments, which they
girded about their loins when
any business required great
activity or expedition; by thus
speaking the Lord enjoins his
prophet to use all possible
vigour and intention of mind as
well as of body, that he might
execute, with diligence and
despatch, the office which God
had assigned him. And arise —
Another expression of the same
meaning. And speak all that I
command thee — Hebrew, shall
command thee. Be not dismayed at
their faces — Discover no fear,
and conceal no message; lest I
confound thee — The Hebrew verb
is the same in both parts of the
sentence, which may be literally
rendered thus: Be not confounded
at their faces, (namely, when
thou appearest in their
presence,)
lest I confound thee before
them. God exhorts him not to be
dismayed at the scoffs and ill
treatment he should meet with
from hardened sinners,
especially from those who
thought their power and
authority set them above
reproof, and would bear them out
in whatsoever they did: see
Ezekiel 11:6. He tells him it is
better to bear the reproaches of
men than the reproofs of God,
who would call him to a strict
account how he discharged his
duty.
Verse 18-19
Jeremiah 1:18-19. For I have
made thee this day a defenced
city — That is, from this day I
will so defend thee that they
shall be no more able to hurt
thee than they would be if thou
wast in a strongly-fortified and
impregnable city. And brazen
walls — Which cannot be broken
or battered down with any force.
Against the whole land, against
the kings, &c. — All its
inhabitants in general;
intimating that, though men of
all degrees should set
themselves against him, yet God
would support him against them
all, and would carry him through
his work, although his troubles
would not only be great, but
long, extended through several
kings’ reigns. And they shall
fight against thee — Shall
oppose thee, and manifest much
hostile hatred against thee; but
they shall not prevail — They
shall not be able, by all their
devices, to shorten thy days, or
to prevent thy executing the
charge given thee. For I am with
thee, to deliver thee — I will
show my power in protecting and
delivering thee out of all thy
troubles, when thy adversaries
shall become a prey to their
enemies. |