Verse 1
Jeremiah 2:1. Moreover, the word
of the Lord came unto me — The
discourse begun here is
continued to the end of the
fifth verse of the next chapter.
In it God professes to retain
the same kind and merciful
disposition toward his people
which he had manifested in their
earlier days. He expostulates
with them on their ungrateful
returns for his past goodness,
and shows that it was not want
of love in him, but their own
extreme and unparalleled
wickedness, which had already
subjected, and would still
subject them, to calamities and
misery. He concludes with a
pathetic address, exhorting them
to return to him, with an
implied promise of acceptance;
and laments the necessity he was
under, through their continued
obstinacy, of giving them
further proofs of his
displeasure. See Blaney.
Verse 2-3
Jeremiah 2:2-3. Go and cry in
the ears of Jerusalem — In the
most public parts of the city,
that all may hear; saying, Thus
saith the Lord — I deliver his
message, and not my own. I come
to you with a commission from
God, and speak in God’s name. I
remember thee, &c. — I remember
my first kindness to thee, when
I delivered thee out of Egypt;
(see Hosea 2:15;) and espoused
thee to myself, to be my own
peculiar people. The covenant
which God made with the
Israelites, at mount Sinai, is
commonly represented under the
metaphor of a marriage contract.
Upon this account idolatry is
represented as spiritual
adultery, because it is the same
degree of unfaithfulness to God
which an adulteress is guilty of
in respect of her husband. When
thou wentest after me in the
wilderness — Out of that love
and affection that thou didst
manifest to me in following my
conduct. Or rather, when thou
wast led by me through the
wilderness, and I took such care
both to protect and provide for
thee, and that by a train of
miracles; in a land that was not
sown — Or, as Houbigant reads
it, in an uncultivated land.
Israel was holiness to the Lord
— A people dedicated to God; and
the first-fruits of his increase
— Or, as the first-fruits. As
the first-fruits are holy to
God, so was Israel. All that
devour, or rather, devoured, him
— For it refers to the time
past, not to the future; and so
the following words: all that
were injurious to him; shall,
or, did, offend — Were obnoxious
and liable to punishment, as if
they had devoured holy things,
Proverbs 20:25. Evil shall come,
rather, came, upon them — Some
evil was inflicted on them from
the Lord, who was always wont to
stand forth for the vindication
of his people; as upon the
Egyptians, Amalekites, Sihon, Og,
the Midianites, Canaanites, and
others, as the four last books
of Moses abundantly testify.
Verses 4-6
Jeremiah 2:4-6. Hear, O house of
Jacob, &c. — The prophet here
directs his discourse to the
twelve tribes, as he does
afterward, Jeremiah 3:14, &c.
For the captivity of the ten
tribes was not so total but that
there were some Israelites still
remaining in the land among the
Assyrian colonists. What
iniquity have your fathers found
in me? — That is, what injustice
or unfaithfulness in not
performing my part of the Sinai
covenant? That they are gone far
from me — Far from the love and
fear of me, and from obedience
to my laws; far from my worship
and service; and have walked
after vanity — Have followed
after vain idols, incapable of
affording them either protection
or help. And are become vain —
In their imaginations, Romans
1:21-22; fools, as senseless as
the stocks or stones, of which
they made their idols. Neither
said they, Where is the Lord? —
They made no inquiry after him,
took no thought about their duty
to him, nor expressed any desire
to recover his favour; that
brought us up out of the land of
Egypt? — Working such a
deliverance for us as had never
been wrought for any people.
That led us through the
wilderness — Conducting and
sustaining our whole nation in
that barren desert for the space
of forty years, by almost
incessant miracles; through a
land of deserts and pits —
Through desolate and dangerous
places; through a land of
drought — Where we had no water
but by a miracle; and of the
shadow of death — Houbigant
renders it, where death
threatened us. A barren and
deadly land, where no man could
live; bringing forth nothing
that could support life, and
therefore where nothing but
death could be expected; and,
besides, possessed by great
numbers of venomous and
destructive creatures, such as
scorpions, serpents, &c., and
where we were exposed to the
attacks of many enemies. A land
that no man passed through — As
having in it no accommodation
for travellers, much less for
habitation.
Verse 7-8
Jeremiah 2:7-8. And I brought
you into a plentiful country —
Hebrew, into the land of Carmel.
Carmel was so fertile a part of
Judea, that the word from thence
came to be used to express a
fruitful place in general.
Canaan was as one great,
fruitful field, Deuteronomy 8:7.
When ye entered, ye defiled my
land — By your sins, especially
by your idolatries, Psalms
106:38; that sin being greatly
aggravated by this circumstance,
that the people thereby
renounced God’s authority in
that very land into which he had
brought them, by a train of
unparalleled wonders, and the
propriety of which he had
reserved to himself, though he
had graciously bestowed upon
them the use of it: see
Leviticus 25:23. The priests
said not, Where is the Lord? —
That race of men, whom I exalted
to the honourable office of
ministering to me in holy
things, neither inquired after
me, nor cultivated any
acquaintance or intercourse with
me. And they that handle the law
knew me not — They, whom I
appointed to the important
office of instructing others in
the knowledge of me and their
duty, (see Malachi 2:6-7,) were
ignorant or regardless of it
themselves. And this was the
principal cause of that
degeneracy of manners which
prevailed among the people. The
pastors also transgressed
against me — By pastors here,
distinguished from the priests
and prophets, are meant the
kings, princes, and chiefs of
the nation; for the word pastor
is used in the prophets for a
magistrate, as well as for a
teacher of the people, and
ecclesiastical governor. And the
prophets prophesied by Baal —
Gave forth prophecies in the
name of Baal, with a view to
recommend him as a god. Or, they
that should have taught the
people the true worship of God,
were themselves worshippers of,
and advocates for, Baal, and
drew others from God to the
worship of that idol; and walked
after things that do not profit
— Namely, after idols; things
that could not possibly do them
any service, but were sure to
bring ruin upon them. It appears
from hence, that all orders and
degrees of men in authority had
contributed to that general
corruption of manners, whereof
Jeremiah complains.
Verse 9
Jeremiah 2:9. Wherefore I will
yet plead with you — By my
prophets, and by my judgments,
as I pleaded with your fathers,
that you may be left without
excuse. And with your children’s
children will I plead —
According to the tenor of the
law, wherein God threatens to
visit the sins, particularly the
sin of idolatry, of the fathers
upon the children, unto the
third and fourth generation.
Verse 10-11
Jeremiah 2:10-11. For pass over
the isles of Chittim — The
neighbouring isles and
peninsulas, which lay west of
Judea, meaning especially the
countries of Greece and
Macedonia, and the islands and
continents of Europe in general;
the countries that were more
polite and learned. And send
unto Kedar — To Arabia, and the
countries to the east and south,
as the others lay to the west
and north: send to them that are
more rude and barbarous. And
consider diligently — As a
matter well worth your
attention; and see if there be
such a thing — As if he had
said, If you search from east to
west, from south to north, you
will find no instance of
apostacy from the objects of
their worship like this of
yours. Hath a nation changed
their gods? — The gods
worshipped by their forefathers?
or shown a disposition to change
them? Which are yet no gods? —
But mere imaginary beings, or
images made by men’s hands, or
the creatures of the living and
true God. But my people have
changed their glory, have
relinquished the worship of the
infinite and eternal Jehovah,
their Creator, Preserver,
Benefactor, Redeemer, Friend,
and Father, to whom they owe
their all, and whose worship and
service, favour and protection,
were their greatest glory. For
that which doth not profit — For
those idols which never did, nor
can, do them any good; that have
no essence or power; and of
which they must necessarily be
ashamed.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 2:12-13. Be astonished,
O ye heavens, at this — A
pathetical expression, in the
poetic style, signifying that
the wickedness of these
apostates from God was so great,
that the very inanimate
creatures, could they be
sensible of it, might well stand
amazed at it: that the heavens
might be affrighted to behold
it, and the celestial bodies
withdraw their light and
influences from that part of the
world where such enormities were
practised. “Such rhetorical
apostrophes import the
unusualness, and likewise the
indignity, of the things spoken
of; implying them to be such
that, if men take no notice of
them, the elements themselves
will testify against such
practices.” — Lowth. See note on
Isaiah 1:2. For my people have
committed two evils — Two
remarkable evils, ingratitude
and folly: they have acted
contrary both to their duty and
to their interest; they have
forsaken me, the fountain of
living waters — In whom they had
an abundant and constant supply
of all that comfort and relief
they stood in need of, and had
it freely; and hewed them out
cisterns — Have had recourse to
creatures, and to schemes of
their own devising; to gods of
their own making, for relief in
their necessities, for
deliverance out of, or support
and comfort in, their troubles.
Broken cisterns — False at the
bottom, and leaky, so that they
can hold no water — They have
acted as foolishly as persons
would do who should reject the
waters of a clear, perpetual
spring, to drink rain-water,
received in cisterns, which
could neither be so sweet nor so
wholesome as that of pure
springs; and not only so, but
should betake themselves to such
cisterns as, being broken, could
hold no water, or none for any
length of time, and therefore
could give them no assurance of
finding any upon having recourse
to them. God may, indeed, be
justly compared to a perpetual
spring, as he is the fountain or
origin of all good things; the
author and giver of all
blessings, both spiritual and
temporal, from whom all good
gifts are derived, as from an
inexhaustible source; see Psalms
36:9. “And wherever else men
place their happiness, whether
in false religions, or in the
uncertain comforts of worldly
blessings, they will find
themselves as wretchedly
disappointed as those who expect
to find water in broken cisterns
or conduits. Hereby is strongly
set forth the folly of the Jews
in renouncing the worship of the
true God, and their dependance
upon him, and betaking
themselves to the worship of
idols, and the alliance and
protection of idolaters.” —
Lowth.
Verse 14
Jeremiah 2:14. Is Israel a
servant? is he a home-born
slave? — Is he of a condition to
be delivered as a prey to his
enemies? Is he of those people
whom God regards as slaves and
strangers? These interrogations
imply, and have the force of, a
negative. As if he had said, Is
not Israel the son, the chosen
and peculiar people of God? Why
then hath the Lord treated him
as a common slave, and given him
up into the power of tyrannical
lords and masters? The sense is,
God redeemed Israel from the
bondage of Egypt, and adopted
him to be his son, Exodus 4:22.
So that the servitude he now
undergoes, and his being made a
prey to so many foreign enemies,
cannot be owing to his birth, or
primitive condition, but must be
imputed to his sins, of which
his slavery is the consequence.
Compare Isaiah 50:1; Isaiah
52:3.
Verse 15-16
Jeremiah 2:15-16. The young
lions roared upon them — Lions,
in the figurative style of
prophecy, denote powerful
princes and conquerors; see
Jeremiah 50:17; where the king
of Assyria is mentioned as one
of those lions which had
devoured him, and Nebuchadnezzar
as another. If we consider the
prophet as speaking here of what
was past, by the young lions he
probably means the kings of
Syria and Assyria, who laid the
country waste, not only of the
ten tribes, but also Judah and
Benjamin; and carried the
Israelites into captivity; see
Isaiah 1:7. But the words כפרים
ישׁאגוare more properly
rendered, The young lions shall
roar upon him; and so may be
understood of Pharaoh-necho,
king of Egypt, and
Nebuchadnezzar, whose successive
hostilities against the kingdom
of Judah were foreseen by the
prophet, and are probably here
foretold. It is true, the
following verbs of this verse
are in the past time, but the
context favours interpreting
them of the future. Nor is it
unusual for the prophets to
speak of events yet to come, and
foreseen by them, as if they had
been already accomplished. They
made his land waste, his cities
are burned, &c.
That Jeremiah speaks here of the
future, and not of the past,
appears from this: that in the
time of Josiah, when this
prophecy was uttered, the
country was not in the condition
here described; the land had not
been reduced to desolation, nor
the cities burned with fire; but
the determination of the Lord
was past, and the prophet
clearly foresaw that these
calamities would come. Also the
children of Noph, &c., have
broken the crown of thy head —
By the children of Noph and
Tahapanes are meant the
Egyptians, these being the two
principal cities of Egypt,
called by heathen writers
Memphis and Taphanes, or Daphnę
Pelusicę. “This no doubt
alludes,” says Blaney, “to the
severe blow which the nation
received in a capital part, when
the good King Josiah was
defeated by the Egyptians, and
slain in battle; or when,
afterward, upon the deposition
of Jehoahaz, the glory of the
monarchy was debased, by its
being changed into a tributary
and dependant kingdom, 2 Kings
23:29-34, and 2 Chronicles
35:20.
Verse 17
Jeremiah 2:17. Hast thou not
procured this unto thyself? —
Are not all these calamities
owing to thy sins, thy known and
wilful sins? By their sinful
confederacies with the nations,
and especially their conformity
to them in their idolatrous
customs and usages, they had
made themselves very mean and
contemptible, as all those do
that have made a profession of
religion, and afterward throw it
off. Nothing now appeared of
that which, by their
constitution, made them both
honourable and formidable, and
therefore the neighbouring
nations neither respected nor
feared them. But this was not
all: they had provoked God to
give them up into the hands of
their enemies, who, after
becoming a dreadful scourge to
them, at last subdued them, and
overturned their government. And
thus they brought their miseries
upon themselves, in forsaking
the Lord their God, in revolting
from their allegiance to him,
and so throwing themselves out
of his protection; for
protection and allegiance go
together. When he led thee, &c.
— Hebrew, מולכךְ בעת בדרךְ, at
the time, the very time, he was
leading thee by the way. Then,
when he was leading thee on to a
happy peace and settlement, and
thou wast arrived at the very
borders of it, thou didst draw
back, and forsake thy guide. We
may observe here, that although
Josiah was a very pious prince,
and exerted himself to the
utmost to restore the worship of
God, breaking down the altars
and groves, and beating the
graven images into powder, &c.,
2 Chronicles 34., 35.,
nevertheless, from the
complaints of Jeremiah, and his
reproofs of their idolatry, it
sufficiently appears that the
people were far from being
reformed.
Verse 18
Jeremiah 2:18. And now what hast
thou to do, &c. — “The kings of
Egypt and Assyria were the most
potent monarchs in the
neighbourhood of Judea; and
according as either of these was
the stronger, the Jews made
their court to him, and desired
his assistance. This is
expressed by drinking the waters
of Sihor, an Egyptian river,
which some suppose, and Dr.
Waterland renders, the Nile;
(see note on Isaiah 42; Isaiah
3;) and of the Euphrates, called
here the river, by way of
eminence. The expressions allude
to Jeremiah 2:13, where human
assistances are styled broken
cisterns, and opposed to God,
who, by reason of his
all-sufficiency, is called the
fountain of living waters. To
drink of the waters of these
rivers might possibly allude,
further, both to the strong
propensity which the Israelites
had to return to Egypt, and that
which they showed for adopting
the idolatrous worship of these
countries. For the Egyptians
worshipped the water, and
particularly that of the Nile.”
See Div. Leg., vol. 3., and
Calmet.
Verse 19
Jeremiah 2:19. Thy own
wickedness shall correct thee —
The miseries that your own sins
have brought upon you, one would
suppose, might be sufficient to
reclaim you from your evil
courses, and induce you to
return to God, by a sincere
repentance, Hosea 2:7. Know
therefore — Upon the whole
matter; and see that it is an
evil thing that thou hast
forsaken the Lord thy God — For
that is the thing that makes
thine enemies, enemies indeed,
and thy friends, friends in
vain. The sense of the clause
is, Call to mind what thou hast
found by experience, and reflect
seriously upon it, and thou
canst not but be convinced how
dear the forsaking of God hath
cost thee. And that my fear —
Or, the fear of me; or, that
thou hast not my fear in thee,
saith the Lord — Consider this
well, for it is the ground of
all thy sin and suffering, in
order that thy correction may
not end in thy utter ruin. This
whole discourse of Jeremiah is a
kind of pleading, wherein the
prophet maintains the cause of
God against his people.
Verse 20-21
Jeremiah 2:20-21. For of old
time I have broken thy yoke —
That is, I have delivered thee
from the bondage and tyranny
that thou wast under, of old
time, in Egypt; as also divers
times besides. See the book of
Judges. And burst thy bands —
Alluding either to the bands and
fetters with which prisoners
were wont to be bound, Jeremiah
40:4, or those bands wherewith
yokes were usually fastened upon
the necks of beasts. And thou
saidst, I will not transgress —
When the deliverance was fresh,
thou didst form good
resolutions. This translation is
according to the marginal
reading of the Masoretes; but in
the Hebrew text, confirmed by
the LXX., Syriac, and Vulgate,
we read לא אעבוד, I will not
serve, namely, Jehovah.
According to this reading, which
seems very just and
unexceptionable, and is approved
by Houbigant and Dr. Waterland,
the meaning of the passage is,
that even after the Jews had
been freed, by God, from their
Egyptian bondage, and admitted
into an immediate covenant and
alliance with him, they had been
guilty of the utmost ingratitude
in refusing obedience to the
divine law, and particularly in
respect to the prohibition of
idolatry. When upon every high
hill, and under every green
tree, &c. — Alluding to their
worshipping their idols upon the
hills, and under the trees; thou
wanderest, playing the harlot —
Worshipping false gods. As
idolatry is frequently called
whoredom in the Scripture
language, so the prophet
describes the Israelites under
the image of a strolling harlot,
seeking for lovers wherever she
can, without any shame. Yet I
planted thee a noble vine —
Hebrew, the vine of Sorek;
concerning which see note on
Isaiah 5:2. Israel is here
compared to a shoot, or branch,
taken from a generous or good
vine, and transferred to another
soil, where it degenerates.
Wholly a right seed — Without
any mixture; the offspring of
those true believers, Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob: and the laws
which I gave thee, and the means
of grace which I afforded thee,
were sufficient to have made
thee fruitful in every good
work. How then art thou turned
into the degenerate plant of a
strange vine? — That is, one
which has degenerated from the
nature of the vine whence it was
taken, and bears worse fruit
than that did. The constitution
of the Israelitish government,
both in church and state, was
excellent; their laws righteous,
and all their ordinances
instructive, and very
significant; and there was a
generation of good men among
them, when they first settled in
Canaan. For we learn, Joshua
24:31, that Israel served the
Lord, and kept close to him, all
the days of Joshua, and of the
elders that outlived Joshua.
They were then wholly a right
seed, likely to replenish the
vineyard they were planted in
with choice vines: but it proved
otherwise; the very next
generation knew not the Lord,
nor the works that he had done,
2:10, and they grew worse and
worse, till they became the
degenerate plant of a strange
vine — The very reverse of what
they were at first. Their
constitution was now quite
broken, and there was nothing in
them of that good which one
might have expected from a
people so happily formed;
nothing of the purity or piety
of their ancestors; but their
vine was, according to Moses’s
prediction, as the vine of
Sodom.
Verse 22
Jeremiah 2:22. For though thou
wash thee with nitre, &c. —
Though thou shouldest use ever
so many methods of washing away
thy sins, such as the rites of
expiation prescribed by the law,
or practised by idolaters;
though thou shouldest insist
ever so much upon thy own
innocence and righteousness, yet
the marks or stains of thy sins
will always appear in the sight
of God, till they are done away
by his pardoning mercy,
exercised toward thee in
consequence of thy repentance
and reformation. “The nitre here
mentioned is not what we call
nitre, or salt-petre, but a
native salt of a different kind,
distinguished among naturalists
by the name of natrum, or the
nitre of the ancients. It is
found in abundance in Egypt, and
in many parts of Asia, where it
is called soap-earth, because it
is dissolved in water, and used
like soap in washing.” — Blaney.
Verse 23-24
Jeremiah 2:23-24. How canst thou
say, I am not polluted? — With
what face canst thou go about to
excuse thyself, or deny what is
so evident, and so truly charged
upon thee? see Jeremiah 2:20. I
have not gone after Baalim — The
word is plural, because meant to
comprehend all their idols;
being a name usually given to
several of them, as Baal-peor,
Numbers 25:3; Baal-zebub, 2
Kings 1:16. Because they had the
temple, and sacrifices offered
therein, &c., they still
persuaded themselves that they
worshipped the true God, though
they joined their idolatries
with his worship. Thus the
Papists, though they make use of
idols in their worship, yet
pretend they are not idolaters.
See thy way in the valley —
Whether of Hinnom, (where they
burned their children in
sacrifice,) or in any valleys
where thou hast been frequent in
thy idolatries. Know what thou
hast done — Look on, and
consider thy ways. Thou art a
swift dromedary, traversing her
ways — Or, as a swift dromedary.
The prophet compares their
fondness for a variety of idols
to the eagerness with which, in
the time of breeding, the swift
dromedaries are wont to traverse
the plain, and run to and fro in
every direction. “And the
impossibility of restraining one
of those fleet animals, when
hurried away by the impetuous
call of nature, is represented
as a parallel to that unbridled
lust and eagerness with which
the people of Judah ran after
the gratification of their
passion for idolatry, called
spiritual whoredom.” — Blaney. A
wild ass — Or, as a wild ass;
used to the wilderness — Another
similitude, for the more lively
description of the same thing.
That snuffeth up the wind at her
pleasure — This should rather be
rendered, When she snuffeth up
the wind in her lust; meaning
the time when the female asses
seek the males by the wind,
smelling them afar off. In her
occasion — When she is desirous
of the male; who can turn her
away? — She bears down all
opposition. All that seek her
will not weary themselves — They
will not bestow their labour in
vain, but will let her take her
course, and wait their time and
opportunity for taking her. In
her month they shall find her —
Hebrew, בחדשׁה, which Blaney
renders, when her heat is over;
or, in her renewal, deriving the
noun from the verb חדשׁ, to
renew. “That is,” says he, “when
the heat is abated, and she
begins to come about again to
the same state as before the fit
came on. The LXX. seem so to
have understood it: εν τη
ταπεινωσει αυτης ευρησουσιν
αυτην, ‘when she is humbled,
they shall find her.’ And
perhaps it was designed to
insinuate to the Jews, by way of
reproach, that they were less
governable than even the brute
beast, which, after having
followed the bent of appetite
for a little time, would cool
again, and return quietly home
to her owners: but the
idolatrous fit in them seemed
never to abate, nor to suffer
the people to return to their
duty. Or else it may mean, that
when their affairs took a new
turn, and became adverse, then
would be the time when, being
humbled, they would again have
recourse to the true God who
alone could save them.” The
expression, in her month, is
explained in the margin of our
ancient Bible to mean, when she
is with foal, an interpretation
which many commentators follow.
Thus Henry: “They that seek her
will have a little patience till
she is big with young, heavy,
and unwieldy; and then they
shall find her, and she cannot
outrun them.” And he thus
applies it: “The time will come
when the most fierce will be
tamed, and the most wanton will
be manageable: when distress and
anguish come upon them, then
their ears will be open to
discipline; that is the month in
which you may find them.” Psalms
141:5-6.
Verse 25
Jeremiah 2:25. Withhold thy foot
from being unshod, &c. — “Do not
wear out thy shoes, or sandals,
and expose thyself to thirst and
weariness in undertaking long
journeys, to make new alliances
with idolaters.” Thus Lowth, and
many other expositors. “But I
rather take it,” says Blaney,
“to be a warning to beware of
the consequences of pursuing the
courses they were addicted to:
as if it had been said, Take
care that thou dost not expose
thyself, by thy wicked ways, to
the wretched condition of going
into captivity unshod, as the
manner is represented Isaiah
20:4; and of serving thine
enemies in hunger, and in
thirst, and in want of the
necessaries of life,”
Deuteronomy 28:48. But thou
saidst, There is no hope — The
language of desperate sinners,
who are resolved to continue in
their wickedness, in spite of
every reason that can be offered
to the contrary. No; for I have
loved strangers — Strange gods,
idols; and after them will I go
— The Jews probably did not
really speak in this manner, but
they acted thus: this, the
prophet signifies was the
language of their conduct. By
their actions they professed
that idolatry which they denied
with their mouths.
Verses 26-28
Jeremiah 2:26-28. As the thief
is ashamed — As the thief has
nothing to say for himself, but
is perfectly confounded when he
is taken in the very act, so the
house of Israel hath no manner
of plea wherewith to defend or
excuse their idolatry. They,
their kings, their princes —
Whose duty it was to have
restrained them from such
practices by their authority;
their priests, and their
prophets — Who ought to have set
them a better example, and have
given them better instruction.
Saying to a stock, Thou art my
father — Giving the title of
father, which belongs to God, as
the sovereign Creator and
Preserver of all things, (see
Jeremiah 3:19,) to senseless
images, made of wood and stone.
They did not, indeed, think
themselves to be created or made
by these images, but thus they
addressed the gods whom they
thought to be present in the
consecrated images. But as there
was in fact no such deity
residing in the image, but it
was a mere nothing, a fiction of
the idolaters, their worship in
reality centred in, or went no
higher than, the image itself.
For they have turned their back
unto me — A token of contempt
and aversion; and not their face
— Which they turn wholly toward
their idols. But in the time of
their trouble — A time which is
approaching; they will say,
Arise, and save us — As they did
formerly; see the margin. When
they prove, by experience, the
vanity of their idols, and their
own folly in relying on things
that cannot help or save them,
and in rejecting me, then they
will apply to me for relief and
aid. But where are thy gods? —
Thy idols, the gods of thy own
making? Let them arise — From
the places where they are fixed;
if they can save thee in the
time of thy trouble — In thy
great distress, when thou art in
such need of help. For according
to the number of thy cities are
thy gods — For thou hast a
sufficient number of them, every
country and city having its
peculiar deity, imitating the
heathen, who, according to
Varro, had above thirty thousand
gods. Make trial, if any, or all
of them together, can help thee.
Verse 29-30
Jeremiah 2:29-30. Wherefore will
ye plead with me? — Why do you
insist upon your innocence? See
Jeremiah 2:35. Why do you lay
claim to my former promises, as
if you had not forfeited your
title to them by your sins? In
vain have I smitten your
children — That is, the children
or people of Judah. They had
been under divine rebukes of
many kinds, whereby God designed
to bring them to repentance, but
it was in vain: they did not
answer God’s end in afflicting
them; their consciences were not
awakened, nor their hearts
softened and humbled, nor were
they induced to seek unto God by
repentance and prayer. They
received no correction — Though
they were corrected, yet they
would not be instructed and
reformed. They did not receive,
that is, they did not submit to,
or comply with, the correction;
but in their hearts fretted
against and opposed the Lord.
Observe, reader, it is a great
loss thus to lose an affliction.
Your own sword hath devoured
your prophets — You are so far
from receiving and improving by
God’s chastisements, that you
take away the lives of those
prophets who, in God’s name,
reprove you, and call you to
repentance. Thus Zechariah, the
son of Jehoiada, was put to
death in the reign of Joash, 2
Chronicles 24:20-21. See also 1
Kings 19:1; 1 Kings 19:10;
Nehemiah 9:26; Matthew 23:30-37.
Verse 31-32
Jeremiah 2:31-32. O generation —
O wicked generation; see ye the
word of the Lord — Consider what
I say to you from the mouth of
God. Have I been a wilderness
unto Israel? — Have ye not been
plentifully provided for by me?
Have I been backward in
bestowing favours upon you? Have
I not accommodated you with all
necessaries? A land of darkness
— Hebrew, ארצ מאפליה, rendered
by the Vulgate, terra serotina,
a land backward or late in
producing its fruits. Our
translation of the clause,
however, a land of darkness,
seems preferable, as darkness is
often used to denote calamity
and distress: see Jeremiah
13:16; Isaiah 5:30; Isaiah 8:22.
“The meaning of the passage,”
says Blaney, “is, Have I been
wanting to you, while ye have
been under my guidance, in
providing you with good things,
or have I brought you unto the
gloom of trouble and distress?”
Wherefore say my people, We are
lords, &c. — We are our own
masters, and will no more
acknowledge thee as Lord over
us, nor obey thy laws. This was
the language, probably, not of
the lips, but of the hearts and
lives of the idolatrous Jews,
who would not return to the
worship and service of the true
God. Can a maid forget her
ornaments — How seldom is it,
and unlikely, that a maid should
forget her ornaments? or a bride
her attire? — On which her
thoughts and affections are
placed? Yet my people have
forgotten me — Their chief glory
and ornament, on whose favour
and protection they were wont
justly to value themselves, and
whereby they were distinguished
from all other nations. Such was
the folly and wickedness of
God’s ancient people, called by
his name, rescued from bondage
and misery by his power,
enriched with all temporal and
spiritual blessings by his
bounty, and guarded as the apple
of his eye. Strange infatuation
and weakness this, we are ready
to exclaim, of the Jews! But are
not multitudes of persons called
Christians equally weak and
foolish? Do not things of very
small worth, and short duration,
frequently occupy their
thoughts, and even possess their
hearts; things of as little
value as the ornaments which
vain women delight in, while
things of the highest excellence
and greatest necessity, things
far superior to every visible
and temporal object, such as
salvation, grace, and glory,
God, and Christ, and heaven, are
overlooked and neglected?
Reader, is not this thy
practice? does not thy
conscience accuse thee of this
wickedness and folly?
Verse 33-34
Jeremiah 2:33-34. Why trimmest
thou thy way to seek love — “The
prophet,” says Lowth, “alludes
to the practices of common
harlots, who deck themselves,
and use all inveigling arts,
that they may recommend
themselves to their gallants; in
like manner,” the prophet
intimates, “the Jews tried all
methods to gain the friendship
and assistance of foreign
idolaters, who are called their
lovers:” see Jeremiah 3:1;
Jeremiah 22:22. Houbigant’s
translation of this verse is,
“Why dost thou strew thy way,
that thou mayest find lovers;
and teachest thy ways to thy
companions?” The original word,
rendered trimmest, תישׂבי,
properly means, to make good,
right, or agreeable. Noldius
expounds the clause, “Why dost
thou justify thy ways, or insist
upon thy innocence?” And the
French interpret the verse, “Why
wouldest thou justify thy
conduct, to enter into favour
with me? so long as thou hast
taught to others the evil which
thou hast done; and while
(Jeremiah 2:34) in thy skirts,”
&c. Also in thy skirts is found
the blood of the souls, &c. —
This would be better rendered,
Also in thy skirts is found the
blood of poor and innocent
persons, for by souls is meant
persons; and by the blood being
found in their skirts, the
prophet means their committing
murders and oppressions,
secretly, perhaps; but their
guilt was as manifest as though
the blood of the persons slain
had been found sprinkled upon
their garments. The LXX. render
the clause εν ταις χερσι σου
ευρεθησαν αιματα ψυχων αθωων, in
thy hands have been found the
blood of innocent souls, or
persons. Their sacrificing of
their little children to their
idols, as well as their
oppressing and murdering of
adult persons, is intended to be
comprised here. I have not found
it by secret search — The LXX.,
with whom all the ancient
versions agree, render the
clause ουκ εν διορυγμασιν ευρον
αυτους, I have not found them in
digged holes, or ditches, but
upon all these. The LXX. and
Syriac render על כל אלה, here,
upon every oak. “The meaning of
which,” says Blaney, “is this:
In the law it is commanded,
(Leviticus 17:13,) that the
blood of animals killed in
hunting should be covered with
dust, in order, no doubt, to
create a horror at the sight of
blood. In allusion to this
command, it is urged against
Jerusalem, (Ezekiel 24:7,) that
she had not only shed blood in
the midst of her, but that she
had set it upon the top of a
rock, and poured it not upon the
ground to cover it with dust;
that is, she had seemed to glory
in the crime, by doing it in the
most open and audacious manner,
so as to challenge God’s
vengeance. In like manner it is
said here, that God had not
discovered the blood that was
shed in holes under ground, but
that it was sprinkled upon every
oak before which their inhuman
sacrifices had been performed.”
Verse 35-36
Jeremiah 2:35-36. Yet thou
sayest — Or interrogatively,
Darest thou say? Hast thou the
impudence to affirm it? Because
I am innocent — Clear of this
whole charge; surely his anger
shall turn from me — Shall not
break out against me, Isaiah
5:25. Behold, I will plead with
thee — I will proceed in my
judgment against thee; because
thou sayest, I have not sinned —
Because thou continuest to
justify thyself, as if I had no
cause to be angry with thee. Why
gaddest thou about so much to
change thy way? — That is, thy
actions. Why hast thou recourse
to so many different expedients
for relief? Why dost thou seek
auxiliaries anywhere rather than
cleave to me? Or act like those
adulterous women, whose love is
never fixed, but sometimes set
on one, sometimes on another.
This is rendered by the Vulgate,
“How vile art thou become,
changing or repeating thy ways!”
Continuing still to seek new
succours from strangers, though
thou hast been so often
deceived! Egypt now shall fail
thee, as Assyria has done
before. Blaney renders this last
clause, “By means of Egypt also
shalt thou be put to shame, even
as thou hast been put to shame
by Assyria.” “The people of
Judah,” he observes, “seem to
have courted the assistance of
foreign nations, by a sinful
compliance with their idolatrous
customs. But this measure had
already failed them, and they
had been disappointed in their
expectations from Assyria in the
time of King Ahaz, who, as we
read 2 Chronicles 28:16-21,
called upon the king of Assyria
to help him in his need; but he
distressed him only, instead of
helping him. In the same manner,
also, it is here prophesied they
would be served by the
Egyptians, whose alliance would
only disappoint them, and make
them ashamed of having trusted
to so ineffectual a support; and
it turned out accordingly.” See
Jeremiah 37:7-8.
Verse 37
Jeremiah 2:37. Yea, thou shalt
go forth from him — The
ambassadors thou sendest to
Egypt shall return with
disappointment and confusion;
and their hands on their heads —
Condoling the desperate
condition of their people. Or,
Thou shalt go forth from hence,
namely, into captivity, in a
strange land. And thy hands upon
thy head — As Tamar went forth
from her brother Amnon, her
garments torn, and her hands
upon her head, insulted and
despised, and in the greatest
grief and misery; and Egypt, on
which thou reliedst, shall not
be able to prevent it, or to
rescue thee out of captivity.
For the Lord hath rejected thy
confidences — Hath refused to
give success to them, or hath
rejected thee for thy
confidences; or he disapproves
thy confidences, namely, all thy
dependances and refuges, which
thou seekest out of him. And
thou shalt not prosper in them —
They shall not stand thee in any
stead, nor give thee any
satisfaction. As there is no
counsel or wisdom that can
prevail against the Lord, so
there is none that can prevail
without the Lord. Some read it,
The Lord hath rejected thee for
thy confidences; that is,
because thou hast dealt so
unfaithfully with him as to
trust in his creatures, nay, in
his enemies, when thou shouldest
have trusted in him only, he has
abandoned thee to that
destruction from which thou
thoughtest thus to have
sheltered thyself; and then thou
canst not prosper, for none ever
either hardened himself against
God, or estranged himself from
God, and prospered. |