Verse 1-2
Jeremiah 8:1-2. At that time,
&c. — The first three verses of
this chapter properly belong to
the preceding, and ought not to
have been separated from it.
They shall bring out the bones
of the kings of Judah — “The
Chaldeans shall regard neither
the living nor the dead. They
shall put the living to death
without remorse; and shall break
open and defile the tombs of the
dead, in hopes of finding riches
deposited there. They shall cast
them out of their sepulchres,
and leave them upon the ground,
without staying to collect them
together, and replace them.” We
learn from Josephus (Antiq, lib.
7, cap. ult.) that King Solomon
laid up vast treasures in his
father’s sepulchre, which
remained untouched till the
pontificate of Hyrcanus, who, on
a public emergency, opened one
of the cells, and took out at
once three thousand talents of
silver. And afterward Herod the
Great opened another cell, out
of which he also took
considerable wealth. That it was
no uncommon practice at the
sacking of cities to open the
monuments of the great, and
scatter their bones abroad
without concerning themselves to
cover them again, the learned
reader may see in Horace’s 16th
Epod. Jeremiah 50:13. And they
shall spread, or expose, them
before the sun and the moon, &c.
— The idols which they have
worshipped, but which shall not
be able to help them in their
misery. Whom they have loved,
served, walked after, sought,
worshipped — The prophet
multiplies words to express
their extraordinary zeal in the
service of their idols, and to
ridicule the folly and madness
of their idolatry. And they
shall not be gathered, &c. — The
bones which shall be thus
scattered about shall not be
gathered again, or laid up in
their sepulchres.
Verse 3
Jeremiah 8:3. And death shall be
chosen rather than life — Not
through a lively and
well-grounded hope of happiness
in another life, but through an
utter despair of any ease in
this life. It denotes the
extremity of misery, when men
have no comfort left wherewith
to alleviate their calamities,
or render their lives tolerable.
This appears by the next words
to be spoken chiefly of the
miseries which those should
suffer who should survive the
siege, and either flee or be
carried captive into divers
countries.
Verses 4-6
Jeremiah 8:4-6. Moreover, thou
shalt say, &c. — The prophet is
here directed to set before the
Jews the unreasonableness and
folly of their impenitence,
which was the thing that brought
this ruin upon them. And he
represents them as the most
stupid and senseless people in
the world, that would not be
made wise by any of the methods
which infinite wisdom took to
bring them to a right mind. Thus
saith the Lord, Shall they fall
and not arise? — If men happen
to make a false step and fall to
the ground, do they not
endeavour immediately to rise
again? Shall he — Shall any
traveller; turn away — Namely,
out of his right road, and not
return into it when he is
informed of his error? Why then
is this people slidden back by a
perpetual backsliding? — Having
fallen into sin, why do they not
endeavour to rise again by
repentance? Having missed their
way, and being clearly shown
that they have, why to they not
correct their error and return
into it? It is “an
expostulation,” says Lowth,
“implying that men are seldom so
far gone in wickedness as not to
be touched with some remorse for
their evil doings, and make some
general resolutions of
amendment:” but the Jews were
“guilty of one perpetual
apostacy, as if they could
deceive God by their
hypocritical pretences, without
taking any steps toward a
reformation.” They hold fast
deceit, they refuse to return —
They have turned aside into a
false way, a way in which they
promise themselves prosperity,
but which will bring them to
ruin; their error is
demonstrated to them, and yet
they refuse to relinquish it:
they hold it fast, and proceed
forward to destruction. I
hearkened and heard, &c. — These
also are the words of God,
expressing himself after the
manner of men, who are wont to
look and listen diligently after
the things they are very
desirous of. Thus God represents
himself as waiting and looking
continually to see marks of the
people’s repentance, that he
might show them mercy, and avert
his threatened judgments. But
they spake not aright — I
neither heard a word nor saw an
action which manifested any
sorrow for their apostacy, or
any inclination to return to
their duty and allegiance. No
man repented him, saying, What
have I done? — None of them did
so much as take the first step
toward repentance; they did not
even examine into their conduct,
and call themselves to an
account for their actions. Every
one turned to his course, &c. —
Proceeded on in his accustomed
way, committing all wickedness
without restraint.
Verse 7
Jeremiah 8:7. Yea, the stork
knoweth her appointed times — Of
going and returning; the turtle
and the crane, &c., the time of
their coming — The proper season
for changing their climate.
Taught by natural instinct, they
change their quarters as the
temper of the air alters,
removing to a warmer climate
when the winter approaches, and
returning when the spring comes
on; but my people know not the
judgment of the Lord —
Understand neither their duty
nor their happiness; they
apprehend not the meaning either
of God’s mercies or judgments,
nor how to accommodate
themselves to either so as to
answer God’s intention therein.
They know not how to improve the
seasons of grace which God
affords them when he sends them
his prophets; nor how to make
use of the rebukes they are
under when his voice cries in
the city. They discern not the
signs of the times, (Matthew
16:3,) nor are aware how God is
dealing with them. They know not
the law which God has prescribed
them, though it be written both
in their hearts and in their
books.
Verse 8
Jeremiah 8:8. How do ye say, We
are wise? — As if he had said,
These things considered, where
is your wisdom? you see the very
fowls of the air are not so
stupid as you are. He speaks not
merely to the princes and
priests, but to the whole body
of the people. And the law of
the Lord is with us — They were
wont to boast much of the law,
as well as of the temple,
Jeremiah 18:18; Romans 2:17-23.
Lo, certainly in vain made he it
— For any use you make of it,
you might as well have been
without it. As if he had said,
It is to no purpose for you to
boast of your wisdom and skill
in the knowledge of God’s law,
if you do not govern your lives
by its directions; otherwise it
was written and delivered to you
in vain. The pen of the scribes
is vain — Neither need it ever
have been copied out by the
scribes. “The title of scribe,
as applied to the skill of
transcribing or interpreting the
law, is first given,” in the
Scriptures, “to Ezra, (Ezra
7:6,) who was not merely a
copier of the law, but likewise
an explainer of the difficulties
of it, Nehemiah 8:1-13; and it
is likely none made it their
business to write copies of the
law but those who were well
versed in the study of it, which
would best secure them from
committing mistakes in their
copies; hence the word, in the
New Testament, signifies those
who were learned in explaining
the law, and answering the
difficulties arising concerning
the sense of it.” — Lowth.
Verse 9
Jeremiah 8:9. The wise men are
ashamed — That is, they have
reason to be so, who have not
made a better use of their
wisdom, and reduced their
knowledge to practice. They are
confounded and taken — All their
wisdom has not served to keep
them from those courses that
will issue in their ruin. They
shall be taken in the same
snares that others of their
neighbours, who have not
pretended to so much wisdom, are
taken in, and filled with the
same confusion. Those that have
more knowledge than others, and
yet provide no better than
others for their own souls, have
reason to be ashamed. They have
rejected the word of the Lord —
They would not be governed or
guided in their conduct by it,
would not act as it directed
them, nor comply with their duty
as there set forth; and what
wisdom is in them? — None to any
purpose: none that will yield
them comfort in life, support in
death, or boldness at the day of
final accounts: none that will
be found to their praise when
God shall bring every work into
judgment, how much soever it may
exalt them in their own opinion
in the present world.
Verses 10-12
Jeremiah 8:10-12. Therefore will
I give their wives unto others —
See on Jeremiah 6:12; and their
fields to them, that shall
inherit, or possess, them — For
the word inherit is sometimes
taken for any sort of
possession. See Psalms 32:8. So
Israel is called the Lord’s
inheritance, chap. Jeremiah
10:16, and elsewhere. The
expression, however, implies
that their fields should not
only be taken possession of by
the victorious Chaldeans, should
be ravaged and stripped of their
crops and cattle, but that these
their enemies should possess
their fields as their own, and
acquire a property in them which
they should transmit to their
posterity. For every one is
given to covetousness, &c. — For
the elucidation of this and the
two following verses, see notes
on Jeremiah 6:13-15.
Verse 13
Jeremiah 8:13. There shall be no
grapes on the vine — A
figurative expression, to
signify that there should be
none of them left. And the leaf
shall fade, &c. — As both leaves
and fruit wither and fade when a
tree is blasted or killed, so
will I utterly deprive this
people of all the blessings I
had given them, of those which
are for use, as well as those
which are for ornament.
Verse 14-15
Jeremiah 8:14-15. Let us enter
into the defenced cities — In
these verses the prophet seems
to turn to and address his
countrymen by way of apostrophe;
and, as one of the people that
dwelt in the open towns, advises
those that were in the like
situation to retire with him
into some of the fortified
cities, and there wait the event
with patience; since there was
nothing but terror abroad, and
the noise of the enemy who had
already begun to ravage the
country. By this the prophet
signifies, that when the
Chaldeans should come, there
would be no hope of safety left
but in fleeing to fortified
places, and that none would dare
to stay in the open country. He
speaks of the thing as already
present, because it was soon to
happen, and it was represented
to him, in his vision, as
already present. Let us be
silent there, for the Lord hath
put us to silence — This may
mean, that God had suffered the
forces of the king of Judah to
be so diminished that they were
not able to defend the country
and open towns, but must of
necessity keep themselves cooped
up in their fortified cities,
and leave the country to be
ravaged everywhere by the
Chaldeans. And given us water of
gall to drink — Hath brought us
into grievous calamities for the
punishment of our sins. We
looked for peace — We were
willing to believe the false
prophets, who foretold
prosperous times. For a time of
health — Or, for a time in which
we should be cured; that is, for
a time of peace, in which we
might recover our strength.
Verse 16
Jeremiah 8:16. The snorting of
his horses was heard from Dan —
Dan was situated in the northern
extremity of Palestine, on the
side whence the Chaldeans were
to come against Jerusalem.
Accordingly, Grotius observes,
after Jerome, that
Nebuchadnezzar, having subdued
Phenicia, passed through the
tribe of Dan in his way to
Judea. When the enemy therefore
was advanced so near, it was
time for the people of Judah to
take the alarm, and to provide
for their own safety. The whole
land trembled at the neighing of
his strong ones — The word
אביריו, here rendered strong
ones, signifies horses in
several places, and is so
rendered here by Dr. Waterland,
(see 5:22; Jeremiah 47:3,) and
is so understood by the LXX. By
the whole land trembling is
meant the inhabitants being
terrified at the vast number of
horses that were in the Chaldean
army, the neighing of which they
heard; which struck them with
great dread, as they had few or
no horses in Judea to oppose to
them. For they have devoured the
land, and all that is in it —
All the fruits, and all the
forage, they have devoured or
taken away. It is to be
observed, that the prophet
speaks of it as already done,
because it was so represented to
him in his vision. The city, and
those that dwell therein — Both
town and country are laid waste
before them, and not only the
wealth, but the inhabitants of
both are taken or destroyed.
Jerusalem is here chiefly meant
by the city, for, though the
taking of other cities was
attended with a slaughter of the
inhabitants, the sacking of
Jerusalem was the greatest of
all their calamities, as being
the metropolis, and the richest
and most populous of all their
cities.
Verse 17
Jeremiah 8:17. For behold, I
send serpents, &c., which shall
not be charmed — Such enemies as
you shall not be able to soften
by any entreaties you can use.
That some persons possessed the
faculty of rendering serpents
harmless, is a fact too well
attested by historians and
travellers to admit of
contradiction: but by what means
this effect was produced is not
quite so clear. Pliny speaks of
certain herbs which, being
carried about, prevented the
bite of serpents, Nat. Hist.,
lib. 20. sec. 16, lib. 22. sec.
25. Others tell surprising, but
not altogether incredible
stories, of the influence of
musical sounds. See Shaw’s
Travels, p. 429; and Sir John
Chardin’s MS., cited by Harmer,
chap. Jeremiah 8:14. In this
same MS. the author remarks,
that “those who know how to tame
serpents by their charms are
wont commonly to break out their
teeth; and supposes this to be
alluded to, Psalms 58:6, Break
their teeth, O God, in their
mouths.” But whatever were the
methods commonly practised to
charm serpents, the enemies of
the Jews are here compared to
such serpents as were not to be
mollified nor disarmed by any of
those means. They shall bite
you, saith the Lord — See
Blaney, and note on Psalms 58:5.
Verse 18-19
Jeremiah 8:18-19. When I would
comfort myself, &c. — “When I
would apply comfort to myself,
my heart misgives me: I find
great reason for my fears, and
none for my hopes.” Blaney
translates the verse, sorrow is
upon me past my remedying; my
heart within me is faint. They
seem to be the words of the
prophet, who had endeavoured to
comfort himself in his trouble
by acquiescing in the will of
God; but the miseries coming on
his countrymen continually
occurring to his mind in all
their horrors and aggravations,
deprived him of all comfort, and
rendered him inconsolable.
Behold the voice of the cry —
The bitter cries and
lamentations, which methinks I
hear; of the daughter of my
people — To whose welfare I
cannot be indifferent; because
of them that dwell in a far
country — Namely, their enemies
the Chaldeans, who were coming
against them. But the words may
be rendered more agreeably to
the Hebrew thus, The voice of
the cry of the daughter of my
people from a land afar off.
Compare Isaiah 33:17, where the
phrase in the original, ארצ
מרחקים, is the same. Thus
interpreted, the words express
the doleful complaints of the
Jews in their state of
captivity, as if God had quite
forsaken and disowned them. In
this light many commentators
understand the prophet. He
“anticipates,” says Blaney, “in
his imagination, the captivity
of his countrymen in Babylon, a
far country; and represents them
there as asking, with a mixture
of grief and astonishment, if
there was no such being as
JEHOVAH, who presided in Zion,
that he so neglected his people,
and suffered them to continue in
such a wretched plight. Upon
this complaint of theirs, God
justly breaks in with a question
on his part, and demands why, if
they acknowledged such a
protector as himself, they had
deserted his service, and by
going over to idols, with which
they had no natural connection,
had forfeited all title to his
favour.” Why have they provoked
me to anger? — Some translators,
to render the sense more
evident, supply here the words,
saith God; for it is evident
that it is God, and not the
prophet, who speaks here,
telling them that their sins
were the cause of his forsaking
them; and that as they provoked
him to anger by their
idolatries, so he would no
longer defend them.
Verse 20
Jeremiah 8:20. The harvest is
past, &c. — Here the prophet
speaks again in the name of the
people, or, rather, represents
the people besieged in Jerusalem
complaining on account of the
length of the siege. Their false
prophets had amused them with
vain hopes of deliverance, and
they had expected the Egyptians
to come to their relief; but now
the harvest and the summer were
past, and yet there was no
appearance of succour or
deliverance coming to them.
Jerusalem began to be besieged
in the winter of the year, but
was not taken till the end of
the summer of the following
year.
Verse 21-22
Jeremiah 8:21-22. For the hurt
of the daughter of my people am
I hurt, &c. — These are the
words of the prophet, lamenting
the miserable condition of his
country. The Hebrew is more
literally rendered, For the
breach of the daughter of my
people am I broken, that is,
heart-broken: or, as Houbigant
renders it, I am wounded with
the wound of my people. I am
black — I look ghastly, as those
who are dying. Astonishment hath
taken hold on me — I am so
stupified that I know not what
to do, or which way to turn. Is
there no balm in Gilead — Balm,
or balsam, is used with us as a
common name for many of those
oily, resinous substances, which
flow spontaneously, or by
incision, from certain trees or
plants, and are of considerable
use in medicine and surgery,
being good, as physicians inform
us, to soften, assuage, warm,
dissolve, cleanse, dry up, and
purge. The Hebrew word here
used, צרי, is rendered by the
LXX., ρητινη, and interpreted
resin by the ancients in
general. For this balm, resin,
or turpentine, as the word might
be rendered, Gilead was famous
from very ancient times. See
Genesis 37:25, where we find
Joseph was sold to Ishmaelite
merchants, who came from Gilead,
and carried it, with sweet
spices, into Egypt. This made
many physicians and surgeons to
resort to Gilead. The prophet
applies this metaphorically to
the state of the Jews, which was
all over corrupted, (compare
Isaiah 1:6,) and represents God
as asking whether there have
been no methods used to heal
these mortal wounds and
distempers? or, if there have,
how it comes to pass they should
have so little success? As if he
had said, Whence comes it that
the wounds of my people have not
been healed and closed? Have
means of healing been wanting?
Spiritual medicines or
physicians? Have I not sent you
prophets, who have admonished,
warned, and instructed you? Have
I not given you time, and
furnished you with helps
sufficient to enable you to
return to your duty? Why then
are not your spiritual disorders
cured? Doubtless it is your own
fault: it is because you would
not make use of the remedies
provided, nor follow the
prescriptions of the physicians.
Thus we may apply the words
spoken concerning Babylon,
Jeremiah 51:9, to the present
case: we would have healed
Babylon, but she is not, or
rather, she would not, be
healed. The words may likewise
be understood of a temporal
deliverance. As if he had said,
Is this people so forsaken both
of God and men, that there is no
remedy left to effect their
deliverance? Are there no
salutary means within reach, or
no persons that know how to
apply them, for the relief of my
country from those miseries with
which it is afflicted? Observe,
reader, if sinners die of their
wounds, their blood is upon
their own heads. The blood of
Christ is balm in Gilead, his
Spirit is the physician there:
both are sufficient,
all-sufficient, to effect a
perfect cure; so that they might
have been healed, but would not. |