Verse 1-2
Jeremiah 10:1-2. Hear ye the
word, &c. — The prophet
continues his remonstrances and
exhortations to Judah. He said,
at the conclusion of the
preceding chapter, that the Lord
would punish, without
distinction, all the ungodly and
unrighteous Jews, as well as
Gentiles. He here informs them
that if they would avoid this
vengeance of the Lord they must
quit their idolatries and other
impieties, and have nothing to
do with the superstitious
practices of the Gentile
nations. Learn not the way of
the heathen — Their manner of
life or customs. And be not
dismayed at the signs of heaven
— “The Chaldeans, among whom the
Jews were destined to live in
captivity, were particularly
addicted to astrology, and
attributed to the heavenly
bodies a considerable influence
over human affairs. This
naturally tended to beget a
religious dread and awe of those
objects, from whence so much
good or evil was supposed to be
derived. The sun, moon, and
planets are said indeed to have
been set in the firmament for
signs. Genesis 1:14. But hereby
is meant, that they should
serve, as natural marks, to
distinguish, by their periodical
revolutions and appearances, the
various times and seasons;
which, however, is a very
different use from that of
prognosticating future events,
or causing an alteration in the
fortunes of men.” — Blaney.
Verses 3-5
Jeremiah 10:3-5. One cutteth
down a tree, &c. — The prophet
here exposes the folly of men’s
worshipping the work of their
own hands, by arguments similar
to those which are used by
Isaiah 44:10-20; where see the
notes. They are upright,&c. —
They are like the trunk of the
palm-tree — Houb. “They are
inflexible, immoveable, fixed,
without action or motion, like
the trunk of a tree: a
comparison which admirably suits
the ancient statues seen in
Egypt and elsewhere, before the
art of sculpture attained the
perfection which it afterward
did in Greece.” — Calmet. Dr.
Waterland’s translation of this
verse is, They are of just
proportion, as a pillar, but
they speak not; carried they
must be, for go they cannot. Be
not afraid of them — They can do
you no more harm than the signs
of heaven could do. The heathen
worshipped some idols in order
that they might do them good,
and others, that they might do
them no harm: but God tells them
here, that as they cannot do
evil, so neither is it in them
to do good. See note on Isaiah
41:23. They can neither punish
nor reward; they can neither
hurt their enemies nor help
their friends. By this the true
God will be distinguished from
idols, in that he alone can
foretel things to come, and he
alone can reward or punish.
Verse 6-7
Jeremiah 10:6-7. Forasmuch as
there is none like unto thee —
This verse would be better
rendered, O Lord, thou art
great, so that there is none
like unto thee, and thy name is
great, because of thy might. Who
would not fear thee? — Rather,
who would not reverence, or
stand in awe of thee? For to
thee doth it appertain — That
is, as some interpret the
phrase, To thee doth it
appertain to be feared and
reverenced; to thee fear and
reverence are due. The Hebrew,
however, may be rendered, Who
would not fear thee when he
shall come, or draw near to
thee? accordingly Blaney
translates the verse thus: Who
will not fear thee, O king of
nations, when he shall approach
unto thee? Forasmuch as among
all the wisest of the nations,
and in all their kingdoms, there
is none like unto thee — On the
clause, among the wisest of the
nations, he observes, “These
words may signify, either all
those nations which were most
distinguished for the
cultivation and improvement of
their rational faculties; or
else those sage individuals
among them, from whose learning
and philosophy some better
notions of God and religion
might have been expected than
from the rude and illiterate
vulgar. And yet the fact was,
that all their boasted wisdom
and knowledge had failed of
leading them to an object of
worship, in any degree
corresponding with the infinite
perfections and majesty of the
divine nature.”
Verse 8
Jeremiah 10:8. But they are
altogether brutish — Or, all
alike brutish. They that make
images, saith the psalmist,
Psalms 115:8, are like unto
them, equally stupid and
insensible. The stock is a
doctrine of vanities — Or lies.
The use of images in worship is
grounded on a false and foolish
opinion, that God is like the
work of men’s hands, and that
images have some divine power
lodged within them, and in this
opinion it has a direct tendency
to confirm the ignorant. Hence
an image is called by Habakkuk,
A teacher of lies. Instead of
the stock, &c., Dr. Waterland
reads, Vain institutions! very
wood! Blaney, in consistency
with his interpretation of the
7th verse, given above, renders
this, But they, when they
approach, (namely, to worship,)
are stupid and sottish, the very
wood itself being a rebuker of
vanities. On which he observes,
“The contrast is thus strongly
marked between the true God, and
the objects of heathen
superstition. The servants of
the former, when they approached
him in their devotions, could
not but be impressed with a
reverential awe of a being so
transcendently glorious. But
those who drew near to worship
the latter, manifested the
greatest stupidity, in not
discovering what was so obvious
to common apprehension, the
gross unworthiness of the
objects to which their
adorations were addressed.” On
the latter clause, The very wood
itself, &c., he remarks, “The
true meaning and force of this
passage seem to have escaped the
notice of all the commentators.
מוסר, (which our translators
render doctrine,) properly
signifies rectifying, or
correcting, a false notion by
just reproof; and by vanities
are meant idols, so called from
their being of no real use or
advantage to those who had
recourse to their assistance.
And this unprofitableness of the
idol, the very dull and
senseless matter, says the
prophet, out of which it was
formed, is capable of
demonstrating. But the rebuke,
strictly speaking, is not
directed to the idol, but to
those who had not sense to
perceive, that all the efforts
of human art could never change
an inanimate log of wood into an
animated being, possessed of
power and intelligence far
surpassing those of the person
from whom its origin was
derived. There are, therefore,
an energy and pointedness in
this short sentence, at least
equal to whatever has been said
on the same subject by the most
spirited writer, whether sacred
or profane. Not even the keen
raillery of the Roman satirist
in those celebrated lines, olim
truncus eram, &c., cuts with
greater severity.” See note on
Isaiah 44:12, &c.
Verse 9
Jeremiah 10:9. Silver spread
into plates — To cover the
images, and make them appear as
if made of massy silver; is
brought from Tarshish — A port
of Spain, to which the merchants
of Tyre and Sidon traded; of
which place see note on Isaiah
2:16. And gold from Uphaz — The
Syriac, Chaldee, and Theodotion
read, from Ophir, which Bochart
supposes to be here meant;
namely, Ophir in India, near
Zeilan, a place famous for gold.
Blue and purple are their
clothing — “The splendour and
magnificence of dress seem,
among the ancients, to have
consisted very much in the
richness of the colours; the art
of dying which to perfection,
was esteemed a matter of great
skill, being known and practised
by very few. The excellence of
the Tyrian purple is celebrated
by both sacred and profane
authors. And the blue, which
from many passages of Scripture
we find to have been in great
request, was also imported from
remote countries as an article
of elegant and expensive
luxury.” They are all the work
of cunning men — “If, in the
preceding verse, the
insignificance of the idols was
argued from the vile and
perishable matter out of which
they were composed; the same is
inferred in this from their
being indebted to the art and
labour of man for all their
costly ornaments, their splendid
outward show. In short, the
whole of them, says the prophet,
internal and external, is the
work of skilful men. Upon what
ground then could the thing
formed pretend to a nature more
excellent than its former?” —
Blaney.
Verse 10
Jeremiah 10:10. But the Lord —
Hebrew, Jehovah, is the true God
— A very different being from
these idols. He is the living
God — Images are dead and
senseless things; but Jehovah is
life itself, and the author and
fountain of life and
understanding; and all creatures
that live, live in and by him.
And an everlasting King — The
absolute monarch over all
creatures, their owner and
ruler, having an incontestable
right both to command and to
dispose of them. And the
counsels of his kingdom were
from everlasting, and the
continuance of it will be to
everlasting. He is the king of
eternity. The idols whom they
call their kings are but of
yesterday, and will soon be
abolished; and the kings of the
earth, that set them up to be
worshipped, will themselves be
in the dust shortly; but the
Lord shall reign for ever, thy
God, O Zion, unto all
generations. At his wrath the
earth shall tremble — Even the
strongest and stoutest of the
kings of the earth, nay, the
earth itself, as firmly as it is
fixed, when he pleases, is made
to quake, and the rocks to
tremble. And the nations, though
they join together to contend
with him, and unite their force
against him, shall be found
utterly unable, not only to
resist, but even to abide his
indignation.
Verse 11
Jeremiah 10:11. Thus shall ye
say unto them — “This verse is
in the Chaldee language, and it
appears here as a kind of
parenthesis. Houbigant thinks
that the most probable reason
why it is here inserted in the
Chaldee, and not in the Hebrew,
is, that Jeremiah prescribes to
the Jews what they shall answer
in living among idolaters, and
using the Chaldee language;
hereby prescribing that they
should be the captives of the
Chaldees.” — Dodd. The gods that
have not made the heavens and
the earth — And therefore they
are no gods, but the usurpers of
the honour due to him only who
did make them; shall perish from
the earth, &c. — Shall perish of
course, because they are vanity,
formed of perishing materials;
and shall perish by his
righteous sentence, because they
are rivals with him who made all
things. Here the prophet
foretels that there shall be a
final period put to idolatry.
God hath already blotted out the
names of many of the heathen
idols, as an earnest of the
utter destruction of the rest in
his due time.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 10:12-13. He hath made
the earth, &c. — Here follows a
noble and lofty description of
God’s power and providence,
whereby he sets forth his
infinite pre-eminence above all
the dead and senseless idols of
the world. When he uttereth his
voice, &c. — When he gives the
word of command, and signifies
his will and pleasure: see Job
38:34. Or, when he sends forth
his thunder, called in Scripture
the voice of God, the clouds
immediately precipitate in
torrents of rain, which, coming
upon the ground that was
scorched with heat before, not
only cools and refreshes it, but
renders it fruitful in all kinds
of vegetable productions. He
maketh lightnings with rain —
And as he causes the vapours to
ascend up in clouds from every
quarter of the earth, so he
joins two contrary things
together, ordaining great
flashes of lightning to break
forth with the rain; the latter,
by its moisture, preventing the
ill effects that might otherwise
proceed from the heat of the
former. And bringeth forth the
winds out of his treasures — As
there is occasion for them,
directing them all in such
measures, and for such uses, as
he thinks fit. In other words,
“He makes great and mighty winds
to come from unknown places and
causes, as if he brought them
out of a hidden treasure, or
repository, where they had been
laid up till he had occasion for
them.” — Lowth.
Verse 14-15
Jeremiah 10:14-15. Every man is
brutish in his knowledge — This
is spoken of the makers of
idols, whose skilfulness as
workmen made them foolish enough
to attempt to make gods, and who
afterward acted still more
foolishly in worshipping them,
when they knew they were but the
work of their own hands. The
founder is confounded by the
graven image — Or, ashamed, as
הבישׁsignifies. For it can
afford no help, nor do any good,
to those who worship it; and
therefore is a disgrace to the
workman who pretends to make it
a god, that could hear the
prayers offered to it, and send
help to its worshippers. His
molten image is falsehood — That
is, those are no less deceived
who expect help from a molten
image, than they who expect it
from a false, lying man. They
are the work of errors — The
making of them is owing to men’s
erroneous notions of the nature
of God. In the time of their
visitation they shall perish —
The time will come when God will
execute vengeance upon
idolaters, and utterly destroy
their idols.
Verse 16
Jeremiah 10:16. The portion of
Jacob is not like them — There
is no comparison between
senseless idols and the great
Creator of all things, who has
chosen the posterity of Jacob
for his peculiar people, and has
promised to be their God, and
that they should always have an
especial interest in his favour,
if they continued steadfast in
their worship of, and obedience
to, him. The rod of his
inheritance — Is an expression
taken from the first division of
the land of Canaan, when the
inheritance of each tribe and
family was meted out with a line
or rod.
Verse 17-18
Jeremiah 10:17-18. Gather up thy
wares, &c. — That is, as some
explain it, “Collect to
Jerusalem all that you have
valuable in the country; flee
thither for refuge with your
best effects; for the enemy will
soon extend himself over all
your land, and render it
desolate.” Or, rather, the
prophet, returning to his former
denunciations against Jerusalem,
warns her to move her effects,
and prepare for going into
captivity; for, though she
thought herself secure, as
dwelling in a place of great
strength and well fortified, yet
her enemies should prevail and
take it: compare Ezekiel 12:3.
Behold, I will sling out the
inhabitants at this once — I
will, at one stroke, remove the
whole body of this people out of
their native country: see 1
Samuel 25:29. And I will
distress them that they may find
it so — Or, that they may find
my threatenings to be true. This
implies, that though they had
been often saved by God’s
providence from hostile attacks,
they would, however, on this
occasion, find it otherwise.
Verse 19-20
Jeremiah 10:19-20. Wo is me for
my hurt — The prophet here again
pathetically laments the
overthrow of his country, and,
either in his own person or in
that of his country, bewails the
plundering and desolation of the
cities and houses, as if they
were so many shepherds’ tents,
to which he compares them,
Jeremiah 10:20. But I said, This
is a grief, and I must bear it —
Blaney thinks the prophet here
suggests motives of patience and
consolation to his country, in
regard to the evils that were
coming upon her, putting the
words of this and the following
verses into her mouth, and
making her observe, first, That
her affliction, though great,
would yet be found tolerable;
secondly, That she had less
reason to complain of what she
suffered, as it was no other
than might have been expected
from the misconduct of those who
had the direction of her
affairs, Jeremiah 10:21; and,
lastly, That she was not without
hope in the mercy of God, who,
upon the humble supplication of
his people, might be moved to
mitigate their chastisement, and
to turn his hand against the
heathen that oppressed them,
Jeremiah 10:24. My children are
gone from me, and are not, &c. —
My inhabitants are gone into
captivity, and will return
hither no more, so that they are
the same to me as if they were
dead. There is none to set up my
curtains — They will never be
able to contribute any thing to
the restoration of my former
state.
Verse 21-22
Jeremiah 10:21-22. For the
pastors are become brutish — The
prophet pursues the foregoing
metaphor, and says, that the
reason why the tents are
destroyed, is because the
shepherds, meaning the
governors, both civil and
ecclesiastical, had, like so
many brute creatures, forgotten
God and their duty to him, and
thereby engaged the people
committed to their charge in
idolatry, and in all manner of
wickedness, which had ended in
ruin to themselves and their
flocks. And have not sought the
Lord — Have neither made their
peace with him nor addressed
their prayers to him; they have
had no eye to him and his
providence in their management
of affairs, have neither
acknowledged the judgment nor
expected the deliverance to come
from his hand. Observe well,
reader, those are brutish people
that do not seek the Lord, that
live without prayer and without
God in the world: they are
unworthy of the name of rational
beings. But the state of a
people is indeed deplorable when
their pastors, that should feed
them with knowledge and
understanding, are themselves
thus brutish. And what is the
consequence? Therefore they
shall not prosper — None of
their attempts for the public
safety shall succeed. How,
indeed, can those expect to
prosper who do not take God
along with them in their ways?
And when the pastors are
brutish, what else can be
expected but that all their
flocks should be scattered? for
if the blind lead the blind both
will fall into the ditch.
Behold, the noise of the bruit
is come — The word bruit here
signifies noise, or rumour,
which is the meaning of the
Hebrew, שׁמועה. This is
explained in the following
clause to be that of the
tumultuary invasion of the
country by the Chaldeans from
the north, of which notice had
been repeatedly given. Blaney
translates the verse, Hark! a
noise! Behold, it advanceth,
even a great commotion from the
north country. To make the
cities of Judah a desolation, a
dwelling-place for dragons.
Verse 23
Jeremiah 10:23. O Lord, I know,
&c. — The prophet now turns to
God, and addresses himself to
him, finding it to little
purpose to speak to the people.
It is some comfort to poor
ministers, that, if men will not
hear them, God will; and to him
they have liberty of access at
all times. Let them close their
preaching with prayer, as the
prophet here does, and then they
will have no reason to complain
that they have laboured in vain.
That the way of man is not in
himself — The prophet must here
be considered as acknowledging
the superintendence and dominion
of the divine providence; that
by it, and not by their own will
and wisdom, the affairs both of
nations and particular persons
are directed and governed. His
words in this verse, taken in
connection with the following,
may be thus paraphrased: Thy
providence, O Lord, superintends
all events; all that happens
comes to pass through thy
permission or appointment. It is
not in man to hinder that which
has been once resolved on in thy
decrees. We know, therefore,
that it is not in our power to
divert those judgments which are
coming upon us, but thou canst
moderate and limit them as thou
pleasest. If, then, it be thy
will that we should feel the
awful effects of thy justice,
chastise us, but spare our
weakness; correct us, but with
judgment, not in thine anger,
&c. Theodoret applies this to
Nebuchadnezzar, and explains the
passage thus: “We know, O Lord,
that the prince whom thou
sendest against us comes not
without thy orders; that the
success of his arms, and the
good fortune of his enterprise,
proceed only from thee: but
deliver us, O Lord, from this
terrible enemy; and if we have
merited chastisement, may we
receive it at thy hand. Punish
us as a father, and not as a
judge.” The words, however, are
applicable to us all, as well as
to Nebuchadnezzar and the Jews.
We are not at our own disposal,
nor able to direct our own way
by our own wisdom, either in
matters temporal or spiritual.
Nor are we at liberty to choose
what line of life we please, or
to ensure to ourselves the
success and prosperity we may
desire. We are under God’s
government, and at his disposal,
and have continual need of his
direction, and of the influence
of his grace, without which we
shall certainly err from the
right way, and shall neither
choose nor perform what is truly
and lastingly good, and for our
happiness.
Verse 24
Jeremiah 10:24. O Lord, correct
me — I do not entirely deprecate
all chastisement; I know we
deserve correction, and am
willing to accept it; persuaded
that it is necessary for our
purification and amendment; but
let it be with judgment — That
is, in measure, with moderation,
and in wisdom; not more than is
necessary; not in thine anger —
How severe soever the correction
be, let it come from thy love,
and be designed for our good,
and made to work for good; not
to bring us to nothing, but to
bring us to thyself. Let it not
be according to the desert of
our sins, but according to the
designs of thy grace. Blaney
justly observes here, that the
word משׁפשׂ, translated
judgment, “properly signifies,
that calm and dispassionate
judgment, which stands opposed
to the hasty sallies of anger
and furious revenge. And, though
the latter cannot actually exist
in God, it is sometimes,
however, nominally attributed to
him, whenever the effects of his
displeasure are so violent as to
stop nothing short of utter
ruin; although such a proceeding
may be justifiable upon the most
solid principles of reason and
equity. As, therefore, to punish
with anger, implies an
unrelenting rigour and severity;
so, to correct with judgment,
admits the use of such
moderation as is consistent with
the sinner’s personal safety,
while it promotes his
reformation.”
Verse 25
Jeremiah 10:25. Pour out thine
indignation upon the heathen,
&c. — Let thy justice be made
known, by bringing an exemplary
punishment upon the Chaldeans
and their allies, (see Jeremiah
1:15,) who do not acknowledge
thy providence, but ascribe all
their successes to their idols:
for they have eaten up Jacob,
&c. — See note on Jeremiah 6:3.
This prayer, it must be
observed, did not proceed from a
spirit of malice or revenge in
the prophet, nor was it intended
to prescribe to God on whom he
should execute his judgments, or
in what order; but, 1st, It is
an appeal to his justice; as if
he had said, Lord, we are a
provoking people, but are there
not other nations that are more
so? And shall we only be
punished?
2d, It is a prediction of God’s
judgments upon all the
impenitent enemies of his church
and kingdom. If judgment begin
thus at the house of God: what
shall be the end of those that
obey not his gospel? 1 Peter
4:17. |