Verse 1
Jeremiah 11:1. The word that
came to Jeremiah, &c. — At what
time the prophecy, contained in
this and the following chapter,
was communicated to the prophet,
is not expressed; but Blaney and
many others assign it to the
latter part of the reign of
Josiah,” when the people, who,
in the eighteenth year of that
prince, had solemnly engaged to
perform the obligations of the
divine covenant, may be supposed
to have relapsed, in course of
time, into their former
disregard and neglect. The
prophet, therefore, is sent to
recall them to their duty, by
proclaiming the terms of the
covenant, and rebuking them
sharply for their hereditary
disobedience.”
Verses 2-5
Jeremiah 11:2-5. Hear ye the
words of this covenant — God
speaks here chiefly to Jeremiah,
but seems, at the same time, to
address, together with him, all
those pious persons who were
like-minded with him, and who
reproved the wicked manners of
the people. The covenant here
spoken of was the covenant of
the law of God, delivered by
Moses, to which the people had
frequently promised obedience.
And speak unto the men of Judah,
&c. — Lay the tenor of the
covenant before them; and say,
Cursed be the man that obeyeth
not, &c. — Deuteronomy 27:26, it
is, Cursed be he that confirmeth
not all the words of this law to
do them: and all the people
shall say, Amen. The people’s
saying Amen, testified their
assent, and made the law a
covenant; but they had, besides
this, formally and explicitly
covenanted with God, Exodus
24:3-7, with religious rites and
ceremonies, used in
stipulations, and afterward
consented that God should punish
those that violated that
covenant, Deuteronomy 27:26.
Which I commanded, &c. — Which
law, (that you by your
restipulation made a formal
covenant,) I, who am the Lord,
and so have a sovereign power to
lay laws upon my creatures,
commanded your fathers; in the
day that I brought them from the
iron furnace — And thus obliged
them to obedience before I laid
my law upon them. The use of the
iron furnace being to melt and
purify metals, it was a proper
representation of that state of
sore affliction in which the
people of God were for many ages
in Egypt. Saying, Obey my voice,
&c. — For which kindness I
required no more of them but a
gentle service to me, in obeying
my voice, as to the things of
this law which I gave them in
charge; so shall ye be my
people, &c. — Nor did I only lay
my commands upon them, but also
encouraged them to obedience, by
my gracious promise, that if
they would obey they should be a
people whom I would peculiarly
protect and bless. That I may,
or, rather, might (for he refers
to the time past) perform the
oath, &c. — As if he had said, I
required their obedience for
their own good: for I had sworn
to their fathers, that I would
give their posterity a land
abounding with plenty of all
good things, upon condition of
their obedience. I have
performed that oath; I have
brought them into such a land,
and showed myself faithful to
them. Then answered I, So be it,
O Lord — God having ended his
speech, the prophet says, Amen,
as God had commanded,
Deuteronomy 27:26; either
asserting the truth of what God
had said, or expressing his
desire that the people would do
according to their covenant, or
even assenting to the curse as
just and reasonable.
Verses 6-8
Jeremiah 11:6-8. Proclaim all
these words in the cities of
Judah, &c. — That all may hear,
for all are concerned; saying,
Hear ye the words, &c., and do
them — Let it be thy work to
call upon this people, not only
to hear, but to do the things
which I have commanded them, and
which they have engaged to do.
For I earnestly protested —
Hebrew, in protesting I
protested; a way of speaking by
which the Hebrews expressed the
seriousness and earnestness
wherewith any thing was done: by
protesting, he means the same
with charging and solemnly
enjoining, with promises annexed
to obedience, and threatenings
denounced in case of
disobedience. This, God says, he
had done with a great deal of
patience and diligence, even
from the time that this people
were brought by him out of the
land of Egypt to the present
period. Yet they obeyed not —
And, because they were resolved
not to be subject to God’s
commandments, they would not so
much as incline their ears to
them, but walked every one in
the imagination of his evil
heart, following their own
inventions; and each one acting
as his fancy or humour led him,
both in their devotions and in
their conversations. Therefore I
will bring upon them all the
words of this covenant — That
is, all the threatenings
contained in it. Observe,
reader, the words of God’s
covenant shall not fall to the
ground. If we do not by our
obedience qualify ourselves for
the blessings of it, we shall,
by our disobedience, bring
ourselves under the curses of
it.
Verses 9-11
Jeremiah 11:9-11. And the Lord
said, A conspiracy is found, &c.
— Namely, by him whose eye is
upon the hidden works of
darkness. There is a combination
formed among them against God
and religion, a dangerous design
to overthrow the government of
Jehovah, and to bring in
counterfeit deities. In other
words, All sorts of people have
been alike disobedient, as if
they had conspired together to
break my law. They are turned
back to the iniquities of their
forefathers — They made some
steps toward a reformation in
the former part of the reign of
Josiah, but now they have agreed
to turn back to their former
idolatries. Therefore behold, I
will bring evil upon them, &c. —
The evil of punishment for the
evil of sin, which they shall
not be able to escape by any
evasion whatsoever. Let us
remember, those who will not
submit to God’s government,
shall not be able to escape his
wrath. Evil pursues sinners, and
entangles them in snares, out of
which they cannot extricate
themselves. And though they
shall cry unto me, I will not
hearken — God will not hear them
crying to him in their
adversity, who refuse to hear
him speaking to them in their
prosperity.
Verses 12-14
Jeremiah 11:12-14. Then shall
the cities of Judah cry unto the
gods, &c. — “When great
calamities threaten men, their
fears suggest all possible ways
of seeking for succour. Thus,
when the Jews found themselves
forsaken of God, they betook
themselves to idols, but found
all such applications vain, and
to no purpose: see 2 Chronicles
28:23. For according to the
number of thy cities were thy
gods, &c. — See note on Jeremiah
2:28. Ye have set up altars to
that shameful thing — Hebrew,
בשׁת, bosheth, shame, so called,
because it was what they had
cause to be ashamed of, and what
would certainly bring them to
shame and confusion. See note on
Jeremiah 3:24. Therefore pray
not thou for this people — See
note on Jeremiah 7:16.
Verse 15
Jeremiah 11:15. What hath my
beloved to do in my house, &c. —
“Why doth this, my chosen and
peculiar people, as they love to
call themselves, make their
appearance before me in my
house, since they have gone a
whoring after several idols of
the nations round about them,
and thereby have disowned me,
and broken the marriage contract
that was between us? See note on
Jeremiah 2:2. God calls the Jews
his beloved people, because they
called themselves so, and
because they were still beloved
for their fathers’ sake, Romans
11:18; and he would not cast
them off utterly, for the sake
of the covenant he had made with
their progenitors.” — Lowth. And
the holy flesh is passed from
thee — “The flesh of thy
sacrifices, which thou offerest
up to me as an atonement for thy
sins, does not at all profit
thee, being rendered
unacceptable to me through thy
many and great provocations, in
the commission of which thou
continuest without remorse.” —
Lowth. But the words are
rendered by some, The flesh of
my sanctuary shall pass from
thee, and may mean, that the
parts of the victims, which by
the Mosaic law were the portion
of the priests, should not be
given to them, since the temple
would be destroyed. According to
this interpretation the prophet
must be considered as addressing
the priests, of whom there were,
without doubt, many in
Jerusalem. When thou doest evil,
thou rejoicest — Thou gloriest
in thy wickedness. Or, at a time
when thou offendest most against
my laws, thou exultest, and
behavest as if thou didst every
thing that is right.
Verse 16-17
Jeremiah 11:16-17. The Lord hath
called thy name, A green
olive-tree — Perhaps Jeremiah
here alludes to Hosea 11:7,
where Israel is compared to an
olive-tree. The Jewish nation,
which, in its flourishing state,
is often compared by the sacred
writers to a vine, is also
sometimes compared to an
olive-tree, chiefly because of
the fruits of holiness and
righteousness which God might
justly have expected from them,
after all the care and pains he
had bestowed upon them to make
them fruitful. Fair, and of a
goodly fruit — Amiable and
serviceable, pleasant to the
eye, and good for yielding food.
With the noise of a great tumult
he hath kindled a fire upon it,
&c. — The words קול המולה, here
rendered the noise of a great
tumult, occur Ezekiel 1:24, and
are there explained to be כקיל
מחנה, like the voice of a host.
Here they undoubtedly signify
the confused murmur, noise, and
tumult of the Chaldean army,
coming to desolate Jerusalem and
its dependances with fire and
sword, described under the image
of an olive-tree, whose branches
are cut down that they may be
burned, or which is burned as it
stands; its branches, or lofty
boughs, as דליותיוmore properly
signifies, meaning the priests
and princes. For the Lord that
planted thee — And expected
fruit from thee in vain; hath
pronounced evil against thee —
Hath passed a condemnatory
sentence upon thee, and marked
thee out for destruction. For
the evil of the house of Israel
and the house of Judah — The
evil of whose heinous sins shall
now be followed with the evil of
most dreadful punishments.
Verse 18-19
Jeremiah 11:18-19. And the Lord
hath given me knowledge of it,
&c. — This relates to the ill
designs which the men of
Anathoth had contrived against
the prophet, which he here saith
God had revealed to him. See the
following verses. But I was like
a lamb or an ox, &c. — A
proverbial speech, expressing a
false security, or insensibility
of danger. Dr. Waterland, in
agreement with the Vulgate,
Bochart, and Houbigant, reads
this clause, But I was like a
gentle lamb; and Blaney, For I
was like a tame lamb that is led
to the slaughter. But Lowth
justly observes, we may very
well admit of the common
translation. For the word
יאלוŠhere used, certainly
frequently signifies an ox, and
the disjunctive particle,
supplied by or, is elsewhere
often understood, though not
expressed. The meaning here is,
that the prophet would have met
with a fate similar to that of a
slaughtered lamb or ox, if God
had not revealed to him the
designs of his enemies. Many
commentators suppose that
Jeremiah here speaks of his own
sufferings as figurative of
those of the Messiah. “All the
churches agree,” says St.
Jerome, “that these and the
following words respect Jesus
Christ and his passion. It was
against his life that they
formed their designs: he was the
true lamb, meek and innocent.
Jeremiah is here a figure of the
divine Saviour; he here suffers
from his brethren, and
represents, in his person, him
who was a man of grief, and
tried by all sorts of
afflictions.”
Let us destroy the tree with the
fruit thereof — Let us not only
put an end to his prophesying,
but to his life. The Hebrew is
literally, Let us destroy the
tree (or the stock) with the
bread thereof; and bread, it
must be observed, is sometimes
used for the corn of which bread
is made, as Jeremiah 5:17. The
meaning then is, Let us destroy
the prophet and his doctrine. We
have no other mention of this
conspiracy but this here. It is,
however, very plain, both from
this verse and what follows,
that the men of Anathoth (which
was Jeremiah’s own town) were
offended at his prophesying, and
had conspired to kill him.
Verse 20
Jeremiah 11:20. But, O Lord,
thou judgest righteously — It is
matter of comfort to us, when
men deal unjustly with us, that
we have a God to go to, who doth
and will plead the cause of
injured innocence, and appear
against the injurious. God’s
justice, which is a terror to
the wicked, is a comfort to the
godly. That triest the reins and
the heart — That perfectly
knowest what is in man, that
discernest his most secret
thoughts, desires, and designs.
Let me see thy vengeance on them
— That is, do justice between me
and them in such a way as thou
pleasest. “When men continue
implacable in their malice,”
says Lowth, “we may lawfully
expect and desire that God will
plead our cause, and judge us
according to our righteousness.
For the bringing wicked men to
condign punishment tends both to
the manifestation of God’s glory
and the good government of the
world. And to pray against our
enemies in this sense, namely,
not for the satisfying our
private resentments, but the
setting forth of God’s justice,
is not contrary to the spirit of
Christianity. So St. Paul prayed
against Alexander the
copper-smith, 2 Timothy 4:14.”
It must be observed, however,
that, according to the Hebrew
text here, the words are merely
a prediction; מהם אראה נקמתן,
being literally, I shall see thy
vengeance on them; that is, I
foresee it, and predict it,
though I lament they should have
given occasion for it.
Verse 21
Jeremiah 11:21. Thus saith the
Lord of the men that seek thy
life — That are combined to kill
thee; saying, Prophesy not in
the name of the Lord —
The meaning is, that those men
of Anathoth threatened that they
would kill him if he did not
cease to prophesy such things as
he did in the name of the Lord,
namely, concerning the
destruction of Jerusalem, the
desolation of Judea, and the
carrying away of the people into
captivity. For if he had spoken
falsely in the name of the Lord,
and promised them peace and
prosperity, they would have
heard him prophesy gladly: they
were thus exasperated at him,
and opposed his prophesying,
because he told them those
truths which they had no mind to
hear. This passage sufficiently
shows that Jeremiah is to be
understood in the literal sense
here, which, however, does not
by any means forbid our
considering him in this instance
as a type of Christ, and
prefiguring, by his sufferings,
those of the Redeemer of
mankind. It manifests also the
usage which the prophets
generally met with from their
own countrymen, who became their
enemies because they told them
the truth. The people of their
own towns, even their friends
and relations, could not bear to
hear the solemn warnings which
they gave them, and the
prediction of those judgments
which were coming upon them for
their sins.
Verse 22-23
Jeremiah 11:22-23. Therefore
thus saith the Lord, Behold, I
will punish them — Hebrew, פקד
עליהם, I will visit, namely,
this their wicked conduct, upon
them; I will inquire into it,
and reckon with them for it. The
young men shall die by the sword
— Though they be young priests,
not men of war, their sacred
office shall be no protection to
them. Their sons and their
daughters shall die by famine —
Which is a more grievous death
than that by the sword,
Lamentations 4:9. Thus two of
God’s four sore judgments would
overwhelm their town in
destruction, which should be so
entire that there should be no
remnant of them — None to be the
seed of another generation: they
sought Jeremiah’s life, and
therefore their lives shall be
taken: they wished to destroy
him, root and branch, that his
name might be no more
remembered, and therefore there
shall be no remnant of them: and
herein the Lord is righteous.
Thus evil would be brought upon
them, even the year of their
visitation — And that would be
evil sufficient, a recompense
according to their deserts. Such
is the consequence of opposing
the truth and cause of God, and
his servants in the execution of
their office! Such is the
deplorable condition of those
that have the prayers of good
ministers and good people
against them. |