Verses 1-4
Jeremiah 16:1-4. The word of the
Lord came, &c. — Here begins a
new discourse, wherein God
forbids Jeremiah to marry,
principally with a view to show
the miseries of parents, and the
confused and ruinous state of
things in Judea. “Fruitfulness
was promised as a blessing under
the law, Deuteronomy 28:4, but
ceased to be so in such
difficult times as were coming
upon the Jewish nation. For
parents could not promise to
themselves any comfort in their
children, who must be exposed to
the many miseries that attend a
hostile invasion and a
conquering army.” — Lowth. They
shall die of grievous deaths —
Hebrew ממותי תחלאים, mortibus
ęgritudinum, id est, ęgerrimis,
Buxtorf. Literally, of deaths of
sicknesses, that is, very
sorrowful deaths; meaning,
Blaney thinks, epidemical
disorders, (such as the
pestilence,) terminating in
death. It, no doubt, however,
also includes death by the sword
and by famine.
Verse 5-6
Jeremiah 16:5-6. Enter not into
the house of mourning — Or, of a
mourning feast, according to the
reading in the margin, the word
מרזח, occurring also Amos 6:7,
and being there rendered a
banquet. The sense seems to be,
Do not go to comfort such as
mourn for any friends or
relations dead; their feastings
on those occasions being upon a
consolatory account: those that
die are most happy. For I have
taken away my peace from this
people — That is, I have put a
full period to their prosperity,
and deprived them of every thing
wherewith they might comfort
themselves and one another; even
loving-kindness and mercies —
These shall be shut up and
restrained, which are the
springs from whence all the
streams of comfort flow to
mankind. Both the great and the
small shall die in this land —
The land of Canaan that used to
be called the land of the
living. They shall not be
buried, &c. — So many of all
ranks and ages shall die that
men shall have no time to bury
them, or there shall not be a
sufficient number left alive to
bury the dead. Neither shall men
lament for them — Nor shall men
have leisure, through their own
miseries, to lament for the
miseries of others. Or their own
calamities shall be so great
that they will render them
insensible to the calamities of
others. Nor cut themselves, &c.
— The law expressly forbade the
Israelites to make any cuttings
in their flesh at funeral
obsequies, Leviticus 19:28;
Deuteronomy 14:1.
Notwithstanding which
prohibition, this practice seems
to have been adopted by the
Jews, among other heathenish
customs. Shaving of the head
also was a usual expression of
mourning, chap. Jeremiah 7:29.
Verse 7
Jeremiah 16:7. Neither shall men
tear themselves for them —
According to this translation
the phrase alludes to another
expression of immoderate grief,
which consisted in tearing their
flesh with their nails. But
according to the marginal
reading, the sense is, Neither
shall men break bread for them;
alluding to the mourning-feast,
mentioned Jeremiah 16:5. So the
LXX., ου μη κλασθη αρτος εν
πενθει αυτων εις παρακλησιν επι
τεθνηκοτι, “bread shall by no
means be broken in their
mourning, for consolation
concerning the dead.” So also
the Vulgate. As to the custom
alluded to, Jerome informs us,
in his commentary on this place,
that “it was usual to carry
provisions to mourners, and to
make an entertainment, which
sort of feasts the Greeks call
περιδειπνα, and the Latins
parentalia.” The origin of which
custom undoubtedly was, that the
friends of the mourner, who came
to comfort him, (which they
often did in great numbers, as
we learn from John 11:19,)
easily concluding, that a person
so far swallowed up of grief, as
even to forget his own bread
could hardly attend to the
entertainment of so many guests,
each sent in his proportion of
meat and drink, in hopes to
prevail upon the mourner, by
their example and persuasions,
to partake of such refreshment
as might tend to recruit both
his bodily strength and his
spirits. To this custom Tobit is
thought to refer when, among
other exhortations to his son,
he directs him to pour out his
bread on the burial of the just.
See Blaney. It must be observed,
that among the Hebrews all
things eaten were called bread.
Neither shall men give them the
cup of consolation for their
father, &c. — They were also
wont, on these occasions, to
send wine, or some other
cheering liquor to drink, that
they might forget their sorrows.
This is called here the cup of
consolation. Sir John Chardin,
in one of his MSS. tells us,
that “the oriental Christians
still make banquets of the same
kind, by a custom derived from
the Jews; and that the
provisions spoken of in this
verse were such as were wont to
be sent to the house of the
deceased, where healths were
also drunk to the survivers of
the family.” God here tells the
Jews by his prophet, that the
time should come when so many
should die, and so fast, and the
rest should be so much upon the
brink of the grave, that they
should have neither leisure nor
heart for using these
ceremonies.
Verse 8-9
Jeremiah 16:8-9. Thou shalt not
also go into the house of
feasting — God not only forbade
his prophet to go into houses of
mourning, but forbade him also
to go into houses where people
were wont to eat and drink on
joyful occasions, because it
would be unseasonable, and would
not agree with the afflictive
dispensations of Providence that
were coming on the land and
nation. God called aloud for
weeping, mourning, and fasting,
because he was coming forth
against them in his judgments,
and it was time for them to
humble themselves before him.
And it well became the prophet,
who gave them the warning, to
give them an example of taking
the warning himself, and
complying with it; and so to
make it appear that he did
himself believe what he declared
to them. For, behold I will
cause to cease the voice of
mirth, &c. — In the approaching
time of general desolation, all
the solemn seasons of mirth and
gladness shall cease, as well
public as private. The solemn
feasts, which were always
observed with great expressions
of joy, shall be no more
celebrated, nor shall nuptial
solemnities and other private
occasions of rejoicing be any
longer observed.
Verse 13
Jeremiah 16:13. There shall ye
serve other gods day and night —
The opportunities of frequenting
the public worship of the true
God shall be taken from you, as
a just judgment upon you for
your neglect of his service in
your own country; and you shall
be exposed to the peril of being
seduced by the Chaldeans to the
worship of idols: see
Deuteronomy 4:28; Deuteronomy
28:36, where Moses utters a
similar prediction. Compare also
1 Samuel 26:19.
Verse 14-15
Jeremiah 16:14-15. Therefore,
behold the days come, saith the
Lord, &c. — The particle
לכןseems to be very improperly
rendered therefore here. It
evidently sometimes signifies
notwithstanding, or
nevertheless; see note on Isaiah
30:18, and sometimes, yet
surely, as Jeremiah 5:2, of this
prophecy; which sense agrees
well with the scope of this
place, and connects this verse
with the words foregoing. And so
it seems it should be rendered,
Jeremiah 30:16; Jeremiah 32:36.
Blaney, however, thinks that
both in this verse and in all
these passages, as also Jeremiah
23:7, and Hosea 2:14, it more
properly signifies, after this.
Accordingly, he translates this
clause, after this, behold the
days come, saith Jehovah, &c.,
observing, “that this notice of
a future restoration was here
inserted on purpose to guard the
people, during their exile, from
falling into idolatry through
despair, by letting them see
they had still a prospect of
recovering God’s wonted favour
and protection.” To which may be
added, that he probably intended
also, in thus sweetening the
dreadful threatenings preceding
with this comfortable promise,
to prevent such as were pious
among them, or should be brought
to repentance by these terrible
calamities, from being swallowed
up of overmuch sorrow. It shall
no more be said, &c. — The
bringing of Israel out of the
Egyptian bondage shall not be so
much spoken of and celebrated as
their deliverance from their
captivity in Babylon. In fact,
the latter was in several
respects more remarkable than
the former. Their deliverance
from the power of the king of
Egypt was extorted from him by
terrifying miracles, which
scarcely brought him to a
compliance; but their
deliverance from their captivity
in Babylon was voluntarily
granted them by Cyrus, a far
greater king than the king of
Egypt, and attended by a decree
extremely honourable to them.
Verses 16-18
Jeremiah 16:16-18. Behold, I
will send, &c. — This may be
better rendered, But now I will
send, &c. — Because here the
prophet returns to denounce
threatenings; many fishers, and
they shall fish them — “It is
common with the sacred writers
to represent enemies and
oppressors under the metaphors
of fishers and hunters, because
they use all the methods of open
force and secret stratagem to
make men their prey.” By these
two characters the same enemies
are probably meant, namely, the
Chaldeans, who should take
different methods, one after
another, to destroy them;
besieging them in their cities,
and taking them like fish,
enclosed in a net; and afterward
pursuing the scattered parties
from place to place, till they
got them into their hands; so
that one way or other, few, if
any, would be suffered to
escape. Compare Isaiah 24:17-18,
where it is in like manner
foretold, that those who escaped
from one danger should fall by
another. See Blaney. For mine
eyes are upon all their ways — I
mark all their sins, though they
commit them never so secretly,
and palliate them never so
artfully. They have not their
eyes upon me; have no regard to
me, stand in no awe of me: but I
have mine eye upon them, and
neither they nor any of their
ways are hid from me. I will
recompense their iniquity double
— Not double to what it
deserves, but double to what
they expect, and to what I have
done formerly. Or, I will
recompense it abundantly; they
shall now pay for their long
reprieve and the divine patience
they have abused; because they
have defiled my land — By their
idolatry, blood, cruelty, and
other sins; have filled mine
inheritance with the carcasses
of their detestable things —
Their idols, which are elsewhere
called carcasses, not only
because they were without life,
but also because of their
filthiness and hatefulness in
the sight of God: see Leviticus
26:30; Ezekiel 43:7; Ezekiel
43:9. Or the words may be
explained of the human
sacrifices which were offered to
idols.
Verse 19-20
Jeremiah 16:19-20. O Lord, my
strength — To support and
comfort me; my fortress — To
protect and shelter me; and my
refuge in the day of affliction
— To whom I may flee for
deliverance and consolation; the
Gentiles, the nations, shall
come to thee from the ends of
the earth — The prophet, shocked
at the apostacy of Israel, and
concerned for God’s honour, here
comforts himself by looking
forward to the time when even
the Gentiles themselves should
become sensible of the absurdity
of their hereditary idolatry,
and be converted to the
acknowledgment of the one living
and true God: and this
remarkable and desirable event
he predicts, the more
emphatically to demonstrate the
unreasonableness and folly of
forsaking him for idols. And
shall say — That is, the
Gentiles shall say, Surely our
fathers, our ancestors, have
inherited lies, vanity, &c. —
And did not receive the
satisfaction they promised
themselves and their children;
we are now sensible of the folly
and deception of their
idolatrous worship, by which
they were cheated to their ruin,
and therefore we will entirely
and for ever renounce it, and in
all our wants address ourselves
to the true God as our only
refuge and protection. Shall a
man make gods unto himself? —
Thus the prophet represents the
Gentiles, when enlightened by
the truth, as reasoning with
themselves. Shall a man be so
ignorant and foolish; so
perfectly void of reason and
discernment, as to make gods to
himself, the creatures of his
own fancy, the work of his own
hands, which are really no gods?
Can a man be so infatuated, so
entirely lost to human
understanding, as to expect any
divine blessing or favour from
that which pretends to no
divinity but what it first
received from him? Observe,
reader, that reformation is
likely to be sincere and durable
which results from a rational
conviction of the gross
absurdity which there is in sin,
and the service of Satan.
Verse 21
Jeremiah 16:21. Therefore I will
this once — Or, as בפעם הזאתmay
be rendered, at this time, as
the same expression is rendered,
2 Samuel 17:7. Cause them to
know my hand and my might, &c. —
“The time alluded to is
undoubtedly that when the gospel
was to be preached to, and
embraced by, the Gentiles; when
God promises that he would make
such a display of his mighty
power as should amply convince
them of the truth of his
existence and divinity. They
shall know that my name is
JEHOVAH — A name which implies
absolute and necessary
existence, the real source and
origin of all perfection; and
they shall know it by the
blessings which shall, from my
providence, be derived to them.”
— Blaney. |