Verses 1-4
Jeremiah 18:1-4. The word which
came to Jeremiah, &c. — We have
here the beginning of a new
discourse of Jeremiah, which, if
introduced in its proper place,
as we have reason to think it
is, was probably also, as well
as the foregoing, delivered in
some part of the first three
years of Jehoiakim’s reign.
Arise, and go down to the
potter’s house — Some well-known
place where pots were made; and
there I will cause thee to hear
my words — I will further reveal
my mind to thee, that thou
mayest make it known to this
people. God has frequently
condescended to teach us his
will by very familiar and
striking images. Then I went,
&c. — Not being disobedient to
the heavenly vision. And behold
he wrought a work on the wheels
— Hebrew, על האבנים, literally,
upon the stones. Thus also the
LXX., επι των λιθων. “There can
be no doubt,” says Blaney, “that
the machine is intended on which
the potters formed their earthen
vessels; and the appellation, οι
λιθοι, the stones, will appear
very proper, if we consider this
machine as consisting of a pair
of circular stones placed one
upon another like millstones; of
which the lower was immoveable,
but the upper one turned upon
the foot of a spindle or axis,
and had motion communicated to
it by the feet of the potter
sitting at his work; as may be
learned from Sirach 38:29. Upon
the top of this upper stone,
which was flat, the clay was
placed, which the potter, having
given the stone the due
velocity, formed into shape with
his hand.” And the vessel that
he made of clay — Hebrew, כחמר,
as clay, that is, while it was
yet clay, was marred, was
spoiled in the potter’s hand, so
that he did not think fit to go
on with his design, as to the
form of the vessel, but turned
the same clay into a vessel of
another form: as he judged best.
Nothing can more strongly
represent the absolute dominion
God has over us than this image
of the potter fashioning his
clay into what form or vessel he
pleased.
Verse 6
Jeremiah 18:6. Cannot I do with
you as this potter? — Have I not
as absolute an authority and
power over you? Nay, God has an
infinitely clearer title to
dominion over us than the potter
has over the clay, for the
potter only gives the clay its
form; whereas we have both
matter and form from God. As the
work of his hands, made and
preserved by him, and yet more
as sinners redeemed by him, we
are entirely in his hands, and
at his disposal, and he has an
undoubted right to do with us
what he pleases. But as a being
infinitely holy, just, and
gracious, in all his conduct
toward his intelligent, free,
and immortal offspring, he acts
by fixed rules of perfect equity
and infinite goodness. He
frequently dispenses favours,
indeed, to individuals,
families, and nations, in a way
of sovereignty, but never
punishes by arbitrary power.
Strong is his hand, and high is
his right hand, (Psalms 89:13,)
but, as it there follows,
justice and judgment are the
habitation of his throne. He
asserts his absolute power, and
tells us what he might do; but
at the same time assures us that
he will act as a merciful and
righteous judge.
Verse 7-8
Jeremiah 18:7-8. At what instant
I shall speak concerning a
nation, &c. — God speaks thus
concerning nations and kingdoms
in his word, and by his prophets
and ministers. Thus he told
Jeremiah 1:10, that he had set
him over the nations, to root
out and pull down — That is, to
declare they should be rooted
out and pulled down, or to make
known the divine purposes
concerning them. If that nation,
against whom 1 have pronounced,
turn, &c., I will repent, &c. —
Repentance in man produces
repentance in God. The
threatenings of God being
conditional, when they are
suspended by his long-suffering
and mercy, or prevented by the
amendment of the persons against
whom they are denounced, he is
said, in Scripture, to repent;
not that the phrase implies that
there is any change in him, but
that there is a change in us;
and that his conduct toward us,
provided his denunciations were
not conditional, is the same as
if he repented or changed his
mind. But the reader is desired
to see what is said on this
subject, Genesis 6:6.
Verse 9-10
Jeremiah 18:9-10. If I shall
speak concerning a nation to
build and to plant — That is, To
advance and establish all the
true interests of it; if it do
evil in my sight, &c. — If it
lose its piety and virtue, and
become profane and vicious; then
will I repent of the good, &c. —
I will not proceed with the good
work which I was performing in
its behalf, but it shall be
intermitted; and what favours
were further designed it shall
be withheld. Thus God changed
his purpose concerning Eli’s
house, 1 Samuel 2:30; and
hurried Israel back into the
wilderness, when he had brought
them within sight of Canaan; and
thus he rejected those lost
sheep of the house of Israel who
refused to embrace the gospel,
notwithstanding the general
promises he had made to that
people, and even after he had
sent his Son to seek and save
them. In like manner neither can
any particular Christians, nor
Christian churches, lay any
claim to God’s general promise
of preserving and finally saving
them, any further than they keep
close to that rule of faith and
manners which he hath prescribed
to them in the New Testament.
Verse 11-12
Jeremiah 18:11-12. Now therefore
speak to the men of Judah — The
Lord now commands his prophet to
make a particular application of
the more general doctrine which
he had before delivered. Thus
saith the Lord, Behold, I frame
evil against you — I have a work
upon the wheel, which, when
finished, will effect your ruin;
it is therefore your wisdom now
to return from your evil ways,
and make your doings good. And
they said, There is no hope —
Thou dost but labour in vain in
talking to us. We will walk
after our own devices — We will
proceed forward in our old
course; and we will every one do
the imagination of his evil
heart — It cannot be supposed
that they would call the
imaginations of their hearts
evil; nor does the prophet mean
that they actually expressed
themselves in these words; but
this was the language of their
conduct. They gave evident proof
that they were determined to
continue in their sins.
Verse 13-14
Jeremiah 18:13-14. Ask ye now
among the heathen — Such an
apostacy as you are guilty of
(see Jeremiah 18:15) is not to
be paralleled among the heathen.
Compare Jeremiah 2:10. Who hath
heard such things — When did
people ever behave toward their
idols, which yet were no gods,
as my people have behaved toward
me? The virgin of Israel — That
people who were dedicated to me
as a chaste virgin, have since
corrupted themselves, and gone a
whoring after idols. Will a man
leave the snow of Lebanon, &c. —
“The two similitudes in this
verse are evidently designed to
illustrate the unnatural and
absurd conduct of the Jewish
nation in deserting their own
God, and adopting the
superstitions of a strange
idolatry, in preference to the
good old paths which God had
ordained for them to walk in. As
to the first, Lebanon, it must
be observed, was the highest
mountain in Israel, lying to the
north of it, and having its
summit almost always covered
with snow; from the whiteness of
which it is supposed to have
derived its name.” See Ancient
Univ. Hist. vol. 1. book 1. p.
570, fol. The same circumstance
is also recorded by Tacitus,
Hist. lib. 5. c. 6. “Præcipuum
montium Libanum erigit, mirum
dictu, tantos inter ardores
opacum fidumque nivibus.” If we
follow the translation in our
text, the sense is, It is as
strange and unreasonable for men
to forsake the true God for
idols, as it would be for a
thirsty traveller to forego the
cold refreshing streams that
come in his way, flowing from
the melting snows of Lebanon, or
the clear waters issuing from a
pure spring, in order that he
might drink of the stagnant
waters of some muddy pool. But,
it is to be observed, the words
a man, and which cometh, are not
in the Hebrew, but supplied by
our translators, and
considerably alter the sense,
which literally is, Will the
snow of Lebanon cease from the
rock of the field? That is, Will
it cease to flow, &c. And by the
rock of the field, may be meant
the rocks on the level ground on
the very top of Lebanon; from
which the snow, being melted,
flowed down into the vales at
the bottom of the mountain. Or,
shall the cold overflowing
waters, running down, fail? The
Vulgate translates the verse to
exactly the same sense, “Nunquid
deficiet de petra agri nix
Libani; aut evelli possunt aquæ
erumpentes frigidæ, et
defluentes?” And the LXX. to
nearly that sense, ΄η
εκλειψουσιν απο πετρας μασοι, η
χιων απο του λιβανου; μη εκκλινη
υδωρ βιαιως ανεμω φερομενον;
Shall the breasts (that is, the
springs) fail from the rock, or
snow from Lebanon? Shall water,
borne along violently by the
wind, turn aside? The sense of
the verse seems to be, that the
Jews ought no more to have
failed in their adherence to the
true God, and his service, than
the snow on mount Lebanon, or
the waters which flow from that
mountain into the fields under
it, ever fail; in other words,
That, as the works of nature
preserve their order, and fail
not of answering the ends for
which they were appointed; so
the Jews ought not to have
failed of performing their duty
to, and showing forth the
praises of, Him who chose them
to be his peculiar people, and
conferred singular privileges
upon them in order to these very
ends.
Verses 15-17
Jeremiah 18:15-17. Because my
people have forgotten me — The
fountain of living waters; have
forgotten what I am in myself,
and what I have been, and am
still ready to be to them; have
lost their knowledge of me, and
their remembrance of what I have
done for them; they have burned
incense to vanity — To vain
idols, the products of men’s
vain imaginations, and serving
no good purpose whatever; and
they have caused them to
stumble, &c. — “The worship of
idols hath perverted them from
following the old, beaten track,
plainly set forth in the law of
Moses, and in the examples of
former ages; (see Jeremiah
6:16;) and hath engaged them in
such new and untried ways of
worship as will end in their
ruin.” — Lowth. To make their
land desolate — Though the Jews
did not practise idolatry and
other sins with this view for
they wished nothing less than
the desolation of their country;
yet they acted as if they wished
it, and God had sufficiently
warned them it was an effect
which would follow upon their
conduct. And a perpetual hissing
— To be hissed at perpetually by
way of insult and scorn, by
those who pass by. I will
scatter them as with an east
wind, &c. — The east wind, being
dry and blasting, is commonly
used to express the calamities
of war, and such like wasting
judgments. But the words may
perhaps be more intelligibly
rendered, As the east wind the
stubble, so will I scatter them
before the enemy. And I will
show them the back and not the
face — I will manifest the same
aversion from them which they
have shown from me; I will not
favour but be against them. The
metaphor is taken from the
custom of kings and princes,
which is, to turn their backs
on, or go away from, those
supplicants whose petitions they
will not grant.
Verse 18
Jeremiah 18:18. Then said they,
Come, &c. — Namely, after they
had heard from Jeremiah what God
had ordered him to say to them
concerning their destruction;
for this seems to be understood.
Let us devise devices against
Jeremiah — Let us accuse him of
being a false prophet; for the
law shall not perish from the
priest, &c. — For his
threatenings plainly contradict
God’s promises made to his
people. “They seem to have been
incensed against him on much the
same ground as the Jews, in
aftertimes, were against our
Saviour and his apostles. They
had persuaded themselves, that
God had intended for them a
perpetual establishment; and
would accordingly provide them
with a constant succession of
man, in all departments, to
preserve and maintain the
general welfare; namely, priests
to direct in all matters of law
and religion; wise statesmen to
manage their civil concerns; and
prophets to make known to them
the immediate will of God on all
important and extraordinary
occasions. Upon this presumption
they inferred, that Jeremiah,
who foretold the contrary, was a
false prophet, and, as such,
they determined to punish him.”
— Blaney. Let us smite him with
the tongue — Let us calumniate
and disparage him, traducing him
as an enemy to his country. Let
us accuse him of crimes against
the state, and by that means
take away his life; then all his
prophecies will die with him. In
the margin we read, for the
tongue, which may signify, “Let
us punish him for his malignant
speeches.” “But I rather think,”
says Blaney, “we should render
it, Let us smite him on the
tongue, that is, on the
offending part; alluding to a
very significant mode of
inflicting punishment, by
directing it to that particular
member which had the most
immediate share in the offence,
although here it may possibly
carry this general import only,
‘Let us punish him so as
effectually to silence him.’“
Verses 19-23
Jeremiah 18:19-23. Give heed to
me, O Lord — The people had
determined not to give heed to
any of his words, (Jeremiah
18:18,) nor to admit any of his
complaints, nor take the least
notice of his grievances;
therefore he appeals to God, as
an impartial judge, that would
hear both sides, as every judge
ought to do. It is a matter of
comfort to faithful ministers
that, if men will not give heed
to their preaching, yet God will
give heed to their praying. And
hearken to the voice of them
that contend with me — Hear what
they have to say against me, and
for themselves, and then make it
appear that thou sittest upon
the throne judging right. Shall
evil be recompensed for good? —
And shall it go unpunished? Wilt
not thou recompense me good for
that evil? see 2 Samuel 16:12.
“To render good for good,” says
Henry, “is human, evil for evil
is brutish, good for evil is
Christian, but evil for good is
devilish; it is so very absurd
and wicked a thing that we
cannot think but God will avenge
it.” They have digged a pit for
my soul — That is, They have
laid snares for me as for a wild
beast; for pits are digged for
wild beasts to fall into, that
so they may be taken. Therefore
the sense is, They have formed a
design against my life, and that
not in a generous way, by an
open assault, against which I
might have had an opportunity of
defending myself; but in a base,
cowardly, clandestine way. Such
was the evil they did or devised
against him. But see how great
the good was which he had done
for them: Remember, he says,
that I stood before thee to
speak good for them — That is,
in the execution of my
prophetical office, I always
interposed, with my prayers, in
their behalf, to avert those
judgments which, by thy command,
I denounced against them.
Therefore deliver up their
children, &c. — Since they are
thus incorrigible, I shall not
any more intercede for them, but
let those calamities of famine
and sword, with which thou hast
threatened them, overtake them.
Let a cry be heard from their
houses, &c. — When they are
unexpectedly assaulted by a
troop of their enemies, that
come to plunder and destroy
them. Yet Lord, or, rather, For
Lord, thou knowest all their
counsel against me, to slay me;
forgive not their iniquity, &c.
— Compare chap. Jeremiah 11:20;
Jeremiah 15:15; Psalms 59:5; on
which passages see the notes.
Although it redounds to the
glory of God’s justice that
incorrigible sinners should meet
with exemplary punishment; yet
these strong imprecations are
not to be considered as the
effusions of an unholy zeal, but
as simple prophecies, in which
light, we have shown, in our
commentary on the Psalms, many
similar expressions occurring
there are to be considered. |