Verse 1
Jeremiah 21:1. The word which
came to Jeremiah, when King
Zedekiah sent unto him — The
occasion of Zedekiah’s sending
the message here mentioned to
Jeremiah, has, by some
commentators, been confounded
with that in chap. 37. “But I
think,” says Blaney, “they are
clearly and undeniably distinct
one from the other. From the
reply given to that in chapter
37., it is manifest that the
Chaldeans, who had been
besieging Jerusalem for some
time had already raised the
siege, and were gone to meet the
Egyptian army, leaving the Jews
in great hopes that they would
never return again. But the
terms of this message seem to
imply, that the king of Babylon
had but just commenced his
hostilities against Judah, of
which Zedekiah informs the
prophet, as of a matter that
might not yet have come to his
certain knowledge; and desires
him to intercede with God, that
he would divert the storm by
some such extraordinary
interposition as he had been
wont to manifest in favour of
his people. The answer likewise
takes no notice of any siege or
operations past; but simply
regards the future, which it is
declared should end unhappily,
because God would take an active
part against the inhabitants of
Judah, and would deliver both
their city, and also the king
and his people, into the hands
of their merciless enemies. The
time of this transaction,
therefore, I conceive to be the
ninth year of Zedekiah, previous
to the siege of Jerusalem, which
began in the tenth mouth of that
year.”
Verse 2
Jeremiah 21:2. Inquire, I pray
thee, of the Lord for us — As
Zedekiah was not one of the
best, so he was not one of the
worst of the kings of Judah.
Having some reverence for God,
he sends the prophet to inquire
of him. Or, as the word דרשׁ,
signifies, to seek or apply to
God by prayer and supplication:
see Isaiah 55:6. If so be the
Lord will deal with us, &c. —
If he will show his wonderful
power, in giving us a total
deliverance from the hands of
our enemies, the Chaldeans. If
they had attended to the
predictions of the prophets they
would not have made this inquiry
of Jeremiah; for all the things
which had happened to them
already, had been predicted by
the prophets. But perhaps they
flattered themselves that all
God’s threatenings would not be
executed; or that they had been
executed already, in great
numbers of them being carried
into captivity, first in the
reign of Jehoiakim, and
afterward in that of Jehoiachin.
Verses 4-7
Jeremiah 21:4-7. Behold, I will
turn back the weapons, &c. —
Instead of doing execution upon
your enemies, they shall hurt
yourselves, and be the occasion
of your own destruction. God
will as visibly appear against
you as if a miraculous wind were
to drive back your own darts and
arrows, and turn them upon
yourselves. And I myself will
fight against you — By the
executioners of my wrath, the
sword, the famine, and the
pestilence. I will plainly
appear on your enemies’ side, by
the success I will give to their
arms. And I will smite the
inhabitants of this city — I the
Lord will do it, and it shall
evidently appear to be my work;
both man and beast — Even the
beasts shall perish, both those
that are for food, and those
that are for service in war.
They shall die of a great
pestilence — Which shall rage
within the walls, while their
enemies are encamped about them.
Though the walls and gates of
Jerusalem may for a time keep
out the Chaldeans, they cannot
keep out God’s judgments. His
arrows of pestilence can reach
those that think themselves safe
from other arrows. And I will
deliver Zedekiah, &c. — The king
himself, and all the people that
escape the sword, famine, and
pestilence, shall fall into the
hands of Nebuchadnezzar and the
Chaldeans. And he shall smite
them with the edge of the sword
— Zedekiah himself was not put
to death, but carried to
Babylon, where he died: see
Jeremiah 24:5. But his sons and
his great men were slain by the
command of Nebuchadnezzar, 2
Kings 25:7-8. “It is common in
all writers to express that
indefinitely which is true of
the greater part of the persons
concerned.” — Lowth. He shall
not spare, neither have pity nor
mercy — These three synonymous
terms are used by way of
emphasis, to express the severe
revenge the Babylonians would
take of them. The inhabitants of
Jerusalem must indeed have been
sensible at last, that they
could expect little or no mercy,
since they had rebelled three
times against the king of
Babylon.
Verses 8-10
Jeremiah 21:8-10. And unto this
people thou shalt say, &c. — By
the civil message which the king
sent to Jeremiah it appeared
that both he and the people
began to have respect for him;
but the reply which God obliged
him to make was sufficient to
crush that little respect, and
to exasperate them against him
more than ever. Behold, I set
before you the way of life, and
the way of death — Both the law
and the prophets had often set
before them life and death in
another sense; life, if they
would obey the voice of God;
death, if they should persist in
disobedience, Deuteronomy 30:19.
But they had slighted that way
of life which would have made
them truly happy; to upbraid
them with which the prophet here
uses similar expressions, which
signify, not as those of Moses,
a fair proposal, but a
melancholy dilemma, advising
them, of two evils, to choose
the least. And that lesser evil,
a shameful and wretched
captivity, is all the life now
left for them to propose to
themselves. He that abideth in
this city — And trusts to it to
secure him; shall die by the
sword — Without the city; or by
the famine, or pestilence within
it. But he that goeth out, and
falleth to the Chaldeans —
Giving up his vain hopes of
safety in the city, and bringing
his spirit down to his
condition; shall live — God had
declared it to be his purpose to
give up Judea and the
neighbouring countries to the
dominion of the Chaldeans: so
they who would comply with his
declared will should have their
lives spared, the rest should be
destroyed as fighting against
God. And his life shall be unto
him for a prey — That is, he
shall save his life with as much
difficulty and hazard as a prey
is taken from the mighty: he
shall escape but very narrowly.
Or, he shall think himself a
considerable gainer by escaping
with his life in so general a
destruction. For I have set my
face against this city — To lay
it waste and not to protect it;
for evil — Which shall have no
good mixed with it, no
mitigation, or merciful allay;
and, therefore, you have no way
of safety, but begging quarter
of the Chaldeans, and
surrendering yourselves
prisoners of war. In vain did
Rabshakeh persuade the Jews to
do this, while they had God for
them, Isaiah 36:16. But it was
the best course they could take
now, God being against them.
Verse 11-12
Jeremiah 21:11-12. And touching
the house of the king of Judah,
&c. — The house of Zedekiah, the
court, or those who were
magistrates. Hear ye the word of
the Lord — These, how great
soever, are not excused from the
common obligations which lie
upon all to listen to and obey
the revelations of the divine
will. Execute judgment in the
morning — Do it diligently, do
it quickly, and do not delay to
do justice upon appeals made to
you, and tire out your poor
petitioners as you have done.
Those magistrates that would
fill their places well, and do
their duty, must rise early.
This is so expressed because it
was usual for kings and judges
to sit for the administration of
justice in a morning. Lest my
fury go out like fire — Many
commentators have been of
opinion that this prophecy, from
the 11th verse, belongs to the
same subject with chapter 22.,
and relates to the time of
Jehoiakim. And from these words,
lest my fury, &c., they infer,
that it was antecedent to the
prophecy at the beginning of the
chapter, and to that peremptory
decree published against the
king’s house, mentioned Jeremiah
21:7 of this chapter, “But I
cannot help thinking,” says
Blaney, “that this latter part
is but a continuation of the
same prophecy with which the
chapter begins; for the house of
David was still to be visited
with more calamities than those
which had befallen it in the
days of Jehoiakim. And how
peremptory soever the decree may
sound, (Jeremiah 21:7,) we must
remember the rule laid down
concerning such decrees,
(Jeremiah 18:7-8,) none of
which, it seems, are
irreversible on the condition of
a change of conduct. And, though
God may well be supposed to know
when no such ground of reversal
will take place, yet it is
agreeable to the justice of his
providence repeatedly to
admonish sinners of the means by
which his judgments may be
avoided, that they may have none
to blame but themselves when the
threatened vengeance overtakes
them.”
Verse 13-14
Jeremiah 21:13-14. Behold, I am
against thee, O inhabitant of
the valley, and rock of the
plain — A description of
Jerusalem, which was built in
part upon the rocky mountain of
Zion, but a great part of it was
in the valley; and the higher
mountains about mount Zion made
that mountain itself, in
comparison with them, to appear
as a valley. Which say, Who
shall come down against us? —
They confided in the strength of
their situation, as the
Jebusites, the ancient
inhabitants of the place, had
formerly done. “Yet how many
times,” says Bishop Newton, “was
Jerusalem taken, though it was a
very strong place and
wonderfully fortified, both by
nature and art! It was taken by
Shishak king of Egypt, by
Nebuchadnezzar, by Antiochus
Epiphanes, by Pompey, by Socius,
and Herod, before its final
destruction by Titus.” I will
kindle a fire in the forest
thereof — The word forest is
often metaphorically taken for a
city in the prophetical
writings. See Jeremiah 22:7;
Ezekiel 20:46; Zechariah 11:1.
Or it may mean the forest of
Lebanon, or their houses made of
wood cut out of that forest,
especially those of the royal
family, or their idolatrous
groves. And it shall devour all
things round about it — And this
fire shall not end in the
destruction of this city, but
shall totally destroy all the
adjacent country. |