Verse 1-2
Jeremiah 22:1-2. Thus saith the
Lord — The prophecy which
follows to Jeremiah 23:9, was
evidently delivered in the reign
of Jehoiakim; for it speaks of
his immediate predecessor as
already gone into captivity, and
foretels the death of Jehoiakim
himself. Blaney thinks it
followed immediately after what
is said in the xixth and xxth
chapters to have passed in the
temple precincts, from whence,
as from a higher ground, he
supposes the prophet is ordered
to go down to the house of the
king of Judah. Hear, &c., O king
of Judah — Namely, Jehoiakim,
(Jeremiah 22:18,) who was
established upon the throne by
the king of Egypt, in the place
of Jehoahaz, in the year of the
world 3394, according to
Archbishop Usher. That sittest
on the throne of David — Thus
the prophet puts him in mind of
the promises God had made to
David’s family, if they would
live in obedience to his will, 1
Kings 8:25. Thou, and thy
servants, and thy people — Thy
courtiers and other officers,
who attend continually on thee,
comprehending likewise all the
people of the city: all whom
this word of the Lord concerned;
that enter in by these gates —
Namely, the gates of the palace,
whereby they went in to the
king. The king was evidently at
the gate of his palace, with his
principal officers, when
Jeremiah presented himself
before him.
Verses 3-5
Jeremiah 22:3-5. Thus saith the
Lord, Execute ye judgment, &c. —
That is, administer justice to
all your subjects. The stranger,
the fatherless, and the widow
are particularly named, as
persons who have the fewest
friends, and therefore are the
most exposed to the tyranny,
injustice, and oppression of the
great. And do no wrong, do no
violence, &c. — Compare Jeremiah
22:17, where we find Jehoiakim
charged with these sins. For if
ye do this thing indeed — If ye
will, not in pretence, but
reality, do what is just and
right to every one, and see that
inferior magistrates, acting
under you do so too; then shall
there enter, &c. — See the note
on Jeremiah 17:25, where,
instead of the gates of this
house, the text reads, the gates
of this city. And the context
here shows, that the prophecy is
directed, not only to the king’s
court in particular, but
likewise to the whole city of
Jerusalem, one part of which was
called the city of David; and
the whole looked upon as a royal
city, and the place of their
king’s residence. Kings sitting
upon the throne of David, &c. —
There shall then be a succession
of kings, and that
uninterrupted, reigning in
Judah, of David’s line, kings
who shall enjoy a perfect
tranquillity, and live in great
state and dignity. But if ye
will not hear these words — That
is, if ye will not so hear as to
obey them. I swear by myself,
saith the Lord — That is, I
resolve absolutely upon it; for
God is not in Scripture said to
swear, unless as speaking after
the manner of men, and according
to the actions of men; so that
whenever this expression is
employed, it is only to signify,
that God would not revoke the
thing spoken of, but that it
should be immutable. Here,
therefore, it implies that the
sentence pronounced should
certainly be executed, and that
nothing could reverse it but the
people’s sincere repentance,
which condition is expressed in
the foregoing part of the verse.
See Hebrews 6:17. This house
shall become a desolation — This
palace, of the kings of Judah
shall fare no better than other
habitations in Jerusalem, sin as
certainly effecting the ruin of
the houses of princes as those
of mean men.
Verses 6-9
Jeremiah 22:6-9. For thus saith
the Lord unto, or, concerning,
the king’s house: Thou art
Gilead unto me, &c.; yet surely,
&c. — “Though thou wert never so
precious in my sight, as
valuable for riches and plenty
as the fat pastures of Gilead,
and thy buildings as beautiful
for their stateliness as the
tall cedars of Lebanon, yet
unless thy princes and people
reform, thou shalt become
nothing but ruin and
desolation.” Thus Lowth. But
Blaney translates the verse,
Gilead art thou through me, O
summit of Lebanon; surely I will
make thee a desert, cities not
inhabited. Which he interprets
as follows, “Lebanon was the
highest mountain in Israel, and
was therefore an apt emblem of
the reigning family advanced to
the highest rank of dignity in
the state. Gilead was the
richest and most fertile part of
the country. The meaning then is
plainly this, By my providence
thou art not only supreme in
rank, but hast been rendered
exceedingly wealthy and
flourishing. But the same power
that raised will likewise be
exerted in reducing thee to the
lowest state of indigence and
distress.” And I will prepare —
Hebrew, וקדשׁתי, I will sanctify
destroyers against thee — That
is, I will solemnly appoint and
set them apart for the work of
destroying thee. And they shall
cut down thy choice cedars —
Having compared the king’s
palace, or the city of
Jerusalem, to Lebanon, Jeremiah
22:6, pursuing the metaphor, he
threatens to destroy them and
their most beautiful edifices by
the Chaldean army. And many
nations — Persons of many
nations; shall pass by this
city, &c. — Namely, when on
their travels; and they shall
say, Wherefore hath the Lord
done thus unto this great city —
They who have heard that this
had been a very strong, rich,
and populous city, and that it
had been called the city of God,
and the place of his especial
residence, would be astonished
to find it, through his
judgments, a scene of ruin and
desolation, and would require
how such an effect came to be
produced. Thus was fulfilled
that threatening of Moses,
Deuteronomy 28:37, that God
would make the Jews an
astonishment to other nations.
See likewise 1 Kings 9:8. Then
shall they answer — Some shall
answer, or they shall answer one
another. The reason is so
obvious that it shall be ready
in every man’s mouth. Because
they have forsaken the covenant
of Jehovah their God; have
revolted from their allegiance
to him, and from the duty which
they had solemnly covenanted to
perform, and worshipped other
gods and served them — In
contempt of him; and therefore
he gave them up to this
destruction.
Verse 10
Jeremiah 22:10. Weep ye not for
the dead — This seems to be
spoken of King Josiah, killed in
battle with the Egyptians: see 2
Kings 23:29-30, concerning whom
the prophet here says that he
was rather to be rejoiced over
than lamented, since, by being
taken soon out of life, he
escaped the terrible evils which
came upon his country. But weep
sore for him that goeth away,
for he shall return no more —
Namely, Jehoahaz, who was
carried captive into Egypt by
Pharaoh-necho, and never more
returned to his country. He is
called Shallum in the next
verse, but in all other places
Jehoahaz. It seems probable that
Shallum was his name before he
ascended the throne, and that he
changed it for Jehoahaz, as his
brothers Eliakim and Mattaniah
also assumed the names of
Jehoiakim and Zedekiah on the
like occasion, 2 Kings 23:34; 2
Kings 24:17.
Verses 13-16
Jeremiah 22:13-16. Wo unto him
that buildeth his house by
unrighteousness, &c. — “The
prophet proceeds to denounce
God’s judgments against
Jehoiakim, (see Jeremiah 22:18,)
who, it seems, built himself a
stately palace in those
calamitous times, and took no
care to pay the wages of the
workmen; but maintained his own
luxury by the oppression of
those who were to live by their
labour: a crying sin, and too
common among the great men of
the world, severely prohibited
both in the Old and New
Testament.” — Lowth. See
Deuteronomy 24:14-15; James 5:4.
That saith, I will build me a
wide house and large chambers —
Hebrew, עליות מרוחים, chambers
to the wind; that is, exposed,
or open, to wind on every side.
They used to enjoy the cool air
in these chambers; the windows
being so placed that they might
receive the wind from whatever
quarter it came. Shalt thou
reign because thou closest
thyself in cedar? — Will a
house, finely adorned and
furnished, be a fortress and
defence to thee against thy
enemies, that come to deprive
thee of thy kingdom? Did not thy
father eat and drink, and do
justice, &c. — Did not Josiah
live, and enjoy comfort in life
as well as thou dost, though he
did not indulge himself in such
delicacies, and had not such
magnificent apartments? Did he
not live in sufficient plenty,
and in a state suitable to his
character, and yet strictly
observed justice, both in his
private and public capacity, and
not betake himself to such
sordid methods of injustice and
oppression for the support of
his grandeur? He did no wrong to
any of his subjects, never
oppressed them, or put any
hardship upon them, but was
careful to preserve to all their
just rights and properties. Nay,
he not only did not abuse his
power for the support of wrong,
but used it for the maintaining
of right; he judged the cause of
the poor and needy — Was ready
to hear the cause of the meanest
of his subjects, and do them
justice; and then it was well
with him — The blessing of God
was upon him as the reward of
his justice and integrity. He
was comfortable in himself, and
was useful to and respected by
his subjects, and prospered in
all that he put his hand to. Was
not this to know me, saith the
Lord? — Did he not hereby make
it appear, that he rightly knew,
worshipped, and served me, and
consequently was known and owned
by me? Observe, reader, the
right knowledge of God implies
the doing our duty to our
fellow-creatures, as well as to
God, particularly that duty
which our place and station in
the world require us to perform.
Verse 17
Jeremiah 22:17. But thine eyes
and thy heart are not but for
thy covetousness — They are for
that, and for nothing else. For
this cause Jehoiakim is compared
to a lion, by the Prophet
Ezekiel 19:6. Observe, reader,
in covetousness the heart walks
after the eyes, Job 31:7; it is
therefore called the lust of the
eye, 1 John 2:15 : and the eyes
and the heart are then for
covetousness when the aims and
affections are set upon the
wealth of this world; and when
they are so the temptation is
strong to fraud, oppression, and
all manner of violence and
villany, even, as it is here
said, to shed innocent blood.
Verse 18-19
Jeremiah 22:18-19. They shall
not lament for him, saying, Ah
my brother! &c. — “The prophet
here repeats part of the funeral
ditty or song which the public
mourners used to sing at
funerals, (see note on Jeremiah
9:17; Jeremiah 20:14, and
compare 1 Kings 13:30,)
signifying, that neither
Jehoiakim, nor his queen or
family, should be buried with
those solemn lamentations with
which the memory of his
predecessors, particularly that
of his father, had been
honoured: see 2 Chronicles
35:25. Saying, Ah Lord! or, Ah
his glory! — That is, how is his
glory departed and vanished!
another burden or chorus of the
funeral song. He shall be buried
with the burial of an ass — None
attending him to his grave, none
mourning over him. Or, the
meaning is, he shall have no
burial: for the carcasses of
asses are not buried. Drawn and
cast forth, &c. — The expression
seems to be taken from the
custom of dogs to draw about a
carcass before they tear and
devour it. Jehoiakim, having
been advanced to the kingdom by
Pharaoh-necho, king of Egypt, 2
Kings 23:34, followed the
fortune of that king, and upon
the conquest of Egypt by the
Chaldeans, Jeremiah 46:2, after
three years’ reign, was taken
prisoner by Nebuchadnezzar, and
put into irons, Daniel 1:2; 2
Chronicles 36:6. But afterward,
it seems, the king of Babylon
released him and made him a
tributary king. After three
years’ obedience, however,
Jehoiakim rebelled, in
confidence of assistance from
Egypt. Soon after which
Nebuchadnezzar’s army overran
Judea, besieged Jerusalem, and
probably took Jehoiakim prisoner
in some sally that he made upon
them, and killed him, and then
cast out his dead body into the
highway, denying him the common
rites of burial: see 2 Kings
24:1-6. Accordingly, he is said
to have slept with his fathers,
but not to have been buried with
them: see also Joseph. Antiq.,
lib. 10. cap. 7, 8.
Verse 20
Jeremiah 22:20. Go up to
Lebanon, and cry, &c. — The
verbs here being in the feminine
gender, the city of Jerusalem,
or the land of Judea, seems to
be addressed and called upon
ironically to go to the tops of
the high mountains, and to the
frontiers of the country, and
cry aloud for help to the
neighbouring powers, but in
vain, since all those who had
any inclination to favour her,
the Egyptians in particular,
were themselves disabled and
crushed by the arms of
Nebuchadnezzar. Cry from the
passages — Hebrew, מעברים, from
the borders, or rivers, which
are the bounds of your country.
For the word signifies, not only
the fords, or passages of a
river, but the parts along each
bank, and the confines or
extremities of a country. For
all thy lovers are destroyed —
Or broken, as נשׁברוsignifies:
all thy foreign allies, whose
friendship and assistance thou
hast sought, and whom thou hast
courted, by complying with their
idolatries, are humbled.
Verse 21
Jeremiah 22:21. I spake unto
thee in thy prosperity — Spake
by my servants the prophets, in
reproofs, admonitions, counsels;
but thou saidst, I will not hear
— Didst manifest by thy conduct
that thou wouldest not obey.
Such is too often the effect of
prosperity. It puffs men up with
pride and high-mindedness, and
makes them despise the word of
God, thinking themselves too
wise to stand in need of advice,
and therefore they defer
attending to it, till they are
in extremities, when it becomes
of little or no benefit to them.
The word שׁלוה, however, which
we translate prosperity,
properly signifies security, and
may be spoken of the false
security in which the
inhabitants of Judah and
Jerusalem lived in times when
they were threatened with the
most grievous calamities, and
which had been denounced to them
by the prophets, from the time
of Hezekiah on account of the
idolatries and various other
acts of wickedness of their
kings and people; who
nevertheless continued in their
vices without any amendment.
This hath been thy manner from
thy youth — From thy being first
formed into a people. See the
margin.
Verse 22
Jeremiah 22:22. The wind shall
eat up all thy pastors — Thy
kings, princes, priests, and
false prophets, who have
presided over thy civil and
religious affairs, shall be
destroyed by my judgments, as
plants are blasted by winds.
God’s judgments are often
compared to a scorching and
blasting wind. Thy lovers shall
go into captivity — Thy allies
shall themselves be made
captives by the Chaldeans, and
shall not be able to preserve
themselves, much less to give
any assistance to thee.
Verse 23
Jeremiah 22:23. O inhabitant of
Lebanon — O thou that inhabitest
the city which for pleasantness
and delight may be compared to
Lebanon. Or he alludes to the
stately buildings of Jerusalem,
elsewhere compared to the tall
cedars of a forest: see note on
Jeremiah 21:14. That makest thy
nest in the cedars — Who livest
in houses built of cedars. How
gracious shalt thou be — Or
rather, how humble, or
suppliant, wilt thou be, when
pangs come upon thee — Those
pangs of affliction which shall
suddenly oppress thee, whereas
before thou wast too proud to
hearken to any advice that was
offered. The Hebrew, מה נחנתי,
is rendered by Buxtorff, quam
gratulaberis tibi, How wilt thou
gratulate thyself when pangs,
&c., understanding it as spoken
ironically.
Verses 24-28
Jeremiah 22:24-28. As I live,
saith the Lord, though Coniah
were the signet, or, rather, the
ring, upon my right hand — By
Coniah he means Jehoiachin,
whose name was Jeconiah, 1
Chronicles 3:16, (for all
Josiah’s sons had two names, and
so had his grandchild Jeconiah,)
here, in contempt, called
Coniah; yet would I pluck thee
thence — Though he were never so
near and dear to me, as dear as
a signet, or ring, which every
man keeps safe, yet his
wickedness would make him
forfeit all my favour toward
him. “The ring was anciently
worn as a mark of sovereignty.
When Alexander was dying, he
gave his ring to Perdiccas,
thus, as it were, marking him
out for his successor.” And I
will cast thee out, and thy
mother that bare thee — We are
informed, (2 Kings 24:15,) that
Nebuchadnezzar carried away
Jehoiachin, that is, Jeconiah or
Coniah, to Babylon, and his
mother, and his wives, &c. Is
this man Coniah a despised
broken idol, &c. — Blaney
renders the verse more
literally, thus: “A
contemptible, broken idol is
this man Coniah? Or a vessel in
which none delighteth? Wherefore
are they cast forth, he and his
seed, and thrown upon a land
which they knew not?” As if he
had said, “Would any one have
thought that this man, who was
invested with royal dignity,
should be rendered no better
than a broken image of royalty,
a mere potsherd, utterly
contemptible and useless?”
Verse 29-30
Jeremiah 22:29-30. O earth, &c.
— The word earth, or land
rather, as ארצmay be properly
rendered, is repeated three
times by way of emphasis, to
engage the deeper attention. The
prophet speaks to the land of
Judea, which he commands to
write down the following
prediction, that it might be
remembered by them, and the
truth of it be thereby made
manifest. Write ye this man
childless — Hebrew, ערירי,
solitary, deprived, destitute.
The LXX. render it εκκηρυκτον
αυθρωτον, an ejected, or
expelled man; a man that shall
not prosper in his days — This
latter clause seems explanatory
of the former; and that again is
further explained in the
following: “For no man of his
seed shall prosper, sitting upon
the throne of David, and ruling
any more in Judah.” That
Jeconiah had children appears
both from this verse and
Jeremiah 22:28; but according to
this prophecy, no man of his
seed sat upon the throne of
David. This seems the true
exposition of this passage,
which has been considered as
attended with considerable
difficulty. “I cannot,” says
Blaney, “agree with the
generality of commentators, who
suppose that God hereby declares
it as a thing certain, and, as
it were, orders it to be
inserted among the public acts
of his government, that Jeconiah
should die absolutely childless.
Other parts of Scripture
positively assert him to have
had children, 1 Chronicles
3:17-18; Matthew 1:12. Both
Jeremiah 22:28, and the
subsequent part of this verse,
imply that he either had, or
should have, seed. But the
historians and chroniclers of
the times are called upon, and
directed to set him down
childless; not as being
literally so, but yet the same
to all intents and purposes of
public life, for he was to be
the last of his race that should
sit upon the throne of David;
and his descendants were no more
to figure as kings, but to be
reduced to the rank and
obscurity of private persons.
And in this sense the prophecy
was actually fulfilled, for,
allowing Zerubbabel, who is
called governor of Judah,
(Haggai 1:1,) to have been a
lineal descendant of Jeconiah,
yet he could not be said to sit
upon the throne of David, and
reign, or rule, in Judah, seeing
he was but a provincial
governor, a mere servant of the
king of Persia, in whom the
sovereignty resided; nor were
any of those persons kings who
afterward reigned in Judah, even
of the family of David, until
the time of Christ.” |