Verse 1
Jeremiah 27:1. In the beginning
of the reign of Jehoiakim —
Instead of Jehoiakim here, Dr.
Waterland, Houbigant, Blaney,
and many others, read Zedekiah,
because it is difficult, if not
impossible, to reconcile the
common reading with what
follows. Lowth also, in his
commentary upon the place, gives
it as his opinion, that “the
least forced way of solving the
difficulty is, to say that
Jehoiakim has crept into the
text by the negligence of the
scribes, (who might have their
eyes fixed upon the beginning of
the last chapter or section,)
instead of Zedekiah. This
emendation is confirmed by
comparing this verse with the
3d, 12th, and 20th verses of
this chapter, and with the
beginning of the next. Such
little verbal mistakes must be
allowed by all impartial readers
to have sometimes happened in
transcribing the Holy
Scriptures, as well as in other
books, and may easily be
corrected, by comparing the
suspected reading with other
parts of the sacred text, which
admit of no difficulty or
uncertainty.”
Verse 2-3
Jeremiah 27:2-3. Make thee bonds
and yokes, &c. — The prophets
were frequently ordered to
foreshow future events by
actions as well as by words.
Thus Isaiah was commanded to go
naked and barefoot, Isaiah 20:3.
Ezekiel, in like manner, was
ordered to prophesy by signs,
Ezekiel 4:1; Ezekiel 12:3; and
Ezekiel 24:17-19. In making
these yokes, putting them upon
his neck, and fastening them on
with bands, Jeremiah was
intended to be a type both to
his own people, and also to the
people afterward mentioned, that
they should be brought under
subjection to the king of
Babylon. And send them to the
king of Edom, &c. — These
nations were near to the Jews,
and their princes had their
ambassadors resident at
Jerusalem. They were also some
of those countries which God had
declared that he had given into
the hand of the king of Babylon:
see Jeremiah 25:21; Jeremiah
25:24. By the hand of the
messengers, &c. — The business
of these messengers seems to
have been, to engage Zedekiah to
join in a league with the
nations from which they came,
against the king of Babylon.
Verse 6
Jeremiah 27:6. I have given all
these lands into the hand of
Nebuchadnezzar — “God is the
sole lord and proprietor of the
world; and, by virtue of his
absolute sovereignty and
dominion, has a right to give
the kingdoms of the earth to
whomsoever he pleases, Daniel
4:17, and he exercises this
authority by changing times and
seasons, by removing kings, and
setting up kings, Daniel 2:21.
The king of Babylon, my servant
— One whom I have made use of as
an instrument to execute my
purposes in inflicting
punishment on many nations: see
note on Jeremiah 25:9. And the
beasts of the field have I given
him — This is a hyperbolical way
of speaking, to signify the most
ample authority and dominion.
Verse 7-8
Jeremiah 27:7-8. All nations
shall serve him, his son, and
his son’s son — His son was
Evil-merodach, and his son’s son
Belshazzar, in whom his kingdom
ended. Then the time of
reckoning with his land came,
when the tables were turned; and
many nations and great kings —
Incorporated in the empire of
the Medes and Persians, served
themselves of him. The nation,
&c., that will not put their
neck under the yoke of the king
of Babylon — That will not
submit to that servitude,
represented by the yoke,
mentioned Jeremiah 27:2-3; will
I punish with the sword, &c. —
With one judgment after another,
until they are wasted and
ruined. Nebuchadnezzar was very
unjust and barbarous in invading
the rights and liberties of his
neighbours, and forcing them
into a subjection to him; yet
God had just and holy ends in
view in permitting it, namely,
to punish those nations for
their idolatry and gross
immoralities. They that would
not serve the God that made and
preserved them, were justly made
to serve their enemies that
sought to ruin them.
Verses 9-11
Jeremiah 27:9-11. Hearken not ye
to your prophets, nor to your
diviners — These nations, it
must be observed, had their
prophets as well as the Jews, or
rather persons that pretended to
foretel future events by
consulting the stars, by dreams,
and various arts of divination;
and they, to please their
patrons, flattered them with
assurances that they should not
be brought into subjection and
servitude by the king of
Babylon. By these means they
designed to animate them to a
vigorous resistance: and though
they had no ground for such an
expectation, they hoped hereby
to do them service. But Jeremiah
here tells them, that it would
prove to their destruction; for
by resisting they would provoke
the conqueror to deal severely
with them, to remove them from
their land, and to drive them
out into a miserable captivity,
in which they should be buried
in oblivion, and perish. But the
nations that bring their neck
under the yoke, &c. — That, upon
the first summons, or without
making any hostile opposition,
shall yield themselves subjects
to the king of Babylon, shall
continue in their own country
and possessions, being only made
tributaries to that king.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 27:12-13. I spake also
to Zedekiah, &c. — What the
prophet here says to Zedekiah
has a particular weight in it,
because he was made king of
Judea by Nebuchadnezzar, and had
taken an oath to be faithful to
him, and never to resist his
authority. Why will ye die, thou
and thy people? — That is, why
wilt thou wilfully ruin, not
only thyself, but thy people, by
the sword, the famine, and the
pestilence? by which judgments
the Lord hath declared, that all
nations who will not willingly
yield to the king of Babylon
shall be destroyed.
Verses 16-18
Jeremiah 27:16-18. Also I spake
to the priests and to all this
people — The prophet, being
God’s true servant, spared none,
but gave faithful warning to all
sorts of persons, to take heed
of being deceived by the false
prophets, who undertook to
foretel that the vessels of the
temple, carried away in the time
of Jehoiakim and his son
Jeconiah, (of which we read 2
Chronicles 36:7; 2 Chronicles
36:10,) should be brought back
again to Jerusalem in a short
time: see Jeremiah 28:3. Hearken
not unto them — Believe them
not, but acquiesce in God’s
providence with respect to you,
and be content to be subject to
the king of Babylon, that so
your lives may be given you for
a prey. Wherefore should this
city be laid waste? — If you do
not comply with God’s will in
this instance, your city will
certainly be destroyed, and why
should you pull down such a
judgment upon your own heads?
But if they be prophets, &c. —
If they be true prophets, and
have any power with God, instead
of foretelling the bringing back
of the vessels carried away, let
them apply to him in prayer to
prevent the carrying away of the
vessels that yet remain, whether
in the house of the Lord, or in
the king’s house, or in
Jerusalem, which can be done no
other way than by pleading with
God to turn away his wrath, and
not proceed in inflicting those
sore judgments which he is most
certainly bringing upon you.
Verses 19-22
Jeremiah 27:19-22. Thus saith
the Lord concerning the pillars,
&c. — These were all parts of
the temple, or vessels used in
it: see 1 Kings 7. And all the
nobles, &c. — Concerning the
persons and things which the
king of Babylon carried away,
see 2 Kings 24:13-15. Yea, thus
saith the Lord — The prophet
enlarges the divine threatening,
and represents it as extending
to all other vessels of value in
the houses of the king, the
nobles, or more wealthy
citizens. They shall be carried
to Babylon, and there shall they
be — See an historical account
of the fulfilment of this
prophecy, 2 Kings 25:13-16; and
2 Chronicles 36:18; and that
they abode in Babylon till the
end of the captivity, appears
from Daniel 5:2, where we read
of Belshazzar’s sending for
them, to drink wine in at his
fatal feast; until the day that
I visit them — That is, until
the expiration of the time of
the Jewish captivity, which was
seventy years. Then will I
restore them to this place — Of
the fulfilling of which part of
the prophecy we have an account
Ezra 1:7-9. So punctually was
Jeremiah’s prophecy in this
place fulfilled, and so exactly
does one part of holy writ agree
with another, which are
irrefragable proofs of the
divine authority of the sacred
Scriptures. |