Verse 1
Jeremiah 31:1. At the same time,
saith the Lord — Namely, in the
latter days, mentioned Jeremiah
30:24. I will be the God of all
the families of Israel — Not of
the two tribes only, but of all
the tribes; not of the house of
Aaron only and the families of
Levi, but of all the families.
And they shall be my people — I
will favour them, and do them
good, and they shall be subject
to, and shall worship and obey
me. “This second part of the
prophecy,” says Calmet,
“principally respects the return
of the ten tribes. And I have
shown, in a particular
dissertation, that not only
Judah, Benjamin, and Levi, but
also the twelve tribes returned
into their own country.”
Doubtless, many individuals of
the ten tribes returned with the
Jews from Babylon, having been
incorporated among them in the
several places where they were
settled; yet this seems to have
been only a very partial
accomplishment of this prophecy,
which, as Blaney observes,
“points out circumstances that
certainly were not fulfilled at
the return of the Jews from the
Babylonish captivity, nor have
hitherto had their completion.”
But, in the latter days, when
the fulness of the Gentiles are
brought in, all Israel shall be
saved; for, as Isaiah and St.
Paul testify, there shall come
out of Zion the deliverer, and
shall turn away ungodliness from
Jacob. Isaiah 59:19; Romans
11:26-29. See note on Jeremiah
30:10.
Verse 2
Jeremiah 31:2. The people that
were left of the sword — That
sword of Pharaoh with which he
cut off the male children as
soon as they were born, and that
sword with which he threatened
to cut them off when he pursued
them to the Red sea. Found grace
in the wilderness — Though in
the wilderness, where they
seemed to be lost and forgotten,
as these latter Jews and
Israelites were now in a strange
land, yet they found grace in
God’s sight, were owned, and
highly honoured by him, and
blessed with wonderful instances
of his peculiar favour. And he
went to cause them to rest —
Went before them in a pillar of
cloud, to mark out the places
for them where they should pitch
their tents, and conducted them
to the land that he had provided
for them. And after such
evidences of his kindness to
them, why should they doubt of
the continuance of his favours?
Verse 3-4
Jeremiah 31:3-4. The Lord hath
appeared of old unto me — The
prophet here personifies the
Jewish nation, the people spoken
of in the foregoing verse, who
are introduced as calling to
mind how God, in times of old,
had manifested himself to the
fathers of their nation, and
appeared for their deliverance.
Yea, I have loved thee with an
everlasting love — These are
evidently the words of God
addressed to Zion or Jerusalem.
As if he had said, The mercies I
promised you, as a nation, when
I made a covenant with your
fathers, shall never fail. My
love was not a temporary love,
manifested merely to a single
generation, but it is an
everlasting love, and will
continue through all
generations. Therefore with
loving-kindness have I drawn
thee — I have shown my benignity
toward you, by taking all
opportunities of doing you good,
and preventing you, by acts of
grace and goodness, to draw you
to myself, as your God, from all
the idols to which you had
turned aside. I have ever dealt
graciously with them who fear
me, and who hope in my mercy,
and will always continue so to
do. Again I will build thee, O
virgin of Israel — “Thy
inhabitants shall be again
restored to thee, who shall
rebuild their cities and
habitations that lay desolate
during the time of their
captivity.” Perhaps the Jews
have the title of virgin of
Israel bestowed upon them to
imply that, in consequence of
their repentance and
reformation, “they should be
washed from the stains of their
former idolatries, so often
compared to whoredom in the
Scriptures.” — Lowth. Thou shalt
again be adorned with thy
tabrets — “All the signs, both
of religions and civil joy,
shall be restored to thee.” That
it was usual for the women of
Israel to go forth with tabrets
and dancing in times of public
rejoicing and prosperity, see
Exodus 15:20; 11:34; 1 Samuel
18:16. These times were now to
be renewed.
Verse 5
Jeremiah 31:5. Thou shalt yet
plant vines — Building and
planting are commonly joined
together; upon the mountains of
Samaria — Samaria, being the
metropolis of the ten tribes,
seems to be put for the kingdom
of Israel, as it is distinct
from that of Judah. According to
which interpretation the
mountains of Samaria are
equivalent to the mountains of
Israel, and therefore the words
imply, that the deliverance here
spoken of should extend to
Israel as well as Judah. The
planters shall plant, and shall
eat them as common things —
After they have planted them
they shall eat the fruits
thereof, according to the
promise contained in the
parallel texts, (Isaiah 65:21;
Amos 9:14,) whereas, God had
threatened as a curse, that, in
case of their disobedience, when
they had planted their vines,
another should eat the fruit,
Deuteronomy 28:30. The verb
חללו, translated, eat them as
common things, alludes to the
law that forbade the fruit of
any young trees to be eaten till
the fifth year of their bearing.
For the first three years they
were to be considered as in a
state of uncircumcision or
uncleanness. In the fourth year
the fruit was holy to the Lord.
But after that time it became
free for the owner’s use,
Leviticus 19:23-25. See also
Deuteronomy 20:6; and
Deuteronomy 28:30; where the
same verb is used for eating of
the fruit of a plantation
without restraint. Here,
therefore, a promise is given
directly opposite to the
above-mentioned threat, namely,
That the persons who planted the
vineyards on the hills of
Samaria should not be compelled
to give up the fruit of their
labours to others, but should
themselves remain in the land,
and enjoy the produce of their
plantations unmolested.
Verse 6-7
Jeremiah 31:6-7. For there shall
be a day, that the watchmen
shall cry — By the watchmen are
meant God’s prophets, or the
ministers of his word, giving
notice of his dispensations, and
calling upon men to act suitably
under them. The first reference
may be to the leaders and
teachers of the Jews, returning
from Babylon, or to the general
summons throughout all the ten
tribes, for which Ephraim is
put, to repair to Jerusalem, and
join themselves to the true
church, from which they had been
so long separated; but,
doubtless, in the full
completion of the prophecy, by
watchmen the preachers of the
gospel are to be understood. The
phrase, crying upon mount
Ephraim, alludes to the custom
of persons that had to publish
any proclamation ascending to
the top of some high hill, from
whence their voice might be
heard a great way off. See 9:7;
2 Chronicles 13:4; Isaiah 40:9.
The phrase, Arise ye, let us go
up to Zion, &c, alludes to the
Jewish custom of going in
companies to Jerusalem at their
three annual festivals. For thus
saith the Lord, Sing with
gladness, &c. — When ye see some
dawning of these blessed times,
express your joy for the
restoration of Jacob’s posterity
in the most public manner that
can be; and shout among the
chief of the nations — Namely,
among the most potent nations
from whence you are to be
gathered. Or, persons belonging
to the chief nations of the
earth are here called upon to
congratulate the Israelites on
their restoration to their own
land, and their conversion to
the church of God, as Moses
predicted, Deuteronomy 32:43,
and the apostle exhorts, Romans
15:10, Rejoice, ye Gentiles,
with his people; for when the
promises made to the fathers are
accomplished, the Gentiles shall
glorify God for his mercy; as it
is written, For this cause will
I confess to thee among the
Gentiles, and sing unto thy
name, Romans 15:8. Publish ye,
praise ye, and say, O Lord, save
thy people — Publish these good
tidings with the highest
expressions of praise and glory
to God; and likewise pray that
he, who hath begun so glorious a
work, would proceed and complete
it.
Verse 8-9
Jeremiah 31:8-9. Behold, I will
bring them from the north
country — Here God himself
undertakes to conduct home the
remnant of his people from the
countries through which they had
been scattered; and the promise
relates to the ten tribes, as
well as to those of Judah and
Benjamin; for Assyria and Media,
whither they were removed, lay
north of Judea as well as
Babylon. And the following words
speak of a general restoration
of this people from their
several dispersions; and with
them the blind and the lame, &c.
—
God will compassionate their
infirmities, and will conduct
them with all imaginable care
and tenderness, and furnish the
feeble and indigent of them with
suitable accommodations. The
prophet alludes to the care and
compassion which God manifested
in conducting his people, of all
ages and conditions, through the
wilderness, compared to the care
with which a parent or nurse
carries a tender child,
Deuteronomy 1:31. See also
Isaiah 40:11; Isaiah 49:10. They
shall come with weeping — The
LXX. translate the words, εν
κλαυθμω εξηλθον, και εν
παρακλησει αναξω αυτους, they
went forth with weeping, but
with comfort will I bring them
back; which sense agrees exactly
with the words of Psalms
136:5-6, which was composed upon
occasion of the return from
captivity, He that sows in tears
shall reap in joy: he that goeth
forth weeping, shall come again
with rejoicing. Our translation,
however, is much more agreeable
to the original words, and is
also confirmed by Jeremiah 3:21,
where we read, A voice was
heard, weeping and supplications
of the children of Israel; the
prophet speaking upon the same
subject, and in the same words
here used. See also chap.
Jeremiah 50:4, where it is said,
The children of Israel and Judah
shall come together, going and
weeping, and seek the Lord their
God. All which words imply, that
the Jews and Israelites, at the
time of their general
restoration, shall have their
joy tempered with tears of
repentance for their former
miscarriages; which is more
fully expressed Zechariah 12:10,
where God promises to pour upon
them the spirit of grace and
supplication. I will cause them
to walk by the rivers of waters
— So that they shall not be
afflicted with thirst, or the
want of any accommodation in
their journey. The words allude
to God’s miraculously supplying
the Israelites with water in the
wilderness. See notes on Isaiah
35:6-7; Isaiah 41:17-18; Isaiah
49:10. In a straight way wherein
they shall not stumble — This
phrase is an allusion to God’s
leading the Israelites through
the Red sea, and afterward in
the wilderness. See Isaiah
63:13; Isaiah 42:16. For I am a
father to Israel — The
remembrance of former
connections is here mentioned as
the motive of God’s returning
favour to Israel. And Ephraim is
my firstborn — Ephraim is often,
as here, equivalent to Israel,
especially when Israel denotes
the ten tribes as distinct from
Judah. He is termed the
firstborn among the tribes of
Israel; because the birthright
which Reuben had forfeited was
conferred upon the two sons of
Joseph, of whom Ephraim had the
precedence. “The reader will
observe, that all this was but
imperfectly verified in the
return of the Jews from Babylon,
but was fully made good in those
who were made partakers of the
gospel of Christ, in the
miracles, in the preaching of
the apostles, in the free grace
and pardoning mercy of the
Redeemer.”
Verse 10-11
Jeremiah 31:10-11. Hear the word
of the Lord, O ye nations, &c. —
This apostrophe, or turning to
the heathen nations, was, as it
were, the prelude of calling
them to the knowledge of the
true God. This calling of them
was certainly never effected by
the Jews in the way and to the
degree it was by the apostles of
Christ and their disciples, who
gained thousands more to
Christianity than ever the Jews
did to Judaism. Here the prophet
calls upon the Gentiles, not the
Jews, to hear the word of the
Lord, and to proclaim or make it
known; and the event has proved
that he did not do this but by
the direction of the Divine
Spirit, since the Gentiles were
far more ready to hear and obey
the word of God by Christ, and
to receive his divine doctrine,
and propagate it, than the Jews
were. Declare it in the isles
afar off — The Jews, as we have
repeatedly seen, called all the
countries islands to which they
went by sea. He that scattered
Israel, &c. — He that caused
Israel to be carried away
captive into various countries,
and dispersed them over the face
of the earth, will gather them
into one body or people, Isaiah
11:12; Isaiah 27:12; Isaiah
54:7. And keep him as a shepherd
does his flock — As God’s care
over his people is often
compared to that of a shepherd,
so the office of the Messiah is
described under the same
character, Isaiah 40:11, and
particularly with respect to the
Jews, after their conversion and
restoration. For the Lord hath
redeemed Jacob, &c., from him
that was stronger than he — From
those who by subtlety and power
conquered him, and detained him
captive; an emblem of that
redemption which Christ obtains
for us by vanquishing the devil,
called the strong one, Matthew
12:29.
Verses 12-14
Jeremiah 31:12-14. They shall
sing in the height of Zion — By
the height of Zion is meant the
temple, built upon a hill
adjoining to mount Zion, and it
is here to be taken
metaphorically, as it frequently
is in the writings of the
prophets, for the church, which
is compared, by Christ, to a
city set on a hill, as being
remarkable for the excellence of
its laws and institutions, and
the piety and virtue of its
genuine members. And shall flow
to the goodness of the Lord, &c.
— Spiritual blessings are here,
as elsewhere, described under
the emblems of fruitfulness and
plenty. And their soul shall be
as a watered garden — Refreshed
and fertilized by the truth and
grace of God. And they shall not
sorrow any more at all — Hebrew,
לדאבה עוד ולא יוסיפו, They shall
not add, or, continue, yet to
grieve. The LXX. render it, ου
πεινασουσιν ετι, They shall not
hunger any more; and so the
Vulgate. Then shall the virgin
rejoice, &c., both young men and
old — There shall be signs of a
universal joy, in which all ages
shall unanimously join. The
expressions in the next verse
allude to that plentiful
provision that was made for the
temporal support of the priests
under the law, which is here put
metaphorically for that
plenitude of blessings which are
to be enjoyed under the gospel.
Verses 15-17
Jeremiah 31:15-17. Thus saith
the Lord; A voice, &c. — Here
“the scene of this prophecy
changes, and two new personages
are successively introduced, in
order to diversify the subject,
and to impress it more strongly
on the mind of the reader. The
first is Rachel, who in these
verses is represented as just
rising from the grave, and
bitterly bewailing the loss of
her children, for whom she looks
about in vain, but none are to
be seen. Her tears are dried up,
and she is consoled with the
assurance that they are not lost
for ever, but shall in time be
brought back to their ancient
borders.” The passage is
strongly figurative, but not
difficult of interpretation, as
the reader will perceive by what
follows: A voice was heard in
Ramah — Ramah was a city of
Benjamin, (see 19:13,) near
which Rachel, the mother of
Joseph and Benjamin, was buried.
She is here, in a beautiful
figure of poetry, represented as
come forth out of her grave,
and, as chief mourner on so sad
an occasion, lamenting bitterly
for the loss of her children,
none of whom presented
themselves to her view, being
all either slain or gone into
exile. In this way the prophet
sets forth the lamentations, in
and about Jerusalem, at the time
of the several captivities
mentioned Jeremiah 52:15;
Jeremiah 52:28-30. The
evangelist indeed applies these
words to Herod’s massacre of the
infants at Bethlehem and its
environs, Matthew 2:17-18. But
the context here plainly shows,
that this massacre could not
have been the direct and
immediate object of the
prophecy, (see the following
note,) but the prophet’s words
so well suited the occasion that
the evangelist, with great
propriety, observes their
congruity therewith. He must
however be understood just as if
he had said, The circumstances
of this affair were such that
the words of Jeremiah, though
spoken with a different view,
may well be accommodated to this
event. And this is as much as
can be allowed with respect to
several passages of the New
Testament, where the words of
the Old Testament were said to
be fulfilled. See Matthew 2:16;
Acts 1:16-20, &c.; and Blaney.
It is observable, that the
Vulgate and Chaldee understand
the word, רמה, ramah, not as a
proper name, but as an
appellative, and translate it,
in excelso, on high, or, aloud;
according to which the sense
will be, A voice is heard on
high, or aloud, lamentations,
weepings; of Rachel bewailing
her children, and refusing to be
comforted concerning them,
because they are not. Refrain
thy voice from weeping, and
thine eyes from tears — Set
bounds to thy sorrow, repress
and moderate thy inordinate and
excessive grief; for thy work
shall be rewarded — That is, it
will appear thou hast not
brought forth children in vain,
nor shalt thou be deprived of
the satisfaction of seeing the
welfare of thy children, which
is the parent’s reward for her
pain in bringing them into the
world, and her care and
attention in providing for their
support and education; for they
shall come again from the land
of the enemy. Thus the text
interprets itself. But if the
massacre at Bethlehem had been
primarily designed here, with
what propriety could it have
been said, how could it have
been affirmed, that they should
return fromthe land of the
enemy, or, as in the next verse,
should come again to their own
border? The words ישׁ תקוה
לאחריתךְ, rendered here, There
is hope in thine end, may be
translated, There is hope, or
expectation, to thy posterity;
that is, though these of the
present age do not experience a
return from captivity, yet their
posterity shall enjoy that
blessing. This promise was
particularly fulfilled with
respect to the tribe of
Benjamin, as well as that of
Judah, in their return under
Cyrus. See Ezra 1:5.
Verse 18
Jeremiah 31:18. I have surely
heard Ephraim, &c. — Here, still
further to diversify the
subject, and give it the greater
force, the other personage
referred to in the preceding
note is introduced. Ephraim,
representing the ten tribes, is
brought forward, lamenting his
past undutifulness with great
contrition and penitence, and
professing an earnest desire of
amendment. And “these symptoms
of returning duty are no sooner
discerned in him than God
acknowledges him once more as a
darling child, and resolves to
receive him with mercy.” The
passage is intended to show the
change necessary to be wrought
in the hearts of the Israelites,
in order to their obtaining this
restoration from captivity,
according to the conditional
promises made of old to this
people. See Leviticus 26:40-41.
Previously to his conferring
this great benefit upon them,
God must hear them bemoaning
themselves, or bewailing their
miserable state, and the sins
which had brought them into it,
acknowledging that the
chastisements which they had
suffered had not been more or
greater than their sins had
justly merited, and praying
earnestly for mercy and
deliverance. Thou hast chastised
me, and I was chastised — Or,
instructed by thy discipline, as
אוסרmaybe properly rendered. As
a bullock unaccustomed to the
yoke — Whereas before I was as
an untamed bullock, or heifer,
that is not to be managed but by
stripes and corrections. Turn
thou me, and I shall be turned —
Do thou turn my heart by thy
preventing and renewing grace,
and then I shall be effectually
reformed, Lamentations 5:21.
“Sometimes the Scripture
ascribes the whole work of man’s
conversion to God, because his
grace is the first and principal
cause of it. But yet, to make it
effectual, man’s concurrence is
necessary, as appears
particularly from Jeremiah 51:9,
where God says, We would have
healed Babylon, and she is not
healed; that is, God did what
was requisite on his part for
her conversion, but she refused
to comply with his call. To the
same purpose he speaks to
Jerusalem, (Ezekiel 24:13,) I
have purged thee, and thou wast
not purged.”
Verse 19
Jeremiah 31:19. Surely after
that I was turned, I repented —
After I was enlightened and
impressed with a due sense of my
duty, and of the many deviations
from it of which I had been
guilty, and after my will was
subjected to the will of God, I
straightway became a true
penitent, and expressed my
repentance by all the outward
and inward signs of an unfeigned
sorrow for, and hatred to, my
past conduct. And after that I
was instructed — Respecting my
sin and folly, in forsaking the
fountain of living waters for
the broken cisterns that could
hold no water; I smote upon my
thigh — Through the most
poignant grief and concern, and
with indignation against myself.
I was ashamed, yea, even
confounded — At my own stupidity
and frowardness, and could
neither with any confidence look
up to God, nor with any comfort
reflect upon myself; because I
did bear the reproach of my
youth — The burden of my former
sins lay heavy upon my mind, and
I became sensible that all the
calamities and reproaches I had
undergone were the due deserts
of my offences. Ephraim smote
upon his thigh, as the publican
upon his breast. We find, both
in the Holy Scriptures, and
other ancient records, smiting
on the thigh mentioned as an
expression of great surprise and
concern. Thus God commands
Ezekiel to cry and howl, on
account of the sword that should
be upon his people, and to smite
upon his thigh. We find the same
custom noticed by Homer, Iliad
16. 50:124.
— — — — — — αυταρ αχιλλευς ΄ηρω
πληξαμενος πατροληα πρωσεειπεν,
Divine Achilles view’d the
rising flames, And smote his
thigh, and thus aloud exclaims,
Arm, arm, Patroclus! POPE.
It is also noticed by Xenophon,
Cicero, and others. The meaning
is, when Ephraim was made
sensible of his sinfulness he
showed marks of real contrition.
Verse 20
Jeremiah 31:20. Is Ephraim my
dear son? Is he, &c. — These
questions are designed to be
answered in the affirmative, as
appears from the inference,
therefore my bowels are moved
for him. It seems that, to suit
the idiom of our language, and
fully to express the sense of
the original, the particle not
ought to have been supplied, and
the clause to have been read, Is
not Ephraim my dear son? Is he
not a pleasant child? That is,
is he not one that I have set my
affections on, as a parent does
upon a child in whom he
delights? Thus Dr. Waterland,
Lowth, and many others interpret
the words. Houbigant, however,
defends the common reading, and
thinks that God means to deny
that Ephraim was his son, in
order to show him that his
bowels were moved toward him
solely through free mercy, and
not on account of any merits or
deservings of his people. For
since I spake against him — Or,
of him, as the same phrase in
the original is translated
Jeremiah 48:27. I do earnestly
remember him still — Ever since
I have so severely reproved and
chastised him, my thoughts
toward him have been thoughts of
peace. I have a fatherly
kindness and affection for him.
Therefore my bowels are troubled
for him — Or, yearn over him, as
Joseph’s bowels yearned toward
his brethren, even when he spake
roughly to them. Observe,
reader, when God afflicts his
people, yet he does not forget
them; when he casts them out of
their land, yet he does not cast
them out of his sight, nor out
of his mind. Even then, when God
is speaking against us, yet he
is acting for us, and designing
our good in all; and this is our
comfort in our affliction, that
the Lord thinketh upon us,
though we have forgotten him.
When Israel’s afflictions
extorted a penitent confession
and submission, it is said, (
10:16,) his soul was grieved for
the misery of Israel: for he
always afflicts with the
greatest tenderness. It was his
compassion that mitigated
Ephraim’s punishment, (Hosea
11:8-9,) My heart is turned
within me, &c., and now the same
compassion accepted Ephraim’s
repentance, and induced God to
say, I will surely have mercy
upon him.
Verse 21
Jeremiah 31:21. Set thee up
way-marks — “These words are a
call to Israel to prepare for
their return. The word צינים,
rendered way-marks, means stone
pillars, and תמרודים, translated
heaps, from המר, a palm-tree,
probably signifies tall-poles,
like palm-trees, or, perhaps,
made of palm- trees; both set up
in the roads, at certain
distances, for the traveller’s
direction, and extremely
necessary for those who had to
pass wild and spacious deserts,”
— Blaney. Set thy heart toward
the way which thou wentest —
Mind well the way that the
Assyrians and Babylonians
carried thee captive, for thou
shalt return the same way. Turn
again — That is, Return to thine
own country; O virgin of Israel
— See note on Jeremiah 31:14.
Turn again to these thy cities —
The expression is doubled for
the greater certainty of the
event.
Verse 22
Jeremiah 31:22. How long wilt
thou go about — Or, go out of
the right way, or follow thine
own imaginations, O thou
backsliding daughter — Thou that
didst formerly revolt from thy
sovereign Lord, and decline from
his worship and service, going
after idols, and seeking help
from foreign nations, instead of
applying to him for it; and who
now seemest to loiter when God
calls thee to return homeward
out of a strange country. The
expression is often used of
Israel, or the ten tribes: see
Jeremiah 3:6-12 : and of Judah
and Israel together, ibid.,
Jeremiah 31:14; Jeremiah 31:22;
both being comprehended under
the title of the virgin of
Israel, in the foregoing verse.
For the Lord hath created, or
doth create, a new thing in the
earth, a woman shall compass a
man — It is difficult to say,
with any certainty, what this
obscure passage means. Several
ancient Jews expounded it of the
Messiah, and most Christian
interpreters understand it of
the miraculous conception of the
child Jesus in the womb of the
virgin. “Taking the words in
this sense they properly
import,” as Lowth justly
observes, “a new creation, and
such as is the immediate work of
God. And that such a prophecy
concerning the conception of
Christ may not be thought to
come in here abruptly, it is to
be observed, that as the coming
of the Messiah is the foundation
of the promises, both of the
first and second covenant; so it
contains the most powerful
arguments to persuade men to
obedience: and the covenant, of
which Christ was to be the
Mediator is plainly foretold and
described in the 31st and three
following verses of this
chapter.” Blaney, however,
thinks the original words, נקבה
תסיבב גבר, cannot by any
construction be brought to imply
any such thing as the miraculous
conception above mentioned.
“Admitting,” he says, “that the
word תסובב may signify shall
encompass, or, comprehend in the
womb, and that גבר, instead of
an adult, or, strong man, (which
the word generally means,)
may also signify a male child;
yet the words, all taken
together, still import no more
than that a woman shall
conceive, or contain, a male
child: but this is nothing new
or extraordinary, and therefore
I presume it not the sense
intended.” Being of opinion that
the word, which we translate
compass, or encompass, may
signify to cause to turn about,
or repulse, he renders the
clause, “A woman shall put to
the rout a strong man,” judging
it to be a proverbial form of
speech, denoting, “The weaker
shall prevail over the
stronger,” an expression
equivalent to, one shall chase a
thousand. Now this, says he, it
must be confessed, is in itself
new and unusual, and contrary to
the ordinary course of nature;
and accordingly it is ascribed
to the interposing power of God,
who is said therein to create a
new thing, or, in other words,
to work a miracle. Interpreting
the passage in this sense, he
explains its connection with the
context as follows: “The virgin
of Israel is exhorted not to
turn aside, or decline the
invitation given her to return,
as she might, perhaps, be
disposed to do through dread of
the power of enemies, who would
oppose her deliverance. For her
encouragement she is told, that
she had no reason to be
apprehensive of the superior
strength of any enemies, since
God would work a miracle in her
favour, and enable her, though
apparently weak, to overcome and
prevail against all their
opposition.” By an
interpretation nearly allied to
this, many understand the
passage as being a promise that
the Jewish Church in its time,
and afterward the gospel church,
should prevail over all its
enemies; though comparing the
fewness and weakness of the
church’s members with the
multitude of her enemies, and
the greatness of their power, it
seemed as strange a thing as for
a woman to prevail against a
strong and mighty man.
Verses 23-25
Jeremiah 31:23-25. Thus saith
the Lord of hosts, the God of
Israel — These prophecies of the
restoration of the Jews are
ordinarily prefaced with these
two attributes of God, the one
of which asserts his power to do
the thing promised; the other,
his goodness to his people; as
yet, or, yet again, they shall
use this speech in the land of
Judah, and in the cities
thereof, &c. — Three things the
prophet here foretels, 1st, That
the cities which had formerly
been the habitations of unjust,
cruel, and bloody men, should
become the habitations of men
who should do justice to all.
2d, That the city which stood
upon mount Zion, and had
formerly been a habitation of
idolaters and other unholy
persons, should become a place
in which men should, in a due
and holy manner, worship and
serve the true God. 3d, That
they should be so famous, both
for justice and holiness, that
men would take notice of it, and
wish they might be blessed on
that account: so that as they
had, for their sins, been made a
curse and proverb, so, upon
their reformation they should be
for a blessing. And there shall
dwell in Judah, &c., husbandmen
— This verse is not only
intended to express that the
country should be inhabited, as
well as the cities, after their
return from captivity, but to
set forth their peaceable and
happy state at that time. For I
have satiated, or, I will
satiate, the weary soul — I will
comfort them after their sorrows
and afflictions, and will give
them abundance of ease and
plenty.
Verse 26
Jeremiah 31:26. Upon this I
awaked, &c. — These words afford
a plain proof that the preceding
revelations had been made to the
prophet in a dream, or vision.
And my sleep was sweet unto me —
The vision which I had seen was
so agreeable to me that it gave
me as great satisfaction and
comfort as men usually feel when
they have been refreshed with an
undisturbed and sweet sleep.
Verse 27-28
Jeremiah 31:27-28. I will sow
the house of Israel — Under the
captivity the land lay desolate,
without man and beast, Jeremiah
33:12; but here it is promised
that it should be again
inhabited and replenished with
both. And like as I have watched
over them to pluck up, &c. — I
will show the same care and
diligence in restoring them as I
have formerly done in destroying
them, according to the promise
made to them upon their
repentance and reformation. See
Jeremiah 18:7-10.
Verse 29-30
Jeremiah 31:29-30. They shall
say no more, The fathers have
eaten a sour grape, &c. — “God
had often declared that he would
visit the sins of the fathers
upon the children, and had
particularly threatened to
execute judgment upon the
present generation for the
idolatries and other sins of
their forefathers. See note on
Exodus 20:5, and chap. Jeremiah
15:4. This gave occasion to the
proverb mentioned in this verse,
which they that were in
captivity applied to their own
case, as if the miseries they
endured were chiefly owing to
their fathers’ sins: see
Lamentations 5:7; Ezekiel 18:2;
but when this judgment should be
removed, then there would be no
further occasion to use this
proverb, as Ezekiel there
speaks.” But every one shall die
for his own iniquity, &c. —
These national judgments
ceasing, every one shall suffer
only for his own faults. “This
promise,” says Lowth, “will be
remarkably verified when God
shall cease to visit upon the
Jewish nation that imprecation
which they laid upon themselves
by the crucifixion of Christ,
his blood be upon us, and upon
our children.” It was the
opinion of Bishop Warburton,
that the punishment of children
for the iniquity of their
parents, was to supply the want
of the sanction of a future
state, which he supposed was
very obscurely, if at all,
revealed under the Mosaic
dispensation. “For,” says he,
“while a future state was kept
hid from the Jews there was an
absolute need of such a law to
restrain the more daring spirits
by working upon their instincts.
But when a doctrine was brought
to light which held them up, and
continued them after death, the
objects of divine justice, it
had then no further use, and was
therefore reasonably to be
abolished, with the rest of the
Jewish laws peculiar to the
Mosaic dispensation.” But it may
be inquired here, Do not
children still suffer for the
sins of their parents in the
only sense in which they ever
did, namely, in all national
calamities, and in that poverty
and reproach, and those bodily
afflictions, which the vices of
their parents entail upon them?
Verse 31-32
Jeremiah 31:31-32. Behold, the
days come, saith the Lord — The
latter days, or the times of the
gospel, are here intended, as is
evident from the apostle’s
applying the following promises
to those times, and quoting this
whole passage as a summary of
the covenant of grace, Hebrews
8:8-10. I will make a new
covenant with the house of
Israel and the house of Judah —
The benefits of this covenant
were first offered to the Jews,
as being the completion of that
covenant which God had made with
their fathers, Acts 3:26; Acts
13:46; but those benefits were
actually conferred only on the
spiritual seed of Abraham, or
the imitators of Abraham’s
faith, the true Israel of God,
on whom peace is and shall be,
Galatians 6:16, and with whom
only this new covenant is made.
In other words, Israel and Judah
stand here for the true people
or church of God, especially the
gospel church: and the covenant
here promised to be made with
them is said to be new, not
because it was so as to the
substance of it, for it was made
with Abraham, Genesis 17:7, and
with the Israelites, Deuteronomy
26:17-18; but, upon many other
accounts, especially the
following: — 1st, It was new,
considered as a testament,
confirmed by the actual death of
the testator, which did not take
place till gospel times. 2d, It
was revealed after a new manner,
more fully and particularly,
plainly and clearly. 3d, It
contained no such mixture of
temporal promises as when first
made with the Jews. 4th, The
ceremonial law was no part of
it, as it was to the Jews, who
were obliged to approve
themselves God’s people, by a
strict observance thereof. 5th,
The publication of it was
extended to the Gentiles as well
as the Jews, which was not the
case with the Mosaic covenant.
6th, The influences of the
Divine Spirit, attending the
publication of it, are conferred
more largely under this than
under the old covenant,
distributing to believers a
greater measure and variety of
gifts and graces, to enable them
to comply with the terms, and
fulfil the demands of it. Not
according to the covenant made
with their fathers — Differing
from it in the circumstances
above mentioned, and in others
declared afterward: in the day
when I took them by the hand,
&c. — The covenant which God
made with the Jews, when they
came out of the land of Egypt,
was on his part the law which he
gave them from Sinai, with the
promises annexed; on their part,
(which made it a formal
covenant,) their promise of
obedience to it. This covenant
God says he made with them when
they were a weak and ignorant
people, the care of whom he took
upon himself, and led them as a
parent leads his feeble child by
the hand. Which my covenant they
brake — This covenant they are
said to have broken, not because
of every defect, or failure in
their obedience, for in that
sense, through the general
depravity and weakness of human
nature, they could not but break
it; (see Romans 3:20; Galatians
3:10-11;) but because of their
gross and wilful sins often
repeated and continued in
without repentance, and more
especially by their idolatry,
compared to whoredom, which
broke the marriage covenant
between God and them, and caused
him to divorce them, and to say,
Lo Ammi, You are not my people:
Although I was a husband to them
— This their covenant-breaking
was aggravated by God’s kindness
to them and care of them, who,
as he stood, related to them in
the character of a husband, so
he had always manifested to them
such love as is but faintly
shadowed forth by that of the
most affectionate husband to his
wife, and had given them no
temptation to go a whoring from
him.
Verse 33-34
Jeremiah 31:33-34. This shall be
the covenant that I will make
with the house of Israel — That
is, with those who are
Israelites indeed, in whom is no
guile, John 1:47, who are Jews
inwardly, Romans 2:29, by the
circumcision of the heart and
spirit, spoken of and promised
by God, Deuteronomy 30:6. I will
put my law in their inward
parts, &c. — In the times of the
gospel God’s law is not
abrogated and made void; for
Christ came not to destroy the
law, but to fulfil it: but it is
written in the hearts of God’s
true Israel by the finger of his
Spirit; and they become obedient
to it from their secret
approbation of it as holy, just,
and good, and from the delight
they take in it after the inward
man. But it may be asked, How
was this peculiar to this new
covenant? Did not God of old
write his law on the hearts of
his people? Did not David and
others, the servants of God, of
whom we read in the Old
Testament, serve God, out of a
principle of love and delight in
his law? We must answer,
Undoubtedly they did, and the
law of God was, in a measure,
written in their hearts; but
this was not through the virtue
of the Mosaic dispensation, but
through the grace of this new
covenant, revealed and
communicated, though but
obscurely and partially, even
under that dispensation. The
principal design of the prophet
here is evidently to express the
difference between the law and
the gospel: the law shows man
his duty, the gospel brings the
grace of regeneration, by which
the heart of man is changed, and
he is enabled to do his duty.
All who, during the time of the
Mosaic dispensation, attained
salvation, were saved by virtue
of this new covenant; but this
was not then evidently
exhibited; neither was the
renewing grace of God so
generally and largely given as
it has been under the gospel.
And they shall teach no more
every man his neighbour — This
must not be so interpreted as if
under the gospel there should be
no more need of ministerial
teaching, for Christ himself
sent out his apostles to preach;
nor yet as if there should be no
further need of brethren in
Christ teaching one another, for
the contrary is commanded,
Colossians 3:16. This expression
only signifies the great
increase of divine knowledge,
especially of the knowledge of
the being and attributes of the
one living and true God, and of
the relations in which he is
pleased to stand to his people,
which is the knowledge here
chiefly intended. For they shall
all know me, from the least unto
the greatest — Even the least of
them, who have an interest in
this new covenant, and are
ingrafted into the good olive,
and partake of the fatness of
the root, even babes in Christ,
and much more they who have
arrived at the measure of the
stature of his fulness; shall
all savingly know me, and have
eternal life in and by that
knowledge. For I will forgive
their iniquity, &c. — Here God
represents the free pardon of
all their sins as being the root
and foundation of this grace,
and of all the privileges and
blessings of this new covenant.
Verses 35-37
Jeremiah 31:35-37. Thus saith
the Lord, who giveth the sun for
a light by day — All the acts
here mentioned are such as
manifest the divine, almighty
power of him who is the Lord of
all the hosts of the creation.
Which divideth, or, who did
divide, the sea — Namely, as the
words are generally interpreted,
the Red sea, to give the
Israelites passage. The original
words, however, רגע הים, which
occur Isaiah 51:15, where they
are translated as here, are by
Bishop Lowth rendered, who
stilleth the sea, a sense which
accords better with the words
immediately following, when the
waves thereof roar — That is,
even when the waves are most
tumultuous, and roar most
dreadfully, he, with infinite
ease, quiets them, and produces
a perfect calm. In this sense
the same word is interpreted
Jeremiah 31:2 of this chapter,
and also Jeremiah 50:34. If
these ordinances — Hebrew,
החקים, these appointments
respecting the heavenly bodies
and their motions and uses;
depart from before me — Be
altered or suspended in their
operations; then shall the seed
of Israel cease from being a
nation, &c. — Thus God makes the
continuance of the laws of
nature a pledge of the
continuance of Israel as a
people. The prediction implies,
1st, That God would preserve a
remnant of them in the country
to which they were led captive,
and would restore them to their
own land; 2d, That there should
be another remnant of them, at
the beginning of the gospel,
called οι σωζομενοι, the saved,
(Acts 2:47,) who, by embracing
the faith of Christ, should
escape those terrible judgments
that should be inflicted upon
the main body of that nation;
and 3d, That Providence would
still preserve them in a body
distinct from all other people
in the world, in order to their
conversion in God’s due time. To
this place St. Paul, speaking of
the conversion of the Jews in
the latter times, seems to refer
when he says, The gifts and
calling of God [to the Jews] are
without repentance, Romans
11:29. If heaven above can be
measured, &c. — If the height
and extent thereof can be
ascertained by men, which is
impossible, I will also cast off
all the seed of Israel, &c. —
That is, I will never cast them
all off — a promise which the
apostle, (Romans 11:1-2,) proves
to have been made good by God,
notwithstanding the rejection of
the great body of that people.
Verses 38-40
Jeremiah 31:38-40. Behold, the
days come, that the city shall
be built to the Lord — Or, for
the Lord, namely, for his use
and service. Blaney renders it,
Under the direction of the Lord,
from the tower of Hananeel, &c.
— “Here follows a description of
the circumference of a new city
to be built on the site of
Jerusalem; but that it does not
mean the city which was rebuilt
after the return of the Jews
from the Babylonish captivity is
evident from two principal
circumstances; first, because
the limits are here extended
farther, so as to include a
greater space than was contained
within the walls at that time;
and secondly, it is here said,
that it should never be razed or
destroyed any more. This new
city, therefore, must be
referred to those after-times
when the general restoration of
Israel is appointed to take
place.” Thus Blaney, with whom
many other commentators agree.
That this prophecy “was not
fulfilled,” says Dr. Dodd, “from
the return out of Babylon to the
days of Christ, we are assured
from sacred history; where we
read that mount Goath, or
Golgotha, (which word in Hebrew
signifies the heap of Gotha,)
was situated without Jerusalem.
The same may be said of the
valley of dead bodies and of the
ashes,” namely, the valley of
Hinnom, so described, from its
having been made a common
burying place, and a receptacle
for the rubbish and filth of the
city. “As to Gareb we know
nothing certain. We may also
add, that the last clause of
this chapter, it shall not be
plucked up, &c., any more for
ever, cannot refer to the
Jerusalem which was rebuilt
after the captivity, and which
was plucked up and thrown down
by the Romans. We must
necessarily recur, therefore,
either to some future building
of that city, or to the church
of Christ, against which we are
assured the gates of hell shall
never prevail,” and which is
elsewhere called the city of
God, and the new Jerusalem.
Taking the passage in this
mystical sense, as a description
of the church, in its most
enlarged and perfect state, in
the latter days: we can be at no
loss to explain the clause in
the last verse which expresses
that all parts of the city, even
the valley of Hinnom, and all
the fields, unto the brook
Kidron, &c., shall be holy unto
the Lord. For, undoubtedly, at
this time the church shall be
thoroughly purged from all
corruption, both with regard to
the doctrine taught in it, and
the principles and practices of
its members, who shall all be
both well instructed in divine
things, and truly holy in their
hearts and lives. |