Verse 1
Jeremiah 33:1. The word of the
Lord came unto Jeremiah the
second time — See note on
Jeremiah 32:2. Jeremiah being
forced out of the temple, God
follows him to the prison, and
there reveals his mind to him
once and again. The wickedness
of the Jews in persecuting the
prophet could not make God’s
promises of no effect respecting
mercy to be shown to the people
after the captivity; which
promises, though made before,
are here confirmed a second
time.
Verse 2
Jeremiah 33:2. Thus saith the
Lord, the maker thereof — That
is, as many interpreters
understand it, of the city of
Jerusalem, a figure of that
church spoken of before: see
Jeremiah 32:36; Jeremiah 32:44,
compared with the 4th, 6th, and
9th verses of this chapter.
Blaney, however, renders the
clause, Thus saith Jehovah the
doer of it, Jehovah the framer
of it, who also disposeth it,
considering the pronoun it as
referring to the thing which God
here says he is about to do.
Verse 3
Jeremiah 33:3. Call unto me, and
I will answer thee — An
expression manifesting God’s
favour and loving kindness; that
he was ready to comply with the
first intimations of his
servant’s desires. Compare
Jeremiah 29:12. God, by thus
directing his discourse to
Jeremiah, not only signified his
kindness toward him, but
likewise the affection he still
bore to his people, for, whom
this prophet so earnestly
interceded, and whose welfare he
had so much at heart. And show
thee great and mighty things —
That is, give thee a clear and
full prospect of them. Hebrew,
גדלות ובצרות, great and
abstruse, or, hidden things, as
some render the words; which
thou knowest not — And canst not
know without further revelation,
meaning, probably, not only what
related to the return of the
Jews from the Babylonish
captivity, but likewise the
blessings to be conferred upon
them in the times of the
Messiah.
Verse 4-5
Jeremiah 33:4-5. Thus saith the
Lord concerning the houses of
this city — Not excepting those
of the kings of Judah, thrown
down by the mounts — Namely, by
the battering engines placed
upon the mounts, which were
raised against the walls of the
city; and by the sword — By the
violence of war. The Hebrew word
generally rendered sword may
mean any instrument of iron, and
particularly such as were used
in demolishing any building. It
is rendered a mattock by our
translators, 2 Chronicles 24:6,
and axes, Ezekiel 26:9. They
come to fight with the Chaldeans
— Most interpreters understand
this as spoken of the Jews
sallying forth against the
Chaldeans, to beat them off from
the siege, which they attempted
to do in vain, and to their own
destruction, only thus filling
the houses of Jerusalem with the
dead bodies of their men, who
died of the wounds received from
the Chaldeans in making those
sallies. And the verse is
thought to come in by way of
parenthesis, between the fourth
and sixth, to show that at
present God would not prosper
any efforts that were made for
the defence of the city, though
he would restore it hereafter to
its former splendour.
Verses 6-8
Jeremiah 33:6-8. Behold, I will
bring it health and cure — The
latter part of this verse
expounds the former: for, by
health and cure, the prophet
means peace and truth, or,
stability. Blaney renders it, I
will make it, namely, the city
or state perfectly sound and
whole. The disturbed and
calamitous state of the nation
being compared to wounds and
sickness, (see Jeremiah 8:21-22;
Jeremiah 30:17,) the restoring
of it to a peaceful and
prosperous state is fitly called
its health and cure. And will
build them as at the first —
When they, by repentance, do
their first works, God will, by
their restoration, manifest
toward them his ancient mercies
and loving- kindnesses. He will
not only cause their captivity
to return, as is expressed, in
plain words, in the former
clause, but will re-establish
them in the possession of their
civil and religious privileges,
and hereby promote both their
virtue and happiness. And I will
cleanse them from all their
iniquity — I will make them
pious and holy, as well as
virtuous and happy; and I will
pardon all their iniquities —
Will not impute their past sins
any longer to them as I have
done, but will remit the further
punishments to which for sin
they were liable.
Verse 9
Jeremiah 33:9. And it shall be
to me a praise and an honour —
Jerusalem thus rebuilt, and
Judah thus re-established, shall
be to my glory before all the
nations. In other words, it is
foretold here that God’s
especial providence over the
Jews, in restoring their city
and temple, and re-establishing
them in their own land, should
be taken notice of by the
heathen world, and should cause
them to give glory to that God
whom the Jews worshipped: see
Ezra 1:2; Ezra 6:12. Or, as the
words may imply, This renewed
nation shall be as much a
reputation to religion as
formerly they were a reproach to
it. This promise, however, has
been much more signally
fulfilled in the Christian
Church, to which the heathen
resorted, as to the seat and
temple of truth, than it has yet
been in the Jewish. And they
shall fear and tremble for the
goodness that I do unto it —
These surprising effects of my
goodness shall produce an
astonishment like that which
arises from fear. Or, the
meaning is, They shall fear to
engage against a nation so
beloved and favoured by me,
Exodus 15:14-16.
Verse 10-11
Jeremiah 33:10-11. Again there
shall be heard in this place
which ye say shall be desolate —
See note on Jeremiah 32:43; the
voice of joy and the voice of
gladness — The contrary to what
takes place in the times of
captivity and desolation. The
voice of them that shall say,
Praise ye the Lord, for the Lord
is good, &c. — We read, (Ezra
3:11,) that those who returned
from captivity used this very
hymn. And of them that shall
bring the sacrifice of praise
into the house of the Lord —
Such as was wont to be offered
upon any great deliverance. See
Leviticus 7:12; Psalms 107:22;
Psalms 116:17. The Hebrew, מבאים
תודה, is literally, of them that
bring praise, or, thanksgiving,
there being nothing for the word
sacrifice. This, however, is
called by St. Paul, the
sacrifice of praise, even the
fruit of our lips, (Hebrews
13:15,) to distinguish it from
the oblations commanded by the
law, which consisted of the
fruits of the ground, or of the
flock and herd. The sum of this
verse is, that those who were
carried into captivity should
return, and, upon their return,
should be in their former state
as to civil transactions,
marrying and giving in marriage;
and, as to religion, should
publicly praise the Lord with
holy and spiritual joy, as they
had been wont to do in the best
and most prosperous times of
their commonwealth, which was
fulfilled, as we see, Nehemiah
12:27-40.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 33:12-13. Again in this
place shall be a habitation for
shepherds, &c. — See Jeremiah
50:19; Isaiah 65:10. In those
places which were desolate,
without man and beast, there
should be flocks and herds of
sheep and goats, which the
shepherds should take care of as
in former times. And in the
cities of Judah shall the flocks
pass again under the hands of
him that telleth them — Namely,
so as to keep account of them,
as they were wont to do, both
morning and evening in those
countries. Virgil alludes to the
same custom, when he says,
Ecclesiastes 3., Bisque die
numerant ambo pecus, alter et
hædos; Twice each day they count
my goats and sheep. See
Leviticus 27:32, where תחת
חשׁבשׂ, passing under the rod,
means their being numbered, the
shepherds striking every sheep
with his rod, or crook, as it
passed out of the fold, and so
counting them; and the
expression here made use of, על
ידי מונה, under the hand of him
that numbers them, seems to
signify the same thing.
Verses 14-16
Jeremiah 33:14-16. Behold, the
days come that I will perform
that good thing, &c. — The
Lord’s word is not yea and nay:
he cannot lie, or repent. There
shall come a time when he will
verify every good word which he
hath spoken to, or concerning,
his people. In those days will I
cause the Branch of
righteousness to grow up to
David — The kings they had
hitherto had of the line of
David were most of them
unrighteous men; but God here
promises that after the
captivity they should have a
branch of David that would
execute judgment and
righteousness in the land, for
the protection and government of
those that feared him. If this
passage point at all to
Zerubbabel, who was a good man,
a descendant of David, and,
though not a king, a ruler of
the Jews, after their return
from Babylon, and who governed
with equity and not as Jehoiakim
had done; yet it can only refer
to him as a type of the Messiah,
the branch out of the stem of
Jesse, Isaiah 11:1; the branch
of the Lord that was to be
beautiful and glorious, Isaiah
4:2; and the righteous branch
that was to be raised up unto
David, as he is described
Jeremiah 23:5, a passage exactly
similar to this, and undoubtedly
meant of the same person. See
the notes on these passages. In
those days shall Judah be saved,
&c. — If, a temporal salvation
be here at all intended, it must
be, not that which the Jews
enjoyed for a short season under
the government of Zerubbabel, a
deliverance and protection from,
or security against their
enemies, which was very
imperfect, and frequently
interrupted; but that more
perfect salvation, peace, and
prosperity, which they shall
enjoy in the latter days, after
their conversion to
Christianity, and restoration to
their own land, according to the
predictions contained in this
and the three preceding
chapters. But a spiritual and
eternal salvation undoubtedly is
chiefly intended here, as well
as in the parallel passage,
Jeremiah 23:6. And this is the
name wherewith ye shall be
called, The Lord our
righteousness — According to
this reading it is here
foretold, that the name which
properly belongs to the Messiah
shall be given to Jerusalem,
that is, to the church; “to
signify,” says Lowth, “that it
is in a peculiar manner
dedicated to him, he having
chosen it for the place of his
residence, (see Ezekiel 48:35,)
and that all the righteousness
of the faithful, both their
justification and
sanctification, is derived from
him. this seems,” adds he, “to
be the genuine sense of the
words, as may appear to any that
will compare the original phrase
here, יקרא לה, with Isaiah 62:4;
Isaiah 62:12, where it is said
of Zion, Thou shalt be called
Hephzibah, or, my delight is in
her, and sought out, a city not
forsaken. Nor is there any
greater impropriety in giving
the name Jehovah to a city, than
in calling an altar
Jehovah-nissi, that is, Jehovah
my banner, (Exodus 17:15,) and
Jehovah-shalom, Jehovah peace, (
6:24,) in token that the Lord
was the author of those mercies
of which the said altars were
designed to be monuments. So the
servants of God are described as
having his name written upon
their foreheads, Revelation
3:12; Revelation 14:1; but
several interpreters,
particularly Huetius, and our
learned Bishop Pearson, (in his
Exposition of the Creed, p.
165,) render the words thus: He
that shall call her [to be his
peculiar people] is the Lord our
righteousness.” Thus also Dr.
Waterland and others. But
Blaney, who renders the last
clause of Jeremiah 23:6, This is
the name by which Jehovah shall
call him, OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS,
translates this, And this is he
whom Jehovah shall call OUR
RIGHTEOUSNESS, judging that the
הin לה, rendered her, is not the
feminine pronoun affix, but the
masculine, after the Chaldee
form.
Verse 17-18
Jeremiah 33:17-18. For thus
saith the Lord, David shall
never want a man, &c. — It is
very evident that the prophecies
in these verses were not
fulfilled in the Jews after the
Babylonish captivity; for, from
that time to the coming of
Christ, David was without a
successor of his family sitting
upon the throne of Judah or
Israel. Nor have they been
fulfilled in them since, for,
from the destruction of
Jerusalem by the Romans to the
present time, they have neither
had a king nor a regular
priesthood belonging to their
nation. There can therefore be
no doubt that Jeremiah here
foretels the kingdom of the
Messiah, and the priesthood, or
ministry rather, to be
established by him, by which a
pure and spiritual oblation
should be offered in every place
where a church should be formed
for him, (see Malachi 1:11,) and
not at Jerusalem and in Judea
only. “As the Jewish priesthood,
in the family of Aaron, is
extinct, and hath been exercised
neither in Jerusalem nor in any
other place for seventeen
centuries, it follows,” says
Calmet, “that these promises can
respect only the eternal
priesthood of Jesus Christ,
exercised by himself, and by his
ministers, in the Christian
Church from the beginning, and
which shall continue to the end
of time.” Nor is it unusual for
God in the Old Testament to
express promises relating to,
and to be fulfilled under, the
gospel, by terms proper to the
Old Testament. See Isaiah 19:19;
Isaiah 56:7; Isaiah 66:23. And
as the prophets often describe
the Christian worship by
representations taken from the
temple service, so the apostles
prove the rights and privileges
belonging to the ministers of
the gospel from the prerogatives
given to the Jewish priesthood.
See Romans 15:16; 1 Corinthians
9:13-14.
Verse 20-21
Jeremiah 33:20-21. If you can
break my covenant of the day and
of the night — Called the
ordinances of the day and night,
Jeremiah 31:35-36. Then may also
my covenant be broken with David
and with the Levites — A promise
this, that the kingdom of Christ
and a Christian ministry shall
continue in the church to the
end of time. And as his kingdom
shall have no end, (Luke
1:32-33,) the words may also be
construed as extending to the
eternal state, in which, as
Christ shall reign in glory for
ever, so his saints shall be
priests unto God, and reign for
ever with him.
Verse 22
Jeremiah 33:22. As the host of
heaven cannot be numbered, &c. —
The former promise respected the
stability, this the enlargement
of the church, the members of
which are here termed the seed
of David, as they are elsewhere
often called the seed of
Abraham, being the imitators of
the faith of Abraham and David.
Or they may be termed the seed
of David, because they are the
seed of Christ, who is sometimes
called David in the writings of
the prophets, (see Jeremiah
30:9,) and whose seed and whose
Levites are multiplied in the
multiplying of Christians and of
faithful ministers under the
gospel, which are the blessings
here promised.
Verses 24-26
Jeremiah 33:24-26. The two
families which the Lord hath
chosen — “It is plain from
Jeremiah 33:26,” says Blaney,”
that the two families here meant
are those of Jacob and David,
though some have supposed the
two kingdoms of Israel and
Judah, others the royal and
sacerdotal families of David and
Levi, to be intended.” He hath
even cast them off — The words
are spoken by those unbelieving
Jews who thought God would never
restore them to their former
condition, nor give them again a
king of the seed of David, thus
indirectly accusing him of a
breach of promise. Thus they
have despised my people, &c. —
Thus, saith God, they have
spoken in a reproachful and
degrading manner of my people,
as if they should never be a
nation again, having rulers of
themselves and a ministry. If my
covenant be not with day and
night, &c. — If I have not
appointed the vicissitudes of
day and night, and of summer and
winter, upon which the seasons
of the year and the fruitfulness
of the earth depend; then will I
cast away the seed of Jacob —
Then will I finally, and for
ever, abandon the body of the
Jews and Israelites; and David
my servant — Namely, the seed of
David, all persons lineally
descended from him, so that none
of them shall ever hereafter
reign over Israel and Judah. The
sum of these verses is plainly
this, that a restoration of them
to their own land should as
certainly succeed their
captivity as the day succeeds
the night, or summer follows
winter. God had as certainly
ordained the one as the other,
and, would as certainly have
mercy on his people as he would
certainly continue the
revolutions of the heavenly
bodies. And in showing this
mercy he would take care that
one of the seed of David should
be their ruler: which has been,
and still more fully shall be,
fulfilled in the Messiah, who
shall always as certainly govern
his church, whether consisting
of converted Jews or Gentiles,
as there will always be a church
on earth to be governed. |