Verse 2-3
Jeremiah 43:2-3. Then spake
Azariah, the son of Hoshaiah —
Called Jazaniah, Jeremiah 42:1.
We may observe many like
instances in the books of Kings
and Chronicles, of the same
persons being called by two
different names. And all the
proud men — They who refused to
obey Almighty God when his
commands crossed their own
inclinations. Saying unto
Jeremiah, The Lord hath not
spoken by thee — The constant
method of hypocrites and
infidels, who pretend they are
not satisfied of the truth of
divine revelation, when the true
cause of their unbelief is, that
God’s commands contradict their
own lusts and appetites. But
Baruch the son of Neriah setteth
thee on against us — They would
not directly accuse Jeremiah of
partiality toward, or
confederacy with the Chaldeans,
as his enemies had done
formerly, (Jeremiah 37:13,) but
they lay the blame upon Baruch,
whom they knew to be an intimate
companion of Jeremiah’s, and to
have been kindly used by the
Chaldeans upon Jeremiah’s
account. — Lowth.
Verses 4-7
Jeremiah 43:4-7. So Johanan and
all the captains, &c., obeyed
not, &c. — That is, they
resolved not to obey the message
God had sent them by Jeremiah;
but took all the remnant of
Judah that were returned, &c. —
The resolution which they had
formed they presently put in
practice. Though Jeremiah and
Baruch, and probably many of the
people, were not willing to go
along with them, yet these
rebellious captains forced them
to go; so that the prophet and
his pious friends were now a
kind of prisoners to their own
countrymen. So they came into
the land of Egypt — Their great
inclination to go into Egypt
arose, as has been intimated,
from a supposition that they
should be safer there from the
Babylonians, who, they thought,
might injure them at any time
while they stayed in Judea; but
would not venture to attack
Egypt, on account of its
strongly fortified cities, which
commanded the passes into the
country, and the various
channels of the Nile, which were
great obstructions to the march
of an army. Thus they came even
to Tahpanhes — One of the
principal cities of Egypt, and a
place of residence for their
kings. The word is contracted to
Hanes, Isaiah 30:4, and joined
with Zoan, the chief city of the
kingdom. Tahpanhes gave a name
to a queen of Egypt, (1 Kings
11:19,) and is supposed by many
to be the same city which was
afterward called Daphnĉ
Pelusiacĉ. In this behaviour of
the Jews we have an instance of
great impiety joined to
hypocrisy. They had promised
with an oath to follow the
advice of the prophet; but,
because his counsel was not
agreeable to their inclinations,
they went down into Egypt, and
even charged the prophet with
speaking falsely in the name of
the Lord. In these Jews we see a
picture of those persons who,
upon some occasions, express
their zeal and good intentions,
but reject the most wholesome
counsels when those counsels
thwart their passions, and are
in opposition to what they have
secretly purposed. With respect
to Jeremiah, it may be observed,
God suffered him to be carried
to Egypt, that he might there
denounce the ruin of the
Egyptians as well as of the
Jews, who had put their trust in
them. Wherever the wicked are,
the hand of God finds them out;
and those who think, by
disobeying him, to avoid the
evils which they dread, and to
that end make use of unlawful
means, fall by those very means
into the evils they expect to
shun, and are confounded in
their hope.
Verse 8-9
Jeremiah 43:8-9. Then came the
word of the Lord to Jeremiah in
Tahpahnes — Jeremiah was now
among idolatrous Egyptians and
treacherous Israelites, yet here
the word of the Lord came to
him, and he prophesied. God can
visit his people with his grace,
and the revelations of his mind
and will, wherever they are; and
when his ministers are bound,
his word is not bound. When
Jeremiah went into the land of
Egypt, not out of choice, but by
constraint, God withdrew not his
wonted favour from him. And what
he received of the Lord he
delivered to the people.
Wherever we are, we must
endeavour to do good; for that
is our business in this world.
Saying, Take great stones in thy
hand — Such as are used as
foundation-stones; and hide them
in the clay in the brick-kiln —
Or furnace. The Vulgate reads,
in crypta, quĉ est sub muro
lateritio, in the hollow place,
or vault, which is under the
brick wall; and the LXX., εν
προθυροις, in the place before
the gate which is at the entry
of Pharaoh’s house — Which,
however, might be a great way
from the palace itself; the
courts of great kings being
almost equal to a city, for
extent, in ancient times:
particularly the palace of
Babylon was four miles in
compass, according to Diodorus
Siculus: in the sight of the men
of Judah — Hebrew, אנשׁים
יהודים, literally, of men Jews;
which signifies indefinitely
some of that nation; not as in
our present translation, which
seems to imply, that the
presence of all the Jewish
emigrantswas required; for in
that case the reading would at
least have been, with the
definite article prefixed,
האנשׁים היהודים, the men the
Jews, see Blaney. Jeremiah was
not ordered to place these
stones thus in the presence of
the Egyptians, who were
unacquainted with his prophetic
character, but in the sight of
the Jews to whom he was sent; at
least some of them, who might
attest what they had seen to
others; in order that, since he
could not prevent their going
into Egypt, he might bring them
to repent of their going.
Verse 10-11
Jeremiah 43:10-11. And say, Thus
saith the Lord, I will send
Nebuchadrezzar, &c. — God now
commands his prophet to expound
to the Jews the design of the
order given him in the preceding
verse. The stones hid in the
clay, at the entry of Pharaoh’s
house, were intended to be a
sign that the king of Babylon
should make himself master of
that royal city, and set his
throne in that very place. This
minute circumstance is
particularly foretold, that,
when it was accomplished, they
might be put in mind of the
prophecy, and confirmed in their
belief of the extent and
certainty of the divine
prescience; to which the
smallest and most contingent
events are evident. God calls
Nebuchadnezzar his servant,
because in this instance he
should execute God’s will,
accomplish his purposes, and be
instrumental in carrying on his
designs. And when he cometh, he
shall smite the land of Egypt —
Though Egypt has always been a
warlike nation, it shall not be
able to withstand the king of
Babylon; but whom he will he
shall slay, and in what way he
pleases; and deliver such as are
for death to death — See note on
Jeremiah 15:2. Death here
signifies the pestilence which
the prophet foretels would
overspread the country of Egypt
by reason of the famine
occasioned by sieges and other
ravages of war.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 43:12-13. And I will
kindle a fire in the houses of
the gods of Egypt — I will cause
the temples of the gods of Egypt
to be set on fire, and their
images to be consumed, or
carried away, as being neither
able to save their worshippers
nor themselves. God here speaks
of himself as the prime mover,
or principal agent in this
business, no doubt with a design
to inculcate this necessary and
important lesson, that in the
punishing of idolatrous or
ungodly nations both the plan is
his, and the power of carrying
it into execution, whatever
instruments he may choose to
employ as the subordinate
ministers of his providence. And
he shall array himself with the
land of Egypt — That is, he
shall clothe, or enrich himself
and his army with the spoils and
plunder of the country: or he
shall add Egypt to his
dominions, and possess himself
of the riches of it, with as
much ease as the shepherd puts
on his garment. So calamities,
when they surround men on every
side, are compared to a garment,
Psalms 109:19. “The expression
shows,” says Rollin, “the
prodigious ease with which all
the power and riches of a
kingdom are carried away, when
God appoints the revolution.”
And he shall go forth from
thence in peace — None daring or
attempting to resist him, or
give him any molestation. He
shall also break the images of
Beth-shemesh — Or, the house of
the sun, as the word signifies.
The LXX. render the clause, και
συντριψει στυλους ηλιουπολεως,
He shall break in pieces the
pillars of Heliopolis, that is,
the city of the sun, where, as
we learn from Herodotus, lib. 2.
c. 59, the Egyptians celebrated
a grand festival annually, in
honour of the sun, that had a
temple there. But בית שׁמשׁ, the
house of the sun, seems rather
to mean the temple itself, in
which the images of their deity
were erected. |