Verse 1
Jeremiah 44:1. The word which
came to Jeremiah — The patience
and goodness of God to this
remnant of his ancient people
are very remarkable; he leaves
them not even in their
rebellion, but commissions his
prophet, whom he had before sent
to forbid their going into this
idolatrous country, to try if in
Egypt they could be brought to
repentance and reformation;
concerning all the Jews which
dwelt at Migdol, and at
Tahpanhes, &c. — They were now
dispersed into divers parts of
the country, and Jeremiah is
sent with a message from God to
them, which he delivered, either
by going about from place to
place to them; or when he had
many of them together in Pathros,
as is mentioned Jeremiah 44:15.
We find a place termed Migdol,
mentioned Exodus 14:2, as
situate near the Red sea. “But I
do not take this,” says Blaney,
“to be here intended. Migdol
properly signifies a tower, and
may, in all probability, have
been a name given to different
cities in Egypt where there was
a distinguished object of that
kind. The city of Magdolus is
mentioned by Herodotus, Hecatĉus,
and others, and placed by
Antoninus at the entrance of
Egypt from Palestine, about
twelve miles from Pelusium. This
was too far distant from the Red
sea to be in the route of the
Israelites; but its situation in
the neighbourhood of Tahpanhes,
or Daphnĉ, and its distance from
Judea, favour the supposition of
its being the Migdol here spoken
of. For then, as Bochart
observes, we shall find the four
places mentioned exactly in the
order of their respective
distances from that country;
1st, Migdol, or Magdolus; 2d,
Tahpanhes, or Daphnĉ; 3d, Noph,
or Memphis; and lastly, the
district of Pathros, or Thebais.”
Near Memphis stands one of the
pyramids which are yet
remaining.
Verses 2-5
Jeremiah 44:2-5. Ye have seen
all the evil that I have brought
on Jerusalem — He refers to the
late destruction of it by the
king of Babylon: this remnant of
the people was a brand plucked
out of the burning, and their
eyes had been witnesses of the
desolations which God had
wrought. Because of their
wickedness, &c. — As they were
eye-witnesses of the effect, so
nothing but their unbelief made
them strangers to the cause of
the divine wrath manifested
against them; for God, by his
prophets, had continually
assured them that the grand
cause was their departure from
him, the one living and true
God, and forsaking his worship
for that of idols. To serve
other gods, whom they knew not —
The sin of their various
idolatries was aggravated by
this, that they were as much
strangers to the idols as to the
people with whom they joined in
the worship of them, neither
they nor any of their fathers
having had any proof that these
idols had ever done, or were
able to do, any thing for their
worshippers: compare Deuteronomy
13:6; Deuteronomy 32:17. These
idols are opposed to the true
God, called elsewhere the God of
their fathers, who had made
himself known to them by so many
wonderful works and so many
instances of his favour and
benignity; and had promised to
show the same favour to their
posterity, if they continued
steadfast in their obedience. I
sent, &c., saying, O! do not
this abominable thing that I
hate — God had given them
numberless admonitions and
warnings by his prophets, that
idolatry in all the species and
instances of it was a sin which
he hated above all others, and
would very dreadfully punish,
yet they would not hear so as to
yield obedience to him; but
still persisted in the
commission of this most
abominable and absurd iniquity.
The Hebrew, אל נא תעשׂו, may be
properly rendered, Do not, I
pray you, this abominable thing
which I hate. Thus the Vulgate,
Nolite, oro, facere verbum
abominationis hujuscemodi. Be
unwilling, I beseech you, to
practise a thing so abominable.
The language is as pathetic as
it is emphatical.
Verse 6-7
Jeremiah 44:6-7. Wherefore my
fury, &c., was poured forth, &c.
— As if he had said, For these
very reasons, their idolatry and
contempt of my word by my
prophets, the very sins you are
now committing, I gave Judah and
Jerusalem into the hand of the
king of Babylon, and they are,
as you see this day, waste and
desolate. Wherefore commit ye
this great evil? &c. — What sort
of prudence is it that
influences you to do such
actions as these, by which you
cannot injure God. but
yourselves only? You are now but
a few of many; what love can you
have for your country while you
take courses which will
certainly tend to the utter
extirpation of those few, so
that there shall be none
remaining of all the Jews? God
designed that this remnant
should have remained in Judea,
and kept possession of it, when
the rest of their brethren were
carried away captive, Jeremiah
42:10. But by their going into
Egypt and defiling themselves
with the idolatries of that
nation, they provoked God to
make an utter destruction of
them.
Verses 8-10
Jeremiah 44:8-10. Ye provoke me
unto wrath with the works of
your hands — By making and
setting up idols to worship.
That ye might cut yourselves
off, &c. — This is not to be so
taken as if they did these
things with a design to cut off
themselves and their posterity:
but only as signifying that
their utter ruin would be the
certain consequence of their
continuing so to act. Have ye
forgotten the wickedness of your
fathers? &c. — Have you
forgotten what great wickedness
your fathers committed, and what
great punishments were in
consequence thereof inflicted
upon them? We may be truly said
to have forgotten that the sight
of which, or reflection thereon,
makes no such impression upon us
as produces a suitable practice.
Which they have committed in the
land of Judah, &c. — To have
practised these things in any
place would have been to
contract great guilt; but to
have done them in the land of
Judah, and in the streets of
Jerusalem, in the valley of
vision, and in the holy city,
where there were such means of
information and such helps to
piety, was still more aggravated
and inexcusable wickedness. They
are not humbled even unto this
day — Neither they nor you are
yet properly humbled, and
prepared for receiving mercy.
Neither have they feared, nor
walked in my law — Hence we
learn, that reformation and
obedience are the proper fruit
of true contrition and
humiliation; God does not
account those to be humbled, but
hardened, who are not reformed
and made obedient, let their
pretended contrition or
humiliation be, in outward
appearance, what it may.
Verses 11-14
Jeremiah 44:11-14. I will set my
face against you for evil — See
note on Jeremiah 21:10. And I
will take — Or, I will take
away, namely, by destruction;
the remnant of Judah, &c. — The
direful punishments denounced
against those who went to Egypt
were not denounced because it
was a sin in itself for the Jews
to leave their country, and seek
a securer habitation in Egypt,
but because, in so doing, they
showed their distrust of God’s
power or goodness, as if he were
not able or willing to protect
them in Judea, and also were
guilty of disobeying his express
commands, and disbelieving his
faithful promises, whereby he
had engaged to protect them. To
which must be further added, the
great danger and probability,
not to say certainty, there was
that they would fall into the
idolatry of the Egyptians.
Therefore God uttered grievous
threatenings against their going
thither, that they might be
deterred from it. For I will
punish them that dwell in the
land of Egypt, &c. — See notes
on Jeremiah 42:15-18. So that
none of the remnant of Judah
which are gone, &c. — Blaney
translates this more agreeably
to the Hebrew, thus: “And the
remnant of Judah, those who are
come into the land of Egypt,
with a view to sojourn there,
and to return into the land of
Judah, &c., shall not have one
escaper or surviver; whereas
none shall return but escapers.”
And he observes, “It is evident,
from Jeremiah 44:28, that some
Jews were to escape the general
destruction in Egypt, and to
return into their own country,
although but a few; and the same
thing is implied in the latter
sentence of this verse. But the
former part of this verse
excludes out of the number of
the escapers every individual of
those that were called properly
the remnant of Judah, those that
had set their faces to enter
Egypt to sojourn there, in
opposition to the express
command of God, upon a
presumption that they knew
better than God how to consult
their own restoration. The few
then who were destined to
escape, and to return back to
the land of Judah, were to be
such as had come into the land
of Egypt in a less offensive
manner, and happened to be there
when the storm burst upon them.”
Verse 15
Jeremiah 44:15. Then all the men
and all the women that dwelt in
Pathros — Which was Upper Egypt;
answered Jeremiah, &c. — From
this it appears with how much
reason it was that God ordered
Jeremiah to endeavour to prevent
their going into Egypt, since
the Israelitish women imitated
the idolatry of the inhabitants
of it, as soon as they came
thither, and no people were
immersed in a more absurd and
shameful idolatry than the
Egyptians. It is probable that
when the Jewish women perceived
the Egyptians to abound in
riches and plenty, and to live
in peace and security, they
foolishly concluded that the
gods which the Egyptians
worshipped were more powerful,
or more beneficent, than
Jehovah, whom the Jews
worshipped.
Verses 16-19
Jeremiah 44:16-19. As for the
word thou hast spoken unto us,
we will not hearken unto thee —
Johanan and the rest (Jeremiah
43:5) only denied that God had
said such things, and told
Jeremiah he had spoken falsely:
but now these people rise
higher; they acknowledge
Jeremiah had spoken to them in
the name of the Lord, but,
nevertheless, tell him in plain
terms they would not obey his
word, and indeed this is in the
hearts of all sinners that are
ruled by their lusts; though
they will sometimes pretend that
what they hear is not the will
of God, but spoken out of malice
and prejudice; yet they are
pre-resolved they will not
comply with it, let their
understandings be never so well
informed. But will certainly do
whatsoever thing goeth out of
our own mouth — That is, that
which we have solemnly vowed to
perform. Here we have the root
of all the disobedience of
sinners, their resolution to
please themselves, and do their
own will, and not in any thing
to deny themselves. To burn
incense to the queen of heaven —
To the moon and the rest of the
host of heaven: see the note on
Jeremiah 7:18; and Jeremiah
19:13. As we have done, we and
our fathers, &c. — Their
arguments for continuing in this
idolatry are, 1st, Custom and
antiquity; they and their
fathers had practised it. 2d,
The example of their kings and
princes. 3d, The plenty and
prosperity they had while they
did so, as if their idols and
not Jehovah had been the authors
of it. They compared their
former condition, before the
invasion of Judea and the siege
of Jerusalem, with their present
state, and argued from their
being in prosperity at that
time, that they must needs have
been then in the right; not
considering that it was to be
ascribed to the goodness and
long-suffering of God waiting
for their repentance, as being
unwilling to destroy them, or
even to bring any great calamity
upon them. Besides, though on
account of the measure of their
iniquity being filled up, they
now suffered more grievous
calamities than they had ever
done before, yet, if they were
at all acquainted with the
history of former times, they
could not but know that idolatry
had always brought calamities on
their fathers, and that they
never were so prosperous as when
they worshipped and served
Jehovah only. But since we left
off, &c., we have wanted all
things — This is their last
argument in defence of their
idolatry, an argument drawn from
the evils that had befallen them
since they had left off to
worship the host of heaven; thus
making their ceasing to commit
the sin of idolatry the cause of
their sufferings, whereas, in
truth, the commission of that
and their other sins had been
the cause of all the calamities
to which they had been exposed.
And when we burned incense, &c.,
did we worship her without our
men? — Here the women speak, and
allege that their husbands had
joined with them in offering
incense to the host of heaven,
and that it was not done without
their privity. “By the law of
Moses the men had an independent
power of binding themselves by
any religious vow or obligation;
but the vows of the women were
not binding, without the
knowledge and consent of their
fathers and husbands; but if the
father or husband knew of the
vow, and did not signify his
dissent at the time, his consent
was presumed, and the vow stood
firm and irrevocable, Numbers
30:1-16. This appeal, therefore,
to the concurrence of their men
must be considered as coming
from the female part of the
assembly only, who thereby
appear to declare that since
they were thus authorized by
those who alone had a legal
right to control them, they
should not submit to any other
restraint upon their
inclinations.” — Blaney.
Verses 20-23
Jeremiah 44:20-23. Then Jeremiah
said, The incense that ye
burned, &c. — In these verses
the prophet shows that they
interpreted the dispensations of
God’s providence toward them in
a sense directly contrary to
their true intent and meaning.
They concluded that their
omission of late to burn incense
to the queen of heaven was the
cause of the calamities which
had befallen them; but the
prophet shows them that the true
cause was, not their leaving off
that practice, but their being
formerly guilty of it. This
their idolatry, with their other
sins, did indeed go unpunished a
great while: for God was
longsuffering toward them, and
during the time of his patience
it was perhaps, as they said,
well with them, and they saw no
evil; but at length they became
so provoking that, as the
prophet tells them, Jeremiah
44:22, the Lord could no longer
bear, but began a controversy
with them. Upon this, it seems,
some of them did in a degree
reform their conduct: but their
old guilt being uncancelled, and
their corrupt inclinations being
still the same, God remembered
against them the idolatries of
their fathers, their kings, and
their princes, which they,
instead of being ashamed of,
gloried in: all these, he
intimates, Jeremiah 44:21, came
into his mind, with all the
abominations which they had
committed, Jeremiah 44:22, and
all their disobedience to the
voice of the Lord, Jeremiah
44:23 : all was brought to
account; and to punish them for
these was their land made a
desolation, an astonishment, and
a curse, as they saw it to be.
Therefore — Not for their late
reformation, he assures them,
but for their old
transgressions, had all that
evil happened to them.
Verses 24-28
Jeremiah 44:24-28. Jeremiah
said, Hear all Judah that are in
the land of Egypt — That is, all
you men and women that belong to
Judah, and are now come to dwell
in Egypt; ye and your wives have
spoken — The Hebrew word תדברנה,
rendered have spoken, is of the
feminine gender, and implies
that the women were first and
principally concerned in this
idolatry, and that the men’s
guilt lay chiefly in conniving
at them, and suffering
themselves to be seduced by
them; saying, We will surely
perform our vows, &c. — They
insist on their unlawful vows as
obligations in conscience, which
could not be dispensed with,
just as Herod did on his
unlawful oath, Matthew 14:9 : as
if, though to burn incense to
the queen of heaven were a sin,
yet their having vowed to do it
were sufficient to justify them
in the doing of it; whereas no
man can, by his vow, make that
lawful to himself, much less his
duty, which God had before made
sin. Ye will surely accomplish
your vows, &c. — You are
resolved upon it, and there is
no moving you from your
resolution. Therefore hear ye
the word of the Lord — Hear what
is God’s resolution. Behold, I
have sworn by my great name,
saith the Lord — I also have
made a solemn vow, in opposition
to that wicked one of yours, and
have confirmed it by an oath. I
have sworn and will not repent:
That my name shall no more be
named by any man of Judah in the
land of Egypt, &c. — “These Jews
seem to have joined the worship
of the true God with that of
idols, as the Samaritans did
before them, 2 Kings 17:33.
Thereupon God declares he will
not receive any such polluted
worship at their hands, (compare
Ezekiel 20:39,) nor suffer his
name to be any longer profaned
by such hypocrites, but will
consume them by a sudden and
general destruction” — Lowth.
Behold, I will watch over them
for evil — God here represents
himself as one who would be
solicitous and industrious to
bring evil upon them, as men,
who are so in any business,
watch all opportunities for
doing it: as if he had said, No
opportunity shall be let slip to
bring some judgment upon them,
until there be an end of them,
and they be quite rooted out.
Yet a small number that escape
the sword shall return, &c. — A
very few, next to none in
comparison of the great number
that shall return out of the
land of the Chaldeans: see note
on Jeremiah 44:14. And all the
remnant of Judah shall know
whose words shall stand, mine or
theirs — They said they should
recover themselves when they
returned to worship the queen of
heaven. God says they shall
hereby ruin themselves: and now
the event will show who was in
the right. The contest between
God and sinners is, whose word
shall stand, whose will shall be
done, who shall prevail? Sinners
say, We shall have peace, though
we go on in sin: God says, Ye
shall have no peace. And when
God judges, he will overcome:
his word shall stand, and not
the sinner’s.
Verse 29-30
Jeremiah 44:29-30. And this
shall be a sign unto you — Signs
are usually antecedent to the
thing signified, as Isaiah 38:7;
but here, as Exodus 3:12, Isaiah
37:30, and Luke 2:12, the word
is taken, in a larger sense, for
a circumstance that should
attend the thing signified. It
may be observed, however, that
although the destruction of
these Jews, and that of Pharaoh,
were things immediately
following each other, yet the
latter was in order before the
other. I will give
Pharaoh-hophra into the hand of
his enemies — Pharaoh was a name
common, in ancient times, to all
the kings of Egypt; but several
of them had some additional
epithet to distinguish them from
the rest. Thus the predecessor
of this king was called Pharaoh-
nechoh, 2 Kings 23:29. This
Pharaoh-hophra appears to have
been the same that is called by
profane authors Apries; and his
unfortunate end, in exact
conformity with this prediction,
is particularly related by
Herodotus, lib. 2. cap. 169, and
by Diodorus Siculus, lib. 1. p.
43. “His subjects rebelling, he
sent Amasis, one of his
generals, to reduce them to
their duty; but no sooner had
Amasis begun to make his speech
than they fixed a helmet on his
head, and proclaimed him king.
Amasis accepted the title, and
confirmed the Egyptians in their
rebellion; and the greater part
of the nation declaring for him,
Apries was obliged to retire
into Upper Egypt; and the
country, being thus weakened by
intestine war, was attacked and
easily overcome by
Nebuchadnezzar, who, on quitting
it, left Amasis his viceroy.
After Nebuchadnezzar’s
departure, Apries marched
against Amasis, but, being
defeated at Memphis, was taken
prisoner, carried to Sais, and
strangled in his own palace;
thus verifying this prophecy.”
See Rollin’s Ancient Hist., vol.
1., and Bishop Newton on the
Prophecies, vol. 1. p. 362. |