Verse 1
Jeremiah 49:1. Hath Israel no
sons? Why then doth their king
inherit Gad? — Is there no
posterity of Israel, that the
king of the Ammonites hath taken
possession of Gad, as if he had
a right to it, and his people
dwell in the cities of it?
Instead of their king, here,
Blaney reads Milcom, and Dr.
Waterland and Houbigant Malkam,
the idol of the Ammonites. “God
sorely afflicted those parts of
the kingdom of Israel that lay
eastward of Jordan, first by
Hazael, 2 Kings 10:33; afterward
by Tiglath-pileser, chap. 2
Kings 15:29; and then delivered
up the whole kingdom to be
carried captive by Shalmaneser,
chap. 17.; after which, it is
probable, the Ammonites took
occasion to possess themselves
of Gad, that lay near their
territories. But God’s
dispossessing the Israelites
gave the Ammonites no right to
invade their inheritance, (see
Zephaniah 2:8,) especially as
they had been so tender of the
Ammonites’ right as not to
invade their possessions in
their march toward the land of
Canaan.” See Lowth, and
Deuteronomy 4:19; 2 Chronicles
20:10. It is probable, as the
king of Ammon had instigated
Ishmael to kill Gedaliah, that
the reason which induced
Nebuchadnezzar to make war upon
the Ammonites was to revenge
that murder.
Verse 2
Jeremiah 49:2. Therefore I will
cause the noise of war to be
heard in Rabbah, &c. — The
principal city of that country.
Her daughters shall be burned
with fire — That is, the lesser
cities, which are reckoned so
many daughters to the mother
city. Then shall Israel be heir
unto them that were his heirs —
Hebrew, וירשׁ את ירשׁיו,
Possidebit possessores suos,
Vulgate, shall possess his
possessors: or, as Blaney
renders it, shall take to their
possessions who have taken to
his. “This is understood,” says
he, “to have been fulfilled when
Judas Maccabeus defeated the
Ammonites, and took their towns,
1 Maccabees 5:6, &c. Zephaniah
speaks in like manner, Jeremiah
2:9, The residue of my people
shall spoil them, and the
remnant of my people shall
possess them. But both prophets
may, perhaps, refer to still
future times, when Israel shall
be finally restored to their own
land, as is frequently foretold
of them, and not only recover
their own ancient possessions,
but succeed, likewise, to the
vacant possessions of their once
hostile neighbours, long since
extinct and irrecoverably lost.”
Verse 3
Jeremiah 49:3. Howl, O Heshbon,
for Ai is spoiled — This “Ai
must be a different city from
that taken by Joshua, chap. 8.,
which lay on the west side of
Jordan. Grotius mentions another
city, called Gaia by Ptolemy;
which, being near Heshbon, the
destruction of it was matter of
concern to the neighbouring
city.” Lament, and run to and
fro by the hedges — Try to hide
yourselves in the thickets, and
remove from one place to
another, for fear of being
discovered. But by גדרות, here
rendered hedges, Blaney thinks,
are meant, “those fences or
enclosures round the lesser
towns, which served to secure
them against thieves and
robbers, but were not dignified
with the name of walls, capable
of resisting the attack of a
regular enemy.” The psalmist, he
supposes, distinguishes these
from the fortifications of
cities, Psalms 89:40, terming
the former גדרתיו, his fences,
and the latter מבצריו, his
strong holds, or walled
fortresses. According to this
interpretation, therefore, the
prophet here foretels that “the
inhabitants of the lesser towns
should run to and fro, like
persons distracted with fear,
within their enclosures, not
daring to step beyond them, lest
they should fall in with the
enemy, whose approach they
dreaded.” For their king — Or,
Milcom, their idol; shall go
into captivity, and his priests
and princes together — “Here the
same is said of Milcom,” says
Blaney, “as was of Chemosh,
chap. Jeremiah 48:7, which shows
that the word is properly used
as the name of the Ammonitish
idol.”
Verses 4-6
Jeremiah 49:4-6. Wherefore
gloriest thou in the valleys? —
That is, in the riches of thy
fat and plentiful valleys, which
overflow with abundance of all
things: compare Isaiah 28:1;
Isaiah 28:4. Though they be
fruitful, yet glory not therein,
for, notwithstanding their
fertility, they shall be no
security to thee against the
terror which I shall bring upon
thee. Behold, I will bring fear
upon thee — When God gives up a
people to destruction, he
commonly takes from them their
usual courage. But the word fear
here may denote a hostile army,
the cause of fear and terror.
And ye shall be driven out every
man right forth — That is, so as
not to dare to look back, or
stop to consider which way to
go, but flee for your lives that
way which lies next. And none
shall gather up him that
wandereth — None shall bring him
that flees from the enemy to his
house, or afford him any shelter
or accommodation. And afterward
I will bring again the captivity
of Ammon. See note on Jeremiah
48:47.
Verse 7
Jeremiah 49:7. Concerning Edom —
The destruction of Edom, or
Idumea, is likewise foretold by
Ezekiel, Joel, Amos, and
Obadiah: see the margin. Is
wisdom no more in Teman — “The
eastern part of the world (by
which is chiefly meant Arabia
and the adjacent countries) was
famous for the study of wisdom,
or philosophy, as it was called
in later times: see 1 Kings
4:30. The Edomites put in their
claim to this prerogative, as
appears from what is said here,
and in the parallel place of
Obadiah, Jeremiah 49:8, as also
from the book of Job, where
Eliphaz, one of the disputants,
is called the Temanite, as being
descended from Teman, Esau’s
grandson, who gave name to the
city or country of Teman,
elsewhere mentioned. Is counsel
perished from the prudent? —
When God designs a people for
destruction, he deprives them of
that common prudence and
foresight which are requisite
for the due management of their
affairs.” — Lowth. Here Edom,
which boasted itself, and whose
fame was spread abroad for
wisdom and prudence, is
described acting as if all its
wisdom and prudence were gone.
Verse 8
Jeremiah 49:8. Flee ye, turn
back, dwell deep — “When the
Arabs,” says Harmer, “have drawn
upon themselves such a general
resentment of the more fixed
inhabitants of those countries
that they think themselves
unable to stand against them,
they withdraw into the depths of
the great wilderness, where none
can follow them with hopes of
success.” D’Arvieux tells us,
“they will be quite ready to
decamp upon less than two hours’
warning, and, retiring
immediately into the deserts,
render it impossible for other
nations, even the most powerful,
to conquer them, they not daring
to venture far into the deserts,
where the Arabs alone know how
to steer their course, so as to
hit upon places of water and
forage. Is it not then most
probable that the dwelling deep,
which Jeremiah here recommends
to the Arab tribes, means this
plunging far into the deserts,
rather than going into deep
caves and dens, as Grotius and
other commentators suppose?” O
inhabitants of Dedan — The
Dedanites were Arabians of the
posterity of Dedan, a grandson
of Abraham, Genesis 25:3. They
seem by this place to have been,
in latter times, subdued by the
Idumeans, and incorporated with
them.
Verse 9-10
Jeremiah 49:9-10. If
grape-gatherers come to thee,
&c. — The vintage is not usually
gathered so clean but there will
be a gleaning left, Isaiah 17:6;
and house-breakers, or thieves,
commonly leave something behind.
But I have made Esau bare — But
the destruction coming upon thee
will be so entire that scarcely
a remnant shall be preserved. I
have uncovered his secret places
— I have taken from him every
thing that might be a refuge or
defence to him, and laid open
all the recesses wherein he
might conceal himself, or his
riches. His seed is spoiled, &c.
— The calamity shall also extend
to his family, and to all that
he has any connection with. And
he is not — He is utterly ruined
and undone.
Verse 11
Jeremiah 49:11. Leave thy
fatherless children, I will
preserve them, &c. — The Chaldee
paraphrast understands this of
the Jews, to whom the following
words do certainly belong, as if
it contained God’s promise to
take care of their families, in
that distressed and forlorn
state to which the captivity had
reduced them. Some, who apply it
to the Edomites, understand it
as spoken by way of irony, in
which light they understand
Isaiah 16:4. “But there is
nothing in the context,” says
Houbigant, “which can lead to
this interpretation. I rather
understand it as a prophecy; nor
was it any thing wonderful that
the conquerors should spare the
little children and widows, from
whom they had nothing to fear;
nor that the Edomites should
forsake both the one and the
other, when compelled to a
precipitate flight.” Or, it is a
promise that God would not
wholly destroy the race of Esau,
but protect and preserve a
remnant of them; and that, at
the time when he sent these his
judgments on the proud and
self-confident, and all their
boasted strength was cast down,
the weak and helpless should be
remembered by him, the Father of
mercies.
Verse 12-13
Jeremiah 49:12-13. They whose
judgment was not to drink of the
cup — Namely, of God’s wrath:
see note on Jeremiah 25:15; have
assuredly drunken — The
Israelites, God’s peculiar
people, who, in regard to the
gracious promises which he had
made to them and to their
fathers, the near relation in
which they stood to him, and the
many pious persons who, from age
to age, were found among them,
might, in all human appearance,
have expected mercy at God’s
hands, have, nevertheless,
suffered dreadful judgments. And
art thou he that shall
altogether go unpunished? — Is
Edom the righteous nation,
which, above all others,
deserves to be exempted from
punishment? There is a peculiar
emphasis, says Blaney, in the
pronoun הוא, he, which denotes
that Edom was he, the people, to
which the punishment was
peculiarly due: see note on
Jeremiah 25:29. I have sworn by
myself — I have confirmed my
threatening, as I have
frequently confirmed my
promises, by an oath; that
Bozrah shall become a
desolation, &c. — Bozrah, one of
the chief cities of Idumea, is
here put for that country in
general, it being usual with the
prophets to describe the
destruction of a whole nation by
the ruin of some one or more of
its principal cities: see
Jeremiah 49:23; Amos 1:8; Amos
1:12-14.
Verses 14-16
Jeremiah 49:14-16. I have heard
a rumour — Hebrew, שׁמועה, a
report or message, from the
Lord, and an ambassador is sent
unto the heathen. Obadiah begins
his prophecy against Edom in
similar words. The prophets, it
must be observed, “often
represent God as summoning
armies, and setting them in
array of battle against those
people whom he has decreed to
destroy. And his stirring up
men’s spirits to invade such
countries, is described here as
if he had sent an ambassador to
the Chaldeans and their
confederates, to engage them in
a war against the Idumeans;
according to the methods which
earthly princes use to engage
their allies.” — Lowth. For lo,
I will make thee small, &c. — I
will bring thee low and make
thee very contemptible. Thy
terribleness hath deceived thee
— “Thou hast been formerly
terrible to all about thee, and
looked upon as impregnable; and
the confidence thou hast had in
this thy strength hath made thee
careless and secure, and thereby
given thy enemies an advantage
against thee.” O thou that
dwellest in the clefts, &c. —
St. Jerome, who lived in the
neighbourhood, tells us, in his
commentary upon Obadiah, “that
Idumea was a rocky mountainous
country, and that the
inhabitants dwelt in caves dug
out of the rocks and hills.”
Though thou shouldest make thy
nest as high as the eagle — The
greatest height or strength
cannot place thee out of the
reach of divine vengeance. The
eagle is remarkable for its
flying high, and making its nest
in very high and inaccessible
rocks: see note on Job 39:27-28.
Verses 17-19
Jeremiah 49:17-19. Edom shall be
a desolation; every one shall
hiss, &c. — See note on Jeremiah
18:16. As in the overthrow of
Sodom, &c. — A proverbial
expression, denoting an utter
destruction. Behold, he shall
come up like a lion, &c. — This
is a description of
Nebuchadnezzar’s marching with
his army against Idumea, whom
the prophet compares to a lion
coming out of his den near
Jordan. When that river swells,
in the time of harvest, the
lions, that lie in the thickets
on the river side, are raised
out of their coverts, and infest
the country: see note on
Jeremiah 12:5, and Maundrell’s
Travels, pp. 81, 82. Against the
habitation of the strong —
Hebrew, אל נוה איתן, the strong
folds, or rough pastures. The
LXX. read εις τοπον αιθαμ, to
the place Aitham, considering
the word which we render strong
as a proper name. But I will
suddenly make him run away from
her — This clause should rather
be rendered, I will rouse him up
and make him, run upon her, the
preposition מעל, here rendered
from likewise signifying upon,
and being so rendered by our
translators, 1 Kings 9:5. To
this purpose the Vulgate, quia
subito currere faciam eum ad
illam, because I will cause him
to run suddenly against her. And
who is a chosen man that I may
appoint over her? — Namely, to
spoil and destroy her. What
select man shall I employ for
this purpose? for it must be one
who will do it effectually.
Nebuchadnezzar, or his
captain-general Nebuzar- adan,
seems to be here meant. For who
is like me? — Who is able, like
me, to prepare instruments to
perform his work? And who will
appoint me the time? and who is
that shepherd? &c. — Who will
challenge me to meet him in the
field, as if we were upon equal
terms? or what leader or general
can enter the lists with me?
“The word shepherd often
signifies a prince, or
commander. But here it is used
in opposition to the lion
mentioned before; as if he had
said, A shepherd may as well
encounter a lion as the best
appointed warrior contend with
the Almighty, or those whom he
makes the instruments of his
vengeance.” — Lowth.
Verses 20-22
Jeremiah 49:20-22. Therefore
hear the counsel of the Lord —
Let them, the Edomites, hear and
consider what God hath purposed
against them. Surely the least
of the flock shall draw them out
— By the least of the flock, may
be here understood the common
soldiers in the Chaldean army,
any one of whom, he says, shall
have courage and strength enough
to conquer the Idumeans, and
draw them to slaughter or
captivity. The earth is moved at
the noise of their fall — The
neighbouring countries are
astonished at it. The prophet
compares the destruction of
Idumea to the fall of a great
building, which affrights those
that are near it. The noise
thereof was heard in the Red sea
— The borders of Idumea reached
to the Red sea. Behold he shall
fly as the eagle — The
suddenness and rapidity with
which Nebuchadnezzar, or his
general, Nebuzar-adan, marched
and fell upon Edom, are
described in this verse: see
note on Jeremiah 48:40-41.
Verse 23
Jeremiah 49:23. Concerning
Damascus — “Damascus was the
capital of the kingdom of Syria:
and had seemingly at this time
swallowed up all the other petty
sovereignties of that country.
Isaiah had before uttered a
prophecy concerning it, of a
calamitous import, (chap. 17,)
which had been fulfilled by
Tiglath-pileser’s taking it, and
carrying the people captive to
Kir, 2 Kings 16:9. Amos also had
foretold the same event, Amos
1:3-5. But it had recovered
itself after the fall of the
Assyrian empire, and is here
doomed to suffer again the like
calamities from the resentment
of Nebuchadnezzar, probably
about the same time with the
other neighbouring nations: see
note on chap. Jeremiah 48:1.
Hamath is confounded, and Arpad
— Hamath and Arpad are elsewhere
joined together: see 2 Kings
18:34; 2 Kings 19:13; Isaiah
10:9. Hamath was the capital of
a part of Syria. bearing the
same name, and which formed once
an independent kingdom. It was
situate on the northern frontier
of the land of Israel, Whence we
find frequent mention of the
entrance of Hamath, Numbers
34:8, &c. The city of Hamath,
Josephus tells us, was that
which the Macedonians afterward
called Epiphania: Ant., lib. 1.
cap. 6. And Jerome, in his
commentary on Isaiah 10:9, says
the same. Hemath, quam Syri
usque hodie Epiphanium vocant —
Aphad, or Arvad, is with good
reason held to be the island of
Aradus, in the Mediterranean
sea; as those who are called
הארודי, Genesis 10:18, are by
the LXX. rendered αραδιοι, in
the Vulgate, Aradii. This island
was not far from the shore, and
nearly opposite to Hamath.” —
Blaney. They heard evil tidings
— Tidings of the approach of a
hostile army; they are
faint-hearted — Their courage
fails them. Their sorrow is on
the sea — Or, as on the sea,
namely, when a storm arises and
the sea is tempestuous.
Houbigant reads, They fluctuate
as the sea; they cannot be at
rest: compare Isaiah 57:20-21.
But Blaney renders נמגו נים
דאגה, They are melted into a sea
of solicitude: observing, “This
is a literal translation of the
text; and appears to me
preferable in sense to any of
the interpretations I have
hitherto met with.”
Verses 24-27
Jeremiah 49:24-27. Damascus is
waxed feeble — That is, the
inhabitants of Damascus. They
have lost their ancient courage
and valour; they were wont to be
formidable to their enemies, but
now they flee before them. Fear,
or rather, trembling, or,
horror, as רשׂשׂ, properly
signifies, hath seized on her,
distress and pangs, Hebrew, צרה
וחבלים, have taken her, as a
woman in travail — Great anguish
and sorrow are ordinarily
expressed by this similitude in
the Scriptures. How is the city
of praise — That is, a city of
fame and renown; not left —
Namely, not spared, or left
untouched by the enemy. This is
thought to be spoken in the
person of the king, or some
other inhabitant of Damascus.
Therefore her young men — Or,
surely her young men, as the
particle לכןis rendered Jeremiah
5:2; shall fall in her streets —
Or, broad places, as the Hebrew
word signifies. A fire shall
consume the palaces of Benhadad
— The name of several kings of
Syria.
Verse 28-29
Jeremiah 49:28-29. Concerning
Kedar and the kingdoms of Hazor
— Kedar is well known to have
been one of the sons of Ishmael,
Genesis 25:13, who settled in
Arabia. But of Hazor we find no
satisfactory account given by
commentators. There is, indeed,
a city called Hazor, mentioned
Joshua 11:10, and in other parts
of Scripture: but this was in
the land of Canaan; whereas the
kingdoms of Hazor, here
mentioned, were evidently in
Arabia, in the neighbourhood, at
least, of Kedar. Among the sons
of Joktan, however, who were
prior to the Ishmaelites in
Arabia, and whose descendants
are therefore looked on as the
only genuine Arabs, we find one
whose name was Hazar-maveth,
Genesis 10:26-30. And, as by
Kedar all the descendants of
Ishmael are probably here
designed, so all the other
branches of the family of Joktan
may, in like manner, be included
under the general name of Hazor.
And perhaps the most probable
reason why the Arabians are
called a mingled people is, that
they were thus made up of the
people of different descents;
some of them being sprung from
Joktan, others from Ishmael, to
whom must be added the sons of
Abraham by Keturah, who are also
said to have been settled in
Kedem, or the east country,
Genesis 25:6, and perhaps other
families besides. All these were
divided into petty sovereign
ties under certain chiefs or
princes, which explains what is
to be understood by the kingdoms
of Hazor: see Blaney. Arise ye,
go up to Kedar, &c. — Here the
prophet foretels that
Nebuchadnezzar should conquer
these kingdoms, and spoil the
men of the East, as the Arabians
are called in the Scriptures.
Their tents and their flock
shall they — Namely, the
Chaldeans; take away — Their
substance consisted in their
cattle and their tents, from
whence the country itself is
called the tents of Kedar,
Psalms 120:5 : with these they
removed from place to place for
the convenience of pasture. They
shall take to themselves their
curtains — Those elegant
coverings of which their tents
were made. and which were much
superior to those of any other
people. And they shall cry unto
them — Hebrew, וקראו, Let them
call for, or command, that is,
as Blaney renders it, Let them
bring, upon them terror from
every side.
Verses 30-33
Jeremiah 49:30-33. Flee ye, get
you far off — Hebrew, נדו מאד;
Vulgate, Abite vehementer, Go
away with eagerness, or, haste.
Dwell deep, or, “retire deep for
to dwell:” see note on Jeremiah
49:8. Arise, get you up unto the
wealthy nation — The prophet
here gives the Chaldeans a
commission from God to undertake
this expedition, and seize upon
the wealth of the inhabitants of
Hazor; which have neither gates
nor bars — Who have never been
attacked, and therefore live
securely without walls or
ramparts for their defence;
which dwell alone — Solitarie
habitant, dwell solitarily, as
Buxtorf renders בדד ישׁכנו.
“Their habitations are
isolated,” as some interpret it.
“They do not live in cities,
towns, or villages, where the
houses are contiguous; but each
family has its mansion apart
from the rest, with land about
it sufficient for the
subsistence of their cattle. In
this dispersed state they were,
of course, less provided with
the means of defending
themselves from the incursions
of the enemy.” I will scatter
into all winds — Into all the
quarters of heaven; them, that
are in the utmost corners — Or,
those that inhabit the insulated
coast, namely, the peninsula of
Arabia: see notes on Jeremiah
9:26; Jeremiah 25:23.
Verse 34
Jeremiah 49:34. The word that
came to Jeremiah against Elam —
Elam we find to have been an
independent, and even powerful
kingdom, in the days of Abraham,
Genesis 14:1. “But I am not of
opinion with those writers,”
says Blaney, “who hold that by
Elam, in Scripture, Persia is
always meant. There is no doubt
but that when the monarchy of
Persia was established under
Cyrus, Elam was blended into and
formed a part of it. But before
that time Elam and Persia were
two distinct kingdoms: of which
this may be admitted for proof,
that the kingdom of Persia, if
Xenophon may be credited as an
historian, was never subdued
under the dominion of
Nebuchadnezzar, but preserved
its liberty in alliance with the
Medes. Elam, on the contrary, is
not only here prophesied of, as
destined to become a part of the
Babylonian conquests, but is
actually spoken of, (Daniel
8:2,) as a province of the
Babylonish empire; over which
Daniel seems to have presided,
having Shushan for the seat of
his government. We may therefore
conclude Elam to have been, as
the name itself would lead us to
suppose, the country called by
heathen writers Elymais, which
Pliny, in conformity with
Daniel, describes as separated
from Susiana, by the river
Eulæus, or Ulay; Nat. Hist.,
lib. 6. cap. 31.”
Verses 35-38
Jeremiah 49:35-38. Behold, I
will break the bow of Elam — The
Elamites were famous archers, as
this expression intimates, as
also Isaiah’s words, Isaiah
22:6; And Elam bare the quiver.
Strabo also says, that the
mountainous parts of Elymais
bred chiefly archers; στρατιωτας
τρεφει τοξοτας τους πλειστους,
lib. 16. p. 744. Livy, and other
heathen writers, also speak of
the Elymæan archers. Upon Elam
will I bring the four winds, &c.
— I will bring enemies upon Elam
from every quarter; and scatter
them to every quarter. Wars and
commotions are metaphorically
denoted by winds. And I will
send the sword after them — Even
after they are driven out of
their own country, my judgments
shall pursue them. And I will
set my throne in Elam — As
Nebuchadnezzar acted under the
commission of God, and had
authority from him to conquer
this and the neighbouring
nations, and is called God’s
servant, the establishing of his
power was in effect the setting
up of the throne or dominion of
Jehovah. Some, however, think
this is spoken of the Persian
monarchy, established there by
Cyrus, who is expressly called,
in Scripture, God’s anointed
one, whom he had particularly
chosen.
Verse 39
Jeremiah 49:39. In the latter
days, I will bring again the
captivity of Elam — This is
supposed to relate to the times
of the Lagi and Seleucidæ, when
the Elamites recovered their
liberty. Or, if we consider what
is said in the foregoing verse
to relate to Nebuchadnezzar,
this may be understood of
Cyrus’s setting them free from
the Babylonish yoke; for we find
from Isaiah 22:6, that the
Elamites assisted Cyrus in the
conquest of Babylon; and
Shushan, the chief city of Elam,
was made the metropolis of the
Persian empire. |