Verse 1-2
Jeremiah 51:1-2. Behold, I will
raise up against Babylon —
Darius and Cyrus, who came
against Babylon, came by a
divine instinct. God excited
their spirits to accomplish his
purpose against that idolatrous
city, and the oppressive
government which had its seat
there. Against them that dwell
in the midst — Hebrew, in the
heart; of them that rise up
against me — That is, in the
centre of the country of mine
adversaries, which by a
circumlocution means the same as
Babylon itself. A destroying
wind — See note on Jeremiah
4:11, where the prophet
describes the Chaldean army
coming up for the destruction of
Judea under the same metaphor.
The Chaldeans had been like a
destroying, blasting wind to the
Jews, and now the Medes and
Persians are to be like one to
them. And will send unto Babylon
fanners — Enemies who shall
drive them away as chaff is
driven away by the fan; or those
who shall disperse her forces,
and empty or spoil her land of
all its riches, &c. This image
is frequently made use of by the
Hebrew prophets, to represent
the ease with which the Almighty
disperses and destroys his
enemies: see notes on Jeremiah
15:7; Isaiah 21:10; Isaiah
41:16. For in the day of trouble
they shall be against her, &c. —
Or, as the words may be
rendered, When they shall come
round her on every side in the
evil (or adverse) day.
Verses 3-5
Jeremiah 51:3-5. Against him
that bendeth let the archer bend
— See Jeremiah 50:14; and
against him, that lifteth up
himself in his brigandine — Or,
coat of mail: suffer not them
who are skilful in using the
bow, or armed in coats of mail,
to avail themselves any thing of
their skill or their armour, but
oppose them with superior skill
and force. Thus the slain shall
fall in the land of the
Chaldeans — There seems to be a
transposition of words in this
sentence, the sense certainly
being, Thus the Chaldeans shall
fall down slain to the earth.
For Israel hath not been (or
rather, shall not be) forsaken,
nor Judah of his God — “Though
God was justly displeased with
his people, yet he would not
cast them off utterly, or
deprive them of his protection,
though he would do so to those
that were the rod in his hand,
to chastise and scourge his
people.”
Verse 6-7
Jeremiah 51:6-7. Flee out of the
midst of Babylon, &c. — God’s
people are here exhorted to flee
out of Babylon with all haste,
as Lot did out of Sodom, lest
they should be consumed in the
iniquity of that place: see
Jeremiah 50:8. Babylon hath been
a golden cup in the Lord’s hand
— In what sense Babylon is
called a cup may be seen by
comparing Jeremiah 25:15. Her
greatness and glory enticed and
drew in many nations to be
confederate with her, in hopes
of enriching or aggrandizing
themselves; but thereby they
drew down destruction upon
themselves. They thought to
drink, or be in alliance with
the Babylonians, was drinking
out of a golden cup, but it
proved to them a deadly draught.
For she was a splendid
instrument of vengeance,
ordained by God against them;
and as they all had suffered by
her, so they are all here
represented as glorying over
her, and rejoicing when her turn
of suffering came. By making all
the earth drunken, is meant
either making all the
neighbouring nations act
foolishly, and contrary to true
wisdom and prudence, or the
causing them, as it were, to
stagger and fall through the
terror and astonishment, the
confusion and dismay, which
God’s judgments should produce
among them: see note on Jeremiah
25:15. We may observe further
here, that this golden cup is
said to be in the Lord’s hand,
to signify that these things had
been brought about by the divine
providence, and that God had
used Babylon as an instrument to
bring the nations to that
condign punishment which they
had deserved.
Verse 8-9
Jeremiah 51:8-9. Babylon is
suddenly fallen — It was one of
the aggravations of the
punishment of Babylon, that her
destruction came upon her
suddenly and unexpectedly. Howl
for her, &c. — So the kings, the
merchants, and other factors,
are described as lamenting the
destruction of mystical Babylon,
Revelation 18:9; Revelation
18:11; Revelation 18:17-19. Take
balm for her pain — Use your
utmost endeavours, and try every
thing you can to save her from
destruction. This is spoken
ironically, implying her ruin to
be irrecoverable. We would have
healed Babylon, but she is not
healed — Some think “this is
spoken in the name of God’s
prophets, and the other
witnesses of his truth,
importing that they had
sufficiently testified against
her errors and idolatries, but
that she was irreclaimable; and
therefore that it was time for
all the lovers of truth to
depart out of her, lest they
should be involved in her
punishments.” But it is more
probable that the nations which
had been subject to Babylon, and
were her allies, are the
speakers here, declaring that
they had assisted her to the
utmost of their power, and had
endeavoured to support her
sinking cause, but all in vain,
nothing which they had done or
could do availing to save her
from destruction. And therefore,
as her case was desperate, it
was time for them to shift for
themselves, and to leave Babylon
to its fate, since it seemed to
be the decree of Heaven that it
should fall. Those who have
written of the downfall of
Babylon relate, that when its
affairs seemed to grow
desperate, it was deserted by
most of its allies, few or none
of them persevering to lend it
any assistance. Her judgment
reacheth unto heaven — That is,
her sin, bringing down God’s
judgments; and is lifted up even
to the skies — It comes to the
ears of even God himself, and
engages him to take account of
it and punish her.
Verse 10
Jeremiah 51:10. The Lord hath
brought forth our righteousness
— Hath made manifest the equity
of our cause, revenged the
wrongs we have suffered, and
shown ours to be the true
religion, by bringing such
remarkable judgments upon our
enemies. Come, and let us
declare in Zion, &c. — Therefore
let us give glory to him in the
assemblies of his church, and in
the most public manner
imaginable. This is spoken in
the persons of the captive Jews.
Verse 11-12
Jeremiah 51:11-12. Make bright
the arrows, gather the shields —
Hebrew, מלאו השׁלשׂים, the
quivers. Thus the LXX., πληρουτε
τας φαρετρας, with whom agree
the Vulgate, Castalio, and
others. The meaning is, Prepare
all the instruments of war to
defend yourselves, ye
Babylonians, for you will have
need of them all. The Lord hath
raised up the spirit of the
kings of the Medes —
Neriglissar, king of Babylon,
having formed an alliance
against the Medes, Cambyses sent
his son Cyrus with an army of
thirty thousand Persians to join
the Medes, commanded by
Cyaxares, king of Media, Cyrus’s
uncle; called in Scripture,
Darius the Mede. It was properly
his army that made the
expedition against the
Babylonians, Cyrus being
employed as his general. Persia
was then a small part of the
empire of Media, and of little
account till Cyrus advanced its
reputation; and even then it was
called the kingdom of the Medes
and Persians, the Medes having
still the preference: see
Xenophon’s Cyropæd., lib. 1. and
Lowth. Set up the standard upon,
or rather, before the walls of
Babylon; and proceed to take all
the necessary steps to distress
her, and make yourselves masters
of her: for the Lord hath both
devised, &c. — For God will both
favour your undertaking, and
will enable you to accomplish
it.
Verses 13-19
Jeremiah 51:13-19. O thou that
dwellest upon many waters — The
river Euphrates ran through the
midst of Babylon, and there was
a prodigious lake of water on
one side of the city, besides
other lesser waters near it, so
that it was in a manner
encompassed with waters. Many
waters do likewise signify
mystically the many people over
which this was the reigning
city: see Revelation 17:15.
Abundant in treasures — Not only
enriched by traffic, but by the
conquest and spoil of many
nations. Thine end is come, and
the measure of thy covetousness
— God has set bounds to thy
covetousness, which it shall not
pass over: thou shalt no more
increase in wealth, but an end
shall be put to all thy designs
of this sort. The Lord of hosts
hath sworn by himself — The
Lord, who is well able to make
his words good, hath sworn by
himself, for he could swear by
no greater, saying, Surely I
will fill thee with men as with
caterpillars — Or, locusts, as,
according to Bochart, the word
ילקproperly signifies. Armies
are often compared to
caterpillars, locusts, and such
like devouring insects. He hath
made the earth by his power, &c.
— It is he who, by his immense
power, has made all these
wonderful things which we see
about us, and adorned and
settled them by his wisdom, that
has pronounced this concerning
Babylon: and therefore you need
not be doubtful respecting its
accomplishment, since he who
could create these mighty works,
can certainly, whenever he
pleases, effect what is
infinitely more easy, the ruin
of Babylon. But for an
elucidation of this, and the
four following verses, see notes
on Jeremiah 10:12-16.
Verses 20-24
Jeremiah 51:20-24. Thou art my
battle-axe, &c. — Cyrus, or
rather the army of the Medes and
Persians, seems to be intended
here; compare Jeremiah 51:11-12;
as elsewhere the instrument of
God’s vengeance is called a
sword, a rod, a scourge. This
army, with Cyrus, their general,
God here says he will make use
of for destroying the whole
power of the Babylonish empire,
and all orders and degrees of
men in it, as he had formerly
made that empire the executioner
of his judgments upon other
countries, Jeremiah 50:23. “Or
else,” says Lowth, “the words
may be understood of the church,
and imply, that God will destroy
all those earthly powers and
kingdoms which are adversaries
to his truth and people, in
order to establish and advance
his church. This will be
fulfilled at the fall of
mystical Babylon, when God’s
kingdom shall break in pieces
all the kingdoms of the earth,
in the destruction of that
remnant of the fourth monarchy,
according to Daniel’s prophecy,
Daniel 2:44.” And I will render
unto Babylon all their evil (see
Jeremiah 51:11, and Jeremiah
50:28) that they have done in
Zion, in your sight — This may
either refer to the evil done at
Jerusalem and in Judea, by the
Chaldeans, in the sight of God’s
people, or to the open and
public manner in which judgment
would be executed on Babylon.
Verse 25-26
Jeremiah 51:25-26. Behold, I am
against thee, O destroying
mountain — Babylon was situate
in a plain, but is called a
mountain here, by reason of its
superiority and eminence above
all other places; and perhaps
also on account of its lofty
walls, palaces, and other
edifices; and it has the epithet
of destroying, on account of its
being the cause of the
destruction of many nations. Or,
the words הר המשׁחיתmay properly
be rendered, mountain of
corruption, a name given by way
of reproach to the mount of
Olives, after it was defiled by
idolatry, 2 Kings 23:13, where
see the note. The same
appellation is here given to
Babylon, because it was the seat
of idolatry; which was derived
from thence into other countries
under its government and
jurisdiction. This is remarkably
true of mystical Babylon. I will
roll thee down from the rocks —
That is, from thy strong holds.
I will dismantle all thy walls
and forts, and then set thee on
fire, (see Jeremiah 51:58-59,)
so that thou shalt appear like a
great mountain burning.
“Earthquakes were frequent in
Palestine, and the sacred
writers have embellished their
writings with repeated allusions
to this terrible phenomenon. The
prophet here compares a powerful
nation, doomed to destruction,
to a ruinous mountain, or rather
a volcano, which would soon be
consumed, and involve other
mountains in its ruins.” And
they shall not take of thee a
stone — There shall not be left,
in thee a stone fit to be used
in any principal part of a
building, either for a
foundation or for a
corner-stone. This seems to be
spoken figuratively, and to
signify that they should no
longer have kings and governors
taken from among themselves, but
should be under the dominion of
foreigners.
Verses 27-29
Jeremiah 51:27-29. Set ye up a
standard — blow the trumpet —
These were common signals for
assembling armies together. Call
together the kingdoms of Ararat,
Minni, and Ashehenaz — These
were countries under the
dominion of the Medes. The two
former probably the greater and
lesser Armenia, and the latter a
part of Phrygia, near the
Hellespont: so Bochart thinks.
And that both Armenians and
Phrygians composed part of the
army which Cyrus led against
Babylon, may be seen in
Xenophon. Cyropœd., lib. 3. and
lib. 7. Appoint a captain
against her — Appoint a proper
person, who has skill, courage,
and conduct, to command and
direct all these nations. Such
was Cyrus, who was accordingly
appointed to this purpose. Cause
her horses to come up as the
rough caterpillars — Or, the
rough locusts, as Bochart
renders it, who observes, that
there are some insects of that
kind rough and hairy. Blaney
reads, bristled locusts. Locusts
represent horses, not only in
their swiftness, but likewise in
the shape of their heads, and
Joel 2:4, Revelation 9:7, they
are said to have the appearance
of horses and horsemen. Prepare
against her the kings of the
Medes — The several princes or
viceroys of the provinces
belonging to the Median empire,
with their people. All princes
and governors are called kings
in the Hebrew language. The land
shall tremble and sorrow — An
expression commonly used to
express the confusion of the
inhabitants under some great
calamity. For every purpose of
the Lord shall be performed, &c.
— See notes on Jeremiah
50:16-40.
Verses 30-32
Jeremiah 51:30-32. The mighty
men of Babylon have forborne to
fight: they have remained, &c. —
“The year before the siege of
Babylon, Cyrus overthrew
Belshazzar in battle, whereupon
his army retreated within the
walls, where they were shut up
by him and besieged. Afterward,
when Cyrus entered the city, he
ordered public proclamation to
be made, that all persons should
keep within their houses, and
whoever was found abroad should
be put to death; and threatened
to set their houses on fire, if
any offered to hurt the soldiers
from the tops of their houses.”
They became as women — Timorous,
and without courage. They have
burned their dwelling-places —
The enemy have burned their
houses. Her bars are broken —
All her fortresses, and what she
confided in as her chief defence
against the enemy. One post
shall run to meet another —
Messengers shall run from
different parts, and so fall in
with one another, all carrying
the same intelligence to the
same person, that the city was
taken on the part every one came
from. This is a very natural
description of what may be
supposed to happen on a city
being taken by surprise in the
middle of the night; for, as
fast as the alarm spread, people
would be posting away with the
news from all parts to the
head-quarters. The translation
of the last clause, to show the
king of Babylon that his city is
taken at one end, is not
accurate: the word מקצהdoes not
mean at one end, for one is not
in the text, but at the
extremity. It may not be
improper to observe further
here, that though it seems
unusual to say that one
messenger runs to meet another,
to acquaint any one with the
same news, the usual expression
in such a case being, that one
messenger follows upon the heels
of another; yet, in this matter,
this unusual way of speaking was
exactly descriptive of the fact;
for Babylon being taken by a
party of soldiers entering by
the channel of the Euphrates at
each extremity of the city, the
messengers who carried the news
to the king at his palace would
actually run toward and meet
each other at or near the
palace, as they came from
opposite quarters, to acquaint
him that his city was taken at
the extremities; for we cannot
but suppose that people would
run from each end of the city to
the palace as soon as Cyrus’s
men entered. The passage in the
original has great beauty and
sublimity, which, however, is
almost lost in our translation.
Houbigant seems to give it its
due force, rendering the verbs
in the present tense, and
omitting the connecting
particles, which greatly
augments its energy, thus:
“Courier comes to meet courier —
messenger meets messenger — to
inform the king of Babylon that
his city is taken at the
extremity, that the passages are
stopped, [or surprised, see
Jeremiah 51:41,] that fires are
burning among the reeds, that
the men of war are terrified.”
The passages here mentioned
“were most probably the
entrances into the city from the
river side, which were secured
by gates that ought, as
Herodotus observes, to have been
fast barred, which, if it had
been done, would have
effectually frustrated the
attempt of the enemy; but being
left open and unguarded, on
account of the public festivity,
the assailants were in
possession of those entrances,
and in the heart of the city,
before the besieged were aware
of it.” The word אגמים, here
rendered reeds, properly
signifies marshes or lakes; and
the phrase here seems to import,
that the enemies had burned up
all the outworks belonging to
the marshy grounds about the
river Euphrates. — Lowth.
Verse 33
Jeremiah 51:33. The daughter of
Babylon is like a
thrashing-floor — God’s people
have been sorely bruised and
trodden under foot by the
Babylonians, as corn in a
thrashing-floor: see note on
Isaiah 21:10. It is time to
thrash her — It is time for her
to feel the miseries she has
made others suffer. The word
thrash often signifies to subdue
by force and power. Yet a little
while and the time of her
harvest shall come — There shall
be a clear riddance made of her
inhabitants and their treasures,
as the harvest clears the
fields, and leaves them empty
and bare. By her harvest may be
meant the slaughter and spoiling
of her inhabitants; and by the
thrashing, or treading, which
follows the harvest, the
destruction of the city itself.
Verse 34-35
Jeremiah 51:34-35.
Nebuchadrezzar hath devoured me
— Zion and Jerusalem, which are
both expressed in the next
verse, are the speakers here,
and the words contain a
pathetical description of the
calamities brought upon the Jews
by Nebuchadnezzar and his
forces, who, after they had
devoured the wealth and laid
waste the beauty of Judea, then
turned the inhabitants out of
it, and led them captives into a
strange land. The violence done
to me and my flesh be upon
Babylon — Let God return upon
her the violence she has done to
me and to my children. Our
nearest relations are called our
flesh in Scripture. This
imprecation is very similar to
that in Psalms 137:8, where see
the note.
Verses 36-39
Jeremiah 51:36-39. Thus saith
the Lord, I will plead thy cause
— This is, as it were, God’s
answer to the prayers and
imprecations of the Jewish
people, mentioned in the two
foregoing verses. I will dry up
her sea, and make her springs
dry — This some think is spoken
figuratively, meaning, I will
exhaust her multitudes of
people, and dry up all those
sources from whence she derived
her immense wealth and power.
But this was literally fulfilled
in Cyrus’s draining the river,
and thereby gaining an entrance
into the city. All great waters
are called seas in the Hebrew
language. And Babylon shall
become heaps — See note on
Jeremiah 50:39-40. They shall
roar together like lions, &c. —
This is either expressive of
their grief and anguish of mind,
or else the prophet describes
the revels and riotous noise
which they made upon the night
of that public festival in which
the city was taken: see below.
In their heat I will make their
feasts — Or, I will supply them
with drink, as Blaney renders
משׁתיהם, observing, that all the
ancient versions give the word
that sense, and that it agrees
with the use of it, Daniel 1:8;
Daniel 1:10; Daniel 1:16. And I
will make them drunken — I will
suffer them to give a loose to
joy in their feasts, and to be
intoxicated with wine: God is
frequently said in Scripture to
do those things which he permits
to be done. Or the words may be
taken figuratively, as
signifying, While they are
feasting I will prepare for them
another cup to drink, namely,
that of my fury and indignation.
History informs us that Babylon
was taken at a time when the
Babylonians were so engaged in
feasting and revelling, and so
intoxicated with liquor, that
the gates leading down to the
river, which used to be shut
every night, were left open,
which gave a free passage to
Cyrus and his army into the
city. That they may rejoice and
sleep a perpetual sleep — That,
in the midst of their jollity
and security, they may sleep the
sleep of death.
Verses 41-43
Jeremiah 51:41-43. How is
Sheshach taken! — That Babylon
is meant by Sheshach is certain;
but why it is so called is yet
matter of doubt: see note on
Jeremiah 25:26. Some indeed have
supposed that it is called so
from a goddess of that name,
which the Babylonians
worshipped, and which is
supposed by Calmet to have been
the same with the moon; but of
these things there does not
appear to be satisfactory proof.
How is the praise of the whole
earth surprised — Babylon was
esteemed the wonder of the
world, for the height, breadth,
and compass of its walls, the
palaces and hanging gardens
belonging to it, for the temple
of Belus, for the banks and
facing of the river, and the
artificial lakes and canals made
for the draining of it, and for
its riches and greatness. The
sea is come up upon Babylon, &c.
— A numerous army, or a vast
multitude of people, carrying
all before them like an
inundation. Her cities are a
desolation — All the lesser
cities, within the territories
of Babylon, are become an
uninhabited, uncultivated
desert: see note on Isaiah
13:20.
Verse 44
Jeremiah 51:44. And I will
punish Bel in Babylon — The
heathen ascribed the honour of
all their successes to their
idols; and, upon any great
victory, offered the best part
of the spoils to their gods, and
deposited them in their temples,
as a grateful acknowledgment
that the success was owing to
their assistance. So
Nebuchadnezzar, upon every
victory over the Jews, carried
away part of the furniture of
the sanctuary and put it in the
temple of his idol: see 2
Chronicles 36:7; Daniel 1:2. The
restoring of the holy vessels to
their right owner, and to their
former use, is what is here
foretold by bringing forth out
of his mouth that which he hath
swallowed, which was done by
Cyrus, upon his proclamation for
rebuilding the temple, Ezra 1:7.
But the full accomplishment of
this prediction Dr. Prideaux
places in Xerxes’ demolishing
the temple of Belus, and
plundering it of its vast
wealth, which, from Diodorus
Siculus’s account of it, he
computes to amount to twenty-one
millions of our money: see his
Connect., pp. 100, 101. And the
nations shall not flow together
any more unto him — There shall
be no more costly presents
brought by foreign nations unto
the temple of Bel, as a
compliment to that monarchy;
just as, under the Roman empire,
people that were conquered by
it, sent golden crowns to
Jupiter Capitolinus: see Lowth.
Verse 45-46
Jeremiah 51:45-46. My people, go
ye out of the midst of her, &c.
— See note on Jeremiah 50:8. And
lest your heart faint, and ye
fear for the rumour, &c. — “Lest
the rumours of new forces, ready
to join themselves to the
Babylonians, dishearten you, and
make you despair of seeing so
great an empire subdued by any
human power.” A rumour shall
come one year, and after that in
another year — This seems to be
an idiomatic phrase, denoting
that terrifying rumours should
continue year after year. And in
these words the prophet, by
God’s direction, gives signs or
tokens to the captive Jews,
whereby they might know the
exact time when Babylon should
be taken, and, consequently,
when they should remove from the
city into some other place, that
they might not be terrified, and
induced to quit the city before
there was any occasion for their
doing so; and he acquaints them
that there should come a rumour
one year, namely, of Cyrus’s
preparations against the
Babylonians; and that the next
year there should be another
rumour, namely, as we may
suppose, of Cyrus’s march into
Asia, and his victories there,
and of his drawing nearer and
nearer to Babylon every day. And
violence in the land, ruler
against ruler — “It is
possible,” says Blaney, “that
the contests between the adverse
powers of Babylon and Media,
during which the dominions of
the former were subjected to the
miseries of foreign invasion,
may alone be here intended. But
Berosus, the Chaldean historian,
as cited by Josephus, Contra
Apion, lib. 1., gives an account
of civil violences and disorders
that were committed in the land
after the death of
Nebuchadnezzar, whose son,
Evil-merodach, was, after a
short reign, murdered, and his
throne usurped by one of his
subjects. The usurper’s son, who
succeeded him, was also murdered
in his turn, and the kingdom
restored to the lawful heir; and
all this happened in the course
of a few years previous to the
foreign invasion. These
therefore, I think, are more
likely to be the violence in
this passage alluded to, and
introduced as the forerunners of
still greater devastations.”
Verses 47-49
Jeremiah 51:47-49. Therefore
behold, or rather, Then soon,
the days come that I will do
judgment upon the graven images,
&c. — That is, cause the statues
of the gods of Babylon to be
broken to pieces, or carried
away. Then the heaven and the
earth, &c., shall sing for
Babylon — The angels in heaven,
and many nations of the earth,
shall rejoice and praise God for
the just punishment brought upon
Babylon. So at Babylon shall
fall, or rather, Through Babylon
have fallen, as נפלוshould be
rendered, the slain of all the
earth — The reason is here
assigned why the heavens and the
earth, and all that are therein,
should rejoice at the fall of
Babylon, because not only the
people of Israel, but of the
whole earth likewise had been
greatly annoyed, oppressed, and
diminished by the power of that
ambitious nation.
Verse 50-51
Jeremiah 51:50-51. Ye that have
escaped the sword — Namely, the
sword which wasted Babylon. Go
away, stand not still — This is
spoken to the Jews, who,
attending to the advice given
them, Jeremiah 51:45, withdrew
from Babylon in time, and so
escaped the sword by which they
otherwise might have fallen. And
here they are advised to flee
still farther and farther off;
but amidst all to remember their
native country, and in
particular Jerusalem, and the
God they had worshipped there;
and to pray for the restoration
of the city and temple; and that
he would avenge himself of the
Babylonians for laying them in
ruins. We are confounded,
because we have heard reproach —
The prophet here represents the
words or thoughts of the pious
exiles, when they heard the
Babylonians speaking of Jehovah
with contempt, and deriding them
for worshipping him, who could
not, they said, deliver his city
and temple out of their hands,
or preserve them from being
destroyed. For strangers are
come into the sanctuaries of the
Lord’s house — The word
sanctuaries, in the plural, is
likewise used Psalms 73:17,
though our English reads there,
sanctuary. Probably the several
courts of the temple are meant
by sanctuaries.
Verse 53
Jeremiah 51:53. Though Babylon
should mount up to heaven —
Though Babylon were built upon
the most lofty and inaccessible
mountain, and though it were
made as strong as nature and art
could make it, yet still I would
cause it to be spoiled.
Verses 55-57
Jeremiah 51:55-57. Because the
Lord hath spoiled Babylon, and
destroyed out of her the great
voice — “When cities are
populous, they are of course
noisy: see Isaiah 22:2. Silence
is therefore a mark of
depopulation; and in this sense
we are to understand God’s
destroying, or taking away out
of Babylon, the great noise,
which, during the time of her
prosperity, was constantly heard
there, ‘the busy hum of men,’ as
the poet very expressly calls
it. In this manner the mystical
Babylon is threatened,
Revelation 18:22-23. Compare
Jeremiah 7:34; Jeremiah 16:9;
Jeremiah 25:10.” — Blaney. Every
one of their bows is broken —
Their strength is quite broken,
and they cannot defend
themselves, or hurt their
enemies. I will make drunk her
princes and her wise men, &c. —
I will permit her princes, her
commanders, and directors to be
intoxicated, so that they shall
neglect what should be done for
their defence, and thereby be
slain.
Verse 58
Jeremiah 51:58. The broad walls
of Babylon shall be utterly
broken, &c. — That the walls of
Babylon were of a prodigious
height and thickness, Herodotus
tells, who says, they were 200
cubits high, and 50 cubits in
breadth, lib. 1. cap. 178. “We
are astonished,” says Bishop
Lowth, in his note on Isaiah
13:19, “at the accounts which
ancient historians of the best
credit give, of the immense
extent, height, and thickness of
the walls of Nineveh and
Babylon; nor are we less
astonished, when we are assured
by the concurrent testimony of
modern travellers, that no
remains, not the least traces,
of these prodigious works, are
to be found. Our wonder will, I
think, be moderated in both
respects, if we consider the
fabric of these celebrated
walls, and the nature of the
materials of which they
consisted. Buildings in the East
have always been, and are to
this day, made of earth or clay
mixed, or beat up with straw, to
make the parts cohere, and dried
only in the sun. This is their
method of making bricks. The
walls of the city were built of
the earth, digged out of the
spot, and dried upon the place;
by which means both the ditch
and the wall were at once
formed; the former furnishing
materials for the latter. That
the walls of Babylon were of
this kind is well known; and
Berosus expressly says, (apud
Joseph. Antiq. Jeremiah 10:11,)
that Nebuchadnezzar added three
new walls, both to the old and
new city, partly of brick and
bitumen, and partly of brick
alone. A wall of this sort must
have a great thickness in
proportion to its height,
otherwise it cannot stand. The
thickness of the walls of
Babylon is said to have been
one-fourth of their height;
which seems to have been no more
than was absolutely necessary.”
Her high gates shall be burned,
and the people shall labour in
vain, &c. — If the Chaldeans
take never so much pains to
quench the fire, it shall be to
no purpose; and all their
efforts to preserve their empire
and city shall be as
insignificant as if men wrought
in the fire, which immediately
destroys all the fruits of their
labours. The words may be better
translated, “And the people have
laboured for a thing of naught,
and the folks have wearied
themselves for that which shall
be fuel for the fire;” that is,
the works which have been
erected with such incredible
labour and expense, shall be a
prey to the flames.
Verse 59
Jeremiah 51:59. The word which
Jeremiah commanded Seraiah. when
he went with Zedekiah — The
Hebrew בלכתו את צדקיהו, is
rendered by the LXX., οτε
επορευετο παρα σεδεκιου, when he
went from Zedekiah, on his
behalf, or by virtue of his
commission; which seems to be
the meaning of the clause; for
we have no reason to suppose
that Zedekiah went in person to
Babylon at that time. Instead
of, This Seraiah was a quiet
prince, as our translators
render שׁר מנוחה, the LXX. read,
αρχων δωρων, a prince, or chief
master of gifts, which Blaney
interprets to mean, chief of the
embassy, or who had the
principal charge of the present
sent from Zedekiah to the king
of Babylon, judging, that in
these words is specified the
business on which Seraiah was
sent. He was employed to carry
the present, or customary
tribute, which Zedekiah was
obliged to pay to the king of
Babylon, in acknowledgment of
his subjection and vassalage.
Verses 60-62
Jeremiah 51:60-62. So Jeremiah
wrote in a book — Namely, in the
two foregoing chapters; all the
evil that should come upon
Babylon — This was done that it
might be known even in Babylon
itself that Jeremiah had
foretold the destruction of that
city, six years before the
Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem.
And Jeremiah said, When thou
shalt see and read all these
words — This is probably to be
understood, not of a mere
private reading of them by
himself, but of his reading them
to the Jews in Babylon, (namely,
those that had been carried
thither in Jehoiakim’s
captivity,) to comfort them
under their exile, and, perhaps,
in the hearing of some of the
Babylonians themselves. Then
shalt thou say — Looking up to
God, and making a solemn
protestation of the divine
authority, and unquestionable
certainty, of that which thou
hast read; O Lord, thou hast
spoken against this place — And
I believe what thou hast spoken.
Thou hast passed sentence upon
Babylon, and it shall be
executed. This is like the
angel’s protestation, Revelation
19:9, concerning the destruction
of the New Testament Babylon,
These are the true sayings of
God: and Revelation 21:6, These
words are true and faithful. To
cut it off, that none shall
remain in it, &c. — Though
Seraiah and the captive Jews see
Babylon flourishing, yet, having
read this prophecy, they must
foresee Babylon falling, and by
virtue of this foresight, must
learn neither to envy its pomp
nor fear its power. Thus,
reader, when we observe what
this world is, how glittering
are its shows, and how
flattering its proposals, let us
read in the book of the Lord,
that its fashion passeth away,
and that it shall shortly be cut
off, and made desolate for ever,
and we shall learn to look upon
it with a holy contempt, and to
die to all its false glories and
illusive joys.
Verse 63-64
Jeremiah 51:63-64. And thou
shalt bind a stone to it, and
cast it into the midst of
Euphrates — The prophets, as we
have seen, frequently gave
sensible representations of the
judgments they foretold: see
Jeremiah 19:10. This now given
was a significant emblem of
Babylon’s sinking irrecoverably
under the judgments here
denounced against her: compare
Revelation 18:21. This
threatening was in a literal
sense fulfilled by Cyrus’s
breaking down the head or dam of
the great lake, which was on the
west side of the city, in order
to turn the course of the river
that way; for no care being
afterward taken to repair the
breach, the whole country round
it was overflowed. And the
prophecy of Isaiah 14:23,
foretelling that the country of
Babylon should become a
possession for the bittern and
pools of water, was literally
fulfilled. — Prideaux and Lowth.
And they shall be weary — This
clause, expressed by one word in
the Hebrew, namely, ויעפו, is
not to be met with in the
translation of the LXX., “nor
does it appear to me,” says
Blaney, “to be authentic,
notwithstanding the concurrence
of the later versions and MSS.
The sense is entire and complete
without it; and the addition
serves only to cause perplexity
and confusion. The word seems to
have been added by some
transcriber, whose eye was
caught by it at the close of the
preceding paragraph, Jeremiah
51:58,” where the same word
occurs. Thus far are the words
of Jeremiah — Here the
prophecies of Jeremiah end: the
following chapter being added by
some other hand, either in the
lifetime of Jeremiah, and by his
consent, or after his death. |