Chapter 10:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 isaiah lamentations
Jeremiah 10
Complete Concise
We may conjecture that the prophecy of this chapter was
delivered after the first captivity, in the time of Jeconiah or Jehoiachin, when
many were carried away to Babylon; for it has a double reference: I. To those
that were carried away into the land of the Chaldeans, a country notorious above
any other for idolatry and superstition; and they are here cautioned against the
infection of the place, not to learn the way of the heathen (v. 1, 2), for their
astrology and idolatry are both foolish things (v. 3-5), and the worshippers of
idols brutish (v. 8, 9). So it will appear in the day of their visitation (v.
14, 15). They are likewise exhorted to adhere firmly to the God of Israel, for
there is none like him (v. 6, 7). He is the true God, lives for ever, and has
the government of the world (v. 10-13), and his people are happy in him (v.
16). II. To those that yet remained in their own land. They are cautioned
against security, and told to expect distress (v. 17, 18) and that by a foreign
enemy, which God would bring upon them for their sin (v. 20-22). This calamity
the prophet laments (v. 19) and prays for the mitigation of it (v. 23-25).
Verses 1-16
The prophet Isaiah, when he prophesied of the captivity in
Babylon, added warnings against idolatry and largely exposed the sottishness of
idolaters, not only because the temptations in Babylon would be in danger of
drawing the Jews there to idolatry, but because the afflictions in Babylon were
designed to cure them of their idolatry. Thus the prophet Jeremiah here arms
people against the idolatrous usages and customs of the heathen, not only for
the use of those that had gone to Babylon, but of those also that staid behind,
that being convinced and reclaimed, by the word of God, the rod might be
prevented; and it is
written for our learning. Observe here,
I. A solemn charge given to the people of God not to conform
themselves to the ways and customs of the heathen. Let the house of Israel hear
and receive this word from the God of Israel:
"Learn not the way of the
heathen, do not approve of it, no, nor think indifferently concerning it,
much less imitate it or accustom yourselves to it. Let not any of their customs
steal in among you (as they are apt to do insensibly) nor mingle themselves with
your religion." Note, It ill becomes those that are taught of God to
learn
the way of the heathen, and to think of worshipping the true God with such
rites and ceremonies as they used in the worship of their false gods. See Deu.
12:29-31. It was the way of the heathen to worship the host of heaven, the
sun, moon, and stars; to them they gave divine honours, and from them they
expected divine favours, and therefore, according as
the signs of heaven
were, whether they were auspicious or ominous, they thought themselves
countenanced or discountenanced by their deities, which made them observe those
signs, the eclipses of the sun and moon, the conjunctions and oppositions of the
planets, and all the unusual phenomena of the celestial globe, with a great deal
of anxiety and trembling. Business was stopped if any thing occurred that was
thought to bode ill; if it did but thunder on their left hand, they were almost
as if they had been thunderstruck. Now God would not have his people to be
dismayed
at the signs of heaven, to reverence the stars as deities, nor to frighten
themselves with any prognostications grounded upon them. Let them fear the God
of heaven, and keep up a reverence of his providence, and then they need not be
dismayed
at the signs of heaven, for the
stars in their courses fight not
against any that are at peace with God. The heathen are dismayed at these signs,
for they know no better; but let not the
house of Israel, that are taught
of God, be so.
II. Divers good reasons given to enforce this charge.
1. The way of the heathen is very ridiculous and absurd, and is
condemned even by the dictates of right reason, v. 3. The statutes and
ordinances of the heathen are vanity itself; they cannot stand the test of a
rational disquisition. This is again and again insisted upon here, as it was by
Isaiah. The Chaldeans valued themselves upon their wisdom, in which they thought
that they excelled all their neighbours; but the prophet here shows that they,
and all others that worshipped idols and expected help and relief from them,
were brutish and sottish, and had not common sense. (1.) Consider what the idol
is that is worshipped. It was a
tree cut out of the forest originally. It
was fitted up by
the hands of the workman, squared, and sawed, and worked
into shape; see Isa. 44:12, etc. But, after all, it was but the stock of a tree,
fitter to make a gate-post of than any thing else. But, to hide the wood,
they
deck it with silver and gold, they gild or lacquer it, or they deck it with
gold and silver lace, or cloth of tissue.
They fasten it to its place,
which they themselves have assigned it,
with nails and hammers, that it
fall not, nor be thrown down, nor stolen away, v. 4. The image is made straight
enough, and it cannot be denied but that the workman did his part, for it
is
upright as the palm-tree (v. 5); it looks stately, and stands up as if it
were going to speak to you, but it
cannot speak; it is a poor dumb
creature; nor can it take one step towards your relief. If there be any occasion
for it to shift its place, it must be carried in procession, for it
cannot
go. Very fitly does the admonition come in here,
"Be not afraid of
them, any more than of the signs of heaven; be not afraid of incurring their
displeasure, for
they can do no evil; be not afraid of forfeiting their
favour,
for neither is it in them to do good. If you think to mend the
matter by mending the materials of which the idol is made, you deceive
yourselves. Idols of gold and silver are an unworthy to be worshipped as wooden
gods.
The stock is a doctrine of vanities, v. 8. It teaches lies, teaches
lies concerning God. It is
an instruction of vanities; it is wood."
It is probable that the idols of gold and silver had wood underneath for the
substratum, and then
silver spread into plates is brought from Tarshish,
imported from beyond sea,
and gold from Uphaz, or
Phaz, which is
sometimes rendered the
fine or
pure gold, Ps. 21:3. A great deal
of art is used, and pains taken, about it. They are not such ordinary mechanics
that are employed about these as about the wooden gods, v. 3. these are cunning
men; it is
the work of the workman; the graver must do his part when it
has passed through
the hands of the founder. Those were but decked here
and there with silver and gold; these are silver and gold all over. And, that
these gods might be reverenced as kings,
blue and purple are their clothing,
the colour of royal robes (v. 9), which amuses ignorant worshippers, but makes
the matter no better. For what is the idol when it is made and when they have
made the best they can of it? He tells us (v. 14):
They are falsehood;
they are not what they pretend to be, but a great cheat put upon the world. They
are worshipped as the gods that give us breath and life and sense, whereas they
are lifeless senseless things themselves, and
there is no breath in them;
there is
no spirit in them (so the word is); they are not animated, or
inhabited, as they are supposed to be, by any
divine spirit or
numendivinity.
They are so far from being gods that they have not so much as the
spirit of a
beast that goes downward. They are vanity, and the work of errors, v. 15.
Enquire into the use of them and you will find they are vanity; they are good
for nothing; no help is to be expected from them nor any confidence put in them.
They are a
deceitful work, works of illusions, or
mere mockeries;
so some read the following clause. They
delude those that put their trust
in them, make fools of them, or, rather, they make fools of themselves. Enquire
into the use of them and you will find they are
the work of errors,
grounded upon the grossest mistakes that ever men who pretended to reason were
guilty of. They are the creatures of a deluded fancy; and the errors by which
they were produced they propagate among their worshippers. (2.) Infer hence what
the idolaters are that worship these idols. (v. 8):
They are altogether
brutish and foolish. Those that make them are like unto them, senseless and
stupid, and there is no spirit in themno use of reason, else they would never
stoop to them, v. 14.
Every man that makes or worships idols has become
brutish
in his knowledge, that is, brutish for want of knowledge, or brutish in that
very thing which one would think they should be fully acquainted with; compare
Jude 10,
What they know naturally, what they cannot but know by the light
of nature,
in those things as brute beasts they corrupt themselves.
Though in the works of creation they cannot but see the eternal power and
godhead of the Creator, yet they have become
vain in their imaginations, not
liking to retain God in their knowledge. See Rom. 1:21, 18. Nay, whereas
they thought it a piece of wisdom thus to multiply gods, it really was the
greatest folly they could be guilty of.
The world by wisdom knew not God,
1 Co. 1:21; Rom. 1:22.
Every founder is himself
confounded by the
graven image; when he has made it by a mistake he is more and more confirmed
in his mistake by it; he is bewildered, bewitched, and cannot disentangle
himself from the snare; or it is what he will one time or other be ashamed of.
2. The God of Israel is the one only living and true God, and
those that have him for their God need not make their application to any other;
nay, to set up any other in competition with him is the greatest affront and
injury that can be done him. Let the house of Israel cleave to the God of Israel
and serve and worship him only, for,
(1.) He is a non-such. Whatever men may set in competition with
him, there is none to be compared with him. The prophet turns from speaking with
the utmost disdain of the idols of the heathen (as well he might) to speak with
the most profound and awful reverence of the God of Israel (v. 6, 7):
"Forasmuch
as there is none like unto thee, O Lord! none of all the heroes which the
heathen have deified and make such ado about," the dead men of whom they
made dead images, and whom they worshipped. "Some were deified and adored
for their wisdom; but,
among all the wise men of the nations, the
greatest philosophers or statesmen, as Apollo or Hermes,
there is none like
thee. Others were deified and adored for their dominion; but,
in all
their royalty" (so it may be read), "among all their kings, as
Saturn and Jupiter,
there is none like unto thee." What is the glory
of a man that invented a useful art or founded a flourishing kingdom (and these
were grounds sufficient among the heathen to entitle a man to an apotheosis)
compared with the glory of him that is the Creator of the world and that
forms
the spirit of man within him? What is the glory of the greatest prince or
potentate, compared with the glory of him whose
kingdom rules over all?
He acknowledges (v. 6),
O Lord! thou art great, infinite and immense, and
thy name is great in might; thou hast all power, and art known to have
it. Men's name is often beyond their might; they are thought to be greater
than they are; but God's
name is great, and no greater than he really
is. And therefore
who would not fear thee, O King of nations? Who would
not choose to worship such a God as this, that can do every thing, rather than
such dead idols as the heathen worship, that can do nothing? Who would not be
afraid of offending or forsaking a God whose name is so
great in might?
Which of all the nations, if they understood their interests aright,
would
not fear him who is the
King of nations? Note, There is an admirable
decency and congruity in the worshipping of God only. It is fit that he who is
God alone should alone be served, that he who is Lord of all should be served by
all, that he who is great should be greatly feared and greatly praised.
(2.) His verity is as evident as the idol's vanity, v. 10.
They are the work of men's hands, and therefore nothing is more plain than
that it is a jest to worship them, if that may be called a jest which is so
great an indignity to him that made us:
But the Lord is the true God, the
God of truth; he is God in truth.
God Jehovah is truth; he is not a
counterfeit and pretender, as they are, but is really what he has revealed
himself to be; he is one we may depend upon, in whom and by whom we cannot be
deceived. [1.] Look upon him as he is in himself, and he is
the living God.
He is life itself, has life in himself, and is the fountain of life to all the
creatures. The gods of the heathen are dead things, worthless and useless, but
ours is a living God, and hath immortality. [2.] Look upon him with relation to
his creatures, he is a
King, and absolute monarch, over them all, is
their owner and ruler, has an incontestable right both to command them and
dispose of them. As a king, he protects the creatures, provides for their
welfare, and preserves peace among them. He is
an everlasting king. The
counsels of his kingdom were from everlasting and the continuance of it will be
to everlasting. He is a
King of eternity. The idols whom they call their
kings are but of yesterday, and will soon be abolished; and the kings of the
earth, that set them up to be worshipped, will themselves be in the dust
shortly; but
the Lord shall reign for ever, thy God, O Zion! unto all
generations.
(3.) None knows the power of his anger. Let us stand in awe, and
not dare to provoke him by giving that glory to another which is due to him
alone; for
at his wrath the earth shall tremble, even the strongest and
stoutest of the kings of the earth; nay, the earth, firmly as it is fixed, when
he pleases is made to quake and the rocks to tremble, Ps. 104:32; Hab. 3:6, 10.
Though the nations should join together to contend with him, and unite their
force, yet they would be found utterly unable not only to resist, but even
to
abide his indignation. Not only can they not make head against it, for it
would overcome them, but they cannot bear up under it, for it would overload
them, Ps. 76:7, 8; Nah. 1:6.
(4.) He is the God of nature, the fountain of all being; and all
the powers of nature are at his command and disposal, v. 12, 13. The God we
worship is he that made the heavens and the earth, and has a sovereign dominion
over both; so that his
invisible things are manifested and proved in the
things
that are seen. [1.] If we look back, we find that the whole world owed its
origin to him as its first cause. It was a common saying even among the Greeks
He
that sets up to be another god ought first to make another world. While the
heathen worship gods that they made, we worship the God that made us and all
things.
First, The earth is a body of vast bulk, has valuable treasures
in its bowels and more valuable fruit on its surface. It and them he has
made
by his power; and it is by no less than an infinite power that it
hangs
upon nothing, as it does (Job 26:7)
ponderibus librata suispoised by
its own weight. Secondly, The world, the habitable part of the earth, is
admirably fitted for the use and service of man, and
he hath established it
so
by his wisdom, so that it continues serviceable in constant changes
and yet a continual stability from one generation to another. Therefore both the
earth and the world are his, Ps. 24:1.
Thirdly, The heavens are
wonderfully
stretched out to an incredible extent, and it is
by his
discretion that they are so, and that the motions of the heavenly bodies are
directed for the benefit of this lower world. These
declare his glory
(Ps. 19:1), and oblige us to declare it, and not give that glory to the heavens
which is due to him that made them. [2.] If we look up, we see his providence to
be a continued creation (v. 13):
When he uttereth his voice (gives the
word of command)
there is a multitude of waters in the heavens, which are
poured out on the earth, whether for judgment or mercy, as he intends them. When
he utters his voice in the thunder, immediately there follow thunder-showers, in
which there are a multitude of waters; and those come with
a noise, as
the margin reads it; and we read of the
noise of abundance of rain, 1 Ki.
18:41. Nay, there are wonders done daily in the kingdom of nature without noise:
He causes the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth, from all
parts of the earth, even the most remote, and chiefly those that lie next the
sea. All the earth pays the tribute of vapours, because all the earth receives
the blessing of rain. And thus the moisture in the universe, like the money in a
kingdom and the blood in the body, is continually circulating for the good of
the whole. Those vapours produce wonders, for of them are formed
lightnings
for the rain, and
the winds which God from time to time
brings
forth out of his treasures, as there is occasion for them, directing them
all in such measure and for such use as he thinks fit, as payments are made out
of the treasury. All the meteors are so ready to serve God's purposes that he
seems to have treasures of them, that cannot be exhausted and may at any time be
drawn from, Ps. 135:7. God glories in the treasures he has of these, Job 38:22,
23. This God can do; but which of the idols of the heathen can do the like?
Note, There is no sort of weather but what furnishes us with a proof and
instance of the wisdom and power of the great Creator.
(5.) This God is Israel's God in covenant, and the felicity of
every Israelite indeed. Therefore let the house of Israel cleave to him, and not
forsake him to embrace idols; for, if they do, they certainly change for the
worse, for (v. 16)
the portion of Jacob is not like them; their rock is
not as our rock (Deu. 32:31), nor ours like their mole-hills. Note, [1.] Those
that have the Lord for their God have a full and complete happiness in him. The
God
of Jacob is the
portion of Jacob; he is his all, and in him he has
enough and needs no more in this world nor the other. In him we have a worthy
portion, Ps. 16:5. [2.] If we have entire satisfaction and complacency in God as
our portion, he will have a gracious delight in us as his people, whom he owns
as
the rod of his inheritance, his possession and treasure, with whom he
dwells and by whom he is served and honoured. [3.] It is the unspeakable comfort
of all the Lord's people that he who is their God is
the former of all
things, and therefore is able to do all that for them, and give all that to
them, which they stand in need of. Their
help stands in his name who made
heaven and earth. And he is the
Lord of hosts, of all the hosts in
heaven and earth, has them all at his command, and will command them into the
service of his people when there is occasion. This is the name by which they
know him, which they first give him the glory of and then take to themselves the
comfort of. [4.] Herein God's people are happy above all other people, happy
indeed,
bona si sua norintdid they but know their blessedness. The
gods which the heathen pride, and please, and so portion themselves in, are
vanity and a lie; but
the portion of Jacob is not like them.
3. The prophet, having thus compared the gods of the heathen
with the God of Israel (between whom there is no comparison), reads the doom,
the certain doom, of all those pretenders, and directs the Jews, in God's
name, to read it to the worshippers of idols, though they were their lords and
masters (v. 11):
Thus shall you say unto them (and the God you serve will
bear you out in saying it),
The gods which have not made the heavens and the
earth (and therefore are no gods, but usurpers of the honour due to him only
who did make heaven and earth)
shall perish, perish of course, because
they are vanityperish by his righteous sentence, because they are rivals with
him. As gods they shall perish
from off the earth (even all those things
on
earth beneath which they make gods of)
and from under these heavens,
even all those things in the firmament of heaven, under the highest heavens,
which are deified, according to the distribution in the second commandment.
These words in the original are not in the Hebrew, like all the rest, but in the
Chaldee dialect, that the Jews in captivity might have this ready to say to the
Chaldeans in their own language when they tempted them to idolatry: "Do you
press us to worship your gods? We will never do that; for," (1.) "They
are counterfeit deities; they are no gods, for they
have not made the heavens
and the earth, and therefore are not entitled to our homage, nor are we
indebted to them either for the products of the earth or the influences of
heaven, as we are to the God of Israel." The primitive Christians would
say, when they were urged to worship such a god,
Let him make a world and he
shall be my god. While we have him to worship who made heaven and earth, it
is very absurd to worship any other. (2.) "They are condemned deities. They
shall perish; the time shall come when they shall be no more respected as
they are now, but shall be buried in oblivion, and they and their worshippers
shall sink together. The earth shall no longer bear them; the heavens shall no
longer cover them; but both shall abandon them." It is repeated (v. 15),
In
the time of their visitation they shall perish. When God comes to reckon
with idolaters he will make them weary of their idols, and glad to be rid of
them. They shall
cast them to the moles and to the bats, Isa. 2:20.
Whatever runs against God and religion will be run down at last.
Verses 17-25
In these verses,
I. The prophet threatens, in God's name, the approaching ruin
of Judah and Jerusalem, v. 17, 18. The Jews that continued in their own land,
after some were carried into captivity, were very secure; they thought
themselves
inhabitants of a fortress; their country was their strong
hold, and, in their own conceit, impregnable; but they are here told to think of
leaving it: they must prepare to go after their brethren, and pack up their
effects in expectation of it:
"Gather up thy wares out of the land;
contract your affairs, and bring them into as small a compass as you can.
Arise,
depart, this is not your rest," Mic. 2:10. Let not what you have lie
scattered, for the Chaldeans will be upon you again, to be the executioners of
the sentence God has passed upon you (v. 18):
"Behold, I will sling out
the inhabitants of the land at this once; they have hitherto dropped out, by
a few at a time, but one captivity more shall make a thorough riddance, and they
shall be slung out as a stone out of a sling, so easily, so thoroughly shall
they be cast out; nothing of them shall remain. they shall be thrown out with
violence, and driven to a place at a great distance off, in a little time."
See this comparison used to signify an utter destruction, 1 Sa. 25:29.
Yet
once more God will shake their land, and
shake the wicked out of it,
Heb. 12:26. He adds,
And I will distress them, that they may find it so.
He will not only throw them out hence (that he may do and yet they may be easy
elsewhere); but, whithersoever they go, trouble shall follow them; they shall be
continually perplexed and straitened, and at a loss within themselves: and who
or what can make those easy whom God
will distress, whom he will distress
that they may find it so, that they may feel that which they would not
believe? They were often told of the weight of God's wrath and their utter
inability to make head against it, or bear up under it. They were told that
their sin would be their ruin, and they would not regard nor credit what was
told them; but now
they shall find it so; and
therefore God will
pursue them with his judgments,
that they may find it so, and be forced
to acknowledge it. Note, sooner or later sinners will find it just as the word
of God has represented things to them, and no better, and that the threatenings
were not bugbears.
II. He brings in the people sadly lamenting their calamities (v.
19):
Woe is me for my hurt! Some make this the prophet's own
lamentation, not for himself, but for the calamities and desolations of his
country. He mourned for those that would not be persuaded to mourn for
themselves; and, since there were none that had so much sense as to join with
them, he weeps in secret, and cries out,
Woe is me! In mournful times it
becomes us to be of a mournful spirit. But it may be taken as the language of
the people, considered as a body, and therefore speaking as a single person. The
prophet puts into their mouths the words they
should say; whether they
would say them or no, they should have cause to say them. Some among them would
thus bemoan themselves, and all of them, at last, would be forced to do it. 1.
They lament that the affliction is very great, and it is very hard to them to
bear it, the more hard because they had not been used to trouble and now did not
expect it:
"Woe is me for my hurt, not for what I fear, but for what
I feel;" for they are not, as some are, worse frightened than hurt. Nor is
it a slight hurt, but
a wound, a wound that is
grievous, very
painful, and very threatening. 2. That there is no remedy but patience. They
cannot help themselves, but must sit still, and abide it:
But I said,
when I was about to complain of my wound, To what purpose is it to complain?
This
is a grief, and I must bear it as well as I can. This is the language rather
of a sullen than of a gracious submission, of a patience per force, not a
patience by principle. When I am in affliction I should say, "This is an
evil, and I will bear it, because it is the will of God that I should, because
his wisdom has appointed this for me and his grace will make it work for good to
me." This is
receiving evil at the hand of God, Job 2:10. But to
say, "This is an evil,
and I must bear it, because I cannot help it,"
is but a brutal patience, and argues a want of those good thoughts of God which
we should always have, even under our afflictions, saying, not only, God can and
will do what he pleases, but,
Let him do what he pleases. 3. That the
country was quite ruined and wasted (v. 20):
My tabernacle is spoiled.
Jerusalem, though a strong city, now proves as weak and moveable as a tabernacle
or tent, when it is taken down, and
all its cords, that should keep it
together, are
broken. Or by the tabernacle here may be meant the temple,
the sanctuary, which at first was but a tabernacle, and is now called so, as
then it was sometimes called a temple. Their church is ruined, and all the
supports of it fail. It was a general destruction of church and state, city and
country, and there were none to repair these desolations.
"My children
have gone forth of me; some have fled, others are slain, others carried into
captivity, so that as to me,
they are not; I am likely to be an outcast,
and to perish for want of shelter; for
there is none to stretch forth my tent
any more, none of my children that used to do it for me,
none to set up
my curtains, none to do me any service."
Jerusalem has none to guide
her of all her sons, Isa. 51:18. 4. That the rulers took no care, nor any
proper measures, for the redress of their grievances and the re-establishing of
heir ruined state (v. 21):
The pastors have become brutish. When the
tents, the shepherds' tents, were spoiled (v. 20), it concerned the shepherds
to look after them; but they were foolish shepherds. Their kings and princes had
no regard at all for the public welfare, seemed to have no sense of the
desolations of the land, but were quite besotted and infatuated. The priests,
the pastors of God's tabernacle, did a great deal towards the ruin of
religion, but nothing towards the repair of it. They are
brutish indeed,
for
they have not sought the Lord; they have neither made their peace
with him nor their prayer to him; they had no eye to him and his providence, in
their management of affairs; they neither acknowledged the judgment, nor
expected the deliverance, to come from his hand. Note, Those are brutish people
that do not seek the Lord, that live without prayer, and live without God in the
world. Every man is either a saint or a brute. But it is sad indeed with a
people when their pastors, that should
feed them with knowledge and
understanding, are themselves thus brutish. And what comes of it?
Therefore
they shall not prosper; none of their attempts for the public safety shall
succeed. Note, Those cannot expect to prosper who do not by faith and prayer
take God along with them in all their ways. And, when the pastors are brutish,
what else can be expected but that
all their flocks should be
scattered?
For, if the blind lead the blind, both will fall into the ditch. The ruin of
a people is often owing to the brutishness of their pastors. 5. That the report
of the enemy's approach was very dreadful (v. 22):
The noise of the bruit
has come, of the report which at first was but whispered and bruited abroad,
as wanting confirmation. It now proves too true:
A great commotion arises
out of the north country, which threatens to make all
the cities of
Judah desolate and a den of dragons; for they must all expect to be
sacrificed to the avarice and fury of the Chaldean army. And what else can that
place expect but to be made a den of dragons which has by sin made itself a den
of thieves?
III. He turns to God, and addresses himself to him, finding it
to little purpose to speak to the people. It is some comfort to poor ministers
that, if men will not hear them, God will; and to him they have liberty of
access at all times. Let them close their preaching with prayer, as the prophet,
and then they shall have no reason to say that they have laboured in vain.
1. The prophet here acknowledges the sovereignty and dominion of
the divine Providence, that by it, and not by their own will and wisdom, the
affairs both of nations and particular persons are directed and determined, v.
23. This is an article of our faith which it is very proper for us to make
confession of at the throne of grace when we are complaining of an affliction or
suing for a mercy:
"O Lord, I know, and believe,
that the way of
man is not in himself; Nebuchadnezzar did not come of himself against our
land, but by the direction of a divine Providence." We cannot of ourselves
do any thing for our own relief, unless God work with us and command deliverance
for us; for
it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps, though he
seem in his walking to be perfectly at liberty and to choose his own way. Those
that had promised themselves a long enjoyment of their estates and possessions
were made to know, by sad experience, when they were thrown out by the Chaldeans,
that
the way of man is not in himself; he designs which men lay deep, and
think well-formed, are dashed to pieces in a moment. We must all apply this to
ourselves, and mix faith with it, that we are not at our own disposal, but under
a divine direction; the event is often overruled so as to be quite contrary to
our intention and expectation. We are not masters of our own way, nor can we
think that every thing should be according to our mind; we must therefore refer
ourselves to God and acquiesce in his will. Some think that the prophet here
mentions this with a design to make this comfortable use of it, that, the way of
the Chaldean army being not in themselves, they can do no more than God permits
them; he can set bounds to thee proud waves, and say,
Hitherto they shall
come, and no further. And a quieting consideration it is that the most
formidable enemies have
no power against us but what is given them from
above.
2. He deprecates the divine wrath, that it might not fall upon
God's Israel, v. 24. He speaks not for himself only, but on the behalf of his
people:
O Lord, correct me, but with judgment (in measure and with
moderation, and in wisdom, no more than is necessary for driving out of the
foolishness that is bound up in our hearts),
not in thy anger (how severe
soever the correction be, let it come from thy love, and be designed for our
good and made to work for good), not to
bring us to nothing, but to bring
us home to thyself. Let it not be according to the desert of our sins, but
according to the design of thy grace. Note, (1.) We cannot pray in faith that we
may never be corrected, while we are conscious to ourselves that we need
correction and deserve it, and know that as many as God loves he chastens. (2.)
The great thing we should dread in affliction is the wrath of God. Say not,
Lord,
do not correct me, but, Lord, do not correct me
in anger;
for that will infuse wormwood and gall into the affliction and misery that will
bring
us to nothing. We may bear the smart of his rod, but we cannot bear the
weight of his wrath.
3. He imprecates the divine wrath against the oppressors and
persecutors of Israel (v. 25):
Pour out thy fury upon the heathen that know
thee not. This prayer does not come from a spirit of malice or revenge, nor
is it intended to prescribe to God whom he should execute his judgments upon, or
in what order; but, (1.) It is an appeal to his justice. As if he had said,
"Lord, we are a provoking people; but are there not other nations that are
more so? And shall we only be punished? We are thy children, and may expect a
fatherly correction; but they are thy enemies, and against them we have reason
to think thy indignation should be, not against us." This is God's usual
method. The
cup put into the hands of God's people is
full of
mixtures, mixtures of mercy; but the
dregs of the cup are reserved
for
the wicked of the earth, let them
wring them out, Ps. 75:8.
(2.) It is a prediction of God's judgments upon all the impenitent enemies of
his church and kingdom. If
judgment begin thus
at the house of God,
what shall be
the end of those that obey not his gospel? 1 Pt. 4:17. See
how the heathen are described, on whom God's fury shall be poured out. [1.]
They are strangers to God, and are content to be so. they
know him not,
nor desire to know him. They are families that live without prayer, that have
nothing of religion among them; they
call not on God's name. Those that
restrain prayer prove that they know not God; for those that know him will seek
to him and entreat his favour. [2.] They are persecutors of the people of God
and are resolved to be so.
They have eaten up Jacob with as much
greediness as those that are hungry eat their necessary food; nay, with more,
they have
devoured him, and consumed him, and made his habitation desolate,
that is, the land in which he lives, or the temple of God, which is his
habitation among them. Note, What the heathen, in their rage and malice, do
against the people of God, though therein he makes use of them as the
instruments of his correction, yet he will, for that, make them the objects of
his indignation. This prayer is taken from Ps. 79:6, 7.
Chapter 10:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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