Chapter 13:
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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 13
Complete Concise
Still the prophet is attempting to awaken this secure and
stubborn people to repentance, by the consideration of the judgments of God that
were coming upon them. He is to tell them, I. By the sign of a girdle spoiled
that their pride should be stained (v. 1-11). II. By the sign of bottles
filled with wine that their counsels should be blasted (v. 12-14). III. In
consideration hereof he is to call them to repent and humble themselves (v. 15-21).
IV. He is to convince them that it is for their obstinacy and incorrigibleness
that the judgments of God are so prolonged and brought to extremity (v. 22-27).
Verses 1-11
Here is, I. A sign, the marring of a girdle, which the prophet
had worn for some time, by hiding it in a hole of a rock near the river
Euphrates. It was usual with the prophets to teach by signs, that a stupid
unthinking people might be brought to consider, and believe, and be affected
with what was thus set before them. 1. He was to wear a linen girdle for some
time, v. 1, 2. Some think he wore it under his clothes, because it was linen,
and it is said to
cleave to his loins, v. 11. It should rather seem to be
worn upon his clothes, for it was worn for a name and a praise, and probably was
a fine sash, such as officers wear and such as are commonly worn at this day in
the eastern nations. He must
not put it in water, but wear it as it was,
that it might be the stronger, and less likely to rot: linen wastes almost as
much with washing as with wearing. Being not wet, it was the more stiff and less
apt to bend, yet he must make a shift to wear it. Probably it was very fine
linen which will wear long without washing. The prophet, like John Baptist, was
none of those that wore soft clothing, and therefore it would be the more
strange to see him with a linen girdle on, who probably used to wear a leathern
one. 2. After he had worn this linen girdle for some time, he must go, and
hide
it in a hole of a rock (v. 4) by the water's side, where, when the water
was high, it would be wet, and when it fell would grow dry again, and by that
means would soon rot, sooner than if it were always wet or always dry. 3. After
many days, he must look for it, and he should find it quite spoiled, gone all to
rags and good for nothing, v. 7. It has been of old a question among
interpreters whether this was really done, so as to be seen and observed by the
people, or only in a dream or vision, so as to go no further than the prophet's
own mind. It seems hard to imagine that the prophet should be sent on two such
long journeys as to the river Euphrates, each of which would take him up some
week's time, when he could so ill be spared at home. For this reason most
incline to think the journey, at least, was only in vision, like that of
Ezekiel, from the captivity in Chaldea to Jerusalem (Eze. 8:3) and thence back
to Chaldea (ch. 11:24); and the explanation of this sign is given only to the
prophet himself (v. 8), not to the people, the sign not being public. But there
being, it is probable, at that time, great conveniences of travelling between
Jerusalem and Babylon, and some part of Euphrates being not so far off but that
it was made the utmost border of the land of promise (Jos. 1:4), I see no
inconvenience in supposing the prophet to have made two journeys thither; for it
is expressly said,
He did as the Lord commanded him; and thus gave a
signal proof of his obsequiousness to his God, to shame the stubbornness of a
disobedient people: the toil of his journey would be very proper to signify both
the pains they took to corrupt themselves with their idolatries and the sad
fatigue of their captivity; and Euphrates being the river of Babylon, which was
to be the place of their bondage, was a material circumstance in this sign.
II. The thing signified by this sign. The prophet was willing to
be at any cost and pains to affect this people with the word of the Lord.
Ministers must spend, and be spent, for the good of souls. We have the
explanation of this sign, v. 9-11.
1. The people of Israel had been to God as this girdle in two
respects:(1.) He had taken them into covenant and communion with himself:
As
the girdle cleaves very closely
to the loins of a man and surrounds
him,
so have I caused to cleave to me the houses of Israel and Judah.
They were a people near to God (Ps. 148:14); they were his own, a peculiar
people to him, a kingdom of priests that had access to him above other nations.
He
caused them to cleave to him by the law he gave them, the prophets he
sent among them, and the favours which in his providence he showed them. He
required their stated attendance in the courts of his house, and the frequent
ratification of their covenant with him by sacrifices. Thus they were made so as
to cleave to him that one would think they could never have been parted. (2.) He
had herein designed his own honour. When he took them to be
to him for a
people, it was that they might be to him
for a name, and for a praise,
and for a glory, as a girdle is an ornament to a man, and particularly the
curious
girdle of the ephod was to the high-priest
for glory and for beauty.
Note, Those whom God takes to be to him for a people he intends to be to him for
a praise. [1.] It is their duty to honour him, by observing his institutions and
aiming therein at his glory, and thus adorning their profession. [2.] It is
their happiness that he reckons himself honoured in them and by them. He is
pleased with them, and glories in his relation to them, while they behave
themselves as become his people. He was pleased to take it among the titles of
his honour to be
the God of Israel, even a
God to Israel, 1 Chr.
17:24. In vain do we pretend to be to God for a people if we be not to him for a
praise.
2. They had by their idolatries and other iniquities loosed
themselves from him, thrown themselves at a distance, robbed him of the honour
they owed him, buried themselves in the earth, and foreign earth too, mingled
among the nations, and were so spoiled and corrupted that they were
good for
nothing: they could no more be to God, as they were designed,
for a name
and a praise, for they would not hear either their duty to do it or their
privilege to value it:
They refused to hear the words of God, by which
they might have been kept still cleaving closely to him.
They walked in the
imagination of their heart, wherever their fancy led them; and denied
themselves no gratification they had a mind to, particularly in their worship.
They would not
cleave to God, but
walked after other gods, to serve
them, and
to worship them; they doted upon the gods of the heathen
nations that lay towards Euphrates, so that they were quite spoiled for the
service of their own God, and were as
this girdle, this rotten girdle, a
disgrace to their profession and not an ornament. A thousand pities it was that
such a girdle should be so spoiled, that such a people should so wretchedly
degenerate.
3. God would by his judgments separate them from him, send them
into captivity, deface all their beauty and ruin their excellency, so that they
should be like a fine girdle gone to rags, a worthless, useless, despicable
people. God will after this manner
mar the pride of Judah, and the great
pride of Jerusalem. He would strip them of all that which was the matter of
their pride, of which they boasted and in which they trusted; it should not only
be sullied and stained, but quite destroyed, like this linen girdle. Observe, He
speaks of
the pride of Judah (the country people were proud of their holy
land, their good land), but of
the great pride of Jerusalem; there the
temple was, and the royal palace, and therefore those citizens were more proud
than the inhabitants of other cities. God takes notice of the degrees of men's
pride, the pride of some and the great pride of others; and he will mar it, he
will stain it. Pride will have a fall, for God resists the proud. He will either
mar the pride that is in us (that is, mortify it by his grace, make us ashamed
of it, and, like Hezekiah, humble us for the pride of our hearts, the great
pride, and cure us of it, great as it is; and this marring of the pride will be
making of the soul; happy for us if the humbling providences our hearts be
humbled) or else he will mar the thing we are proud of. Parts, gifts, learning,
power, external privileges, if we are proud of these, it is just with God to
blast them; even the temple, when it became Jerusalem's pride, was marred and
laid in ashes. It is the honour of God to
took upon every one that is proud
and abase him.
Verses 12-21
Here is, I. A judgment threatened against this people that would
quite intoxicate them. This doom is pronounced against them in a figure, to make
it the more taken notice of and the more affecting (v. 12):
Thus saith the
Lord God of Israel, every bottle shall be filled with wine; that is, those
that by their sins have made themselves
vessels of wrath fitted to
destruction shall be filled with the wrath of God as a bottle is with wine;
and, as every vessel of mercy prepared for glory shall be filled with mercy and
glory, so they shall
be full of the fury of the Lord (Isa. 51:20); and
they shall be brittle as bottles; and, like old bottles into which new wine is
put, they shall burst and be broken to pieces, Mt. 9:17. Or, They shall have
their heads as full of wine as bottle are; for so it is explained, v. 13,
They
shall be filled with drunkenness; compare Isa. 51:17. It is probable that
this was a common proverb among them, applied in various ways; but they, not
being aware of the prophet's meaning in it, ridiculed him for it:
"Do
we not certainly know that
every bottle shall be filled with wine?
What strange thing is there in that? Tell us something that we did not know
before." Perhaps they were thus touchy with the prophet because they
apprehended this to be a reflection upon them for their drunkenness, and
probably it was in part so intended. They
loved flagons of wine, Hos.
3:1. Their watchmen were all
for wine, Isa. 56:12. They loved their false
prophets
that prophesied to them of wine (Mic. 2:11), that bade them be
merry, for that they should never want their bottle to make them so. "Well,"
says the prophet, "you shall have your
bottles full of wine, but not
such wine as you desire." They suspected that he had some mystical meaning
in it which prophesied no good concerning them, but evil; and he owns that so he
had. What he meant was this,
1. That they should be a giddy as men in drink. A drunken man is
fitly compared to a bottle or cask full of wine; for, when the wine is in, the
wit, and wisdom, and virtue, and all that is good for any thing, are out. Now
God threatens (v. 13) that shall they shall all be
filled with drunkenness;
they shall be full of confusion in their counsels, shall falter in all their
talk and stagger in all their motions; they shall not know what they say or do,
much less what they should say or do. They shall be sick of all their enjoyments
and throw them up as drunken men do, Job 20:15. They shall fall into a slumber,
and be utterly unable to help themselves, and, like men that have drunk away
their reason, shall lie at the mercy and expose themselves to the contempt of
all about them. And this shall be the condition not of some among them (if any
had been sober, they might have helped the rest), but
even the kings that sit
upon the throne of David, that should have been like their father David, who
was
wise as an angel of God, shall be thus intoxicated. Their priests and
prophets too, their false prophets, that pretended to guide them, were as
indulgent of their lusts, and therefore were justly as much deprived of their
senses, as any other. Nay,
all the inhabitants, both
of the land
and
of Jerusalem were as far gone as they. Whom God will destroy he
infatuates.
2. That, being giddy, they should run upon one another. The cup
of the wine of the Lord's fury shall throw them not only into a lethargy, so
that they shall not be able to help themselves or one another, but into a
perfect frenzy, so that they shall do mischief to themselves and one another (v.
14):
I will dash a man against his brother. Not only their drunken
follies, but their drunken frays, shall help to ruin them. Drunken men are often
quarrelsome, and upon that account they have
woe and sorrow (Prov. 23:29,
30); so their sin is their punishment; it was so here. God sent an evil spirit
into families and neighbourhoods (as Jdg. 9:23), which made them jealous of, and
spiteful towards, one another; so that
the fathers and sons went
together
by the ears, and were ready to pull one another to pieces, which made them all
an easy prey to the common enemy. This decree against them having gone forth,
God says,
I will not pity, nor spare, nor have mercy, but destroy them;
for they
will not pity, nor spare, nor have mercy, but destroy one
another; see Hab. 2:15, 16.
II. Here is good counsel given, which, if taken, would prevent
this desolation. It is, in short, to
humble themselves under the mighty hand
of God. If they will
hearken and give ear, this is that which God has
to say to them,
Be not proud, v. 15. This was one of the sins for which
God had a controversy with them (v. 9); let them mortify and forsake this sin,
and God will let fall his controversy.
"Be not proud.; when God
speaks to you by his prophets do not think yourselves too good to be taught; be
not scornful, be not wilful, let not your hearts rise against the word, nor
slight the messengers that bring it to you. When God is coming forth against you
in his providence (and by them he speaks) be not secure when he threatens, be
not impatient when he strikes, for pride is at the bottom of both." It is
the great God that has spoken, whose authority is incontestable, whose power is
irresistible; therefore bow to what he says, and
be not proud, as you
have been. They must not be proud, for,
1. They must advance God, and study how to do him honour:
"Give
glory to the Lord your God, and not to your idols, not to
other gods. Give him glory by confessing your sins, owning yourselves guilty
before him, and accepting the punishment of your iniquity, v. 16. Give him glory
by confessing your sins, owning yourselves guilty before him, and accepting the
punishment of your iniquity, v. 16. Give him glory by a sincere repentance and
reformation." The and not till then, we begin to live as we should, and to
some good purpose, when we begin to
give glory to the Lord our God, to
make his honour our chief end and to seek it accordingly. "Do this quickly,
while your space to repent is continued to you;
before he cause darkness,
before you will see no way of escaping." Note, Darkness will be the portion
of those that will not repent to
give glory to God. When those that by
the fourth vial were scorched with heat
repented not, to give glory to God.
When those that by the fourth vial were scorched with heat
repented not, to
give glory to God, the next vial filled them with
darkness, Rev.
16:9, 10. The aggravation of the darkness here threatened is, (1.) That their
attempts to escape shall hasten their ruin:
Their feet shall stumble when
they are making all the haste they can over
the dark mountains, and they
shall fall, and be unable to get up again. Note, Those that think to out-run the
judgments of God will find their road impassable; let them make the best of
their way, they can make nothing of it, the judgments that pursue them will
overtake them; their way is dark and slippery, Ps. 35:6. And therefore, before
it comes to that extremity, it is our wisdom to give glory to him, and so make
our peace with him, to fly to his mercy, and then there will be no occasion to
fly from his justice. (2.) That their hopes of a better state of things will be
disappointed:
While you look for light, for comfort and relief, he will
turn
it into the shadow of death, which is very dismal and terrible, and make it
gross
darkness, like that of Egypt, when Pharaoh continued to harden his heart,
which was darkness that might be felt. The expectation of impenitent sinners
perishes when they die and think to have it satisfied.
2. They must abase themselves, and take shame to themselves; the
prerogative of the king and queen will not exempt them from this (v. 18):
"Say
to the king and queen, that, great as they are, they must
humble
themselves by true repentance, and so give both glory to God and a good
example to their subjects." Note, Those that are exalted above others in
the world must humble themselves before God, who is higher than the highest, and
to whom kings and queens are accountable. They must
humble themselves,
and
sit downsit down, and consider what is comingsit down in the
dust, and lament themselves. Let them humble themselves, for God will otherwise
take an effectual course to humble them:
"Your principalities shall come
down, the honour and power on which you value yourselves and in which you
confide,
even the crown of your glory, your
goodly or glorious crown:
when you are led away captives, where will your principality and all the badges
of it be then?" Blessed be God there is a crown of glory, which those shall
inherit who do humble themselves, that shall never
come down.
III. This counsel is enforced by some arguments if they continue
proud and unhumbled.
1. It will be the prophet's unspeakable grief (v. 17):
"If
you will not hear it, will not submit to the word, but continue refractory,
not only my eye, but
my soul shall weep in secret places." Note, The
obstinacy of people, in refusing to hear the word of God, will be heart-breaking
to the poor ministers, who know something of the terrors of the Lord and the
worth of souls, and are so far from desiring that they tremble at the thoughts
of the death of sinners. His grief for it was undissembled (his
soul wept)
and void of affectation, for he chose to weep
in secret places, where no
eye saw him but his who is all eye. He would mingle his tears not only with his
public preaching, but with his private devotions. Nay, thoughts of their case
would make him melancholy, and he would become a perfect recluse. It would
grieve him, (1.) To see their sins unrepented of:
"My soul shall weep
for your pride, your haughtiness, and stubbornness, and vain confidence."
Note, The sins of others should be matter of sorrow to us. We must mourn for
that which we cannot mend, and mourn the more for it because we cannot mend it.
(2.) To see their calamity past redress and remedy:
"My eyes shall weep
sorely, not so much because my relations, friends, and neighbours are in
distress, but
because the Lord's flock, his people and the sheep of his
pasture,
are carried away captive." That should always grieve us
most by which God's honour suffers and the interest of his kingdom is
weakened.
2. It will be their own inevitable ruin, v. 19-21. (1.) The
land shall be laid waste:
The cities of the south shall be shut up. The
cities of Judah lay in the southern part of the land of Canaan; these shall be
straitly besieged by the enemy, so that there shall be no going in or out, or
they shall be deserted by the inhabitants, that there shall be none to go in and
out. Some understand it of the cities of Egypt, which was south from Judah; the
places there whence they expected succours shall fail them, and they shall find
no access to them. (2.) The inhabitants shall be hurried away into a foreign
country, there to live in slavery:
Judah shall be carried away captive.
Some were already carried off, which they hoped might serve to answer the
prediction, and that the residue should still be left; but no:
It shall be
carried away all of it. God will make a full end with them:
It shall be
wholly carried away. So it was in the last captivity under Zedekiah, because
they repented not. (3.) The enemy was now at hand that should do this (v. 20):
"Lift
up your eyes. I see upon their march, and you may if you will
behold,
those that come from the north, from the land of the Chaldeans; see how fast
they advance, how fierce they appear." Upon this he addresses himself to
the king, or rather (because the pronouns are feminine) to the city or state.
[1.] "What will you do now with the people who are committed to your
charge, and whom you ought to protect?
Where is the flock that was given
thee, thy beautiful flock? Whither canst thou take them now for shelter? How
can they escape these ravening wolves?" Magistrates must look upon
themselves as shepherds, and those that are under their charge as their flock,
which they are entrusted with the care of and must give an account of; they must
take delight in them as their beautiful flock, and consider what to do for their
safety in times of public danger. Masters of families, who neglect their
children and suffer them to perish for want of a good education, and ministers
who neglect their people, should think they hear God putting this question to
them:
Where is the flock that was given thee to feed,
that beauteous
flock? It is starved; it is left exposed to the beasts of prey. What account
wilt thou give of them when the chief shepherd shall appear? [2.] "What
have you to object against the equity of God's proceedings?
What will thou
say when he shall visit upon thee the former days? v. 21. Thou canst say
nothing, but that
God is just in all that is brought upon thee."
Those that flatter themselves with hopes of impunity, what will they say? What
confusion will cover their faces when they shall find themselves deceived and
that God punishes them! [3.] "What thoughts will you now have of your own
folly, in giving the Chaldeans such power over you, by seeking to them for
assistance, and joining in league with them? Thus
thou hast taught them
against thyself to be captains and to
become the head." Hezekiah
began when he showed his treasures to the ambassadors of the king of Babylon,
tempting him thereby to come and plunder him. Those who, having a God to trust
to, court foreign alliances and confide in them, do but make rods for themselves
and teach their neighbours how to become their masters. [4.] "How will you
bear the trouble that is at the door?
Shall not sorrows take thee as a woman
in travail? Sorrows which thou canst not escape nor put off, extremity of
sorrows; and in these respects more grievous than those of a woman in travail
that they were not expected before, and that there is no manchild to be born,
the joy of which shall make them afterwards to be forgotten."
Verses 22-27
Here is, I. Ruin threatened as before, that the Jews shall go
into captivity, and fall under all the miseries of beggary and bondage, shall be
stripped of their clothes,
their skirts discovered for want of upper
garments to cover them, and their
heels made bare for want of shoes, v.
22. Thus they used to deal with prisoners taken in war, when they drove them
into captivity,
naked and barefoot, Isa. 20:4. Being thus carried off
into a strange country, they shall be scattered there,
as the stubble that is
blown away by the wind of the wilderness, and nobody is concerned to bring
it together again, v. 24. If the stubble escape the fire, it shall be carried
away by the wind. If one judgment do not do the work, another shall, with those
that by sin have made themselves as stubble. They shall be stripped of all their
ornaments and exposed to shame, as harlots that are carted, v. 26. They made
their pride appear, but God will
make their shame appear; so that those
who have doted on them shall be ashamed of them.
II. An enquiry made by the people into the cause of this ruin,
v. 22. Thou wilt
say in thy heart (and God knows how to give a proper
answer to what men say in their hearts, though they do not speak it out;
Jesus,
knowing their thoughts, replied to
them, Mt. 9:4),
Wherefore came
these things upon me? The question is supposed to come into the heart, 1. Of
a sinner quarrelling with God and refusing to receive correction. They could not
see that they had done any thing which might justly provoke God to be thus angry
with them. They durst not speak it out; but in their hearts they thus charged
God with unrighteousness, if he had
laid upon them more than was meet.
They seek for the cause of their calamities, when, if they had not been
willfully blind, they might easily have seen it. Or, 2. Of a sinner returning to
God. If there come but a penitent thought into the heart at any time (saying,
What
have I done? ch. 8:6, wherefore am I in affliction? why doth God contend
with me?) God takes notice of it, and is ready by his Spirit to impress the
conviction, that, sin being discovered, it may be repented of.
III. An answer to this enquiry. God will be justified when he
speaks and will oblige us to justify him, and therefore will set the sin of
sinners in order before them. Do they ask,
Wherefore come these things upon
us? Let them know it is all owing to themselves.
1. It is for the greatness of their iniquities, v. 22. God does
not take advantage against them for small faults; no, the sins for which he now
punishes them are of the first rate, very heinous in their own nature and highly
aggravatedfor
the multitude of thy iniquity (so it may be read), sins
of every kind and often repeated and relapsed into. Some think we are more in
danger from the multitude of our smaller sins than from the heinousness of our
greater sins; of both we may say,
Who can understand his errors?
2. It is for their obstinacy in sin, their being so long
accustomed to it that there was little hope left of their being reclaimed from
it (v. 23):
Can the Ethiopian change his skin, that is by nature black,
or the
leopard his spots, that are even woven into the skin? Dirt
contracted may be washed off, but we cannot alter the natural colour of a hair
(Mt. 5:36), much less of the skin; and so impossible is it, morally impossible,
to reclaim and reform these people. (1.) They had been long
accustomed to do
evil. They were taught to do evil; they had been educated and brought up in
sin; they had served an apprenticeship to it, and had all their days made a
trade of it. It was so much their constant practice that it had become a second
nature to them. (2.) Their prophets therefore despaired of ever bring them to do
good. This was what they aimed at; they persuaded them to cease to do evil and
learn to do well, but could not prevail. They had so long been used to do evil
that it was next to impossible for them to repent, and amend, and begin to do
good. Note, Custom in sin is a very great hindrance to conversion from sin. The
disease that is inveterate is generally thought incurable. Those that have been
long accustomed to sin have shaken off the restraint of fear and shame; their
consciences are seared; the habits of sin are confirmed; it pleads prescription;
and it is just with God to give those up to their own hearts' lusts that have
long refused to give themselves up to his grace. Sin is the blackness of the
soul, the deformity of it; it is its spot, the discolouring of it; it is natural
to us, we were shapen in it, so that we cannot get clear of it by any power of
our own. But there is an almighty grace that is able to change the Ethiopian's
skin, and that grace shall not be wanting to those who in a sense of their need
of it seek it earnestly and improve it faithfully.
3. It is for their treacherous departures from the God of truth
and dependence on lying vanities (v. 25):
"This is thy lot, to be
scattered and driven away; this is
the portion of thy measures from me,
the punishment assigned thee as by line and measure; this shall be thy share of
the miseries of this world; expect it, and think not to escape it: it is
because
thou hast forgotten me, the favours I have bestowed upon thee and the
obligations thou art under to me; thou hast no sense, no remembrance, of these."
Forgetfulness of God is at the bottom of all sin, as the remembrance of our
Creator betimes is the happy and hopeful beginning of a holy life. "Having
forgotten
me, thou hast trusted in falsehood, in idols, in an arm of flesh in Egypt
and Assyria, in the self-flatteries of a deceitful heart." Whatever those
trust to that forsake God, they will find it a
broken reed, a
broken
cistern.
4. It is for their idolatry, their spiritual whoredom, that sin
which is of all sins most provoking to the
jealous God. They are exposed
to a shameful calamity (v. 26) because they have been guilty of a shameful
iniquity and yet are shameless in it (v. 27):
"I have seen thy
adulteries (thy inordinate fancy for strange gods, which thou hast been
impatient for the gratification of, and hast even
neighed after it), even
the
lewdness of thy whoredoms, thy impudence and insatiableness in them,
thy eager worshipping of idols
on the hills in the fields, upon the high
places. This is that for which a
woe is denounced against thee,
O
Jerusalem! nay, and many woes."
IV. Here is an affectionate expostulation with them, in the
close, upon the whole matter. Though it was adjudged next to impossible for them
to be brought to do good (v. 23), yet while there is life there is hope, and
therefore still he reasons with them to bring them to repentance, v. 27. 1. He
reasons with them concerning the thing itself:
Wilt thou not be made clean?
Note, It is the great concern of those who are polluted by sin to be made clean
by repentance, and faith, and a universal reformation. The reason why sinners
are not made clean is because they will not be made clean; and herein they act
most unreasonably:
"Wilt thou not be made clean? Surely thou will at
length be persuaded to
wash thee, and make thee clean, and so be wise for
thyself." 2. Concerning the time of it:
When shall it once be? Note,
It is an instance of the wonderful grace of God that he desires the repentance
and conversion of sinners, and thinks the time long till they are brought to
relent; but it is an instance of the wonderful folly of sinners that they put
that off from time to time which is of such absolute necessity that, if it be
not done some time, they are certainly undone for ever. They do not say that
they will never be cleansed, but not yet; they will defer it to a more
convenient season, but cannot tell us when it shall once be.
Chapter 13:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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