Chapter 15:
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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 15
Complete Concise
When we left the prophet, in the close of the foregoing chapter,
so pathetically poring out his prayers before God, we had reason to hope that in
this chapter we should find God reconciled to the land and the prophet brought
into a quiet composed frame; but, to our great surprise, we find it much
otherwise as to both. I. Notwithstanding the prophet's prayers, God here
ratifies the sentence given against the people, and abandons them to ruin
turning a deaf ear to all the intercessions made for them (v. 1-9). II. The
prophet himself, notwithstanding the satisfaction he had in communion with God,
still finds himself uneasy and out of temper. 1. He complains to God of his
continual struggle with his persecutors (v. 10). 2. God assures him that he
shall be taken under special protection, though there was a general desolation
coming upon the land (v. 11-14). 3. He appeals to God concerning his sincerity
in the discharge of his prophetic office and thinks it hard that he should not
have more of the comfort of it (v. 15-18). 4. Fresh security is given him
that, upon condition he continue faithful, God will continue his care of him and
his favour to him (v. 19-21). And thus, at length, we hope he regained the
possession of his own soul.
Verses 1-9
We scarcely find any where more pathetic expressions of divine
wrath against a provoking people than we have here in these verses. The prophet
had prayed earnestly for them, and found some among them to join with him; and
yet not so much as a reprieve was gained, nor the least mitigation of the
judgment; but this answer is given to the prophet's prayers, that the decree
had gone forth, was irreversible, and would shortly be executed. Observe here,
I. What the sin was upon which this severe sentence was
grounded. 1. It is in remembrance of a former iniquity; it is because of
Manasseh, for that which he did in Jerusalem, v. 4. What that was we are told,
and that it was for it that Jerusalem was destroyed, 2 Ki. 24:3, 4. It was for
his idolatry, and
the innocent blood which he shed, which the Lord would not
pardon. He is called
the son of Hezekiah because his relation to so
good a father was a great aggravation of his sin, so far was it from being an
excuse of it. The greatest part of a generation was worn off since Manasseh's
time, yet his sin is brought into the account; as in Jerusalem's last ruin God
brought upon it all
the righteous blood shed on the earth, to show how
heavy the guilt of blood will light and lie somewhere, sooner or later, and that
reprieves are not pardons. 2. It is in consideration of their present
impenitence. See how their sin is described (v. 6):
"Thou hast forsaken
me, my service and thy duty to me;
thou hast gone backward into the
ways of contradiction, art become the reverse of what thou shouldst have been
and of what God by his law would have led thee forward to." See how the
impenitence is described (v. 7):
They return not from their ways, the
ways of their own hearts, into the ways of God's commandments again. There is
mercy for those who have turned aside if they will return; but what favour can
those expect that persist in their apostasy?
II. What the sentence is. It is such as denotes no less than an
utter ruin.
1. God himself abandons and abhors them:
My mind cannot be
towards them. How can it be thought that the holy God should have any
remaining complacency in those that have such a rooted antipathy to him? It is
not in a passion, but with a just and holy indignation, that he says,
"Cast
them out of my sight, as that which is in the highest degree odious and
offensive, and
let them go forth, for I will be troubled with them no
more."
2. He will not admit any intercession to be made for them (v.
1):
"Though Moses and Samuel stood before me, by prayer or sacrifice
to reconcile me to them, yet I could not be prevailed with to admit them into
favour." Moses and Samuel were two as great favourites of Heaven as ever
were the blessings of this earth, and were particularly famed for the success of
their mediation between God and his offending people; many a time they would
have been destroyed if Moses had not stood before him in the breach; and to
Samuel's prayers they owed their lives (1 Sa. 12:19); yet even their
intercessions should not prevail, no, not though they were now in a state of
perfection, much less Jeremiah's who was now
a man subject to like passions
as others. The putting of this as a case,
Though they should stand before me,
supposes that they do not, and is an intimation that saints in heaven are not
intercessors for saints on earth. It is the prerogative of the Eternal Word to
be the only Mediator in
the other world, whatever Moses, and Samuel, and
others were in this.
3. He condemns them all to one destroying judgment or other.
When God casts them out of his presence,
whither shall they go forth? v.
2. Certainly nowhere to be safe or easy, but to be met by one judgment while
they are pursued by another, till they find themselves surrounded with mischiefs
on all hands, so that they cannot escape;
Such as are for death to death.
By death here is meant the pestilence (Rev. 6:8), for it is death without
visible means.
Such as are for death to death, or
for the sword to the
sword; every man shall perish in that way that God has appointed: the law
that appoints the malefactor's death determines what death he shall die. Or,
He that is by his own choice for this judgment, let him take it, or for that,
let him take it, but by the one or the other they shall all fall and none shall
escape. It is a choice like that which David was put to, and was thereby put
into a
great strait, 2 Sa. 24:14.
Captivity is mentioned last,
some think, because the sorest judgment of all, it being both a complication and
continuance of miseries. That of
the sword is again repeated (v. 3), and
is made the first of another four frightful set of destroyers, which God will
appoint
over them, as officers over the soldiers, to do what they please with them.
As those that escape
the sword shall be cut off by pestilence, famine, or
captivity, so those that fall by the sword shall be cut off by divine vengeance,
which pursues sinners on the other side death; there shall be
dogs to tear
in the field to devour. And, if there be any that think to outrun justice, they
shall be made the most public monuments of it:
They shall be removed into all
kingdoms of the earth (v. 4), like Cain, who, that he might be made a
spectacle of horror to all, became
a fugitive and a vagabond in the
earth.
4. They shall fall without being relieved. Who can do any thing
to help them? for (1.) God, even their own God (so he had been) appears against
them:
I will stretch out my hand against thee, which denotes a deliberate
determined stroke, which will reach far and wound deeply.
I am weary with
repenting (v. 6); it is a strange expression; they had behaved so
provokingly, especially by their treacherous professions of repentance, that
they had put even infinite patience itself to the stretch. God had often turned
away his wrath when it was ready to break forth against them; but now he will
grant no more reprieves. Miserable is the case of those who have sinned so long
against God's mercy that at length they have sinned it away. (2.) Their own
country expels them, and is ready to
spue them out, as it had done the
Canaanites that were before them; for so it was threatened (Lev. 18:28):
I
will fan them with a fan in the gates of the land, in their own gates,
through which they shall be scattered, or
into the gates of the earth,
into the cities of all the nations about them, v. 7. (3.) Their own children,
that should assist them when they speak with the enemy in the gate, shall be cut
off from them:
I will bereave them of children, so that they shall have
little hopes that the next generation will retrieve their affairs, for
I will
destroy my people; and, when the inhabitants are slain, the land will soon
be desolate. This melancholy article is enlarged upon, v. 8, 9, where we have,
[1.] The destroyer brought upon them. When God has bloody work to do he will
find out bloody instruments to do it with. Nebuchadnezzar is here called
a
spoiler at noon-day, not a thief in the night, that is afraid of being
discovered, but one that without fear shall break through and destroy all the
fences of rights and properties, and this in the face of the sun and in defiance
of its light:
I have brought against the mother a young man, a spoiler
(so some read it); for Nebuchadnezzar, when he first invaded Judah, was but a
young
man, in the first year of his reign. We read it,
I have brought upon
them, even
against the mother of the young men, a spoiler, that is,
against Jerusalem, a mother city, that had a very numerous family of young men:
or that invasion was in a particular manner terrible to those mothers who had
many sons fit for war, who must now hazard their lives in the high places of the
field, and, being an unequal match for the enemy, would be likely to fall there,
to the inexpressible grief of their poor mothers, who had nursed them up with a
great deal of tenderness. The same God that brought the spoiler upon them
caused
him to fall upon it, that is, upon the spoil delivered to him,
suddenly
and by surprise; and then
terrors came
upon the city. the original
is very abrupt
the city and terrors. O the city! what a consternation
will it then be in!
O the terrors that shall then seize it! Then the city
and terrors shall be brought together, that seemed at a distance from each
other.
I will cause to fall suddenly upon her (upon Jerusalem)
a
watcher and terrors; so Mr. Gataker reads it, for the word is used for a
watcher (Dan. 4:13, 23), and the Chaldean soldiers were called watchers, ch.
4:16. [2.] The destruction made by this destroyer. A dreadful slaughter is here
described.
First, The wives are deprived of their husbands:
Their
widows are increased above the sand of the seas, so numerous have they now
grown. It was promised that the men of Israel (for those only were numbered)
should be
as the sand of the sea for multitude; but now
they shall
be all cut off, and their widows shall be so. But observe, God says,
They are
increased to me. Though the husbands were cut off by the sword of his
justice, their poor widows were gathered in the arms of his mercy, who has taken
it among the titles of his honour to be
the God of the widows. Widows are
said to be
taken into the number, the number of those whom God has a
particular compassion and concern for.
Secondly, The parents are deprived
of their children:
She that has borne seven sons, whom she expected to be
the support and joy of her age, now
languishes, when she has seen them
all cut off by the sword in one day, who had been many years her burden and
care.
She that had many children has waxed feeble, 1 Sa. 2:5. See what
uncertain comforts children are; and let us therefore rejoice in them
as
though we rejoiced not. When the children are slain the mother
gives up
the ghost, for her life was bound up in theirs:
Her sun has gone down
while it was yet day; she is bereaved of all her comforts just when she
thought herself in the midst of the enjoyment of them. She is now
ashamed and
confounded to think how proud she was of her sons, how fond of them, and how
much she promised herself from them. Some understand, by this languishing
mother, Jerusalem lamenting the death of her inhabitants as passionately as ever
poor mother bewailed her children. Many are cut off already,
and the residue
of them, who have yet escaped, and, as was hoped, were reserved to be the
seed of another generation, even these
will I deliver to the sword before
their enemies (as the condemned malefactor is delivered to the sheriff to be
executed),
saith the Lord, the Judge of heaven and earth, who, we are
sure, herein judges according to truth, though the judgment seem severe.
5. They shall fall without being pitied (v. 5):
"For who
shall have pity on thee, O Jerusalem? When thy God has
cast thee out of
his sight, and his compassions fail and are shut up from thee, neither thy
enemies nor thy friends shall have any compassion for thee. They shall have no
sympathy with thee; they shall not
bemoan thee nor be sorry for thee;
they shall have no concern for thee, shall not go a step out of their way to
ask
how thou dost." For, (1.) Their friends, who were expected to do these
friendly offices, were all involved with them in the calamities, and had enough
to do to bemoan themselves. (2.) It was plain to all their neighbours that they
had brought all this misery upon themselves by their obstinacy in sin, and that
they might easily have prevented it by repentance and reformation, which they
were often in vain called to; and therefore
who can pity them? O Israel! thou
hast destroyed thyself. Those will perish for ever unpitied that might have
been saved upon such easy terms and would not. (3.) God will thus complete their
misery. He will set their acquaintance, as he did Job's at a distance from
them; and his hand, his righteous hand, is to be acknowledged in all the
unkindnesses of our friends, as well as in all the injuries done us by our foes.
Verses 10-14
Jeremiah has now returned from his public work and retired into
his closet; what passed between him and his God there we have an account of in
these and the following verses, which he published afterwards, to affect the
people with the weight and importance of his messages to them. Here is,
I. The complaint which the prophet makes to God of the many
discouragements he met with in his work, v. 10.
1. He met with a great deal of contradiction and opposition. He
was a
man of strife and contention to the whole land (so it might be
read, rather than to
the whole earth, for his business lay only in that
land); both city and country quarrelled with him, and set themselves against
him, and said and did all they could to thwart him. He was a peaceable man, gave
no provocation to any, nor was apt to resent the provocations given him, and yet
a man of strife, not a man striving, but a man striven with; he was for
peace, but, when he spoke, they were for war. And, whatever they pretended, that
which was the real cause of their quarrels with him was his faithfulness to God
and to their souls. He showed them their sins that were working their ruin, and
put them into a way to prevent that ruin, which was the greatest kindness he
could do them; and yet this was it for which they were incensed against him and
looked upon him as their enemy. Even the prince of peace himself was thus a man
of strife, a sign spoken against, continually
enduring the contradiction of
sinners against himself. And the gospel of peace brings division, even to
fire and sword, Mt. 10:34, 35; Lu. 12:49, 51. Now this made Jeremiah very
uneasy, even to a degree of impatience. He cried out,
Woe is me, my mother,
that thou hast borne me, as if it were his mother's fault that she bore
him, and he had better never have been born than be born to such an
uncomfortable life; nay, he is angry that she had
borne him a man of strife,
as if he had been fatally determined to this by the stars that were in the
ascendant at his birth. If he had any meaning of this kind, doubtless it was
very much his infirmity; we rather hope it was intended for no more than a
pathetic lamentation of his own case. Note, (1.) Even those who are most quiet
and peaceable, if they serve God faithfully, are often made men of strife. We
can but
follow peace; we have the making only of one side of the bargain,
and therefore can but,
as much as in us lies, live peaceably. (2.) It is
very uncomfortable to those who are of a peaceable disposition to live among
those who are continually picking quarrels with them. (3.) Yet, if we cannot
live so peaceably as we desire with our neighbours, we must not be so disturbed
at it as thereby to lose the repose of our own minds and put ourselves upon the
fret.
2. He met with a great deal of contempt, contumely, and
reproach. They every one of them cursed him; they branded him as a turbulent
factious man, as an incendiary and a sower of discord and sedition. They ought
to have blessed him, and to have blessed God for him; but they had arrived at
such a pitch of enmity against God and his word that for his sake they cursed
his messenger, spoke ill of him, wished ill to him, did all they could to make
him odious. They all did so; he had scarcely one friend in Judah or Jerusalem
that would give him a good word. Note, It is often the lot of the best of men to
have the worst of characters ascribed to them.
So persecuted they the
prophets. But one would be apt to suspect that surely Jeremiah had given
them some provocation, else he could not have lost himself thus: no, not the
least:
I have neither lent money
nor borrowed money, have been
neither creditor nor debtor; for so general is the signification of the words
here. (1.) It is implied here that those who deal much in the business of this
world are often involved thereby in strife and contention;
meum et tuummine
and thine are the great make-bates; lenders and borrowers sue and are sued,
and great dealers often get a great deal of ill-will. (2.) it was an instance of
Jeremiah's great prudence, and it is written for our learning, that, being
called to be a prophet, he
entangled not himself in the affairs of this life,
but kept clear from them, that he might apply the more closely to the business
of his profession and might not give the least shadow of suspicion that he aimed
at secular advantages in it nor any occasion to his neighbours to contend with
him. He
put out no money, for he was no usurer, nor indeed had he any
money to lend: he
took up no money, for he was no purchaser, no merchant,
no spendthrift. He was perfectly dead to this world and the things of it: a very
little served to keep him, and we find (ch. 16:2) that he had neither wife nor
children to keep. And yet, (3.) Though he behaved thus discreetly, and so as one
would think should have gained him universal esteem, yet he lay under a general
odium, through the iniquity of the times. Blessed be God, bad as things are with
us, they are not so bad but that there are those with whom virtue has its
praise; yet let not those who behave most prudently think it strange if they
have not the respect and esteem they deserve.
Marvel not, my brethren, if the
world hate you.
II. The answer which God gave to this complaint. Though there
was in it a mixture of passion and infirmity, yet God graciously took cognizance
of it, because it was
for his sake that the prophet suffered reproach. In
this answer, 1. God assures him that he should weather the storm and be made
easy at last, v. 11. Though his neighbours quarrelled with him for what he did
in the discharge of his office, yet God accepted him and promised to stand by
him. It is in the original expressed in the form of an oath:
"If I
take not care of thee, let me never be counted faithful;
verily it shall go
well with thy remnant, with the remainder of thy life" (for so the word
signifies); "the residue of thy days shall be more comfortable to thee than
those hitherto have been."
Thy end shall be good; so the Chaldee
reads it. Note, It is a great and sufficient support to the people of God that,
how troublesome soever their way may be, it shall be well with them in their
latter end, Ps. 37:37. They have still a
remnant, a
residue,
something behind and left in reserve, which will be sufficient to counterbalance
all their grievances, and the hope of it may serve to make them easy. It should
seem that Jeremiah, besides the vexation that his people gave him, was uneasy at
the apprehension he had of sharing largely in the public judgments which he
foresaw coming; and, though he mentioned not this, God replied to his thought of
it, as to Moses, Ex. 4:19. Jeremiah thought, "If my friends are thus
abusive to me, what will my enemies be?" And God had thought fit to awaken
in him an expectation of this kind, ch. 12:5. But here he quiets his mind with
this promise:
"Verily I will cause the enemy to entreat thee well in the
time of evil, when all about thee shall be laid waste." Note, God has
all men's hearts in his hand, and can turn those to favour his servants whom
they were most afraid of. And the prophets of the Lord have often met with
fairer and better treatment among open enemies than among those that call
themselves his people. When we see trouble coming, and it looks very
threatening, let us not despair, but hope in God, because it may prove better
than we expect. This promise was accomplished when Nebuchadnezzar, having taken
the city, charged the captain of the guard to be kind to Jeremiah, and let him
have every thing he had a mind to, ch. 39:11, 12. The following words,
Shall
iron break the northern iron, and the steel, or
brass? (v. 12), being
compared with the promise of God made to Jeremiah (ch. 1:18), that he would make
him an
iron pillar and
brazen walls, seem intended for his
comfort. They were continually clashing with him, and were rough and hard as
iron; but Jeremiah, being armed with power and courage from on high, is as
northern iron, which is naturally stronger, and as steel, which is hardened by
art; and therefore they shall not prevail against him; compare this with Eze.
2:6; 3:8, 9. He might the better bear their quarrelling with him when he was
sure of the victory. 2. God assures him that his enemies and persecutors should
be lost in the storm, should be ruined at last, and that therein the word of God
in his mouth should be accomplished and he proved a true prophet, v. 13, 14. God
here turns his speech from the prophet to the people. To them also v. 12 may be
applied:
Shall iron break the northern iron, and the steel? Shall their
courage and strength, and the most hardly and vigorous of their efforts, be able
to contest either with the counsel of God or with the army of the Chaldeans,
which are as inflexible, as invincible, as the northern iron and steel. Let them
therefore hear their doom:
Thy substance and thy treasure will I give to the
spoil, and that
without price; the spoilers shall have it
gratis;
it shall be to them a cheap and easy prey. Observe, The prophet was poor; he
neither lent nor borrowed; he had nothing to lose, neither
substance. nor
treasure, and therefore the enemy will treat him well,
Cantabit vacuus
coram latrone viatorThe traveller that has no property about him will
congratulate himself when accosted by a robber. But the people that had
great estates in money and land would be slain for what they had, or the enemy,
finding they had much, would use them hardly, to make them confess more. And it
is their own iniquity that herein corrects them: It is
for all thy sins, even
in all thy borders. All parts of the country, even those which lay most
remote, had contributed to the national guilt, and all shall now be brought to
account. Let not one tribe lay the blame upon another, but each take shame to
itself: It is for
all thy sins in all thy borders. Thus shall they stay
at home till they see their estates ruined, and then they shall be carried into
captivity, to spend the sad remains of a miserable life in slavery:
"I
will make thee to pass with thy enemies, who shall lead thee in triumph
into
a land that thou knowest not, and therefore canst expect to find no comfort
in it." All this is the fruit of God's wrath: "It is
a fire
kindled in my anger, which shall burn upon you, and, if not extinguished in
time, will burn eternally."
Verses 15-21
Here, as before, we have,
I. The prophet's humble address to God, containing a
representation both of his integrity and of the hardships he underwent
notwithstanding. It is a matter of comfort to us that, whatever ails us, we have
a God to go to, before whom we may spread our case and to whose omniscience we
may appeal, as the prophet here,
"O Lord! thou knowest; thou knowest
my sincerity, which men are resolved they will not acknowledge; thou knowest my
distress, which men disdain to take notice of." Observe here,
1. What it is that the prophet prays for, v. 15. (1.) That God
would consider his case and be mindful of him:
"O Lord! remember me;
think upon me for good." (2.) That God would communicate strength and
comfort to him:
"Visit me; not only remember me, but let me know
that thou rememberest me, that thou art nigh unto me." (3.) That he would
appear for him against those that did him wrong:
Revenge me of my
persecutors, or rather,
Vindicate me from my persecutors; give
judgment against them, and let that judgment be executed so far as is necessary
for my vindication and to compel them to acknowledge that they have done me
wrong. Further than this a good man will not desire that God should avenge him.
Let something be done to convince the world that (whatever blasphemers say to
the contrary) Jeremiah is a righteous man and the God whom he serves is a
righteous God. (4.) That he would yet spare him and continue him in the land of
the living:
"Take me not away by a sudden stroke, but
in thy
long-suffering lengthen out my days." The best men will own themselves
so obnoxious to God's wrath that they are indebted to his patience for the
continuance of their lives. Or, "While thou exercisest long-suffering
towards my persecutors, let not them prevail to take me away." Though in a
passion he complained of his birth (v. 10), yet he desires here that his death
might not be hastened; for life is sweet to nature, and the life of a useful man
is so to grace.
I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world.
2. What it is that he pleads with God for mercy and relief
against his enemies, persecutors, and slanderers.
(1.) That God's honour was interested in this case:
Know,
and make it known,
that for thy sake I have suffered rebuke. Those that
lay themselves open to reproach by their own fault and folly have great reason
to bear it patiently, but no reason to expect that God should appear for them.
But if it is for doing well that we suffer ill, and for righteousness' sake
that we have all manner of evil said against us, we may hope that God will
vindicate our honour with his own. To the same purport (v. 16),
I am called
by thy name, O Lord of hosts! It was for that reason that his enemies hated
him, and therefore for that reason he promised himself that God would own him
and stand by him.
(2.) That the word of God, which he was employed to preach to
others, he had experienced the power and pleasure of in his own soul, and
therefore had the graces of the Spirit to qualify him for the divine favour, as
well as his gifts. We find some rejected of God who yet could say,
Lord, we
have prophesied in thy name. But Jeremiah could say more (v. 16):
"Thy
words were found, found
by me" (he searched the scripture,
diligently studied the law, and found that in it which was reviving to him: if
we seek we shall find), "found
for me" (the words which he was
to deliver to others were laid ready to his hand, were brought to him by
inspiration),
"and I did not only taste them, but
eat them,
received them entirely, conversed with them intimately; they were welcome to me,
as food to one that is hungry; I entertained them, digested them, turned them
in
succum et sanguineminto blood and spirits, and was myself delivered into
the mould of those truths which I was to deliver to others." The prophet
was told to
eat the roll, Eze. 2:8; Rev. 10:9.
I did eat itthat
is, as it follows, it
was to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart,
nothing could be more agreeable. Understand it, [1.] Of the message itself which
he was to deliver. Though he was to foretel the ruin of his country, which was
dear to him, and in the ruin of which he could not but have a deep share, yet
all natural affections were swallowed up in zeal for God's glory, and even
these messages of wrath, being divine messages, were a satisfaction to him. He
also rejoiced, at first, in hope that the people would take warning and prevent
the judgment. Or, [2.] Of the commission he received to deliver this message.
Though the work he was called to was not attended with any secular advantages,
but, on the contrary, exposed him to contempt and persecution, yet, because it
put him in a way to serve God and do good, he took pleasure in it, was glad to
be so employed, and it was his
meat and drink to do the will of him that sent
him, Jn. 4:34. Or, [3.] Of the promise God gave him that he would assist and
own him in his work (ch. 1:8); he was satisfied in that, and depended upon it,
and therefore hoped it should not fail him.
(3.) That he had applied himself to the duty of his office with
all possible gravity, seriousness, and self-denial, though he had had of late
but little satisfaction in it, v. 17. [1.] It was his comfort that he had given
up himself wholly to the business of his office and had done nothing either to
divert himself from it or disfit himself for it. He kept no unsuitable company,
denied himself the use even of lawful recreations, abstained from every thing
that looked like levity, lest thereby he should make himself mean and less
regarded. He
sat alone, spent a great deal of time in his closet,
because
of the hand of the Lord that was strong upon him to carry him on his work,
Eze. 3:14.
"For thou hast filled me with indignation, with such
messages of wrath against this people as have made me always pensive."
Note, It will be a comfort to God's ministers, when men despise them, if they
have the testimony of their consciences for them that they have not by any vain
foolish behaviour made themselves despicable, that they have been dead not only
to the wealth of the world, as this prophet was (v. 10), but to the pleasures of
it too, as here. But, [2.] It is his complaint that he had had but little
pleasure in his work. It was at first the rejoicing of his heart, but of late it
had made him melancholy, so that he had no heart to
sit in the meeting of
those that make merry. He cared not for company, for indeed no company cared
for him. He
sat alone, fretting at the people's obstinacy and the
little success of his labours among them. This filled him with a holy
indignation.
Note, It is the folly and infirmity of some good people that they lose much of
the pleasantness of their religion by the fretfulness and uneasiness of their
natural temper, which they humour and indulge, instead of mortifying it.
(4.) He throws himself upon God's pity and promise in a very
passionate expostulation (v. 18):
"Why is my pain perpetual, and
nothing done to ease it? Why are the wounds which my enemies are continually
giving both to my peace and to my reputation incurable, and nothing done to
retrieve either my comfort or my credit? I once little thought that I should be
thus neglected; will the God that has promised me his presence
be to me as a
liar, the God on whom I depend to be me
as waters that fail?" We
are willing to make the best we can of it, and to take it as an appeal, [1.] To
the mercy of God: "I know he will not let the pain of his servant be
perpetual, but he will ease it, will not let his wound be incurable, but he will
heal it; and therefore I will not despair." [2.] To his faithfulness:
"Wilt
thou be to me as a liar? No; I know thou wilt not. God is not a man that he
should lie. The fountain of life will never be to his people as
waters that
fail."
II. God's gracious answer to this address, v. 19-21. Though
the prophet betrayed much human frailty in his address, yet God vouchsafed to
answer him with good words and comfortable words; for he knows our frame.
Observe,
1. What God here requires of him as the condition of the further
favours he designed him. Jeremiah had done and suffered much for God, yet God is
no debtor to him, but he is still upon his good behaviour. God will own him.
But, (1.) He must recover his temper, and be reconciled to his work, and friends
with it again, and not quarrel with it any more as he had done. He must
return,
must shake off these distrustful discontented thoughts and passions, and not
give way to them, must regain the peaceable possession and enjoyment of himself,
and resolve to be easy. Note, When we have stepped aside into any disagreeable
frame or way our care must be to return and compose ourselves into a right
temper of mind again; and
then we may expect God will help us, if thus we
endeavour to help ourselves. (2.) He must resolve to be faithful in his work,
for he could not expect the divine protection any longer than he did approve
himself so. Though there was no cause at all to charge Jeremiah with
unfaithfulness, and God knew his heart to be sincere, yet God saw fit to give
him this caution. Those that do their duty must not take it ill to be told their
duty. In two things he must be faithful:[1.] He must distinguish between some
and others of those he preached to: Thou must
take forth the precious from
the vile. The righteous are the precious be they ever so mean and poor; the
wicked are the vile be they ever so rich and great. In our congregations these
are mixed, wheat and chaff in the same floor; we cannot distinguish them by
name, but we must by character, and must give to each a portion, speaking
comfort to precious saints and terror to vile sinners, neither
making the
heart of the righteous sad nor
strengthening the hands of the wicked
(Eze. 13:22), but
rightly dividing the word of truth. Ministers must take
those whom they see to be precious into their bosoms, and not
sit alone
as Jeremiah did, but keep up conversation with those they may do good to and get
good by. [2.] He must closely adhere to his instructions, and not in the least
vary from them:
Let them return to thee, but return not thou to them,
that is, he must do the utmost he can, in his preaching, to bring people up to
the mind of God; he must tell them they must, at their peril, comply with that.
Those that had flown off from him, that did not like the terms upon which God's
favour was offered to them,
"Let them return to thee, and, upon
second thoughts, come up to the terms and strike the bargain; but do not thou
return
to them, do not compliment them, nor comply with them, nor think to make the
matter easier to them than the word of God has made it." Men's hearts and
lives must come up to God's law and comply with that, for God's law will
never come down to them nor comply with them.
2. What God here promises to him upon the performance of these
conditions. If he approve himself well, (1.) God will tranquilize his mind and
pacify the present tumult of his spirits:
If thou return, I will bring thee
again, will
restore thy soul, as Ps. 23:3. The best and strongest
saints, if at any time they have gone aside out of the right way, and are
determined to return, need the grace of God to bring them again. (2.) God will
employ him in his service as a prophet, whose work, even in those bad times, had
comfort and honour enough in it to be its own wages:
"Thou shalt stand
before me, to receive instructions from me, as a servant from his master;
and
thou shalt be as my mouth to deliver my messages to the people, as an
ambassador is the mouth of the prince that sends him." Note, Faithful
ministers are God's mouth to us; they are so to look upon themselves, and to
speak God's mind and
as becomes the oracles of God; and we are so to
look upon them, and to hear God speaking to us by them. Observe, If thou keep
close to thy instructions,
thou shalt be as my mouth, not otherwise; so
far, and no further, God will stand by ministers, as they go by the written
word.
"Thou shalt be as my mouth, that is, what thou sayest shall be
made good, as if I myself had said it." See Isa. 44:26; 1 Sa. 3:19. (3.) He
shall have strength and courage to face the many difficulties he meets with in
his work, and his spirit shall not fail again as now it does (v. 20):
"I
will make thee unto this people as a fenced brazen wall, which the storm
batters and beats violently upon, but cannot shake.
Return not thou to them
by any sinful compliances, and then trust thy God to arm thee by his grace with
holy resolutions. Be not cowardly, and God will make thee daring." He had
complained that he was made a
man of strife. "Expect to be so (says
God); they will
fight against thee, they will still continue their
opposition,
but they shall not prevail against thee to drive thee off
from thy work nor to cut thee off from the land of the living." (4.) He
shall have God for his protector and mighty deliverer:
I am with thee to save
thee. Those that have God with them have a Saviour with them who has wisdom
and strength enough to deal with the most formidable enemy; and those that are
with God, and faithful to him, he will deliver (v. 21) either from trouble or
through it. They may perhaps fall
into the hand of the wicked, and they
may appear terrible to them, but God will rescue them
out of their hands.
They shall not be able to kill them till they have finished their testimony;
they shall not prevent their happiness. God will so deliver them as to
preserve
them to his heavenly kingdom (2 Tim. 4:18), and that is deliverance enough.
There are many tings that appear very frightful that yet do not prove at all
hurtful to a good man.
Chapter 15:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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