Chapter 18:
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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 18
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A general declaration of God's
ways in dealing with nations and kingdoms, that he can easily do what he will
with them, as easily as the potter can with the clay (v. 1-6), but that he
certainly will do what is just and fair with them. If he threaten their ruin,
yet upon their repentance he will return in mercy to them, and, when he is
coming towards them in mercy, nothing but their sin will stop the progress of
his favours (v. 7-10). II. A particular demonstration of the folly of the men
of Judah and Jerusalem in departing from their God to idols, and so bringing
ruin upon themselves notwithstanding the fair warnings given them and God's
kind intentions towards them (v. 11-17). III. The prophet's complaint to God
of the base ingratitude and unreasonable malice of his enemies, persecutors, and
slanderers, and his prayers against them (v. 18-23).
Verses 1-10
The prophet is here sent to
the potter's house (he knew
where to find it), not to preach a sermon as before to the gates of Jerusalem,
but to prepare a sermon, or rather to receive it ready prepared. Those needed
not to study their sermons that had them, as he had this, by immediate
inspiration.
"Go to the potter's house, and observe how he manages
his work, and there
I will cause thee, by silent whispers,
to hear my
words. There thou shalt receive a message, to be delivered to the people."
Note, Those that would know God's mind must observe his appointments, and
attend where they may hear his words. The prophet was never
disobedient to
the heavenly vision, and therefore went to the potter's house (v. 3) and
took notice how he
wrought his work upon the wheels, just as he pleased,
with a great deal of ease, and in a little time. And (v. 4) when a lump of clay
that he designed to form into one shape either proved too stiff, or had a stone
in it, or some way or other came to be
marred in his hand, he presently
turned it into another shape; if it will not serve for a vessel of honour, it
will serve for a vessel of dishonour, just
as seems good to the potter.
It is probable that Jeremiah knew well enough how the potter wrought his work,
and how easily he threw it into what form he pleased; but he must go and observe
it
now, that, having the idea of it fresh in his mind, he might the more
readily and distinctly apprehend that truth which God designed thereby to
represent to him, and might the more intelligently explain it to the people. God
used similitudes by his servants the prophets (Hos. 12:10), and it was
requisite that they should themselves understand the similitudes they used.
Ministers will make a good use of their converse with the business and affairs
of this life if they learn thereby to speak more plainly and familiarly to
people about the things of God, and to expound scripture comparisons. For they
ought to make all their knowledge some way or other serviceable to their
profession.
Now let us see what the message is which Jeremiah receives, and
is entrusted with the delivery of, at the potter's house. While he looks
carefully upon the potter's work, God darts into his mind these two great
truths, which he must preach to
the house of Israel:
I. That God has both an incontestable authority and an
irresistible ability to form and fashion kingdoms and nations as he pleases, so
as to serve his own purposes:
"Cannot I do with you as this potter,
saith the Lord? v. 6. Have not I as absolute a power over you in respect
both of might and of right?" Nay, God has a clearer title to a dominion
over us than the potter has over the clay; for the potter only gives it its
form, whereas we have both matter and form from God.
As the clay is in the
potter's hand to be moulded and shaped as he pleases,
so are you in my
hand. This intimates, 1. That God has an incontestable sovereignty over us,
is not debtor to us, may dispose of us as he thinks fit, and is not accountable
to us, and that it would be as absurd for us to dispute this as for the clay to
quarrel with the potter. 2. That it is a very easy thing with God to make what
use he pleases of us and what changes he pleases with us, and that we cannot
resist him. One turn of the hand, one turn of the wheel, quite alters the shape
of the clay, makes it a vessel, unmakes it, new-makes it. Thus are our times in
God's hand, and not in our own, and it is in vain for us to strive with him.
It is spoken here of nations; the most politic, the most potent, are what God is
pleased to make them, and no other. See this explained by Job (ch. 12:23),
He
increaseth the nations and destroyeth them; he enlargeth the nations and
straiteneth them again. See Ps. 107:33 etc., and compare Job 34:29.
All
nations before God are as the drop of the bucket, soon wiped away,
or the
small dust of the balance, soon blown away (Isa. 40:15), and therefore, no
doubt, as easily managed as the clay by the potter. 3. That God will not be a
loser by any in his glory, at long run, but, if he be not glorified by them, he
will be glorified upon them. If the potter's vessel be marred for one use, it
shall serve for another; those that will not be monuments of mercy shall be
monuments of justice.
The Lord has made all things for himself, yea, even the
wicked for the day of evil, Prov. 16:4. God formed us out of the clay (Job
33:6), nay, and we are still as clay in his hands (Isa. 64:8); and has not he
the same power over us that the potter has over the clay? (Rom. 9:21), and are
not we bound to submit, as the clay to the potter's wisdom and will? Isa.
29:15, 16; 45:9.
II. That, in the exercise of this authority and ability, he
always goes by fixed rules of equity and goodness. He dispenses favours indeed
in a way of sovereignty, but never punishes by arbitrary power.
High is his
right hand, yet he rules not with a
high hand, but, as it follows
there,
Justice and judgment are the habitation of his throne, Ps. 89:13,
14. God asserts his despotic power, and tells us what he might do, but at the
same time assures us that he will act as a righteous and merciful Judge. 1. When
God is coming against us in ways of judgment we may be sure that it is for our
sins, which shall appear by this, that national repentance will stop the
progress of the judgments (v. 7,8):
If God speak concerning a nation to pluck
up its fences that secure it, and so lay it open, its fruit-trees that adorn
and enrich it, and so leave it desolateto pull down its fortifications, that
the enemy may have liberty to enter in, its habitations, that the inhabitants
may be under a necessity of going out, and so
destroy it as either a
vineyard or a city is destroyedin this case, if
that nation take the
alarm, repent of their sins and reform their lives, turn every one from his evil
way and return to God, God will graciously accept them, will not proceed in his
controversy, will return in mercy to them, and, though he cannot change his
mind, he will change his way, so that it may be said, He
repents him of the
evil he said he would do to them. Thus often in the time of the Judges, when
the oppressed people were penitent people, still God raised them up saviours;
and, when they turned to God, their affairs immediately took a new turn. It was
Nineveh's case, and we wish it had oftener been Jerusalem's; see 2 Chr.
7:14. It is an undoubted truth that a sincere conversion from the evil of sin
will be an effectual prevention of the evil of punishment; and God can as easily
raise up a penitent people from their ruins as the potter can make anew the
vessel of clay when it was
marred in his hand. 2. When God is coming
towards us in ways of mercy, if any stop be given to the progress of that mercy,
it is nothing but sin that gives it (v. 9, 10):
If God speak concerning a
nation to build and to plant it, to advance and establish all the true
interests of it, it is
his husbandly and
his building (1 Co. 3:9),
and, if he speak in favour of it, it is done, it is increased, it is enriched,
it is enlarged, its trade flourishes, its government is settled in good hands,
and all its affairs prosper and its enterprises succeed. but if this nation,
which God is thus loading with benefits,
do evil in his sight and
obey
not his voice,if it lose its virtue, and become debauched and profane,if
religion grow into contempt, and vice to get to be fashionable, and so be kept
in countenance and reputation, and there be a general decay of serious godliness
among them,then God will turn his hand against them, will pluck up what he
was planting, and pull down what he was building (ch. 45:4); the good work that
was in the doing shall stand still and be let fall, and what favours were
further designed shall be withheld; and this is called his
repenting of the
good wherewith he said he would benefit them, as he changed his purpose
concerning Eli's house (1 Sa. 2:30) and hurried Israel back into the
wilderness when he had brought them within sight of Canaan. Note, Sin is the
great mischief-maker between God and a people; it forfeits the benefit of his
promises and spoils the success of their prayers. It defeats his kind intentions
concerning them (Hos. 7:1) and baffles their pleasing expectations from him. It
ruins their comforts, prolongs their grievances, brings them into straits, and
retards their deliverances, Isa. 59:1, 2.
Verses 11-17
These verses seem to be the application of the general truths
laid down in the foregoing part of the chapter to the nation of the Jews and
their present state.
I. God was now speaking concerning them
to pluck up, and
to
pull down, and
to destroy; for it is that part of the rule of
judgment that their case agrees with (v. 11):
"Go, and tell them"
(saith God),
"Behold I frame evil against you and devise against you.
Providence in all its operations is plainly working towards your ruin. Look upon
your conduct towards God, and you cannot but see that you deserve it; look upon
his dealings with you, and you cannot but see that he designs it." He
frames evil, as the potter frames the vessel, so as to answer the end.
II. He invites them by repentance and reformation to meet him in
the way of his judgments and so to prevent his further proceedings against them:
"Return you now every one from his evil ways, that so (according to
the rule before laid down) God may turn from the evil he had purported to do
unto you, and that providence which seemed to be framed like a vessel on the
wheel against you shall immediately be thrown into a new shape, and the issue
shall be in favour of you." Note, The warnings of God's word, and the
threatenings of his providence, should be improved by us as strong inducements
to us to reform our lives, in which it is not enough to
turn from our evil
ways, but we must
make our ways and our doings good, conformable to
the rule, to the law.
III. He foresees their obstinacy, and their perverse refusal to
comply with this invitation, though it tended so much to their own benefit (v.
12):
They said, "There is no hope. If we must not be delivered
unless we return from our evil ways, we may even despair of ever being
delivered, for we are resolved that
we will walk after our own devices.
It is to no purpose for the prophets to say any more to us, to use any more
arguments, or to press the matter any further; we will have our way, whatever it
cost us;
we will do every one the imagination of his own
evil heart,
and will not be under the restraint of the divine law." Note, That which
ruins sinners is affecting to live as they list. They call it liberty to live at
large; whereas for a man to be a slave to his lusts is the worst of slaveries.
See how strangely some men's hearts are hardened by the deceitfulness of sin
that they will not so much as promise amendment; nay, they set the judgments of
God at defiance: "We will go on with
our own devices, and let God go
on with his; and we will venture the issue."
IV. He upbraids them with the monstrous folly of their
obstinacy, and their hating to be reformed. Surely never were people guilty of
such an absurdity, never any that pretended to reason acted so unreasonably (v.
13):
Ask you among the heathen, even those that had not the benefit of
divine revelation, no oracles, no prophets, as Judah and Jerusalem had, yet,
even among them,
who hath heart such a thing? The Ninevites, when thus
warned, turned from their evil ways. Some of the worst of men, when they are
told of their faults, especially when they begin to smart for them, will at
least promise reformation and say that they will endeavour to mend. But
the
virgin of Israel bids defiance to repentance, is resolved to go on frowardly,
whatever conscience and Providence say to the contrary, and thus
has done a
horrible thing. She should have preserved herself pure and chaste for God,
who had espoused her to himself; but she has alienated herself from him, and
refuses to return to him. Note, It is
a horrible thing, enough to make
one tremble to think of it, that those who have made their condition sad by
sinning should make it desperate by refusing to reform. Wilful impenitence is
the grossest self-murder; and that is
a horrible thing, which we should
abhor the thought of.
V. He shows their folly in two things:
1. In the nature of the sin itself that they were guilty of.
They forsook God for idols, which was the most horrible thing that could be, for
they put a most dangerous cheat upon themselves (v. 14, 15):
Will a
thirsty traveller
leave the snow, which, being melted, runs down from the
mountains
of Lebanon, and, passing over
the rock of the field,
flows in clear, clean, crystal streams? Will he leave these, pass these by, and
think to better himself with some dirty puddle-water?
Or shall the cold
flowing waters that come from any other place be forsaken in the heat of
summer? No; when men are parched with heat and drought, and meet with cooling
refreshing streams, they will make use of them, and not turn their backs upon
them. The margin reads it,
"Will a man that is travelling the road
leave
my fields, which are plain and level,
for a rock, which is rough and
hard,
or for the snow of Lebanon, which, lying in great drifts, makes the
road impassable?
Or shall the running waters be forsaken for the strange cold
waters? No; in these things men know when they are well off, and will keep
so; they will not leave a certainty for an uncertainty. But
my people have
forgotten me (v. 15), have quitted
a fountain of living waters for broken
cisterns. They have burnt incense to idols, that are as vain as
vanity
itself, that are not what they pretend to be nor can perform what is expected
from them." They had not the common wit of travellers, but even their
leaders caused them to err, and they were content to be misled. (1.) They left
the
ancient paths, which were appointed by the divine law, which had been walked
in by all the saints, which were therefore the right way to their journey's
end, a safe way, and, being well-tracked, were both easy to hit and easy to walk
in. But, when they were advised to keep to the good old way, they positively
said that they would not, ch. 6:16. (2.) They chose by-paths; they walked
in
a way not cast up, not in the highway, the King's highway, in which they
might travel safely, and which would certainly lead them to their right end, but
in a dirty way, a rough way, a way in which they could not but
stumble;
such was the way of idolatry (such is the way of all iniquityit is a false
way, it is a way full of stumbling-blocks) and yet this way they chose to walk
in and lead others in.
2. In the mischievous consequences of it. Though the thing
itself were bad, they might have had some excuse for it if they could have
promised themselves any good out of it. But the direct tendency of it was
to
make their land desolate, and, consequently, themselves miserable (for so
the inhabitants must needs be if their country be laid waste), and both
themselves and their land
a perpetual hissing. Those deserve to be hissed
that have fair warning given them and will not take it.
Every one that passes
by their land shall make his remarks upon it, and
shall be astonished,
and way his head, some wondering, others commiserating, others triumphing in
the desolations of a country that had been
the glory of all lands. They
shall wag their heads in derision, upbraiding them with their folly in forsaking
God and their duty, and so pulling this misery upon their own heads. Note, Those
that revolt from God will justly be made the scorn of all about them, and,
having reproached the Lord, will themselves be a reproach.
Their land
being made
desolate, in pursuance of their destruction, it is threatened
(v. 17),
I will scatter them as with an east wind, which is fierce and
violent; by it they shall be hurried to and fro
before the enemy, and
find no way open to escape. They shall not only flee before the enemy (that they
might do and yet make an orderly retreat), but they shall be scattered, some one
way and some another. That which completes their misery is,
I will show them
the back, and not the face, in the day of their calamity. Our calamities may
be easily borne if God look towards us, and smile upon us, when we are under
them, if he countenance us and show us favour; but if he turn
the back
upon us, if he show himself displeased, if he be deaf to our prayers and refuse
us his help, if he forsake us, leave us to ourselves, and stand at a distance
from us, we are quite undone.
If he hide his face, who then can behold him?
Job 34:29. herein God would deal with them as they had dealt with him (ch.
2:27),
They have turned their back unto me, and not their face. It is a
righteous thing with God to show himself strange to those in the day of their
trouble who have shown themselves rude and undutiful to him in their prosperity.
This will have its full accomplishment in that day when God will say to those
who, though they have been professors of piety, were yet workers of iniquity,
Depart
from me, I know you not, nay,
I never knew you.
Verses 18-23
The prophet here, as sometimes before, brings in his own
affairs, but very much for instruction to us.
I. See here what are the common methods of the persecutors. We
may see this in Jeremiah's enemies, v. 18.
1. They laid their heads together to consult what they should do
against him, both to be revenged on him for what he had said and to stop his
mouth for the future:
They said, Come and let us devise devices against
Jeremiah. The enemies of God's people and ministers have been often very
crafty themselves, and confederate with one another, to do them mischief. What
they cannot act to the prejudice of religion separately they will try to do in
concert.
The wicked plots against the just. Caiaphas, and the chief
priests and elders, did so against our blessed Saviour himself. The opposition
which the gates of hell give to the kingdom of heaven is carried on with a great
deal of cursed policy. God had said (v. 11),
I devise a device against you;
and now, as if they resolved to be quits with him and to outwit Infinite Wisdom
itself, they resolve to
devise devices against God's prophet, not only
against his person, but against the word he delivered to them, which they
thought by their subtle management to defeat. O the prodigious madness of those
that hope to disannul God's counsel!
2. Herein they pretended a mighty zeal for the church, which,
they suggested, was in danger if Jeremiah was tolerated to preach as he did:
"Come,"
say they, "let us silence and crush him,
for the law shall not perish
from the priest; the law of truth is in their mouths (Mal. 2:6) and there we
will seek it; the administration of ordinances according to the law is in their
hands, and neither the one nor the other shall be wrested from them.
Counsel
shall not perish from the wise; the administration of public affairs shall
always be lodged with the privy-counsellors and ministers of state, to whom it
belongs;
nor shall
the word perish
from the prophets"they
mean those of their own choosing, who prophesied to them smooth things, and
flattered them with visions of peace. Two things they insinuated:(1.) That
Jeremiah could not be himself a true prophet, but was a pretender and a usurper,
because he neither was commissioned by the priests, nor concurred with the other
prophets, whose authority therefore will be despised if he be suffered to go on.
"If Jeremiah be regarded as an oracle, farewell the reputation of our
priests, our wise men, and prophets; but
that must be supported, which is
reason enough why he must be suppressed." (2.) That the matter of his
prophecies could not be from God, because it reflected sometimes upon the
prophets and priests; he had charged them with being the ringleaders of all the
mischief (ch. 5:31) and deceiving the people (ch. 14:14); he had foretold that
their
heart should perish, and
be astonished (ch. 4:9), that
the
wise men should be dismayed (ch. 8:9, 10), that the priests and prophets
should be intoxicated, ch. 13:13. Now this galled them more than any thing else.
Presuming upon the promise of God's presence with their priests and prophets,
they could not believe that he would ever leave them. The guides of the church
must needs be infallible, and therefore he who foretold their being infatuated
must be condemned as a false prophet. Thus, under colour of zeal for the church,
have its best friends been run down.
3. They agreed to do all they could to blast his reputation:
"Come,
let us smite him with the tongue, put him into an ill name, fasten a bad
character upon him, represent him to some as despicable and fit to be
prosecuted, to all as odious and not fit to be tolerated." This was their
device,
fortiter calumniari, aliquid adhaerebitto throw the vilest
calumnies at him, in hopes that some would adhere to him. to dress him up in
bearskins, otherwise they could not bait him. Those who projected this, it is
likely, were men of figure, whose tongue was no small slander, whose
representations, though ever so false, would be credited both by princes and
people, to make him obnoxious to the justice of the one and the fury of the
other. The scourge of such tongues will give not only smart lashes, but deep
wounds; it is a great mercy therefore to be
hidden from it, Job 5:21.
4. To set others an example, they resolved that they would not
themselves regard any thing he said, though it appeared ever so weighty and ever
so well confirmed as a message from God:
Let us not give heed to any of his
words; for, right or wrong, they will look upon them to be
his words,
and not the words of God. What good can be done with those who hear the word of
God with a resolution not to heed it or believe it? Nay,
5. That they may effectually silence him, they resolve to be the
death of him (v. 23):
All their counsel against me is
to slay me.
They
hunt for the precious life; and a precious life indeed it was that
they hunted for. Long was this Jerusalem's wretched character,
Thou that
killedst many of
the prophets, and wouldst have killed them all.
II. See here what is the common relief of the persecuted. This
we may see in the course that Jeremiah took when he met with this hard usage. He
immediately applied to his God by prayer, and so gave himself ease.
1. He referred himself and his cause to God's cognizance, v.
19. They would not regard a word he said, would not admit his complaints, nor
take any notice of his grievances; but,
Lord (says he),
do thou give
heed to me. It is matter of comfort to faithful ministers that, if men will
not give heed to their praying. He appeals to God as an impartial Judge, that
will hear both sides, as every judge ought to do. "Do not only
give heed
to me, but
hearken to the voice of those that contend with me; hear
what they have to say against me and for themselves, and then make it to appear
that thou
sittest in the throne, judging right. Hear the voice of my
contenders, how noisy and clamorous they are, how false and malicious all they
say is, and let them be
judged out of their own mouth; cause their own
tongues to fall upon them."
2. He complains of their base ingratitude to him (v. 20):
"Shall
evil be recompensed for good, and shall it go unpunished? Wilt not thou
recompense me good for that evil?" 2 Sa. 16:12. To render good for good is
human, evil for evil is brutish, good for evil is Christian, but evil for good
is devilish; it is so very absurd and wicked a thing that we cannot think but
God will avenge it. See how great the evil was that they did against him:
They
have dug a pit for my soul; they aimed to take away his life (no less would
satisfy them), and that not in a generous way, by an open assault, against which
he might have an opportunity of defending himself, but in a base, cowardly,
clandestine way:
they dug pits for him, which there was no fence against,
Ps. 119:85. But see how great the good was which he had done for them:
Remember
that I stood before thee to speak good for them; he had been an intercessor
with God for them, had used his interest in heaven on their behalf, which was
the greatest kindness they could expect from one of his character.
He is a
prophet and he shall pray for thee, Gen. 20:7. Moses often did this for
Israel, and yet they quarrelled with him, and sometimes
spoke of stoning him.
He did them this kindness when they were in imminent danger of destruction and
most needed it. They had themselves provoked God's wrath against them, and it
was ready to break in upon them, but he stood in the gap (as Moses, Ps. 106:23)
and
turned away that
wrath. Now, (1.) This was very base in them. Call a
man ungrateful and you can call him no worse. But it was not strange that those
who had forgotten their God did not know their best friends. (2.) It was very
grievous to him, as the like was to David. Ps. 35:13; 109:4,
For my love they
are my adversaries. Thus disingenuously do sinners deal with the great
intercessor, crucifying him afresh, and speaking against him on earth, while his
blood is speaking for them in heaven. See Jn. 10:32. But, (3.) It was a comfort
to the prophet that, when they were so spiteful against him, he had the
testimony of his conscience for him that he had done his duty to them; and the
same will be our rejoicing in such a day of evil.
The blood-thirsty hate the
upright, but the just seek his soul, Prov. 29:10.
3. He imprecates the judgments of God upon them, not from a
revengeful disposition, but in a prophetical indignation against their horrid
wickedness, v. 21-23. He prays, (1.) That their families might be starved for
want of bread:
"Deliver up the children to the famine, to the famine
in the country for want of rain, and that in the city through the straitness of
the siege. Thus let this iniquity of the fathers be visited upon the children."
(2.) That they might be cut off
by the sword of war, which, whatever it
was in the enemy's hand, would be, in God's hand, a sword of justice:
"Pour
them out (so the word is)
by the hands of the sword; let
their
blood be shed as profusely as water, that
their wives may be left
childless
and widows, their husbands being taken away by
death"
(some think that the prophet refers to
pestilence);
let their young
men, that are the strength of this generation and the hope of the next,
be
slain by the sword in battle. (3.) That the terrors and desolations of war
might seize them suddenly and by surprise, that thus their punishment might
answer to their sin (v. 22):
"Let a cry be heard from their houses,
loud shrieks,
when thou shalt bring a troop of the Chaldeans
suddenly
upon them, to seize them and all they have, to make them prisoners and their
estates a prey;" for thus they would have done by Jeremiah; they aimed to
ruin him at once ere he was aware:
"They have dug a pit for
me,
as for a wild beast,
and have
hid snares for me, as for some
ravenous noxious fowl." Note, Those that think to ensnare others will
justly be themselves ensnared in an evil time. (4.) That they might be dealt
with according to the desert of this sin, which was without excuse:
"Forgive
not their iniquity, neither blot out their sin from thy sight; that is, let
them not escape the just punishment of it; let them lie under all the miseries
of those whose sins are unpardoned." (5.) That God's wrath against them
might be their ruin:
Let them be overthrown before thee. This intimates
that justice was in pursuit of them, that they endeavoured to make their escape
from it, but in vain; "they shall be made to stumble in their flight, and
being overthrown they will certainly be overtaken." And then, Lord,
in
the time of thy anger, do to them (he does not say what he would have done
to them, but) do to them as thou thinkest fit, as thou usest to do with those
whom thou art angry with
deal thus with them. Now this is not written
for our imitation. Jeremiah was a prophet, and by the impulse of the spirit of
prophecy, in the foresight of the ruin certainly coming upon his persecutors,
might pray such prayers as we may not; and, if we think by this example to
justify ourselves in such imprecations, we
know not what manner of spirit we
are of; our Master has taught us, by his precept and pattern, to
bless
those that curse us and pray for those that despitefully use us. Yet it is
written for our instruction, and is of use to teach us, [1.] That those who have
forfeited the benefit of the prayers of God's prophets for them may justly
expect to have their prayers against them. [2.] That persecution is a sin that
fills the measure of a people's iniquity very fast, and will bring as sure and
sore a destruction upon them as any thing. [3.] Those who will not be won upon
by the kindness of God and his prophets will certainly at length feel the just
resentments of both.
Chapter 18:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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
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