Chapter 31:
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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 31
Complete Concise
This chapter goes on with the good words and comfortable words
which we had in the chapter before, for the encouragement of the captives,
assuring them that God would in due time restore them or their children to their
own land, and make them a great and happy nation again, especially by sending
them the Messiah, in whose kingdom and grace many of these promises were to have
their full accomplishment. I. They shall be restored to peace and honour, and
joy and great plenty (v. 1-14). II. Their sorrow for the loss of their
children shall be at an end (v. 15-17). III. They shall repent of their sins,
and God will graciously accept them in their repentance (v. 18-20). IV. They
shall be multiplied and increased, both their children and their cattle, and not
be cut off and diminished as they had been (v. 21-30). V. God will renew his
covenant with them, and enrich it with spiritual blessings (v. 31-34). VI.
These blessings shall be secured to theirs after them, even to the spiritual
seed of Israel for ever (v. 35-37). VII. As an earnest of this the city of
Jerusalem shall be rebuilt (v. 38-40). These exceedingly great and precious
promises were firm foundations of hope and full fountains of joy to the poor
captives; and we also may apply them to ourselves and mix faith with them.
Verses 1-9
God here assures his people,
I. That he will again take them into a covenant relation to
himself, from which they seemed to be cut off.
At the same time, when God's
anger breaks out against the wicked (ch. 30:24), his own people shall be owned
by him as the children of his love:
I will be the God (that is, I will
show myself to be the God)
of all the families of Israel (v. 1),not of
the two tribes only, but of all the tribes,not of the house of Aaron only,
and the families of Levi, but of all their families; not only their state in
general, but their particular families, and the interests of them, shall have
the benefit of a special relation to God. Note, The families of good people, in
their family capacity, may apply to God and stay themselves upon him as their
God. If we and our houses serve the Lord, we and our houses shall be protected
and blessed by him, Prov. 3:33.
II. That he will do for them, in bringing them out of Babylon,
as he had done for their fathers when he delivered them out of Egypt, and as he
had purposed to do when he first took them to be his people. 1. He puts them in
mind of what he did for their fathers when he brought them out of Egypt, v. 2.
They were then, as these were, a
people left of the sword, that sword of
Pharaoh with which he cut off all the male children as soon as they were born (a
bloody sword indeed they had narrowly escaped) and that sword with which he
threatened to cut them off when he pursued them to the Red Sea. They were then
in
the wilderness, where they seemed to be lost and forgotten, as these were
now in a strange land, and yet they found grace in God's sight, were owned and
highly honoured by him, and blessed with wonderful instances of his peculiar
favour, and he was at this time going
to cause them to rest in Canaan.
Note, When we are brought very low, and insuperable difficulties appear in the
way of our deliverance, it is good to remember that it has been so with the
church formerly, and yet that it has been raised up from its low estate and has
got to Canaan through all the hardships of a wilderness; and God is still the
same. 2. They put him in mind of what God had done for their fathers, intimating
that they now saw not such signs, and were ready to ask, as Gideon did,
Where
are all the wonders that our fathers told us of? It is true,
The Lord
hath appeared of old unto me (v. 3), in Egypt, in the wilderness, hath
appeared with me and for me, hath been seen in his glory as my God. The years of
ancient times were glorious years; but now it is otherwise; what good will it do
us that he
appeared of old to us when now he is
a God that hides
himself from us? Isa. 45:15. Note, It is hard to take comfort from former
smiles under present frowns. 3. To this he answers with an assurance of the
constancy of his love:
Yea, I have loved thee, not only with an ancient
love, but
with an everlasting love, a love that shall never fail, however
the comforts of it may for a time be suspended. It is
an everlasting love;
therefore have I extended or
drawn out lovingkindness unto thee also,
as well as to thy ancestors, or,
with lovingkindness have I drawn thee to
myself as thy God, from all the idols to which thou hadst turned aside. Note, It
is the happiness of those who are through grace interested in the love of God
that it is
an everlasting love (from everlasting in the counsels of it,
to
everlasting in the continuance and consequences of it), and that nothing can
separate them from that love. Those whom God loves with this love he will draw
into covenant and communion with himself, by the influences of his Spirit upon
their souls; he will
draw them with lovingkindness, with the cords of a
man and bands of love, than which no attractive can be more powerful.
III. That he will again form them into a people, and give them a
very joyful settlement in their own land, v. 4, 5. Is the church of God his
house, his temple? Is it now in ruins? It is so; but,
Again I will build
thee, and thou shalt be built. Are they parts of this building dispersed?
They shall be collected and put together again, each in its place. If God
undertake to build them, they shall be built, whatever opposition may be given
to it? Is
Israel a beautiful
virgin? Is she now stripped of her
ornaments and reduced to a melancholy state? She is so; but
thou shalt again
be adorned and made fine, adorned
with thy tabrets, or timbrels, the
ornaments of thy chamber, and made merry. They shall resume their harps which
had been hung upon the willow-trees, shall tune them, and shall themselves be in
tune to make use of them. They shall be adorned with their tabrets, for now
their mirth and music shall be seasonable; it shall be a proper time for it, God
in his providence shall call them to it, and then it shall be an ornament to
them; whereas tabrets, at a time of common calamity, when God called to
mourning, were a shame to them. Or it may refer to their use of tabrets in the
solemnizing of their religious feasts and their
going forth in dances
then, as the
daughters of Shiloh, Jdg. 21:19, 21. Our mirth is then
indeed an ornament to us when we serve God and honour him with it. Is the joy of
the city maintained by the products of the country? It is so; and therefore it
is promised (v. 5),
Thou shalt yet plant vines upon the mountains of Samaria,
which had been the head city of the kingdom of Israel, in opposition to that of
Judah; but they shall now be united (Eze. 37:22), and there shall be such
perfect peace and security that men shall apply themselves wholly to the
improvement of their ground:
The planters shall plant, not fearing the
soldiers' coming to eat the fruits of what they had planted, or to pluck it
up; but they themselves
shall eat them freely,
as common things,
not forbidden fruits, not forbidden by the law of God (as they were till the
fifth year, Lev. 19:23-25), not forbidden by the owners, because there shall
be such plenty as to yield enough for all, enough for each.
IV. That they shall have liberty and opportunity to worship God
in the ordinances of his own appointment, and shall have both invitations and
inclinations to do so (v. 6):
There shall be a day, and a glorious day it
will be, when
the watchmen upon Mount Ephraim, that are set to stand
sentinel there, to give notice of the approach of the enemy, finding that all is
very quiet and that there is no appearance of danger, shall desire for a time to
be discharged from their post, that they may
go up to Zion, to praise God
for the public peace. Or
the watchmen that tend the vineyards (spoken of
v. 5) shall stir up themselves, and one another, and all their neighbours, to go
and keep the solemn feasts at Jerusalem. Now this implies that the service of
God shall be again set up in Zion, that there shall be a general resort to it,
with much affection and mutual excitement, as in David's time, Ps. 122:1. But
that which is most observable here is
that the watchmen of Ephraim are
forward to promote the worship of God at Jerusalem, whereas formerly
the
watchman of Ephraim was hatred against the house of his God (Hos. 9:8), and,
in stead of inviting people to Zion, laid snares for those that set their faces
thitherward, Hos. 5:1. Note, God can make those who have been enemies to
religion and the true worship of God to become encouragers of them and leaders
in them. This promise was to have its full accomplishment in the days of the
Messiah, when the gospel should be preached to all these countries, and a
general invitation thereby given into the church of Christ, of which Zion was a
type.
V. That God shall have the glory and the church both the honour
and comfort of this blessed change (v. 7):
Sing with gladness for Jacob,
that is, let all her friends and well-wishers rejoice with her, Deu. 32:43.
Rejoice,
you Gentiles with his people, Rom. 15:10. The restoration of Jacob will be
taken notice of by all the neighbours, it will be matter of joy to them all, and
they shall all join with Jacob in his joys, and thereby pay him respect and put
a reputation upon him. Even
the chief of the nations, that make the
greatest figure, shall think it an honour to them to congratulate the
restoration of Jacob, and shall do themselves the honour to send their
ambassadors on that errand.
Publish you, praise you. In publishing these
tidings, praise the God of Israel, praise the Israel of God, speak honourably of
both. The publishers of the gospel must publish it with praise, and therefore it
is often spoken of in the
Psalms as mingled with
praises, Ps.
67:2, 3; 96:2, 3. What we either bring to others or take to ourselves the
comfort of we must be sure to give God the praise of.
Praise you, and say, O
Lord! save thy people; that is, perfect their salvation, go on to save
the
remnant of Israel, that are yet in bondage; as Ps. 126:3, 4. Note, When we
are praising God for what he has done we must call upon him for the future
favours which his church is in need and expectation of; and in praying to him we
really praise him and give him glory; he takes it so.
VI. That, in order to a happy settlement in their own land, they
shall have a joyful return out of the land of their captivity and a very
comfortable passage homeward (v. 8, 9), and this beginning of mercy shall be to
them a pledge of all the other blessings here promised. 1. Though they are
scattered to places far remote, yet they shall be brought together
from the
north country, and from the coasts of the earth; wherever they are, God will
find them out. 2. Though many of them are very unfit for travel, yet that shall
be no hindrance to them:
The blind and the lame shall come; such a
good-will shall they have to their journey, and such a good heart upon it, that
they shall not make their blindness and lameness an excuse for staying where
they are. There companions will be ready to help them, will be
eyes to the
blind and legs to the lame, as good Christians ought to be to one another in
their travels heavenward, Job 29:15. But, above all, their God will help them;
and let none plead that he is blind who has God for his guide, or lame who has
God for his strength.
The women with child are heavy, and it is not fit
that they should undertake such a journey, much less those
that travail with
child; and yet, when it is to return to Zion, neither the one nor the other
shall make any difficulty of it. Note, When God calls we must not plead any
inability to come; for he that calls us will help us, will strengthen us. 3.
Though they seem to be diminished, and to have become few in numbers, yet, when
they come all together, they shall be
a great company; and so will God's
spiritual Israel be when there shall be a general rendezvous of them, though now
they are but a little flock. 4. Though their return will be matter of joy to
them, yet prayers and tears will be both their stores and their artillery (v.
9):
They shall come with weeping and with supplications, weeping for sin,
supplication for pardon; for
the goodness of God shall
lead them to
repentance; and they shall weep with more bitterness and more tenderness for
sin, when they are delivered out of their captivity, than ever they did when
they were groaning under it. Weeping and praying do well together; tears put
life into prayers, and express the liveliness of the, and prayers help to wipe
away tears.
With favours will I lead them (so the margin reads it); in
their journey they shall be compassed with God's favours, the fruits of his
favour. 5. Though they have a perilous journey, yet they shall be safe under a
divine convoy. Is the country they pass through dry and thirsty?
I will cause
them to walk by the rivers of waters, not the waters of a land-flood, which
fail in summer. Is it a wilderness where there is no road, no track?
I will
cause them t walk in a straight way, which they shall not miss. Is it a
rough and rocky country? Yet
they shall not stumble. Note, Whithersoever
God gives his people a clear call he will either find them or make them a ready
way; and while we are following Providence we may be sure that Providence will
not be wanting to us. And,
lastly, here is a reason given why God will
take all this care of his people:
For I am a Father to Israel, a Father
that begat him, and therefore will maintain him, that have the care and
compassion of a father for him (Ps. 103:13);
and Ephraim is my first-born;
even
Ephraim, who, having gone astray from God, was
no more worthy to
be called a son, shall yet be owned as a
first-born, particularly
dear, and heir of a double portion of blessings. The same reason that was given
for their release out of Egypt is given for their release out of Babylon; they
are free-born and therefore must not be enslaved, are born to God and therefore
must not be the servants of men. Ex. 4:22, 23,
Israel is my son, even my
first-born; let my son go that he may serve me. If we take God for our
Father, and join ourselves to
the church of the first-born, we may be
assured that we shall want nothing that is good for us.
Verses 10-17
This paragraph is much to the same purport with the last,
publishing to the world, as well as to the church, the purposes of God's love
concerning his people. This is a
word of the Lord which the
nations
must
hear, for it is a prophecy of a work of the Lord which the nations
cannot but take notice of. Let them hear the prophecy, that they may the better
understand and improve the performance; and let those that hear it themselves
declare it to others,
declare it in the isles afar off. It will be a
piece of news that will spread all the world over. it will look very great in
history; let us see how it looks in prophecy.
It is foretold, 1. That those who are dispersed shall be brought
together again from their dispersions:
He that scattereth Israel will gather
him; for he knows whither he scattered them and therefore where to find
them, v. 10.
Una eademque manus vulnus opemque tulit
The hand that
inflicted the wound shall heal it. And when he has gathered him into one
body, one fold, he will
keep him, as a shepherd does his flock, from
being scattered again. 2. That those who are sold and alienated shall be
redeemed and brought back, v. 11. Though the enemy that had got possession of
him was
stronger than he, yet
the Lord, who is stronger than all.
has
redeemed and ransomed him, not by price, but by power, as of old out of the
Egyptians' hands. 3. That with their liberty they shall have plenty and joy,
and God shall be honoured and served with it, v. 12, 13. When they shall have
returned to their own land
they shall come and sing in the high place of
Zion; on the top of that holy mountain they shall sing to the praise and
glory of God. We read that they did so when the foundation of the temple was
laid there; they
sang together, praising and giving thanks to the Lord,
Ezra 3:11. They
shall flow together to the goodness of the Lord; that is,
they shall flock in great numbers and with great forwardness and cheerfulness,
as streams of water,
to the goodness of the Lord, to the temple where he
causes his goodness to pass before his people. They shall come together in
solemn assemblies, to
praise him for his goodness, and to pray for the
fruits of it and the continuance of it; they shall come to bless him for his
goodness, in giving them
wheat, and wine, and oil, and the young of the flock
and of the herd, which, now that they have obtained their freedom, they have
an uncontested property in and the quiet and peaceable enjoyment of, and which
therefore they honour God with the first-fruits of and out of which they bring
offerings to his altar. Note, It is comfortable to observe the goodness of the
Lord in the gifts of common providence, and even in them to taste covenant-love.
Having plenty (plenty out of want and scarcity) they shall greatly rejoice,
their
soul shall be as a watered garden, flourishing and fruitful (Isa. 58:11),
pleasant and fragrant, and abounding in all good things. Note, Our souls are
never valuable as gardens but when they are watered with the dews of God's
Spirit and grace. It is a precious promise which follows, and which will not
have its full accomplishment any where on this side the height of the heavenly
Zion, that
they shall not sorrow any more at all; for it is only in that
new Jerusalem
that all tears shall be wiped away, Rev. 21:4. However, so
far it was fulfilled to the returned captives that they had not any more those
causes for sorrow which they had formerly had; and therefore (v. 13)
young
men and old shall rejoice together; so grave shall the young men be in their
joys as to keep company with the old men, and so transported shall the old men
be as to associate with the young.
Salva res est, saltat senexThe state
prospers, and the aged dance. God
will turn their mourning into joy,
their fasts into solemn feasts, Zec. 8:19. It was in the return out of Babylon
that those
who sowed in tears were made to
reap in joy, Ps. 126:5,
6. Those are comforted indeed whom God comforts, and may forget their troubles
when he
makes them to
rejoice from their sorrow, not only rejoice
after it, but rejoice from it their joy shall borrow lustre from their sorrow,
which shall serve as a foil to it; and the more they think of their troubles the
more they rejoice in their deliverance. 4. That both the ministers and those
they minister to shall have abundant satisfaction in what God gives them (v.
14):
I will satiate the soul of the priests with fatness; there shall be
such a plenty of sacrifices brought to the altar that those who
live upon the
altar shall live very comfortably, they and their families shall be
satiated
with fatness, they shall have enough, and that of the best;
and my people
shall be satisfied with my goodness, and shall think there is enough in that
to make them happy; and so there is. God's people have an abundant
satisfaction in God's goodness, though they have but little of this world. Let
them be satisfied of God's lovingkindness, and they will be satisfied with it
and desire no more to make them happy. All this is applicable to the spiritual
blessings which the redeemed of the Lord enjoy by Jesus Christ, infinitely more
valuable than corn, and wine, and oil, and the satisfaction of soul which they
have in the enjoyment of them. 5. That those particularly who had been in sorrow
for the loss of their children who were carried into captivity should have that
sorrow turned into joy upon their return, v. 15-17. Here we have, (1.) The sad
lamentation which the mothers made for the loss of their children (v. 15):
In
Ramah was there a voice heard, at the time when the general captivity was,
nothing but
lamentation, and bitter weeping, more there than in other
places, because there Nebuzaradan had the general rendezvous of his captives, as
appears, ch. 40:1, where we find him sending Jeremiah back from Ramah.
Rachel
is here said to
weep for her children. The sepulchre of Rachel was
between Ramah and Bethlehem. Benjamin, one of the two tribes, and Ephraim, head
of the ten tribes, were both descendants from Rachel. She had but two sons, the
elder of whom was one for whom his father grieved and
refused to be comforted
(Gen. 37:35); the other she herself called
Benonithe son of my sorrow.
Now the inhabitants of Ramah did in like manner
grieve for their sons and
their daughters that were carried away (as 1 Sa. 30:6), and such a voice of
lamentation was there as, to speak poetically, might even have raised Rachel out
of her grave to mourn with them. The tender parents even
refused to be
comforted for their children, because they were not, were not with them, but
were in the hands of their enemies; they were never likely to see them any more.
This is applied by the evangelists to the great mourning that was at Bethlehem
for the murder of the infants there by Herod (Mt. 2:17-18), and this scripture
is said to be then fulfilled. They wept for them,
and would not be comforted,
supposing the case would not admit any ground of comfort,
because they were
not. Note, Sorrow for the loss of children cannot but be great sorrow,
especially if we so far mistake as to think
they are not. (2.) Seasonable
comfort administered to them in reference hereunto, v. 16, 17. They are advised
to moderate that sorrow, and to set bounds to it:
Refrain thy voice from
weeping and thy eyes from tears. We are not forbidden to mourn in such a
case; allowances are made for natural affection. But we must not suffer our
sorrow to run into an extreme, to hinder our joy in God, or take us off from our
duty to him. Though we mourn, we must not murmur, nor must we resolve, as Jacob
did, to go to the grave mourning. In order to repress inordinate grief, we must
consider that
there is hope in our end, hope that there will be an end
(the trouble will not last always), that it will be a happy andthe end will
be peace. Note, It ought to support us under our troubles that we have reason to
hope they will end well.
The righteous has hope in his death; that will
be the blessed period of his grief and the blessed passage to his joys.
"There
is hope for thy posterity" (so some read it); "though thou mayest
not live to see these glorious days thyself, there is hope that thy posterity
shall. Though one generation falls in the wilderness, the next shall enter
Canaan. Two things thou mayest comfort thyself with the hope of:"[1.]
"The reward of thy work:
Thy suffering
work shall be rewarded.
The comforts of the deliverance shall be sufficient to balance all the
grievances of thy captivity." God makes his people
glad according to the
days wherein he has afflicted them, and so there is a proportion between the
joys and the sorrows, as between the reward and the work. The
glory to be
revealed, which the saints hope for in the end, will abundantly countervail
the
sufferings of this present time, Rom. 8:18. [2.] "The restoration of
thy children:
They shall come again from the land of the enemy (v. 16);
they
shall come again to their own border," v. 17.
There is hope
that children at a distance may be brought home. Jacob had a comfortable meeting
with Joseph after he had despaired of ever seeing him. There is hope concerning
children removed by death that they shall
return to their own border, to
the happy lot assigned them in the resurrection, a lot in the heavenly Canaan,
that border of his sanctuary. We shall see reason to repress our grief for the
death of our children that are taken into covenant with God when we consider the
hopes we have of their resurrection to eternal life. They are not lost, but gone
before.
Verses 18-26
We have here,
I. Ephraim's repentance, and return to God. Not only Judah,
but Ephraim the ten tribes, shall be restored, and therefore shall thus be
prepared and qualified for it, Hos. 14:8.
Ephraim shall say, What have I do
to any more with idols? Ephraim the people, is here spoken of as a single
person to denote their unanimity; they shall be as one man in their repentance
and shall glorify God in it with one mind and one mouth, one and all. it is
likewise thus expressed that it might be the better accommodated to particular
penitents, for whose direction and encouragement this passage is intended.
Ephraim is here brought in weeping for sin, perhaps because Ephraim, the person
from whom that tribe had its denomination, was a man of a tender spirit,
mourned
for his children many days (1 Chr. 7:21, 22), and sorrow for sin is compared
to that
for an only son. This penitent is here brought in, 1. Bemoaning
himself and the miseries of his present case. True penitents do thus bemoan
themselves. 2. Accusing himself, laying a load upon himself as a sinner, a great
sinner. He charges upon himself, in the first place, that sin which his
conscience told him that he was more especially guilty of at this time, and that
was impatience under correction:
"Thou has chastised me; I have been
under the rod, and I needed it, I deserved it; I was justly chastised, chastised
as a bullock, who would never have felt the goad if he had not first
rebelled against the yoke." True penitents look upon their afflictions as
fatherly chastisements:
"Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised;
that is, it was well that I was chastised, otherwise I should have been undone;
it did me good, or at least was intended to do me good; and yet I have been
impatient under it." Or it may intimate his want of feeling under the
affliction:
"Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised, that was
all; I was not awakened by it and quickened by it; I looked no further than the
chastisement.
I have been under the chastisement
as a bullock
unaccustomed to the yoke, unruly and unmanageable, kicking against the
pricks,
like a wild bull in a net," Isa. 51:20. This is the sin he
finds himself guilty of now; but (v. 19) he reflects upon his former sins and
looks as far back as the days of his youth. The discovery of one sin should put
us upon searching out more; now he remembers
the reproach of his youth.
Ephraim, as a people, reflect upon the misconduct of their ancestors when they
were first formed in a people. It is applicable to particular persons. Note, The
sin of our youth was the reproach of our youth, and we ought often to remember
it against ourselves and to bear it in a penitential sorrow and shame. 3. He is
here brought in angry at himself, having a holy indignation at himself for his
sin and folly: He
smote upon his thigh, as the publican upon his breast.
He was even amazed at himself, and at his own stupidity and frowardness: He
was
ashamed, yea even confounded, could not with any confidence look up to God,
nor with any comfort reflect upon himself. 4. He is here recommending himself to
the mercy and grace of God. He finds he is bent to backslide from God, and
cannot by any power of his own keep himself close with God, much less, when he
has revolted, bring himself back to God, and therefore he prays,
Turn thou me
and I shall be turned, which implies that unless God do turn him by his
grace he shall never be turned, but wander endlessly, that therefore he is very
desirous of converting grace, has a dependence upon it, and doubts not but that
that grace will be sufficient for him, to help him over all the difficulties
that were in the way of his return to God. See ch. 17:14,
Heal me and I shall
be healed. God works with power, can make the unwilling willing; if he
undertake the conversion of a soul, it will be converted. 5. He is here pleasing
himself with the experience he had of the blessed effect of divine grace:
Surely
after that I was turned I repented. Note, All the pious workings of our
heart towards God are the fruit and consequence of the powerful working of his
grace in us. And observe, He was
turned, he was
instructed, his
will was bowed to the will of God, by the right informing of his judgment
concerning the truths of God. Note, The way God takes of converting souls to
himself is by opening the eyes of their understandings, and all good follows
thereupon:
After that I was instructed I yielded,
I smote upon my
thigh. When sinners come to a right knowledge they will come to a right way.
Ephraim was chastised, and that did not produce the desired effect, it went no
further:
I was chastised, and that was all. But, when the instructions of
God's Spirit accompanied the corrections of his providence, then the work was
done, then he
smote upon his thigh, was so humbled for sin as to have no
more to do with it.
II. God's compassion on Ephraim and the kind reception he
finds with God, v. 20. 1. God owns him for a child and a prodigal:
Is Ephraim
my dear son? Is he a pleasant child? Thus when Ephraim bemoans himself God
bemoans him, as
one whom his mother comforts, though she had chidden him,
Isa. 66:13.
Is this
Ephraim my dear son? Is this that
pleasant
child? Is it he that is thus sad in spirit and that complains so bitterly?
So it is like that of Saul (1 Sa. 26:17),
Is this thy voice, my son David?
Or, as it is sometimes supplied,
Is not Ephraim my dear son? Is he not a
pleasant child? Yes, now he is, now he repents and returns. Note, Those that
have been undutiful backsliding children, if they sincerely return and repent,
however they have been under the chastisement of the rod, shall be accepted of
God as dear and pleasant children. Ephraim had afflicted himself, but God thus
heals himhad abased himself, but God thus honours him; as the returning
prodigal who thought himself no more worthy to be
called a son, yet, by
his father, had the
best robe put on him and
a ring on his hand.
2. He relents towards him, and speaks of him with a great deal of tender
compassion:
Since I spoke against him, by the threatenings of the word
and the rebukes of providence,
I do earnestly remember him still, my
thoughts towards him are thoughts of peace. Note, When God afflicts his people,
yet he does not forget them; when he casts them out of their land, yet he does
not cast them out of sight, nor out of mind. Even then when God is speaking
against us, yet he is acting for us, and designing our good in all; and this is
our comfort in our affliction, that
the Lord thinks upon us, though we
have forgotten him.
I remember him still, and therefore
my bowels are
troubled for him, as Joseph's yearned towards his brethren, even when he
spoke
roughly to them. When Israel's afflictions extorted a penitent confession
and submission it is said that his soul was grieved for the misery of Israel (Jdg.
10:16), for he always afflicts with the greatest tenderness. It was God's
compassion that mitigated Ephraim's punishment:
My heart is turned within
me (Hos. 11:8, 9); and now the same compassion accepted Ephraim's
repentance. Ephraim had pleaded (v. 18),
Thou art the Lord my God,
therefore to thee will I return, therefore on thy mercy and grace I will depend;
and God shows that it was a valid plea and prevailing, for he makes it appear
both that he is God and not man and that he is
his God. 3. He resolves to
do him good:
I will surely have mercy upon him, saith the Lord, Note, God
has mercy in store, rich mercy, sure mercy, suitable mercy, for all that in
sincerity seek him and submit to him; and the more we are afflicted for sin the
better prepared we are for the comforts of that mercy.
III. Gracious excitements and encouragements given to the people
of God in Babylon to prepare for their return to their own land. Let them not
tremble and lose their spirits; let them not trifle and lose their time; but
with a firm resolution and a close application address themselves to their
journey, v. 21, 22. 1. They must think of nothing but of coming back to their
own country, out of which they had been driven:
"Turn again, O virgin of
Israel! a virgin to be again espoused to thy God;
turn again to these thy
cities; though they are laid waste and in ruins, they are
thy cities,
which thy God gave thee, and therefore
turn again to them." They
must be content in Babylon no longer than till they had liberty to return to
Zion. 2. They must return the same way that they went, that the remembrance of
the sorrows which attended them, or which their fathers had told them of, in
such and such places upon the road, the sight of which would, by a local memory,
put them in mind of them, might make them the more thankful for their
deliverance. Those that have departed from God into the bondage of sin must
return by the way in which they went astray, to the duties they neglected, must
do
their first works. 3. They must engage themselves and all that is within
them in this affair:
Set thy heart towards the highway; bring thy mind to
it; consider thy duty, the interest, and go about it with a good-will. Note, The
way from Babylon to Zion, from the bondage of sin to the glorious liberty of God's
children, is a highway; it is right, it is plain, it is safe, it is well-tracked
(Isa. 35:8); yet none are likely to walk in it, unless they
set their hearts
towards it. 4. They must furnish themselves with all needful accommodations
for the journey:
Set thee up way-marks, and
make thee high heaps
or
pillars; send before to have such set up in all places where there is
any danger of missing the road. Let those that go first, and are best acquainted
with the way, set up such directions for those that follow. 5. They must compose
themselves for their journey:
How long will thou go about, O backsliding
daughter? Let not their minds fluctuate, or be uncertain about it, but
resolve upon it; let them not distract themselves with care and fear; let them
not seek about to creatures for assistance, not hurry hither and thither in
courting them, which had often been an instance of their backsliding from God;
but let them cast themselves upon God, and then let their minds be fixed. 6.
They are encouraged to do this by an assurance God gives them that he would
create
a new thing (strange and surprising)
in the earth (in that land),
a
woman shall compass a man. The church of God, that is weak and feeble as a
woman, altogether unapt for military employments and of a timorous spirit (Isa.
54:6), shall surround, besiege, and prevail against a mighty man. The church is
compared to a woman, Rev. 12:1. And, whereas we find
armies compassing the
camp of the saints (Rev. 20:9), now the camp of the saints shall compass
them. Many good interpreters understand this
new thing created in that
land to be the incarnation of Christ, which God an eye to in bringing them back
to that land, and which had sometimes been given them for a sign, Isa. 7:14;
9:6.
A woman, the virgin Mary, enclosed in her womb
the Mighty One;
for so
Geber, the word here used, signifies; and God is called
Gibbor,
the Mighty God (ch. 32:18), as also is Christ in Isa. 9:6, where his
incarnation is spoken of, as it is supposed to be here. He is
El-Gibbor,
the
mighty God. Let this assure them that God would not cast off this
people, for that blessing was to be among them, Isa. 65:8.
IV. A comfortable prospect given them of a happy settlement in
their own land again. 1. They shall have an interest in the esteem and good-will
of all their neighbours, who will give them a good word and put up a good prayer
for them (v. 23):
As yet or rather
yet again (though Judah and
Jerusalem have long been an astonishment and a hissing),
this speech shall be
used, as it was formerly,
concerning the land of Judah and the cities
thereof, The Lord bless you, O habitation of justice and mountain of holiness!
This intimates that they shall return much reformed and every way better; and
this reformation shall be so conspicuous that all about them shall take notice
of it. The
cities, that used to be nests of pirates, shall be
habitations
of justice; the
mountain of Israel (so the whole land is called, Ps.
78:54), and especially Mount Zion, shall be a
mountain of holiness.
Observe, Justice towards men, and holiness towards God, must go together.
Godliness and honesty are what God has joined, and let no man think to put them
asunder, not to make one to atone for the want of the other. It is well with a
people when they come out of trouble thus refined, and it is a sure presage of
further happiness. And we may with great comfort pray for the blessing of God
upon those houses that are
habitations of justice, those cities and
countries that are
mountains of holiness. There the Lord will undoubtedly
command the blessing. 2. There shall be great plenty of all good things
among them (v. 24, 25):
There shall dwell in Judah itself, even in it,
though it has now long lain waste, both husbandmen and shepherds, the two
ancient and honourable employments of Cain and Abel, Gen. 4:2. It is comfortable
dwelling in a
habitation of justice and a
mountain of holiness.
"And the husbandmen and shepherds shall eat of the fruit of their labours;
for I have
satiated the weary and sorrowful soul;" that is, those
that came weary from their journey, and have been long sorrowful in their
captivity, shall now enjoy great plenty. This is applicable to the spiritual
blessings God has in store for all true penitents, for all that are just and
holy; they shall be abundantly satisfied with divine graces and comforts. In the
love and favour of God the weary soul shall find rest and the sorrowful soul
joy.
V. The prophet tells us what pleasure the discovery of this
brought to his mind, v. 26. The foresights God had given him sometimes of the
calamities of Judah and Jerusalem were exceedingly painful to him (as ch. 4:19),
but these views were pleasant ones, though at a distance.
"Upon this I
awaked, overcome with joy, which burst the fetters of sleep; and I reflected
upon my dream, and it was such as had made
my sleep sweet to me; I was
refreshed, as men are with quiet sleep." Those may sleep sweetly that lie
down and rise up in the favour of God and in communion with him. Nor is any
prospect in this world more pleasing to good men, and good ministers, than that
of the flourishing state of the church of God. What can we see with more
satisfaction than
the good of Jerusalem, all the days of our life, and peace
upon Israel?
Verses 27-34
The prophet, having found his sleep sweet, made so by the
revelations of divine grace, sets himself to sleep again, in hopes of further
discoveries, and is not disappointed; for it is here further promised,
I. That the people of God shall become both numerous and
prosperous. Israel and Judah shall be replenished both with men and cattle, as
if they were sown with the seed of both, v. 27. They shall increase and multiply
like a field sown with corn; and this is the product of God's blessing (v.
23), for whom God blessed, to them he said,
Be fruitful. This should be a
type of the wonderful increase of the gospel-church. God will build them, and
plant them, v. 28. He
will watch over them to do them good; no
opportunity shall be lost that may further their prosperity. Every thing for a
long time had turned so much against them, and all occurrences did so transpire
to ruin them, that it seemed as if God had
watched over them to pluck up and
to throw down; but now every thing that falls out shall happily fall in to
strengthen and advance their interests. God will be as ready to comfort those
that repent of their sins, and are humbled for them, as he is to punish those
that continue in love with their sins, and are hardened in them.
II. That they shall be reckoned with no further for the sins of
their fathers (v. 29, 30),:
They shall say no more (they shall have no
more occasion to say) that
God visits the iniquity of the parents upon the
children, which God had done in the captivity, for the sins of their
ancestors came into the account against them, particularly those of Manasseh:
this they had complained of as a hardship. Other scriptures justify God in this
method of proceeding, and our Saviour tells the wicked Jews in his days that
they should smart for their fathers' sins, because they persisted in them, Mt.
23:35, 36. But it is here promised that this severe dispensation with them
should now be brought to an end, that God would proceed no further in his
controversy with them for their fathers' sins, but remember for them his
covenant with their fathers and do them good according to that covenant:
They
shall no more complain, as they have done, that
the fathers have eaten
sour grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge (which speaks
something of an absurdity, and is an invidious reflection upon God's
proceedings), but
every one shall die for his own iniquity still; though
God will cease to punish them in their national capacity, yet he will still
reckon with particular persons that provoke him. Note, Public salvations will
give no impunity, no security, to private sinners: still every man that
eats
the sour grapes shall have his
teeth set on edge. Note, Those that
eat forbidden fruit, how tempting soever it looks, will find it a
sour grape,
and it will
set their teeth on edge; sooner or later they will feel from
it and reflect upon it with bitterness. There is as direct a tendency in sin to
make a man uneasy as there is in sour grapes to set the teeth on edge.
III. That God will renew his covenant with them, so that all
these blessings they shall have, not by providence only, but by promise, and
thereby they shall be both sweetened and secured. But this covenant refers to
gospel times, the latter days that
shall come; for of gospel grace the
apostle understands it (Heb. 8:8, 9, etc.), where this whole passage is quoted
as a summary of the covenant of grace made with believers in Jesus Christ.
Observe, 1. Who the persons are with whom this covenant is made
with the
house of Israel and Judah, with the gospel church,
the Israel of God
on which
peace shall be (Gal. 6:16), with the spiritual seed of believing
Abraham and praying Jacob. Judah and Israel had been two separate kingdoms, but
were united after their return, in the joint favours God bestowed upon them; so
Jews and Gentiles were in the gospel church and covenant. 2. What is the nature
of this covenant in general: it is a
new covenant and
not according to
the covenant made with them when they came out of Egypt; not as if that made
with them at Mount Sinai were a covenant of nature and innocency, such as was
made with Adam in the day he was created; no, that was, for substance, a
covenant of grace, but it was a dark dispensation of that covenant in comparison
with this in gospel times. Sinners were saved by that covenant upon their
repentance, and faith in a Messiah to come, whose blood, confirming that
covenant, was typified by that of the legal sacrifices, Ex. 24:7, 8. Yet this
may upon many accounts be called new, in comparison with that; the ordinances
and promises are more spiritual and heavenly, and the discoveries much more
clear. That covenant God made with them when he
took them by the hand, as
they had been blind, or lame, or weak,
to lead them out of the land of Egypt,
which covenant they broke. Observe, It was God that made this covenant, but
it was the people that broke it; for our salvation is of God, but our sin and
ruin are of ourselves. It was an aggravation of their breach of it that God
was
a husband to them, that he had espoused them to himself; it was a
marriage-covenant that was between him and them, which they broke by idolatry,
that spiritual adultery. It is a great aggravation of our treacherous departures
from God that he has been a husband to us, a loving, tender, careful husband,
faithful to us, and yet we false to him. 3. What are the particular articles of
his covenant. They all contain spiritual blessings; not, "I will give them
the land of Canaan and a numerous issue," but, "I will give them
pardon, and peace, and grace, good heads and good hearts." He promises,
(1.) That he will incline them to their duty;
I will put my law in their
inward part and write it in their heart; not, I will give them a new law (as
Mr. Gataker well observes), for Christ
came not to destroy the law, but to
fulfil it; but the law shall be written in their hearts by the finger of the
Spirit as formerly it was written in the tables of stone. God writes his law in
the hearts of all believers, makes it ready and familiar to them, at hand when
they have occasion to use it, as that which is
written in the heart, Prov.
3:3. He makes them in care to observe it, for that which we are solicitous about
is said to lie near our hearts. He works in them a disposition to obedience, a
conformity of thought and affection to the rules of the divine law, as that of
the copy to the original. This is here promised, and ought to be prayed for,
that our duty may be done conscientiously and with delight. (2.) That he will
take them into relation to himself:
I will be their God, a God
all-sufficient to them,
and they shall be my people, a loyal obedient
people to me. God's being to us a God is the summary of all happiness; heaven
itself is no more, Heb. 11:16; Rev. 21:3. Our being to him a people may be taken
either as the condition on our part (those and those only shall have God to be
to them a God that are truly willing to engage themselves to be to him a people)
or as a further branch of the promise that God will by his grace make us his
people, a
willing people, in the day of his power; and, whoever are his
people, it is his grace that makes them so. (3.) That there shall be an
abundance of the knowledge of God among all sorts of people, and this will have
an influence upon all good: for those that rightly know God's name will seek
him, and serve him, and put their trust in him (v. 34):
All shall know me;
all shall be welcome to the knowledge of God and shall have the means of that
knowledge;
his ways shall be known upon earth, whereas, for many ages,
in
Judah only was God known. Many more shall know God than did in the Old
Testament times, which among the Gentiles were times of ignorance, the true God
being to them an unknown God. The things of God shall in gospel times be made
more plain and intelligible, and level to the capacities of the meanest, than
they were while Moses had a
veil upon his face. There shall be such a
general knowledge of God that there shall not be so much need as had formerly
been of teaching. Some take it as a hyperbolical expression (and the dulness of
the Jews needed such expressions to awaken them), designed only to show that the
knowledge of God in gospel times should vastly exceed that knowledge of him
which they had under the law. Or perhaps it intimates that in gospel times there
shall be such great plenty of public preaching, statedly and constantly, by men
authorized and appointed to
preach the word in season and out of season,
much beyond what was under the law, that there shall be less need than there was
then of fraternal teaching, by a neighbour and a brother. The priests preached
but now and then, and in the temple, and to a few in comparison; but now all
shall or may know God by frequenting the assemblies of Christians, wherein,
through all parts of the church, the good knowledge of God shall be taught. Some
give this sense of it (Mr. Gataker mentions it), That many shall have such
clearness of understanding in the things of God that they may seem rather to
have been taught by some immediate irradiation than by any means of instruction.
In short, the things of God shall by the gospel of Christ be brought to a
clearer light than ever (2 Tim. 1:10), and the people of God shall by the grace
of Christ be brought to a clearer sight of those things than ever, Eph. 1:17,
18. (4.) That, in order to all these blessings, sin shall be pardoned. This is
made the reason of all the rest:
For I will forgive their iniquity, will
not impute that to them, nor deal with them according to the desert of that,
will
forgive and forget:
I will remember their sin no more. It is sin that
keeps good things from us, that stops the current of God's favours; let sin
betaken away by pardoning mercy, and the obstruction is removed, and divine
grace runs down like a river, like a mighty stream.
Verses 35-40
Glorious things have been spoken in the foregoing verses
concerning the gospel church, which that epocha of the Jewish church that was to
commence at the return from captivity would at length terminate in, and which
all those promises were to have their full accomplishment in. But may we depend
upon these promises? Yes, we have here a ratification of them, and the utmost
assurance imaginable given of the perpetuity of the blessings contained in them.
The great thing here secured to us is that while the world stands God will have
a church in it, which, though sometimes it may be brought very low, shall yet be
raised again, and its interests re-established; it is
built upon a rock, and
the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Now here are two things
offered for the confirmation of our faith in this matterthe building of the
world and the rebuilding of Jerusalem.
I. The building of the world, and the firmness and lastingness
of that building, are evidences of the power and faithfulness of that God who
has undertaken the establishment of his church.
He that built all things
at first
is God (Heb. 3:4), and the same is he that makes all things now.
The constancy of the glories of the kingdom of nature may encourage us to depend
upon the divine promise for the continuance of the glories of the kingdom of
grace, for
this is as the waters of Noah, Isa. 54:9. Let us observe here,
1. The glories of the kingdom of nature, and infer thence how
happy those are that have this God, the God of nature, to be their God for ever
and ever. Take notice, (1.) Of the steady and regular motion of the heavenly
bodies, which God is the first mover and supreme director of:
He gives the
sun for a light by day (v. 35), not only made it at first to be so, but
still gives it to be so; for the light and heat, and all the influences of the
sun, continually depend upon its great Creator. He gives
the ordinances of
the moon and stars for a light by night; their motions are called
ordinances
both because they are regular and by rule and because they are determined and
under rule. See Job 38:31-33. (2.) Take notice of the government of the sea,
and the check that is given to its proud billows:
The Lord of hosts divides
the sea, or (as some read it)
settles the sea, when the waves thereof
roar (divide et imperadivide and rule); when it is most tossed God keeps
it within compass (Jer. 5:22), and soon quiets it and makes it calm again. The
power of God is to be magnified by us, not only in maintaining the regular
motions of the heavens, but in controlling the irregular motions of the seas.
(3.) Take notice of the vastness of the heavens and the unmeasurable extent of
the firmament; he must needs be a great God who manages such a great world as
this is; the
heavens above cannot be measured (v. 37), and yet God fills
them. (4.) Take notice of the mysteriousness even of that part of the creation
in which our lot is cast and which we are most conversant with.
The
foundations of the earth cannot be searched out beneath, for the Creator
hangs
the earth upon nothing (Job 26:7), and we
know not how the foundations
thereof are fastened, Job 38:6. (5.) Take notice of the immovable
stedfastness of all these (v. 36):
These ordinances cannot depart from before
God; he has all the hosts of heaven and earth continually under his eye and
all the motions of both; he has established them, and they abide,
abide
according to his ordinance, for all are his servants, Ps. 119:90, 91. The
heavens are often clouded, and the sun and moon often eclipsed, the earth may
quake and the sea be tossed, but they all keep their place, are moved, but not
removed. Herein we must acknowledge the power, goodness, and faithfulness of the
Creator.
2. The securities of the kingdom of grace inferred hence: we may
be confident of this very thing that
the seed of Israel shall not cease from
being a nation, for the spiritual Israel, the gospel church, shall be
a
holy nation, a peculiar people, 1 Pt. 2:9. When Israel according to the
flesh is no longer a nation the
children of the promise are counted for the
seed (Rom. 9:8) and God
will not cast off all the seed of Israel, no,
not
for all that they have done, though they have done very wickedly, v.
37. He justly might cast them off, but he will not. Though he cast them out from
their land, and cast them down for a time, yet he will not cast them off. Some
of them he casts off, but not all; to this the apostle seems to refer (Rom.
11:1),
Hath God cast away his people? God forbid that we should think so!
For (v. 5)
at this time there is a remnant, enough to save the credit of
the promise that God
will not cast off all the seed of Israel, though
many among them throw away themselves by unbelief. Now we may be assisted in the
belief of this by considering, (1.) That the God that has undertaken the
preservation of the church is a God of almighty power, who
upholds all things
by his almighty
word. Our help stands in his name who made heaven and
earth, and therefore can do any thing. (2.) That God would not take all this
care of the world but that he designs to have some glory to himself out of it;
and how shall he have it but by securing to himself a church in it, a people
that
shall be to him for a name and a praise? (3.) That if the order of
the creation therefore continues firm because it was well-fixed at first, and is
not altered because it needs no alteration, the method of grace shall for the
same reason continue invariable, as it was a first well settled. (4.) That he
who has promised to preserve a church for himself has approved himself faithful
to the word which he has spoken concerning the stability of the world. He that
is true to his covenant with Noah and his sons, because he established it for an
everlasting covenant (Gen. 9:9, 16), will not, we may be sure, be false
to his covenant with Abraham and his seed, his spiritual seed, for that also is
an
everlasting covenant. Even that which they have done amiss, though
they have done much, shall not prevail to defeat the gracious intentions of the
covenant. See Ps. 89:30, etc.
II. The rebuilding of Jerusalem which was now in ruins, and the
enlargement and establishment of that, shall be an earnest of these great things
that God will do for the gospel church, the
heavenly Jerusalem, v. 38-40.
The days will come, though they may be long in coming, when, 1. Jerusalem
shall be entirely built again, as large as ever it was; the dimensions are here
exactly described by the places through which the circumference passed, and no
doubt the wall which Nehemiah built, and which, the more punctually to fulfil
the prophecy, began about the
tower of Hananeel, here mentioned (Neh.
3:1), enclosed as much ground as is here intended, though we cannot certainly
determine the places here called
the gate of the corner, the hill Gareb,
etc. 2. When built it shall be consecrated to God and to his service. It
shall
be built to the Lord (v. 38), and even the suburbs and fields adjacent
shall
be holy unto the Lord. It shall not be polluted with idols as formerly, but
God shall be praised and honoured there; the whole city shall be as it were one
temple, one holy place, as the new Jerusalem is, which
therefore has no
temple, because it is all temple. 3. Being thus built by virtue of the promise
of God,
it shall not be plucked up, nor thrown down, any more for ever;
that is, it shall continue very long, the time of the new city from the return
to its last destruction being fully as long as that of the old from David to the
captivity. But this promise was to have its full accomplishment in the gospel
church, which, as it is the spiritual Israel, and therefore God will not cast it
off, so it is the holy city, and therefore all the powers of men
shall not
pluck it up, nor throw it down. It may lie waste for a time, as Jerusalem
did, but shall recover itself, shall weather the storm and gain its point,
and
the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
Chapter 31:
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| Matthew Henry
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