Chapter 44:
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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 44
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. An awakening sermon which Jeremiah
preaches to the Jews in Egypt, to reprove them for their idolatry,
notwithstanding the warnings given them both by the word and the rod of God and
to threaten the judgments of God against them for it (v. 1-14). II. The
impudent and impious contempt which the people put upon this admonition, and
their declared resolution to persist in their idolatries notwithstanding, in
despite of God and Jeremiah (v. 15-19). III. The sentence passed upon them for
their obstinacy, that they should all be cut off and perish in Egypt except a
very small number; and, as a sign or earnest of it, the king of Egypt should
shortly fall into the hands of the king of Babylon and be unable any longer to
protect them (v. 20-30).
Verses 1-14
The Jews in Egypt were now dispersed into various parts of the
country, into
Migdol, and Noph, and other places, and Jeremiah was sent
on an errand from God to them, which he delivered either when he had the most of
them together
in Pathros (v. 15) or going about from place to place
preaching to this purport. He delivered this message in the name of
the Lord
of hosts, the God of Israel, and in it,
I. God puts them in mind of the desolations of Judah and
Jerusalem, which, though the captives
by the rivers of Babylon were daily
mindful of (Ps. 137:1), the fugitives in the cities of Egypt seem to have
forgotten and needed to be put in mind of, though, one would have thought, they
had not been so long out of sight as to become out of mind (v. 2):
You have
seen what a deplorable condition Judah and Jerusalem are brought into; now
will you consider whence those desolations came? From the wrath of God; it was
his fury and his anger that kindled the fire which made Jerusalem and
the
cities of Judah waste and desolate (v. 6); whoever were the instruments of
the destruction, they were but instruments: it was a destruction from the
Almighty.
II. He puts them in mind of the sins that brought those
desolations upon Judah and Jerusalem. It was for
their wickedness. It was
this that
provoked God to anger, and especially their idolatry, their
serving
other gods (v. 3) and giving that honour to counterfeit deities, the
creatures of their own fancy and the work of their own hands, which should have
been given to the true God only. They forsook the God who was known among them,
and whose name was great, for gods that they knew not, upstart deities, whose
original was obscure and not worth taking notice of:
"Neither they nor
you, nor your fathers, could give any rational account why
the God of
Israel was exchanged for such impostors." They knew not that they were
gods; nay, they could not but know that they were no gods.
III. He puts them in mind of the frequent and fair warnings he
had given them by his word not to serve other gods, the contempt of which
warnings was a great aggravation of their idolatry, v. 4.
The prophets
were sent with a great deal of care to call to them, saying,
Oh! do not this
abominable thing that I hate. It becomes us to speak of sin with the utmost
dread and detestation as an abominable thing; it is certainly so, for it is that
which God hates, and we are sure that
hid judgment is according to truth.
Call it grievous, call it odious, that we may by all means possible put
ourselves and others out of love with it. It becomes us to give warning of the
danger of sin, and the fatal consequences of it, with all seriousness and
earnestness:
"Oh! do not do it. If you love God, do not, for it is
provoking to him; if you love your own souls do not, for it is destructive to
them." Let conscience do this for us in an hour of temptation, when we are
ready to yield. O take heed!
do not this abominable thing which the Lord
hates; for, if God hates it, though shouldst hate it. But did they regard what
God said to them? No:
"They hearkened not, nor inclined their ear
(v. 5); they still persisted in their idolatries; and you see what came of it,
therefore God's
anger was poured out upon them,
as at this day.
Now this was intended for warning to you, who have not only heard the judgments
of God's mouth, as they did, but have likewise seen the judgments of his hand,
by which you should be startled and awakened, for they were inflicted
in
terrorem, that others might hear and fear and do no more as they did, lest
they should fare as they fared."
IV. He reproves them for, and upbraids them with, their
continued idolatries, now that they had come into Egypt (v. 8): You
burn
incense to other gods in the land of Egypt. Therefore God forbade them to go
into Egypt, because he knew it would be a snare to them. Those whom God sent
into the land of the Chaldeans, though that was an idolatrous country, were
there, by the power of God's grace, weaned from idolatry; but those who went
against God's mind into the land of the Egyptians were there, by the power of
their own corruptions, more wedded than ever to their idolatries; for, when we
thrust ourselves without cause or call into places of temptation, it is just
with God to leave us to ourselves. In doing this, 1. They did a great deal of
injury to themselves and their families:
"You commit this great evil
against your souls (v. 7), you wrong them, you deceive them with that which
is false, you destroy them, for it will be fatal to them." Note, In sinning
against God we sin
against our own souls. "It is the ready way to
cut
yourselves off from all comfort and hope (v. 8), to cut off your name and
honour; so that you will, both by your sin and by your misery, become
a curse
and a reproach among all nations. It will become a proverb, As wretched as a
Jew. It is the ready way
to cut off from you all your relations, all that
you shave have joy of and have your families built up in,
man and woman,
child and suckling, so that Judah shall be a land lost for want of heirs."
2. They filled up the measure of the iniquity of their fathers, and, as if that
had been too little for them, added to it (v. 9):
"Have you forgotten
the wickedness of those who are gone before you, that you are not humbled
for it as you ought to be, and afraid of the consequences of it?"
Have
you forgotten the punishments of your fathers? so some read it. "Do you
not know how dear their idolatry cost them? And yet dare you continue in that
vain conversation received by tradition from you fathers, though you received
the curse with it?" He reminds them of the sins and punishments
of the
kings of Judah, who, great as they were, escaped not the judgments of God
for their idolatry; yea, and they should have taken warning by
the wickedness
of their wives, who had seduced them to idolatry. In the original it is,
And
of his wives, which, Dr. Lightfoot thinks, tacitly reflects upon Solomon's
wives, particularly his Egyptian wives, to whom the idolatry of the kings of
Judah owed its original. "Have you forgotten this, and what came of it,
that you dare venture upon the same wicked courses?" See Neh. 13:18, 26.
"Nay, to come to your own times,
Have you forgotten your own wickedness
and the wickedness of your wives, when you lived in prosperity in Jerusalem,
and what ruin it brought upon you? But, alas! to what purpose do I speak to
them?" (says God to the prophet, v. 10)
"they are not humbled unto
this day, by all the humbling providences that they have been under.
They
have not feared, nor walked in my law." Note, Those that walk not in
the law of God do thereby show that they are destitute of the fear of God.
V. He threatens their utter ruin for their persisting in their
idolatry now that they were in Egypt. Judgment is given against them, as before
(ch. 42:22), that they shall perish in Egypt; the decree has gone forth, and
shall not be called back. They
set their faces to go into the land of Egypt
(v. 12), were resolute in their purpose against God, and now God is resolute in
his purpose against them:
I will set my face to cut off all Judah, v. 11.
Those that think not only to affront, but to confront, God Almighty, will find
themselves outfaced; for
the face of the Lord is against those that do evil,
Ps. 34:16. It is here threatened concerning these idolatrous Jews in Egypt, 1.
That
they shall all be consumed, without exception; no degree nor order
among them shall escape:
They shall fall, from the least to the greatest
(v. 12),
high and low, rich and poor. 2. That
they shall be consumed
by the very same judgments which God made use of for the punishment of
Jerusalem,
the sword, famine, and pestilence, v. 12, 13. They shall not
be wasted by natural deaths, as Israel in the wilderness, but by these sore
judgments, which, by flying into Egypt, they thought to get out of the reach of.
3. That none (except a very few that will narrowly escape) shall ever
return
to the land of Judah again, v. 14. They thought, being nearer, that they
stood fairer for a return to their own land than those that were carried to
Babylon; yet those shall return, and these shall not; for the way in which God
has promised us any comfort is much surer than that in which we have projected
it for ourselves. Observe, Those that are fretful and discontented will be
uneasy and fond of change wherever they are. The Israelites, when they were in
the land of Judah, desired to go into Egypt (ch. 42:22), but when they were in
Egypt they desired to
return to the land of Judah again; they
lifted
up their soul to it (so it is in the margin), which denotes an earnest
desire. But, because they would not dwell there when God commanded it, they
shall not dwell they were they desire it. If we walk contrary to God, he will
walk contrary to us. How can those expect to be well off who would not know when
they were so, though God himself told them?
Verses 15-19
We have here the people's obstinate refusal to submit to the
power of the word of God in the mouth of Jeremiah. We have scarcely such an
instance of downright daring contradiction to God himself as this, or such an
avowed rebellion of the carnal mind. Observe,
I. The persons who thus set God and his judgments at defiance;
it was not some one that was thus obstinate, but the generality of the Jews; and
they were such as knew either themselves or their wives to be guilty of the
idolatry Jeremiah had reproved, v. 15. We find, 1. That the women had been more
guilty of idolatry and superstition than the men, not because the men stuck
closer to the true God and the true religion than the women, but, I fear,
because they were generally atheists, and were for no God and no religion at
all, and therefore could easily allow their wives to be of a false religion, and
to worship false gods. 2. That it was consciousness of guilt that made them
impatient of reproof:
They knew that their wives had burnt incense to other
gods, and that they had countenanced them in it,
and the women that stood
by knew that they had joined with them in their idolatrous usages; so that
what Jeremiah said touched them in a sore place, which made them
kick against
the pricks, as
children of Belial, that will not
bear the yoke.
II. The reply which these persons made to Jeremiah, and in him
to God himself; it is in effect the same with theirs who had the impudence to
say to the Almighty,
Depart from us; we desire not the knowledge of thy ways.
1. They declare their resolution not to do as God commanded
them, but what they themselves had a mind to do; that is, they would go on to
worship the moon, here called
the queen of heaven; yet some understand it
of the sun, which was much worshipped in Egypt (ch. 43:13) and had been so at
Jerusalem (2 Ki. 23:11), and they say that the Hebrew word for the sun being
feminine it may not unfitly be called
the queen of heaven. And others
understand it of all
the host of heaven, or
the frame of heaven,
the whole machine, ch. 7:18. These daring sinners do not now go about to make
excuses for their refusal to obey, nor suggest that Jeremiah spoke from himself
and not from God (as before, ch. 43:2), but they own that he spoke to them
in
the name of the Lord, and yet tell him flatly, in so many words,
"We
will not hearken unto thee; we will do that which is forbidden and run the
hazard of that which is threatened." Note, Those that live in disobedience
to God commonly grow worse and worse, and the heart is more and more hardened by
the deceitfulness of sin. Here is the genuine language of the rebellious
heart:
We will certainly do whatsoever thing goes forth out of our own mouth,
let God and his prophets say what they please to the contrary. What they said
many think who yet have not arrived at such a degree of impudence as to speak it
out. It is that which the young man would be at
in the days of his youth;
he would
walk in the way of his heart and the sight of his eyes, and
would have and do every thing he has a mind to, Eccl. 11:9.
2. They give some sort of reasons for their resolution; for the
most absurd and unreasonably wicked men will have something to say for
themselves, till the day comes when
every mouth shall be stopped.
(1.) They plead many of those things which the advocates for
Rome make the marks of a true church, and not only justify but magnify
themselves with; and these Jews have as much right to them as the Romanists
have. [1.] They plead antiquity: We are resolved
to burn incense to the queen
of heaven, for
our fathers did so; it is a practice that pleads
prescription; and why should we pretend to be wiser than our fathers? [2.] They
plead authority. Those that had power practised it themselves and prescribed it
to others:
Our kings and our princes did it, whom God set over us, and
who were of the seed of David. [3.] They plead unity. It was not here and there
one that did it, but
we, we all with one consent, we that are
a great
multitude (v. 15), we did it. [4.] They plead universality. It was not done
here and there, but
in the cities of Judah. [5.] They plead visibility.
It was not done in a corner, in dark and shady groves only, but
in the
streets, openly and publicly. [6.] They plead that it was the practice of
the mother-church, the holy see; it was not now learned first in Egypt, but it
had been done in
Jerusalem. [7.] They plead prosperity:
They had we
plenty of bread,
and of all good things; we
were well and saw no
evil. All the former pleas, I fear, were too true in fact; God's witnesses
against their idolatry were few and hid; Elijah though that he was left alone:
and this last might perhaps be true as to some particular persons, but, as to
their nation, they were still under rebukes for their rebellions, and there was
no
peace to those that went out or came in, 2 Chr. 15:5. But, supposing all to
be true, yet this does not at all excuse them from idolatry; it is the law of
God that we must be ruled and judged by, hot the practice of men.
(2.) They suggest that the judgments they had of late been under
were brought upon them for
leaving off to burn incense to the queen of
heaven, v. 18. So perversely did they misconstrue providence, though God, by
his prophets, had so often explained it to them, and the thing itself spoke the
direct contrary.
Since we forsook our idolatries
we have wanted all
things, and have been consumed by the sword, the true reason of which was
because they still retained their idols in their heart and an affection to their
old sins; but they would have it thought that it was because they had forsaken
the acts of sin. Thus the afflictions which should have been for their welfare,
to separate between them and their sins, being misinterpreted did but confirm
them in their sins. Thus, in the first ages of Christianity, when God chastised
the nations by any public calamities for opposing the Christians and persecuting
them, they put a contrary sense upon the calamities, as if they were sent to
punish them for conniving at the Christians and tolerating them, and cried,
Christianos
ad leonesThrow the Christians to the lions. Yet, if it had been true, as
they said here, that since they returned to the service of the true God, the God
of Israel, they had been in want and trouble, was that a reason why they should
revolt from him again? That was as much as to say that they served not him, but
their own bellies. Those who know God, and put their trust in him, will serve
him, though he starve them, though he slay them, though they never see a good
day with him in this world, being well assured that they shall not lose by him
in the end.
(3.) They plead that, though the women were most forward and
active in their idolatries, yet they did it with the consent and approbation of
their husbands; the women were busy to
make cakes for meat-offerings
to
the queen of heaven and to prepare
and pour out the drink-offerings,
v. 19. We found, before, that this was their work, ch. 7:18. "But
did we
do it
without our husbands, privately and unknown to them, so as to give
them occasion to be jealous of us? No; the fathers kindled the fire while the
women kneaded the dough; the men that were our heads, whom we were bound to
learn of and to be obedient to, taught us to do it by their example." Note,
It is sad when those who are in the nearest relation to each other, who should
quicken each other to that which is good and so help one another to heaven,
harden each other in sin and so ripen one another for hell. Some understand this
as spoken by the husbands (v. 15), who plead that they did not do it
without
their men, that is, without their elders and rulers, their great men, and
men in authority; but, because the making of the
cakes and the pouring
out of the
drink-offerings are expressly spoken of as the women's work
(ch. 7:18), it seems rather to be understood as their plea: but it was a
frivolous plea. What would it avail them to be able to say that it was according
to their husbands' mind, when they knew that it was contrary to their God's
mind?
Verses 20-30
Daring sinners may speak many a bold word and many a big word,
but, after all, God will have the last word; for he will be justified when he
speaks, and all flesh, even the proudest, shall be silent before him. Prophets
may be run down, but God cannot; nay, here the prophet would not.
I. Jeremiah has something to say to them from himself, which he
could say without a spirit of prophecy, and that was to rectify their mistake (a
wilful mistake it was) concerning the calamities they had been under and the
true intent and meaning of them. They said that these miseries came upon them
because they had now
left off burning incense to the queen of heaven.
"No," says he, "it was because you had formerly done it, not
because you had now left it off." When they gave him that answer, he
immediately replied (v. 20) that the incense which they and their fathers had
burnt to other gods did indeed go unpunished a great while, for God was
long-suffering towards them, and during the day of his patience it was perhaps,
as they said,
well with them, and they
saw no evil; but at length
they grew so provoking
that the Lord could no longer bear (v. 22), but
began a controversy with them, whereupon some of them did a little reform; their
sins left them, for so it might be said, rather than that they left their sins.
But their old guilt being still upon the score, and their corrupt inclinations
still the same, God remembered against them the idolatries of
their fathers,
their kings, and their princes, in the streets of Jerusalem, which they,
instead of being ashamed of, gloried in as a justification of them in their
idolatries; they
all came into his mind (v. 21), all the
abominations
which they had committed (v. 22) and all their disobedience to
the voice
of the Lord (v. 23), all were brought to account; and
therefore, to
punish them for these,
is their land a desolation and a curse, as at this day
(v. 22);
therefore, not for their late reformation, but for their old
transgressions, has all
this evil happened to them, as at this day, v.
23. Note, The right understanding of the cause of our troubles, one would think,
should go far towards the cure of our sins. Whatever
evil comes upon us,
it is
because we have sinned against the Lord, and should therefore
stand
in awe and sin not.
II. Jeremiah has something to say to them,
to the women
particularly, from
the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, They have given
their answer; now let them hear God's reply, v. 24.
Judah, that dwells
in
the land of Egypt, has God speaking to them, even there; that is their
privilege. Let them observe what he says; that is their duty, v. 26. Now God, in
his reply, tells them plainly,
1. That, since they were fully determined to persist in their
idolatry, he was fully determined to proceed in his controversy with them; if
they would go on to provoke him, he would go on to punish them, and see which
would get the better at last. God repeats what they had said (v. 25):
"You
and your wives are agreed in this obstinacy;
you have spoken with your
mouths and fulfilled with your hands; you have said it, and you stand to it,
have said it and go on to do accordingly,
We will surely perform our vows
that we have vowed, to burn incense to the queen of heaven," as if,
though it were a sin, yet their having vowed to do it were sufficient to justify
them in the doing of it; whereas no man can by his vow make that lawful to
himself, much less duty, which God has already made sin. "Well" (says
God),
"you will accomplish, you will perform, your wicked
vows:
now hear what is my vow, what
I have sworn by my great name;" and,
if
the Lord hath sworn, he
will not repent, since they have sworn
and will not repent.
With the froward he will show himself froward, Ps.
18:26. (1.) He had sworn that what little remains of religion there were among
them should be lost, v. 26. Though they joined with the Egyptians in their
idolatries, yet they continued upon many occasions to make mention of the name
of Jehovah, particularly in their solemn oaths; they said,
Jehovah liveth,
he is
the living God, so they owned him to be, though they worshipped
dead idols; they swear,
The Lord liveth (ch. 5:2), but I fear they
retained this form of swearing more in honour of their nation than of their God.
But God declares that his
name shall no more be thus
named by
any
man of Judah in all the land of Egypt; that is, there shall be no Jews
remaining to use this dialect of their country, or, if there be, they shall have
forgotten it and shall learn to swear, as the Egyptians do,
by the life of
Pharaoh, not of Jehovah. Note, Those are very miserable whom God has so far
left to themselves that they have quite forgotten their religion and lost all
the remains of their good education. Or this may intimate that God would take it
as an affront to him and would resent it accordingly, if they did make mention
of his name and profess any relation to him. (2.) He hath sworn that what little
remnant of people there was there should all be consumed (v. 27):
I will
watch over them for evil; no opportunity shall be let slip to bring some
judgment upon them,
until there be an end of them and they be rooted out.
Note, To those whom God finds impenitent sinners he will be found an implacable
Judge. And, when it comes to this, they
shall know (v. 28)
whose word
shall stand, mind or theirs. They said that they should recover themselves
when they returned to worship
the queen of heaven; God said they should
ruin themselves; and now the event will show which was in the right. The contest
between God and sinners is whose word shall stand, whose will shall be done, and
who shall get the better. Sinners say that they shall have peace though they go
on; God says they shall have no peace. But
when God judges he will overcome;
God's word shall stand, and not the sinner's.
2. He tells them that a very few of them should
escape the
sword, and in process of time
return into the land of Judah, a small
number (v. 28), next to none, in comparison with the great numbers that
should return out of the land of the Chaldeans. This seems designed to upbraid
those who boasted of their numbers that concurred in sin; there were none to
speak of that did not join in idolatry: "Well," says God, "and
there shall be as few
that shall
escape the sword and famine."
3. He gives them a sign that all these threatenings shall be
accomplished in their season, that they shall be consumed here in Egypt and
shall quite perish:
Pharaoh-hophra, the present
king of Egypt,
shall be delivered
into the hand of his enemies that seek his lifeof his
own rebellious subjects (so some) under Amasis, who usurped his throne
of
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon (so others), who invaded his kingdom; the
former is related by Herodotus, the latter by Josephus. It is likely that this
Pharaoh had tempted the Jews to idolatry by promises of his favour; however,
they depended upon him for his protection, and it would be more than a presage
of their ruin, it would be a step towards it, if he were gone. They expected
more from him than from Zedekiah king of Judah; he was a more potent and politic
prince. "But," says God,
"I will give him into the hand of his
enemies, as I gave Zedekiah." Note, Those creature-comforts and
confidences that we promise ourselves most from may fail us as soon as those
that we promise ourselves least from, for they are all what God makes them, not
what we fancy them.
The sacred history records not the accomplishment of this
prophecy, but its silence is sufficient; we hear no more of these Jews in Egypt,
and therefore conclude them, according to this prediction, lost there; for no
word of God shall fall to the ground.
Chapter 44:
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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
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