JEREMIAH CHAPTER 10 They are forbid to be afraid of the tokens of
heaven, and consult idols, which are vain, JEREMIAH 10:1, and not to
be compared with the majesty and power of God, who is Jacob's portion,
JEREMIAH 10:6. The Babylonians destroy the temple; the brutish pastors
and the flocks are scat... [ Continue Reading ]
LEARN NOT THE WAY OF THE HEATHEN: the Jews being to live among the
Chaldeans in their captivity, where many of them were already, the
prophet in this sermon admonisheth them against the superstitions of
the Chaldean idolatries, which he understands here by HEATHEN, who
were also much addicted to ast... [ Continue Reading ]
THE CUSTOMS OF THE PEOPLE ARE VAIN, i.e. such courses, institutions,
idolatrous customs, and ceremonies as these, that many people follow,
they are vain, and it is a foolish and wicked thing that any that
profess the true God should give heed to such lying vanities. ONE
CUTTETH A TREE OUT OF THE FOR... [ Continue Reading ]
A further description of their workmanship, having no other comeliness
but what they confer upon it, and they no greater security or
certainty of it than as they can with hammer and nail make it fast,
and fix it to some place, the wooden god being not able to preserve
itself from falling; therefore... [ Continue Reading ]
THEY ARE UPRIGHT AS THE PALM TREE; the nature of which is to grow
upright and tall, without any branchings, till it comes to the top,
thereby possibly representing majesty. BUT SPEAK NOT; looking as if
they were about to speak, standing in a speaking posture; but have not
a word to utter, being only... [ Continue Reading ]
OLBHeb;
FORASMUCH; this particle Nj _min_, is to be taken here causally, and
refers either to what goes before, showing there is no comparison
between God and idols; or rather, to what follows, as the ground and
reason of all due subjection to God, as in the next verse. THY NAME IS
GREAT, or, thou a... [ Continue Reading ]
WHO WOULD NOT FEAR THEE, O KING OF NATIONS? he is called a great King,
ZECHARIAH 1:14: q.d. Thou, by whom all nations are governed, and all
affairs in them disposed, and by none else, who would worship any but
thee, or be afraid of any but thee, seeing it is fit for, and
therefore can belong to, non... [ Continue Reading ]
THEY ARE ALTOGETHER BRUTISH: the awe that the idol doth impress upon
carnal men's minds, and thereby taking them off from a due
apprehension of the essence of God, doth keep them between such hope
and fear, that they become as senseless and as inapprehensive of any
true worship as brutes. AND FOOLIS... [ Continue Reading ]
SILVER SPREAD INTO PLATES; it was not wood washed with gold, nor massy
silver or gold, but covered over _with plates of silver or gold_,
EXODUS 39:3. FROM TARSHISH; from some remote place, probably from
Spain, whence the best gold came; _Tarshish_ is the proper name of a
sea-town in Cilicia, EZEKIEL... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LORD IS THE TRUE GOD: q. d. All these are but false gods: Jehovah
is the alone true God; they are but lies, and the teachers of lies.
God is truth itself, and that both in regard of his _essence_, as it
is ascribed to Christ, 1 JOHN 5:20; and also in regard of his
_faithfulness_, NUMBERS 23:19 P... [ Continue Reading ]
SAY UNTO THEM, viz. to your great lords, the Babylonians, when they
shall solicit you to worship idols. THE GODS THAT HAVE NOT MADE THE
HEAVENS AND THE EARTH: this seems to have some allusion to a saying
common among those Greeks that held one supreme Deity, _Let him that
saith he is a god make anot... [ Continue Reading ]
In this and the next verse the prophet enumerates some particulars
wherein he is transcendently above all creatures which he hath made,
much more above idols, which are the works of man's hands. THE EARTH,
ACTS 14:15, i.e. the whole globe, consisting of waters as well as
earth. BY HIS POWER: it must... [ Continue Reading ]
As in the former verse he relates God's unspeakable power and wisdom
in his creating and fixing the stated order of things; so here he
further sets it forth in his providential ordering and disposing their
accidents. WHEN HE UTTERETH HIS VOICE, THERE IS A MULTITUDE OF WATERS;
i.e. either at his comm... [ Continue Reading ]
EVERY MAN IS BRUTISH IN HIS KNOWLEDGE: some limit it to the makers of
these idols, that can employ their arts and wits to no better purpose
than to frame such stocks into gods; this suits the next expression.
Men are bewitched and besotted by these things, so as to see no more
into their folly than... [ Continue Reading ]
THEY ARE VANITY, AND THE WORK OF ERRORS; either in their rise, as
springing from men of corrupt minds, or the foundation of them; a
metonymy of the effect; teachers and encouragers of _lies_, HABAKKUK
2:18; things rather to be scoffed at and derided, than adored and
worshipped; and it is expressed i... [ Continue Reading ]
OLBHeb;
THE PORTION OF JACOB; a periphrasis for the true God, who vouchsafeth
to be the portion of his people and to be so called, DEUTERONOMY 32:9
PSALMS 16:5, and many other places, because he is in covenant with his
people in the Messiah, whose co-heirs are as dear to him as a portion
is that des... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet now enters upon another subject, and probably begins
another sermon. GATHER UP THY WARES, i.e. every thing thou hast any
advantage by, not only thy domestic concerns, but all thy traffic and
merchandise, wherever thou hast any concerns in the land, as men use
to do in case of invasion by... [ Continue Reading ]
I WILL SLING OUT; it notes with how much violence, and speed, and with
ease the Chaldeans shall hurry away the people into Babylon, as the
stone doth swiftly and violently pass which is thrown out of a sling,
with so much ease, and therefore it is said at _at this once_; I will
not delay, but make o... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the prophet doth not so much express his own sorrow, though that
be great, as personate the sorrow and complaint that the land, i.e.
the people of the land, manifest. or at least ought to do; which
because they do not, causeth no little grief in the prophet himself,
who cannot but be affected w... [ Continue Reading ]
He proceeds in his prosopopoeia to bring in the land, or the
inhabitants thereof, enumerating their calamities, and by a metaphor
sets out the overthrow of the land, or Jerusalem, by the breaking of
the CORDS of a _tabernacle_, the use whereof is to fasten it on every
side to stakes in the ground, w... [ Continue Reading ]
THE PASTORS ARE BECOME BRUTISH; not that the prophet takes off all
blame from the people, but that he layeth it chiefly upon the rulers
of church and state; for so is pastor taken frequently. See JEREMIAH
23:1, AND HAVE NOT SOUGHT THE LORD; not sought unto him, and taken him
into their counsels. THE... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet had divers times sounded this alarm in their ears, but to
very little purpose; his words seemed but as idle tales, they believed
him not: he speaks of it partly as one conceiving what dreadful
commotions and concussions would be upon the land by the clattering of
arms, prancings and neig... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet finding that all he could say prevailed nothing upon this
people, but they rather grew worse, he turns himself to God. How far
these words concern Pelagianism, or free-will, either one way or
other, or whether at all, concerns not this comment; they seem
literally to be the words of the... [ Continue Reading ]
O LORD, CORRECT ME: q.d. Seeing thou wilt bring the Chaldeans upon us
to punish us for our sins, let it be a correction only, not a
destruction and utter ruin. BUT WITH JUDGMENT; let it be in measure,
in judgment, i.e. in wisdom, proportioning it as a father toward his
children, JEREMIAH 30:11; for... [ Continue Reading ]
POUR OUT THY FURY UPON THE HEATHEN: this may imply both petition, that
God would do so, and prediction, that God will certainly do so, which
toward the close of the prophecy we find was fulfilled, God first
sending the king of Babylon to overthrow divers of the heathen
nations, and then Babylon itse... [ Continue Reading ]