This Chapter contains severe threatenings, by which God designed in
time to warn the Jews, that if there was any hope of repentance, they
might be restored by fear to the right way, and that others, the
wicked and the reprobate, might be rendered inexcusable, and also that
the faithful might fortify... [ Continue Reading ]
He then adds, _Howl thou, fir-tree, for the cedar has fallen_. No
doubt the Prophet by naming Lebanon, mentioning a part for the whole,
meant the whole of Judea: and it appears evident from the context that
the most remarkable places are here mentioned; but yet the Prophet’s
design was to show, that... [ Continue Reading ]
He then adds, _The voice of the howling of shepherds; for their
excellency_, or their courage, is laid waste. Here he has אדר,
_ader_, and before אדירים, _adirim_, in the masculine gender. We
see then that the Prophet confirms the same thing in other words,
“Howl now,” he says, “shall the shepherds.... [ Continue Reading ]
Here is given a reason why God purposed to deal so severely with his
people — even because their obstinacy deserved no pardon. As then in
the beginning of the chapter the Prophet threatened ruin to the Jews,
so now he reminds them that their punishment was nigh, and that they
could not be more gentl... [ Continue Reading ]
He afterwards adds another circumstance, which shows still further the
wonderful and ineffable goodness of God, — that he had been a
shepherd of a flock, which had not only been harassed by wolves and
robbers, but also by its own shepherds. In short, the import of the
whole is, — that though wolves... [ Continue Reading ]
He then adds, _And he who fed then has not spared _them. The meaning
is, that the people, according to the opinions commonly entertained,
were not worthy of mercy and kindness. Hence, as I have said, the
wonderful goodness of God shines forth more clearly; for he
condescended to take the care of a f... [ Continue Reading ]
He resumes here the thread of the discourse, which he had shortly
before broken off; for he sets forth what had not yet been
sufficiently expressed — that the ingratitude of the people, with
which obstinacy was especially united, deserved entire ruin, and that
now there was no hope of pardon; for th... [ Continue Reading ]
At the beginning of the verse the Prophet continues the same subject,
that God spared no pains in ruling the people, but patiently bore with
many grievances; for it is the duty of every good and careful husband
man to inspect often his flock, and to change his shepherd, when he
finds him idle and in... [ Continue Reading ]
God now declares what had been briefly mentioned before, — that his
judgment could not be deemed cruel, for the people had been extremely
wicked, and their wickedness deserved extreme punishment. It seems
indeed to be a simple narrative; but God here defends his own cause,
for he had tried all means... [ Continue Reading ]
He confirms the same truth, but a metaphor is introduced: for he says,
that when he freed himself from the office of a shepherd, he broke the
two rods, even _Beauty _and _Gathering_. He speaks of the first staff,
because things were in a confusion in Judea, before the people were
wholly cut off; for... [ Continue Reading ]
He concludes by saying, that _in that day the covenant was broken_. By
which words he intimates that it was not by chance that the law was
destroyed, and that the Jews departed from the just government of God,
but that it was through the dreadful vengeance of God. In that day
then: this is emphatica... [ Continue Reading ]
God now adds another crime, by which he discovers the wickedness of
the people; for they estimated all the labor he had bestowed at a cry
insignificant price. He had before complained of ingratitude; but more
fully detected was the iniquity and baseness of the people, when they
thus regarded as of n... [ Continue Reading ]
Hence he adds, _Jehovah said to me, throw it to the potter_. “This
truly is my reward! Cast it to the potter, that he may get some bricks
or coverings to repair the temple; if there are any parts of the
temple dilapidated, let the potter get thereby some bricks, or let any
humble artisan have such a... [ Continue Reading ]
There is here set before us the extreme vengeance of God in scattering
his people, so that there would be no longer any union between the
children of Abraham. We have seen that the Prophet took two staves or
crooks to execute the office of a shepherd in ruling the people. The
first staff he said was... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Prophet teaches us, that when God shall renounce the care of
his people there will be some weak form of government; but it is
evident that God would no longer perform the office of a shepherd; as
though he had said, that the people would be so deserted, that they
would yet think themselves... [ Continue Reading ]
_Behold_, he says, _I will set a shepherd in the land_. God had now,
as we have said, renounced the office of a shepherd; but he afterwards
set over them wolves, and thieves, and robbers, instead of shepherds,
that is, when he executed his dreadful judgment on the Jews: and he
shows at the same time... [ Continue Reading ]
In this verse the Prophet teaches us, that though God would inflict a
deserved punishment on the Jews, yet the shepherds themselves would
not escape his vengeance; and thus he reminds them, that even in such
a confused and depressed state of things, he would still in some
degree remember his covenan... [ Continue Reading ]