The prophecies against foreign nations are collected into one scroll
Jer. 46–49. Compare Isa. 13–23; Ezek. 25–32. They are arranged
in two great divisions:
(a) Jer. 46–49:33, spoken in connection with Jeremiah 25; and
(b) Jer. 50–51 spoken at a subsequent date against Babylon.
Between them is plac... [ Continue Reading ]
AGAINST THE GENTILES - Or, concerning the nations Jer. 46–49:33.... [ Continue Reading ]
AGAINST ... - i. e., relating to, concerning. So Jeremiah 48:1;
Jeremiah 49:1; see the note at Jeremiah 46:13.
PHARAOH-NECHO - See 2 Kings 23:29 note.
IN - (at) CARCHEMISH - (The Gargamis of the inscriptions, now Jerabis,
on the Euphrates, about 16 miles south of Birejik.)... [ Continue Reading ]
ORDER YE ... - “i. e., prepare ye, make ready.” The buckler was a
small round target carried by the lightly-armed troops: the shield
belonged to the heavily-armed troops, and was large enough to protect
the whole body.... [ Continue Reading ]
From the infantry the prophet proceeds to the chariots, in which the
Egyptians placed great confidence.
GET UP, YE HORSEMEN - Or, “mount the steeds.”
FURBISH - i. e., polish, sharpen.
BRIGANDINES - In old times brigand meant a soldier, and we still call
a division of an army a brigade, and a comm... [ Continue Reading ]
Literally, “Why have I seen? They are terror-stricken! they are
giving way back!” The Egyptian host feels that the battle is lost,
and overborne by the enemy loses heart, and in despair, yet not
without a struggle, gives way. It is remarkable, that while Jeremiah
in his warning addressed to Jerusale... [ Continue Reading ]
Translate it: “The swift shall not flee away, and the hero shall not
escape: in the north on the bank of the river Euphrates they shall
stumble and fall.”... [ Continue Reading ]
In Jeremiah 46:3 we saw only a mighty army marshalling for battle, and
its hasty flight. In Jeremiah 46:7 the prophet tells us at whose
defeat we have been present.
A FLOOD - the Nile. The metaphor describing the advance of the
Egyptian army is naturally drawn from the annual overflow of their own... [ Continue Reading ]
Rather, Go up, advance, ye horses; and drive furiously, ye chariots;
and let the mighty men go forth. They march out of Egypt, arranged in
three divisions, cavalry, chariots, and infantry, to begin the
campaign. The armies of Egypt were composed chiefly of mercenaries.
Cush (see the margin), the Nub... [ Continue Reading ]
Rather, But that “day belongeth to the Lord Yahweh of hosts.” They
march forth in haughty confidence, but that day, the day to which they
are looking forward in proud hope of victory, is Yahweh’s day, a day
on which they will be the victims sacrificed in His honor.... [ Continue Reading ]
BALM - i. e., balsam, the usual remedy for wounds Jeremiah 8:22.
IN VAIN SHALT ... - Or, in vain hast thou multiplied medicines:
healing-plaster hast thou none. Nothing shall avail to heal the blow.... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LAND - The earth; the world rings with the cry of grief.
AGAINST THE MIGHTY - Against the mighty man, i. e., one mighty man
against another. The champions hired to fight Egypt’s battle get in
one another’s way, and so are slaughtered together.... [ Continue Reading ]
A new prophecy, foretelling the successful invasion of Egypt by
Nebuchadnezzar, has been appended to the hymn of triumph, because they
both relate to the same kingdom. This prophecy was probably spoken in
Egypt to warn the Jews there, that the country which they were so
obstinately determined to mak... [ Continue Reading ]
THE SWORD SHALL DEVOUR - “The sword” hath devoured “those round
about thee.” One after another the nations have been consumed by
Nebuehadnezzar; and now at length Tyre, which so long had withstood
him, has fallen, and his forces are about to fall upon Egypt (Jeremiah
2:16 note). Hence, the summons t... [ Continue Reading ]
Translate it: “Why is thy mighty one cast down? He stood not,
because Yahweh thrust him down.” The “mighty one” is explained
by the Septuagint to be the bull Apis. Thus:
(1) the chief deity of Egypt Jeremiah 46:15;
(2) the army of mercenaries Jeremiah 46:16;
(3) the king, Pharaoh Jeremiah 46:17,... [ Continue Reading ]
Literally, as in the margin, i. e., Yahweh hath made many to stumble.
ARISE ... - The Egyptian army being composed of mercenaries, has no
patriotic feeling and immediately that the battle is lost, they
propose to abandon the country which has hired them, and return each
to his native land.... [ Continue Reading ]
Translate it with the versions: “They have called (or, Call ye) the
name of Pharaoh king of Egypt - A noise: he hath overstepped the
appointed time.” For this custom of giving prophetic names see
Jeremiah 20:3; Isaiah 8:3, ... The words mean that Pharaoh is a mere
empty sound, and that he has allowe... [ Continue Reading ]
AS TABOR IS - Omit “is.” “He shall come like a Tabor among the
mountains, and like a Carmel by the sea.” Tabor rises in the form of
a truncated cone to the height of about 1,350 feet above the plain of
Esdraelon, its total height above the sea level being 1,805 feet. Its
shape and the wide extent of... [ Continue Reading ]
Literally, “O thou inhabitant daughter of Egypt,” an equivalent
here for Egypt and its whole population.
FURNISH THYSELF ... - literally, make for thee vessels of banishment,
not merely the packages necessary, but their outfit generally.... [ Continue Reading ]
IS LIKE - Or, is. Her god was the steer Apis Jeremiah 46:15, and she
is the spouse.
BUT DESTRUCTION COMETH; IT COMETH OUT OF THE NORTH - More probably,
“a gadfly from the north has come upon her.” This is a sort of
insect which stings the oxen and drives them to madness. Compare
Isaiah 7:18.... [ Continue Reading ]
Rather, “Also her hirelings in the midst of her are like calves of
the stall.” The mercenaries of Egypt - Nubians, Moors, and Lydians
Jeremiah 46:9 - were destroyed at the battle of Carchemish, and their
place was taken by hirelings from Asia Minor, Carians, and Ionians,
whom Hophra took into his pa... [ Continue Reading ]
THE VOICE THEREOF - Her voice, i. e., the voice of Egypt. The word
here probably means the busy sound of life and activity in the towns
of Egypt, the tramping of her hosts, and the turmoil of camp and city.
All this at the approach of the Chaldaean army shall depart, as the
snake flees away when dis... [ Continue Reading ]
Or, “They have cut down her forest, saith Yahweh, for it is
impenetrable,” i. e., just as a pathless forest must be cleared to
assist agriculture and the passage to and fro of men, so must the
false worship and the material prosperity of Egypt be overthrown.
GRASSHOPPERS - The invading host advance... [ Continue Reading ]
THE DAUGHTER ... - i. e., the inhabitants “of Egypt shall be
disgraced.”... [ Continue Reading ]
THE MULTITUDE OF NO - Rather, Amon of No. Ammon or Jupiter-Ammon was
the first of the supreme triad of Thebes. He was the deity invisible
and unfathomable, whose name signifies “the concealed.” No-Amon,
is the sacred city of Thebes, the capital of Upper Egypt. First then
Yahweh’s anger falls upon th... [ Continue Reading ]
AFTERWARD ... - The invasion of Nebuchadnezzar is to be a passing
calamity, the severity of which will be felt chiefly by the Jews, but
no subjugation of Egypt is to be attempted, and after the Chaldaean
army has withdrawn things will resume their former course.... [ Continue Reading ]
These two verses are a repetition of Jeremiah 30:10, with those slight
variations which Jeremiah always makes when quoting himself. Egypt’s
fall and restoration have been foretold; but the prophet closes with a
word of exhortation to the many erring Jews who dwelt there. Why
should they flee from th... [ Continue Reading ]