-
Verse Jeremiah 15:10. _A MAN OF CONTENTION TO THE WHOLE EARTH!_] To
the whole LAND, to all his countrymen; though he had done nothing to
merit their displeasure....
-
Jeremiah vents his sorrow at the rejection of his prayer. In reading
these and similar expostulations we feel that we have to do with a man
who was the reluctant minister of a higher power, from where...
-
CHAPTER 15
The Prophet's Deep Soul-Exercise
_ 1. The answer (Jeremiah 15:1) _
2. The prophet's grief and sorrow and Jehovah's answer (Jeremiah
15:10)
Jeremiah 15:1. The preceding prayer is
-
THE SORROW AND STRENGTH OF PROPHETIC SERVICE. The experience of the
prophet, as described in the following section, may be the result of
his unpopularity at the time of the drought, and therefore be r...
-
LENT ON USURY. Reference to Pentateuch (Exodus 22:25). App-92....
-
_Woe is me, etc_.] Cp. Job 3:1 ff., also Savonarola's address to God
in one of his sermons, "O Lord, whither hast thou led me? From my
desire to save souls for Thee, I can no longer return to my rest....
-
Jeremiah 15:10-21. The prophet bewails his lot. God's reply
The passage as a whole is one of the most eloquent and pathetic in
the Book. The date cannot be determined with confidence. The latter
part...
-
THAT THOU HAST BORNE ME A MAN OF STRIFE— The prophet here complains
of the opposition he met with from his countrymen for speaking
unwelcome truths, which had occasioned him as much uneasiness, as if...
-
II. PROPHETIC AGONY Jeremiah 15:10-21
Jeremiah suffered a great deal of mental anguish during his ministry.
The rejection of his prophetic intercession on three successive
occasions plunges Jeremiah t...
-
Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a
man of contention to the whole earth! I have neither lent on usury,
nor men have lent to me on usury; yet every one of them doth cu...
-
1-9. The coming woes described....
-
I HAVE NEITHER LENT, etc.] The Jews were forbidden to take interest
from one another (Deuteronomy 23:20), and the money-lender accordingly
was held in extreme disfavour. Jeremiah laments that his miss...
-
אֹֽוי ־לִ֣י אִמִּ֔י כִּ֣י
יְלִדְתִּ֗נִי אִ֥ישׁ...
-
CHAPTER IX
THE DROUGHT AND ITS MORAL IMPLICATIONS
Jeremiah 14:1; Jeremiah 15:1 (17?)
VARIOUS opinions have been expressed about the division of these
Chapter s. They have been cut up into short sect...
-
To this great appeal Jehovah again replied by declaring mercy to be
impossible, and judgment inevitable, and this on account of the sin of
Manasseh which had been persisted in, namely, the rejection o...
-
(k) Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and
a man of contention to the whole earth! I have neither (l) lent on
interest, nor have men lent to me on interest; [yet] every one...
-
_Strife. Jeremias was under continual persecution, (Menochius) yet
ceased not to reprimand the wicked. (Haydock) --- Obsequium amicos,
veritas odium parit. (Cicero) --- Usury. Such people are exposed...
-
We have here the prophet mourning unmanfully. Jeremiah affords an
instance, that he, like all others of Adam's race, partook of the
common stock of corruption. Alas! how unsuitable and unbecoming is i...
-
The Prophet, when he saw that his labor availed nothing, or was not so
fruitful as he wished, no doubt felt somewhat like a man, and shewed
his own weakness. It must however be observed, that he was s...
-
The beginning of chapter 15 is an answer to the close of chapter 14;
but the instruction and the principles it contains are very
remarkable. Jehovah declares that if Moses and Samuel (whose love for
I...
-
WOE IS ME, MY MOTHER, THAT THOU HAST BORN ME A MAN OF STRIFE,.... Not
that the prophet was a quarrelsome and contentious man, but others
quarrelled and contended with him, and that for no other reason...
-
Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a
man of contention to the whole earth! I have neither lent on usury,
nor men have lent to me on usury; [yet] every one of them doth c...
-
_Wo is me, my mother_ The prophet here complains of the opposition he
met with from his countrymen for speaking unwelcome truths. _Thou hast
borne me a man of contention to the whole earth_ Or, _whole...
-
Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a
man of contention to the whole earth! that is, one with whom the whole
world, all men with whom he came into contact, were anxious t...
-
The Prophet's Lamentation...
-
10-14 Jeremiah met with much contempt and reproach, when they ought
to have blessed him, and God for him. It is a great and sufficient
support to the people of God, that however troublesome their way...
-
The prophet in this verse cannot be excused from a great measure of
passion and human infirmity; he almost curseth the day of his birth,
denouncing himself a woeful, miserable man, to be born a man of...
-
Jeremiah 15:10 Woe H188 mother H517 borne H3205 (H8804) man H376
strife H7379 man H376 contention H4066 earth...
-
JEREMIAH TOO FEELS THAT HE HAS BEEN BORN TO AFFLICTION AND STRIFE BUT
IS COMFORTED BY YHWH AS HE OUTLINES THE FUTURE THAT LIES AHEAD,
INCLUDING THE INVASION FROM THE NORTH (JEREMIAH 15:10).
The though...
-
JEREMIAH GRIEVES OVER HIS UNHAPPY SITUATION AND THE EFFECT THAT IT IS
HAVING ON HIS MOTHER (JEREMIAH 15:10).
Jeremiah 15:10
‘Woe is me, my mother, that you have borne me,
A man of strife and a man...
-
CONTENTS: Message on the drought, concluded. The people abandoned to
ruin. Jeremiah complains of his hardships.
CHARACTERS: God, Jeremiah, Moses, Samuel.
CONCLUSION: Miserable is the case of those w...
-
Jeremiah 15:1. _Though Moses and Samuel stood before me,_ as when
Moses by his prayers saved the nation, Exodus 32:11, and Samuel in
Mizpeh was heard, when the Lord terrified the Philistine armies by...
-
_A man of strife._
MEN OF PROGRESS, MEN OF STRIFE
I. Because of noncompliance with popular sins. Always some interested
in doing wrong, and maintaining evil among the people. Those who will
not conf...
-
CRITICAL AND EXEGETICAL NOTES—For _Chronology of the Chapter and
Historical Facts_, see on chap. Jeremiah 10:5 _in loc_.
1. PERSONAL ALLUSIONS. Jeremiah 15:1. “_Moses and Samuel_,” here
mentioned as h...
-
EXPOSITION
JEREMIAH 15:1
Second rejection of Jeremiah's intercession; awfulness of the
impending judgment.
JEREMIAH 15:1
THOUGH MOSES AND SAMUEL, etc. It is a mere supposition which is here
made; t...
-
Then said the LORD unto me, Though Moses and Samuel stood before me,
yet my mind could not be toward this people: cast them out of my
sight, and let them go foRuth (Jeremiah 15:1).
Now it is interesti...
-
1 Corinthians 4:9; 1 Kings 18:17; 1 Kings 18:18; 1 Kings 21:20;...
-
I have not — I have done them no wrong, yet they speak of me all
manner of evil....