speaketh Lit. saith, the same word as throughout the verse.

this people possibly used as a term of reproach: comp. ch. Haggai 2:14; Isaiah 8:11-12.

the time is not come Lit., not time to come. The sentence is evidently elliptical, and there is much difference of opinion as to what should be supplied. The simplest way of taking it appears to be, "it is not (yet) the time (for it, i.e. the matter in hand, or proposed undertaking) to come." Then what that matter or undertaking is, is explained in the next clause, "the time of the House of Jehovah, for it to be built." The LXX., however, and other Ancient Versions render, The time is not come for the Lord's house to be built. R. V. margin.

It has been thought by some, that in saying the time was not come the Jews meant to allege, that the seventy years of desolation which had been predicted were not yet fulfilled. But if that had really been the case their excuse would have been valid. "There was indeed," as Pusey observes, "a second fulfilment of seventy years, from the destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar, b.c. 586, to its consecration in the sixth year of Darius, b.c. 516. But this was through the wilfulness of man prolonging the desolation decreed by God, and Jeremiah's prophecy relates to the people not to the temple." It is clear from the sharp rebuke here administered, and from the severe judgments with which their procrastination had been visited (ver. 6, 9 11), that the excuse was idle and the delay worldly and culpable.

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