Jeremiah 16:2

This is a new discourse, which yet is not unlike many others, except in this particular, that the Prophet was _not to marry a wife nor beget children in the land _But as to the general subject, he repeats now what he had often said before and confirmed in many places. But the prohibition to marry wa... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:4

But the reason why God forbad his Prophet to marry, follows, because they were all consigned to destruction. We hence learn that celibacy is not here commended, as some foolish men have imagined from what is here said; but it is the same as though God had said, “There is no reason for any one to set... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:5

As Jeremiah was forbidden at the beginning of the chapter to take a wife, for a dreadful devastation of the whole land was very nigh; so now God confirms what he had previously said, that so great would be the slaughter, that none would be found to perform the common office of lamenting the dead: at... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:6

He pursues the same subject: he says that all would die indiscriminately, the common people as well as the chief men, that none would be exempt from destruction; for God would make a great slaughter, both of the lower orders and also of the higher, who excelled in wealth, in honor, and dignity; _Die... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:7

With regard to the seventh verse, (161) we may learn from it what I have already referred to, — that the Jews made funeral feasts, that children and widows might receive some relief to their sorrow; for the Prophet calls it the _cup of consolations, _when friends kindly attended; they had also some... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:8

Here the Prophet refers to other feasts, where hilarity prevailed. The meaning then is, — that the people were given up to destruction, so that nothing was better than to depart from them as far as possible. So Jeremiah is prohibited from going at all to them, so that he might not be their associate... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:9

This verse contains a reason for the preceding, — that every connection with that people would be accursed. Yet he states one thing more expressly, — that the time was come in which they were already deprived of all joy; for the ungodly, even when God most awfully threatens them, strengthen themselv... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:10

He shews here what we have seen elsewhere, — that the people flattered themselves in their vices, so that they could not be turned by any admonitions, nor be led by any means to _repentance. _It was a great blindness, nay, even madness, not to examine themselves, when they were smitten by the hand o... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:11

But he then says, _Thou shalt answer them, Because your fathers forsook me; they went after foreign gods, served and worshipped them; and me they forsook and my law they kept not, and ye have done worse _(163) God in the first place accused their fathers, not that punishment ought to have fallen on... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:12

I was constrained yesterday to leave unfinished the words of the Prophet. He said that the children were _worse _than their fathers, and gave the reason, _Because they followed the wickedness of their evil heart, and hearkened not to God _He seems to have said before the same thing of the fathers: i... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:13

Then follows a commination, _I will eject you, _he says, or remove you, _from this land to a land which ye know not, nor your fathers, _for they had followed unknown gods, and went after inventions of their own and of others. God now declares that he would be the vindicator of his own glory, by driv... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:14

Jeremiah seems here to promise a return to the Jews; and so the passage is commonly expounded, as though a consolation is interposed, in which the faithful alone are concerned. But I consider the passage as mixed, that the Prophet, in part, speaks in severe terms of the dreadful exile which he foret... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:15

_But, _it will be rather said, _Live does Jehovah, for he has brought his people from the land of the north; _and for this reason, because there will be less hope remaining for you, when the Chaldeans shall subdue and scatter you like a body torn asunder, and when the name of Israel shall be extingu... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:16

Some explain this of the apostles; but it is wholly foreign to the subject: they think that Jeremiah pursues here what he had begun to speak of; for they doubt not but that he had been speaking in the last verse of a future but a near deliverance, in order to raise the children of God into a cheerfu... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:17

The Prophet now shews that the grievous calamity of which he had spoken would be a just reward for the wickedness of the people; for we know that the prophets were endued with the Spirit of God not merely that they might foretell things to come — for that would have been very jejune; but a doctrine... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:18

Jeremiah introduces here nothing new, but proceeds with the subject we observed in the last verse, — that God would not deal with so much severity with the Jews, because extreme rigor was pleasing to him, or because he had forgotten his own nature or the covenant which he had made with Abraham, but... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:19

What the Prophet has said hitherto might appear contrary to the promises of God, and wholly subversive of the covenant which he had made with Abraham. God had chosen to himself one people from the whole world, now when this people were trodden under foot what could the most perfect of the faithful s... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:20

Some frigidly explain this verse, as though the Prophet said that men are doubly foolish, who form for themselves gods from wood, stone, gold, or silver, because they cannot change their nature; for whatever men may imagine, the stone remains a stone, the wood remains wood. The sense then they elici... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 16:21

The Prophet again threatens the Jews, because their impiety was inexcusable, especially when attended with so great an obstinacy, he therefore says that God was already present as a judge: _Behold I_, he says — the demonstrative particle shews the near approach of vengeance — _I will shew at this ti... [ Continue Reading ]

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