Jeremiah 46:1

Jeremiah begins here to prophesy against foreign nations, and continues to do so to the last chapter but one, not that he then for the first time began to announce these oracles, but as I have already said, a volume was at length formed, including his prophecies, the order of time being not everywhe... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:2

He then says that he had prophesied of the destruction of _the Egyptian army _which King Nebuchadnezzar overthrew _in the fourth year of Jehoiakim _Jeremiah had then foretold before this time what was to be. It might have been that before Pharaoh-necho prepared his army, Jeremiah predicted what woul... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:3

Jeremiah uses now a form of speaking very common in the Prophets though remote from common use. For the Prophets, when they denounce God’s judgments and punishments on the ungodly, do not speak in a simple language, as though they were giving a narrative, but they employed figurative expressions, as... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:5

For it immediately follows, _Why, _or how, _have I seen them broken? _Here the Prophet, on the other hand, disregards all the things which he before enumerated in such high terms, for he spoke, as it were, according to the common judgment of men. And, as I have said, he undertook the person of a her... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:6

He then says first that they would gain power, but he speaks presently of their fall, unless it be thought that the same thing is repeated: and the beginning of the verse may be read affirmatively, “The swift shall not flee,” etc. But as the particle אל, _al, _is often used in a prohibitory sense, t... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:7

The Prophet again meets those doubts which might have possessed the minds of the godly, so as to prevent them to receive this prophecy in faith and with due reverence: for we have said, that when our thoughts are occupied with external things, the power of God is disregarded. When, therefore, we spe... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:8

Then he adds, _Egypt _is like _rivers _and like a _lake_: it made a noise with its forces, as though a river were rolling along its waters. But all this would be nothing, as he afterwards tells us he adds, he _hath said, I will ascend, I will cover the land, I will destroy the city, etc_. He puts ci... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:9

He goes on with the same subject, and enumerates whatever might discredit his prophecy. For when the faithful saw that the Egyptians went on that expedition not only with immense forces, but had also, as foreign aids, the Ethiopians and the Libyans, and even transmarine soldiers from Lydia, — when t... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:10

The Prophet having described the terrible forces of Pharaoh, in which he so trusted, that he dared to boast of a certain victory, now says that the event would be very different: _But this day, he says, will be the day of Jehovah’s vengeance; _as though he had said, that Pharaoh would look only on h... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:11

The Prophet adds here nothing new, but confirms by another metaphor what he had said before. He then says, that the slaughter would be like a fatal plague, as though God would take away from the Egyptians every hope. We indeed know that the kingdom of Egypt did not then perish; for the nation itself... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:12

He concludes this prophecy by saying that the report of this slaughter would be everywhere known among all nations. Had the Egyptians sustained only a small loss, the thing might have been unknown, as when a small engagement takes place the report does not spread far and wide; but when by one battle... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:13

The former prophecy was respecting the slaughter of the Egyptian army, when Pharaoh came to assist the Assyrians, with whom he was then confederate. But this prophecy extends farther; for Jeremiah declares that the Egyptians themselves would have their turn; for we know even from other Prophets, tha... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:14

He pursues the same mode of speaking as we observed yesterday; and the reason was explained, even because, as men are very inattentive to God’s judgments, the message of Jeremiah would have been _ineffectual, _had he spoken plainly, and in an ordinary way. It was therefore necessary to adopt an elev... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:15

By these words the Prophet expresses more clearly what I have just referred to, that the Egyptians would not be able to resist, though they might have gathered auxiliaries on every side, because God would carry on war against them. In astonishment he asks, “How has it happened, or, how is it, that t... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:16

Brevity of expression renders this sentence obscure or ambiguous. The verb הרבה _, erebe, _is put without a nominative case; but it is to be applied to God. God, then, has _multiplied. _And then there is a change of number, for the singular is to be taken as a plural when he says, _he falls, _ כושל... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:17

This verse ought to be joined with the preceding, for he refers to the cries of the soldiers who had been deceived by their own hopes: they at length _cried, Pharaoh is to us a king of confusion. _The Prophet predicts what was to be; but he speaks, according to what was usually done, in the past tim... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:18

Why did the Prophet say this, except that the Egyptians thought they had escaped, because the time had been delayed? As, then, the length of time had deceived them, thinking, as they did, that God had told what was false, or that he had forgotten what he had predicted by his Prophets, he says, _I li... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:19

The Prophet exults over the Egyptians, in order that he might more and more confirm his doctrine; for we have said, and experience teaches the same, that the unbelieving are but little moved when God summons them to his tribunal, and gives evidence of his vengeance; for they remain stupid, except th... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:20

Jeremiah intimates here, that though Egypt indulged in pleasures, it could not yet escape the vengeance of God. We reminded you yesterday why the Prophets mentioned the wealth, the riches, and the power of the ungodly, even because they are blinded by all the good things in which they abound; for th... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:21

Here the Prophet represents the mercenaries of Egypt, as we have already said, as being foreign soldiers, who had been hired here and there, and from far countries, such as Lydia was. It may yet have been, that there were not many at that time who had come from beyond the sea to the Egyptians; but t... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:22

To study elegance was not so much the object of the Prophet, as to confirm what he had taught. The figures, then, which he now uses, were not intended as ornaments of speech, but rather for the purpose of giving force and power to what he had said; for, as it has been said, prophecies had no credit... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:23

He goes on here with the same subject. He indeed uses the past tense, but we know that this was commonly done by the Prophets. He compares the people of Egypt to a forest, as he had said that individual men would be like trees: _They have _then _cut down, _that is, _they _shall cut down _its forest,... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:24

He says that _Egypt _would be _ashamed, _because it would be brought into the greatest disgrace, for their enemies would treat them reproachfully. By the _people of the north _he means the Chaldeans, as in many other places; for Babylon was northward of Egypt. he intimates, in short, that the Chalde... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:25

The Prophet speaks again in God’s name, and sets God’s glory in opposition to the perverseness of his own nation; for, as it has been said, he effected but little when he threatened the Egyptians. For the Jews, believing that land to be impregnable, were secure; because they thought that the Egyptia... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:26

Jeremiah pursues the same subject, and continues to speak in God’s name, that he might more powerfully impress minds otherwise tardy; _I will give them, _he says, _into the hand _of enemies, and those deadly enemies; for we have said elsewhere that to “seek life” is not to spare it. Expressed here t... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:27

The Prophet now directs his discourse to the Israelites; for we have already said that he was not appointed a teacher to heathen nations. Whatever, then, he spoke of heathen nations had a reference to the benefit of his people; and for this purpose, as we have said, the Prophets extended their proph... [ Continue Reading ]

Jeremiah 46:28

He repeats the same thing, and no wonder, for under circumstances so hopeless it was not easy to raise up and sustain the minds of the people, so that they might patiently wait for the time of their redemption. He had to raise them to light as it were from the lowest depths, for captivity was little... [ Continue Reading ]

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