| 
												
												Verse 1Jeremiah 3:1. They say — That 
												is, men use to say, If a man put 
												away his wife — Or give her a 
												bill of divorce, Deuteronomy 
												24:1; and she go from him — In 
												consequence thereof; and become 
												another man’s — Engage herself 
												to another; shall he return unto 
												her? — He cannot take her again 
												according to the law, 
												Deuteronomy 24:1-4. Or, rather, 
												will a man do such a thing? If 
												the law were not against it, 
												would any man be inclined to 
												take such a woman again? 
												Certainly not. Such playing fast 
												and loose with the marriage-bond 
												would be a horrid profanation of 
												that ordinance, and would 
												greatly pollute the land. Thus 
												they had reason to expect, that 
												God would refuse ever to take 
												them again to be his people, who 
												had not only been joined to one 
												strange god, but had played the 
												harlot with many lovers. If we 
												had to do with a man like 
												ourselves, after such 
												provocations as we have been 
												guilty of, he would be 
												implacable, and we might despair 
												of his ever being reconciled to 
												us again. But he is God and not 
												man, and therefore he adds, Yet 
												return again to me — Namely, 
												forsaking all those other 
												lovers; which invitation implies 
												a promise, that he would receive 
												them upon their repentance and 
												reformation.
 
 Verse 2
 Jeremiah 3:2. Lift up thine eyes 
												— Do but look and consider 
												whether I charge thee wrongfully 
												or not; unto the high places — 
												The places of thy spiritual 
												whoredoms or idolatries, their 
												false gods being generally 
												worshipped upon the hills and 
												mountains, 2 Kings 21:3. Thy 
												idolatries have been so frequent 
												that thou canst scarcely show a 
												place where some false god has 
												not been worshipped. In the ways 
												hast thou sat for them — To 
												allure passengers. Thus the 
												fondness of the people for 
												idolatry is compared to the 
												wantonness of a harlot, who lies 
												in wait for men as for her prey; 
												or, as the Arabian hides himself 
												in the desert, to rob and spoil 
												the unwary traveller. “The 
												Arabs,” says Sir John Chardin, 
												in a manuscript quoted by 
												Harmer, “wait for caravans with 
												the most violent avidity, 
												looking about them on all sides, 
												raising themselves upon their 
												horses, running hither and 
												thither, to see if they can 
												perceive any smoke, or dust, or 
												tracks on the ground, or any 
												other marks of people passing 
												along.” And with thy wickedness 
												— Not only with thy idolatries 
												hast thou polluted the land, but 
												with all thy other wicked 
												courses.
 
 Verse 3
 Jeremiah 3:3. Therefore the 
												showers have been withholden — 
												Namely, by me, according to my 
												threatening, Leviticus 26:19; 
												Deuteronomy 28:23-24; that is, a 
												drought was sent upon their 
												land, either as a punishment of 
												their wickedness, public sins 
												bringing public judgments, or as 
												an aggravation of it, in which 
												case the clause ought to be 
												read, Though the showers, &c.; 
												that is, notwithstanding the 
												great drought, whereby thou hast 
												been chastised, thou hast not 
												been brought to repentance; and 
												there hath been no latter rain — 
												Though the latter rain hath been 
												withheld as well as the former: 
												concerning which two seasons of 
												rain, see notes on Deuteronomy 
												11:14, and Proverbs 16:15. Thou 
												hadst a whore’s forehead — 
												Notwithstanding all this, thou 
												didst still remain impudent and 
												obstinate, as one ashamed of 
												nothing. “The general import of 
												the passage is, that though God 
												had begun, in some degree, to 
												chastise his people, as he had 
												threatened, with a view to their 
												reformation, his chastisements 
												had not produced the desired 
												effect, for they continued as 
												abandoned as before, without 
												showing the least sign of shame 
												or remorse.” — Blaney.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Jeremiah 3:4-5. Wilt thou not 
												from this time — Namely, that I 
												have withholden showers, this 
												time of conviction and 
												correction; now that thou hast 
												been made to see thy sins, and 
												to smart for them, wilt thou not 
												forsake them and return to me, 
												saying, I will go and return to 
												my first husband, for then it 
												was better with me than now? Or 
												from this time that thou hast 
												had so kind an invitation to 
												return, and an assurance that 
												thou shalt be well received. 
												Wilt thou not cry unto me, My 
												father? — Wilt thou not, as a 
												child, humble thyself, and call 
												upon me, whom thou hast greatly 
												provoked, and own me as a 
												father, for such I have been to 
												thee? Psalms 103:13; Malachi 
												1:6; Malachi 3:17. Wilt thou not 
												beg pardon for thy undutiful 
												carriage toward me, and hope to 
												find in me the tender compassion 
												of a father toward a returning 
												prodigal? Wilt thou not come and 
												make thy complaints to me as to 
												a father, and confide in me for 
												relief and succour? Thou art the 
												guide of my youth — The husband 
												who didst espouse me, and become 
												my guide in the days of my 
												youth: alluding to the time when 
												their manners had not been 
												corrupted by idolatry. Though 
												thou hast gone after many 
												lovers, wilt thou not at length 
												remember the love of thine 
												espousals, and return to the 
												husband of thy youth? Or the 
												relation of a father may rather 
												be referred to; as if he had 
												said, Wilt thou not remember and 
												lay to heart under whose eye and 
												care thou wast brought up, and 
												who was the guide of thy 
												inexperienced years? In our 
												return to God, we ought 
												thankfully to remember that he 
												was our guide when we were young 
												in years, in the way of comfort; 
												and we must faithfully covenant 
												that he shall be our guide from 
												henceforward in the way of duty, 
												and that we will follow his 
												guidance, and give ourselves up 
												to his government. Will he 
												reserve anger for ever? — Surely 
												he will not, for he hath 
												proclaimed his name, gracious 
												and merciful. They seem to be 
												the words of the people 
												reasoning thus with themselves, 
												for their encouragement to 
												return to God. Repenting sinners 
												may encourage themselves with 
												this, that though God chide, he 
												will not always chide; though he 
												be angry, he will not keep his 
												anger to the end; but though he 
												cause grief he will have 
												compassion. Behold, thou hast 
												spoken, &c. — Or, as Blaney 
												translates the clause, “Behold, 
												thou hast spoken and done; thou 
												hast wrought wickedness, and 
												hast prevailed.” These are the 
												words of God, or of the prophet 
												speaking in God’s name, 
												reminding them of, and reproving 
												them for, their long and 
												obstinate continuance in 
												idolatry and other sins. The 
												prophets had endeavoured to 
												dissuade them from persevering 
												in their evil courses, but their 
												arguments had no weight with 
												them; “they continued to do as 
												they had said, or resolved; they 
												carried their wicked thoughts 
												into execution, in spite of all 
												that was urged to the contrary.”
 
 Verse 6
 Jeremiah 3:6. Then the Lord said 
												unto me — “Here begins an entire 
												new section, or distinct 
												prophecy, which is continued to 
												the end of the sixth chapter. It 
												consists of two distinct parts. 
												The first part contains a 
												complaint against Judah for 
												having exceeded the guilt of her 
												sister Israel, whom God had 
												already cast off for her 
												idolatrous apostacy, Jeremiah 
												3:6-12. The prophet is hereupon 
												sent to announce to Israel the 
												promise of pardon upon her 
												repentance, and the hopes of a 
												glorious restoration in after 
												times, which are plainly marked 
												out to be the times of the 
												gospel, when the Gentiles 
												themselves were to become a part 
												of the church, Jeremiah 3:12-21. 
												In the second part, which begins 
												Jeremiah 4:3, and is prefaced 
												with an address to the people of 
												Judah and Jerusalem, exhorting 
												them to prevent the divine 
												judgments by a timely 
												repentance; the Babylonian 
												invasion is clearly and fully 
												foretold, with all the miseries 
												which it would be attended with; 
												and the universal and 
												incorrigible depravity of the 
												people is represented at large, 
												and pointed out as the justly 
												provoking cause of the national 
												ruin.
 
 In the days of Josiah the king — 
												This date of the prophecy, or 
												sermon, must be particularly 
												observed, in order to the right 
												understanding of it. It was 
												delivered in the days of Josiah, 
												who began a blessed work of 
												reformation, in which he was 
												hearty; but the people were not 
												sincere in their compliance with 
												it. To reprove them for that, 
												and warn them of the 
												consequences of their hypocrisy, 
												is the scope of that which God 
												here declares to the prophet, 
												and which he delivers to them. 
												Hast thou seen what backsliding 
												Israel hath done — The case of 
												the two kingdoms of Israel and 
												Judah is here compared, the ten 
												tribes that revolted from the 
												throne of David and the temple 
												at Jerusalem, and the two tribes 
												that adhered to both. The 
												distinct history of these two 
												kingdoms is given us in the two 
												books of the Kings; by referring 
												to the notes on which the reader 
												will be enabled the better to 
												understand this paragraph, and 
												many other parts of this 
												prophecy. When God asks, Hast 
												thou seen what Israel has done? 
												he refers to the prophet’s 
												acquaintance with that history, 
												for as he lived between sixty 
												and seventy years after Israel 
												was carried into captivity, he 
												could not otherwise see what 
												they had done. She hath gone up 
												upon every high mountain: &c. — 
												See note on Jeremiah 2:20. They 
												had openly, and almost with 
												common consent, apostatized from 
												the worship appointed by God, 
												insomuch that all their kings 
												proved wicked and idolatrous: 
												and no marvel, since from the 
												time of their defection from the 
												kingdom of David, they 
												worshipped God by the golden 
												calves at Dan and Beth-el, and 
												hence easily proceeded from 
												worshipping by the medium of 
												images, to worship images 
												themselves, and other false and 
												imaginary deities.
 
 Verse 7
 Jeremiah 3:7. After she had done 
												all these things — For which she 
												might justly have been 
												abandoned; I said, Turn thou 
												unto me — Namely, and I will 
												receive thee. Though they had 
												forsaken both the house of David 
												and the house of Aaron, who both 
												had their authority from God 
												without dispute, yet God sent 
												his prophets among them to call 
												them to return to him, that is, 
												to the worship of him only, not 
												insisting so much upon their 
												return to the house of David as 
												to that of Aaron. We do not read 
												that Elijah, that great prophet, 
												ever mentioned their returning 
												to the former, but only to the 
												faithful service of the true 
												God. It is serious and genuine 
												piety that God regards more than 
												any ritual observances, whether 
												with respect to matters civil or 
												religious. But she returned not 
												— Which God observed, and with 
												which he was much displeased; 
												and her treacherous sister Judah 
												saw it — A sister, because 
												descended from the same common 
												stock, Abraham and Jacob; and as 
												Israel had the character of a 
												back-slider, so Judah is called 
												treacherous, because, though she 
												professed to keep close to God 
												when Israel had backslidden, and 
												adhered to the kings and priests 
												that were of God’s own 
												appointing, yet she proved 
												treacherous, false, and 
												unfaithful to her profession and 
												promises, as is stated in the 
												following verses.
 
 Verse 8
 Jeremiah 3:8. And I saw — As if 
												he had said, That which others 
												discerned not, I saw perfectly; 
												namely, both her hypocrisy and 
												her incorrigibleness, 
												notwithstanding what had 
												befallen Israel, whose 
												correction should have 
												instructed and reformed her. 
												When for all the causes — The 
												various idolatries and other 
												sins, for which I had given her 
												— That is, Israel; a bill of 
												divorce — Delivered her up into 
												the hands of the Assyrians, and 
												thereby taken from her the title 
												of being my church; yet her 
												sister Judah feared not — Was 
												neither afraid of giving me 
												offence, nor of the like 
												punishment; but went and played 
												the harlot also — Was forward 
												enough to worship any idol that 
												was introduced, and to join in 
												any idolatrous usage, although 
												she had seen the judgment of God 
												executed upon Israel before her 
												eyes.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Jeremiah 3:9-10. And through the 
												lightness of her whoredom — “By 
												this phrase,” says Blaney, “I 
												take to be meant, that she was 
												not nice in the choice of the 
												objects, but was ready to 
												prostitute herself to all that 
												came in her way; that is, she 
												eagerly fell in with all kinds 
												of idolatrous worship 
												indiscriminately, descending so 
												low as to images of wood and 
												stone.” That she defiled the 
												land — Brought the whole land 
												under the guilt of idolatry. Yet 
												for all this — Though God saw 
												what she did, and though she saw 
												the shameful idolatry of Israel, 
												and what she had suffered; yet 
												Judah hath not turned unto me, 
												&c. — When they had a good king 
												that would have reformed the 
												nation, they did not heartily 
												concur with him in that good 
												work. In the reigns of Manasseh 
												and Amon, who were disposed to 
												idolatry, the people were so 
												too, and all the country was 
												corrupted by it, none fearing 
												the ruin which Israel, by this 
												sin, had brought on themselves. 
												God therefore tried whether they 
												would manifest a different 
												spirit and conduct under a good 
												king, but the evil disposition 
												was still the same, and they 
												returned not to the Lord with 
												all their hearts, but feignedly 
												— They were forced indeed to an 
												external compliance with Josiah, 
												who went further in destroying 
												idolatry than the best of his 
												predecessors had done, joined 
												with him in keeping a very 
												solemn passover, and in 
												professing to renew their 
												covenants with God, 2 Chronicles 
												34:32; 2 Chronicles 35:17; but 
												they were not sincere in all 
												this, nor were their hearts 
												right with God. For which reason 
												God, at that very time, said, I 
												will remove Judah out of my 
												sight, as I have removed Israel, 
												(2 Kings 23:27,) because Judah 
												was not removed from their sin 
												by the sight of Israel’s removal 
												from their land.
 
 Verse 11
 Jeremiah 3:11. And the Lord said 
												unto me, &c. — The case of these 
												sister kingdoms is here 
												compared, and judgment given 
												upon the comparison. Israel hath 
												justified herself more than 
												Judah — Hebrew, צדקה נפשׁה, hath 
												justified her soul: so the LXX. 
												εδικαιωσε την ψυχην, and the 
												Vulgate. The meaning is, that of 
												the two, Judah was the more 
												guilty, because, though Israel’s 
												sins were more numerous, and 
												their idolatry had continued 
												longer, yet in Judah that and 
												other sins were more heinous, 
												because Judah had sinned against 
												greater light, and would not 
												take warning by that desolation 
												which God had brought upon the 
												whole kingdom of Israel. 
												Observe, reader, this 
												comparative justification stood 
												Israel in little stead. It will 
												little avail us to say we are 
												not so bad as others, when yet 
												we are not really good 
												ourselves. And God’s judgments 
												upon others, if they be not the 
												means of our reformation, will 
												help to aggravate our 
												destruction. The Prophet Ezekiel 
												makes the same comparison 
												between Jerusalem and Samaria, 
												that Jeremiah here makes between 
												Judah and Israel, nay, and 
												between Jerusalem and Sodom, and 
												Jerusalem is represented as 
												being the worst of the three. 
												See Ezekiel 23:11; and Ezekiel 
												16:48.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Jeremiah 3:12-13. Go, and 
												proclaim these words toward the 
												north — “The sin of the ten 
												tribes being attended with more 
												favourable circumstances than 
												that of Judah, the prophet is 
												commanded to call them to 
												repentance with promises of 
												pardon. In order to this he is 
												bid to direct his speech 
												northward, that is, toward 
												Assyria and Media, whither the 
												ten tribes had been carried away 
												captive, which countries lay 
												north of Judea.” And say: 
												Return, thou backsliding Israel 
												— Repent of thy backslidings, 
												return to thy allegiance; come 
												back to that good way out of 
												which thou hast turned aside. 
												And I will not cause mine anger 
												to fall upon you — Namely, more 
												grievously than it has already 
												fallen, or for ever; for 
												otherwise his anger lay heavy 
												upon them at this time. Observe, 
												reader, God’s anger is ready to 
												fall on sinners, as a lion falls 
												on his prey, and there is none 
												to deliver. But if they repent, 
												it shall be turned away, for he 
												is merciful, and will not keep 
												anger for ever. Only acknowledge 
												thine iniquity — Own thyself in 
												a fault, and thereby take shame 
												to thyself, and give glory to 
												God. Confess and forsake thy 
												sins; for he that confesseth and 
												forsaketh shall find mercy. This 
												will aggravate the condemnation 
												of sinners, that the terms of 
												pardon and peace were brought so 
												low, and yet they would not come 
												up to them. Sinner, if the 
												prophet had bid thee do some 
												great thing, wouldst thou not 
												have done it? How much more when 
												he saith, Only acknowledge thine 
												iniquity. The Hebrew, דעי עונן, 
												is properly, Know thine 
												iniquity, that is, in order to 
												thy acknowledging and forsaking 
												it. We must call our sins to 
												mind, consider the number, 
												greatness, and inexcusableness 
												of them, that we may conceive a 
												proper hatred to them, and 
												sorrow for them, and thereby, 
												and through faith in the divine 
												mercy and grace in Christ, may 
												obtain pardon and deliverance 
												from them. That thou hast 
												transgressed against the Lord 
												thy God — Against the infinite 
												and eternal Jehovah, who had 
												taken thee to be his peculiar 
												people, and was in covenant with 
												thee as thy God. And hast 
												scattered thy ways to the 
												strangers — To other gods, to 
												idols, running hither and 
												thither to worship them. The 
												phrase is taken from the 
												lewdness of common harlots, who 
												promiscuously prostitute 
												themselves to all comers: see 
												Proverbs 30:20. The clause may 
												be rendered, Thou hast wandered 
												among strangers, or strange 
												gods; that is, thou hast not 
												repaired, or had recourse, to 
												one strange god, but many; under 
												every green tree — Alluding to 
												the heathen performing the 
												ceremonies of their idolatrous 
												worship in groves, or under 
												large spreading trees. And ye 
												have not obeyed my voice — So 
												that your sin is not a sin of 
												ignorance, but of obstinacy, for 
												you shut your ears against my 
												counsels, sent by my prophets 
												for reclaiming you.
 
 Verse 14
 Jeremiah 3:14. Turn, for I am 
												married unto you — I am in 
												covenant with you, and this 
												covenant, notwithstanding all 
												your unfaithfulness, I am ready 
												to renew with you. Hebrew, בעלתי 
												בכם, which Blaney translates, I 
												have been a husband among you; 
												observing, that God hereby 
												“means to remind them that he 
												had fulfilled the covenant on 
												his part, by protecting and 
												blessing them, as he had 
												promised when he engaged to be 
												their God: and therefore, as 
												they had never any reason to 
												complain of him, he urges them 
												to return to their duty, and 
												promises, in that case, to be 
												still kinder to them than 
												before.” I will take you one of 
												a city, &c. — Some interpret 
												these words thus: “I will 
												receive you, though there should 
												be but one from a city willing 
												to return, and two from a 
												province, or tribe.” This 
												prophecy was accomplished in the 
												letter, after the edict of 
												Cyrus, when several of the 
												Israelites returned to 
												Palestine, but only by little 
												and little, and, as it were, one 
												by one. But undoubtedly it was 
												intended to be understood 
												chiefly, in a spiritual sense, 
												of their conversion to 
												Christianity, and their 
												reception into the gospel 
												church, into which they partly 
												have been, and probably 
												hereafter in greater numbers 
												will be admitted, “not all at a 
												time, or in a national capacity, 
												but severally, as individuals, 
												here and there one.” See Isaiah 
												27:12.
 
 Verse 15
 Jeremiah 3:15. I will give you 
												pastors according to my heart — 
												This is likewise an evangelical 
												promise, (compare Jeremiah 
												23:4,) implying that under the 
												happy times here foretold all 
												governors, both civil and 
												ecclesiastical, should 
												faithfully discharge their 
												trust, in duly governing and 
												instructing the people committed 
												to their charge; and that all in 
												authority should answer the 
												character which God gives of 
												David, namely, that he was a man 
												after his own heart, whereas, at 
												the time when Jeremiah lived, 
												the princes, the priests, and 
												prophets were the ringleaders in 
												seducing the people, and 
												enticing them to idolatry: see 
												Jeremiah 2:8, and Lowth. “Those 
												are pastors after God’s own 
												heart,” says Henry, “that make 
												it their business to feed the 
												flock; not to feed themselves 
												and fleece the flock, but to do 
												all they can for the good of 
												those that are under their 
												charge; that feed them with 
												wisdom and understanding — That 
												is, wisely and understandingly, 
												as David fed them, in the 
												integrity of his heart and by 
												the skilfulness of his hands, 
												Psalms 78:72. Those that are not 
												only pastors, or rulers, but 
												teachers, must feed them with 
												the word of God, which is wisdom 
												and understanding, and is able 
												to make us wise unto salvation.”
 
 Verse 16
 Jeremiah 3:16. And when ye be 
												multiplied — That is, when the 
												kingdom of the Messiah shall be 
												set up, and there shall be a 
												vast increase of the members of 
												the church by the accession of 
												the Gentiles: for that the days 
												of the Messiah are here 
												intended, the Jewish masters 
												themselves acknowledge; they 
												shall say no more, The ark, &c. 
												— The ark is here put for all 
												the legal ceremonies, being, 
												with the rites connected with 
												it, the chief part thereof. The 
												sense is, that whole worship, 
												with all the rites and 
												ceremonies belonging to it, 
												shall wholly cease, Christ being 
												come, who was the substance of 
												what the ark and all other rites 
												did but shadow out for a time. 
												“Here,” says Blaney, “God 
												comforts the Jews with an 
												assurance that, though upon 
												their return to him they might 
												not find themselves in 
												possession of exactly the same 
												privileges as they had before, 
												they should be no losers, but 
												should receive ample 
												indemnification, so as to leave 
												them no just cause of regret. 
												The ark of the covenant was the 
												visible seat of God’s residence 
												among his people; it was 
												therefore the object of their 
												boast; but after the destruction 
												of the first temple they had it 
												no more. But, to compensate this 
												loss, they are told, in the next 
												verse, that Jerusalem should be 
												called the throne of Jehovah, to 
												which, not the Jews only, but 
												all nations should resort. By 
												Jerusalem is probably meant the 
												Christian Church: see Galatians 
												4:26; Revelation 21:2-3. The 
												greater privileges of this 
												latter would, of course, 
												supersede all boast on account 
												of those which had belonged to 
												the Jewish Church at any time.”
 
 Neither shall it come to mind — 
												Hebrew, ולא יעלה על לב, which 
												Blaney renders, Nor shall it be 
												the delight of their heart; 
												namely, as it formerly was, 
												observing, that several passages 
												of Scripture where the same 
												phrase occurs show this to be 
												the import of it. What value the 
												Israelites set upon the ark, and 
												how much they were attached to 
												it, appears from many parts of 
												their history. Neither shall 
												they remember it — They shall 
												forget the less in contemplation 
												of the greater benefit. Neither 
												shall they visit it — Or care 
												for it, as Blaney translates 
												יפקדו, which often signifies to 
												look after a thing, which has 
												been long lost or neglected, 
												with a wish or design to recover 
												or restore it. In this sense God 
												is said to have visited his 
												people, Exodus 3:16; Luke 1:68; 
												that is, he again showed that he 
												concerned himself about them. 
												And so it is said of the people, 
												Isaiah 26:16, O Lord, in trouble 
												have they visited thee; that is, 
												they, who before neglected thee, 
												in their affliction turned their 
												thoughts and desires toward 
												thee. Neither shall that be done 
												any more — It shall be no more 
												in use; neither shall men 
												trouble their thoughts about it, 
												or mention it. The Hebrew, ולא 
												יעשׂה עוד, is literally rendered 
												by the LXX., και ου ποιηθησεται 
												ετι, Nor shall it be made any 
												more. So also the Vulgate, nec 
												fiet ultra. The ark, once lost, 
												was never to be made again, or 
												restored: and for a good reason, 
												which immediately follows; 
												because, instead of the ark, 
												Jerusalem itself, that is, the 
												Christian Church, was to become 
												the seat of God’s residence. It 
												is probable that this great 
												variety of expressions is used, 
												not only to show that the 
												ceremonies of the law of Moses 
												should be totally and finally 
												abolished, never to be used any 
												more, but that it would be with 
												difficulty that those who had 
												been so long wedded to them 
												would be weaned from them; and 
												that they would not quite 
												relinquish them till their holy 
												city and holy house should both 
												be levelled with the ground.
 
 Verse 17
 Jeremiah 3:17. At that time — Of 
												reformation, διορθωσεως, 
												emendation, (Hebrews 9:10,) when 
												things should be put into a 
												better state by the coming of 
												the Messiah; they shall call 
												Jerusalem the throne of the Lord 
												— Instead of the ark, the 
												Christian Church, typified by 
												Jerusalem, shall be the place of 
												God’s special residence, power, 
												and glory; where he will rule 
												and act, and display his glory, 
												in and by his word and 
												ordinances, and especially in 
												and by the Messiah. And all the 
												nations shall be gathered unto 
												it — Not only the Jews and 
												Israelites, but many of all 
												nations: many of the heathen 
												shall be brought to worship the 
												true God, and to embrace the 
												Christian faith. To the name of 
												the Lord — Which shall be both 
												manifested and called upon in 
												his church, as formerly at 
												Jerusalem. Neither shall they 
												walk, &c. — Both Jews and 
												Gentiles shall now conform 
												themselves to the will of God. 
												The word שׁררות, here rendered 
												imagination, is derived from a 
												root that signifies to see, and 
												is sometimes applied to the 
												judgment, and sometimes to the 
												affections. Here it may 
												comprehend both: they shall 
												neither follow their own corrupt 
												judgment nor affection, but 
												wholly the word of God.
 
 Verse 18
 Jeremiah 3:18. In those days the 
												house of Judah, &c. — Judah and 
												Israel shall be happily united; 
												the enmity that was between them 
												shall be taken away, and they 
												shall walk one with another, in 
												a friendly manner, in the ways 
												of God. This implies their being 
												incorporated in one body, by one 
												spirit, under Christ their head, 
												and that without distinction of 
												nations. This reunion of Israel 
												and Judah, and their joint 
												participation of the blessings 
												of the Messiah’s kingdom, is 
												elsewhere foretold. See the 
												margin. And they shall come 
												together out of the land of the 
												north — Namely, out of their 
												captivity; to the land that I 
												have given them — That is, the 
												land of Canaan. Both Assyria and 
												Chaldea fell into the hands of 
												Cyrus, and his proclamation 
												extended to all the Jews in all 
												his dominions. And therefore we 
												have reason to think that many 
												of the house of Israel came with 
												those of Judah out of the land 
												of the north; though at first 
												there returned but forty-two 
												thousand, of whom we have an 
												account, Ezra 2., yet Josephus 
												saith, (Antiq., lib. 11. cap. 
												4,) that some years after, under 
												Darius, Zerubbabel went and 
												fetched up above four million of 
												souls to the land that was given 
												for an inheritance to their 
												fathers. And we never read of 
												such animosities and enmities 
												between Israel and Judah as had 
												been formerly. And the happy 
												coalescence between Israel and 
												Judah in Canaan was a type of 
												their union, and that of Jews 
												and Gentiles in the gospel 
												church, when, all enmities being 
												slain, they should become one 
												flock under one shepherd. It may 
												also be implied in these words, 
												as many commentators think is 
												expressly declared in many other 
												passages of the ancient 
												prophets, that in the latter 
												days the Jews and Israelites, 
												after their conversion to 
												Christianity, shall actually 
												return from their several 
												dispersions to dwell, as a 
												nation, in their own land.
 
 Verse 19
 Jeremiah 3:19. But I said — 
												Namely, within myself, God is 
												here represented as deliberating 
												with himself, after the manner 
												of men, in what way he might, 
												consistently with his divine 
												attributes, receive the Jewish 
												people into his favour, and 
												admit them into the Christian 
												Church. How shall I put thee 
												among the children, and give 
												thee a pleasant land? — How can 
												it be consistent with my divine 
												holiness and justice to receive 
												such a rebellious people into my 
												favour, to own them for my 
												children, and restore them to 
												the possession of that goodly 
												inheritance which I gave to 
												their fathers. Judea is 
												elsewhere called a pleasant 
												land, the glory of all lands, 
												and the land which God had 
												espied out for his chosen 
												people: see Daniel 8:9; and 
												Daniel 11:16; Daniel 11:45; 
												Ezekiel 20:6. A goodly heritage 
												of the hosts of nations — The 
												Hebrew, צבי צבאות גוים, is 
												literally, the glory of hosts, 
												or, multitudes of nations, that 
												which they esteem glorious, a 
												phrase of the same import with 
												that now quoted from Ezekiel, 
												the glory of all lands. This 
												pleasant land, and glory of the 
												hosts of nations, is here to be 
												taken figuratively, for the 
												Christian Church and the 
												privileges of the gospel 
												covenant. And the condition of 
												adoption into the former, and of 
												enjoying the latter, are 
												expressly stated by Christ and 
												his apostles to be the same as 
												are here prescribed, namely, 
												true faith in God, as our 
												Father, our reconciled Father in 
												Christ, (which faith is always 
												preceded by the repentance 
												required, Jeremiah 3:13,) and 
												uniform obedience for the time 
												to come. Thou shalt call me, My 
												Father, and shalt not turn away 
												from me — On these conditions I 
												will put thee among the 
												children.
 
 Verse 20-21
 Jeremiah 3:20-21. Surely, as a 
												wife treacherously departeth, 
												&c. — This may be rendered, As a 
												woman is not faithful to her 
												husband, or, her friend, as the 
												Hebrew רעהsignifies. Here God 
												returns to the carnal 
												Israelites; so that the Jewish 
												doctors seem to be right in 
												calling the spirit of prophecy 
												an abrupt spirit. So have you 
												dealt treacherously with me — 
												God, by thus reminding the 
												Israelites of what they had 
												formerly been, endeavours to 
												bring them to repentance and new 
												obedience for the time to come. 
												A voice was heard, &c. — Here 
												the prophet, foreseeing that 
												some of them would at length be 
												brought to true repentance for 
												all their misdoings, represents 
												them as bewailing themselves 
												upon the high places, the scenes 
												of their former idolatries. 
												Compare Jeremiah 31:9; Jeremiah 
												50:4; Zechariah 12:10. Or, as 
												some think, he alludes to the 
												usual practice of praying upon 
												the tops of houses in great 
												calamities, Isaiah 15:3; and 
												Isaiah 22:1; Jeremiah 7:29. For 
												they have perverted their way — 
												This is that which they lament: 
												for this they bemoan themselves. 
												They have forgotten the Lord 
												their God — Of this they were 
												now sensible, and for this they 
												were humbled, as being the first 
												step toward their apostacy. 
												Observe well, reader, 1st, Sin 
												is the perverting of our way; it 
												is turning aside to crooked 
												paths, and perverting that which 
												is right. By it we embarrass 
												ourselves, and bring ourselves 
												into trouble and misery. 2d, 
												Forgetting the Lord our God is 
												at the bottom of all sin: if men 
												would remember God, and their 
												obligations to him, and consider 
												that his eye is upon them, they 
												would not transgress as they do. 
												3d, Prayers and tears well 
												become those whose consciences 
												tell them that they have 
												perverted their way and 
												forgotten their God.
 
 Verse 22
 Jeremiah 3:22. Here begins a 
												dialogue between God and his 
												people, wherein he offers 
												gracious terms of pardon to 
												them, and they make sincere 
												professions of obedience to him. 
												Return, ye backsliding — Or 
												revolted, children — Return to 
												me, and to my worship and 
												service; return to your duty. 
												God is introduced as saying this 
												upon hearing the weeping and 
												supplications of the Israelites, 
												acknowledging their sin, and 
												humbling themselves for it. And 
												I will heal your backslidings — 
												Your revolts, or apostacies: I 
												will take away the guilt of 
												them, and save you from a 
												refractory and revolting 
												disposition. God heals our 
												backslidings by his pardoning 
												mercy, his composing peace, and 
												his renewing grace. Behold, we 
												come unto thee — We readily and 
												cheerfully obey thy command, and 
												comply with thy invitation. It 
												is an echo to God’s call; an 
												immediate, speedy answer, 
												without delay; not we will come 
												hereafter, but we do come now; 
												we need not take time to 
												consider of it. For thou art the 
												Lord our God — Words expressing 
												the strongest inducements to 
												return to God imaginable, 
												because God had an undoubted 
												right to them and their 
												services, was willing to accept 
												them, and able to save them, 
												Isaiah 55:7; chap. Jeremiah 
												14:22. Not only this latter part 
												of the verse, but what follows, 
												to the end of the chapter, is 
												spoken of in the name of the 
												Israelites, accepting the divine 
												invitation, acknowledging the 
												vanity of their misplaced trust, 
												and professing the deepest 
												contrition and shame for their 
												misconduct. It is a description, 
												not of what was really done by 
												the Israelites in general, but 
												of what was necessary to be done 
												in order to their regaining 
												God’s favour; and of what he 
												foresaw would actually be done 
												by such of them as should 
												believe on the Messiah, when he 
												came, and receive the privileges 
												and blessings of the new 
												covenant.
 
 Verse 23
 Jeremiah 3:23. Truly in vain is 
												salvation hoped for from the 
												hills — From idols worshipped on 
												hills and mountains. It is a 
												continuation of that form of 
												confession begun Jeremiah 3:22, 
												drawn up with a reference to the 
												present state of the idolatrous 
												Israelites; wherein they express 
												their abhorrence of those idols 
												which they worshipped upon the 
												hills and mountains, and declare 
												their firm resolution of 
												adhering to, and depending upon, 
												the Lord their God. There being 
												nothing in the original of this 
												clause for salvation is hoped 
												for, it has been differently 
												interpreted by learned men. The 
												LXX. render it, οντως εις ψευδος 
												ησαν οι βουνοι, και η δυναμις 
												των ορεων, Truly the hills and 
												the power of the mountains were 
												for a lie. And the Vulgate 
												nearly to the same sense, Vere 
												mendaces erant colles, et 
												multitudo montium, Truly the 
												hills were liars, and the 
												multitude of mountains; that is, 
												they were deceitful: they 
												promised what they did not 
												perform. To the same purpose the 
												Syriac. Blaney renders the 
												verse,
 
 “Surely the hills are lies; the 
												tumult of mountains: surely in 
												Jehovah our God is the salvation 
												of Israel.” “The people,” he 
												observes, “acknowledge that the 
												hills, the places sacred to 
												idolatrous worship, and the 
												tumultuous rites with which that 
												worship was accompanied, (see 1 
												Kings 18:26; 1 Kings 18:28,) 
												were mere impostures, deceiving 
												and disappointing those that 
												trusted in them; whereas Jehovah 
												was indeed the author of 
												salvation to his people.”
 
 Verse 24-25
 Jeremiah 3:24-25. For shame hath 
												devoured the labour of our 
												fathers — That is, the fruit of 
												their labour, יגיע, which 
												properly signifies labour and 
												toil, being here put by a 
												metonymy for the substance 
												acquired by toil; that is, their 
												labours have been followed by 
												disappointment and shame; they 
												have not reaped the expected 
												fruit of them. Or sin, which 
												causes shame, especially the sin 
												of idolatry, has brought all our 
												calamities upon us, the loss of 
												our goods and substance, the 
												dispersion of our families and 
												nearest relations, and all the 
												other miseries of our captivity: 
												all these evils, which we and 
												our forefathers have felt, are 
												the effects of our idolatry, of 
												which we are now heartily 
												ashamed, and which had brought 
												shame and confusion upon us. 
												Blaney renders הבשׁת, (which we 
												translate shame,) that thing of 
												shame, meaning the idol which 
												they worshipped, called by the 
												same name, chap. Jeremiah 11:13; 
												Hosea 10:10; “and with good 
												reason,” says he, “because, in 
												return for all the expense and 
												pains bestowed upon it, it only 
												frustrated the hopes of its 
												votaries, and, as it follows in 
												the next verse, left them 
												mortified with disappointment, 
												and overwhelmed with disgrace, 
												for having deserted the service 
												of a Being that could have saved 
												them, in pursuit of so vile and 
												worthless an object.” We lie 
												down in our shame — Being unable 
												to bear it. Our confusion 
												covereth us — On account both of 
												our sins and sufferings. Sin 
												hath laid us under such rebukes 
												of God’s providence, and such 
												reproaches of our own 
												consciences, as surround us and 
												fill us with shame. These 
												expressions, which set forth the 
												greatness of their repentance 
												and sorrow, are taken from those 
												who cast themselves down upon 
												the ground, and cover themselves 
												with dust or ashes, out of grief 
												and anguish of mind.
 |