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												Verse 1Jeremiah 9:1. O that my head, 
												&c. — The prophet sympathizes 
												with the calamities of his 
												people, as before, Jeremiah 
												1:19; Jeremiah 8:21; and thereby 
												excites them to a sense of their 
												own misfortunes, that they might 
												humble themselves under the 
												mighty hand of God. The passage 
												is a fine instance of the 
												pathetic, wherein Jeremiah so 
												much excels. That I might weep 
												day and night for the slain, &c. 
												— For the multitudes of his 
												countrymen that he foresaw would 
												fall by the sword of the 
												Babylonians. When we hear of 
												great numbers slain in battles 
												and sieges, we ought not to make 
												a light matter of it, but to be 
												much affected with it; yea, 
												though they be not of the 
												daughter of our people — For of 
												whatever people they are, they 
												are of the same human nature 
												with us; and there are so many 
												precious lives lost, as dear to 
												them as ours to us, and so many 
												precious souls gone into 
												eternity.
 
 Verse 2
 Jeremiah 9:2. O that I had in 
												the wilderness, &c. — The 
												prophet here wishes that he had 
												a lodging-place, or tent, such 
												as travellers in this country 
												were wont to lodge in when they 
												travelled over the deserts, 
												professing that he would rather 
												pass his days in such a 
												habitation in some desert place, 
												than at Jerusalem, which was 
												filled with wicked men. That I 
												may leave my people and go from 
												them — Not chiefly because of 
												the ill usage he met with among 
												them, but rather because his 
												righteous soul was vexed from 
												day to day, as Lot’s was in 
												Sodom, with the wickedness of 
												their conversation, 2 Peter 
												3:7-8. It made him even weary of 
												his life to see them 
												dishonouring God and destroying 
												themselves. Time was when the 
												place where God had chosen to 
												put his name, there were the 
												desire and delight of good men. 
												David, in the wilderness, longed 
												to be again in the courts of 
												God’s house; but now Jeremiah, 
												in the courts of God’s house, 
												(for there he was when he said 
												this,) wishes himself in a 
												wilderness! Those have made 
												themselves very vile and very 
												miserable, that have made God’s 
												people and ministers weary of 
												them, and desirous to get from 
												among them. It may not be 
												improper to observe here, that 
												“travellers in the East are not, 
												nor ever were, accommodated at 
												inns on the road, after the 
												manner of the European nations. 
												In some places indeed there are 
												large public buildings provided 
												for their reception, which they 
												call caravansaries; but these 
												afford merely a covering, being 
												absolutely without furniture; 
												and the traveller must carry his 
												own provisions and necessaries 
												along with him, or he will not 
												find any. Nor are even these 
												empty mansions always to be met 
												with; so that if the weary 
												traveller at night comes into a 
												town where there is no 
												caravansary, or πανδοχειον, as 
												it is called Luke 10:34, he must 
												take up his lodging in the 
												street, unless some charitable 
												inhabitant will be pleased to 
												receive him into his house, as 
												we find 19:15. And if he passes 
												through the desert, it is well 
												for him if he can light upon a 
												cave, or a hut, which some one 
												before him may have erected for 
												a temporary shelter. And this 
												last is what I conceive to be 
												here meant by מלון ארחים, a 
												solitary and not very 
												comfortable situation, but yet 
												preferable to the chagrin of 
												living continually in the 
												society of men of profligate 
												manners.” — Blaney. For they be 
												all adulterers — The expression 
												seems here to be metaphorical, 
												implying that they were 
												apostates from God, to whose 
												service they were engaged by the 
												most solemn covenant, like that 
												which obliges a wife to be 
												faithful to her husband. See 
												note on Jeremiah 2:2; and 
												compare Matthew 16:4; James 4:4.
 
 Verse 3
 Jeremiah 9:3. They bend their 
												tongues like their bow — With a 
												great deal of craft, their 
												tongues are fitted for lying, as 
												a bow which is bent is for 
												shooting. Thus the psalmist 
												compares the tongue to a bow and 
												words of calumny and falsehood 
												to arrows, Psalms 64:3-4. But 
												they are not valiant for the 
												truth — They use their tongues 
												in defence of lies rather than 
												of the truths of God; and, in 
												the administration of justice, 
												they have not courage to stand 
												by an honest cause that has 
												truth on its side, if greatness 
												and power be on the other side. 
												Truth is fallen in the land, and 
												they dare not lend a hand to 
												help it up, Isaiah 59:14-15. 
												They proceed from evil to evil — 
												From one sin to another, and 
												from one degree of sin to 
												another. They every day grow 
												more bold in their wickedness, 
												because they escape punishment, 
												and they enrich themselves by 
												their evil deeds, and so become 
												formidable, defending and 
												maintaining their wickedness by 
												fresh acts of wickedness. And 
												they know not me, saith the Lord 
												— And where men have not the 
												true knowledge of God, what but 
												evil can be expected from them? 
												Observe, reader, men’s ignorance 
												of God is the cause of all their 
												bad conduct one toward another.
 
 Verses 4-6
 Jeremiah 9:4-6. Take ye heed 
												every one of his neighbour — Or, 
												of his friend, as רעהוrather 
												signifies; of him who pretends 
												friendship to him, or whom he 
												has befriended. And trust ye not 
												in a brother — Against whom you 
												must stand as much upon your 
												guard as if you were dealing 
												with a stranger. For every 
												brother will utterly supplant — 
												Will deceive, overreach, and 
												take all possible advantage of 
												his nearest relation; and every 
												neighbour — Or friend, rather, 
												as before; will walk with 
												slanders — Will not care what 
												ill he says of another, though 
												never so false. The Hebrew, רכיל 
												יהלךְ, is properly, will go 
												about as a detracter, or 
												calumniator, namely, carrying 
												slanders with him from house to 
												house. This is a strong 
												description of the falsehood and 
												calumny which universally 
												prevailed among them. And weary 
												themselves to commit iniquity — 
												They are so inclined and 
												enslaved to iniquity, that they 
												not only commit it when they can 
												do it easily, but when the 
												commission of it is attended 
												with difficulty; for they take 
												more pains to carry on their ill 
												designs than the practice of 
												truth and integrity would cost 
												them. Thy habitation is in the 
												midst of deceit — That is, all 
												about thee are addicted to it, 
												therefore stand upon thy guard. 
												They are God’s words to the 
												prophet. If all around us are 
												false and deceitful, it concerns 
												us to beware of them, and to be 
												wise as serpents. Through deceit 
												they refuse to know me, saith 
												the Lord — “The knowledge of 
												God, which is true religion, is 
												incompatible with the practice 
												of any wickedness. And therefore 
												it is natural enough for those 
												that are resolved at all events 
												to abide in their evil courses, 
												to endeavour, if possible, to 
												divest themselves of all 
												religious principles, which, if 
												insufficient to restrain, will 
												be sure at least to be very 
												troublesome to them.”
 
 Verse 7-8
 Jeremiah 9:7-8. Behold, I will 
												melt them and try them — I will 
												cast them into the furnace of 
												affliction, that I may purify 
												them from their dross. See note 
												on Jeremiah 6:29-30, and on 
												Isaiah 1:25. For how shall I do, 
												&c. — I have tried all other 
												means, and they have proved 
												ineffectual. Their tongue is as 
												an arrow, &c. — It was compared 
												to a bow bent, Jeremiah 9:3, 
												plotting and preparing mischief; 
												here it is an arrow shot out, 
												putting in execution what they 
												had projected. Dr. Waterland 
												renders the words, as a sharp, 
												or killing arrow; it speaketh 
												deceit — They speak what they do 
												not mean, that they may more 
												easily deceive the credulous: 
												they speak fair when they mean 
												to destroy, as the next words 
												explain it.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Jeremiah 9:10-11. For the 
												mountains will I take up a 
												weeping — “These words,” says 
												Houbigant, “as they now lie, 
												must belong either to Jeremiah 
												or the daughter of Zion; and yet 
												it follows in the next verse, 
												And I will make, which are the 
												words of God: therefore this 
												verse should be rendered, by a 
												slight alteration of the text, 
												‘Take ye up a weeping and 
												wailing on the mountains, a 
												lamentation in the dwellings of 
												the wilderness; for they are 
												desolate, because there is no 
												traveller; nor is the voice of 
												cattle heard in them; both the 
												fowl of the heavens and the 
												beast are fled.’“ The prophet 
												laments that general desolation 
												which he sees coming upon the 
												whole land, and which would 
												involve all the parts of it, 
												both high and low, in one common 
												destruction. I will make 
												Jerusalem heaps — Of rubbish, 
												and lay it in such ruins that it 
												shall be fit for nothing but to 
												be a den of dragons —
 
 Or serpents, as the word 
												תניםfrequently signifies, or 
												such creatures as are usually 
												found in ruins or desolate 
												places.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Jeremiah 9:12-13. Who is the 
												wise man — Or, Is there not a 
												wise man, who understands this? 
												— Is there none of you so well 
												acquainted with the will of God 
												and the methods of his 
												providence, as to be able to 
												declare the reasons why he has 
												given such severe instances of 
												his anger against this land? The 
												question implies, that there are 
												none, or very few, that consider 
												common calamities in the cause 
												of them, but rather impute the 
												divine chastisements to chance, 
												not seeing the hand of God in 
												them. And the Lord saith. 
												Because they have forsaken my 
												law, &c. — Here God himself 
												declares the reasons of his 
												judgments by the mouth of his 
												prophet.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Jeremiah 9:15-16. I will feed 
												them, &c., with wormwood — See 
												on Deuteronomy 29:18. The word 
												rendered wormwood here, it 
												seems, had better be rendered 
												wolfsbane, as signifying an herb 
												which is not only bitter and 
												nauseous, but also noxious. And 
												give them water of gall to drink 
												— Or juice of hemlock, as some 
												read it; some other herb that is 
												poisonous as well as 
												distasteful. By these 
												expressions is signified not 
												only a scarcity of meat and 
												drink, but the most grievous 
												calamities. I will scatter them 
												also among the heathen — They 
												have been corrupted by their 
												intimacy with heathen idolaters, 
												with whom they mingled 
												themselves, and whose works they 
												learned, and now they shall lose 
												themselves among those through 
												whom they lost their virtue. 
												Whom neither they nor their 
												fathers have known — They set up 
												gods to worship, which they had 
												not known, strange gods, new 
												gods, Deuteronomy 32:17; and now 
												God will scatter them among 
												those people whom they had not 
												known, those with whom they can 
												claim no acquaintance, and from 
												whom therefore they can expect 
												no favour. The nations to the 
												east, beyond the Euphrates and 
												Tigris, seem to be chiefly meant 
												here, whom the Jews knew little 
												or nothing of before they were 
												carried into captivity among 
												them. And from that time to this 
												the Jews have been scattered 
												among those people. They are now 
												also scattered through almost 
												all the nations of the earth; so 
												that this prophecy has received 
												its full accomplishment in the 
												most literal sense; for they 
												have indeed been scattered among 
												those whom neither they nor 
												their fathers had known. And 
												what deserves highly to be 
												remarked is, that among none of 
												these nations have they attained 
												to any share of supreme power, 
												but have always lived among them 
												upon courtesy or sufferance. And 
												I will send a sword after them, 
												&c. — A judgment threatened by 
												Moses in case of their 
												disobedience, Leviticus 26:23, 
												and fulfilled upon several of 
												the Jewish captives in Egypt and 
												elsewhere.
 
 Verse 17
 Jeremiah 9:17. Consider ye, and 
												call for the mourning women — 
												Consider the evil circumstances 
												you are in, which call for 
												mourning and lamentation: and 
												since you yourselves are not 
												sufficiently affected with the 
												dangers that threaten you, send 
												for those women whose profession 
												it is to mourn at funerals, and 
												upon other sorrowful occasions, 
												and let their lamentations 
												excite true sorrow in you. The 
												prophet seems here to compare 
												the Jewish state to a person 
												dead, and going to be buried, 
												and therefore calls upon the 
												people to send for those who 
												used to be hired to make 
												lamentations and wailings at 
												funerals. The reader will 
												observe, “it was an ancient 
												custom of the Hebrews, at 
												funerals, and on other like 
												occasions, to make use of hired 
												mourners, whose profession it 
												was to exhibit in public all the 
												signs and gestures of immoderate 
												and frantic grief, and by their 
												loud outcries and doleful songs 
												to excite a real passion of 
												sorrow in others. Women were 
												generally employed in this 
												office, either because it was an 
												office more suitable to the 
												softness of a female mind, or 
												because the more tender passions 
												being predominant in that sex, 
												they succeeded better in their 
												parts; nor were there ever 
												wanting those artists well 
												instructed in the discipline of 
												mourning, and ready to hire out 
												their lamentations and tears on 
												any emergency. It was the chief 
												excellence of other arts to 
												imitate nature; it was likewise 
												esteemed so in this; their 
												funeral dirges, therefore, were 
												composed in imitation of those 
												which had been poured forth by 
												genuine and sincere grief. Their 
												sentences were short, querulous, 
												pathetic, simple, and unadorned; 
												somewhat laboured indeed, 
												because they were composed in 
												metre, and to be sung to the 
												pipe, as we learn from Matthew 
												9:23; and from Homer,” where, 
												speaking of Hector’s funeral, he 
												says, — — παρα δ’ εισαν αοιδους,
 
 θρηνων εξαρχους, οιτε σονοεσσαν 
												αοιδην,
 
 οι μεν αρ’ εθρηνεον, επι δε 
												σεναχοντο γυναικες. ILIAD, ω. 
												720.
 
 A melancholy choir attend 
												around, With plaintive sighs, 
												and music’s solemn sound; 
												Alternately they sing, alternate 
												flow Th’ obedient tears, 
												melodious in their wo. See 
												POPE’S IL., book 24. ver. 900.
 
 Jerome tells us, in his comment 
												on this verse, that the practice 
												was continued in Judea down to 
												his days; “That women, at 
												funerals, with dishevelled hair, 
												and naked breasts, endeavoured, 
												in a modulated voice, to unite 
												others in lamentation with 
												them.” Frequent allusions to 
												this custom are to be met with 
												in Scripture, particularly 2 
												Chronicles 35:25, where the 
												singing men and singing women 
												are said to have made it a 
												constant rule, after King 
												Josiah’s death, to commemorate 
												that excellent prince in all 
												their future dirges or 
												lamentations, as one in whom the 
												public in general had sustained 
												an irreparable loss. Such were 
												the mourners, mentioned 
												Ecclesiastes 12:5, and said to 
												go about the streets; and those 
												whom Amos calls, יודעי נהי, 
												skilful of lamentation; Amos 
												5:16. And such no doubt were the 
												minstrels and the people making 
												a noise; οχλον θορυβουμενον, 
												whom our Saviour found in the 
												house of the ruler of the 
												synagogue, whose daughter was 
												just dead; who, St. Mark says, 
												wept and wailed greatly, 
												κλαιοντας και αλαλαζοντας πολλα, 
												Mark 5:38. There are especially 
												several traces of this custom to 
												be met with in the prophets, who 
												frequently delivered their 
												predictions of approaching 
												calamities in the form of 
												funeral dirges. The poem before 
												us, from Jeremiah 9:19-22, is 
												both an illustration and 
												confirmation of this, and worthy 
												of the reader’s frequent 
												perusal, on account of its 
												affecting pathos, moral 
												sentiments, and fine images; 
												particularly in Jeremiah 9:21, 
												where death is described in as 
												animated a prosopopœia as can be 
												conceived. See Lowth’s Prelec., 
												Calmet, and Blaney.
 
 Verse 23-24
 Jeremiah 9:23-24. Let not the 
												wise man glory in his wisdom — 
												Let not men value themselves on 
												account of their wisdom, 
												strength, or riches, which are 
												things in themselves of a very 
												uncertain continuance, and such 
												calamities are coming, (see 
												Jeremiah 9:25-26,) in which they 
												will stand the owners of them in 
												very little stead. The only 
												true, valuable endowment is the 
												knowledge of God, not as he is 
												in himself, which is too high an 
												attainment for poor mortals to 
												pretend to, but with respect to 
												his dealings with men; to have a 
												serious sense of his mercies to 
												the penitent, of his judgments 
												to the obstinate, and of his 
												truth and integrity, in making 
												good his promises and 
												threatenings to both. It is in 
												the exercise of these attributes 
												God chiefly delights; and it is 
												by these he desires to make 
												himself known to the world; and 
												he that forms a just and lively 
												apprehension of God, chiefly 
												with regard to these his 
												perfections, will always demean 
												himself suitably toward him. 
												Judgment and righteousness are 
												often equivalent terms, but here 
												the former seems to denote God’s 
												severity against the wicked, and 
												the latter his truth, justice, 
												or holiness. See Lowth. Upon the 
												whole, all other wisdom is vain 
												and dangerous, except that which 
												has God himself for its object, 
												and teaches us to despise 
												ourselves, to be humbled beneath 
												his mighty hand, and to glory in 
												him alone.
 
 Verse 25-26
 Jeremiah 9:25-26. Behold the 
												days come, &c. — Blaney 
												translates these two verses, 
												“Behold, the days are coming, 
												saith Jehovah, that I will 
												punish all the circumcision with 
												the uncircumcision; Egypt, &c., 
												and all those that have their 
												coast insulated, those that 
												dwell in the wilderness: for all 
												the nations are uncircumcised, 
												and all the house of Israel is 
												uncircumcised in heart.” The 
												Greek word ακροβυσια, which 
												properly means uncircumcision, 
												is several times used by St. 
												Paul for the persons who are 
												uncircumcised, as περιτομη, 
												circumcision, is put for persons 
												circumcised. See Romans 2:26-27; 
												Romans 3:30. Because the Jews 
												valued themselves so much upon 
												their circumcision, God here 
												tells them that, when he should 
												send his judgments abroad into 
												the world, they should find no 
												more favour than those that were 
												not circumcised; and, 
												accordingly, in mentioning the 
												heathen nations whom he would 
												punish, he places Judah among 
												them, because they were, in 
												effect, uncircumcised as well as 
												the heathen, contenting 
												themselves with the outward sign 
												of circumcision in the flesh, 
												without seeking that internal 
												circumcision, which is of the 
												heart and spirit, and the 
												purification and holiness 
												signified thereby. By those that 
												have their coast insulated, as 
												Blaney renders one of the 
												clauses of Jeremiah 9:26, he 
												supposes the Arabians are 
												designed, which he thinks may be 
												fairly concluded from the 
												connection in which the same 
												words. קצוצי פאה, stand with the 
												context, in Jeremiah 49:32. 
												Concerning the precise meaning, 
												however, of these words, he 
												justly observes, “interpreters 
												differ very greatly. Some 
												represent them as signifying 
												persons cut off from other 
												people, by being thrust into a 
												remote corner; in which light 
												the translators of our Bible 
												appear to have considered them, 
												when they rendered them in the 
												text, All that are in the utmost 
												corners, and in the margin, cut 
												off into corners. But all the 
												ancient versions understand them 
												as expressing the peculiar 
												manner in which the Arabians cut 
												the hair of their heads or 
												beards,” expressed also in our 
												marginal reading; which reading, 
												Dr. Durel says, ought doubtless 
												to be received into the text; 
												the Arabs, who are meant, he 
												thinks, by this periphrasis, 
												being accustomed to cut their 
												hair short, particularly about 
												the crown of the head; and in 
												respect to their beards, leaving 
												only a tuft of hair growing 
												about their chins; a practice 
												which was forbidden to the Jews, 
												Leviticus 19:27. But it seems 
												much more probable that the 
												words have a respect to the 
												peninsular form of the country, 
												surrounded on all sides by the 
												sea, excepting only the isthmus 
												to the north; and thus almost 
												insulated, or cut off, from any 
												other land.
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