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												Verse 1Jeremiah 15:1. Then said the 
												Lord unto me, &c. — This is the 
												Lord’s answer to the fervent 
												prayers of Jeremiah, contained 
												in the last four verses of the 
												preceding chapter. Though Moses 
												and Samuel stood before me — By 
												prayer or sacrifice to reconcile 
												me to them; yet my mind could 
												not be toward this people — Yet 
												I could not be prevailed with to 
												admit them into favour. “As God 
												had forbidden Jeremiah before to 
												intercede for them, because it 
												would be to no purpose; so here 
												he declares, that he would not 
												admit the prayers of any others, 
												though eminent favourites, in 
												their behalf. Moses obtained 
												pardon for the people after 
												their sin in making the golden 
												calf, Exodus 32:34; and again, 
												after their despising the 
												promised land, Numbers 14:20. 
												Samuel’s intercession prevailed 
												for their deliverance out of the 
												hands of the Philistines, 1 
												Samuel 7:9. And these two 
												persons are mentioned together, 
												as remarkably prevalent by their 
												prayers, Psalms 99:6; Psalms 
												99:8. But here God says, that if 
												these very persons were alive, 
												and in that near attendance to 
												him which they formerly enjoyed, 
												(for that is the import of the 
												phrase, To stand before him,) 
												yet even their prayers should 
												not avert his judgments from 
												this people.” — Lowth. Cast them 
												out of my sight — Declare that 
												they shall be cast out, as that 
												which is in the highest degree 
												odious and offensive; or tell 
												them to come no more to me with 
												their supplications, but to go 
												out of my sanctuary. A strong 
												declaration of determined 
												displeasure. Thus the Lord 
												dismisses them with a severity 
												whereof we have few examples in 
												Scripture. See Ezekiel 14:14; 
												Ezekiel 14:16.
 
 Verses 2-5
 Jeremiah 15:2-5. If they say 
												unto thee, Whither shall we go 
												forth? — If they ask thee what 
												thou meanest by going forth, and 
												whither they shall go: thou 
												shalt tell them, Such as are for 
												death to death, &c. — In 
												general, You shall go forth, 
												saith God, to ruin and 
												destruction; but shall not be 
												all destroyed in one and the 
												same way, but every one shall 
												perish in that way which God 
												hath appointed: some shall be 
												destroyed by the pestilence, 
												(for that is here to be 
												understood by death, Revelation 
												6:8, it being death without 
												visible means,) others shall be 
												destroyed by famine, others by 
												the sword of the enemy, others 
												shall go into captivity; but one 
												way or other the greatest part 
												of you shall be consumed. And I 
												will appoint over them four 
												kinds — Namely, of destroyers. 
												The sword to slay — And those 
												that are slain by it shall not 
												enjoy the common rites of 
												burial, but their carcasses 
												shall be left a prey to the 
												dogs, the birds, and the wild 
												beasts, which last shall both 
												tear their living bodies and 
												their dead carcasses. And I will 
												cause them to be removed into 
												all kingdoms, &c. — Though the 
												body of the people were removed 
												into Babylon, yet it is more 
												than probable that many of them 
												became voluntary exiles to avoid 
												the miseries which they saw 
												coming upon their country. And, 
												without doubt, the king of 
												Babylon removed them into 
												several kingdoms belonging to 
												his large empire. These, it must 
												be observed, are the very words 
												of Moses, (Deuteronomy 28:25,) 
												where he threatens the 
												Israelites with a general 
												dispersion over the world, which 
												threatening received its 
												completion, in part, by the 
												Babylonish captivity, but more 
												perfectly after the destruction 
												of Jerusalem by the Romans. 
												Because of Manasseh — In 
												idolatry and other abominations 
												he exceeded all the kings that 
												preceded him: see 2 Kings 
												21:7-11. In his time the public 
												worship of God was wholly 
												suppressed, and idolatry 
												introduced into the very temple; 
												the law of God was likewise 
												quite laid aside, and, in a 
												manner, forgotten, as appears by 
												the surprise Hilkiah was in when 
												he found the original copy of 
												the law in the house of the 
												Lord. So that his sins filled up 
												the measure of the Jews’ 
												iniquities; and therefore, 
												notwithstanding the reformation 
												wrought afterward by Josiah, the 
												Lord turned not from the 
												fierceness of his wrath kindled 
												against Judah: see 2 Kings 23:26 
												and 2 Kings 24:3-4. It must be 
												observed, however, that it was 
												not merely for his sins, or the 
												sins of his times, that God so 
												dreadfully punished the Jews in 
												the days of Jehoiakim and 
												Zedekiah; but it was also, and 
												especially because they imitated 
												the wicked example which 
												Manasseh had set them, the 
												reformation effected by Josiah 
												being only partial, and of not 
												long continuance. For who shall, 
												or, who will, have pity upon 
												thee, O Jerusalem — Thy sins 
												render thee unworthy of pity, 
												and all that see the calamities 
												brought upon thee will 
												acknowledge them to be just. Who 
												will go aside, &c. — Who will be 
												so much concerned for thee as to 
												step a little out of his way to 
												inquire after thee; a common 
												instance of respect between 
												persons in any degree 
												acquainted. Rather they that 
												pass by will insult over thy 
												calamities.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Jeremiah 15:6-7. Thou hast 
												forsaken me, thou art gone 
												backward — God here, by more 
												expressions of the same import 
												with many that we have before 
												met with, declares his steady 
												resolution to destroy them for 
												their apostacy from him; and 
												represents himself as an angry 
												prince or parent, that had 
												frequently been provoked by a 
												subject or child whom he had 
												often resolved to punish, but 
												out of his clemency, or upon the 
												mediation of others, had altered 
												his mind, and resolved to spare 
												him; but afterward had met with 
												so many fresh provocations that 
												his patience was quite tired 
												out, and he was determined to 
												bear no longer. I will fan them 
												with a fan — Not a purging fan, 
												to separate the chaff from them, 
												but a scattering fan, to 
												disperse and scatter them to all 
												the winds, as Ezekiel expresses 
												it, Ezekiel 5:12. In the gates 
												of the land — He alludes to a 
												man standing in the gate of his 
												thrashing-floor to fan and 
												cleanse his corn. I will deprive 
												them of children — The words, of 
												children, are not in the Hebrew, 
												and are unnecessarily supplied: 
												it may as well be of any, or all 
												their comforts and good things. 
												I will destroy my people — The 
												privilege they claim of being my 
												people shall not protect them 
												while they go on in their sinful 
												courses.
 
 Verse 8
 Jeremiah 15:8. Their widows are 
												increased above the sand of the 
												seas — A hyperbolical 
												expression. The prophet still 
												speaks of things to come as if 
												present. In Jehoiakim’s time we 
												read of no great number of 
												widows, but they were 
												exceedingly multiplied when the 
												city was besieged and taken in 
												Zedekiah’s time. I have brought 
												upon them against the mother, 
												&c. — Blaney renders this and 
												the next clause, I have brought 
												against their mother a chosen 
												one, spoiling at noon-day; I 
												have caused to fall upon her 
												suddenly an enemy and terrors. 
												By the mother here we are to 
												understand Jerusalem, the 
												mother-city, as she is termed in 
												the margin, against which 
												Nebuchadnezzar, the spoiler, was 
												sent, and who came, not 
												secretly, as a thief by night, 
												but openly, with an army at 
												noon-day. “Nebuchadnezzar might 
												be called a chosen one,” says 
												Blaney, “as being selected by 
												God to be the instrument and 
												executioner of his vengeance. In 
												the margin of our Bibles, בחורis 
												rendered a young man; and this 
												also would very properly 
												characterize the same person. 
												For Josephus (Contra Apion, lib. 
												1.) cites from Berosus, the 
												Chaldean historian, a passage to 
												the following purport: that 
												‘Nabopollassar, king of Babylon, 
												hearing that the provinces of 
												Egypt, Cœlo-Syria, and Phœnice 
												had revolted, and being himself 
												infirm through age, sent a part 
												of his forces under his son 
												Nebuchadnezzar, then in the 
												prime of youth, οντι ετι εν 
												ηλικια, by whom those provinces 
												were again reduced.’ This was 
												the expedition said to have been 
												undertaken by him in the third 
												year of Jehoiakim, king of 
												Judah, in the course of which, 
												after having first defeated the 
												Egyptian army at Carchemish, he 
												laid siege to Jerusalem, took 
												and plundered it, carrying away 
												much spoil and many captives to 
												Babylon.” See Jeremiah 46:2; 
												Daniel 1:1-3; 2 Kings 24:1.
 
 Verse 9
 Jeremiah 15:9. She that hath 
												borne seven languisheth — Seven 
												is put for many, (see 1 Samuel 
												2:5,) and the multitude of the 
												inhabitants of Jerusalem, the 
												mother-city, is here alluded to; 
												the prophet pursuing the 
												metaphor of the former verse, 
												and describing the mother-city 
												under the figure of a woman that 
												had been fruitful, but was now 
												become feeble, and bore no 
												children. He means that the 
												people of Judah, which had been 
												very numerous, were now greatly 
												diminished. Her sun is gone down 
												while it was yet day — In the 
												midst of her prosperity she is 
												reduced to this state of misery, 
												being of a sudden overwhelmed 
												with the greatest calamities, 
												when she might have expected a 
												long continuance of happiness. 
												The expression is extremely 
												strong, and denotes a sudden 
												change from the highest dignity 
												to the lowest abasement. She 
												hath been ashamed and confounded 
												— The judgments of God oppressed 
												and confounded a part of the 
												Jews before their captivity. And 
												the residue of them — The 
												remainder of them, saith God, 
												shall be destroyed by the sword 
												of the enemy.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Jeremiah 15:10-11. Wo is me, my 
												mother — The prophet here 
												complains of the opposition he 
												met with from his countrymen for 
												speaking unwelcome truths. Thou 
												hast borne me a man of 
												contention to the whole earth — 
												Or, whole land, rather. I am the 
												object of common hatred; every 
												body takes occasion to quarrel 
												with me, because I speak truths 
												which they do not like to hear. 
												I have neither lent upon usury, 
												&c. — “The Jews were forbidden 
												to take usury of their brethren, 
												(Deuteronomy 23:19,) especially 
												of the poor, (Exodus 22:25,) 
												which was thought so great an 
												oppression that it made the man 
												who was guilty of it hated and 
												cursed by every one. The prophet 
												says that he had never done 
												this, and yet every body was his 
												enemy, only for delivering those 
												messages which he had received 
												from God.” The Lord said, Verily 
												it shall be well with thy 
												remnant — The latter words of 
												this verse expound the former: 
												for by שׁרית, remnant, or 
												residue, is meant the remnant of 
												days that Jeremiah had to live. 
												Verily, I will cause the enemy 
												to entreat thee well — I will by 
												my providence so order it that 
												how cruelly and severely soever 
												the enemy may deal with thy 
												countrymen, yet they shall use 
												thee kindly when they shall take 
												the city. This was accordingly 
												fulfilled: the Chaldeans, when 
												they took Jerusalem, and carried 
												the inhabitants of the land into 
												captivity, treated Jeremiah with 
												great kindness, giving him his 
												choice to go where he pleased, 
												and bestowing gifts upon him, as 
												we read Jeremiah 39:11; Jeremiah 
												40:3-4.
 
 Verse 12
 Jeremiah 15:12. Shall iron break 
												the northern iron? — The 
												northern iron is the hardest of 
												any. “It is here,” says Blaney, 
												“justly supposed to denote, in a 
												primary sense, that species of 
												hardened iron, or steel, called 
												in Greek χαλυψ, from the 
												Chalybes, a people bordering on 
												the Euxine sea, and consequently 
												lying to the north of Judea, by 
												whom the art of tempering steel 
												is said to have been discovered. 
												Strabo speaks of this people as 
												known in former times by the 
												name of Chalybes, but afterward 
												called Chaldæi, and mentions 
												their iron mines, lib. 12. p. 
												549. These, however, were a 
												different people from the 
												Chaldeans who were united with 
												the Babylonians.” “The words, if 
												applied to Jeremiah, import thus 
												much, that, as common iron 
												cannot contend for hardness with 
												the northern iron, or with 
												steel, so the opposition which 
												the Jews made against him should 
												be easily vanquished and 
												disappointed, because the Lord 
												was with him to save him, 
												Jeremiah 15:20. If the words 
												relate to the Jews, as the 
												following verses plainly do, the 
												sense is, that the Chaldeans 
												coming from the north would be 
												as much too hard for them to 
												engage with, as the northern 
												iron was superior in strength to 
												the common metal of that kind.” 
												— Lowth. But perhaps the 
												expression is not merely 
												metaphorical: it is not unlikely 
												that the Babylonians had their 
												armour from the Chalybes, and 
												that therefore it was made of 
												iron much harder, and of much 
												better proof, than that of which 
												the armour of the Jews was 
												formed.
 
 Verse 13-14
 Jeremiah 15:13-14. Here God 
												turns his speech from the 
												prophet to the people. Thy 
												substance and thy treasures will 
												I give to the spoil — All thy 
												riches and precious things shall 
												be spoiled: there shall be no 
												price taken for the redemption 
												of them. For all thy sins in all 
												thy borders — All parts of the 
												country, even those which lay 
												most remote, had contributed to 
												the national guilt, and all 
												shall be brought to account. And 
												I will make thee to pass with 
												thine enemies, &c. — They shall 
												stay in their own country till 
												they see their estates and all 
												their property ruined, and then 
												they shall be carried into 
												captivity, to spend the remains 
												of a miserable life in slavery. 
												And all this is the fruit of 
												God’s wrath; for a fire, says 
												he, is kindled in mine anger, 
												which shall burn upon you — And, 
												if not extinguished in time, 
												will burn to eternity.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Jeremiah 15:15-16. O Lord, thou 
												knowest — Thou knowest my 
												sincerity, how faithfully I have 
												declared thy will: or, thou 
												knowest my sufferings, how 
												wickedly my enemies act toward 
												me. It is matter of comfort to 
												us, that, whatever befalls us, 
												we have a God to go to, before 
												whom we may spread our case, and 
												to whose omniscience we may 
												appeal, as the prophet here 
												does. Remember me, and visit me 
												— Think upon me for good, and 
												visit me with thy love, while 
												this people are visited with thy 
												wrath. Revenge me — Or, rather, 
												Vindicate me, from my 
												persecutors, as the Hebrew, לי 
												מרדפי הנקם, may be properly 
												rendered: give judgment against 
												them, and let that judgment be 
												executed so far as is necessary 
												for my vindication, and to 
												compel them to acknowledge that 
												they have done me wrong: see 
												note on Jeremiah 11:20. Take me 
												not away in thy longsuffering — 
												While thou exercisest 
												long-suffering toward my 
												persecutors, and forbearest to 
												vindicate my cause and defend 
												me, let them not prevail to take 
												away my life. Or, as some 
												understand his words, Though I 
												am a sinner, and deserve to be 
												punished as such among the Jews, 
												yet exercise toward me patience 
												and long-suffering, and let me 
												not be taken away into 
												captivity. Know that for thy 
												sake I have suffered rebuke — 
												Lord, remember that my reproach, 
												and all that I suffer, is for 
												thy sake, because I have 
												faithfully declared thy truth, 
												and defended thy honour and 
												glory. Thy words were found, and 
												I did eat them — The words 
												which, from time to time, thou 
												didst reveal to me, were by me 
												readily received, meditated 
												upon, and inwardly digested. And 
												thy word was unto me the joy, 
												&c., of my heart — That is, 
												either, 1st, Though some of thy 
												words were very dreadful, and 
												foretold the ruin of my country, 
												which is very dear to me, and in 
												the ruin of which I cannot but 
												have a deep share, yet, because 
												they proceeded from thee, I was 
												glad to hear them, and be thy 
												instrument to communicate them 
												to thy people, all my natural 
												affections being swallowed up in 
												zeal for thy glory. Or, 2d, Thy 
												word of commission, by which I 
												was made thy prophet, was at 
												first very grateful and pleasing 
												to me; and I was glad when thou 
												didst, at any time, reveal thy 
												will to me, and authorize and 
												enjoin me to make it known to 
												the people. For though the 
												execution of this office was not 
												attended with any secular 
												advantages, but, on the 
												contrary, exposed me to contempt 
												and persecution, yet, because I 
												was thereby serving and 
												glorifying thee, and doing good, 
												I was glad to be so employed, 
												and it was my meat and drink to 
												do thy will. For I am called by 
												thy name, O Lord God of hosts — 
												I became a prophet by thy 
												authority, and am thy messenger, 
												and thou, the Lord of hosts, art 
												able to protect me.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Jeremiah 15:17-18. I sat not in 
												the assembly of the mockers — 
												Or, of those that make merry, as 
												משׂחקים is elsewhere rendered: 
												see Jeremiah 30:19; Jeremiah 
												31:4. Jeremiah soon found that 
												the joy which he had conceived 
												in being called to the prophetic 
												office, and favoured with 
												extraordinary communications 
												from God, was turned into 
												heaviness, God continually 
												filling his mouth with dreadful 
												messages, and his prophecies 
												containing nothing but terrible 
												denunciations of wrath against a 
												sinful people. Hence his whole 
												prophetical life was to him a 
												time of sorrow and solitude, a 
												time when he sat alone mourning 
												and weeping, in secret, for the 
												indignation of God, revealed to 
												him against his people; nor 
												rejoiced — I did not, with the 
												deriders and scorners of thy 
												word, give a loose to joy and 
												mirth at a time when thy severe 
												judgments were denounced, and 
												when the most dreadful 
												calamities hung over the 
												country. Because of thy hand — 
												God’s hand may be understood of 
												his judgments, which, being 
												denounced by the prophet, might 
												be resembled to a hand stretched 
												out, and just ready to strike; 
												or else of the prophetical 
												impulse which was strong upon 
												Jeremiah, and, in a manner, 
												forced him to be the messenger 
												of evil tidings. God’s 
												judgments, as they were 
												represented to the prophets, 
												often raised such dreadful ideas 
												in their minds as affected them 
												in an extraordinary manner, 
												especially if their threatenings 
												concerned their own country, or 
												the church of God. Why is my 
												pain perpetual, &c. — These seem 
												evidently to be the words of 
												Jeremiah, complaining of the 
												hard task which God had put upon 
												him, continually filling his 
												mouth with such bitter words of 
												evil against the people as 
												exposed him to their most 
												implacable rage, so that his 
												misery seemed like an incurable 
												wound, attended with 
												excruciating pain, for which 
												there was no remedy but 
												patience. Wilt thou be 
												altogether to me as a liar, and 
												waters that fail? — No, I know 
												thou wilt not. God is not a man 
												that he should lie. The fountain 
												of life will never be to his 
												people as waters that fail. The 
												sense is, “Thou hast promised to 
												be my defence against mine 
												enemies; and wilt thou 
												altogether deceive me? like 
												little brooks, which are dried 
												up in summer, when they are most 
												wanted, and so disappoint the 
												thirsty traveller: see Job 6:15. 
												The prophet here sets down the 
												perplexities he laboured under, 
												by reason of the opposition he 
												continually met with from 
												ungodly men, in the execution of 
												his office; just as the psalmist 
												relates the misgivings of his 
												mind when he was under great 
												troubles and temptations. But 
												then presently he checks such 
												thoughts, calls to mind God’s 
												gracious promises, and 
												encourages himself to rely upon 
												him. And the like encouragements 
												are recorded in the following 
												verses of this chapter.” — 
												Lowth.
 
 Verses 19-21
 Jeremiah 15:19-21. Therefore 
												thus saith the Lord — In these 
												verses we have God’s gracious 
												answer to the preceding 
												expostulation. Though the 
												prophet betrayed much human 
												frailty in his address, yet God 
												vouchsafed to answer him with 
												good and comfortable words, for 
												he knows our frame. If thou 
												return — Namely, from thy 
												diffidence and distrust in my 
												providence and promises; then 
												will I bring thee again, and 
												thou shalt stand before me — I 
												will restore thee to the former 
												favour thou hadst with me, and 
												thou shalt be my prophet, to 
												reveal my mind to the people. 
												And if thou take the precious 
												from the vile — If thou separate 
												the precious truths of God from 
												the vile fancies of men; or 
												rather, if thou preach so as to 
												distinguish good and bad men 
												from each other, encouraging the 
												good, and reproving the wicked, 
												then I will continue thee as my 
												prophet, to speak in my name; 
												and thou wilt answer the 
												character of a true prophet, 
												whose office it is to utter the 
												words that God puts into his 
												mouth, without adding thereto, 
												or diminishing from them. Let 
												them return unto thee, &c. — He 
												here charges the prophet to keep 
												his ground, and not to go over 
												to wicked men, but to use his 
												endeavour to reduce them to that 
												obedience which he yielded to 
												God. And I will make thee unto 
												this people a fenced wall — 
												Which the storm batters and 
												beats violently upon, but cannot 
												shake; and they shall fight 
												against thee — They will still 
												continue their opposition; but 
												they shall not prevail — Namely, 
												to drive thee from off thy work, 
												or to cut thee off from the land 
												of the living. For I am with 
												thee to save thee — And I have 
												wisdom and power enough to deal 
												with the most formidable enemy. 
												I will deliver thee out of the 
												hand of the wicked — The wicked 
												Jews; and out of the hand of the 
												terrible — The power of the 
												terrible Chaldeans, into whose 
												hands thou shalt come, but shalt 
												be preserved from any harm by 
												the workings of my providence in 
												thy favour.
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