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												Verse 1Jeremiah 23:1. Wo be unto the 
												pastors — Or, as הויis by some 
												rendered, Alas for the pastors! 
												or, Ho the pastors! For it may 
												be a particle of calling, as the 
												LXX. and Syriac represent it, 
												and not of commination, as in 
												our translation. The word 
												pastors comprehends both civil 
												and ecclesiastical governors: 
												see note on Jeremiah 2:8. This 
												acceptation of the word agrees 
												with the prophet’s complaint 
												elsewhere, that their rulers, as 
												well as their priests and 
												prophets, were rather corrupters 
												than reformers of the people’s 
												manners. And the Messiah 
												himself, whose coming is 
												foretold, Jeremiah 23:5, for the 
												rectifying of these disorders, 
												was both a king and a priest.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Jeremiah 23:2-4. Therefore thus 
												saith the Lord against the 
												pastors that feed my people — 
												That undertake the care of my 
												people, though they do not 
												faithfully execute their trust. 
												God calls them his people, his 
												flock, the sheep of his pasture, 
												with respect to the ancient 
												covenant which he had made with 
												their fathers. They are said to 
												have fed this people, because it 
												was their duty to have done so. 
												Ye have scattered my flock — 
												Namely, by acts of violence and 
												oppression, driving them from 
												their places to seek more safe 
												and quiet abodes. Or, instead of 
												looking after them, you have 
												suffered them to be dispersed, 
												and through your ill example 
												they have gone astray to 
												idolatry, and that, with your 
												other sins, has brought upon 
												them their expulsion from their 
												own land and a general 
												dispersion. Behold, I will visit 
												upon you the evil of your doings 
												— Will deal with you as your 
												sins have deserved. They would 
												not visit the flock in the way 
												of duty, and therefore God will 
												visit them in a way of 
												vengeance. And I will gather the 
												remnant of my flock — Though 
												there be but a remnant of my 
												flock, a little remnant left, 
												that has narrowly escaped 
												destruction, I will gather that 
												remnant; will find them out 
												wherever they are, and will find 
												out ways and means to bring them 
												back out of all countries 
												whither I have driven them. It 
												was the justice of God for the 
												sins of their shepherds that 
												dispersed them, but the mercy of 
												God shall gather them when the 
												shepherds that betrayed them are 
												cut off. And being brought to 
												their former habitations, as 
												sheep to their folds, there they 
												shall be fruitful, and increase 
												in numbers. And I will set up 
												shepherds over them — Who shall 
												make it their business, not only 
												to rule, but also to feed them, 
												namely, with knowledge and 
												understanding. They shall fear 
												no more — As they formerly did, 
												when they were continually 
												exposed to the oppressions of 
												their rulers at home, or the 
												invasions and assaults of their 
												enemies from abroad; but they 
												shall be preserved in peace and 
												safety, and none of them shall 
												be lacking. Though the times may 
												have been long bad with the 
												church, it does not follow that 
												they will be always so. Such 
												pastors as Zerubbabel and 
												Nehemiah, though they did not 
												live in such pomp as Jehoiakim 
												and Jeconiah lived in, nor made 
												such a figure, were as great 
												blessings to the people as the 
												others were plagues to them. The 
												peace and prosperity of the 
												church are not connected with, 
												much less do they depend upon, 
												the pomp of her rulers.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Jeremiah 23:5-6. I will raise 
												unto David a righteous branch — 
												The house of David seemed to be 
												quite sunk and ruined by the 
												threatening pronounced against 
												Jeconiah, (Jeremiah 22:30,) that 
												none of his seed should ever sit 
												upon the throne of David: but 
												here we have a promise which 
												effectually secures the honour 
												of the covenant made with David, 
												notwithstanding that 
												threatening; for by it his house 
												will be raised out of its ruins 
												to a greater lustre than ever, 
												and shine brighter than it did 
												even in the days of Solomon. We 
												have not so many prophecies of 
												Christ in this book as we had in 
												that of the Prophet Isaiah. But 
												here we have a very illustrious 
												one. Of him, doubtless, the 
												prophet here speaks, and of no 
												other person. Even the Jewish 
												doctors, as well as Christian 
												interpreters, understand this as 
												a prophecy of the Messiah, who 
												is called the branch: Isaiah 
												4:2; Isaiah 53:2; and the man 
												the branch, Zechariah 3:8. And 
												here he is termed the righteous 
												branch, not only because he 
												himself was righteous, but 
												because he makes his people 
												righteous; and a king that shall 
												reign and prosper — Not like 
												kings that now were of the house 
												of David, going backward in all 
												their affairs, but one that 
												shall set up a kingdom in the 
												world, which shall be victorious 
												over all opposition; one to 
												whose hands the good pleasure of 
												the Lord shall be committed, and 
												under whose care and management 
												it shall prosper; one who shall 
												execute judgment and justice in 
												the earth — All the world over, 
												Psalms 96:13. The present kings 
												of David’s line were unjust and 
												oppressive, and their affairs 
												therefore did not prosper; but 
												this king shall break the 
												usurped power of Satan, 
												institute a perfect rule of holy 
												living, and in due time make all 
												the world righteous. In his days 
												— That is, under his dominion, 
												when his kingdom shall be set up 
												and established upon earth; 
												Judah shall be saved, &c. — The 
												people of God, typified by Judah 
												and Israel, shall be saved with 
												a spiritual and eternal 
												salvation, a salvation from the 
												guilt and power of sin, into the 
												favour and image of God here, 
												and into the kingdom of his 
												glory hereafter. At which 
												kingdom, till they arrive, God 
												will be a special protection to 
												them, their refuge and strength, 
												and very present help in 
												trouble; so that they shall 
												dwell safely — Confiding in the 
												care of their strong helper, and 
												preserved in perfect peace. And 
												this is his name whereby he 
												shall be called — Namely, by his 
												people, and by God; the name 
												whereby he shall be known, and 
												which shall at once be 
												descriptive both of his person 
												and office. THE LORD, Hebrew, 
												JEHOVAH OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS — 
												Though of the seed of David 
												according to the flesh, he shall 
												indeed be JEHOVAH, God in human 
												nature, and OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS 
												namely, justifying us by his 
												merits, sanctifying us by his 
												Spirit, and directing us in 
												every part of our duty by his 
												doctrine and example; the end of 
												the law for righteousness to 
												every one that believeth in him 
												with a faith that worketh by 
												love.
 
 Verse 7-8
 Jeremiah 23:7-8. Therefore, 
												behold, the days come, saith the 
												Lord — Here the prophet proceeds 
												to fore-tel one very important, 
												although remote, consequence of 
												God’s raising up the righteous 
												branch to David, namely, the 
												great salvation which should 
												thereby come to the Jews in the 
												latter days of their state, 
												which should be so illustrious 
												as far to outshine their 
												deliverance out of Egypt. That 
												they shall no more say, The Lord 
												liveth, &c. — These words we had 
												before, Jeremiah 16:14-15, where 
												see the note. But here the 
												passage seems to point more 
												plainly than it did there to the 
												days of the Messiah, and to 
												compare, not so much the two 
												deliverances themselves, giving 
												the preference to the latter, as 
												the two states to which the 
												church should grow after those 
												deliverances. About four hundred 
												and eighty years after they were 
												come out of Egypt, Solomon’s 
												temple was built, 1 Kings 6:1; 
												and at that time that nation, 
												which was so wonderfully brought 
												out of Egypt, was gradually 
												arrived to its height. And four 
												hundred and ninety years 
												(seventy weeks) after they came 
												out of Babylon, Messiah the 
												Prince set up the gospel temple, 
												which was the greatest glory of 
												that nation that was so 
												wonderfully brought out of 
												Babylon: see Daniel 9:24-25. Now 
												the spiritual glory of the 
												second period of that nation, 
												especially as transferred to the 
												gospel church, is much more 
												admirable and illustrious than 
												all the temporal glory of the 
												first period of it, in the days 
												of Solomon; for that was no 
												glory, compared with the glory 
												which excelleth. Add to this, 
												the prophet, it seems, also 
												foretels a second gathering of 
												the Jews from their dispersions, 
												namely, one that should take 
												place after the coming of the 
												Messiah, and the ruin of their 
												city and country by the Romans, 
												and therefore yet future. Now 
												this work of God, whenever it 
												shall be effected, including, as 
												it undoubtedly will, their 
												conversion to Christianity, and 
												perhaps, also, their restoration 
												to their own land, will 
												assuredly appear so wonderful as 
												greatly to outshine every former 
												deliverance wrought for that 
												people, and therefore may well 
												put every other out of 
												remembrance. St. Paul calls this 
												restoration of them, life from 
												the dead, (Romans 9:25,) meaning 
												that it would be a miracle as 
												surprising as the resurrection 
												of a multitude of dead bodies.
 
 Verse 9
 Jeremiah 23:9. My heart within 
												me is broken — This seems to be 
												the beginning of a new discourse 
												against the false prophets, with 
												whom afterward the priests are 
												joined. The first word of it in 
												the Hebrew, לנבאים, is rendered 
												by the Vulgate, Ad prophetas, To 
												the prophets, as if it were the 
												title of the following prophecy. 
												In this Jeremiah describes the 
												terror and concern which were 
												upon him when he considered the 
												horrible sin of these prophets 
												in pretending a divine mission 
												when they had received none, and 
												in uttering as messages from God 
												what were really their own 
												inventions, and in direct 
												opposition to every thing God 
												had spoken. And he declares 
												that, upon a view of their 
												guilt, and of the evils they 
												were bringing on themselves and 
												their country, he was in trouble 
												and agitation, like that of a 
												man who had lost his reason 
												through intoxication.
 
 Verse 10
 Jeremiah 23:10. For the land is 
												full of adulterers — Under this 
												term, which properly respects 
												those who violate the 
												marriage-bed, persons offending 
												by any species of uncleanness 
												are comprehended, as also such 
												as by fraud and falsehood 
												circumvented others, and tempted 
												them to join in the commission 
												of those illicit actions which 
												implied breach of faith and duty 
												toward God. Because of swearing 
												the land mourneth — By swearing 
												here, it seems, is not only 
												meant false swearing, or 
												perjury, but also profane and 
												idle swearing, or taking the 
												name of God in vain. Compare 
												this verse with Hosea 4:2. The 
												Hebrew word, אלה, signifies 
												indifferently swearing or 
												cursing. The Jewish forms of 
												adjuration, used in their courts 
												of justice for the discovery of 
												the truth, had usually an 
												imprecation joined to them; and 
												the prophet’s words here may 
												import, that men ventured to 
												forswear themselves, and incur 
												the imprecation implied in an 
												oath, rather than discover the 
												truth in cases wherein they were 
												called upon to be witnesses. The 
												land is said to mourn when it is 
												afflicted with drought, 
												barrenness, or any other 
												uncommon calamity. And the 
												swearing here spoken of is 
												represented by the prophet as 
												one of those crying sins for 
												which God had visited the nation 
												with these and other severe 
												judgments. And the sins here 
												mentioned, which abounded so 
												much among the people, were in a 
												great measure owing to the bad 
												example and corrupt doctrine of 
												the priests and prophets. See 
												Jeremiah 23:11-15. The pleasant 
												places, or the pastures, of the 
												wilderness — Or, of the plain, 
												as the words may be properly 
												rendered; are dried up — The 
												wrath of God is extended to all 
												places, whether more or less 
												inhabited. See note on Jeremiah 
												12:4. And their course is evil, 
												&c. — This seems to be intended 
												of the prophets and priests, to 
												whom this discourse is chiefly 
												directed, (see Jeremiah 
												23:9-11,) and it implies that 
												they not only erred in single 
												acts, but that the whole course 
												of their actions was evil, and 
												particularly their power, rule, 
												and government. For they both 
												made use of ill arts to 
												establish their authority over 
												the people, and they employed 
												it, not for the bettering, but 
												rather for the corrupting of 
												their manners.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Jeremiah 23:11-12. For both the 
												prophet and the priest are 
												profane — The priests, by their 
												formality and hypocrisy, 
												profaned the ordinances of God 
												which they were appointed to 
												administer; and the prophets, by 
												their lies, false doctrine, and 
												corrupt practice, profaned the 
												word of God, which they 
												pretended to deliver. Yea, in my 
												house have I found their 
												wickedness: saith the Lord — 
												Even in my temple, where they 
												assemble under a pretence to 
												worship and do me honour, they 
												say and do many things contrary 
												to my law, and are guilty of 
												various acts of profaneness and 
												immorality. Such profaners of 
												things sacred were formerly 
												Hophni and Phinehas. Wherefore 
												their way shall be as slippery 
												ways — In which they shall not 
												walk with any steadiness, 
												safety, or satisfaction: or they 
												shall fail and miscarry in all 
												their designs.
 
 Verse 13-14
 Jeremiah 23:13-14. I have seen — 
												Rather, I saw, namely, formerly, 
												before I cast them out of their 
												own land; folly — Hebrew, תפלה, 
												stupidity, infatuation. The LXX. 
												render it, ανομηματα, 
												iniquities, or unlawful actions, 
												and the Vulgate, fatuitatem, 
												sottishness; in the prophets of 
												Samaria — That is, in those that 
												belonged to the ten tribes, 
												whose chief city was Samaria. 
												They prophesied in Baal — 
												Pretending they had their 
												relations from Baal, they caused 
												the people of that kingdom to 
												err — That is, they seduced them 
												from the worship and service of 
												the true God to idolatry. I have 
												seen also in the prophets of 
												Jerusalem a horrible thing — 
												Hebrew, שׁערורה, a thing to be 
												detested, an abomination. He 
												compares the sins of the 
												prophets of Samaria with those 
												of the prophets of Jerusalem, 
												and pronounces the sins of the 
												latter to be more enormous, 
												because they pronounced their 
												false prophecies in the name of 
												the true God, and pretended that 
												he was the author of all their 
												impostures: the wickedness of 
												their lives also reflected great 
												dishonour upon his name and 
												religion. Compare Jeremiah 3:11. 
												They commit adultery — See 
												Jeremiah 29:23. And walk in lies 
												— Utter what they themselves 
												have feigned, and call their 
												inventions divine visions, and 
												use all manner of deceit and 
												fraud. They strengthen also the 
												hands of evil-doers — They 
												confirm men in their evil ways, 
												both by their own bad example, 
												and by promising them peace and 
												security, notwithstanding their 
												wicked conduct and ungodly 
												deeds. See Jeremiah 23:17; and 
												Ezekiel 13:22. They are all of 
												them unto me as Sodom — See 
												Deuteronomy 32:32; Isaiah 1:10; 
												Ezekiel 16:46-48.
 
 Verse 15
 Jeremiah 23:15. Therefore thus 
												saith the Lord concerning the 
												prophets — The priests also, and 
												all ecclesiastical guides, are 
												included. Behold, I will feed 
												them with wormwood — Will 
												afflict them with most bitter 
												calamities. For from the 
												prophets of Jerusalem is 
												profaneness gone forth — Or, 
												hypocrisy, which seems rather to 
												be the meaning of חנפה, the word 
												here used. Certain it is, that 
												this was a vice they were 
												generally addicted to. These 
												false prophets affected to be 
												looked upon as pious, while they 
												indulged themselves in various 
												acts of wickedness; and as this 
												could not be totally concealed, 
												the people took example from 
												them, and indulged themselves in 
												vice, while they put on the garb 
												of piety. The Jewish nation 
												continued much in this habit 
												even to the times of Christ, as 
												is sufficiently evident from 
												what is said of the Pharisees in 
												the New Testament.
 
 Verse 16-17
 Jeremiah 23:16-17. Thus saith 
												the Lord, Hearken not unto the 
												words of the prophets — People 
												are under no religious 
												obligation to hear what is 
												contrary to the revealed will of 
												God, or to obey those who enjoin 
												things which that does not 
												require. They make you vain — Or 
												rather, they deceive you, as the 
												words may be properly rendered: 
												or they make you trust to and 
												undertake vain things. The 
												inhabitants of Jerusalem were 
												fed by these false prophets with 
												the vain hopes of being able to 
												drive the Babylonians from their 
												walls, and raise the siege of 
												the city; yea, and of shaking 
												off the yoke of Nebuchadnezzar 
												entirely, and being quite free 
												for the future. They speak a 
												vision of their own heart — A 
												pretended vision which they have 
												framed themselves. They say 
												still — That is, they persist to 
												say; unto them that despise me — 
												That are destitute even of my 
												fear, and therefore slight my 
												authority, and violate my 
												commands; The Lord hath said, Ye 
												shall have peace — Whereas, in 
												truth, I have said the contrary, 
												and have assured them, There is 
												no peace to the wicked — Thus 
												they both make me to patronise 
												sin, and to contradict myself.
 
 Verse 18
 Jeremiah 23:18. For who hath 
												stood in the counsel of the 
												Lord? — These are either the 
												words of God expressing that 
												none of these pretended prophets 
												knew any thing of his designs, 
												as he had not revealed them unto 
												them, and they could not 
												otherwise know them; or else 
												they are to be understood as the 
												words of these false prophets, 
												who, among other things, told 
												the people, that God’s counsels 
												were not to be absolutely known; 
												and that therefore neither 
												Jeremiah, nor the rest of the 
												prophets, who foretold the 
												destruction of Jerusalem, were 
												informed more than others of 
												what God intended to do.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Jeremiah 23:19-20. Behold, a 
												whirlwind of the Lord is gone 
												forth with fury — A severe 
												judgment of God, that shall 
												resemble a whirlwind for the 
												sudden and utter destruction 
												that it shall bring. The same 
												word, סערה, is elsewhere 
												translated a storm. It is called 
												a whirlwind of the Lord, both to 
												denote the greatness of it, and 
												to signify that it should come 
												forth from God, and be of his 
												sending. It shall fall 
												grievously upon the head of the 
												wicked — Whatever these 
												flattering teachers may assert 
												to the contrary. Blaney 
												translates the verse, Behold, 
												the whirlwind of Jehovah! it 
												goeth forth hot, even a settling 
												whirlwind; (so he translates 
												מתחולל, which we render, 
												grievous,) upon the head of the 
												wicked it shall settle. And he 
												observes, “The hot, scorching 
												wind, blowing from the south, 
												(see note on Jeremiah 4:11-12,) 
												is evidently here alluded to, 
												that blows, not with a transient 
												blast, but exerts a continued 
												force upon the head of the 
												unfortunate traveller till it 
												has effectually destroyed him:” 
												an emblem this of the consuming 
												and insupportable wrath of God. 
												The anger of the Lord shall not 
												return — The prophet speaks of 
												the judgment as of a messenger, 
												which should not return till it 
												had done its errand, and 
												executed what God had resolved 
												it should effect. In the latter 
												days ye shall consider, &c. — 
												Though you will not now believe 
												it, but flatter yourselves with 
												vain hopes, yet hereafter, when 
												it shall be too late, you shall 
												consider it perfectly, that is, 
												when this judgment hath 
												over-taken you, you shall fully 
												believe and understand that God 
												did indeed bring it upon you, 
												for the punishment of your sins.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Jeremiah 23:21-22. I have not 
												sent these prophets, yet they 
												ran — They were always ready to 
												bring you pleasing tidings as 
												from me, though I had given them 
												no commission so to do, or 
												revealed any thing to them. But 
												if they had stood in my counsel 
												— Been made acquainted by me 
												with my will and pleasure; and 
												had caused my people to hear my 
												words — And not their own 
												conceits and inventions; then 
												they should have turned 
												therefrom their evil way — This 
												was the design of all God’s 
												messages by his prophets, and 
												therefore all true prophets made 
												this their principal aim. And 
												the giving encouragement to men 
												to continue in their sinful 
												courses, or in a state of carnal 
												security, is often mentioned as 
												a mark of a false prophet.
 
 Verse 23-24
 Jeremiah 23:23-24. Am I a God at 
												hand and not a God afar off? — 
												Do these false prophets imagine 
												that I am only a God in some 
												particular places, and that I 
												cannot see or know things done 
												privately, or at a distance from 
												the place where they suppose me 
												to be? Do they think to impose 
												upon me, or vent their own 
												dreams in my name, and I not 
												discover them? As if either 
												distance or secrecy could place 
												any thing out of the reach of my 
												power and knowledge. Atheism, or 
												ignorance of God, is generally 
												the foundation of a wicked life. 
												Men think God does not see, or 
												does not regard them and their 
												actions, and will not call them 
												to an account for them, and 
												therefore they go on in their 
												trespasses. By a God at hand, 
												some understand, in heaven: as 
												if he had said, Do you think my 
												eyes are limited like yours, so 
												that I cannot see men’s 
												practices though at a distance 
												from the place of my peculiar 
												and glorious residence? Others 
												interpret the particle with 
												respect to time; Am I a god of 
												yesterday, like the idols? Am 
												not I the Ancient of days? the 
												eternal God, of whose majesty, 
												omniscience, and omnipresence 
												you ought to have been sensible? 
												Can any hide himself in secret 
												places — Can any man hide his 
												projects or intentions, his 
												thoughts or desires, his words 
												or works, that I shall not see 
												them? Surely not. No arts or 
												concealments can hide any man’s 
												practices or even the counsels 
												of his heart from the eye of 
												God, nor in any respect deceive 
												his judgment of them. Do not I 
												fill heaven and earth, namely, 
												by my essential presence, as 
												well as by my universal 
												providence? Am I not continually 
												present, and continually active 
												through all parts of the 
												universe? As I am above all, so 
												I am through all, and in all, 
												Ephesians 4:6.
 
 Verses 25-27
 Jeremiah 23:25-27. I have heard 
												what the prophets say, &c. — I 
												am perfectly acquainted with 
												what these prophets have thought 
												and said, though they think I 
												take no notice of it, and so 
												continue to act the same 
												counterfeit part over again. 
												Saying, I have dreamed — I have 
												had a divine vision, or have 
												received information from God in 
												a dream. This, it appears, the 
												false prophets often pretended, 
												when they had received nothing 
												of the kind. How long shall this 
												be in the heart of the prophets? 
												— How long shall I bear with 
												them while they prophesy the 
												deceit of their own hearts? 
												while they utter, for 
												prophecies, that which they have 
												feigned or devised themselves? 
												Will they never see what an 
												affront they put upon me, what 
												an abuse they put upon my 
												people, and what judgments they 
												are preparing for themselves? To 
												cause my people to forget my 
												name by their dreams, &c. — They 
												act as if they designed to draw 
												my people off from worshipping 
												and serving me, and from all 
												regard to my laws and ordinances 
												and to the true prophets. 
												Indeed, their palming upon the 
												people counterfeit revelations, 
												and fathering their own fancies 
												upon divine inspiration, was the 
												ready way to bring all religion 
												into contempt, and make men turn 
												atheists and infidels.
 
 Verse 28-29
 Jeremiah 23:28-29. The prophet 
												that hath a dream let him tell a 
												dream — Or, as some render it, 
												let him tell it as a dream. Let 
												him lay no more stress upon it 
												than men do upon their dreams, 
												nor expect any more regard to be 
												paid to it. Or, he that pretends 
												to have a message from God, 
												either by dream, or vision, or 
												voice, or otherwise, let him 
												declare it. And he that hath my 
												word, let him speak my word 
												faithfully — Let him speak it, 
												as truth; so some read the 
												clause; let him keep close to 
												his instructions, and you will 
												soon perceive a vast difference 
												between the dreams which the 
												false prophets tell, and the 
												divine oracles which the true 
												prophets deliver, and will 
												easily discern which is of God 
												and which is not. Those that 
												have spiritual senses exercised 
												will be able to distinguish. For 
												what is the chaff to the wheat — 
												There is as much difference 
												between my will and their 
												dreams, as there is between the 
												chaff and the wheat. Is not my 
												word like fire? — Quick and 
												powerful, capable of trying men 
												as metals are tried in a 
												furnace, and ready to burn up 
												that which will not bear the 
												trial. And like a hammer that 
												breaks the rock in pieces — As a 
												hammer breaks to pieces the 
												hardest rock, so is my word, 
												when properly applied, able to 
												break the hardest and most 
												obstinate heart, and to beat 
												down the confidence of the most 
												hardened sinner.
 
 Verses 30-32
 Jeremiah 23:30-32. Behold, I am 
												against the prophets that steal 
												my words, &c. — “That imitate 
												the true prophets, speaking in 
												my name, as they do, and saying, 
												Thus saith the Lord, (see 
												Jeremiah 23:31,) and using their 
												words, but applying them to 
												their own purpose: or, it may 
												be, adding their own inventions 
												to them.” So Lowth. Others 
												paraphrase the verse thus, “That 
												conspire together what to say to 
												deceive the people, and to steal 
												what they say one from another.” 
												Or, perhaps the meaning rather 
												is, That utter, as revelations 
												made to themselves, things which 
												they have learned, and, as it 
												were, stolen from others. That 
												use their tongues, &c. — That 
												take their own tongues, as 
												Blaney renders it, and say, He 
												(the Lord) hath said. “The 
												phrase of taking their own 
												tongue,” he observes: “is, I 
												think, very easily to be 
												understood of those who, without 
												any inspiration, took upon them 
												to deliver messages to the 
												people, and pretended that they 
												came from God.” I am against 
												them that prophesy false dreams 
												— False things, under the notion 
												of revelations made to them in 
												their sleep. And cause my people 
												to err — To wander from the 
												right way; by their lies, and by 
												their lightness — By their 
												groundless assertions, their 
												folly, their rashness and 
												inconsistency with themselves: 
												or, by the flatteries of their 
												preaching, soothing men up in 
												their sins, and by the looseness 
												and lewdness of their 
												conversation encouraging them to 
												persist in them. Yet I sent them 
												not, &c. — They are not my 
												messengers, nor is what they say 
												my message. Therefore they shall 
												not profit this people at all — 
												All the profit they aim at 
												communicating is to make the 
												people easy, but they shall not 
												be able to do even that; for my 
												providences will be such as will 
												fill them with painful 
												apprehensions and distressing 
												fears. Some read the clause, 
												They do not profit this people, 
												considering the words as 
												implying more than they express, 
												namely, that these false 
												prophets not only did the people 
												no good, but did them a great 
												deal of hurt. Observe, reader, 
												none can expect God’s blessing 
												upon their ministry who are not 
												called and sent of God. And 
												those that corrupt the word of 
												God, while they pretend to 
												preach it, are so far from 
												edifying the church, that they 
												do it the greatest mischief 
												imaginable.
 
 Verse 33
 Jeremiah 23:33. When this 
												people, or the prophet, &c., 
												shall ask thee, &c. — “The 
												remaining part of this chapter 
												is directed against those who 
												called the word of God, spoken 
												by the true prophets, A BURDEN, 
												by way of reproach; meaning that 
												it always portended evil, and 
												never good;” the word משׁא, a 
												burden, generally signifying a 
												calamitous prophecy. See note on 
												Isaiah 13:1. “Ahab intended to 
												cast the same slur on the 
												Prophet Micaiah when he 
												represented him as one that 
												never prophesied good concerning 
												him, but evil, 1 Kings 22:8.” 
												The false prophets, who said, 
												Peace, peace, it seems, derided 
												the true prophets, whose 
												predictions were full of 
												threatenings, as if God’s 
												messages were a burden which 
												they were weary of hearing; and 
												made a jest of these words, The 
												burden of the Lord, with which 
												God’s prophets sometimes 
												prefaced their prophecies. Upon 
												this account God forbade the use 
												of that expression, as in the 
												following verses. See Lowth.
 
 Verse 36
 Jeremiah 23:36. For every man’s 
												word shall be his burden — You 
												shall be made severely to 
												account for your loose and 
												profane speeches, wherewith you 
												deride and pervert the words and 
												messages of God himself. Or, 
												“Every man shall have most 
												reason to regard his own word as 
												hurtful and prejudicial to him. 
												For the words of God were 
												delivered with a salutary 
												tendency, to warn sinners of the 
												danger of their situation, and 
												to call them to repentance. 
												Those, therefore, who made a 
												right use of them would have no 
												cause to complain. But those who 
												despised and rejected them 
												perverted that which should have 
												been for their wealth into an 
												occasion of falling.” — Blaney.
 
 Verse 39
 Jeremiah 23:39. Therefore, 
												behold, I will utterly forget 
												you — The Vulgate renders this 
												clause, Propterea ecce ego tolam 
												vos portans, Therefore, behold, 
												I will take you away removing 
												you, (taking the verb נשׁה, 
												nashah, in the sense of נשׂא, 
												nasa, as words of a like sound 
												are often of a promiscuous 
												signification,) which makes the 
												sense more pertinent to the 
												foregoing verses. The LXX. 
												interpret the clause to the same 
												purpose, δια τουτο ιδου εγω 
												λαμβανω και ρασσω υμας, &c. 
												Therefore, behold I take you, 
												and cast you down, or, dash you, 
												to the ground, and the city 
												which I gave to you and to your 
												fathers.
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