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												Verse 1Jeremiah 25:1. The word that 
												came to Jeremiah in the fourth 
												year of Jehoiakim — It is 
												probable this revelation was 
												made to the prophet in the early 
												part of that year; for the 
												defeat of the Egyptians at 
												Carchemish, and the subsequent 
												taking of Jerusalem, are both 
												placed in the same year: but 
												from Jeremiah 25:9 it appears 
												that Nebuchadnezzar had but just 
												entered upon his expedition when 
												the Lord sent this word to 
												Jeremiah, and had not yet 
												carried into execution any of 
												those designs for which God 
												there says he would take and 
												send him. The reader will 
												observe, the fourth year of 
												Jehoiakim was seven years and 
												some months before Jeconiah was 
												carried into captivity, as 
												appears from 2 Kings 23:36; 2 
												Kings 24:8-15, and eighteen 
												years before the taking of the 
												city and the more general 
												captivity; which shows that this 
												prophecy was delivered at least 
												six or seven years before that 
												in the preceding chapter. That 
												was the first year of 
												Nebuchadnezzar — That is, 
												according to the Jewish mode of 
												computing his reign, from the 
												time of his being associated 
												with his father in the empire 
												before he set out on his Syrian 
												expedition. But the Babylonians 
												do not reckon his reign to have 
												begun till two years after, upon 
												his father’s death.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Jeremiah 25:2-3. Which Jeremiah 
												spake to all the people of Judah 
												— That is, the word which he 
												spake concerned them all, and he 
												spake it to as many of them as 
												he met with in any public 
												assembly at Jerusalem or 
												elsewhere. From the thirteenth 
												year of Josiah — In which year, 
												as we read, Jeremiah 1:2, 
												Jeremiah began to prophesy; 
												Josiah reigned thirty-one years, 
												2 Kings 22:1; so that, taking in 
												the thirteenth year, he 
												prophesied nineteen years during 
												the life of Josiah, to which the 
												four years of Jehoiakim’s reign 
												being added, make the number 
												twenty-three. These twenty-three 
												years, says the prophet, I have 
												been a preacher to you, and I 
												have not been negligent in my 
												work, but, like men that rise 
												early in the morning to despatch 
												their business, I have been 
												attentive and laborious in the 
												discharge of my prophetic 
												office.
 
 Verses 4-7
 Jeremiah 25:4-7. And the Lord 
												hath sent unto you all his 
												servants, &c. — Nor am I the 
												only prophet whom the Lord hath 
												sent you, and whom you have 
												neglected and despised. God hath 
												sent you many more, and you have 
												despised as many as he hath 
												sent. This contempt of the 
												Lord’s messengers is made the 
												proximate cause of God’s wrath 
												coming upon this people, till 
												there was no remedy, 2 
												Chronicles 36:16. They said, 
												Turn ye again now, &c. — The 
												substance, both of their and my 
												sermons, hath been to persuade 
												you to abandon those sinful 
												courses, wherein you have lived, 
												and which you might have 
												amended, by virtue of that grace 
												which God did not deny you. We 
												have not differed in our 
												doctrine, to the practice of 
												which you have also been 
												encouraged, both by them and me, 
												with an assurance from God, 
												that, if you obeyed it, you 
												should enjoy this good land 
												which the Lord promised, and 
												gave to you and your fathers, 
												and which you have now possessed 
												for many ages. And go not after 
												other gods — Though the Jews 
												were guilty of many other sins, 
												yet their most heinous sin was 
												idolatry, as it was a direct 
												renouncing of God’s authority, 
												who had, by so many miracles of 
												mercy, set them apart for 
												himself and his own service, and 
												had bestowed so many signal 
												privileges and blessings upon 
												them. And provoke me not with 
												the works of your hands — By 
												worshipping, as gods, the images 
												which your own hands have made, 
												or with any works which are 
												contrary to my law. And I will 
												do you no hurt — You shall yet 
												enjoy your own land and prosper. 
												Yet ye have not hearkened unto 
												me — Ye heard me, and other the 
												Lord’s prophets, thus speaking 
												to you, but you have not obeyed; 
												that ye might provoke me, &c. — 
												As if you had disobeyed with a 
												design to incense me against 
												you; to your own hurt — For the 
												sinful actions of men do not 
												affect or injure me, but are to 
												the hurt of those who do them.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Jeremiah 25:8-9. Therefore, 
												because ye have not heard — That 
												is, because ye have not 
												hearkened to, nor obeyed my 
												words, Behold, I will send and 
												take all the families of the 
												north, &c. — All those kings 
												whose territories lie northward 
												of Judea, and particularly 
												Nebuchadnezzar, who, in this 
												work, shall be my servant; and 
												will bring them against this 
												land, &c. — I will lead, as 
												commander in chief, them and 
												their armies up against this 
												people; and I will deprive you 
												of all hopes of safety from your 
												alliances with other nations, 
												for the king of Babylon shall 
												first subdue them. See 2 Kings 
												24:7. And will utterly destroy 
												them, and make them an 
												astonishment — Will make these 
												countries, and their 
												inhabitants, the objects of 
												men’s scorn and reproach. See 
												note on Jeremiah 24:9. And a 
												perpetual desolation — It is 
												often observed, that the Hebrew 
												word עולם, here rendered 
												perpetual, does not always imply 
												eternity, or perpetuity, in a 
												strict sense; but is sometimes 
												taken for such a duration as had 
												a remarkable period to conclude 
												it. Thus it is said of a 
												servant, in a certain case, 
												Exodus 21:6, That he shall serve 
												his master for ever — Which the 
												Jews interpret as meaning, “till 
												the next jubilee.” So here the 
												sense of the word is to be 
												restrained to the period of 
												seventy years, mentioned 
												Jeremiah 25:11.
 
 Verse 10
 Jeremiah 25:10. Moreover, I will 
												take from them the voice of 
												mirth, &c. — See the note on 
												Jeremiah 7:34; Jeremiah 16:9. 
												The sound of the millstones and 
												the light of the candle — There 
												shall be no longer any marks of 
												trade carried on, even 
												respecting the common 
												necessaries of life, such as the 
												grinding of corn; and there will 
												be no use of candles, where the 
												inhabitants are dispersed and 
												destroyed; nor will there be 
												occasion for such illuminations 
												as are usual on festival 
												solemnities, in the time of 
												general desolation, Jeremiah 
												25:11. See the like expressions 
												used, Revelation 18:22; where we 
												may observe that St. John 
												exactly follows the Hebrew text; 
												whereas the LXX., in this place, 
												instead of the sound of the 
												millstones, read οσμην μυρου, 
												the smell of ointment. From 
												which, and several other places 
												of the New Testament, it appears 
												that the apostles and 
												evangelists did not implicitly 
												follow the Greek translation, 
												but only when they thought it 
												consistent with the original 
												text. See Lowth. Mr. Harmer has 
												an excellent observation on this 
												place, which the reader will be 
												glad to see. “The time for 
												grinding their corn is in the 
												morning; which consideration 
												makes the prophet’s selecting 
												the noise of millstones, and the 
												lighting up of candles, as 
												circumstances belonging to 
												inhabited places, appear in a 
												view which no commentators, that 
												I have examined, have taken any 
												notice of. I am indebted to Sir 
												John Chardin’s MS. for the 
												knowledge of this fact. It 
												informs us that ‘in the East 
												they grind their corn at break 
												of day; and that when one goes 
												out in a morning, he hears 
												everywhere the noise of the 
												mill, and that it is the noise 
												that often awakens people.’ It 
												has been commonly known that 
												they bake every day; and that 
												they usually grind their corn as 
												they want it; but this passage 
												informs us, that it is the first 
												work done in a morning, as well 
												as that this grinding of their 
												mills makes a considerable 
												noise, and attracts every ear; 
												and as the lighting up of 
												candles begins the evening, 
												there is an agreeable contrast 
												observable in these words, I 
												will take from thee, &c., the 
												sound of millstones and the 
												light of the candle. And their 
												whole land shall be a desolation 
												— Gloomy shall be the silence of 
												the morning, melancholy the 
												shadows of the evening; no 
												cheerful noise to animate the 
												one, no enlivening ray to soften 
												the gloom of the other. 
												Desolation shall every where 
												reign. A land may abound with 
												habitations, and furnish an 
												agreeable abode, where the voice 
												of mirth is not heard; none of 
												the songs, the music, and the 
												dances of nuptial solemnities; 
												but in the East, where no 
												millstones are heard in the 
												morning, no light seen in the 
												evening, it must be a dreary 
												dismal solitude.” — Chap. 4. 
												obs. 4. See also chap. 3. obs. 
												18.
 
 Verse 11
 Jeremiah 25:11. These nations 
												shall serve the king of Babylon 
												— That is, Nebuchadnezzar and 
												his successors, collectively 
												considered; seventy years — 
												“This period of the nation’s 
												servitude must be computed from 
												the defeat of the Egyptians at 
												Carchemish, in the same year 
												that this prophecy was given, 
												when Nebuchadnezzar reduced the 
												neighbouring nations of Syria 
												and Palestine, as well as 
												Jerusalem, under his subjection. 
												This was near two years before 
												the heathen chronologers in 
												general begin his reign, his 
												father being still living. After 
												his father’s death, according to 
												Ptolemy’s canon, he reigned 
												forty-three years; Ilverodamus, 
												or Evil-merodach, his son two, 
												Neriglissar four, and Nabonadius, 
												supposed to be Belshazzar, the 
												grandson of Nebuchadnezzar, 
												seventeen; to which, if we add 
												two years of Darius the Mede, 
												who is said, Daniel 9:1, to have 
												been made king over the realm of 
												the Chaldeans, we shall find the 
												nations to have continued all 
												that time, nearly seventy years, 
												in subjection, more or less, to 
												the king of Babylon. But after 
												the accession of Cyrus, who put 
												an end to the Babylonish 
												monarchy, the nations could 
												serve the king of Babylon no 
												longer, because there was no 
												longer a king of Babylon to 
												serve; for the kings of Persia 
												were never called kings of 
												Babylon; but Babylon became 
												itself a subject and dependant 
												province, under a subordinate 
												governor, and began from that 
												instant to experience, in some 
												degree, those divine visitations 
												which terminated at length in 
												what is so justly called, in the 
												next verse, perpetual 
												desolations.” — Blaney. See 
												notes on Jeremiah 29:10; and 
												Ezra 1:1.
 
 Verses 12-14
 Jeremiah 25:12-14. When seventy 
												years are accomplished, I will 
												punish the king of Babylon — 
												“God often punishes the persons 
												whom he makes instruments of his 
												vengeance upon others for those 
												very things which they did by 
												his appointment, because their 
												intention was merely to carry on 
												their own ambitious and cruel 
												purposes, and not at all to 
												fulfil God’s will, or advance 
												his glory. So that the evil they 
												did was altogether their own, 
												and the good that was brought 
												out of it was to be ascribed 
												solely to God.” — Lowth. See 
												notes on Isaiah 10:5-7. And that 
												nation for their iniquity — For 
												their pride, ambition, luxury, 
												tyranny, and cruelty, as well as 
												for their various idolatries, 
												which, after Daniel’s 
												interpretation of 
												Nebuchadnezzar’s dreams, and the 
												miracles wrought by the God of 
												Israel, in favour of Shadrach 
												and his companions, not to 
												mention the testimony borne to 
												the true religion by many other 
												pious Jews, were greatly 
												aggravated, and without all 
												excuse. And the land of the 
												Chaldeans, and make it perpetual 
												desolations — Chaldee was not 
												reduced to desolation 
												immediately upon the taking of 
												Babylon, and the conquest of the 
												country by the Medes and 
												Persians, but its power was then 
												broken, and the sources of its 
												prosperity greatly diminished, 
												and by degrees the country was 
												turned into a solitude. Of the 
												steps whereby this was effected, 
												see notes on Isaiah 13:19-22, 
												and Jeremiah 50:40. All that is 
												written in this book, which 
												Jeremiah hath prophesied against 
												all nations — Those prophecies 
												are meant which are to be found 
												all together from chap. 46. to 
												chap. 51. inclusively; and which 
												the LXX. have introduced in this 
												place. For many nations, &c., 
												shall serve themselves of them 
												also — Namely, the nations and 
												kings who were confederates with 
												Cyrus. Houbigant renders the 
												clause, For powerful people, and 
												mighty kings, shall reduce even 
												those nations to servitude, and 
												so, &c. And Blaney to nearly the 
												same sense, thus: For of them, 
												even of these, shall many 
												nations and great kings exact 
												service; and I will render, &c.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Jeremiah 25:15-16. Thus saith 
												the Lord, Take the wine-cup of 
												this fury, &c. — “Those 
												circumstances which constitute 
												the good and evil of human life 
												are often represented in 
												Scripture as the ingredients of 
												a cup, which God, as master of a 
												feast, mixes up, and distributes 
												to the several guests as he 
												thinks fit. Hence, when our 
												Saviour asks James and John, 
												whether they were able to drink 
												of the cup which he was to drink 
												of, he means, whether they had 
												resolution and patience to 
												undergo the like sufferings as 
												his Father had allotted for him. 
												And in the like sense he prays, 
												If it be possible let this cup 
												pass from me. Accordingly, by 
												this image of the wine-cup of 
												God’s wrath, we are to 
												understand those dreadful 
												judgments which an incensed God 
												was about to inflict on the 
												objects of his displeasure. And 
												Jeremiah the prophet, who 
												announced them, is considered as 
												acting the part of a cup-bearer, 
												carrying the cup round to those 
												who were appointed to drink of 
												it; the effects of which were to 
												appear in the intoxication, that 
												is, the terror and astonishment, 
												the confusion and desolation, 
												that should prevail among them.” 
												— Blaney. See notes on Psalms 
												11:6; Psalms 75:8; Isaiah 51:21.
 
 Verse 17
 Jeremiah 25:17. Then took I the 
												cup — It is not to be imagined 
												that Jeremiah went round in 
												person to all the nations and 
												kings here enumerated, with a 
												cup of wine in his hand, but, 
												doubtless, what is here related 
												passed in a vision, in which it 
												was represented to his view. 
												This, either by writing, or by 
												some special messenger, he 
												communicated to the several 
												kings and nations to which God 
												ordered him to publish it. Or, 
												he himself actually did what is 
												figuratively designed, that is, 
												he publicly announced the 
												judgments of God severally 
												against them, as we find in the 
												chapters mentioned in the note 
												on Jeremiah 25:13.
 
 Verses 18-21
 Jeremiah 25:18-21. To wit, 
												Jerusalem and the cities thereof 
												— The Jews are mentioned first, 
												because Jeremiah, as well as the 
												rest of the prophets, was in the 
												first place sent to them, and 
												they were to have the greatest 
												share in the judgments 
												denounced. As it is this day — 
												This clause speaks of the 
												desolation of Judah and 
												Jerusalem; when all that 
												Jeremiah had foretold against 
												them was fulfilled; and 
												therefore must have been added 
												either by Baruch, his 
												amanuensis, or else by Ezra: or 
												whoever it was that collected 
												Jeremiah’s prophecies into one 
												volume, who, it is likely, added 
												the fifty- second chapter. 
												Pharaoh king of Egypt — Whose 
												army Nebuchadnezzar overcame 
												before he took Jerusalem. And 
												all the mingled people — Or, 
												intermingled, as Blaney 
												translates הערב, joining the 
												expression with the preceding 
												verse, and understanding thereby 
												all the foreigners resident in 
												Egypt, who had, by 
												intermarriages, formed 
												connections with the Egyptians. 
												St. Jerome takes the word in the 
												same sense. Our translators, 
												however, seem to have understood 
												by it a mixture of several 
												nations, dwelling either upon 
												the coasts of the Mediterranean, 
												or of the Red sea. And all the 
												kings of the land of Uz — This 
												was the country of Job; but 
												concerning its situation 
												different opinions are 
												entertained. It was most 
												probably on the confines of 
												Idumea, if not a part of it. The 
												daughter of Edom is said to 
												dwell in the land of Uz, 
												Lamentations 4:21 : see note on 
												Job 1:1. Those who were leaders, 
												or governors of different tribes 
												or families, seem to have had 
												the name of kings: they are now 
												called emirs. And all the kings 
												of the Philistines — The princes 
												of the different districts, or 
												cities, into which Philistia was 
												divided, namely, Ashkelon and 
												Azzah, &c. And the remnant of 
												Ashdod — Or Azotus, which had 
												been very much ruined by two 
												sieges in which it was taken, 
												the one by Tartan, the Assyrian 
												general, mentioned Isaiah 20:1; 
												the other by Psammitichus, king 
												of Egypt, who retook it after 
												the longest siege that had even 
												been known in those times: 
												Herodot. lib. 2. c. 157. The 
												prophecy respecting the 
												Philistines is contained in 
												chap. 47. Edom — Or rather, And 
												Edom — As the LXX., Syr., and 
												Vul. read, with seven MSS. For 
												the prophecies concerning Edom, 
												Moab, and the Ammonites, see 
												chap. 48. and Jeremiah 49:1-22.
 
 Verses 22-24
 Jeremiah 25:22-24. And all the 
												kings of Tyrus and Zidon — The 
												nobles, or chief men of each 
												city, seem to be meant by kings 
												here, for neither of these 
												cities had more than one king. 
												And the kings of the isles, 
												which are beyond the sea — 
												Cyprus, &c., which 
												Nebuchadnezzar subjected. Or, as 
												the Hebrew, האי בעבר הים, is 
												rendered in the margin, The 
												region by the sea-side. For that 
												אי, rendered isle in the text, 
												does not always signify an 
												island, properly so called, is 
												manifest from many passages. 
												Dedan, and Tema, and Buz — A 
												person called Dedan was 
												descended from Abraham by 
												Keturah, Genesis 25:3. Probably 
												he founded the city Dedan; 
												which, however, in process of 
												time, seems to have been annexed 
												to Edom: see Jeremiah 49:8; 
												Ezekiel 25:13. Tema was one of 
												the sons of Ishmael, Genesis 
												25:15, and a city, or district, 
												called after him, was situate 
												near the mountains which 
												separate Arabia from Chaldea. — 
												An. Univ. Hist., vol. 7. p. 230, 
												fol. Buz was the brother of Uz, 
												Genesis 22:21, and settled most 
												probably, in his neighbourhood. 
												Elihu, the wisest of Job’s 
												friends, was a Buzite, Job 32:2. 
												And all that are in the utmost 
												corners — Or, all that have the 
												coast insulated, as Blaney 
												translates it: see note on 
												Jeremiah 9:26. These, he 
												supposes, to be the inhabitants 
												of the peninsula of Arabia, 
												especially those situate toward 
												the bottom, or narrow part of 
												it. And all the kings of Arabia 
												— “The whole country to which we 
												give the general name of Arabia 
												seems to have been thrown, in 
												Scripture, into two great 
												divisions, one of which is 
												called properly ערבה, Arabah, 
												the other קדם, Kedem, according 
												to their respective situations; 
												Arabah, signifying the west, as 
												Kedem does the east. Each of 
												these had their subdivisions; 
												the first, comprehending that 
												which geographers have 
												distinguished by the name of 
												Arabia Petrĉa, and also, 
												perhaps, those parts along the 
												western coast of the Red sea 
												bordering upon Egypt. The other 
												part, called Kedem, comprehended 
												Arabia Felix, and Arabia 
												Deserta; the former of which the 
												Scripture seems to have 
												distinguished by the name of 
												קצוצי פאת, those that have their 
												coast insulated, mentioned in 
												the preceding verse; and the 
												latter in this verse, by the 
												mingled race of those that dwell 
												in the desert, meaning such as 
												inhabited the great desert 
												country, lying between 
												Mesopotamia and Palestine. These 
												may have been so called from the 
												manner of inhabiting the desert 
												promiscuously and in common, 
												without any fixed property or 
												abode, settling, for a time, 
												where they found pasture, and 
												then removing with their flocks 
												to another place; or, from their 
												being made up of people of 
												different descents.” — Blaney.
 
 Verse 25-26
 Jeremiah 25:25-26. All the kings 
												of Zimri — Those descended from 
												Zimran, one of Abraham’s sons, 
												by Keturah; all of whom he sent 
												to settle in the east country, 
												Genesis 25:2; Genesis 25:6. It 
												is probable that these 
												descendants of Zimran were the 
												same that Pliny mentions among 
												the inhabitants of Arabia, by 
												the name of Zamareni. And all 
												the kings of Elam — Namely, of 
												Persia. And all the kings of the 
												Medes — Who were descended from 
												Madai, the son of Japhet. The 
												Medes and Persians were commonly 
												confederates and partakers of 
												the same prosperity or 
												adversity. And all the kings of 
												the north far and near — “By the 
												kings of the north that were 
												near, the kings of Syria are 
												probably meant: see Jeremiah 
												49:23. Those that were afar off 
												may mean the Hyrcanians and 
												Bactrians, who are reckoned in 
												Xenophon’s Cyropœdia, lib. 1., 
												among them that were subjected 
												or oppressed by the king of 
												Babylon, and perhaps others 
												besides of the neighbouring 
												nations that were compelled to 
												submit to the Babylonian yoke. 
												All these lay to the north of 
												Judea, and at a great distance.” 
												And all the kingdoms of the 
												world, &c. — It is justly 
												observed by Blaney, that this 
												must be understood with a 
												limitation to that part of the 
												continent with which the Jews 
												had some correspondence, or 
												acquaintance; just as πασα η 
												οικουμενη stands for the whole 
												Roman empire, Luke 2:1. “The 
												ambition of a prince like 
												Nebuchadnezzar, who aimed at 
												universal monarchy, could not 
												but occasion great confusion and 
												distress, both among those who 
												felt, and among those who 
												dreaded, the power of his arms.” 
												And the king of Sheshach shall 
												drink after them — Here the 
												speech of Jehovah is resumed, 
												which was broken off at the end 
												of Jeremiah 25:16. That Sheshach 
												means Babylon, appears clearly 
												from Jeremiah 51:41. “But, among 
												the reasons that have been 
												assigned for this name,” says 
												Blaney,” I have met with none 
												that I think satisfactory. 
												שׁכךְ, signifies to subside, and 
												sink down; and may perhaps 
												allude to the low situation of 
												Babylon, which did not derive 
												its strength from being built, 
												like many other great cities, 
												upon the heights of a rock, but 
												stood upon a large flat, or 
												plain, cowering, as it were, 
												amidst the waters that 
												surrounded it, and by which it 
												was rendered in some parts 
												inaccessible to an enemy.”
 
 Verses 27-29
 Jeremiah 25:27-29. Drink ye and 
												be drunken — The imperative is 
												here put for the future: see the 
												like mode of speaking, Isaiah 
												2:9; Isaiah 6:9; Isaiah 23:16. 
												The cup being metaphorically put 
												for calamity, to be drunken with 
												it, and fall, &c., must signify 
												extreme calamity, or 
												destruction. If they refuse to 
												take the cup, &c. — “If they 
												either do not believe thy 
												threatenings, or disregard them, 
												as thinking themselves 
												sufficiently provided against 
												any hostile invasion, thou shalt 
												let them know that the judgments 
												denounced against them are God’s 
												irreversible decree,” which 
												shall certainly be executed, and 
												that it will be in vain for them 
												to hope to escape the threatened 
												ruin. For lo, I bring evil on 
												the city called by my name, &c. 
												— “Judgment often begins at the 
												house of God, for the correction 
												of his people, and to be a 
												warning to others; but the 
												heaviest strokes of it are 
												reserved for the ungodly:” see 
												Lowth, and Jeremiah 49:12; 1 
												Peter 4:17-18. And should ye be 
												utterly unpunished? — No: if 
												this be done in the green tree, 
												what shall be done in the dry? 
												If they that have some good in 
												them smart so severely for the 
												evil that is found in them, can 
												they expect to escape that have 
												worse evils and no good found 
												among them? If Jerusalem be 
												punished for learning idolatry 
												of the nations, shall not the 
												nations be punished of whom they 
												learned it? No doubt they shall; 
												for, says the Lord, I will call 
												for a sword upon all the 
												inhabitants of the earth — For 
												they have helped to corrupt the 
												inhabitants of Jerusalem.
 
 Verses 30-33
 Jeremiah 25:30-33. The Lord 
												shall roar from on high — Shall 
												manifest his anger from heaven. 
												God speaks by his judgments, and 
												those, when they are very 
												terrible, may be fitly compared 
												to the roaring of a lion, which 
												strikes a consternation into 
												those that hear it. He shall 
												mightily roar upon his 
												habitation — He shall pronounce 
												and execute a terrible judgment 
												upon his temple, the place on 
												earth which he hath chosen for 
												his residence: see 1 Kings 8:29. 
												He shall give a shout as they 
												that tread the grapes — That is, 
												He shall utter his voice before 
												his army, as Joel expresses it, 
												Joel 2:11. Like a leader or 
												general, he shall encourage them 
												to give the onset upon their 
												enemies, which is usually 
												performed with a shout, as great 
												as that which the treaders of 
												grapes use at the time of the 
												vintage. A noise shall come to 
												the ends of the earth — The 
												report of these calamities and 
												confusions shall reach the most 
												distant countries. For the Lord 
												hath a controversy with the 
												nations — God enters into 
												judgment with men for their 
												impieties, as being so many 
												injuries to his honour, for 
												which he demands satisfaction, 
												Hosea 4:1; Micah 6:2. He will 
												plead with all flesh — Namely, 
												with fire and sword, as Isaiah 
												expresses it, Isaiah 66:16. He 
												will give the wicked to the 
												sword — His quarrel with men is 
												for their wickedness, for their 
												contempt of him, of his 
												authority over them, and 
												kindness to them. They have 
												provoked him to anger, and 
												thence comes all this 
												destruction. Behold, evil shall 
												go forth from nation to nation — 
												As the cup of God’s wrath goes 
												round, every nation shall have 
												its share, and take its turn, 
												because one doth not take 
												warning, by the calamities of 
												another, to repent and reform. A 
												great whirlwind shall be raised 
												up, &c. — The Chaldean army 
												shall come like a hurricane, 
												raised in the north, and thence 
												carried forward with incredible 
												fierceness and swiftness, 
												bearing down all before it. 
												God’s vengeance is often 
												compared to a whirlwind, and is 
												here said to come from the 
												coasts, or sides of the earth, 
												because Chaldea was, at that 
												time, thought to be one of the 
												most remote regions. And the 
												slain of the Lord, &c. — 
												Multitudes shall fall by the 
												sword of the merciless 
												Chaldeans, so that the dead 
												shall be everywhere found, here 
												termed, the slain of the Lord, 
												because slain by commission from 
												him, and sacrificed to his 
												justice. They shall not be 
												lamented — They shall fall in 
												such great numbers that the 
												usual funeral rites and 
												lamentations shall not be paid 
												them, and many of them will lie 
												unburied.
 
 Verse 34-35
 Jeremiah 25:34-35. Howl, ye 
												shepherds, and cry — The 
												imperative is here also put for 
												the future: see Jeremiah 25:27. 
												Shepherds are here the same with 
												kings, princes, or generals. In 
												pursuance of the same metaphor, 
												by the principal of the flock 
												are meant the great and rich men 
												of each nation. Though such are 
												wont to be the most courageous 
												and secure, yet of these it is 
												foretold, that their hearts 
												should so fail them that they 
												should howl, and cry, and wallow 
												in ashes. Seeing themselves 
												utterly unable to make head 
												against the enemy, and seeing 
												their country, which they had 
												the charge of, and for the 
												protection and prosperity of 
												which they were concerned, 
												inevitably ruined, they should 
												abandon themselves to despair, 
												sorrow, and lamentation. For the 
												days of your slaughter, &c., are 
												accomplished — The time fixed in 
												the divine counsel for the 
												slaughter of some, and the 
												dispersion of the rest, is fully 
												come. And ye shall fall like a 
												pleasant vessel — Ye shall be 
												utterly destroyed, as a crystal 
												glass when it is dashed against 
												the ground. The shepherds shall 
												have no way to flee, &c. — The 
												enemy will be so numerous, so 
												furious, so sedulous, and the 
												extent of their army so vast, 
												that it will be impossible to 
												avoid falling into their hands.
 
 Verses 36-38
 Jeremiah 25:36-38. A voice of 
												the cry of the shepherds — Those 
												are great calamities indeed that 
												strike such a terror upon great 
												men, and put them into this 
												mighty consternation. For the 
												Lord hath spoiled their pasture 
												— In which they fed their flock, 
												and out of which they fed 
												themselves; the spoiling of this 
												makes them cry out thus. 
												Carrying on the metaphor of a 
												lion roaring, the prophet 
												alludes to the great fright into 
												which shepherds are put when 
												they hear a roaring lion coming 
												toward them, and find that 
												neither they nor their flocks 
												can escape. And the peaceable 
												habitations are cut down — Those 
												that used to be quiet and not 
												molested, who had long dwelt in 
												peace and safety, shall now be 
												exposed to all the calamities of 
												war, and shall be thereby 
												destroyed; or, those that used 
												to be peaceable, and not to 
												molest any of their neighbours, 
												nor give provocation to any, 
												shall yet not escape. This is 
												one of the direful effects of 
												war, that even those that are 
												most harmless and inoffensive, 
												often suffer hard things. 
												Blessed be God, there is a 
												peaceable habitation above for 
												all the sons of peace, which is 
												out of the reach of fire and 
												sword.
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