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												Verse 1-2Jeremiah 37:1-2. Zedekiah, whom 
												Nebuchadrezzar made king — See 2 
												Kings 24:17; 2 Chronicles 36:10, 
												where is related the history of 
												Zedekiah’s succession. He was 
												but a tributary king, having 
												taken an oath of homage to the 
												king of Babylon. He was a feeble 
												and irresolute prince, and 
												although not so bad as many of 
												his predecessors, yet he had but 
												little true piety or virtue. 
												Neither he nor his servants, 
												&c., did hearken unto the words 
												of the Lord — Though they saw in 
												his predecessor the fatal 
												consequences of contemning the 
												word of God, and though it had 
												already begun to be fulfilled, 
												yet they did not take warning, 
												nor give any more heed to it 
												than others had done before 
												them.
 
 Verses 3-5
 Jeremiah 37:3-5. Zedekiah sent 
												Jehucal the son of Shelemiah — 
												This man came in the place of 
												Pashur, who, together with 
												Zephaniah, brought the former 
												message from Zedekiah; saying, 
												Pray now unto the Lord our God 
												for us — Wicked men of all ranks 
												are desirous, in their 
												distresses, of the prayers of 
												those whose counsels and 
												admonitions they never regard 
												while they are in prosperity, 
												which is a plain evidence of 
												their acting contrary to the 
												convictions of their own 
												consciences. Now Jeremiah came 
												in and went out among the people 
												— That is, he was not yet put in 
												prison as he afterward was: see 
												Jeremiah 37:15; Jeremiah 32:2. 
												Jerusalem also, for the present, 
												was at liberty, for Pharaoh’s 
												army was come forth out of 
												Egypt, &c. — “Zedekiah, contrary 
												to the oath that he had given to 
												Nebuchadnezzar, made an alliance 
												with the king of Egypt, and 
												contracted with him for 
												assistance against the king of 
												Babylon; whereupon the king of 
												Egypt sent an army to his 
												relief: see Ezekiel 17:15; which 
												obliged the Chaldeans to raise 
												the siege of Jerusalem, that 
												they might go and fight this 
												army.” — Lowth. During this 
												time, it seems, it was that 
												Zedekiah sent to desire the 
												prophet to pray for them.
 
 Verses 7-10
 Jeremiah 37:7-10. Pharaoh’s 
												army, which is come forth to 
												help you, shall return — They 
												shall be discomfited by the 
												Chaldeans, and forced to retreat 
												without affording you any 
												assistance: see 2 Kings 24:7. 
												And the Chaldeans shall come 
												again — They shall return, renew 
												the siege, and prosecute it with 
												more vigour than ever. And take 
												it and burn it with fire — The 
												sentence passed upon Jerusalem 
												shall be executed, and they 
												shall be the executioners: see 
												Jeremiah 34:22. Deceive not 
												yourselves, &c. —
 
 In vain did the Jews rejoice in 
												Pharaoh’s coming to help them: 
												in vain did they flatter 
												themselves that the army of the 
												Chaldeans would be routed; for, 
												(as God was against them,) had 
												this even been the case, had 
												they smitten, as God here tells 
												them, the whole army of the 
												Chaldeans, so that there 
												remained but wounded men among 
												them, yet would they have been 
												sufficient to have taken and 
												laid low the proud city of 
												Jerusalem. For, when God will 
												take away, who shall rescue? — 
												In vain, therefore, if God be 
												our enemy, is all our power and 
												policy; in vain do we endeavour 
												to strengthen ourselves by 
												riches and great friends, and to 
												build our nest on high; for we 
												can never be safe, but in the 
												favour, and under the protection 
												of the Almighty. And we may 
												observe further, that whatever 
												instruments God has determined 
												to make use of, in any service 
												for him, whether of mercy or 
												judgment, they shall accomplish 
												that for which they are 
												designed, whatever incapacity 
												they may lie under, or be 
												reduced to.
 
 Verse 12
 Jeremiah 37:12. Then Jeremiah 
												went forth, &c., to go into the 
												land of Benjamin — Jeremiah, 
												having no further revelation 
												from God to communicate, and 
												knowing the city would soon be 
												taken, resolves to go to his own 
												country to Anathoth. To separate 
												himself thence, &c. — The 
												Hebrew, בתוךְ העם
 
 לחלק משׁם, is rendered by 
												Houbigant, “That he might have 
												there a possession for himself 
												with the people;” by Dr. 
												Waterland, “To take rents from 
												thence,” &c.; and by Blaney, “To 
												receive a portion thereof among 
												the people.” “This,” says the 
												last-mentioned critic, “seems a 
												more natural interpretation of 
												the words, than to understand 
												them, as our translators seem to 
												have done, of the prophet’s 
												withdrawing himself, or slipping 
												away, (as it is expressed in the 
												margin,) for fear of being shut 
												up again in the city, on the 
												renewal of the blockade. For the 
												case appears to have been this, 
												Jeremiah had been cut off from 
												his patrimony in the land of 
												Benjamin, by the Chaldeans 
												having been masters there. But, 
												upon their retreat, he meant to 
												return, with a view of coming in 
												for a share of the produce of 
												the land with the rest of his 
												neighbours. For that he was 
												likely to want some means for 
												his support is evident from his 
												having been obliged to be 
												subsisted in prison afterward 
												upon a public allowance.”
 
 Verse 13-14
 Jeremiah 37:13-14. When he was 
												in the gate of Benjamin — The 
												gate leading toward the country 
												of Benjamin; Irijah, the son of 
												Hananiah — Probably of that 
												Hananiah whose death Jeremiah 
												had foretold, Jeremiah 28:17; 
												took Jeremiah the prophet — 
												Apprehended him as one who was 
												about to desert the city, and 
												fall off to the Chaldeans; the 
												ground of which accusation was 
												the prophet’s having foretold 
												that the Chaldeans should take 
												the city, and exhorted the Jews 
												to submit to them. Then said 
												Jeremiah, It is false — Though, 
												as the Lord’s prophet, he had 
												faithfully revealed his will, 
												and foretold the calamity that 
												was about to come upon the 
												nation, by means of the 
												Chaldeans, this did not prove 
												that he took their part, for at 
												the same time he gave advice 
												both to the king and people how 
												they might, in some measure at 
												least, escape the judgments he 
												had denounced against them; nor 
												had he now any design to flee to 
												the Chaldeans; so far from it, 
												that, when the city was taken, 
												and the captain of the guard 
												gave him his choice, either to 
												go along with him to Babylon, or 
												to go back to Gedaliah, whom the 
												king of Babylon had left as 
												deputy governor in Judea, he 
												chose rather to go and live 
												under Gedaliah’s government in a 
												poor condition, than to enjoy 
												protection and plenty in an 
												idolatrous country. But he 
												hearkened not unto him — The 
												captain of the ward would not 
												believe him, but carried him 
												before the princes.
 
 Verse 15
 Jeremiah 37:15. Wherefore the 
												princes were wroth — These 
												princes seem to have been much 
												more hostile to the prophet than 
												those that were in the time of 
												Jehoiakim, (see Jeremiah 36:19,) 
												for they proceed here merely 
												upon the captain’s information, 
												and, treating him as guilty, 
												without any proof, cruelly cause 
												him to be beaten, though 
												entirely innocent, and put into 
												a most miserable dungeon. In the 
												house of Jonathan the scribe — 
												“There is nothing 
												extraordinary,” says Blaney, “in 
												making the dwelling- house of a 
												great man a prison, according to 
												either the ancient or modern 
												manners of the East: see Genesis 
												39:20; even in the royal palace 
												itself we find there was a 
												prison, chap. Jeremiah 32:2.” 
												Mr. Harmer (chap. 8. obs. 37) 
												quotes the following passage 
												from a MS. of Sir John Chardin: 
												— “The eastern prisons are not 
												public buildings erected for 
												that purpose; but a part of the 
												house in which their criminal 
												judges dwell. As the governor 
												and provost of a town, or the 
												captain of the watch, imprison 
												such as are accused in their own 
												houses, they set apart a canton 
												of them for that purpose, when 
												they are put into these offices, 
												and choose for the jailer the 
												most proper person they can find 
												of their domestics.” Thus Mr. 
												Harmer thinks that Jonathan’s 
												house became a prison in 
												consequence of his being a royal 
												scribe, or, as we should term 
												him, secretary of state.
 
 Verse 16
 Jeremiah 37:16. When Jeremiah 
												was entered into the dungeon — 
												Hebrew אל בית הבור, into the 
												house of the pit, ditch, or 
												lake; and into the cabins — Or, 
												cells, as החניות signifies. 
												“From comparing this place with 
												chap. Jeremiah 38:6, it seems 
												likely that this dungeon was a 
												deep pit, sunk perpendicularly 
												like a well, in the middle court 
												or quadrangle, around which the 
												great houses were built; and 
												that in the sides of it, near 
												the bottom, were scooped niches, 
												like the cabins of a ship, for 
												the separate lodgment of the 
												unfortunate persons who were let 
												down there. Hence also it may 
												be, that the same word here 
												rendered dungeon is frequently 
												put for the grave; the ancient 
												repositories of the dead being 
												often constructed with niches, 
												in the same manner in which the 
												bodies were placed, separately. 
												Accordingly we read, Isaiah 
												14:15, Yet thou shalt be brought 
												down to the grave, to the sides 
												of the pit, אל ירכתי בור. How 
												long Jeremiah was forced to 
												remain in this miserable place 
												is not said, but it seems from 
												Jeremiah 37:19. that it was 
												until the Chaldean army was 
												returned to the siege.
 
 Verse 17
 Jeremiah 37:17. Then Zedekiah 
												the king sent and took him out — 
												When the vain hopes with which 
												they had fed themselves, and on 
												the ground of which they had 
												re-enslaved their servants, were 
												all vanished away, then they 
												were in a greater consternation 
												than ever: and then the king 
												sent, in all haste, for the 
												prophet, to see if he could give 
												him any hope of their 
												deliverance. When the Chaldeans 
												were withdrawn, he only sent to 
												desire the prophet to pray for 
												him, but now, the city being 
												again invested, he sent for him 
												to consult him: thus gracious 
												will men be when pangs come upon 
												them! He asked him secretly in 
												his house — Being ashamed to be 
												seen in his company: Is there 
												any word from the Lord? — That 
												is, Hath God revealed any thing 
												to thee concerning what will be 
												the issue of the return of the 
												Chaldean army to the siege of 
												the city? Canst thou give us any 
												hopes that they will again 
												retire? What need had Zedekiah 
												to make this inquiry, when God, 
												by this prophet, had so often 
												revealed his will to him in this 
												matter? Observe, reader, those 
												that will not hearken to God’s 
												admonitions when they are in 
												prosperity, would be glad of his 
												consolations when they are in 
												adversity; and expect that his 
												ministers should then speak 
												words of peace to them. But how 
												can they expect it? what have 
												they to do with peace? Jeremiah 
												said, There is, for thou shalt 
												be delivered into the hand of 
												the king of Babylon — Here we 
												have an instance of that freedom 
												and firmness of mind which 
												belong to them who truly live in 
												the fear of God, and put their 
												trust in him. Jeremiah’s life 
												and comfort are in Zedekiah’s 
												hands, and he has now an 
												important petition to present to 
												him; and yet, having this 
												opportunity, he tells him 
												plainly that there is a word 
												from the Lord, but no word of 
												comfort to him, or his people; 
												but that destruction awaits 
												them: see the difference between 
												his spirit and that of Zedekiah. 
												Though a king, Zedekiah dares 
												not run the risk of offending 
												his courtiers, who were his 
												subjects and servants, while the 
												prophet dares denounce the 
												king’s ruin to himself not 
												knowing but such integrity might 
												cost him his life. If he had 
												consulted with flesh and blood, 
												he would have given the king a 
												plausible answer, and not have 
												told him the worst at this time, 
												especially as he had so often 
												told it him before. But Jeremiah 
												was one that had obtained mercy 
												of the Lord to be faithful, and 
												would not, to obtain mercy of 
												man, be unfaithful either to 
												God, or to his prince, or to his 
												people; he therefore tells him 
												the truth, and the whole truth, 
												which to know would be a 
												kindness to the king, in order 
												that, being forewarned of the 
												approaching calamity, he might 
												be the better prepared for it.
 
 Verses 18-21
 Jeremiah 37:18-21. Moreover 
												Jeremiah said, What have I 
												offended against thee — What law 
												have I broken? What injury have 
												I done to thee, or thy people, 
												or government, that ye have put 
												me in prison — Have put me into 
												the pit or dungeon, as a 
												malefactor of the worst kind? 
												Where are now your prophets — 
												That is, your false prophets? 
												Surely the event has now 
												convinced you, how much they 
												have deceived you: for you see 
												the siege renewed, and the city 
												in imminent danger of being 
												taken. Here we see Jeremiah’s 
												confinement in the dungeon had 
												not broken his spirit, or 
												diminished either his zeal or 
												courage in delivering God’s 
												message: he still speaks with 
												the greatest boldness, and as 
												one having authority. No doubt 
												he would have been willing, had 
												God called him to it, to seal 
												his testimony with his blood: 
												nevertheless, having so fair an 
												opportunity to obtain relief, he 
												thought it his duty to embrace 
												it, and therefore, with great 
												humility and submissiveness, and 
												in a most respectful manner, 
												presents his supplication, not 
												indeed for an entire deliverance 
												from restraint, which, however, 
												it would not have been 
												unreasonable to ask, but for a 
												less cruel treatment. Then 
												Zedekiah commanded that they 
												should commit Jeremiah into the 
												court of the prison — A more 
												agreeable place of confinement; 
												and that they should give him 
												daily a piece of bread, &c. — 
												Namely, out of the public stock, 
												(for the prison was within the 
												precincts of the court,) in 
												order that he might not die for 
												want. Until all the bread of the 
												city was spent —
 
 Till the famine forced the city 
												to surrender, Jeremiah 52:6. 
												This was the king’s first order, 
												but afterward it was reversed, 
												by the importunity of the 
												princes and great men, Jeremiah 
												38:6, when Jeremiah was again 
												thrown into the dungeon. Though 
												after that he was released from 
												that place, and returned to his 
												former confinement, ibid. 
												Jeremiah 38:28.
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