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												Verse 1Jeremiah 44:1. The word which 
												came to Jeremiah — The patience 
												and goodness of God to this 
												remnant of his ancient people 
												are very remarkable; he leaves 
												them not even in their 
												rebellion, but commissions his 
												prophet, whom he had before sent 
												to forbid their going into this 
												idolatrous country, to try if in 
												Egypt they could be brought to 
												repentance and reformation; 
												concerning all the Jews which 
												dwelt at Migdol, and at 
												Tahpanhes, &c. — They were now 
												dispersed into divers parts of 
												the country, and Jeremiah is 
												sent with a message from God to 
												them, which he delivered, either 
												by going about from place to 
												place to them; or when he had 
												many of them together in Pathros, 
												as is mentioned Jeremiah 44:15. 
												We find a place termed Migdol, 
												mentioned Exodus 14:2, as 
												situate near the Red sea. “But I 
												do not take this,” says Blaney, 
												“to be here intended. Migdol 
												properly signifies a tower, and 
												may, in all probability, have 
												been a name given to different 
												cities in Egypt where there was 
												a distinguished object of that 
												kind. The city of Magdolus is 
												mentioned by Herodotus, Hecatĉus, 
												and others, and placed by 
												Antoninus at the entrance of 
												Egypt from Palestine, about 
												twelve miles from Pelusium. This 
												was too far distant from the Red 
												sea to be in the route of the 
												Israelites; but its situation in 
												the neighbourhood of Tahpanhes, 
												or Daphnĉ, and its distance from 
												Judea, favour the supposition of 
												its being the Migdol here spoken 
												of. For then, as Bochart 
												observes, we shall find the four 
												places mentioned exactly in the 
												order of their respective 
												distances from that country; 
												1st, Migdol, or Magdolus; 2d, 
												Tahpanhes, or Daphnĉ; 3d, Noph, 
												or Memphis; and lastly, the 
												district of Pathros, or Thebais.” 
												Near Memphis stands one of the 
												pyramids which are yet 
												remaining.
 
 Verses 2-5
 Jeremiah 44:2-5. Ye have seen 
												all the evil that I have brought 
												on Jerusalem — He refers to the 
												late destruction of it by the 
												king of Babylon: this remnant of 
												the people was a brand plucked 
												out of the burning, and their 
												eyes had been witnesses of the 
												desolations which God had 
												wrought. Because of their 
												wickedness, &c. — As they were 
												eye-witnesses of the effect, so 
												nothing but their unbelief made 
												them strangers to the cause of 
												the divine wrath manifested 
												against them; for God, by his 
												prophets, had continually 
												assured them that the grand 
												cause was their departure from 
												him, the one living and true 
												God, and forsaking his worship 
												for that of idols. To serve 
												other gods, whom they knew not — 
												The sin of their various 
												idolatries was aggravated by 
												this, that they were as much 
												strangers to the idols as to the 
												people with whom they joined in 
												the worship of them, neither 
												they nor any of their fathers 
												having had any proof that these 
												idols had ever done, or were 
												able to do, any thing for their 
												worshippers: compare Deuteronomy 
												13:6; Deuteronomy 32:17. These 
												idols are opposed to the true 
												God, called elsewhere the God of 
												their fathers, who had made 
												himself known to them by so many 
												wonderful works and so many 
												instances of his favour and 
												benignity; and had promised to 
												show the same favour to their 
												posterity, if they continued 
												steadfast in their obedience. I 
												sent, &c., saying, O! do not 
												this abominable thing that I 
												hate — God had given them 
												numberless admonitions and 
												warnings by his prophets, that 
												idolatry in all the species and 
												instances of it was a sin which 
												he hated above all others, and 
												would very dreadfully punish, 
												yet they would not hear so as to 
												yield obedience to him; but 
												still persisted in the 
												commission of this most 
												abominable and absurd iniquity. 
												The Hebrew, אל נא תעשׂו, may be 
												properly rendered, Do not, I 
												pray you, this abominable thing 
												which I hate. Thus the Vulgate, 
												Nolite, oro, facere verbum 
												abominationis hujuscemodi. Be 
												unwilling, I beseech you, to 
												practise a thing so abominable. 
												The language is as pathetic as 
												it is emphatical.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Jeremiah 44:6-7. Wherefore my 
												fury, &c., was poured forth, &c. 
												— As if he had said, For these 
												very reasons, their idolatry and 
												contempt of my word by my 
												prophets, the very sins you are 
												now committing, I gave Judah and 
												Jerusalem into the hand of the 
												king of Babylon, and they are, 
												as you see this day, waste and 
												desolate. Wherefore commit ye 
												this great evil? &c. — What sort 
												of prudence is it that 
												influences you to do such 
												actions as these, by which you 
												cannot injure God. but 
												yourselves only? You are now but 
												a few of many; what love can you 
												have for your country while you 
												take courses which will 
												certainly tend to the utter 
												extirpation of those few, so 
												that there shall be none 
												remaining of all the Jews? God 
												designed that this remnant 
												should have remained in Judea, 
												and kept possession of it, when 
												the rest of their brethren were 
												carried away captive, Jeremiah 
												42:10. But by their going into 
												Egypt and defiling themselves 
												with the idolatries of that 
												nation, they provoked God to 
												make an utter destruction of 
												them.
 
 Verses 8-10
 Jeremiah 44:8-10. Ye provoke me 
												unto wrath with the works of 
												your hands — By making and 
												setting up idols to worship. 
												That ye might cut yourselves 
												off, &c. — This is not to be so 
												taken as if they did these 
												things with a design to cut off 
												themselves and their posterity: 
												but only as signifying that 
												their utter ruin would be the 
												certain consequence of their 
												continuing so to act. Have ye 
												forgotten the wickedness of your 
												fathers? &c. — Have you 
												forgotten what great wickedness 
												your fathers committed, and what 
												great punishments were in 
												consequence thereof inflicted 
												upon them? We may be truly said 
												to have forgotten that the sight 
												of which, or reflection thereon, 
												makes no such impression upon us 
												as produces a suitable practice. 
												Which they have committed in the 
												land of Judah, &c. — To have 
												practised these things in any 
												place would have been to 
												contract great guilt; but to 
												have done them in the land of 
												Judah, and in the streets of 
												Jerusalem, in the valley of 
												vision, and in the holy city, 
												where there were such means of 
												information and such helps to 
												piety, was still more aggravated 
												and inexcusable wickedness. They 
												are not humbled even unto this 
												day — Neither they nor you are 
												yet properly humbled, and 
												prepared for receiving mercy. 
												Neither have they feared, nor 
												walked in my law — Hence we 
												learn, that reformation and 
												obedience are the proper fruit 
												of true contrition and 
												humiliation; God does not 
												account those to be humbled, but 
												hardened, who are not reformed 
												and made obedient, let their 
												pretended contrition or 
												humiliation be, in outward 
												appearance, what it may.
 
 Verses 11-14
 Jeremiah 44:11-14. I will set my 
												face against you for evil — See 
												note on Jeremiah 21:10. And I 
												will take — Or, I will take 
												away, namely, by destruction; 
												the remnant of Judah, &c. — The 
												direful punishments denounced 
												against those who went to Egypt 
												were not denounced because it 
												was a sin in itself for the Jews 
												to leave their country, and seek 
												a securer habitation in Egypt, 
												but because, in so doing, they 
												showed their distrust of God’s 
												power or goodness, as if he were 
												not able or willing to protect 
												them in Judea, and also were 
												guilty of disobeying his express 
												commands, and disbelieving his 
												faithful promises, whereby he 
												had engaged to protect them. To 
												which must be further added, the 
												great danger and probability, 
												not to say certainty, there was 
												that they would fall into the 
												idolatry of the Egyptians. 
												Therefore God uttered grievous 
												threatenings against their going 
												thither, that they might be 
												deterred from it. For I will 
												punish them that dwell in the 
												land of Egypt, &c. — See notes 
												on Jeremiah 42:15-18. So that 
												none of the remnant of Judah 
												which are gone, &c. — Blaney 
												translates this more agreeably 
												to the Hebrew, thus: “And the 
												remnant of Judah, those who are 
												come into the land of Egypt, 
												with a view to sojourn there, 
												and to return into the land of 
												Judah, &c., shall not have one 
												escaper or surviver; whereas 
												none shall return but escapers.” 
												And he observes, “It is evident, 
												from Jeremiah 44:28, that some 
												Jews were to escape the general 
												destruction in Egypt, and to 
												return into their own country, 
												although but a few; and the same 
												thing is implied in the latter 
												sentence of this verse. But the 
												former part of this verse 
												excludes out of the number of 
												the escapers every individual of 
												those that were called properly 
												the remnant of Judah, those that 
												had set their faces to enter 
												Egypt to sojourn there, in 
												opposition to the express 
												command of God, upon a 
												presumption that they knew 
												better than God how to consult 
												their own restoration. The few 
												then who were destined to 
												escape, and to return back to 
												the land of Judah, were to be 
												such as had come into the land 
												of Egypt in a less offensive 
												manner, and happened to be there 
												when the storm burst upon them.”
 
 Verse 15
 Jeremiah 44:15. Then all the men 
												and all the women that dwelt in 
												Pathros — Which was Upper Egypt; 
												answered Jeremiah, &c. — From 
												this it appears with how much 
												reason it was that God ordered 
												Jeremiah to endeavour to prevent 
												their going into Egypt, since 
												the Israelitish women imitated 
												the idolatry of the inhabitants 
												of it, as soon as they came 
												thither, and no people were 
												immersed in a more absurd and 
												shameful idolatry than the 
												Egyptians. It is probable that 
												when the Jewish women perceived 
												the Egyptians to abound in 
												riches and plenty, and to live 
												in peace and security, they 
												foolishly concluded that the 
												gods which the Egyptians 
												worshipped were more powerful, 
												or more beneficent, than 
												Jehovah, whom the Jews 
												worshipped.
 
 Verses 16-19
 Jeremiah 44:16-19. As for the 
												word thou hast spoken unto us, 
												we will not hearken unto thee — 
												Johanan and the rest (Jeremiah 
												43:5) only denied that God had 
												said such things, and told 
												Jeremiah he had spoken falsely: 
												but now these people rise 
												higher; they acknowledge 
												Jeremiah had spoken to them in 
												the name of the Lord, but, 
												nevertheless, tell him in plain 
												terms they would not obey his 
												word, and indeed this is in the 
												hearts of all sinners that are 
												ruled by their lusts; though 
												they will sometimes pretend that 
												what they hear is not the will 
												of God, but spoken out of malice 
												and prejudice; yet they are 
												pre-resolved they will not 
												comply with it, let their 
												understandings be never so well 
												informed. But will certainly do 
												whatsoever thing goeth out of 
												our own mouth — That is, that 
												which we have solemnly vowed to 
												perform. Here we have the root 
												of all the disobedience of 
												sinners, their resolution to 
												please themselves, and do their 
												own will, and not in any thing 
												to deny themselves. To burn 
												incense to the queen of heaven — 
												To the moon and the rest of the 
												host of heaven: see the note on 
												Jeremiah 7:18; and Jeremiah 
												19:13. As we have done, we and 
												our fathers, &c. — Their 
												arguments for continuing in this 
												idolatry are, 1st, Custom and 
												antiquity; they and their 
												fathers had practised it. 2d, 
												The example of their kings and 
												princes. 3d, The plenty and 
												prosperity they had while they 
												did so, as if their idols and 
												not Jehovah had been the authors 
												of it. They compared their 
												former condition, before the 
												invasion of Judea and the siege 
												of Jerusalem, with their present 
												state, and argued from their 
												being in prosperity at that 
												time, that they must needs have 
												been then in the right; not 
												considering that it was to be 
												ascribed to the goodness and 
												long-suffering of God waiting 
												for their repentance, as being 
												unwilling to destroy them, or 
												even to bring any great calamity 
												upon them. Besides, though on 
												account of the measure of their 
												iniquity being filled up, they 
												now suffered more grievous 
												calamities than they had ever 
												done before, yet, if they were 
												at all acquainted with the 
												history of former times, they 
												could not but know that idolatry 
												had always brought calamities on 
												their fathers, and that they 
												never were so prosperous as when 
												they worshipped and served 
												Jehovah only. But since we left 
												off, &c., we have wanted all 
												things — This is their last 
												argument in defence of their 
												idolatry, an argument drawn from 
												the evils that had befallen them 
												since they had left off to 
												worship the host of heaven; thus 
												making their ceasing to commit 
												the sin of idolatry the cause of 
												their sufferings, whereas, in 
												truth, the commission of that 
												and their other sins had been 
												the cause of all the calamities 
												to which they had been exposed. 
												And when we burned incense, &c., 
												did we worship her without our 
												men? — Here the women speak, and 
												allege that their husbands had 
												joined with them in offering 
												incense to the host of heaven, 
												and that it was not done without 
												their privity. “By the law of 
												Moses the men had an independent 
												power of binding themselves by 
												any religious vow or obligation; 
												but the vows of the women were 
												not binding, without the 
												knowledge and consent of their 
												fathers and husbands; but if the 
												father or husband knew of the 
												vow, and did not signify his 
												dissent at the time, his consent 
												was presumed, and the vow stood 
												firm and irrevocable, Numbers 
												30:1-16. This appeal, therefore, 
												to the concurrence of their men 
												must be considered as coming 
												from the female part of the 
												assembly only, who thereby 
												appear to declare that since 
												they were thus authorized by 
												those who alone had a legal 
												right to control them, they 
												should not submit to any other 
												restraint upon their 
												inclinations.” — Blaney.
 
 Verses 20-23
 Jeremiah 44:20-23. Then Jeremiah 
												said, The incense that ye 
												burned, &c. — In these verses 
												the prophet shows that they 
												interpreted the dispensations of 
												God’s providence toward them in 
												a sense directly contrary to 
												their true intent and meaning. 
												They concluded that their 
												omission of late to burn incense 
												to the queen of heaven was the 
												cause of the calamities which 
												had befallen them; but the 
												prophet shows them that the true 
												cause was, not their leaving off 
												that practice, but their being 
												formerly guilty of it. This 
												their idolatry, with their other 
												sins, did indeed go unpunished a 
												great while: for God was 
												longsuffering toward them, and 
												during the time of his patience 
												it was perhaps, as they said, 
												well with them, and they saw no 
												evil; but at length they became 
												so provoking that, as the 
												prophet tells them, Jeremiah 
												44:22, the Lord could no longer 
												bear, but began a controversy 
												with them. Upon this, it seems, 
												some of them did in a degree 
												reform their conduct: but their 
												old guilt being uncancelled, and 
												their corrupt inclinations being 
												still the same, God remembered 
												against them the idolatries of 
												their fathers, their kings, and 
												their princes, which they, 
												instead of being ashamed of, 
												gloried in: all these, he 
												intimates, Jeremiah 44:21, came 
												into his mind, with all the 
												abominations which they had 
												committed, Jeremiah 44:22, and 
												all their disobedience to the 
												voice of the Lord, Jeremiah 
												44:23 : all was brought to 
												account; and to punish them for 
												these was their land made a 
												desolation, an astonishment, and 
												a curse, as they saw it to be. 
												Therefore — Not for their late 
												reformation, he assures them, 
												but for their old 
												transgressions, had all that 
												evil happened to them.
 
 Verses 24-28
 Jeremiah 44:24-28. Jeremiah 
												said, Hear all Judah that are in 
												the land of Egypt — That is, all 
												you men and women that belong to 
												Judah, and are now come to dwell 
												in Egypt; ye and your wives have 
												spoken — The Hebrew word תדברנה, 
												rendered have spoken, is of the 
												feminine gender, and implies 
												that the women were first and 
												principally concerned in this 
												idolatry, and that the men’s 
												guilt lay chiefly in conniving 
												at them, and suffering 
												themselves to be seduced by 
												them; saying, We will surely 
												perform our vows, &c. — They 
												insist on their unlawful vows as 
												obligations in conscience, which 
												could not be dispensed with, 
												just as Herod did on his 
												unlawful oath, Matthew 14:9 : as 
												if, though to burn incense to 
												the queen of heaven were a sin, 
												yet their having vowed to do it 
												were sufficient to justify them 
												in the doing of it; whereas no 
												man can, by his vow, make that 
												lawful to himself, much less his 
												duty, which God had before made 
												sin. Ye will surely accomplish 
												your vows, &c. — You are 
												resolved upon it, and there is 
												no moving you from your 
												resolution. Therefore hear ye 
												the word of the Lord — Hear what 
												is God’s resolution. Behold, I 
												have sworn by my great name, 
												saith the Lord — I also have 
												made a solemn vow, in opposition 
												to that wicked one of yours, and 
												have confirmed it by an oath. I 
												have sworn and will not repent: 
												That my name shall no more be 
												named by any man of Judah in the 
												land of Egypt, &c. — “These Jews 
												seem to have joined the worship 
												of the true God with that of 
												idols, as the Samaritans did 
												before them, 2 Kings 17:33. 
												Thereupon God declares he will 
												not receive any such polluted 
												worship at their hands, (compare 
												Ezekiel 20:39,) nor suffer his 
												name to be any longer profaned 
												by such hypocrites, but will 
												consume them by a sudden and 
												general destruction” — Lowth. 
												Behold, I will watch over them 
												for evil — God here represents 
												himself as one who would be 
												solicitous and industrious to 
												bring evil upon them, as men, 
												who are so in any business, 
												watch all opportunities for 
												doing it: as if he had said, No 
												opportunity shall be let slip to 
												bring some judgment upon them, 
												until there be an end of them, 
												and they be quite rooted out. 
												Yet a small number that escape 
												the sword shall return, &c. — A 
												very few, next to none in 
												comparison of the great number 
												that shall return out of the 
												land of the Chaldeans: see note 
												on Jeremiah 44:14. And all the 
												remnant of Judah shall know 
												whose words shall stand, mine or 
												theirs — They said they should 
												recover themselves when they 
												returned to worship the queen of 
												heaven. God says they shall 
												hereby ruin themselves: and now 
												the event will show who was in 
												the right. The contest between 
												God and sinners is, whose word 
												shall stand, whose will shall be 
												done, who shall prevail? Sinners 
												say, We shall have peace, though 
												we go on in sin: God says, Ye 
												shall have no peace. And when 
												God judges, he will overcome: 
												his word shall stand, and not 
												the sinner’s.
 
 Verse 29-30
 Jeremiah 44:29-30. And this 
												shall be a sign unto you — Signs 
												are usually antecedent to the 
												thing signified, as Isaiah 38:7; 
												but here, as Exodus 3:12, Isaiah 
												37:30, and Luke 2:12, the word 
												is taken, in a larger sense, for 
												a circumstance that should 
												attend the thing signified. It 
												may be observed, however, that 
												although the destruction of 
												these Jews, and that of Pharaoh, 
												were things immediately 
												following each other, yet the 
												latter was in order before the 
												other. I will give 
												Pharaoh-hophra into the hand of 
												his enemies — Pharaoh was a name 
												common, in ancient times, to all 
												the kings of Egypt; but several 
												of them had some additional 
												epithet to distinguish them from 
												the rest. Thus the predecessor 
												of this king was called Pharaoh- 
												nechoh, 2 Kings 23:29. This 
												Pharaoh-hophra appears to have 
												been the same that is called by 
												profane authors Apries; and his 
												unfortunate end, in exact 
												conformity with this prediction, 
												is particularly related by 
												Herodotus, lib. 2. cap. 169, and 
												by Diodorus Siculus, lib. 1. p. 
												43. “His subjects rebelling, he 
												sent Amasis, one of his 
												generals, to reduce them to 
												their duty; but no sooner had 
												Amasis begun to make his speech 
												than they fixed a helmet on his 
												head, and proclaimed him king. 
												Amasis accepted the title, and 
												confirmed the Egyptians in their 
												rebellion; and the greater part 
												of the nation declaring for him, 
												Apries was obliged to retire 
												into Upper Egypt; and the 
												country, being thus weakened by 
												intestine war, was attacked and 
												easily overcome by 
												Nebuchadnezzar, who, on quitting 
												it, left Amasis his viceroy. 
												After Nebuchadnezzar’s 
												departure, Apries marched 
												against Amasis, but, being 
												defeated at Memphis, was taken 
												prisoner, carried to Sais, and 
												strangled in his own palace; 
												thus verifying this prophecy.” 
												See Rollin’s Ancient Hist., vol. 
												1., and Bishop Newton on the 
												Prophecies, vol. 1. p. 362.
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