PREVIOUS CHAPTER - NEXT CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE CHAPTER 20 Jer 20:1-18. JEREMIAH'S INCARCERATION BY PASHUR, THE PRINCIPAL OFFICER OF THE TEMPLE, FOR PROPHESYING WITHIN ITS PRECINCTS; HIS RENEWED PREDICTIONS AGAINST THE CITY, &c., ON HIS LIBERATION.
1. son--descendant.
2. The fact that Pashur was of the same order and of the same family
as Jeremiah aggravates the indignity of the blow
(1Ki 22:24;
Mt 26:67).
3. Pashur--compounded of two roots, meaning "largeness (and so 'security') on every side"; in antithesis to Magor-missabib, "terror round about" (Jer 20:10; Jer 6:25; 46:5; 49:29; Ps 31:13). 4. terror . . . to all thy friends--who have believed thy false promises (Jer 20:6). The sense must be in order to accord with "fear round about" (Jer 20:3). I will bring terror on thee and on all thy friends, that terror arising from thyself, namely, thy false prophecies. Thou and thy prophecies will be seen, to the dismay both of thee and thy dupes, to have caused their ruin and thine. MAURER'S translation is therefore not needed, "I will give up thee and all thy friends to terror."
5. strength--that is, resources.
6. prophesied lies--namely, that God cannot possibly leave this land without prophets, priests, and teachers ("the wise") (Jer 18:18; compare Jer 5:31).
7. Jeremiah's complaint, not unlike that of Job, breathing somewhat
of human infirmity in consequence of his imprisonment. Thou didst
promise never to give me up to the will of mine enemies, and yet Thou
hast done so. But Jeremiah misunderstood God's promise, which was not
that he should have nothing to suffer, but that God would deliver him
out of sufferings
(Jer 1:19).
8. Rather, "Whenever I speak, I cry out. Concerning violence
and spoil, I (am compelled to) cry out," that is, complain
[MAURER].
English Version in the last clause is more graphic, "I cried violence
and spoil"
(Jer 6:7)!
I could not speak in a calm tone; their desperate wickedness compelled
me to "cry out."
9. his word was--or literally, "there was in my heart, as it were,
a burning fire," that is, the divine afflatus or impulse to speak was
as . . .
(Job 32:18, 19;
Ps 39:3).
10. For--not referring to the words immediately preceding, but to "I
will not make mention of Him." The "defaming" or detraction of the
enemy on every side (see
Ps 31:13)
tempted him to think of prophesying no more.
11. not prevail--as they hoped to do
(Jer 20:10;
Jer 15:20).
12. triest the righteous--in latent contrast to the hasty judgments
of men
(Jer 11:20; 17:10).
13. delivered . . . soul--This deliverance took place when Zedekiah succeeded Jeconiah. 14-18. The contrast between the spirit of this passage and the preceding thanksgiving is to be explained thus: to show how great was the deliverance (Jer 20:13), he subjoins a picture of what his wounded spirit had been previous to his deliverance; I had said in the time of my imprisonment, "Cursed be the day"; my feeling was that of Job (Job 3:3, 10, 11, whose words Jeremiah therefore copies). Though Jeremiah's zeal had been stirred up, not so much for self as for God's honor trampled on by the rejection of the prophet's words, yet it was intemperate when he made his birth a subject for cursing, which was really a ground for thanksgiving. 15. A man child--The birth of a son is in the East a special subject of joy; whereas that of a daughter is often not so.
16. the cities--Sodom and Gomorrah.
17. he--"that man"
(Jer 20:15, 16).
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