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Introduction Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapters 4 to 6 Chapters 7 to 9 Chapter 10 Chapters 11 and 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapters 19 and 20 Chapters 21 to 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapters 27 and 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapters 31 and 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36 Chapters 37 and 38 Chapters 39 to 44 Chapters 49 to 51 Chapter 52 |
Israel addressed as responsible: Jeremiah pleads with God for them
Jeremiah 11 suggests some observations. God addresses Himself
again to Israel on the ground of their responsibility, reminding
them of the call to obedience, which had been addressed to them
ever since their coming out of Egypt. God was about to bring on the
people the evil with which He had threatened them. Jeremiah is not
to intercede for them. Nevertheless He still calls Israel His
"beloved"; but, being corrupted, what had she to do in His house?
Whatever she might have been to Him, judgment was coming. At the
end of the chapter Jeremiah takes the place of the faithful remnant
who have the testimony of God. His position continually reminds us
of the Psalms. We see the working of the Spirit of Christ often
clearly expressed, but sometimes, it appears to me, in expressions
more mingled with Jeremiah's personal position, and thereby less
deep and less akin to the sentiments of Christ, although the same
in principle with the Psalms. Jeremiah, on account of his
faithfulness and his testimony, was exposed to the machinations of
the wicked. Jehovah reveals these things to him; and, according to
the righteousness which characterises the condition of the remnant,
he calls for the vengeance of God.* This will be the means of
deliverance for the remnant. He announces the judgment of these
wicked men by the word of Jehovah. In Psalm 83 the same principles
will be found, and the same wickedness in God's enemies; only
there, these enemies are Gentiles, and the range of thought is
wider. Israel and the knowledge of Jehovah are the object of the
prayer in that Psalm. Compare also chapter 9 and Psalm 64. Here
there is more intercession on Jeremiah's part; the psalm speaks of
judgment. Compare also Psalm 69:6-7, and Jeremiah 15:15. The
words of the psalm being from the mouth of Christ Himself, the
request is for others and infinitely more touching. This comparison
of passages will help in understanding the relationship between the
position of Jeremiah and that of the remnant described in the
Psalms. We may also compare Psalm 73 with the beginning of Jeremiah
12. This last chapter forms a part of the same prophecy as the
preceding one. Jeremiah pleads with God on the subject of these
judgments, but in a humble and submissive manner, which God accepts
by making him feel (a painful necessity) the evil of the people
more deeply. At the same time He sustains the prophet's faith by
the personal interest He manifests in him. God makes him understand
that He has forsaken His inheritance: the state of things was
therefore no longer to be wondered at. At the same time He reveals
His purposes of blessing to His people, and even to the nations
among whom they will be dispersed,** if these nations would learn
the ways of Jehovah. |
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