Jeremiah Commentary
Jeremiah Commentary
Jeremiah Commentary
Jer_23:17. “Imagination”—stubbornness.
Jer_23:19. “Behold, a whirlwind,” &c. The verse should read, Behold, a tempest
(storm wind) of Jehovah! Fury is gone forth (or, even hot anger is gone forth); and
a whirlwind ( מִתחֹולֵ ל סִַעַ רa tornado, whirling storm) shall be hurled (or burst) upon
the head of the wicked.
Jer_23:29. “Is not My word like as a fire?” The presence of the word כה, thus, in
this sentence gives rise to the suggestion that formerly it was כח, strength or power.
The Targum reads: “Are not all My words strong like fire?” Probably this
suggested the word in Heb_4:12, “quick and powerful.”
Jer_23:31. “That use their tongues and say, He saith.” Not יהִוָה נְִאֻ ם, saith
Jehovah, but only “ נְִאֻ סsaith.”
Jer_23:33. “What burden?” The LXX. divide the words אִת־מה־מּׂשא, What burden?
into only two sections, thus, הּמּׂשא אתם, Ye are the burden; and with this reading,
which is more rational, the following words accord: “Ye are the burden, and I will
cast you away, saith the Lord.” “Forsaken you,” should be, refused you, thrown
you off.
Through the dark clouds gathering over Jerusalem there broke occasionally
gleams of sunshine. The judgments which the prophet foretold were so terrible,
and the ruin awaiting Judah so overwhelming, that Jeremiah and the small remnant
of the true Israel remaining might have abandoned all hope.
But God relieved their despondency by the promise that, notwithstanding the
judgments and calamities, He would again visit and redeem His people.
I. The prediction assumes that all the calamities which the prophet foretold
would overtake Judah. These calamities threatened the kingdom, and also the
very house of David: for the expression, “I will raise unto David a righteous
Branch,” conveys the idea of a tender sprout springing from the root of a tree cut
down or seemingly dead.
II. Yet the prediction assured them that the promise would certainly be
fulfilled. The positive fulfilment of the threatening would encourage the hope in
the sure realisation of the promise, and give them encouragement amid the
calamities.
III. There is here an obvious contrast between this promised King and all
who ever held David’s throne. He was to be righteous, to reign, to act wisely.
How different from all kings before Him! Their impiety and folly had entailed ruin
upon the people.
IV. The description of their future King could not fail to astonish them. It
began by comparing Him to a bud, or tender shoot, from a tree cut down, and
ended by ascribing to Him the great and fearful name of JEHOVAH! It must have
awakened their admiration, reverence, confidence: for—
1. His being the offspring of David assured them of His tenderest sympathy in
the well-being of Israel and Judah; and—
2. His being Jehovah gave still stronger assurance that nothing was too difficult
to accomplish, and nothing would be left undone. And—
3. They were assured that His righteousness, power, and wisdom would be
made available for securing the peace and prosperity of His people, as He was to
be their Righteousness.
V. This promise has been fulfilled, and its hidden meaning unfolded. To
God’s ancient people obscurity must have hidden the true character of their king.
The prophets themselves diligently sought a “private interpretation” of their own
predictions. The Church at large was in mystery. But to us the mystery is all
revealed.
VI. The great principle on which the whole scheme of redemption rests is
here stated. “Righteousness.”
1. It is only on the ground of perfect righteousness that God can accept and
approve an intelligent creature.
Here is—
1. They were not owners of the sheep. God calls them “the sheep of My
pasture.”
3. They would be visited with vengeance. They would not “visit” the sheep; God
would “visit” upon them the evil of their doings. See Addenda: NEGLIGENT
PASTORS.
1. The dispersed people should be gathered happily into their own land, and
under good government (Jer_23:3-4).
2. Messiah, the good Shepherd of the sheep, would be raised up to bless and be
the glory of His people Israel (Jer_23:5-6).
3. This great salvation should far outshine Israel’s deliverance from Egypt
(Jer_23:7-8).
1. Christ is here spoken of as the Branch from David. Mean in appearance; His
beginnings small; His rise seemingly out of the earth, but growing to be green, to
be great, and to be loaded with fruits.
2. He is here spoken of as the Church’s King. He shall reign on the throne of
His father David, and he shall prosper, and not, as the degenerate kings had done,
go back in their affairs. He shall set up a kingdom in the world, which shall be
victorious over all opposition. And in these days of Christ’s government, “Judah
shall be saved,” &c. When He reigns uppermost in the soul, the soul dwells at ease.
3. He is here spoken of as The Lord our Righteousness. (1.) Who and what He
is. As God, “Jehovah;” denoting His eternity and self-existence. As Mediator, “our
Righteousness.” All our righteousness has its being from Him; and we are made
the righteousness of God in Him. (2.) The profession and declaration of this. “This
is the name by which,” &c. Not only shall He be so, but He shall be known to be
so. God shall call Him by this name: and Israel shall so call Him: and every true
believer shall know and call upon Him by that name.—Matthew Henry.
Jeremiah’s deep distress under the necessity of declaring the dreadful woes
which God bade him utter (Jer_23:9).
I. Delusive prophesyings.
5. God’s remonstrance with the nation (Jer_23:16). Though men mislead, God
interposes with earnest appeals and honest counsels.
6. God’s charge against the prophets (Jer_23:18; Jer_23:21-22). They had
neglected “the counsel of the Lord”; had spoken without a commission; and
therefore misled God’s people.
7. Sin’s cruel seductions (Jer_23:12). God gives them over to strong delusions;
to inherit the miseries of their perversity.
Note:
i. False teachers will taste the full “bitterness” of their wicked delusions.
ii. Wilful sinners shall be “driven on” in the slippery ways they prefer.
iii. No teachings which lead men to sin can have the sanction of God.
4. Stern denunciations of lying prophets, (1.) Their sinful practices; they “steal
God’s words” from true prophets and pervert or misapply them; they simulate a
Divine authority for their false words, saying “He saith;” and they lead God’s
people “to err by their lightness.” (2.) God’s severe remonstrance; “I am against
the prophets,” and the “dreamers;” He would requite them for their deceptions and
for the consequent errors of the people.
Note:
i. Promises of peace from men who lead us astray from God are mere “chaff”
which the wind shall drive away.
III. Profane jesting. This charge is thrown upon the whole nation (Jer_23:33-
34). They so treated the messages of God’s true prophet.
1. Retorting with banter and levity. Taking up Jeremiah’s solemn words with
derision, and tossing them about as if it all were a jest.
2. Trifling with messages from God (Jer_23:35-36). Chaffing one another with
being bearers of God’s “burden;” and “perverting” Jehovah’s “words.”
Note:
ii. Such lightness and profanity will prove a woful burden to the sinner and his
everlasting reproach.
1. On whom God charges this faithlessness. These “pastors” were the secular
rulers, the unrighteous kings, mentioned in chap. 22, Jehoahaz, Jehoiakim, and
Jeconiah. Note, the responsibility of civil rulers to God; for “By Me kings reign,”
&c. Hence argue: the obligations of all in power, whether that power be royal,
civil, ecclesiastical, or pastoral, to rule and work for the highest good and the
spiritual advantage of the people.
2. For what God threatens these shepherds. The flock was “destroyed;” i.e., it
was no longer “the flock of God,” for the nation was a wilful and wicked herd of
goats; its pastoral simplicity had been ruined. And the flock was “scattered;”
driven away from fidelity to God; equally from His nutritious pasturage; and
literally from the fold they should have occupied, the land they should have
continued to inhabit (Jer_23:3). Negligent Shepherds harm the people temporally
and spiritually; despoil them of the choicest blessings of this life—their spiritual
comforts and heavenly hopes.
3. With what judgments God would visit such faithlessness. “Woe be to the
pastors.” “I will visit upon you the evil of your doings.” With what measure ye
mete it shall be measured to you again. The ruin of the flock would be requited by
the ruin of the shepherds. (See Ezekiel 33.)
Note that the words “pastors” and “shepherds” are different translations of the
same Hebrew word (rôim).
1. To that nation this was fulfilled in the raising up of religious and righteous
rulers, Zerubbabel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and the Maccabees, who were not hereditary
kings of the seed of David, but men raised up by God to govern His flock.
2. To the spiritual Israel this was fulfilled in the orders and ordinances of the
Christian Church. No more have we the tyranny of secular kings within the
Church; but Christ Himself is King. No longer have we the impiety of priests and
Pharisees within the Church (as in the Jewish Synagogue); for the apostles of
Christ began a line of earnest teachers and preachers who minister within the
sanctuary: faithful pastors who love and tend “the flock of God over which the
Holy Ghost has made them overseers.”
3. To every soul within the Saviour’s fold these assurances are now verified:
“they shall fear no more, nor be dismayed, neither shall they be lacking, saith the
Lord” (Jer_23:4): for believers in Christ have Him for Shepherd (Psalms 24); and
He both guards His fold from harm, and nourishes the souls of His flock.
“Neither shall they be lacking:” this means, not one sheep shall be missing.
This is therefore a prophecy of Judah’s restoration from Babylon; yet its fulness of
significance can only be realised in the final restoration of both “Judah” and
“Israel” (comp. Jer_23:6) out of all countries—a prophecy never yet accomplished.
While spiritually it foreshadows the gathering together of all Christ’s redeemed,
under the One Shepherd of the sheep.
The prophetic writings are replete with appropriate and sublime descriptions of
the personal appearing, redeeming works, and mediatorial offices of the promised
Messiah. The text describes the Redeemer’s character, as assuming human nature
and establishing His kingdom of grace; and directs our attention to the following
important truths:
“Behold the days come,” &c. In these words we may observe three things
relative to the coming Messiah:—
1. His human incarnation. “A Branch.” This term is often used by the prophets
to represent Christ’s assumption of our nature as “the seed of the woman,”
according to the Divine promise (Gen_3:15). To accomplish this and similar
promises, the Lord declares in the text, “Behold the days come that I will raise unto
David a righteous branch.” The Father loved the world, promised, and actually
“sent His Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, that we might live through Him.”
Thus, the Lord “raised” in the royal house and lineage of David “a Branch;” as it is
written, “There shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a branch shall
grow out of His roots.” The scheme of redemption rendered it necessary for Christ
to “take on Him the seed of Abraham,” that He might suffer and die for our sins
(Heb_2:10; Heb_2:17).
3. His sovereign character. “A King shall reign.” The Jews were taught to
expect their Messiah as an illustrious Prince and prosperous monarch. But, in
general, they mistook the precise meaning of the prophets, and expected Him as a
temporal, and not as a spiritual, sovereign. He possessed every qualification
requisite for the dignity of His character. He is infinite in wisdom, righteousness,
power, and goodness. He is not only a Prophet to instruct, a Priest to atone, but
also a King to rule and save His people.
“A King shall reign and prosper,” &c. The empire of Christ is of a complex
character, and comprehends His vast dominion over all things, as the Creator and
Preserver of mankind, and as the Redeemer and Saviour of them that believe. In
this extended view the Messiah possesses:—
1. A universal kingdom. His presence fills all space, and His power is unlimited.
He reigns in His providence over all His creatures, and is “the King of kings, and
Lord of lords.” He is the sovereign proprietor of all things, and sways His sceptre
both in heaven and in earth. All things are dependent on His power, and subject to
His control, “who is over all, God blessed for ever.”
III. The character of His reign. “A king shall reign and prosper,” &c.
4. Christ’s reign is everlasting. All other kings are mortal, and therefore die and
leave their dignities to their successors. All temporal kingdoms rise and fall, and
will ultimately perish in the wreck of worlds; but Christ is the “King eternal and
immortal, and His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and His dominion is from
generation to generation.”
To improve the subject, consider: The dignity of Christ’s person and character,
the folly and misery of His enemies, and the duty and happiness of His subjects.—
Sketches of Sermons.
I. The character of Christ. There are three things we look for in a king:
3. Benevolent. Alexanders and Cæsars were “warriors with confused noise and
garments rolled in blood;” but Christ (Isa_42:2).
III. The prosperity with which His reign shall be attended. To prosper as
king, implies:
Observe:
1. If Christ shall reign and prosper, how great is the folly of being His
adversaries!
2. This subject should inspire the Christian with joy and gratitude (Act_15:3;
Rev_19:6-7).
Jer_23:6. Theme: A BRIGHT ERA FOR MANKIND. “In His days Judah shall
be saved and Israel shall dwell safely.”
Eagerly we scan those prophecies which open a gracious future for humanity.
Especially when our Lord Jesus is predicted as being the author of that blissful
change. For it is so desirable both for human good and the Saviour’s glory.
(a.) The present prevailing irreligion, with all the force of a dark contrast,
makes the outlook alluring to contemplate.
(b.) The slow progress of evangelisation gives zest to the anticipation of the
grand success which shall come “in those days” through the direct interposition of
Heaven.
1. Have those days been realised in the Christian era? Certainly Christianity in
some sense has fulfilled this prediction. It is an era when, not Moses, but Christ
gives the impress to, and dwells supreme in, the dispensation. Jesus is now “the
Lord our Righteousness.” And if we may interpret “Judah and Israel” spiritually,
then He has “saved us.”
But the ancient people of God are here literally meant. And they have not as
yet come to call Jesus “the Lord our Righteousness;” they do not “dwell safely,”
for they are wanderers upon the earth. The promise in Jer_23:8 has not yet been
fulfilled even in a spiritual sense: Israel has not been all won to Christ.
2. Those days have yet to dawn. For when they come Israel shall acknowledge
Christ.
(a.) There may be an actual fulfilment of this promise for the tribes of Judah
and Israel. And who would not welcome it? for they have been a sad people long
afflicted. Yet even more because of the promises which attend the time of their
restoration (Rom_11:11-12; Rom_11:15; Rom_11:25-26).
(b.) But the allusion may be to the millennial age: when (Jer_23:5) the “King
shall reign.” We cannot say these are the days of Christ; for the devil rules a wider
dominion! But “the kingdom of this world shall become the kingdom of our God
and of His Christ.” For this grand future pray, work, and hope.
(b.) Safety has not hitherto been the experience of the Jewish nation. Every age
finds them a wronged and outraged people. But when Messiah comes they will be
molested no more.
(c.) Neither has Israel, spiritually considered, dwelt safely. The souls of
Christ’s people are always imperilled and assailed by the forces of evil.
III. For the coming of Christ’s days we may well with eagerness yearn.
1. They are desirable. What a joyous outlook! Ended our “sowing precious seed
with tears,” our grief over the desolations of sin, our shame for the scorn and
rejection of Christ, our struggles with evil around.
1. The Lord is our righteousness inasmuch as the purpose and plan of justifying
sinners originated with Him.
3. Inasmuch as it is through His grace and by His free donation that we receive
righteousness.
Anxious sinners wish to know the way of acceptance with God. The text is a
brief but satisfactory answer.—Dr. W. Lindsay-Alexander (of Edinburgh), “The
Hive.”
Theme: CHRIST’S SUPREME NAME.
The Gospel is not known as a system of promises simply, though these are
exceedingly great and precious; not as a system of morals, though its morality is of
the highest kind; nor as a system of legislation simply, though it contains the code
of God’s moral government; but it is pre-eminently known as a system of
reconciliation.
This doctrine forms the key to the Christian system. To this one work all
dispensations point. This all sacrifices illustrate. This all promises embody. This
all Providence is bowed to subserve. This all heaven stoops to witness. This all hell
resists and opposes. This all bad men revile or neglect. This all good men venerate
and love. Surely shall one say, In the Lord Jehovah have I righteousness and
strength. “This is the name by which He shall be called,” etc.
It is common with the prophets to console the Jews under their calamities with
the prospect of Messiah’s approach, as a proof that if the Church was to be
preserved till His coming, it should not be destroyed in its present exigency. Here
the transit is easy from the corrupt pastors that destroyed Israel to the true
Shepherd who should redeem it. He was to be the descendant of their shepherd-
king.
2. Specify some of the circumstances that put an emphasis and value upon the
redemption He has achieved.
Every title which Christ bears opens a source of consolation to His people.
They are so many beautiful notices of Himself, and shadow forth blessings.
All the evidence concurs in this, that the Redeemer of the world was to be
Divine as well as human. This was necessary that He might transact our salvation
on equal terms, and that the virtue of His offering might be available and
efficacious on our behalf. Take away His humanity, and He would have no
sacrifice to offer: take away His divinity, and His sacrifice would have no inherent
merit. The doctrines of Christ’s merit and of Christ’s Divinity are inseparable, for if
the one be removed, the other must fall, of course; and with them the whole fabric
of our redemption.
ii. His mediatorial office. “Our righteousness.” So important is this that our
Lord takes His name from it. It is the title by which He loves to be distinguished,
and all who would speak to His honour must make mention of His righteousness. It
was no unusual thing for the warriors, princes, and great men of antiquity to take
their names from the countries conquered, or the exploits they had achieved. As
Scipio from his conquest of Africa, and Coriolanus from his over the Corioli. So
Christ from redemption. In the name of Jesus the whole Gospel lies hid.
The necessity for this scheme of substitution arose out of human depravity, and
the inflexible rectitude of the Divine government. It was necessary that as we had
lost our righteousness it should be restored in Christ. “Die He, or justice must.” To
fulfil the high condition Jesus interposed. Here was glory for our meanness,
suffering for our ransom. It was exacted.
Here we see the grand reality to which all the shadows of the Jewish law
pointed. “It became Him,” etc.
Rest not till you can rest in Christ, as made of God to you wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. It is the personal experience and the
personal application of Christ’s benefits which we need. “I know whom I have
believed.” “I know my Redeemer.”
II. Specify some considerations which put an emphasis and value upon
redemption, and heighten our sense of its importance.
i. The work of redemption has ennobled our nature and shed a lustre over the
annals of our world. He took not on Him the nature of angels—laid not hold on
them. Those first-born sons of immortality were left in their sins. No “mighty to
save” appeared for them. No ark in their deluge: no refuge city in their land: no
brazen serpent in their camp: no star of Bethlehem in their sky!
Christ ennobles all with which He comes in contact. The very place is
memorable. “Thou Bethlehem Ephrata.” The times are memorable. Jesus fills an
era of His own. “In HIS DAYS Judah saved.” We date from His death—we
memorialise His death—“show forth the Lord’s death.”
ii. It eclipses and throws into the shade the greatest of the Divine works. “No
more say the Lord liveth, who brought Israel from Egypt.” Babylon was to eclipse
the deliverance from Egypt—and Calvary that of Babylon.
iii. It enhances the value of temporal blessings following in its train. “Judah
shall be saved”—when God is known as her righteousness.
iv. It forms a permanent bond of union among subjects of grace. “Judah and
Israel.”
Finally, judge of the grandeur of the work by the doom denounced against those
who despise and reject it. “Behold, ye despisers, and wonder and perish.” “Of how
much sorer punishment,” &c.—S. Thodey, A.D. 1838.
Jer_23:5-6. Theme: THE CHRISTIAN CREED SUMMARISED.
The ancient fathers agreed that this prophecy was not fulfilled on the return of
the Jews under Zerubbabel, but is accomplished by the restoration of all true
Israelites in Christ.
I. The manhood of the Messiah is here declared. “I will raise unto David a
righteous branch” (comp. Isa_11:1).
III. His saving power and love as our Redeemer are also affirmed. “In His
days Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely.”
IV. Here is a clear assertion that He who has been pre-announced as Very Man
of the seed of David, and as an Eternal King and Righteous Judge, and as a mighty
Saviour and Deliverer, is also the LORD, JEHOVAH, Very God, and, being Very
God as well as Very Man, is OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.—Bishop Wordsworth.
II. We may safely predicate “our righteousness” of Christ, who is here called
“the Lord our righteousness.”
For the Apostle has expressly taught us that “Christ is made unto us
righteousness” (1Co_1:30). As Man He was able to suffer for us: as God He is able
to reconcile the Father to us.
Not only, therefore, may Christ “our righteousness” be called JEHOVAH, but
by being also called “OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS” he is thereby distinguished from
God the Father, and becomes our Jehovah and our righteousness: the God-Man
consecrated to man’s redemption.—Comp. Bishop Pearson on this text, Art. ii. p.
148.
i. “JEHOVA.” Why that must be a part of this name. David shows (Psa_71:16),
because only His righteousness is worth remembering; and no other is fit to be
mentioned. For our own “righteousness” is odious (Isa_64:6, and Php_4:8).
David calls Him Jehova misericordia (Psa_59:17), and true it is that mercy is
ours. But justice is against us; and except “justice” also be made “ours,” all is not
as it should be. But if justice—that in God which only is against us—might be
made for us, then are we safe. Therefore, all our thought is how we may get “mercy
to triumph over justice” (Jas_2:13), or how we may get them to meet and be
friends (Psa_85:10). Hence, therefore, neither Jehova potentia nor Jehova
misericordia are enough, but it must be Jehova justitia.
iv. NOSTRA. Without this “Jehovah” alone doth not concern us, while
“Jehovah justitia” is wholly against us. But if He be not alone “righteousness,” but
ours too, we have our desires. Verily this possessive word of application is all in
all.—Bishop Andrewes (Works, vol. v. Sermon 5). See further Noticeable Topics.
Jer_23:7-8. Repeated from chap. Jer_16:14-15. See Homily in loc. But see
Noticeable Topics below: “THE LOST TEN TRIBES.”
I. Intense grief over false teachers. “Mine heart within me is broken because
of the prophets.” 1. Their wickedness in teaching delusions. This incensed his pious
soul. 2. Their ruinous misleading of the nation. This disturbed his patriotic spirit.
III. Deepest awe over God’s terribleness. “Because of the Lord and the words
of His holiness.” 1. He knew with whom these prophets were trifling. “And
knowing the terrors of the Lord, we persuade men.” 2. He realised the compulsion
of God’s holy words. God never threatened willingly; but when necessity led Him
to pronounce doom, it was appalling to think of what it meant.
I. Outrages by man against God. Sin has manifold names and shapes, all
offensive. Here is a specification of some especially odious.
1. Pleasures all desolated. “Pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up”
(Jer_23:10). For it should be recognised that men occupy a “wilderness.” Earth is
not naturally fruitful of luxury and pleasure. All its “pleasant places” are God’s
gifts, specially provided for us. Therefore He can easily turn its pleasures into
drought, and He will do so if we abuse His grace. Then life becomes a blank waste,
and the heart is left without comfort.
2. False ways made fatal. God will allow them to pursue “their way”
(Jer_23:12); give them up to their heart’s desire; not arresting them, simply let
them alone to become befooled, besotted, benighted. “In the darkness” they should
not be shown their peril so as to become alarmed, and certainly should not find
escape, but slide down into the blackness of darkness for ever.
3. Forces of evil should seize them. Sin when indulged in the heart and habits
assumes a tyrannical despotism, and “drives on” the sinner (Jer_23:12). Once sin
merely pleaded and decoyed, now it forces and masters the soul; and the sinner
shall “fall”—where? “Therein,” i.e., into the depths of woe, which end the
“slippery ways of darkness.”
4. God Himself will visit sinners with evil (Jer_23:12). Though God delays the
judgment, yet, (1.) There comes a time of judgment, “even the year of their
visitation, saith the Lord.” (2.) Then God will Himself bring evil upon them. “It is a
fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” “Turn ye from your evil
ways, for why will ye die?”—Comp. Homily on chap. Jer_11:15.
Jer_23:13-14. Theme: COMPARATIVE SINFULNESS. “Folly in the prophets
of Samaria, … in the prophets of Jerusalem an horrible thing.”
1. The location of our life affects the moral qualities of conduct. The same acts
done “in Samaria” had less wrong in them than when done “in Jerusalem,” because
there was more religious light in Jerusalem.
2. Guilt is guiltiest when done in the face of God. It was stupidity when done “in
Baal,” in connection with Baal. It was absolutely “horrible” when done in the
Temple in Jerusalem, the seat of God’s Holy Throne and Shekinah glory. Thus
“exalted unto heaven,” they should be “thrust down to hell.”
2. The heaviest woes of sin are terrifying to contemplate. “They are all of them
unto me as Sodom, and the inhabitants thereof as Gomorrah.” Overwhelmed with
ruin, and destroyed with “fire and brimstone.”
I. All sin is horrible in its nature. It is contrary to the character and will of an
Infinite Being—a Being of glorious purity, supreme authority, and almighty
power; a Being who cannot be tempted with evil, nor even look on iniquity, &c.
IV. It is to operate with that evil spirit who works in the children of
disobedience.
Application:—
2. It may be detected. “They make you vain;” deceive with false hopes. In
Jer_23:17 their preaching is further described.
II. Hearers must refuse wrong teaching. The Church, and not her ministers,
is the pillar and ground of the truth.
1. The exercise of the right of “trying the spirits whether they be of God” has its
perils and difficulties. Ignorant, misguided, and narrow-minded men may make a
preacher “an offender for a word.” Timid souls may take quick alarm. Impatient
listeners may judge in haste and without ample reasons.
2. Yet the non-exercise of this right is a grave misdemeanour on the part of the
Church. God commands hearers to “take heed how they hear,” and to “try the
spirits,” &c. Not to do so indicates spiritual inertia, intellectual indifference, and
neglect of highest trusts. It exposes the Church to the grossest misleading, and
leaves the pulpit to reckless adventurers.
III. God’s truth is perceivable by the common people. Rome and arrogant
priests would have us believe that hearers are to receive what is taught them, being
incapable of judging their teachers.
1. The doctrine of the Law was sufficient to guide Judah concerning the
teachings of prophets. “He who ran might read,” if he sought to know.
LESSONS—
5. Encourage and strengthen the earnest and outspoken preacher who may seem
to “become men’s enemy because he tells them the truth.”
6. Make no truce with the sins which an honest preacher must denounce.
I. Because sinners will not duly consider their wickedness, therefore they
misunderstand God’s displeasure.
1. God sees our sin in its most awful aspects. “This abominable thing that I
hate.”
3. Divine anger is rightly fierce towards conduct which would ruin the order
and happiness of the whole intelligent and moral world.
4. Men not understanding what sin is, and what it would despoil, think God
harsh in His denunciations, and its penalties unduly severe.
II. Because sinners defy the forewarning of God’s anger, therefore it will
overwhelm them at the last.
1. God may defer the infliction, yet it cannot be delayed for ever.
2. Men may defy the threatenings, yet cannot thwart the thoughts of the Lord.
4. When God begins with punishment, His anger will not stay till it execute
fullest vengeance.
III. When sinners feel the final woes their sins deserve, they will then awake
to their just deserts.
1. With this nation it was so; Jerusalem was destroyed, and the exiles, taught by
the sore adversity of captivity, saw then how their sin brought woes on themselves
and ruin on their country.
2. Even in this world God makes sinners realise that their guilt is the cause of
their misery of heart and life. As in perilous illness, or sudden calamity.
3. But it is in the future that the ungodly will learn their full iniquity, and justify
the ways of God with them.
4. God’s utterances preached with the fervour which “causes” the “people to
hear.”
1. What is the Divine preacher’s supreme aim? “To turn men from their evil
way,” &c.
2. What are the Divine teacher’s best credentials? That his preaching does
accomplish this result. “Then they should have turned them,” &c.
3. What are the Divine preacher’s richest rewards? Not worldly favour or
power, but sinners turned from the error of their ways; souls won for Christ, his
“crown of rejoicing.”
2. Near us in minute perception. “His eyes behold,” &c. “Run to and fro.”
3. Near us in mighty power. “Doing according to His will among the inhabitants
of the earth,” as well as amid the “armies of heaven.” “No place can either include
Him or exclude Him.” (Henry.)
1. The thought of secrecy is a delusion. We live, move, think, act in the full
blaze of the searching light of omniscience.
2. The deeds of human life are Divinely scanned. He reads them through and
through—motive and method, all keenly and completely discerned.
3. The judgments of God are based upon perfect knowledge of facts. This is
consolatory to the righteous—who are often misrepresented and maligned. This is
admonitory to the irreligious—who will be destitute of all hope of excuse or covert
in the day of decision.
1. In heaven, where He seems locally “near,” pure and redeemed souls may
look upon Him, and glory in His cloudless presence.
2. On earth, though clouds and darkness hide Him, and we think of God as
“afar off,” He can yet make Himself known to our souls.
ii. The co-ordinate truth of God’s omniscience (Jer_23:24). There are no secret
places to God.
3. Such a God, everywhere near, it is easy to worship and wise to trust. He can
know all things on our behalf and do all we need.
2. Divided affections are inconsistent with true homage. We can have but one
God. He will not be placed on a level with another object of regard. “Beside Me is
none else.”
III. The loftiest reverence and truest loyalty become us in relation to a God
so glorious.
3. What a privilege to be permitted to hide our life in such a God! “Hid with
Christ in God.”
IV. Security and peace are assured to the godly soul in the fact of the
Divine omnipresence.
1. God will guard him from the lurking forces and subtleties of sin. “Can any
hide,” &c. God sees His saints in all scenes and circumstances, and will keep them
safely.
2. God will be ever near him; his solace and sufficiency. He is at hand to
cherish, to guide—in life and death; till the redeemed soul reaches Him in heaven.
“He that hath My word, let him speak My word faithfully. What is the chaff to
the wheat? saith the Lord.”
The Word of God is put into our hands, and a dispensation is committed to us to
preach it. This office we must execute “faithfully;” we must speak the Word—
1. To our judgment. “What is the chaff?” &c. Of what use were the assertions of
false prophets? They only deceived the people to their ruin. Contrast with this the
labours of Moses, David, Elijah, Paul. So the true minister (1Ti_4:16; Jas_5:20).
God declares the good effect of faithful teaching (see Jer_23:23).
There are cogent reasons for ministerial fidelity. False doctrines save no man;
but a simple preaching of “Christ crucified is the power of God unto salvation”
(1Co_1:23-24; Rom_1:16). Many are thereby “turned to God from idols,” &c.
(1Th_1:5; 1Th_1:9-10).
ii. Let me call on you to make a due improvement of my testimony. Pray; seek
God’s blessing on the word preached, that it may prove to you “a savour of life
unto life,” and not of “death unto death.” It is He who can make the “fire” burn,
and the “hammer” so mighty that no rock can withstand its force.—C. Simeon.
I. There are those who make more of the ritual and ceremonial in religion
than they do of the spirit and power. But, “What is the chaff to the wheat? saith
the Lord.”
II. There are those who make more of the speculative, theoretical,
mysterious, and mystical in religion, than of the plain, practical, experimental,
and useful. But, “What is the chaff?” &c.
III. There are those who make more of the name, profession, and show of
godliness than they do of godliness itself. But, “What is the chaff?” &c.
IV. There are those who attach more importance to words, style, manner,
appearance, and persons in preaching, than they do to the truth of Scripture.
But, “What is the chaff to the wheat? saith the Lord.”—Lay Preacher.
Jehovah had contrasted the godless inventions of false teachers with the truth of
His own assertions, and having desired that each message might be stated as each
deserved (Jer_23:28), proceeds to compare the lying communications of men with
the true sayings of God.
In the corrupt heart within us there exists and labours so perverse and
destructive a tendency to prefer the chaff to the wheat, as to incur the peril of
choosing the false rather than the true. Therefore the attempt is here made to
expose some of these misapprehensions.
I. What are worldly maxims compared with the Word of God, but as the
chaff to the wheat? The whole world lieth under the power of the “father of lies.”
1. Regard the conduct of men of the world, and by what maxim are they
governed? to what authority do they bow? Of Him who created, sustains, redeemed
them, or of him who deceived our first parents, and has ever since been spreading
snares for their posterity?
2. What lessons does the world teach its disciples? To be lovers of pleasure
more than the lovers of God; to worship the creature more than the Creator; to
spend the precious season of mercy in laying up deceitful treasure for self; to say to
the ensnared soul, “Soul, take thine ease,” &c.; or, “Let us eat and drink, for to-
morrow we die.” Does not the world stigmatise all true religion, the privileges of
Christian life, &c., as dreams of enthusiasm and inventions of hypocrisy; and a
zealous pursuit of “the one thing needful” as the miserable error of “being
righteous overmuch?”
“But what is the chaff to the wheat?”—the authority of the world compared
with that of the Supreme Lord and King; the ridicule of the world with the
indignation of God; the present judgment of men with the decisions of the Book
which shall be opened at the last day; the world’s standard of morality with
Christ’s requirement of a new birth?
There are vain dreamers (Jer_23:26). Suffer them not to mislead you from an
atoning Saviour, &c. “Love not the world,” &c.: but heed the faithful teachings of
the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever.
II. What is the value of that legal righteousness in which carnal man delights,
compared with the righteousness of Christ Jesus, as a ground of justification with
God? “The carnal man is at enmity with God.” He may deem himself, “as
touching the righteousness of the law, blameless,” and ask, “What lack I yet?” But
this delusion results from ignorance of the spirituality of the Divine law. Let the
Spirit’s illumination come to him, and he will see himself no longer “rich,
increased with goods, and in need of nothing; but wretched, miserable,” &c.
The terrors of the law will sweep away all refuges of lies in which the sinner
has sheltered himself, and drive him to the righteousness of Jesus Christ.
Repentance for sin will not form that wedding garment which fits for a seat at the
marriage supper of the Lamb. Nor is it by “works of righteousness which we have
done” that we are accepted with God. Christ alone is “made unto us wisdom,
righteousness,” &c. “In Him must all the seed of Israel be justified.”
“What is the chaff to the wheat?” Who that knows himself to be a sinner, who
knows anything of the self-sufficient salvation of Jesus, would hesitate a moment
between leaning on the broken reed of his own goodness, and coming in faith to
Christ Jesus?
III. What is the happiness of the worldling compared with that of a child of
God, but as chaff to the wheat? “There be many which say, Who will show us any
good,” &c.
3. But while all creature-joys elude, “godliness is profitable,” &c. The believer
has a “joy which no man taketh from him.” “Say ye to the righteous that it shall be
well with him.”
IV. What are the present pleasures of sin compared with the glories of
heaven?
1. This glad prospect sinners have forfeited for the mocking indulgences of life.
“Thou hast had thy good things.”
2. Christ Himself will effectually forbid heaven’s joys to Christless souls. “His
fan is in His hand, and He will thoroughly purge,” &c.
Has a deceived heart turned you aside? Oh, seek the Spirit’s illumination that ye
may escape the delusion of earthly vanities and find rest in the Divine love now,
and a part in the inheritance with the saints in light.—Partly taken from an old and
nameless MS.
“Wheat—Fire—Hammer.”
1. A vital and vitalising substance: “Wheat.” (a.) Life inheres in it. (b.) It
nourishes life in the eater.
II. In its changeful aspects and revelations God’s Word assumes these
diversities. It comes in various forms to mankind.
1. Corn covered with husk. The Divine truth covered with the human exterior.
“We have this treasure in earthen vessels.” Also the God-given message and
doctrine mingled with the “chaff” of human theories and interpretations.
2. Fire in its various forms and degrees. Attractive, as the domestic fire which
draws us around its genial glow. Beneficial, as the warmth to a chilled traveller,
&c. Terrible, as the fiery furnace to those it would consume.
Observe:
i. God’s Word can be refused as “wheat,” but cannot be evaded as “fire,” nor
resisted as “a hammer.”
ii. If we receive not the life it can bring as food, we must feel its consuming and
destroying force.
i. The former is life and power (wheat, fire, hammer); the latter pretence and
weakness (dream, straw).
ii. The two are not to be mixed with each other. Why (add) the chaff to the
wheat? This rendering is admissible.—Lange.
This shows,
i. The vanity of all human imaginations in religion. (a.) What do they afford to
man? (b.) How much do they hinder!
ii. The energy of spiritual truth. Let us entreat God that our estimate may be
practical.—Cecil.
II. God denounces spurious messages. Having no message from God, the
second class used the solemn formula by which Jehovah confirmed the validity of
His messages through His own prophets; but in using it they misused it: only
employing the form “Saith,” instead of “Jehovah saith.” (1.) Yet this gave
emphasis to their delusive inventions: and hypocrites glibly revel in such free use
of solemn asseverations. (2.) They thereby deceived their hearers into the belief
that God said what they uttered. So with all who preach human fancies and theories
instead of the Divine Word.
III. God contemns lying frivolities. (1.) They acted a solemn part with
shameful levity. (2.) They caused the people to err by their spurious teachings.
Notice here:
i. What is a teacher’s qualification for his work. That God should “send” and
“command” him.
ii. What is the test by which to try all preaching. If it “profit not,” it has no
Divine origin or authority.
“Burden” (Massa) means hear oracle, prophetic discourse, and there is a play
on this double sense of the Hebrew.
II. God’s derisive answers. You ask, “What burden?” “Ye are the burden” (see
Lit. Crit. supra on Jer_23:33). And for you the burden shall be this:
1. God will cast you of as being a “burden” to Him. Or, since My word is
burdensome in your eyes, you shall have no more of it, and that will be a far worse
“burden” to you—deserted by God and denied His prophetic word!
2. God will deal seriously with those triflers (Jer_23:34). They used God’s word
in derision, but it would prove dreadfully literal in its fulfilment. Whosoever shall
in mockery call the Lord’s word a “burden,” shall be visited in wrath.
3. God will turn His messages which were intended to prove blessings into
burdens, which shall press heavily on every man.
Christians believe these words fulfilled in Jesus; Jews look for One to come. All
acknowledge they refer to the Messiah: and we may form a judgment from this
description as to what religious system they are suited best, that of the Jew, the
Unitarian, or the Christian.
ii. The Messiah of the UNITARIANS. Already come; Jesus of Nazareth the
Saviour, foretold by ancient prophecy. But, when Christ came, He was nothing
more than a man; born (so many argue), not of a virgin, but of Joseph and Mary his
wife; sent by God to preach to mankind a holy life, and that all men hereafter
should be raised from the dead, and be rewarded according to their works.
iii. The Messiah of CHRISTIANS. Jesus; formed as man, but God Himself,
eternally one with Father; came from heaven, preached righteousness and
resurrection, but these only subordinate ends; by His obedience, merits, and
atonement by blood to take off from the world that curse under which, since Adam,
it had been.
I. This prophecy is fulfilled to the Jews, who expect in their Christ an earthly
monarch, and to Christians, who believe that Christ is a Divine and heavenly
monarch. Jews suppose Christ will be man like ourselves, prophet like Moses, but
also a mighty conqueror and king. Christians believe that Christ from all eternity
has been, together with the Father and Holy Ghost, the Creator and Governor of
the world; that He now sitteth in human form at right hand of Father’s glory; will
be Judge of world at last. But to Unitarians, with whom Christ was a mere prophet,
having no power to rule world, no privilege of doing good to His Church, how can
this prophecy be fulfilled in Christ? On earth, and in human nature, He was very
unlike a “king;” and if He were nothing beyond man, these words are inapplicable
to Him.
II. This prophecy points out the salvation Christ would effect. “In His days,
saith the Lord, Judah shall be saved.” Jews and Christians have reasons, though
different, for applying prophecy to Messiah. They suppose He will save them from
worldly troubles; we believe that He saves all who trust in Him from burthen of
sins and wrath of God. But with what salvation do Unitarians accredit Christ? They
answer: By bringing a more perfect moral law, He taught us to avoid sin, and thus
saved us from sin; that by teaching resurrection and rising Himself, He saved us
from fear of death; that by abolishing law of Moses, He saved us from burdensome
ceremonies. In answer: Morality was equally enforced under Old Testament;
resurrection believed in; and Christ did not destroy and abolish the law.
III. This prophecy gives a Divine title to the Messiah: “The Lord our
Righteousness.” Both Jews and Unitarians must be perplexed, since neither allow
the Saviour foretold was to be other than mortal man. But the word “Lord” is in
Hebrew JEHOVAH. Accordingly, we accept this as proof that the Messiah must
not only be man but God. This is not refuted by the attempt to show from
Jer_23:16, that it is not the Saviour who should bear this awful name, but Judah:
for that text should read, “He, who calleth Jerusalem, is the Lord our
righteousness;” and also, in this present verse, both Judah and Israel are united in
blessing by Messiah; so that, if Judah be meant by this title, Israel must also; and
the word should be, not “He shall be called,” but “they shall be.” Turn it as we
may, this passage remains unconquerable by those who deny Jesus to be GOD and
LORD; for it is allowed He is Messiah, and Messiah is no other than JEHOVAH.
IV. This prophecy further gives to Christ the title of “Our righteousness.”
Jews and heretics cannot explain this away; they deny that the blood of Christ is a
sacrifice, or satisfaction, for the sins of the world; that we are justified by His
death. Yet here, the Man, Messiah, is not only JEHOVAH, but in His own Person
He is “our righteousness.” But how can man or God become the righteousness of
sinful creatures, unless He suffer in their stead the punishment of their sin, and in
their stead obey and fulfil the law? How can He make another being righteous,
except by proving him innocent of faults, or obeying the laws on behalf of the
offender, bearing the faults on Himself, and suffering his punishment? Hence it is
by the imputed merits, obedience, and death of Christ that we are cleansed from sin
and made righteous in the sight of God.
We are herein called to acknowledge in Christ a mighty God and most merciful
Saviour: Advocate, pleading on our behalf His own merits; High Priest, who
offered up His own life for us; Lamb, whose blood washed us clean. Let us by
every action and affection show our faith, love, and thankfulness. Remember that
Christ is our righteousness alone; no merit in us; and in Him is the sinner’s hope.—
Condensed and arranged from BISHOP REGINALD HEBER, A.D. 1838.
Topic: THE RECOVERY OF THE TEN LOST TRIBES FROM THE NORTH
COUNTRY. (Jer_23:8.)
Israel, or the Ten Lost Tribes, were carried captive into Assyria in 725 B.C.
Their captivity was complete in number and time—to this day they have not
returned. The captivity of Judah in 588 was partial in number and time; they
returned and remained until finally scattered about the year 70 A.D. Now they are
all in exile, but they are to return again to their own land. And as surely as the Jews
now say, “The Lord liveth which brought up His people out of Egypt,” so will they
by and by say, “The Lord liveth which brought up His people out of the North
country, and from all the countries whither He had driven them.”
I. This is, and has been, the expectation of the Church for ages. From earliest
centuries this has been a prevailing idea. Six years after the destruction of
Jerusalem, as foretold by the prophets and the Saviour, a child was born who in his
life was to confront this idea in prophecy. Hadrian, the Roman Emperor, born in 76
A.D., died in 138. He hated, with a deadly hatred, the Jews and the Christians.
What of the city of Jerusalem was standing in his day he destroyed, and built a new
city on the old site and called it after himself, Elia Capitolina. Then he forbade Jew
or Christian, under penalty of death, to enter the same, declaring that he would
show them the weakness of their hope and falsity of their prophets.
Again, there was born in Constantinople another child, Nov. 17, A.D. 331, who
died June 26, A.D. 363, named Flavius Claudius Julinus, surnamed Julian the
Apostate. He said that he would make God a liar and prophecy false, for he would
gather the Jews and build the Temple. Some of the Jews he did gather, and he
began to build the Temple, but God was against him by earthquake and by balls of
fire out of the ground, so he ceased to fight against God. Even England has sought
to bring back Israel before the time. Three successive times she has conquered
Palestine, and given it over to the Turks for keeping. Nay, for a time the whole
Christian world sought to force Providence in this matter. You have read of the
wonderful crusades; no less than eight of them, from 1095 to 1272; the time was
not yet, but it will come.
II. Let us remember there is a God—a God who has a purpose and design
both for His people and this land of Palestine. Hear Him speak: “The land shall
not be sold for ever, for the land is Mine, for ye are strangers and sojourners with
Me” (Lev_25:23).
1. Men write, talk, and speculate, but they leave out the Divine quantity in their
calculations. It is this that has confused the nations and the press. The science of
algebra has been passed by, or this quantity could have been found. There is in
nature a force, or something, which science names Catalysis. It is the name for the
presence of some force or power that acts on other things, rendering precision in
the chemical laboratory many times impossible. How much this catalytic power is
in any compound or combination it is difficult to tell. It is a Divine quantity. It is
present in the analysis, but not in the synthesis. The physiologist meets it
everywhere, but the anatomist nowhere. Science can pull to pieces, but cannot put
things together the same, for this catalytic power escapes.
2. Nations, kings, rulers, and governments forget that the earth is the Lord’s.
They think they can part it as they like, but they cannot. This Divine force or
quantity enters and vitiates their conclusion. Listen to Jehovah: “Remember the
days of old, consider the years of many generations; ask thy father and he will
show thee; thy elders and they will tell thee. When the Most High divided to the
nations their inheritance, when He separated the sons of Adam, He set the bounds
of the people according to the number of the children of Israel” (Deu_22:7-8;
comp. also Isa_44:7, and Act_17:26).
III. But when will Israel and Judah return, and how? That they have to
return some time, surely all will agree. The time of the end we believe to be near—
2d. By the grand revelations and teaching of the Great Pyramid, this pillar and
witness spoken of by Isa_19:19. In this remarkable structure the year 1882 is very
significantly denoted. Many great facts in Israel’s history have been incorporated
in this building and have come to pass; so for Israel something is in reserve for
1882—perhaps it is the great deliverance spoken of in the text. This year is also the
wonderful prophetic year. The “time and times and dividing of time” makes 1260
years, which, added to the first year of Mahomet, is equal to our 622, which added
makes 1882.
3d. By the Church witness. For the Gospel was to be preached as a witness unto
all nations before Israel are gathered. This sign is now complete. But how will this
great deliverance be brought about—in God’s own way, as from the Egyptians?
The overthrow and destruction of Turkey may be the preparatory cause. The Jews
now feel specially moved, for at their late council in New York they had letters
missive from Berlin, Paris, London, on how best to promote the return of those
Jews who desire to return to Palestine.—Joseph Wild, D.D., Brooklyn, A.D. 1878.
“Probably many who are called Gospel ministers are more chargeable with
concealing truths than affirming direct error; with not properly building the house
than wilfully pulling it down.”—Dr. Witherspoon.
—Pollock.
During the American war a British officer, walking out at sunrising, observed
an old man with his arm upraised as if in adoration. The officer interfered with
rude disregard, and demanded what he was about. The old native replied, “I am
worshipping the Great Spirit.” The officer asked derisively, “Where is He?” To
which taunt the old man replied, “Soldier, where is He not?”
The question was once asked of a little boy, “How many gods are there?”
“One,” be replied. “How do you know there is only one?” He answered, “Because
there is no room for any more; for the One God fills heaven and earth.”