Font Size

Verse 1

Jeremiah 44:1-30. Jeremiah reproves the Jews for their idolatry in Egypt, and denounces God‘s judgments on them and Egypt alike.

Migdol — meaning a “tower.” A city east of Egypt, towards the Red Sea (Exodus 14:2; Numbers 33:7).

Noph — Memphis, now Cairo (Jeremiah 2:16).

Pathros — Upper Egypt (Isaiah 11:11).

Verse 2

evil … upon Jerusalem — If I spared not My own sacred city, much less shall ye be safe in Egypt, which I loathe.

Verse 3

they went — implying perverse assiduity: they went out of their way to burn incense (one species of idolatry put for all kinds), etc.

Verse 4

(2 Chronicles 36:15).

Verse 7

now — after so many warnings.

commit  …  this  …  evil against your souls — (Jeremiah 7:19; Numbers 16:38; Proverbs 8:36). It is not God whom you injure, but yourselves.

Verse 8

in … Egypt — where they polluted themselves to ingratiate themselves with the Egyptians.

ye be gone — not compelled by fear, but of your own accord, when I forbade you, and when it was free to you to stay in Judea.

that ye might cut yourselves off — They, as it were, purposely courted their own ruin.

Verse 9

Have you forgotten how the wickednesses of your fathers were the source of the greatest calamities to you?

their wives — The Jews‘ worldly queens were great promoters of idolatry (1 Kings 11:1-8; 1 Kings 15:13; 1 Kings 16:31).

the land of Judah — They defiled the land which was holy unto God.

Verse 10

you — The third person puts them to a distance from God on account of their alienating themselves from Him. The second person implies that God formerly had directly addressed them.

humbled — literally, “contrite” (Psalm 51:17).

neither  …  feared — (Proverbs 28:14).

Verse 11

Behold, I will set my face against you for evil — (See on Leviticus 17:10).

and to cut off all Judah — that is, all the idolaters; Jeremiah 44:28 shows that some returned to Judea (compare Jeremiah 42:17).

Verse 14

shall escape  …  that they should return, etc. — The Jews had gone to Egypt with the idea that a return to Judea, which they thought hopeless to their brethren in Babylon, would be an easy matter to themselves in Egypt: the exact reverse should happen in the case of each respectively. The Jews whom God sent to Babylon were there weaned from idolatry, and were restored; those who went to Egypt by their perverse will were hardened in idolatry, and perished there.

have a desire — literally, “lift up (their) soul,” that is, their hopes (compare Jeremiah 22:27, Margin; Deuteronomy 24:15, Margin).

none shall return but such as shall escape — namely, the “small number” (Jeremiah 44:28) who were brought by force into Egypt, as Jeremiah and Baruch, and those who, in accordance with Jeremiah‘s advice, should flee from Egypt before the arrival of the Chaldeans (see on Jeremiah 42:17). Calvin less probably refers the words to the return of the exiles in Babylon, which the Jews in Egypt regarded as hopeless.

Verse 15

their wives — The idolatry began with them (1 Kings 11:4; 1 Timothy 2:14). Their husbands‘ connivance implicated them in the guilt.

Verse 16

we will not — (Jeremiah 6:16).

Verse 17

goeth  …  out of our  …  mouth — whatever vow we have uttered to our gods (Jeremiah 44:25; Deuteronomy 23:23; Judges 11:36). The source of all superstitions is that men oppose their own will and fancies to God‘s commands.

queen of heaven — (See on Jeremiah 7:18); Ashtaroth or Astarte.

we  …  fathers  …  king, etc. — The evil was restricted to no one class: all from the highest to the lowest shared the guilt.

then had we plenty — Fools attribute their seeming prosperity to God‘s connivance at their sin: but see Proverbs 1:32; Ecclesiastes 8:11-13. In fact, God had often chastised them for their idolatry (see Judges 2:14); but it is the curse of impiety not to perceive the hand of God in calamities.

victuals — Men cast away the bread of the soul for the bread that perisheth (Deuteronomy 8:3; John 6:27). So Esau (Hebrews 12:16).

Verse 18

They impute their calamities to their service of God, but these are often marks of His favor, not of wrath, to do His people good at their latter end (Deuteronomy 8:16).

Verse 19

cakes to worship her — Maurer translates, “to form her image.” Crescent-shaped cakes were offered to the moon. Vulgate supports English Version.

without our men — The women mentioned (Jeremiah 44:15); “a great multitude” here speak: we have not engaged in secret night orgies which might justly be regarded unfavorably by our husbands: our sacred rites have been open, and with their privity. They wish to show how unreasonable it is that Jeremiah should oppose himself alone to the act of all, not merely women, but men also. The guilty, like these women, desire to shield themselves under the complicity of others. Instead of helping one another towards heaven, husband and wife often ripen one another for hell.

Verse 21

did not the Lord remember — Jeremiah owns that they did as they said, but in retort asks, did not God repay their own evil-doing? Their very land in its present desolation attests this (Jeremiah 44:22), as was foretold (Jeremiah 25:11, Jeremiah 25:18, Jeremiah 25:38).

Verse 23

law — the moral precepts.

statutes — the ceremonial.

testimonies — the judicial (Daniel 9:11, Daniel 9:12).

Verse 25

Ye … have both spoken with … mouths, and fulfilled with … hand — ironical praise. They had pleaded their obligation to fulfil their vows, in excuse for their idolatry. He answers, no one can accuse you of unsteadiness as to your idolatrous vows; but steadfastness towards God ought to have prevented you from making, or, when made, from keeping such vows.

ye will surely accomplish … vows — Jeremiah hereby gives them up to their own fatal obstinacy.

Verse 26

I have sworn — I, too have made a vow which I will fulfil. Since ye will not hear Me speaking and warning, hear Me swearing.

by my great name — that is, by Myself (Genesis 22:16), the greatest by whom God can swear (Hebrews 6:13, Hebrews 6:14).

my name shall no more be named — The Jews, heretofore, amidst all their idolatry, had retained the form of appeal to the name of God and the law, the distinctive glory of their nation; God will allow this no more (Ezekiel 20:39): there shall be none left there to profane His name thus any more.

Verse 27

for evil — (Jeremiah 1:10; Ezekiel 7:6). The God, whose providence is ever solicitously watching over His people for good, shall solicitously, as it were, watch for their hurt. Contrast Jeremiah 31:28; Jeremiah 32:41.

Verse 28

small number — (see on Jeremiah 44:14; and Jeremiah 42:17; Isaiah 27:13); compare “all-consumed” (Jeremiah 44:27). A band easily counted, whereas they were expecting to return triumphantly in large numbers.

shall know — most of them experimentally, and to their cost.

whose words  …  mine, or theirs — Hebrew, “that from Me and them.” Jehovah‘s words are His threats of destruction to the Jews; theirs, the assertion that they expected all goods from their gods (Jeremiah 44:17), etc. “Mine”; by which I predict ruin to them. “Theirs”; by which they give themselves free scope in iniquity.

shall stand — (Psalm 33:11).

Verse 29

sign unto you — The calamity of Pharaoh-hophra (see on Jeremiah 44:30) shall be a sign to you that as he shall fall before his enemy, so you shall subsequently fall before Nebuchadnezzar (Matthew 24:8) [Grotius]. Calvin makes the “sign” to be simultaneous with the event signified, not antecedent to it, as in Exodus 3:12. The Jews believed Egypt impregnable, so shut in was it by natural barriers. The Jews being “punished in this place” will be a sign that their view is false, and God‘s threat true. He calls it “a sign unto you,” because God‘s prediction is equivalent to the event, so that they may even now take it as a sign. When fulfilled it would cease to be a sign to them: for they would be dead.

Verse 30

Hophra — in Herodotus called Apries. He succeeded Psammis, the successor of Pharaoh-necho, who was beaten by Nebuchadnezzar at Carchemish, on the Euphrates. Amasis rebelled against, and overcame him, in the city Sais.

them that seek his life — Herodotus, in curious accordance with this, records that Amasis, after treating Hophra well at first, was instigated, by persons who thought they could not be safe unless he were put to death, to strangle him. “His enemies” refer to Amasis, etc.; the words are accurately chosen, so as not to refer to Nebuchadnezzar, who is not mentioned till the end of the verse, and in connection with Zedekiah (Ezekiel 20:3; Ezekiel 30:21). Amasis‘ civil war with Hophra pioneered the way for Nebuchadnezzar‘s invasion in the twenty-third year of his reign [Josephus, Antiquities, 10.11].