1WENN ein Mann sein Eheweib verstösst und sie geht von ihm und wird einem andern zu eigen, darf sie wieder zu ihm zurück? Ist nicht ein solches Weib gänzlich entweiht? Du aber hast mit vielen Liebhabern gebuhlt; gibt's da eine Rückkehr zu mir? spricht der Herr. 5.Mo. 24,1-4. 2Erhebe deine Augen zu den Höhen und schaue: wo bist du nicht geschändet worden? An den Strassen hast du auf sie gewartet wie ein Araber in der Wüste, hast das Land entweiht mit deiner Buhlerei und mit deiner Bosheit. Hos. 4,13. 3Da blieben die Regenschauer aus, und der Frühjahrsregen kam nicht. Aber du hattest die Stirn einer Dirne, wolltest dich nicht schämen. 4Riefst du mir nicht eben noch zu: «Mein Vater! der Freund meiner Jugend bist du! 5Wird er wohl ewiglich zürnen, für immer nachtragen?» So redetest du und tatest das Böse; das brachtest du über dich. 6Und der Herr sprach zu mir in den Tagen des Königs Josia: Hast du gesehen, was Israel, das abtrünnige Weib, getan hat? - Sie ging auf jeden hohen Berg und unter jeden grünen Baum und buhlte daselbst. Jer. 2,20. 7Ich dachte: «Nachdem sie dies alles getan hat, wird sie zu mir zurückkehren»; aber sie kehrte nicht zurück. Wohl sah ihre Schwester Juda, die Treulose, Hes. 16,46. 8dass ich Israel, das abtrünnige Weib, gerade um ihres Ehebruchs willen verstiess und ihr den Scheidebrief gab; doch ihre Schwester Juda, die Treulose, scheute sich nicht, sondern ging hin und buhlte auch. 2.Kön. 17,23. 9Und durch ihr leichtfertiges Buhlen entweihte sie das Land und trieb Ehebruch mit Stein und Baum. 10Und bei alledem kehrte auch Juda, die treulose Schwester, nicht von ganzem Herzen zu mir zurück, sondern in Heuchelei, spricht der Herr. 11Und der Herr sprach zu mir: Israel, die Abtrünnige, hat sich gerechter gehalten als Juda, die Treulose. Hes. 16,51; 23,11. 12Geh, rufe diese Worte gen Norden: Kehre wieder, Israel, du Abtrünnige! spricht der Herr. Ich will nicht finster auf euch blicken; denn ich bin gütig, spricht der Herr, ich trage nicht ewiglich nach. 13Nur erkenne deine Schuld, dass du dem Herrn, deinem Gott, die Treue gebrochen und den Fremden dich preisgegeben unter jedem grünen Baum, auf meine Stimme aber nicht gehört hast, spricht der Herr. 14Kehret wieder, abtrünnige Söhne, spricht der Herr; denn ich bin euer Herr, und ich will euch, je einen aus jeder Stadt und je zwei aus jedem Geschlecht, nehmen und euch nach Zion heimbringen. 15Und ich will euch Hirten geben nach meinem Herzen, die werden euch weiden mit Einsicht und Klugheit. Jer. 23,4. 16Wenn ihr euch dann mehrt und fruchtbar werdet im Lande in jenen Tagen, spricht der Herr, so wird man nicht mehr sagen: Die Lade des Bundes des Herrn! - Sie wird keinem mehr in den Sinn kommen, und man wird ihrer nicht mehr gedenken; man wird sie nicht vermissen und sie auch nicht wiederherstellen. 17Alsdann wird man Jerusalem nennen «Thron des Herrn», und es werden dorthin alle Völker zusammenströmen zu dem Namen des Herrn, nach Jerusalem; und sie werden nicht mehr dem Starrsinn ihres bösen Herzens folgen. Jer. 16,19; Mi. 4,2. 18In jenen Tagen werden die vom Hause Juda zu denen vom Hause Israel gehen, und sie werden zusammen aus dem Lande des Nordens heimkommen in das Land, das ich euren Vätern zu eigen gegeben. Jes. 11,12. 19Ich hatte gedacht: Wie will ich dich setzen an Sohnes Statt und dir ein liebliches Land geben, das allerherrlichste Erbe unter den Völkern! Und ich meinte, du würdest mich Vater nennen, von mir dich nicht abwenden. 5.Mo. 7,6; 8,7. 20Aber fürwahr, wie ein Weib seinem Freunde die Treue bricht, so habt ihr mir die Treue gebrochen, Haus Israel, spricht der Herr. 21Horch! auf den Höhen hört man flehentliches Weinen der Kinder Israel, dass sie verkehrte Wege gewandelt und des Herrn, ihres Gottes, vergessen haben. 22Kehret wieder, abtrünnige Söhne, ich will euren Abfall heilen. - «Da sind wir, wir kommen zu dir; denn du bist der Herr, unser Gott. 23Wahrlich, Trug sind die Hügel, der Lärm auf den Bergen! Wahrlich, bei dem Herrn, unserm Gott, steht das Heil Israels! 24Der Schandgott hat den Erwerb unsrer Väter verzehrt von unsrer Jugend auf, ihre Schafe und Rinder, ihre Söhne und Töchter. 25So wollen wir uns denn in unsre Schande betten, und unsre Schmach bedecke uns! denn gegen den Herrn, unsern Gott, haben wir und unsre Väter gesündigt von Jugend an bis auf diesen Tag; wir haben nicht auf die Stimme des Herrn, unsres Gottes, gehört.»
Jamieson Fausset Brown Bible Commentary 1 GOD'S MERCY NOTWITHSTANDING JUDAH'S VILENESS. (Jer. 3:1-25)
They say--rather, as Hebrew, "saying," in agreement with "the LORD";
Jer 2:37 of last chapter [MAURER]. Or, it is equivalent to, "Suppose this case." Some copyist may have omitted, "The word of the Lord came to me," saying.
shall he return unto her--will he take her back? It was unlawful to do so (
Deut 24:1-
Deut 24:4).
shall not--Should not the land be polluted if this were done?
yet return-- (
Jer 3:22;
Jer 4:1;
Zech 1:3; compare
Ezek 16:51,
Ezek 16:58,
Ezek 16:60). "Nevertheless," &c. (see on
Isa 50:1).
2 high places--the scene of idolatries which were spiritual adulteries.
In . . . ways . . . sat for them--watching for lovers like a prostitute (
Gen 38:14,
Gen 38:21;
Pro 7:12;
Pro 23:28;
Ezek 16:24-
Ezek 16:25), and like an Arab who lies in wait for travellers. The Arabs of the desert, east and south of Palestine, are still notorious as robbers.
3 no latter rain--essential to the crops in Palestine; withheld in judgment (
Lev 26:19; compare
Joel 2:23).
whore's forehead-- (
Jer 8:12;
Ezek 3:8).
4 from this time--not referring, as MICHAELIS thinks, to the reformation begun the year before, that is, the twelfth of Josiah; it means--now at once, now at last.
me--contrasted with the "stock" whom they had heretofore called on as "father" (
Jer 2:27;
Luke 15:18).
thou art--rather, "thou wast."
guide of . . . youth--that is, husband (
Jer 2:2;
Pro 2:17;
Hos 2:7,
Hos 2:15). Husband and father are the two most endearing of ties.
5 he--"thou," the second person, had preceded. The change to the third person implies a putting away of God to a greater distance from them; instead of repenting and forsaking their idols, they merely deprecate the continuance of their punishment.
Jer 3:12 and
Ps 103:9, answer their question in the event of their penitence.
spoken and--rather (God's reply to them), "Thou hast spoken (thus), and yet (all the while) thou hast done evil," &c.
as thou couldest--with all thy might; with incorrigible persistency [CALVIN].
6 From here to
Jer 6:30, is a new discourse, delivered in Josiah's reign. It consists of two parts, the former extending to
Jer 4:3, in which he warns Judah from the example of Israel's doom, and yet promises Israel final restoration; the latter a threat of Babylonian invasion; as Nabopolassar founded the Babylonian empire, 625 B.C., the seventeenth of Josiah, this prophecy is perhaps not earlier than that date (
Jer 4:5, &c.;
Jer 5:14, &c.;
Jer 6:1, &c.; Jer. 22:1-30); and probably not later than the second thorough reformation in the eighteenth year of the same reign.
backsliding--literally, "apostasy"; not merely apostate, but apostasy itself, the essence of it (
Jer 3:14,
Jer 3:22).
7 I said-- (
2Kgs 17:13).
sister-- (
Ezek 16:46;
Ezek 23:2,
Ezek 23:4).
8 I saw that, though (whereas) it was for this very reason (namely), because backsliding (apostate) Israel had committed adultery I had put her away (
2Kgs 17:6,
2Kgs 17:18), and given her a bill of divorce, yet Judah, &c. (
Ezek 23:11, &c.).
bill of divorce--literally, "a writing of cuttings off." The plural implies the completeness of the severance. The use of this metaphor here, as in the former discourse (
Jer 3:1), implies a close connection between the discourses. The epithets are characteristic; Israel "apostate" (as the Hebrew for "backsliding" is better rendered); Judah, not as yet utterly apostate, but treacherous or faithless.
also--herself also, like Israel.
9 it--Some take this verse of Judah, to whom the end of
Jer 3:8 refers. But
Jer 3:10 puts Judah in contrast to Israel in this verse. "Yet for all this," referring to the sad example of Israel; if
Jer 3:9 referred to Judah, "she" would have been written in
Jer 3:10, not "Judah." Translate, "It (the putting away of Israel) had come to pass through . . . whoredom; and (that is, for) she (Israel) had defiled the land" &c. [MAURER]. English Version, however, may be explained to refer to Israel.
lightness--"infamy." [EWALD]. MAURER not so well takes it from the Hebrew root, "voice," "fame."
10 yet--notwithstanding the lesson given in Israel's case of the fatal results of apostasy.
not . . . whole heart--The reformation in the eighteenth year of Josiah was not thorough on the part of the people, for at his death they relapsed into idolatry (
2Chr 34:33;
Hos 7:14).
11 justified herself--has been made to appear almost just (that is, comparatively innocent) by the surpassing guilt of Judah, who adds hypocrisy and treachery to her sin; and who had the example of Israel to warn her, but in vain (compare
Ezek 16:51;
Ezek 23:11).
more than--in comparison with.
12 Go--not actually; but turn and proclaim towards the north (Media and Assyria, where the ten tribes were located by Tiglath-pileser and Shalmaneser,
2Kgs 15:29;
2Kgs 17:6;
2Kgs 18:9,
2Kgs 18:11).
Return . . . backsliding--Hebrew, Shubah, Meshubah, a play on sounds. In order to excite Judah to godly jealousy (
Rom 11:14), Jehovah addresses the exiled ten tribes of Israel with a loving invitation.
cause . . . anger to fall--literally, "I will not let fall My countenance" (compare
Gen 4:5-
Gen 4:6;
Job 29:3), that is, I will not continue to frown on you.
keep--"anger" is to be supplied (see on
Jer 3:5).
13 Only acknowledge-- (
Deut 30:1,
Deut 30:3;
Pro 28:13).
scattered thy ways, &c.-- (
Jer 2:25). Not merely the calves at Beth-el, but the idols in every direction, were the objects of their worship (
Ezek 16:15,
Ezek 16:24-
Ezek 16:25).
14 I am married--literally, "I am Lord," that is, husband to you (so
Jer 31:32; compare
Hos 2:19-
Hos 2:20;
Isa 54:5). GESENIUS, following the Septuagint version of
Jer 31:32, and Paul's quotation of it (
Heb 8:9), translates, "I have rejected you"; so the corresponding Arabic, and the idea of lordship, may pass into that of looking down upon, and so rejecting. But the Septuagint in this passage translates, "I will be Lord over you." And the "for" has much more force in English Version than in that of GESENIUS. The Hebrew hardly admits the rendering though [HENGSTENBERG].
take you one of a city--Though but one or two Israelites were in a (foreign) city, they shall not be forgotten; all shall be restored (
Amos 9:9). So, in the spiritual Israel, God gathers one convert here, another there, into His Church; not the least one is lost (
Matt 18:14;
Rom 11:5; compare
Jer 24:5-
Jer 24:7).
family--a clan or tribe.
15 pastors--not religious, but civil rulers, as Zerubbabel, Nehemiah (
Jer 23:4;
Jer 2:8).
16 they shall say no more--The Jews shall no longer glory in the possession of the ark; it shall not be missed, so great shall be the blessings of the new dispensation. The throne of the Lord, present Himself, shall eclipse and put out of mind the ark of the covenant and the mercy seat between the cherubim, God's former throne. The ark, containing the two tables of the law, disappeared at the Babylonian captivity, and was not restored to the second temple, implying that the symbolical "glory" was to be superseded by a "greater glory" (
Hag 2:9).
neither . . . visit it--rather, "neither shall it be missed" (so in
Jer 23:4).
done--rather, "neither shall it (the ark) be made (that is, be restored) any more" [MAURER].
17 Jerusalem--the whole city, not merely the temple. As it has been the center of the Hebrew theocracy, so it shall be the point of attraction to the whole earth (
Isa 2:2-
Isa 2:4;
Zech 2:10-
Zech 2:11;
Zech 14:16-
Zech 14:21).
throne of . . . Lord--The Shekinah, the symbol of God's peculiar nearness to Israel (
Deut 4:7) shall be surpassed by the antitype, God's own throne in Jerusalem (
Ps 2:6,
Ps 2:8;
Ezek 34:23-
Ezek 34:24;
Zech 2:5).
imagination--rather, as Margin, "the obstinacy" or stubbornness.
18 Judah . . . Israel . . . together--Two distinct apostasies, that of Israel and that of Judah, were foretold (
Jer 3:8,
Jer 3:10). The two have never been united since the Babylonish captivity; therefore their joint restoration must be still future (
Isa 11:12-
Isa 11:13;
Ezek 37:16-
Ezek 37:22;
Hos 1:11).
north-- (
Jer 3:12).
land . . . given . . . inheritance-- (
Amos 9:15).
19 The good land covenanted to Abraham is to be restored to his seed. But the question arises, How shall this be done?
put . . . among . . . children--the Greek for adoption means, literally, "putting among the sons."
the children--that is, My children. "How shall I receive thee back into My family, after thou hast so long forsaken Me for idols?" The answer is, they would acknowledge Him as "Father," and no longer turn away from Him. God assumes the language of one wondering how so desperate apostates could be restored to His family and its privileges (compare
Ezek 37:3; CALVIN makes it, How the race of Abraham can be propagated again, being as it were dead); yet as His purpose has decreed it so, He shows how it shall be effected, namely, they shall receive from Him the spirit of adoption to cry, "My Father" (
John 1:12;
Gal 4:6). The elect are "children" already in God's purpose; this is the ground of the subsequent realization of this relationship (
Eph 1:5;
Heb 2:13).
pleasant land-- (
Jer 11:5;
Ezek 20:6;
Dan 11:16, Margin).
heritage of . . . hosts--a heritage the most goodly of all nations [MAURER]; or a "heritage possessed by powerful hosts" (
Deut 4:38;
Amos 2:9). The rendering "splendors," instead of "hosts," is opposed by the fact that the Hebrew for "splendor" is not found in the plural.
20 Surely--rather, "But."
husband--literally, "friend."
21 In harmony with the preceding promises of God, the penitential confessions of Israel are heard.
high places--The scene of their idolatries is the scene of their confessions. Compare
Jer 3:23, in which they cast aside their trust in these idolatrous high places. The publicity of their penitence is also implied (compare
Jer 7:29;
Jer 48:38).
22 Jehovah's renewed invitation (
Jer 3:12,
Jer 3:14) and their immediate response.
heal--forgive (
2Chr 30:18,
2Chr 30:20;
Hos 14:4).
unto thee--rather, "in obedience to thee"; literally, "for thee" [ROSENMULLER].
23 multitude of mountains--that is, the multitude of gods worshipped on them (compare
Ps 121:1-
Ps 121:2, Margin).
24 shame--that is, the idols, whose worship only covers us with shame (
Jer 11:13;
Hos 9:10). So far from bringing us "salvation," they have cost us our cattle and even our children, whom we have sacrificed to them.
25 (
Ezra 9:7).