1Potom všichni velitelé vojsk, Jóchanan, syn Karéachův, Jaazanjáš, syn Hóšajášův, a všechen lid, od nejmenšího do největšího, přistoupili 2a řekli proroku Jeremjášovi: Kéž před tebe přijde naše úpěnlivá prosba. Modli se za nás k Hospodinu, svému Bohu, za celý tento ostatek, neboť nás zůstalo jen málo z mnoha, jak nás tvoje oči vidí. 3Ať nám Hospodin, tvůj Bůh, oznámí cestu, po které máme jít, a co máme dělat. 4Prorok Jeremjáš jim řekl: Dobře. Hle, budu se modlit k Hospodinu, vašemu Bohu, podle vašich slov. I stane se, že vám oznámím všechno, co vám Hospodin odpoví. Nic před vámi nezatajím. 5Oni Jeremjášovi řekli: Ať je Hospodin spolehlivým a věrným svědkem proti nám, jestliže neučiníme všechno tak, jak nám po tobě vzkáže Hospodin, tvůj Bůh. 6Ať to bude dobré či zlé, uposlechneme Hospodina, svého Boha, k němuž tě posíláme, aby se nám dobře vedlo, když uposlechneme Hospodina, svého Boha. 7Po deseti dnech se stalo k Jeremjášovi Hospodinovo slovo. 8Zavolal tedy Jóchanana, syna Karéachova, všechny velitele vojsk, kteří s ním byli i všechen lid od nejmenšího do největšího 9a řekl jim: Toto praví Hospodin, Bůh Izraele, k němuž jste mě poslali, abych před něj předložil vaši úpěnlivou prosbu. 10Jestliže opravdu budete pobývat v této zemi, vystavím vás a nezbořím, zasadím vás a nevyrvu, protože budu litovat zla, které jsem vám učinil. 11Nebojte se babylonského krále, jehož se bojíte. Nebojte se ho, je Hospodinův výrok, protože já jsem s vámi, abych vás zachránil a vysvobodil z jeho ruky. 12Dám vám slitování a slituji se nad vámi a přivedu vás zpět do vaší země. 13Jestliže však řeknete: Nebudeme pobývat v této zemi, neuposlechnete Hospodina, svého Boha, 14a místo toho řeknete: Ne, my půjdeme do egyptské země, kde neuvidíme válku a neuslyšíme zvuk beraního rohu a kde nebudeme hladovět, tam budeme pobývat, 15potom nyní, ostatku Judy, jistě slyšte Hospodinovo slovo: Toto praví Hospodin zástupů, Bůh Izraele: Jestliže jste opravdu rozhodnuti jít do Egypta a přijdete tam pobývat jako cizinci, 16pak se stane, že meč, kterého se bojíte, vás tam v egyptské zemi dostihne a hlad, kterého se obáváte, na vás tam v Egyptě dolehne a zemřete tam. 17Stane se, že všichni muži, kteří jsou rozhodnuti jít do Egypta, aby tam pobývali jako cizinci, zemřou mečem, hladem a morem. Nikdo z nich nepřežije ani neunikne před zlem, které na ně přivedu. 18Neboť toto praví Hospodin zástupů, Bůh Izraele: Jako byl vylit můj hněv a má zloba na obyvatele Jeruzaléma, tak se rozleje má zloba na vás, když půjdete do Egypta. Stanete se prokletím, předmětem hrůzy, kletbou a potupou a toto místo už neuvidíte. 19Hospodin k vám, ostatku Judy, promluvil: Nechoďte do Egypta! To vězte, že jsem vás dnes varoval. 20Vždyť jste se nechali svést vlastní duší. Vy jste mě přece poslali k Hospodinu, svému Bohu, se slovy: Modli se za nás k Hospodinu, našemu Bohu, a všechno, co řekne Hospodin, náš Bůh, nám oznam a uděláme to. 21Dnes jsem vám to oznámil, ale neuposlechli jste Hospodina, svého Boha ani nic z toho, co vám po mně vzkázal. 22A nyní s jistotou vězte, že mečem, hladem a morem zemřete na tom místě, kam se vám zalíbilo jít, abyste tam pobývali jako cizinci.
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 We have reason to wonder how Jeremiah the prophet escaped the sword of Ishmael; it seems he did escape, and it was not the first time that the Lord hid him. It is strange also that in these violent turns he was not consulted before now, and his advice asked and taken. But it should seem as if they knew not that a prophet was among them. Though this people were
as brands plucked out of the fire, yet have they not
returned to the Lord. This people has a
revolting and a rebellious heart; and contempt of God and his providence, God and his prophets, is still
the sin that most easily besets them. But now at length, to serve a turn, Jeremiah is sought out, and
all the captains, Johanan himself not excepted, with
all the people from the least to the greatest, make him a visit; they
came near (
Jer 42:1), which intimates that hitherto they had kept at a distance from the prophet and had been shy of him. Now here,
I. They desire him by prayer to ask direction from God what they should do in the present critical juncture,
Jer 42:2,
Jer 42:3. They express themselves wonderfully well. 1. With great respect to the prophet. Though he was poor and low, and under their command, yet they apply to him with humility and submissiveness, as petitioners for his assistance, which yet they intimate their own unworthiness of:
Let, we beseech thee, our supplication be accepted before thee. They compliment him thus in hopes to persuade him to say as they would have him say. 2. With a great opinion of his interest in heaven:
Pray for us, who know not how to pray for ourselves.
Pray to the Lord thy God, for we are unworthy to call him ours, nor have we reason to expect any favour from him. 3. With a great sense of their need of divine direction. They speak of themselves as objects of compassion:
We are but a remnant, but a few of many; how easily will such a remnant be swallowed up, and yet it is a pity that it should.
Thy eyes see what distress we are in, what a plunge we are at; if thou canst do any thing, help us. 4. With desire of divine direction: Let
the Lord thy God take this ruin into his thoughts and under his hand, and
show us the way wherein we may walk and may expect to have his presence with us,
and the thing that we may do, the course we may take for our own safety. Note, In every difficult doubtful case our eye must be up to God for direction. They then might expect to be directed by a
spirit of prophecy, which has now ceased; but we may still in faith pray to be guided by a
spirit of wisdom in our hearts and the hints of Providence.
II. Jeremiah faithfully promises them to pray for direction for them, and, whatever message God should send to them by him, he would deliver it to them just as he received it without adding, altering, or diminishing,
Jer 42:4. Ministers may hence learn, 1. Conscientiously to pray for those who desire their prayers:
I will pray for you according to your words. Though they had slighted him, yet, like Samuel when he was slighted, he will not
sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for them,
1Sam 12:23. 2. Conscientiously to advise those who desire their advice as near as they can to the mind of God, not
keeping back any thing that is profitable for them, whether it be pleasing or no, but to
declare to them the whole counsel of God, that they may approve themselves true to their trust.
III. They fairly promise that they will be governed by the will of God, as soon as they know what it is (
Jer 42:5,
Jer 42:6), and they had the impudence to appeal to God concerning their sincerity herein, though at the same time they dissembled:
The Lord be a true and faithful witness between us; do thou in the fear of God tell us truly what his mind is and then we will in the fear of God comply with it, and for this the Lord the Judge be Judge between us. Note, Those that expect to have the benefit of good ministers' prayers must conscientiously hearken to their preaching and be governed by it, as far as it agrees with the mind of God. Nothing could be better than this was:
Whether it be good, or whether it be evil, we will obey the voice of the Lord our God, that it may be well with us. 1. They now call God
their God, for Jeremiah had encouraged them to call him so (
Jer 42:4):
I will pray to the Lord your God. He is ours, and therefore
we will obey his voice. Our relation to God strongly obliges us to obedience. 2. They promise to
obey his voice because they sent the prophet to him to consult him. Note, We do not truly desire to know the mind of God if we do not fully resolve to comply with it when we do know it. 3. It is an implicit universal obedience that they here promise. They will do what God appoints them to do,
whether it be good or whether it be evil: Though it may seem evil to us, yet we will believe that if God command it it is certainly good, and we must not dispute it, but do it. Whatever God commands, whether it be easy or difficult, agreeable to our inclinations or contrary to them, whether it be cheap or costly, fashionable or unfashionable, whether we get or lose by it in our worldly interests, if it be our duty, we will do it. 4. It is upon a very good consideration that they promise this, a reasonable and powerful one,
that it may be well with us, which intimates a conviction that they could not expect it should be well with them upon any other terms.
7 We have here the answer which Jeremiah was sent to deliver to those who employed him to ask counsel of God.
I. It did not come immediately, not till
ten days after, Jer 42:7. They were thus long held in suspense, perhaps, to punish them for their hypocrisy or to show that Jeremiah did not speak of himself, nor what he would, for he could not speak when he would, but must wait for instructions. However, it teaches us to continue waiting upon God for direction in our way.
The vision is for an appointed time, and at the end it shall speak. II. When it did come he delivered it publicly, both to the
captains and to all the
people, from the meanest to those in the highest station; he delivered it fully and faithfully as he received it, as he had promised that he would keep nothing back from them. If Jeremiah had been to direct them by his own prudence, perhaps he could not have told what to advise them to, the case was so difficult; but what he has to advise is what
the Lord the God of Israel saith, to whom they had sent him, and therefore they were bound in honour and duty to observe it. And this he tells them,
1. That it is the will of God that they should stay where they are, and his promise that, if they do so, it shall undoubtedly be
well with them he would have them still to
abide in this land, Jer 42:10. Their brethren were forced out of it into captivity, and this was their affliction; let those therefore count it a mercy that they may stay in it and a duty to stay in it. Let those whose lot is in Canaan never quit it while they can keep it. It would have been enough to oblige them if God had only said, I charge you upon your allegiance to
abide still in the land; but he rather persuades them to it as a friend than commands it as a prince. (1.) He expresses a very tender concern for them in their present calamitous condition:
It repenteth me of the evil that I have done unto you. Though they had shown small sign of their repenting of their sins, yet God, as one
grieved for the misery of Israel (
Judg 10:16), begins to repent of the judgments he had brought upon them for their sins. Not that he changed his mind, but he was very ready to change his way and to return in mercy to them. God's time to repent himself concerning his servants is when he sees that, as here, their strength is gone, and
there is none shut up or left, Deut 32:36. (2.) He answers the argument they had against abiding in this land.
They feared the king of Babylon (
Jer 41:18), lest he should come and avenge the death of Gedaliah upon them, though they were no way accessory to it, nay, had witnessed against it. The surmise was foreign and unreasonable; but, if there had been any ground for it, enough is here said to remove it (
Jer 42:11):
Be not afraid of the king of Babylon, though he is a man of great might and little mercy, and a very arbitrary prince, whose will is a law, and therefore you are afraid he will upon this pretence, though without colour of reason, take advantage against you;
be not afraid of him, for that fear will bring a snare: fear not him, for
I am with you; and, if God be for you to save you, who can be against you to hurt you? Thus has God provided to obviate and silence even the causeless fears of his people, which discourage them in the way of their duty; there is enough in the promises to encourage them. (3.) He assures them that if they will still abide in this land they shall not only be safe from the king of Babylon, but be made happy by the King of kings:
I will build you and plant you; you shall take root again, and be the new foundation of another state, a phoenix-kingdom, rising out of the ashes of the last. It is added (
Jer 42:12),
I will show mercies unto you. Note, In all our comforts we may read God's mercies. God will show them mercy in this, that not only the king of Babylon shall not destroy them, but he shall
have mercy upon them and help to settle them. Note, Whatever kindness men do us we must attribute it to God's kindness. He makes those whom he pities to be pitied even by
those who carried them captives, Pss 106:46. The king of Babylon, having now the disposal of the country, shall
cause you to return it to your own land, shall settle you again in your own habitations and put you in possession of the lands that formerly belonged to you. Note, God has made that our duty which is really our privilege, and our obedience will be its own recompence.
Abide in this land, and it shall be your own land again and you shall continue in it. Do not quit it now that you stand so fair for the enjoyment of it again. Be no so unwise as to
forsake your own mercies for
lying vanities. 2. That as they tender the favour of God and their own happiness they must by no means think of going into Egypt, not thither of all places, not to that land out of which God had delivered their fathers and which he had so often warned them not to make alliance with nor to put confidence in. Observe here, (1.) The sin they are supposed to be guilty of (and to him that knew their hearts it was more than a supposition): You begin to say,
We will not dwell in this land (
Jer 42:13); we will never think that we can be safe in it, no, not though God himself undertake our protection. We will not continue in it, no, not
in obedience to the voice of the Lord our God. He may say what he please, but we will do what we please. We will
go into the land of Egypt, and
there will we dwell, whether God give us leave and go along with us or no,
Jer 42:14. It is supposed that their hearts were upon it:
If you wholly set your faces to enter into Egypt, and are obstinately resolved that you will go and
sojourn there, though God oppose you in it both by his word and by his providence, then take what follows. Now the reason they go upon in this resolution is that
in Egypt we shall see no war, nor have hunger of bread,; as we have had for a long time in this land, Jer 42:14.
Note, It is folly to quit our place, especially to quit the holy land, because we meet with trouble in it; but greater folly to think by changing our place to escape the judgments of God, and that evil which pursues sinners in every way of disobedience, and which there is no escaping but by returning to our allegiance. (2.) The sentence passed upon them for this sin, if they will persist in it. It is pronounced in God's name (
Jer 42:15): Hear the word of the Lord, you remnant of Judah, who think that because you are a remnant you must be spared of course (
Jer 42:2) and indulged in your own humour. [1.] Did the sword and famine frighten them? Those very judgments shall pursue them into Egypt, shall overtake them, and overcome them there (
Jer 42:16,
Jer 42:17): You think, because war and famine have long been raging in this land, that they are entailed upon it; whereas, if you trust in God, he can make even this land a land of peace to you; you think they are confined to it, and, if you can get clear of this land, you shall get out of the reach of them, but God will send them after you wherever you go. Note, the evils we think to escape by sin we certainly and inevitably run ourselves upon. The men that go to Egypt in contradiction to God's will, to escape
the sword and famine, shall
die in Egypt by sword and famine. We may apply it to the common calamities of human life; those that are impatient of them, and think to avoid them by changing their place, will find that they are deceived and that they do not at all better themselves. The grievances common to men will meet them wherever they go. All our removes in this world are but from one wilderness to another; still we are where we were. [2.] Did the desolations of Jerusalem frighten them? Were they willing to get as far as they could from them? They shall meet with the second part of them too in Egypt (
Jer 42:18):
As my anger and fury have been poured out here upon Jerusalem, so they shall be
poured out upon you in Egypt. Note, Those that have by sin made God their enemy will find him a consuming fire wherever they go. And then you shall be
an execration and an astonishment. The Hebrews were of old an abomination to the Egyptians (
Gen 43:32), and now they shall be made more so than ever. When God's professing people mingle with infidels, and make their court to them, they lose their dignity and make themselves a reproach.
3. That God knew their hypocrisy in their enquiries of him, and that when they asked what he would have them to do they were resolved to take their own way; and therefore the sentence which was before pronounced conditionally is made absolute. Having set before them good and evil, the blessing and the curse, in the close he makes application of what he had said. And here, (1.) He solemnly protests that he had faithfully delivered his message,
Jer 42:19. The conclusion of the whole matter is,
Go not down into Egypt; you disobey the command of God if you do, and what I have said to you will be a witness against you; for
know certainly that,
whether you will hear or whether you will forbear, I have plainly
admonished you; you cannot now plead ignorance of the mind of God. (2.) He charges them with base dissimulation in the application they made to him for divine direction (
Jer 42:20):
You dissembled in your hearts; you professed one thing and intended another, promising what you never meant to perform.
You have used deceit against your soul (so the margin reads it); for those that think to put a cheat upon God will prove in the end to have put a damning cheat upon themselves. (3.) He is already aware that they are determined to go contrary to the command of God; probably they discovered it in their countenance and secret mutterings already, before he had finished his discourse. However, he spoke from him who knew their hearts:
You have not obeyed the voice of the Lord your God; you have not a disposition to obey it. Thus Moses, in the close of his farewell sermon, had told them (
Deut 31:27,
Deut 31:29),
I know thy rebellion and thy stiff neck, and
that you will corrupt yourselves. Admire the patience of God, that he is pleased to speak to those who, he knows, will not regard him, and deal with those who, he knows, will
deal very treacherously, Isa 48:8. (4.) He therefore reads them their doom, ratifying what he had said before:
Know certainly that you shall die by the sword, Jer 42:22. God's threatenings may be vilified, but cannot be nullified, by the unbelief of man.
Famine and pestilence shall pursue these sinners; for there is no place privileged from divine arrests, nor can any malefactors go out of God's jurisdiction.
You shall die in the place whither you desire to go. Note, We know not what is good for ourselves; and that often proves afflictive, and sometimes fatal, which we are most fond of and have our hearts most set upon.