Bible Commentary

Jeremiah 2:14

The Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 2:14

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Is Israel a servant? The speaker is evidently the prophet, who exclaims in surprise at the view which his prophetic insight opens to him: "quasi de re nova et absurda sciscitatur" (Calvin). For Israel is a member of Jehovah's family; he is not a servant (except in the same high sense as in Isaiah 40-53, where "servant" is virtually equivalent to "representative"), but rather in the highest degree a free man, for he is Jehovah's "firstborn son" ().

How is it, then, that he is dragged away into captivity like a slave who has never known freedom? The view of some, that "servant" means "servant of Jehovah" (comp. ), and that the question therefore is to be answered in the affirmative, is less natural.

"Servant," by itself, never has this turning; and there is a precisely similar term in the discourse at , where the negative answer of the question does not admit of a doubt.

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