Bible Commentary

Jeremiah 6:6

The Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 6:6

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

Hew ye down trees; rather, her trees. Hewing down trees was an ordinary feature of Assyrian and Babylonian expeditions. Thus, Assurnacirpal "caused the forests of all (his enemies) to fall" ('Records of the Past,' 3.

40, 77), and Shalmaneser calls himself "the trampler on the heads of mountains and all forests ". The timber was partly required for their palaces and fleets, but also, as the context here suggests, for warlike operations.

"Trees," as Professor Rawlinson remarks, "were sometimes cut down and built into the mound" (see next note); they would also be used for the "bulwarks" or siege instruments spoken of in .

Cast a mount; literally, pour a mount (or "bank," as it is elsewhere rendered), with reference to the emptying of the baskets of earth required for building up the "mount" (mound). Habakkuk () says of the Chaldeans, "He laugheth at every stronghold, and heapeth up earth, and taketh it" (comp, also ; ).

The intention of the mound was not so much to bring the besiegers on a level with the top of the walls as to enable them to work the battering-rams to better advantage (Rawlinson, 'Ancient Monarchies,' 1.

472). She is wholly oppression, etc.; rather, she is the city that is punished; wholly oppression is in the midst of her.

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