Bible Commentary

Jeremiah 49:19

The Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 49:19

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

He shall some. The subject is withheld, as in (see note); . The swelling of Jordan; rather, the pride of Jordan; i.e. the luxuriant thickets on its banks. See on , where the phrase first occurs.

Against the habitation of the strong; rather, to the evergreen pasture. The word rendered "evergreen" is one of those which are the despair of interpreters, from their fulness of meaning. The root-meaning is simply "continuance," whether it be continuance of strength (comp.

, Hebrew) or of the flow of a stream (; ), or, as here, of the perennial verdure of a well watered pasturage. But I will suddenly make him run away from her. Make whom?

The lion? Such is the natural inference from the Authorized Version, but the context absolutely forbids it. It seems useless to mention the crowd of explanations which have been offered of this "obscure and much-vexed passage," as old Matthew Poole calls it, since in we have precisely the same phrase, but with another suffix, which clears up the meaning.

We may, therefore, either read, "For I will suddenly make them run away from it" (viz. the pasture), or keep the old reading "him" for "them," and explain "him" as meaning the Edomites. The expression used for "suddenly" is very forcible; we might render, with Ewald, "in the twinkling of an eye."

And who is a chosen man, etc.? A still more difficult clause. If the text is correct, which cannot be assumed as certain, we should probably render, with Ewald, "and will appoint over it [i.e. the land of Edom] him who is chosen," viz.

Nebuchadnezzar. Who will appoint me the time? The same phrase is rendered in , "Who shall set me a time to plead?" (comp. the Latin phrase dicur dicere). To drag a defendant before the tribunal implies equality of rank.

One might venture to do this with Nebuchadnezzar, if he were not the representative of One still mightier. Finally, Who is that shepherd that will stand before me? The land of Edom has been likened to a pasture; it is natural that the ruler should be now described as a shepherd (comp.

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