Bible Commentary

Jeremiah 52:1-3

The Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 52:1-3

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

Zedekiah as king.

I. THE POSITION OF A YOUNG MAN. He was twenty-one years old when he began to reign. Out of boyhood, looking round him at a time when he had become responsible for the conduct of his life. In England the age of twenty-one is full of significance to many young men, for then they become free from legal disabilities and restrictions. Any young man about the age of Zedekiah becomes thereby an object of special interest.

II. AN UNEXPECTED POSITION. At least we may fairly assume this from . Zedekiah was not in the succession. Of course it is just possible there may have been aims and intrigues by which Zedekiah gained the crown. But that does not make less noticeable the fact that young men often do find themselves in unexpected positions. They have been making ready for one course, when all in a moment they are turned into a new course where they have to act without much time for consideration.

III. A RESPONSIBLE POSITION. Responsible in any case as that of a young man; peculiarly responsible as being called to a throne. To be called to a position of peculiar responsibility may sober a man if he is inclined to be reckless, may rouse him if inclined to be easy going and self-indulgent. This point may be illustrated by the traditional belief in the change that came over Henry V. on his accession to the throne, especially as this view is brought out in Shakespeare.

IV. A POSITION UNUSUALLY DIFFICULT. A king appointed by a foreign conqueror would be regarded with dislike by many. In such circumstances the best of personal qualities were needed, decision of character combined with the utmost circumspection.

V. A POSITION IN WHICH ZEDEKIAH HAD A COMPETENT ADVISER. Not any of his own courtiers, though there may have been men among them marked by prudence and insight. He has a prophet of Jehovah, a man with a keen sense of right and wrong, a man with revelations from on high, to help him. Moreover, it is on record that he actually sought Jeremiah out. Note the many references in the course of the book to the dealings between the king and the prophet. By the plain speaking of such a man many doubts might be cleared and many errors corrected. It is the censure on Zedekiah () that "he humbled not himself before Jeremiah the prophet speaking from the mouth of the Lord." ― Y.

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Jeremiah 52:1-11This fruit of sin we should pray against above any thing; Cast me not away from thy presence, Ps. 51:11. None are cast out of God's presence but those who by sin have first thrown themselves out. Zedekiah's flight was i…Matthew HenrycommentaryJerusalem Taken by Nebuchadnezzar. (b. c. 588.)JERUSALEM TAKEN BY NEBUCHADNEZZAR. (B. C. 588.) This narrative begins no higher than the beginning of the reign of Zedekiah, though there were two captivities before, one in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, the other in th…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 52:1Zedekiah. (Cf. former homily, Jeremiah 37:1.)—C.Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 52:1-34EXPOSITION The contents of this chapter prove that it is not an independent narrative, but the concluding part of a history of the kings of Judah. It agrees almost word for word with 2Ki 24:18-25:30, from which we are j…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 52:3It came to pass. The implied subject of the verb is Zedekiah's evil doing. That Zedekiah rebelled. There ought to be a full stop before these words, and "that" should rather be "And."Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 52:3The Lord creating evil. This is one of the passages of Scripture the meaning of which does not lie on the surface. It seems to represent God as instigating sin. For "through the anger of the Lord" it is said "that Zedek…Joseph S. Exell and contributors