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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 21:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 21:6

And I will smite the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast: they shall die of a great pestilence.

A great pestilence – As the result of the excessive crowding of men and animals in a confined space with all sanitary regulations utterly neglected.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Jer 21:6

They shall die of a great pestilence.

Pestilence

In a romance, The End of an Epoch, by A. Lincoln Green, the hero, Adam Godwin, makes the acquaintance of a German professor, bearing the ominous name of Azrael Falk, who comes to London, bringing with him a large quantity of an active and deadly germ poison, which would depopulate any country where it might be turned loose. His idea is to make an enormous fortune by selling it to either Russia or Germany, between whom at the time discords had arisen. The catastrophe is brought on in a simple way. The professor, with his jars in his possession (he is too jealous and suspicious ever to part from them), carries out a long-cherished fancy to see the Derby, and on Epsom Downs is taken for a welsher, and set upon by the mob. His precious jars are broken, and he himself is removed insane and dying to a neighbouring asylum. The death dealing contents of the jars rise in a brown mist and float in the air. Adam Godwin knows that London is in mortal peril, but he has not been told the secret of the anti-toxin, and Falk dies without recovering his reason. The most exciting pages are those in which we watch the slow creeping of the plague over London. It attacks all except aged persons, and there is no remedy. The calamity which in this book is merely fictitious was, in dire fact, to befall Jerusalem Disobedience, stubbornness, and impenitence were the deadly germ poison by which the inhabitants of the city were to be swept away.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 6. They shall die of a great pestilence.] The sword may appear to be that of man, though I have given the Chaldeans their commission; but the pestilence shall appear to be the immediate act of GOD.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Still God proclaimeth himself this peoples enemy. Pestilences are but the usual consequents of long sieges, through the scantness and unwholesomeness of food; but God is the first cause of such sore judgments, though there be other second causes. The murrain of beasts bears proportion to the pestilence amongst men, and the beasts are threatened as well as men, not because of any sin in them, but because men are punished in them, they being part of their substance; and this is a part of that bondage of corruption from which the creature groaneth to be delivered, of that vanity to which they are subject, which maketh the irrational part of the creation to be brought in by the apostle, Rom 8:20-22, like as a woman travailing in pain, and desiring the day of judgment.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

And I will smite the inhabitants of this city,…. With one or other of his arrows after mentioned: or, “them that abide in this city” o; that do not go out of it, and surrender themselves to the king of Babylon; see Jer 21:9;

both man and beast; the latter for the sin of the former; particularly such beasts as were fit for food are meant, whereby the famine would be increased, and so the greater destruction of men:

they shall die of a great pestilence; both man and beast; a disease which comes immediately from the hand of God; hence Hippocrates used to call it , “the divine disease”: here it denotes a very uncommon one, which should sweep away large numbers; called great, both for quality, or the nature of it, and for the quantity of persons that died of it.

o “manentes in hac urbe”, Gataker.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Jeremiah goes on with the same discourse, even that God had resolved to destroy Jerusalem and the people, at least for a time. But he points out here what he intended to do, even that he would consume them by pestilence and famine, as long as they continued in the city; as though he had said, “Though these Chaldeans may not immediately take the city by means of a siege, yet its destruction shall be worse, for famine shall rage within and consume them.” We now perceive the design of the Prophet.

But we must keep in mind what I reminded you of yesterday, — that God assumes to himself what might have been ascribed to the Chaldeans, for he makes himself the author of all these calamities; I will smite, he says, the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast; by a great pestilence shall they die This was the first kind of punishment; before the enemy rushed into the city the pestilence had consumed many of the people. Now there is a circumstance mentioned which shews how dreadful would be their state, for not only men would perish, but even brute animals. It was no wonder that God’s vengeance extended to horses, and oxen, and asses; for we know that all these were created for the use of man. Hence when God manifested his wrath as to these animals, His object was to fill men with greater terrors; for they thus saw oxen and asses, though innocent, involved in the same punishment with themselves. For how can we suppose that horses and asses deserved to perish by diseases, or through want of daily food? But God sets forth such a spectacle as this, that he may more effectually touch men; for they thus see that the whole world is exposed to a curse through their sins. They are indeed constrained to know how great their sinfulness is; for on this account it is that the earth becomes dry and barren, that the elements above and below perform not their offices, so that the sterility of the ground deprives animals of their food, and the infection of the air kills them. But on this subject we have spoken elsewhere.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(6) They shall die of a great pestilence.This was doubtless, as in other instances (Thuc. ii. 52), the natural consequence of the siege, but it came before the people as another proof that Jehovah had stretched out his arm against them, that they were fighting against that arm as well as against the host of the invaders. The outstretched hand may be noted as another Deuteronomic phrase (Deu. 4:34; Deu. 5:15; Deu. 26:8).

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

Jer 21:6 And I will smite the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast: they shall die of a great pestilence.

Ver. 6. They shall die of a great pestilence. ] See Jer 16:4 ; Jer 18:21 . Hippocrates calleth the pestilence , the divine disease; because there is much of God’s hand in it, like as there was here in the sweating sickness, wherewith the English only were chased, not only in England, but in all countries. a

a Sir John Heywood’s Life of Edward VI

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

man. Hebrew. ‘adam. App-14.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

I will: Jer 7:20, Jer 12:3, Jer 12:4, Jer 33:12, Jer 36:29, Gen 6:7, Isa 6:11, Isa 24:1-6, Eze 14:13, Eze 14:17, Eze 14:19, Eze 14:21, Eze 33:27, Eze 33:29, Hos 4:3, Mic 3:12, Zep 1:3, Luk 21:24

they: Jer 32:24, Jer 34:17, Jer 42:22, Eze 5:12, Eze 5:13, Eze 7:15, Eze 12:16

Reciprocal: Deu 28:21 – General Jer 25:18 – Jerusalem Jer 50:3 – both

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Jer 21:6. The success of the siege and the destruction that accompanied it were decreed by the Lord and hence would be carried out in Bpite of resistence from Judah.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary