Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 32:41
Yea, I will rejoice over them to do them good, and I will plant them in this land assuredly with my whole heart and with my whole soul.
41. I will plant them] See on Jer 24:6.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Jer 32:41
I will plant them in this land assuredly with My whole heart and with My whole soul
The whole-heartedness of God in blessing His people
I.
consider our text for instruction.
1. God blesses His people heartily. With My whole heart. Notice, in passing, that word assuredly; for it confirms the word as full of truth and certainty. He is slow to wrath, but He is swift to mercy, for He delighteth in it. When He deals out His grace to His people, then you see the loving God, for God is love; and you see the living God, for He blesses you with His whole soul.
2. He does this work of blessing His people thoughtfully, for it is added, and with My whole soul. Not only the affections of God, speaking after the manner of man, but the great mind and life of God is thrown into the work of saving and blessing His people. His essence, His soul, is here at home. The design argument, when brought to bear upon nature, proves the existence of God. Much more when that argument is brought to bear upon the works of grace do we see the Lord; for in the transactions of grace them is design in everything.
3. We notice, next, that if that be so, then He employs all His resources to bless His elect. The Lord our God–I speak as a man, and with deep reverence–is absorbed in doing good to His people: there is nothing that He is, there is nothing that He has, but what He will bring it to bear upon the design upon which He has set His whole heart and His whole soul. Behold ye, what God hath done for His people! He has given them His all: all the wisdom of His providence shall be theirs while here, and all the glory of His heaven hereafter. God has His abode in heaven; behold, He makes it the abode of His chosen for ever. Angels are His courtiers–they shall be ministering spirits to His elect. The throne of His Son they shall sit upon with Him. The victories of God shall furnish them with palms, and the delight of God shall find them harps. But stop, there is something more than all! It was little for God to give earth and heaven, but He must needs give His Son, the express image of His glory, His other self.
4. The Lord subordinates all other works to that of His love. Everything, whether of creation or destruction, mercy or judgment, shall work, like the wheels of some vast machinery, to produce good to those who are the people of the living God.
5. The Lord gives to His people and for His people without stint. When He feeds His children, though once they would have been thankful to eat the crumbs from His table, He sets them among princes, and gives them to eat of the kings meat. He lays eternity under contribution to provide for the needs, nay, for the desires, for the joys of His people.
6. Another point sets forth most plainly that the Lord blesses His people with His whole heart and with His whole soul, for He perseveres in it. Are you not surprised with the variety of His favours towards you? An old writer says that Gods flowers bloom double, for He sends two blessings where there seems but one; but I would say they are like the light: they are sevenfold, even as in every ray from the sun we have seven colours blended in harmony. What sevens and sevens of infinite love are contained in every beam of mercy that comes to the redeemed!
7. As the Lord Perseveres in His work, so He succeeds in it. God is determined to make something of His People, and He will.
8. God delights in all that He does for His own. We are happy when God blesses us, but not so happy as God is. Our God has all the instincts of motherhood and fatherhood blended in one; and when He looks upon His Church He calls her Hephzibah–My delight is in her. He does not rejoice in the works of His hands so much as in the works of His heart.
II. Consider the text with the evidence. In order to prove that God doth thus bless us with His whole heart and with His whole soul, I would remind you that the whole Trinity is engaged in the blessing of the chosen.
1. First comes the Father. It was He that chose us–chose us, not because He must choose us or none, but freely with His whole heart. Wisdom from her throne determined the way in which God would lead His People, and bless His people, and sanctify His people, and perfect His people.
2. In reference to the ever-blessed Son of God, whom we worship as most truly God, we have the same truth to state. He loved us ages before He came to earth am man.
3. I must not omit the Holy Spirit, to whom be all honour and glory. When we were mad with sin, and ravenous after the pleasures of it, He followed us, to check us in our headlong career, to beckon us to better things, to draw us thither, and to help us when we began to incline to the right. He gave us life, and light, and liberty.
III. Consider the inferences which flow from the text.
1. The first inference is one of consolation. Does God bless us with His whole heart and with His whole soul? Oh, then, how happy we ought to be!
2. Another inference, and I have done: it is one of exhortation. Let us love our God with our whole heart and with our whole soul. Trust Him for the past, the present, and the future; trust Him completely, implicitly, unhesitatingly. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The enthusiasm of God
Who can but admire a man who speaks thus? Enthusiasm quickens life. It is salt and light for common days. It makes earth flash with heaven. But was it a man who said this? No. This voice came from heaven. Then of Cod. Well may Calvin annotate my text, saying, The words are indeed did some strong and radiant angel thus avow himself? No. This is the voice singular. God is telling His people the great things He purposes to do for them, and He declares He will accomplish all with His whole heart and with His whole soul. Here we are brought face to face with the kindling fact that God is a God of enthusiasm. In one sense, Calvins remark on the singularity of these words is very pertinent. But surveying them from another view-point, the Divine declaration is not singular. Enthusiasm is an impressive element of Bible theology. Scripture gives us peeps into Gods nature. Only peeps. The open vision would blind us. And assuredly we frequently behold in the Holy Book the outflashing of the Divine enthusiasm. Isaiah uses the wonderful phrase, The zeal of the God of hosts. It is Gods quenchless enthusiasm which is to establish in triumph the ever-increasing kingdom and peace of Emmanuel. This quality of God is one Isaiah delights in. Isaiah on the enthusiasm of God is a stimulating study. He says of a wonderful and apparently impossible deliverance of Gods people from their iron oppressor, The zeal of the Lord of hosts shall do this. Courage, sad-hearted and foe-encircled brother! The enthusiasm of God is pledged to thy deliverance! In another place the poet-theologian describes God as a warrior, and cries, He . . . was clad with zeal as a cloak. Grand is the vision of God as He appears in ruby-red robe of zeal. Ezekiel, his feet on earth, his soul floating amid the cherubim, represents Gods enthusiasm in its vengeful form when he declares how the wrath Divine shall bruise impenitent transgressors, and they shall know that I, the Lord, have spoken it in My zeal, when I have accomplished My fury in them If enthusiasm be a quality which Old Testament theology ascribes to God, it is also emphatically accredited to Him by the theology of the new covenant. It is revealed as an outstanding feature of Him to have seen whom is to have seen the Father. With My whole heart and with My whole soul, was the motto of His incarnate life. Holy enthusiasm was the temper of His words and deeds. The zeal of Thy house will eat me up. Thus our Lord fulfilled the scriptural ideal of enthusiasm as He fulfilled all scriptural ideals. God in Christ is always a God of enthusiasm. How intense He is! How He prays! The fervour of His prayers is never chilled. How He meditates! His inexplorable thoughts breathe themselves through eternity. The Christ of the New Testament is the Jehovah of the Old Testament, in white-hot enthusiasm, as in everything, august, and gentle, and lovely. Enthusiasm must surely be an essential of a true theology. One cannot conceive of an impassionate God. An apathetic God would depress the universe. An ancient Greek finely described enthusiasm as a God within. And such all grand enthusiasm is, and must be evermore. How attractive is our God by reason of His enthusiasm. Who would not love Him with his might who is ready to bless with His whole heart and with His whole soul? Such a God allures us. Who are they for whom God promises to labour so enthusiastically? Notice the repetitions them in this verse. Equally recurrent is the them in the previous verse. In verse 38 the them is indicated. It refers to My people. God will do wonderfully for His people. He prizes His people beyond compare. Nothing is too great for Him to do for those who are in His sight so lovely. And no enthusiasm is too lavish to expend upon their interests. Is there caprice in this wealthy enthusiasm over His people? By no means. Gods people represent character. And Gods enthusiasm for character is shown in His enthusiasm for His people. Gods enthusiasm is evoked by character. Our poor unworthy enthusiasms are often pitifully raise directed. The zeal of God never misses the true mark. God is enthusiastic to help men of character. See how in the neighbourhood of this text He rains golden showers of promises upon such. I will not turn away from them, to do them good (verse 40). I will rejoice over them to do them good (verse 41). I will plant them in this land (verse 41). I will bring upon them all the good that I have promised them (verse 42). And fields shall be bought in this land (verse 43). The enthusiasm of God runs forth in temporal helpfulness to men whose ways please Him. He cares even for fields which belong to His people. Lay tide to heart, burdened business man, if thou art one of Gods people! Consider this, depressed agriculturist, who art a man of God! God makes your interests His own interests. God is enthusiastic in respect of the creation and development of character. How abundantly that can be demonstrated from the context! I will give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear Me for ever, for the good of them, and of their children after them (verse 39). I will put My fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from Me. What do these golden words portend? That with all His heart and with all His soul God will perfect the character of His people. The fact is, nothing in man creates such enthusiasm on Gods part as the instituting and enhancing of character. Your soul is that in you in which God is most interested, and He is interested in everything about you. He is enthusiastic in incomparable degree for your salvation. The supernatural rectification of the will and of the being which we commonly call conversion draws forth Gods intense enthusiasm. With His whole heart and with His whole soul He proposes to develop the good He has already created. He pines to perfect His servants. He has splendid ideals for them. He strongly yearns to make their to-morrows better than their yesterdays. There are those whose so-called enthusiasm is self-centred. Certain intense people are intensely selfish. Some have ineffectual enthusiasms. No altruism irradiates them. Nobody is anything bettered for them. They are fruitless fires. Not so the enthusiasm of God. Gods zeal is to help, to bless, to enrich men. To illumine what is dark in men. To raise what is low. To glorify what is sordid. Temporally and spiritually beneficent is the enthusiasm of God. He delights to help us. Nor can the strong years conquer His enthusiasm. In this, as in respect of all the qualities of the Divine character, we are to be imitators of God, as beloved children. An enthusiasm is contagious. Throbs thrill. The awful peril is that we imitate evil enthusiasms. Souls of men, be admonished against such devil-born enthusiasm. Gods enthusiasm is the true ideal for man. Be ye imitators of God. Be ours enthusiasm for holy living. What a rebuke to our tepidity is the enthusiasm of God! What is more remote from God than moral and spiritual coldness? Oh, this Divine enthusiasm is the crying need of modern religion! It is very instructive to study the Bible teaching concerning the enthusiasm of God. It is even more impressive on the negative than on the positive side. God has no spark of enthusiasm for much that man burns about. What discordance there often is between God and man! This is apparent in the objects of their respective enthusiasms. God has no enthusiasm for self-centredness. God has no enthusiasm for worldliness. No matter what form it assumes, He cares not for it. It is all vanity to Him. God has no enthusiasm for indifferency. Some are zealous for nothing but apathy. They have dead hearts, and there is no death so deadly as the death of the heart. Stoicism is not sanctity. God is quick with sympathy. The omissions from the revealed enthusiasms of God are intensely significant. Take heed lest thou art enthusiastic where thy God is not. A God who, with His whole heart and with His whole soul, seeks mans highest good, is a God who constrains our devotion. He attracts us. He captivates us. Were He a cold, unresponsive God, I should shrink from Him. But being an enthusiastic God, my heart is His. Here is a ground of trustfulness–the enthusiasm of God. Can I fear for the morrow when this God is mine? Here is a ground of hope–the enthusiasm of God. All shall always be well, seeing such a God is mine. Here is a ground of service–the enthusiasm of God. Too much one cannot do for such a God. When He declares, With My whole heart, and with My whole soul, He prefixes another delectable word, assuredly. The margin renders it in truth, or in stability. So the good Lord assures us of the perpetuity of His kindly enthusiasm. It will never fail His people. Whoever cools toward us, the enthusiastic God of grace will be faithful and fervent still (D. T. Young.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 41. Yea, I will rejoice over them to do them good] Nothing can please God better than our coming to him to receive the good which, with his whole heart and his whole soul, he is ready to impart. How exceedingly condescending are these words of God!
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
I will not only do them good, but I will take pleasure and delight in doing them good; and I will certainly bring them to this land, and constantly and freely do them good when they shall be there.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
41. rejoice over them(Deu 30:9; Isa 62:5;Isa 65:19; Zep 3:17).
plant . . . assuredlyrather,”in stability,” that is, permanently, for ever (Jer 24:6;Amo 9:15).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Yea, I will rejoice over them to do them good,…. His covenant people, to whom he gives one heart and one way, and who have his fear implanted in them, and shall never depart from him, but persevere to the end: these he loves with a love of complacency and delight; he rejoices over them, not as considered in themselves, but as in Christ; he rejoices over them, as the bridegroom rejoices over the bride; and which does not merely lie in expression, but appears in fact; he does them good, and with the utmost joy and pleasure; he delights in showing mercy to them, beautifies them with salvation, and takes pleasure in their prosperity; he has taken up good thoughts and resolutions concerning them in his heart; has promised good things to them in his covenant; has provided good things for them in his Son, and bestows them on them in regeneration; and constantly supplies them with his grace, and will withhold no good thing from them, till he has brought them to glory; all which he does cheerfully and with the utmost delight The Targum is,
“my Word shall rejoice over them;”
the essential Word, Christ; he was rejoicing in them, and his delights were with them from eternity; he rejoices over them, as his lost sheep found at conversion; and they shall be his joy and crown of rejoicing to all eternity; and it was for the joy of having them with him that he endured so much for them in the redemption of them:
and I will plant them in this land assuredly; or “in truth”, or “in stability and firmness” n; for it does not seem so much to relate to the truth of the promise, and the assurance that may be had of the fulfilment of that, as to the reality and constancy of the blessing itself. A Gospel church state was first planted in Judea, and from thence has been spread into other parts, and has never been rooted out of the world since; and when the Jews, upon their conversion, are settled in their own land again, they will never more be removed:
with my whole heart and with my whole soul. Grotius thinks these clauses are to be connected with the former part of the verse, that God will rejoice over them to do them good with all his heart and soul; but this the accents will not admit of; but the meaning is, that he will do this particular good for them, as well as all others, in the most cordial and respectable manner, even planting and establishing them in their own land. The Targum is,
“by my Word, and by my will.”
n “in veritate”, Calvin, Cocceius, Schmidt; “in terra hac firma”, Junius Tremellius “in terra hac firma”, Grotius.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
When God says that he would take pleasure in doing good to his people, he adopts the language of man, for fathers rejoice when they can do good to their children. God then, as the paternal love with which he regards his people could not have been otherwise expressed, made use of this similitude. Further, the contrast also ought to be noticed, even that God had rejoiced when he punished his people for their wickedness. For God delights in judgment as well as in mercy. God then for a time rejoiced when he punished the peopie; for as his judgment is right, he delights in it. But now he says that he would manifest his paternal affection, so as to take pleasure in doing them good.
He adds, I will plant them in this land He had indeed planted them, when, by Joshua, the possession of the land was given them, according to what is said in the 80 Psalm, where a similar expression is used, even that God had brought his vine out of Egypt, and planted it in the promised inheritance. (Psa 80:8) But afterwards the people were plucked up by the roots. Hence the first possession of the land to the time of the exile was not, strictly speaking, a plantation, for the people did not then strike firm roots. God then promises here something new and unusual, when he speaks of a plantation. Nor is there a doubt but the perpetuity, of which mention has been made, is intended; for this plantation of the people depends on the covenant, and the covenant is not temporary as before the exile, but perpetual in its duration.
We now then understand what the Prophet means when he compares to a plantation the restoration of the people after their return from exile. We know, indeed, that the people from that time had not been banished, and that the Temple had ever stood, though the faithful had been pressed down with many troubles; but this was only a type of a plantation. We must therefore necessarily pass on to Christ, in order to have a complete fulfillment of this promise. The beginning, as we have said, and I am often compelled to repeat this, is to be taken from this return; but Christ is not to be excluded from that liberation which was like the morning star, before the sun of righteousness itself appeared in its own splendor. When Christians explain this passage and the like, they leave out the liberation of the people from Babylonish exile, as though these prophecies did not belong at all to that time; in this they are mistaken. And the Jews, who reject Christ, stop in that earthly deliverance. But the Prophets, as I have said, begin with the return of the people, but they set Christ also in the middle, that the faithful might know that that return was but a slight taste of the full grace, which was alone to be expected from Christ; for it was then, indeed, that God really planted his people.
Further, when the Jews were afterwards expelled from the land of Canaan, it was owing to their ingratitude; and it was a total abdication. In the meantime, however, God planted there his own vine until Jerusalem was extended and had its limits in the farthest parts of the earth: and we are said to be grafted in Christ and planted, when God adopts us into his Church; and hence that saying of Christ,
“
Every tree which my Father hath not planted shall be rooted up.” (Mat 15:13)
Let us then know that the Church was planted in Judea, for it remained to the time of Christ. And as Christ has pulled down the wall of partition, so that there is now no difference between Jews and Gentiles, God plants us now in the holy land, when he grafts us into the body of Christ.
He says, in truth, that is, faithfully, so as never to pull them up again. And he adds, with my whole heart and with my whole soul The words are indeed singular, for God transfers to himself the affections and feelings of men; but it is necessary that he should in a manner transform himself, that he may be understood by us; for unless he prattled, where would be found so much understanding as would reach the immense altitude of his wisdom? As then the mysteries with which he favors us are incomprehensible, it is necessary that he should accommodate himself to our limited capacities. By the whole heart, then, and the whole soul, he means that faithfulness and constancy which will ever endure until the faithful shall obtain eternal life. Integrity in man is called the whole heart, because there may be a double heart. It cannot, it is true, be for this reason applied to God or to his nature. But as I have already said, he says by a similitude that he would do this with the whole heart, because he will do it so perfectly that there will be nothing wanting to render salvation complete, and the same thing is also meant by truth; though some philosophize more refinedly as to this word, for by truth they understand the firmness or veracity of the promises, (83) But we know that according to the usage of the Hebrew language, that truth means often what is solid and perpetual. He means then that the plantation would be so firm and solid, that there would be no danger that the people would ever be removed elsewhere, even because there would be a living root, as we have explained: the Church was fixed in Judea until the coming of Christ, who brought in the real accomplishment of this plantation; for when we are grafted into him, we already in a manner possess eternal life and are become the citizens of heaven.
(83) The word אמת most commonly means reality in opposition to dissimulation or pretense, or what is only apparent; truth in opposition to falsehood, and stability in opposition to what is evanescent and temporary. The planting was to be a real planting, and not one in disguise or appearance. The following words explain the meaning, “with all my heart and with all my soul,” that is, with sincerity and earnestness, or, with the full purpose of mind and with the full assent of the will and affections. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(41) I will plant them in this land assuredly.Literally, in truth, as in 1Sa. 12:24, and elsewhere. By some interpreters the words have been referred to the stability of possession implied in the promise, but it is better to see in them an attestation of the faithfulness of the Promiser. In meaning, as in form, the word corresponds closely with the frequent Amen, Verily, verily, in our Lords teaching.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
41. With my whole heart A loving and unlimited emphasis.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Jer 32:41 Yea, I will rejoice over them to do them good, and I will plant them in this land assuredly with my whole heart and with my whole soul.
Ver. 41. Yea, I will rejoice over them. ] Volupe mihi erit; it shall be as great a pleasure to me to bless them, as it can be to them to obey me. See Jer 24:7 Psa 119:2 ; Psa 119:10 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
I will rejoice, &c. Reference to Pentateuch (Deu 30:9).
plant. Compare Jer 1:10.
soul. Hebrew. nephesh. App-13. Figure of speech Anthropopatheia.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
I: Deu 30:9, Isa 62:5, Isa 65:19, Zep 3:17
and I: Jer 18:9, Jer 24:6, Jer 31:28, Amo 9:15
assuredly: Heb. in truth, or stability, Hos 2:19, Hos 2:20
Reciprocal: Exo 15:17 – plant Exo 31:17 – and was refreshed Num 14:8 – delight Deu 28:63 – rejoiced over 2Sa 15:26 – General 1Ch 17:9 – plant Est 6:6 – whom the king Psa 35:27 – which Psa 37:28 – forsaketh Psa 104:31 – rejoice Psa 149:4 – taketh pleasure Pro 2:5 – the fear Pro 2:8 – and Pro 23:15 – even mine Son 2:6 – General Son 3:11 – in the day of the Son 7:8 – I will go Isa 53:10 – the pleasure Isa 62:4 – Hephzibah Eze 37:25 – they shall dwell in Mic 7:18 – he delighteth Zec 8:8 – and they shall dwell Luk 12:37 – that Luk 15:5 – rejoicing Joh 15:11 – my
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Jer 32:41. Plant them means God would establish them in that land as a strong nation. That was done after the captivity and as long as they were faithful they continued to be a strong force in the world.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
It would please Him to bless them, and He would wholeheartedly return them to the land in faithfulness to His promise.