Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 22:21
I spoke unto thee in thy prosperity; [but] thou saidst, I will not hear. This [hath been] thy manner from thy youth, that thou obeyedst not my voice.
Prosperity – literally, as in the margin. God spake thus not once only, but whenever Judah was at peace.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Jer 22:21
I spake unto thee in thy prosperity; but thou saidst, I will not hear.
Influence of prosperity
In heaven, the more abundantly Gods bounties are dispensed, the more is He loved and adored; but on earth, the richer His gifts, the more will He be neglected and disobeyed. A striking proof of our depravity, that constant prosperity hardens, and is unfavourable to piety.
I. Abundant earthly blessings do tend to make the heart rebellious towards God.
1. Scripture teachings are emphatic on this matter (Deu 8:12-14; Hos 13:6; Pro 30:8-9).
2. Experience confirms Scripture. In many instances we see that the highest human virtues and holiest saints of God were unable to withstand the influence of prosperity. They could endure affliction, and profit thereby; as certain liquors ripen in the shade, which under the noonday beams turn to acidity and corruption.
3. It is doubtful whether there ever was a single instance of piety which could pass uninjured through the ordeal of unmingled prosperity. The tone of religion is lowered amid riches and honours. Where simplicity and humility of spirit are preserved amid prosperity, it is owing to some hidden trouble, which like the cord on the feet of the aspiring bird keeps the proud spirit lowly and abased.
II. What, then, must be the effect of prosperity on those who have no religious principle to counteract it, and who are avowedly lovers of the world and its pleasures?
1. They will not heed the messages of God.
2. Religion, with its sober realities, is despised.
3. Those favoured of fortune are the most pitiable objects in the world.
III. They who have worldly prosperity should be led to self-inquiry as to its effect on themselves.
1. Are you the same simple-hearted and sincere follower of Jesus as when you began to lay the foundation of your worldly exaltation?
2. What a caution is here to those who are seeking prosperity! Can you discover a means of preserving a lowly spiritual mind amid prosperity? Unless so, there is no alternative but that you must suffer adversity to keep you humble, or become worldly and spiritually hardened.
3. They who have become more indisposed to hear the voice of God should awake to their peril.
4. Prosperous ones may well regard their ease with apprehension. (W. H. Lewis, D. D.)
Prosperity baneful
I. The exactness with which God observes all that relates to human character and conduct.
1. All our relative circumstances are immediately before His eye; and He notices with tender and faithful scrutiny the various effects which His merciful dispensations have upon the mind.
2. The circumstances of human life, however produced, are undoubtedly under the guidance of providence, and therefore subservient to a wise and perfect design. Each mans history is arranged and adapted with utmost precision to the growth of permanent character.
II. The tendency of unsanctified prosperity to render us insensible to the claims of religion and separate us still further from God.
1. Uninterrupted comfort tends to lessen our confidence in God: to form in the mind a feeling of self-confidence: a security nothing can shake: so much so that religion can make no entrance into the mind.
2. It hardens the heart. God would have every temporal blessing raise the inquiry, Lord, what is man? But wicked and irreligious men are only concerned for enjoyment, and for scope for their ambition. They feed and grovel like swine beneath the oak, without looking up to the boughs that bore the fruit, or the hand that shakes it down.
3. Then comes pride. Nebuchadnezzar. God is forgotten, prayer neglected.
4. Leaves a dulness and lethargy of mind. All Divine threatenings, warnings, promises unheeded.
III. Various ways in which God rebukes this tendency and humbles men. God speaks to men in various ways, and He distinctly marks the various impressions produced upon the mind by His communications. He speaks to us by His Word and ordinances, by the instructions we receive in religious education, by the various dispensations of His providence, by affliction, by mercies. (S. Thodey.)
The perverseness of prosperity
Why is prosperity so perverse?
I. Because prosperity often tends to hardness of heart.
II. Because prosperity often grows proud and self-sufficient. Religion and the Bible are well enough for the poor, who need comfort, but what do they want with it, who have more than heart could wish?
III. Because prosperity is often immersed in cares or pleasures. There is no room for religion. The voices of the counting house, the mart of commerce, the shop; or the voices of the pleasure takers, who call men to partake of their pastimes, so fill their ear that they will not obey the voice of God. I have my nest in the cedars. (Anon.)
The Christian prospering in business
The voice of God to the prosperous, which they are in danger of not hearing, concerns–
I. Humility.
1. This humility will be shown towards God. There is a natural tendency in wealth to foster a spirit of sinful self-sufficience and independence of God. Many things conspire to this. Wealth is power. Not only the labour of the hands, but the thoughts, the will, and consciences of men may be bought. Wealth not only gives a sort of independence, but a sort of sovereignty. And, thus, it is an object of esteem and reverence. Now, whatever natural religion may teach us, it is certain that the Bible teaches, that God giveth power to get wealth, and that we have nothing which we have not received. Now, how comprehensive is the claim for humility involved in all this! It makes every difference, whether we be the authors of our wealth, or whether it be the gift of God. If we receive all, the more we have, the more we have received. The prosperous Christian should realise this; and, realising this, he will be grateful. The bounty of Providence will endear the thought of God. In proportion to his joy will be his thankfulness.
2. This feeling of dependence will respect the future, will influence the mode of regarding the continuance of good things. He who feels deeply that we are in the hands of God; that we are in a state of probation; that the great purpose of God is to try us, to reveal us, to exercise us, and especially to sanctify us; that we deserve nothing, while we receive everything; and that crosses and afflictions are often among the most gracious methods of Divine discipline; will regard the fluctuations of life as Divine dispensations. He will not say only, It is the course of things, It is the lot of man, It must be expected, It cant be helped, but he will say also, It is the will of God.
3. Another aspect of this humility will be towards men. In pleading for humility in the rich Christian, I do not advocate an impossible equality, or a forgetfulness of outward distinctions. But I mean, that the feeling of human brotherhood and of Christian respect and affection should be displayed towards all; and that the favours of Providence should only bind us to a more careful regard to the will of our common Father, and a more delicate respect to the feelings of our brethren.
II. Spirituality.
1. Spirituality is opposed to extravagance. He who prizes the manliness and integrity of his soul; he who would not render himself unfit for the possible reverses of life; he who would maintain a taste for the most exalted pleasures; he who is duly alive to the perilous corruption within him, ever ready, like a magazine of powder, to ignite from the smallest spark, or, like a river, on the removal of a little portion of embankment, to burst forth with desolating violence; he will err on the side rather of defect than of excess, and deny himself too much rather than smooth the way and strengthen the temptations of the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life.
2. Spirituality is opposed to worldliness. He is worldly who walks not with God; whose conversation is not in heaven; whose affections are not set on things above; who has no keen eye for the mysteries of the kingdom, no quick ear for its voices, no delicate sensibility to its impressions. Have you not many before your minds who have become worldly through prosperity
3. Spirituality is opposed to indolence. Prosperity says, Take thine ease! and men are but too ready to comply with the suggestion. The man well-to-do contributes to societies that perform the works in which he was engaged. He now works by proxy. He assigns his sphere to others. He is not idle; he supports all good things. But, my brother, the power to do this is additional to the powers you used to have, not instead of them. You did good then by personal service. That obligation remains. The ability to give does not destroy the ability to labour, and the purse cannot answer the demand for activity and effort.
III. Benevolence. The very means of riches, the common way and method of getting rich, should teach this lesson. Why has God appointed commerce? Why given to men different faculties and spheres? Is it not all designed to impress the doctrine of brotherhood, and to draw out affections and promote deeds in keeping with it? The prosperous Christian should be a liberal Christian. It is not enough that he continue his gifts; he must increase them Proportion is Gods rule. He estimates what we part with according to what we keep. A healthy saint will delight in being able to relieve his brethren, and one of the chief charms of prosperity, will be the power it gives him to be a minister for good. His first care will be his own, the needy kindred whose trials he may soothe by generous gifts, or whom he may more worthily and wisely serve by enabling them to serve themselves. His next will be the welfare of those by whose assistance he has succeeded. He will not think his duty done by a mere payment of wages; but will seek to promote their physical and mental and moral well-being. (A. J. Morris.)
The danger of self-confidence
Christians are taught, at least in words, to believe that riches and, indeed, any kind of worldly prosperity are exceedingly dangerous to us–that they prove, very often, too great a trial for mens principles; a snare in which they are entangled to their own destruction. It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God, to submit himself to the mortifying precepts of the Gospel. The word in the text translated prosperity signifies properly calmness, tranquillity, self-satisfaction. It does not merely mean the possession of money, and other such advantages, but also any state or business of life, which makes a person unwilling to apply to his heart or his conscience those truths of the Gospel especially, which might lessen his confidence about himself, and him spiritual estate. When God speaks to men in this their fancied prosperity, how often in the pride . . . of their hearts do they refuse to hear. They will not hear, because they will not consider. Thus, for instance, when things go well with a man, and he has sufficient to maintain himself and his family comfortably his case is one of great difficulty and danger. There is this which makes prosperity a greater danger to us than adversity, that it renders us less willing to listen to the voice of truth and conscience. When worldly things have gone well with a person, and he has yet neglected his eternal interests, there is still hope that adversity may bring him back to his God. But if things have gone ill with a man, and yet he is still worldly-minded and irreligious, what hope is there that prosperity will effect what adversity could not do? The reason is, because worldly business, especially if it be at an successful, is apt to intoxicate the mind, as a dram, and to make a man unable to collect his thoughts and fix them steadily on any object which is not some way or other connected with his immediate interests. But adversity, and suffering, if the heart be not quite hardened against the convictions of conscience, as they make us feel our frailty and dependency, so they have a natural tendency to make us look beyond this present scene for support and consolation. Let it also be considered, that a life of prosperity, and ease, and freedom from trouble, is the least suited for the exercise of those graces and virtues which are peculiarly Christian, and by which our souls are to be fitted for an entrance into that blessed land where sin and sorrow shall be lab more. It is quite certain and unquestionable, that the Gospel of Christ is uniformly addressed to us, as to persons on their trial and probation for an everlasting reward,–to persona who have it in their power to refuse or to receive the gracious offers made to them,–to persons who are to be through life exercised and disciplined, and led on by degrees towards that perfection of holiness from which our nature was degraded by the transgression of our first parents. Here, then, we may see and acknowledge the great danger of a life of prosperity, ease, and self-satisfaction; and, at the same time, the real benefit of adversity, suffering, and self-distrust. If, then, our gracious God have spoken to us in our prosperity, and we have refused to hear; if He have spoken to us in adversity, and our hearts have been somewhat softened at His gracious chastisement, then let us learn to bless Him for all His dispensations, indeed, but most of all for His punishments. (Plain Sermons by Contributors to the Tracts for the Times.)
Man in material prosperity
I. Addressed by almighty God.
1. Be humble. Charge them that are rich, etc. Through the depravity of the heart, wealth has a tendency to fill the soul with self-sufficiency and pride.
2. Be spiritual. Through the depravity of the heart, wealth is often used so to pamper the appetites as to carnalise the soul.
3. Be generous. There is a tendency in wealth so to feed selfishness.
II. Refusing an audience with his Maker. Material indulgence deadens the moral tympanum of the heart. I will not hear though Thou speakest in nature, in Providence, in the Bible, in conscience, in a thousand holy ministries, I will not hear. Why?–
1. Because I am happy as I am. I have all that I want; not only to supply my needs, but to gratify my passions, to satisfy my vanity and ambition.
2. Because Thy voice will disturb me. (Homilist.)
Sin in prosperity
I. The divine condescension. I spake unto thee. What is man that God should notice him at all? It is not so much that man is fallen, but he is rebellious, wilfully ignorant, deliberately sinful, and infinitely beneath God in capacity, duration, power.
II. The hardness of man. Thou wouldst not hear. Surely, one would think that when the great God comes down to commune with man, man, out of mere reverence, would stay to listen. On the contrary, he turns away with disdain. The worm turns upon its Maker and King. This hardness is astonishing–
1. On account of the disrespect it manifests. So great, so good, so merciful a Being demands our attention, our love, our all.
2. On account of the pain it gives. Could you spurn a loving friend, and not cause him grief?
3. On account of the loss it entails. Why does God speak to man?
(1) In order that He may save him from evil–from the evil of sin, of death, of eternal loss.
(2) In order that He may do him good–that He may raise his intellect body and soul, and exalt him to eternal life and glory. It is, then, an astonishing fact that man refuses to hear.
III. The unnatural reason implied. I spake unto thee in thy prosperity.
1. This is a strange assertion. It is strange because–
(1) All prosperity comes from God. The natural thought respecting it, then, would be that it would excite greater reverence and love towards Him who so mercifully bestowed it.
(2) All prosperity gives greater prosperity and enjoyment, and demands a greater return in thanksgiving and sacrifice.
2. It is a true assertion, as history and experience infallibly prove.
(1) When men have prosperity, they get engrossed with their possessions.
(2) When men have prosperity, they get satisfied with what they possess. This makes them refuse the invitations and solicitations of God. (Homilist.)
Danger of prosperity
The long reign of Philip of Macedon–over forty years–witnessed the great decadence of the Hellenic Empire. When he came to the throne she was still a strong empire, full of fairest prospects. But he was one of those characters that are only kept within the bounds of good sense and justice by the sternest adversity. As soon as he found himself safe, his idleness, his tempers and lusts broke out. It was a misfortune both to himself and the world that he was not obliged, Like his predecessors, to recover by arms the kingdom to which he had succeeded by right. Prosperity enervated him; adversity would have braced him. (H. O. Mackay.)
How Gods voice is drowned
On entering a mill the noise of the machinery stunned and bewildered me. The owner of the mill explained the various processes as we went on, but it was a dumb show to me, I heard nothing. Suppose when I came out I had been asked whether the gentleman spoke to me during my visit and I had replied No! would it have been true? Certainly not. He spoke but I did not hear. His voice was drowned in the surrounding noise. And so it is with thousands of those around us. God speaks to them, but His voice is drowned in the hubbub by which they are surrounded. They are awakened in the morning with the postmans knock, and before they have time for a though about God or eternity the noise of their own mill is all around them; before the letters are finished the morning papers arrive, and the roar of the world is added to the sound which already existed, and henceforth it is whirl and excitement till evening. (Charles Garrett.)
This hath been thy manner from thy youth.
Youthful habits retained
I. Habits formed in youth generally continue in future life. This applies to those–
1. Whose Life is given to the luxury of pleasure.
2. Who pass the season of youth in gross vices.
(1) Sabbath breaker.
(2) Profaner.
(3) Drunkard.
3. Equally relevant to vices of the mind.
(1) Selfishness.
(2) Pride.
(3) Malignity.
4. So also as regards their attitude towards religion.
(1) Those who pass their youth in a merely formal regard to the external duties of religion usually become formalists.
(2) Those who practise guile and deceit become hypocritical.
(3) Those who in youth slight the Gospel, in old age are seen to be unfeeling and hardened.
(4) Those who are sceptical frequently become confirmed infidels.
II. Custom in any course generally issues in confirmed habits.
1. The commencement of a course in life is often attended with a struggle and with difficulties.
2. But continuance in a course renders habits congenial and easy.
III. Solemn cautions and exhortations.
1. Cautions. Guard against slighting–
(1) Parental instruction.
(2) The Gospel.
(3) The Sabbath.
(4) Avoid ungodly companions.
2. Exhortations.
(1) Accustom yourself to consider your accountability to God.
(2) Study the sacred Book, by which your future should be directed.
(3) Decide early in favour of religion. (Anon.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 21. I spake unto thee in thy prosperity] In all states and circumstances I warned thee by my prophets; and thou wilt only be ashamed of thy conduct when thou shalt be stripped of all thy excellencies, and reduced to poverty and disgrace, Jer 22:22.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
I, by my prophets, spake to thee while all things went well with thee, so as thou hast not sinned ignorantly or without warning; I have not surprised thee with my judgments, but thou refusedst to hearken and obey my admonitions and precepts. From the time that I brought thee out of the land of Egypt, thou hast been thus a rebellious people.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
21. I admonished thee in time.Thy sin has not been a sin of ignorance or thoughtlessness, butwilful.
prosperitygiven theeby Me; yet thou wouldest not hearken to the gracious Giver. TheHebrew is plural, to express, “In the heightof thy prosperity”; so “droughts” (Isa58:11).
thou saidstnot inwords, but in thy conduct, virtually.
thy youthfrom the timethat I brought thee out of Egypt, and formed thee into a people(Jer 7:25; Jer 2:2;Isa 47:12).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
I spake unto thee in thy prosperity,…. Or “prosperities”, or “tranquillities” y; when in their greatest affluence, in the height of it; this he did, when he sent to them his servants the prophets, as the Targum, and by them exhorted, reproved, and advised them:
[but] thou saidst, I will not hear; this was the language of their hearts and actions, though not of their mouths:
this [hath been] thy manner from thy youth; from the time they came out of Egypt, and first became a church and body politic; while they were in the wilderness; or when first settled in the land of Canaan: this was the infancy of their state; and from that time it was their manner and custom to reject the word of the Lord, and turn a deaf ear to it:
that thou obeyest not my voice; in his law, and by his prophets.
y “in tranquillitatibus fuis”, Vatablus, Cocceius, Schmidt; “felicitatibus tuis”, Pagninus; “securitatibus tuis”, Montanus.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Here God shews that the people were worthy of the reward he had mentioned, even to mourn and to seek aid on every side without finding any. It, indeed, often happens that the excessive severity of a husband alienates his wife from his society; and when a husband, through want of thought, attends to other things and neglects his domestic affairs, and thus his wife goes astray; or when he connives at things when he sees his wife exposed to dangerous allurements and flatteries, the fault is in part to be ascribed to him. But God shews here that he had performed the duties of a good and faithful husband, and also that it was not his fault that the people did not perform their part.
I spoke to thee, he says; that is, thou canst not say that thou hast gone astray through ignorance; for they who are proved guilty are wont to flee to this kind of excuse, — “I did not think; had I been warned, I would have attended to good advice; but on slippery ground it is easy to fall, especially when no one stretches forth his hand to give any help.” But God takes away here every pretext of this kind, and says, that he had spoken; as though he had said, “I warned thee in time; thou hast not then sinned through ignorance or want of thought.” In short, God condemns here the perverseness of the people, that they knowingly and wilfully abandoned themselves to every kind of wickedness. Now this passage deserves special notice; for we see that it is a twofold crime, when God in due time speaks to us and calls us to the right way, and we refuse to hear; for our wickedness is inexcusable when we suffer not ourselves to be corrected by him.
I spoke to thee, he adds, in thy tranquillity By this circumstance also their crime is aggravated; for God not only by his Prophets made known to his people what was right, but had also, by his blessing, conciliated them to himself. For when a husband counsels his wife, and is at the same time austere or peevish, his wife will disregard whatever she may hear, for her mind will be preoccupied with dislike; but when a husband treats his wife kindly, and proves by his benevolence the love he entertains for her, and at the same time shews prudence in his conduct towards her, she must necessarily be of a very bad disposition if she is not moved by such advice, kindness, and benevolence on the part of her husband. Now, God shews here that he had sent Prophets in order to keep his people in the faithful discharge of their duties, and that he had also been kind and bountiful to them, that thereby they might be sweetly drawn to obey him. Therefore, by the word “tranquillity,” the Prophet sets forth God’s kindness and bounty towards his people. (60)
It is, indeed, true what Moses says, that men are like mettlesome and wanton horses when they become fat. (Deu 32:15.) So fatness and tranquillity have such effect as to render us more refractory. Yet this cannot avail for an excuse when God kindly invites us, and connects with his doctrine kind and paternal benevolence, and confirms it by the effects when we are teachable and yield him willing obedience. Thus the Prophet closed the mouths of the Jews, for they would have sought probably to make this objection, — that vengeance was too vehemently denounced on them, and that God suddenly assailed them; but he shews that when in tranquillity and prosperity they might have acknowledged God’s paternal kindness, they had yet been rebellious and had abused the indulgence of God.
I spoke to thee, he says, in thy tranquillity, and thou didst say, I will not hear It is not, indeed, probable that the Jews had spoken so insolently as to say openly and in such plain words, that they would not be obedient; but the Prophet regards their life and not their words. Though, then, the Jews did not express these words, — that they would not obey God; yet such language might have been clearly inferred from their conduct, for they were so perverse as not to render obedience to God and to his counsels.
He adds, in the third place, that it had been the custom of the people from their childhood not to hear the voice of God. It is the height of impiety when we are not only refractory for one day or a short time, but when we pursue wickedness continually. God in the meantime intimates that he had from the beginning been solicitous for the safety of his people, but in vain. It sometimes happens that he who has become hardened in his vices, begins to be taught after the thirtieth or fortieth: year, but he is not very pliable; for men become hard by long usage; we see that old men are less teachable than the young; and why? because age in a manner makes them sturdy, so that they cannot bear to be turned and ruled. But God shews here, that such was the wickedness of his people, that they had been rebellious from their childhood; as though he had said, “Thou canst not make this excuse, that thou hast been for a long time without a teacher that thou hast been without any wisdom and understanding, and that on this account thou hast become hardened in evils; no, because I have found thee wholly unteachable from thy very childhood; it was thy custom, or manner, not to hear my voice,” or, “This has been thy custom, that thou didst not hear my voice; ” literally, “because thou didst not hear my voice; ” but it ought to be rendered as above, for כי , is not here a connective, but all expletive or an exegetical particle. (61) It follows, —
(60) The word for tranquillity is in the plural number, “tranquillities,” meaning tranquil, or quiet times or seasons. It is rendered “fall,” very unaccountably, by the Sept.; “abundance,” by the Vulg.; “affluence,” by the Syr.; “when thou didst sit tranquil,” by the Targ. But the word clearly means a tranquil, quiet, or peaceable state. Blayney rightly renders the expression, “in the times of thy tranquillity.” — Ed.
(61) The כי is omitted in the Sept., and the clause is given as in apposition with the former, which seems to be the meaning; “the way” was not to hear God’s voice. Blayney, very unsuitably, connects the last line with the following verse. I render the verse thus, —
21. I spoke to thee in thy quiet times; Thou didst say, “I will not hear:” This has been thy way from thy childhood; For thou didst not hear my voice.
It has been usual with many to render “hear,” “obey;” but not rightly. The complaint against the people was, that they would not “hear” the voice of God, much less obey it. The answer here was that they would not “hear.” The complaint, or the charge against them is the same, and the verb ought to be so rendered. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(21) In thy prosperity.Literally, prosperities. The word is used, as in Pro. 1:32; Eze. 16:49; Psa. 30:6, in reference to what in old English was called security, the careless, reckless temper engendered by outward prosperity. The plural is used to include all the forms of that temper that had been manifested in the course of centuries.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
21. Thy prosperity Literally, prosperities; that is, times of prosperity, or possibly the many conditions which go to make up prosperity.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Jer 22:21 I spake unto thee in thy prosperity; [but] thou saidst, I will not hear. This [hath been] thy manner from thy youth, that thou obeyedst not my voice.
Ver. 21. I spake unto thee in thy prosperity. ] Heb., In thy prosperities, or tranquillities. Prosperity rendereth men refractory. Demetrius called a peaceable and prosperous life a dead sea; because, being not tossed with any considerable troubles, it slayeth the simple, as Solomon hath it. Pro 1:32 Men are usually best when worst, and worst when best: like the snake which, when frozen, lieth quiet and still, but waxing warm, stirreth and stingeth. The parable of the sun and the wind is known, Anglica gens est optima flens et pessima ridens. The English people are best crying and worst laughing. Some of those who, in Queen Mary’s days, kept their garments close about them, wore them afterwards more loosely. It is as hard to bear prosperity, as to drink much wine and not be giddy. It is, at least, as strong waters to a weak stomach; which, however they do not intoxicate, yet they weaken the brain: plus deceptionis semper habet quam delectationis; it always has greater deception then amusments, it is able to entice, and ready to kill the entangled. In rest we contract rust; neither are men’s ears opened to hear instruction but by correction. Job 33:16 God holdeth us to hard meat, that he may be true to oar souls. Psa 119:75
This hath been thy manner from thy youth.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
prosperity. Hebrew, plural of majesty = thy great prosperity.
obeyedst not = hearkenedst not to.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
I spake: Jer 2:31, Jer 6:16, Jer 35:15, Jer 36:21-26, 2Ch 33:10, 2Ch 36:16, 2Ch 36:17, Pro 30:9
prosperity: Heb. prosperities
This: Jer 3:25, Jer 7:22-28, Jer 32:30, Deu 9:7, Deu 9:24, Deu 31:27, Deu 32:15-20, Jdg 2:11-19, Neh 9:16-37, Psa 106:6-48, Isa 48:8, Eze 20:8, Eze 20:13, Eze 20:21, Eze 20:28, Eze 23:3-39
Reciprocal: Psa 119:67 – Before Jer 25:4 – ye Jer 31:19 – I did Zep 3:2 – obeyed
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
THE PERILS OF PROSPERITY
I spake unto thee in thy prosperity; but thou saidst, I will not hear. This hath been thy manner from thy youth, that thou obeyedst not My voice.
Jer 22:21
Nine centuries after Moses day the prophet of the broken heart utters the Divine complaintI spake to thee in thy prosperity; but thou saidst, I will not hear. The latest generation is linked to the earliest by the sad indictmentThis hath been thy manner from thy youth, that thou obeyedst not My voice. It is a record of going steadily from bad to worse. Your fathers have forsaken Me, and ye have done worse than your fathers. Therefore I will cast you out of this land into a land where I will not shew you favour (Jer 16:11-13). The lessons suggested by the national history of Israel are a message to our own nation to-day. But it is into the narrower area of individual life that I wish to gather the teaching of the text. Does not every man need to be warned of the dereligionising power of prosperity? May not all men be roughly divided into three classes: (1) those who have been prosperous; (2) those who are so; (3) those who desire and endeavour to become so? The gospel of getting on is everywhere popular and palatable. And, under limitations, God means and helps us to get on. The Gospel is in the interests of comfort and prosperity. Godliness has promise of the life that now is. No good thing will He withhold from them that walk uprightly. And it ought to be so with us, that every good gift, every fresh token of Gods fatherly love should remind us of the Giver, and bind us anew to His service. But, alas! experience teaches that the tendency of prosperity is to make men forget God. We are likely to be more devout when we are hungry than when we have eaten and are full. Grace before meat comes more readily to our lips than grace after meat.
I. There is great danger of prosperity making us proud.Instead of remembering that it is God who giveth us power to get wealth, there is the constant temptation to say, My power and the might of my hand hath gotten me this wealth, (Deu 8:17-18). Ezekiel reminds the captives by the river Chebar that the pride and haughtiness of Sodom had been associated with fulness of bread. Thine own is apt to become mine own in thought and word. I will pull down my barns and build greater; and there I will bestow all my fruits and my goods. Is it surprising that the aged Paul, writing to his young colleague, re-opens his already finished letter to add another solemn charge on this very subject? Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not highminded, nor trust in uncertain riches (1Ti 6:17). The prosperous self-made man is likely to become so self-confident as to make no account of Providence. His social superiors are respectful, his equals are deferential, his inferiors are obsequious. He finds wealth to be a golden key, opening doors into places of honour and trust. The aristocrat is more likely to be deficient in money-power and brain-power. He has oftener an emptier purse and a more retreating forehead than the shrewd, energetic, persevering plutocrat. Is there not even something of the God-forgetting spirit in the common phrase, a self-made man? And yet it is just such an one who needs the reminder, What hast thou which thou hast not received? How frequent the sight of a prosperous man ignoring the friends and companions of his earlier and humbler days; becoming ashamed of the poor and uncultured parents, whose self-denying toil first lifted him to a round of the social ladder, higher than that on which they are left to stand; exchanging the humble meeting-house, with its bald, unsthetic worship, for a fashionable church, where the forms of worship and social status of the worshippers are accessories of a religion more fit for a gentleman.
II. Another peril incident to prosperity is worldliness.What is worldliness? Here is a recent answerWant of spiritual sympathy, spiritual perception, spiritual taste, spiritual power. The seen and temporal becomes everything, the unseen and eternal nothing. The gradual growth of wealth too often means the gradual eclipse of the face of God. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. Devotion to material interests tends to renunciation of spiritual aims, means becoming a man of the world, who has his portion in this life. Here, then, emerges the problem of the Christian life to those engaged in trade and commerce. Engagement is likely to become immersion. The godly business man cannot help being thrown into commercial relations with secular men, to whom God and heaven are nothing but words. The reflex influence of the ungodly on the good is to make the latter insensibly set too much store on earthly possessions. In such a chilling atmosphere fervent young Christians tone down to lukewarmness, and give less and less of time and labour to personal Christian service. Little by little, first by a kind of necessity, then by habit, and at last by choice, the world draws them, broken-winged, down to its own level, and they fly no more. Bunyans Man with the Muck-rake could look no way but downwards. Not that poverty is free from perils. Among the well-to-do there may be fewer theoretical unbelievers than among the poor, but there are likely to be more who show by their conduct that to them the spiritual world is a mere fancy. To walk with God, to set affection on things above, to lay up treasure in heavenon whose ears are these counsels most likely to fall unheeded? On the ears of those who have eaten and are full of earths good. There we shall often discover no spiritual appetite, no hunger and thirst after righteousness. It was the better class who refused to come to the feast (Mat 22:5-6). It was the wealthy church of Laodicea which was profoundly unconscious of its spiritual destitution (Rev 3:17). Busy with the straws and small sticks and dust of the floor, Muck-rake had no eyes for the celestial crown in the angels hand. A humbling picture, is it not? Yes, but, alas! it is drawn from the life.
III. A third peril attaching to prosperity is selfishness.The increase of wealth is likely to be associated with a decrease in the spirit of beneficence. The social indifferentist is too common among the well-to-do. In the Mosaic system this was guarded against. Provision was made for supplying the needs of the stranger, and the fatherless, and the widow. But the writings of the prophets frequently testify how grossly these Divine injunctions were violated. Even where the rich and poor dwelt together they became separated by the gulf of social disdain and cynical indifference. Are there not ominous symptoms of the same disastrous separation between rich and poor in our own time? Those who prosper in the world are tempted to withdraw from the saddening sights and bitter cries of the destitute and the neglected, to the suburbs or the country. Suburbanism, doubtless, has its advantages; but one of its greatest drawbacks is the inevitable weakening of the social bond that ought to unite the prosperous and the poor.
Illustration
The purse cannot answer the commandGo, work in My vineyard. Our Divine Exemplar shared our lot, and gave Himself for us. And as greed can only be kept in check by generous giving, so selfishness can only be crushed by personal service rendered in the spirit of the brothers keeper. Better than wealth given away are the gifts for men, which consist in gracious, tender sympathy, in love, and in tears. Here is the secret of escape from the enchanted circle with which selfishness surrounds us. Gold must be given, doubtless, but so must individual effort, so must the sympathy which alone can come from personal contact.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Jer 22:21. In thy prosperity means the Lord gave his people full warning during the time when all things were going well with the nation. Had they heeded the instruction at that time they could have avoided the humiliation of the captivity.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Jer 22:21. I spake unto thee in thy prosperity Spake by my servants the prophets, in reproofs, admonitions, counsels; but thou saidst, I will not hear Didst manifest by thy conduct that thou wouldest not obey. Such is too often the effect of prosperity. It puffs men up with pride and high-mindedness, and makes them despise the word of God, thinking themselves too wise to stand in need of advice, and therefore they defer attending to it, till they are in extremities, when it becomes of little or no benefit to them. The word , however, which we translate prosperity, properly signifies security, and may be spoken of the false security in which the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem lived in times when they were threatened with the most grievous calamities, and which had been denounced to them by the prophets, from the time of Hezekiah on account of the idolatries and various other acts of wickedness of their kings and people; who nevertheless continued in their vices without any amendment. This hath been thy manner from thy youth From thy being first formed into a people. See the margin.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
When Jerusalem was prosperous, in the days of David and Solomon, the Lord had appealed to the people to obey His covenant, but they would not listen. That had been their practice since early in their history as a nation.