Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 23:10
For the land is full of adulterers; for because of swearing the land mourneth; the pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up, and their course is evil, and their force [is] not right.
10. Of the two clauses containing the words “the land,” the first is probably a corruption of the second, as accidentally repeated by a copyist, or as a gloss on a blurred text, suggested perhaps by Jer 23:14. It is not found in LXX, while Gi. would further omit “the pastures dried up.”
adulterers ] either literally, or in the secondary sense of idolatry. Cp. Jer 3:8 f.
swearing ] better, with mg. the curse, viz. the drought described in the next clause, if this last be not (so Gi.) an insertion, suggested perhaps by Jer 12:4. The LXX, however, without any change in the Heb. consonants, vocalised the word as these things.
course ] lit. running.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Because of swearing – Rather, because of the curse denounced against sin Jer 11:3. The mourning probably refers to the drought Jer 12:4.
The pleasant places – Pastures.
Their course – Their mode of life.
Their force is not right – Their heroism, that on which they pride themselves as mighty men, is not right, is wrong (see Jer 8:6 note).
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 10. The land is full of adulterers] Of idolaters. Of persons who break their faith to ME, as an impure wife does to her husband.
The pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up] He speaks here, most probably, in reference to dearth. Profane oaths, false swearing, evil courses, violence, c., had provoked God to send this among other judgments see Jer 23:19.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Under that term
adulterers all species of uncleanness are comprehended.
Because of swearing the land mourneth; by false swearing, or by idle and profane swearing, the land is brought to ruin. The word signifies also a curse or cursing. Many good interpreters judge that the more genuine sense and true translation of this text were, for because of the curse (that is, the curse of God) the land is brought to that misery which is coming upon it.
The pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up; the pastures of the wilderness, or of the plain, for so the word is rendered, Isa 63:13; Lam 4:19. The wrath of God was extended to all places, whether more or less inhabited.
Their course is evil, and their force is not right; the prophets did not only err in single acts, but the whole course of their actions was naught, and particularly their power, rule, and government was not right. If any say, What were the prophets concerned in the peoples wickedness?
Answ. They were profane as well as the people, as we shall find, Jer 23:11; but besides this, the people were thus vile through their connivance; they did not warn the people of their sins, but soothed them up in their wicked courses, and so were the cause of the peoples wickedness, who had not been so vile but for them.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
10. adulterersspiritual, thatis, forsakers of God, Israel’s true Husband (Isa54:5) for idols, at the instigation of the false “prophets”(Jer 23:9; Jer 23:15).Literal adultery and fornication, the usual concomitants ofidolatry, are also meant.
swearingMAURER,c., translate, “Because of the curse (of God on it), the landmourneth” (Deu 27:15-26Deu 28:15-68; Isa 24:6).More than usual notoriety had been given to the curses of the law, bythe finding and reading of it in Josiah’s time (2Ki22:11, c.). But Hos 4:2Hos 4:3, favors EnglishVersion (compare Jer 12:4).A drought was sent by God on the pastures (“pleasant places,”oases) in the desert, on account of the “profaneness” ofthe priests, prophets, and people (Jer23:11).
course . . . evilThey(both prophets and people) rush into wickedness (Jer 23:21;Isa 59:7).
force . . . not rightTheirpowers are used not on the side of rectitude, but onthat of falsehood.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For the land is full of adulterers,…. Of such as were guilty of corporeal adultery, and of spiritual adultery, which is idolatry. Now, though in this, and in the following verses, the prophet describes the men of his generation, both ecclesiastics and laics; yet also so as to have regard to the Jews in the times of Christ, to which this prophecy has respect; between whom there was a great resemblance; adulteries were so frequent in Christ’s time, that the Jews left off the use of the bitter waters n; and our Lord sometimes calls the generation in which he lived an adulterous one, Mt 12:39;
for because of swearing the land mourneth; because of false swearing and cursing; because of the oaths and imprecations of men; or because of the curse of God, for the sins of men, the land was desert or desolate, as the Targum; it became barren and unfruitful, the land of Judea; just as the earth was cursed for the sin of man originally; though it seems rather to signify perjury or false swearing, which, and adultery, were the reigning vices of the age; see Mt 5:33;
the pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up; or the pastures of the wilderness, where cattle used to feed, were dried up for want of rain, and so were unfruitful, and produced no grass for the beasts of the field:
and yet their course is evil; the course of their ministry or prophesying was bad; and the course of their lives and conversations was one continued series of iniquity; the race they ran, both prophet and people, was a wicked one; they ran and made haste to commit sin; though a professing people, their conversation was according to “the course of this world”, Eph 2:2; and not according to the rule of God’s word:
and their force [is] not right; or, “is not so” o; as it ought to be, or employed in the manner it should: the power and authority of the prophets over the people was not used, as it might have been, for the preserving of the people from sin; nor their courage and valour shown for truth, as it ought to have been; and they used their power to hurt and oppress, and not to relieve and help: so the Pharisees in Christ’s time laid heavy burdens on others, but would not move them themselves; and, through a pretence of devotion, devoured widows’ houses,
Mt 23:4. So some render the words here, “and their violence is not right” p; their rapine and oppression were very unjust; so that, besides adultery and swearing, they are charged with violence in particular, and with a wicked course of life in general.
n Misn. Sota, c. 9. sect. 9. o “non sic”, Montanus; “dissimilis”, V. L. p “violentia eorum”. So the margin of our Bible.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Jeremiah now assigns the reason why he was so much horrified by the insensibility which he observed in the prophets. If things were in good order, or if, at least, they were tolerable, the prophets would have more calmly addressed the Jews; for what need is there to make a great ado when men willingly follow what God commands? When, therefore, we have to do with meek and modest men, vehemence is foolish; and they who thus bestir themselves, and seek, through great ambition, to shew very fervid zeal when there is no need, are nothing but apes; but when things are in disorder and confusion, then vehemence is wanted. Jeremiah now declares that things were so extremely out of order, that the prophets could not have been silent, except they were like logs of wood.
These two things, then, ought to be connected together, — that the prophets were dumb, — and that they were dumb when there was the greatest necessity for speaking; for they saw the land filled with adulteries. Though he names adulterers, he yet condemns the crime. As then the land was polluted by adulteries and perjuries, as they all gave themselves up to do evil, it was by no means to be tolerated that the prophets should not be indignant, as though things were well ordered and peaceable.
We hence see how much God abhors sloth in the ministers of his word, in those whom he appoints as teachers in his Church, while they connive at wickedness, and heedlessly pass by adulteries, and fornications, and perjuries, and frauds, and other kinds of wrongs; for if there were even the least particle of religion in their hearts, they would certainly have been moved, and could not have been for a moment silent. For if that zeal ought to be in all God’s children, which was in the Psalmist,
“
The zeal of thine house has consumed me, and the reproaches of them who reproached thee have fallen upon me,” (Psa 69:10,)
how inexcusable must be the indifference of prophets, when they see God’s name exposed to mockery, and when they see every kind of wickedness prevailing? We now see not only what the Prophet teaches in this passage, but also the usefulness of his doctrine and how it ought to be applied. Let us then learn, that the more liberty men take in sinning, and the more audaciously their impiety and contempt of God break out, the more sharply ought prophets and faithful teachers to reprove and condemn them; and that it is the time of fighting, when the world thus presumptuously and furiously rise up against God.
The Prophet mentions some kinds of evil, and yet does not enumerate all kinds; but under adulteries and perjuries he includes also other crimes. As to the word אלה, ale, it properly means swearing; but as cursing often accompanies it, some render it here “execration.” (88) But I rather think that what is meant is perjury, and that swearing here is taken in a bad sense, signifying swearing falsely in the name of God.
Mourned, he says, has the land, and dried up have the pastures of the desert Here the Prophet strikingly shews how shameful was that torpor of which he speaks, for the land itself cried out, and not only the land which was cultivated and had on it many men, but also the very mountains and their recesses. He says that the land was in mourning, because God shewed his judgments everywhere by rendering the fields barren, and by other means which he used as punishments. And it is a very striking mode of speaking, when the Prophet mentions the mourning of the land, as though it assumed the character of a mourner, when it saw God angry on account of the wickedness of men. It is, indeed, a kind of personification, though he does not introduce the land as speaking; but he describes mourning as it appeared in the sterility of the land, and also in hails and storms, in unseasonable rains, in droughts, and in other calamities.
Whenever then God raises his hand to punish men for their sins, if they themselves perceive it not, the very land, which is without sense and feeling, ought to fill them with shame for their madness; for mourning appears in the very land, as though it knew that God was displeased with it. When, therefore, men sleep in their sins, and thus disregard God’s vengeance, how monstrous must be their torpor! And if this be intolerable in the common people, what can be said of the prophets, who ought to proclaim such words as these, — “Cursed is he who has transgressed the precepts of this law” — “ cursed is he who has corrupted the worship of God” — or, “who hath dealt unjustly with his neighbor,” — and whatever else the law contains? (Deu 27:26; Deu 28:47.) We now then perceive how emphatical are the words when the Prophet says, Mourned has the land And he amplifies the same thing by saying, Dried up have the beautiful places of the desert; as though he had said, that God’s judgments were seen in the remotest places, not only in the plains, where the greater number of men dwelt, did the land mourn; but if any one ascended the mountains, where shepherds only with their flocks were to be found, even there the wrath of God was visible; and the very mountains cried out that God was angry; and yet men still deluded themselves, who, at the same time were expounders of the law, who were the mouth of God, and to whom he had committed the office of reproving; but they were dumb! We now understand what these words contain, and what is to be learnt from them.
He adds, that their course was evil, (89) and that their strength was not right By course he no doubt means their doings and all their actions, and also the aid which they proposed to themselves; for our life is called a course, because God has not created us that we may lie down in one place, but he has set before us an end for which we are to live. Therefore, by course, the Scripture means all our doings, and the very end for which we are to live. He then says, that all their strength had been perverted; that is, that they had applied all their powers to do evil. It then hence appears that, except the prophets had been perfidious, they would have thought it full time to cry out, when men provoked God with so much audacity in their wicked courses. It follows —
(88) The early Versions and the Targum differ as to this word: the Sept., the Syr., and the Arab. have “on account of these,” that is, adulterers; the Vulg.,” on account of a curse,” that is of God; the Targ., “on account of false swearing.” Blayney says, that there is nothing here about swearing, and renders the words “because of these:” but the 14 verse (Jer 23:14) decides the question, where we have “adultery” and “walking in lies,” ascribed to the same persons, the prophets. That, אלה means sometimes “false swearing,” is evident from Hos 4:2; and in Hos 10:4, we have the word “falsely” added to it. Their false swearing was their unfaithfulness to God’s covenant, their apostasy in worshipping idols. And the charge of being “adulterers” seems to refer to their spiritual adultery — their idolatry, and not as Calvin and others think, to that which is natural. Everything in the context favors this view; their wickedness was found in God’s house, verse 11 (Jer 23:11); and a comparison is made between them and the Samaritan prophets, verse 14 (Jer 23:14). The construction of this verse leads us to the same conclusion: when two כי occur in succession, as here, they may be rendered as and so, —
As the land has been filled with adulterers, So for false swearing has the land mourned, Withered have the pastures of the wilderness; And their course has become calamitous, And their strength not firm, (that is, to run their course.)
Houbigant and Horsley have re-arranged the whole verse, and made several transpositions. Had these learned men for a moment reflected how such delocations of words, as they suppose, could have taken place, they would have, no doubt, restrained their innovating propensities. — Ed.
(89) That the word means “course,” is evident from Jer 8:6, where it can have no other meaning. So it is rendered by the Sept. and the Vulg. Blayney gives it another meaning.
Their will also hath been wickedness, And their might without right.
He derives it from רצה, to choose, and not from ריף, run: but the sense of the last line is hardly discernible. — Ed
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(10) The land is full of adulterers.The context shows that the words must be taken literally, and not of the spiritual adultery of the worship of other Gods. The false prophets and their followers were personally profligates, like those of 2Pe. 2:14. (Comp. Jer. 5:7-8; Jer. 29:23.)
Because of swearing.Better, because of the cursei.e., that which comes from Jehovah on account of the wickedness of the people.
The land mourneth.This, and the drying up of the pleasant places or pastures, refers apparently to the drought described in Jer. 12:4; Jer. 14:2, or to some similar visitation.
Their course.Literally, their runningi.e., their way or mode of life.
Their force is not right.Literally, their might or their valour: that in which they exulted was might, not right.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
10. Adulterers Taken literally as a specimen-aspect of the prevalent immorality.
Because of swearing Rather, because of the curse.
Mourneth Literally, withereth.
Their force is not right That is, their prowess is on the side of wrong.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Jer 23:10. For because off swearing Houbigant renders this, Whose course is to evil, whose strength is to iniquity; therefore the land mourneth, and the pastures of the desart are dried up. See his note. Others read, Before the face of the curse the land mourneth. Full of corrupted and idolatrous men, of false prophets, who dishonour God by their lies, and people who dishonour him by their worship of false gods, the whole land is become subject to his curse, and, as it were, mourneth and lamenteth under his displeasure. Others understand the expression because of swearing, to mean perjury, or swearing by the false gods.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Jer 23:10 For the land is full of adulterers; for because of swearing the land mourneth; the pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up, and their course is evil, and their force [is] not right.
Ver. 10. For the land is full of adulterers. ] It is even become a great brothel house, as sometimes Cyprus was, and as Rome is now said to be:
“ Tota est iam Roma lupanar. ”
“Now Rome is entirely a brothel.”
For because of swearing (or cursing) the land mourneth.] Swearers and cursers, then, are public enemies, traitors to the State. The Jews observe that Beershaba signifies, The well of oath; and Beersaba, The well of plenty. Sure we are that for oaths the land mourneth; of which there is such store, as if men, by an easy mistake of the point, used to draw and drop them, as it were, out of the well of plenty.
And the pleasant places.
And their course is evil.
And their force is not right.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
their: i.e. the false prophets.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
full: Jer 5:7, Jer 5:8, Jer 7:9, Jer 9:2, Eze 22:9-11, Hos 4:2, Hos 4:3, Mal 3:5, 1Co 6:9, 1Co 6:10, Gal 5:19-21, Heb 13:4, Jam 4:4
because: Zec 5:3, Zec 5:4, 1Ti 1:10
swearing: Heb. cursing
the land: Jer 12:3, Jer 12:4, Jer 14:2, Lam 1:2-4, Joe 1:10
the pleasant: Jer 9:10, Psa 107:34, Isa 24:6
course: or, violence
Reciprocal: Isa 5:18 – draw Jer 4:28 – the earth Jer 12:11 – it mourneth Act 21:35 – for Eph 2:2 – walked according
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Jer 23:10. Doubtless there were many men in Judah who were adulterers in the physical sense, but the charge has special reference to idolatry, which was always classed as adultery. Swear- itiff is from a word that also means a curse, and here refers to the curse that the unfaithful prophets have brought on the land. The evil conditions named are somewhat prophetic and refer especially to what is destined to come upon the land as a chastisement from God.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Jer 23:10. For the land is full of adulterers Under this term, which properly respects those who violate the marriage-bed, persons offending by any species of uncleanness are comprehended, as also such as by fraud and falsehood circumvented others, and tempted them to join in the commission of those illicit actions which implied breach of faith and duty toward God. Because of swearing the land mourneth By swearing here, it seems, is not only meant false swearing, or perjury, but also profane and idle swearing, or taking the name of God in vain. Compare this verse with Hos 4:2. The Hebrew word, , signifies indifferently swearing or cursing. The Jewish forms of adjuration, used in their courts of justice for the discovery of the truth, had usually an imprecation joined to them; and the prophets words here may import, that men ventured to forswear themselves, and incur the imprecation implied in an oath, rather than discover the truth in cases wherein they were called upon to be witnesses. The land is said to mourn when it is afflicted with drought, barrenness, or any other uncommon calamity. And the swearing here spoken of is represented by the prophet as one of those crying sins for which God had visited the nation with these and other severe judgments. And the sins here mentioned, which abounded so much among the people, were in a great measure owing to the bad example and corrupt doctrine of the priests and prophets. See Jer 23:11-15. The pleasant places, or the pastures, of the wilderness Or, of the plain, as the words may be properly rendered; are dried up The wrath of God is extended to all places, whether more or less inhabited. See note on Jer 12:4. And their course is evil, &c. This seems to be intended of the prophets and priests, to whom this discourse is chiefly directed, (see Jer 23:9-11,) and it implies that they not only erred in single acts, but that the whole course of their actions was evil, and particularly their power, rule, and government. For they both made use of ill arts to establish their authority over the people, and they employed it, not for the bettering, but rather for the corrupting of their manners.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
23:10 For the land is full of adulterers; for because of swearing the land mourneth; the pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up, and their {h} course is evil, and their force [is] not right.
(h) They run headlong to wickedness and seek vain help.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The false prophets were unfaithful to the Lord in their attachment to pagan deities. They were off course in their direction, and they were strong only in doing wrong. The evidence of their corruption was the curse that the land was experiencing for the people’s departing from the Mosaic Covenant. Baal was supposed to produce fertility, but worshipping him had only resulted in parched and barren land for Judah.