Therefore go thou, and read in the roll, which thou hast written from my mouth, the words of the LORD in the ears of the people in the LORD’s house upon the fasting day: and also thou shalt read them in the ears of all Judah that come out of their cities.
6. the fast day ] mg. a fast day, probably one specially appointed on account of the critical position of affairs ( Jer 36:9).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
The fasting day – A fasting day. Baruch was to wait for a proper opportunity Jer 36:9.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Jer 36:6
The fasting-day.
Symbolism of a fast
I. It exhibits the duty of a wise self-restraint or self-denial, in receiving the good gifts of heaven. What could more exactly typify this than the temporary withdrawing from innocent pleasure, and even from the proper nourishment of the frame? It is temporary, and not absolute; an occasion, and not a permanency; a suspension, and not a renunciation. It admonishes us by an example, and does not crush us by a law. It reminds us of the obligation of sobriety in the use of the world s offerings. It bids us reflect that it is good for us to break away at times from what is plentiful, contenting ourselves with what is scanty; and to interrupt the course of the enjoyments that only do not reproach us, in order to make room for higher satisfactions. It exhorts us to be frugal, to be watchful, to be provident. It enjoins to be temperate in all things, and to let our moderation be known to all men; to learn how to lack as well as how to abound; and to show to others and prove to ourselves how well we can resign what we would fain keep, and refrain from what we desire to do, controlling tongue and hand, wish and passion, at the call of any holy commandment.
2. It typifies our weak and subject condition. When we pause in the midst of our blessings, and put them at a distance for a while that we may see them the better, we remember how precarious is our hold upon them, and how easily what we dispense with for a day may be withdrawn from us for ever. Fulness may shrink. Strength and activity may be crippled. Resources heaped up ever so high may be scattered to the winds. Opportunity and desire may perish together. It is good to be impressed with this at intervals, though it would not be good to dwell upon it perpetually; for you make a man none the better by making him habitually sad.
3. It presents an image of the sorrows of the world. These are a part of our subjection, and a peculiar part. While it is foolish and ungrateful to anticipate trouble, every day having enough to do with its own; and it is one of the worst occupations we can engage in, to torment ourselves with unarrived calamities, and paint the white blank of the future with woe; yet it becomes thoughtful persons, and has no tendency to make them less thankful, to consider She evils of humanity. They may be thus preserved from presumption, thus guarded against surprises, thus furnished with a fellow-feeling for the sufferings of others, and thus better prepared for their own trial when God shall send it.
4. Fasting represents penitence. It does so on the principle already mentioned, since penitence is one kind of grief. It does so on another ground. When a man is thoroughly stricken with the sense of sin, and seeks to express that consciousness, he describes his unworthiness to receive the bounties of heaven by declining to partake of them. (N. L. Frothingham.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 6. Upon the fasting day] A day when multitudes of people would be gathered together from all parts to implore the mercy of God. This was a favourable time to read these tremendous prophecies.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
We do not read that Jeremiah was a prisoner in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, and therefore it is very uncertainly guessed in what sense he here saith he was shut up. Some think Jehoiakim had imprisoned him, or at least restrained him to his house, though we do not read of it. Others think he restrained himself; but in what sense he was shut up is not certain; that he was so is certain. He knew that God had not commanded his prophecies to be written for any other end, but that the people might have them recalled to their memories: he being not in a capacity himself at present to speak any thing to the people in so public a place, sendeth Baruch to do it in his stead, choosing for it a day of public fast; not the day of the yearly fast mentioned Lev 23:27, but on a fast day (of which we shall read more Jer 36:9) proclaimed by Jehoiakim, probably to avert the vengeance hanging over them from the Chaldeans, or rather from the drought. It was, undoubtedly, because of the concourse of people which the prophet knew would that day be in the temple that he chose that day, when some would be present from all parts of Judah.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
6. goon the following year(Jer 36:9).
fasting day(See Jer36:9). An extraordinary fast, in the ninth month (whereasthe fast on the great day of atonement was on the tenth day of theseventh month, Lev 16:29;Lev 23:27-32), appointed toavert the impending calamity, when it was feared Nebuchadnezzar,having in the year before (that is, the fourth of Jehoiakim), smittenPharaoh-necho at Carchemish, would attack Judea, as the ally of Egypt(2Ki 23:34; 2Ki 23:35).The fast was likely to be an occasion on which Jeremiah would findthe Jews more softened, as well as a larger number of them mettogether.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Therefore go thou, and read in the roll, which thou hast written from my mouth,…. The roll being finished, Baruch is ordered to read it, which was the end of writing it: and since the prophet could not go himself, he sends another in his room, to read
the words of the Lord in the ears of the people, in the Lord’s house,
upon the fasting day; the day of atonement; the great fast, which was on the tenth day of the seventh month, in the fourth year of Jehoiakim; and so a different time of reading from that in Jer 36:9. This was a very proper time to read it in, when the people were fasting and humbling themselves before the Lord; though some think this was a fast proclaimed by Jehoiakim, to avert the vengeance threatened by the Chaldean army:
and also thou shalt read them in the ears of all Judah that come out of their cities; to keep the feast of tabernacles; as they did five days after the fast, or day of atonement; and this seems to be the second reading of the roll enjoined.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Go thou, then, he says, and read in the volume The Prophet, in this case, was ready to incur any odium which might be, for he did not bid Baruch to relate by memory what he had heard from him, but ordered him to take the volume, and to read, as we shall hereafter see, what he had written. The Prophet then did not, in this instance, avoid danger, and put Baruch in his own place, but he expressly told him to read from the volume: What thou hast written, he says,from my mouth, and, what Jehovah has spoken, these things read thou to the people in the Temple, on a fasting day This day was chosen, first, because there was then a greater concourse of people, according to what immediately follows, for he was to read these things in the ears not only of the citizens, but also of the whole people; and on fast-days they were wont, as it is well known, to come in great numbers to the city for the purpose of sacrificing. It was then God’s purpose that these threatenings should be proclaimed, not only to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, but also to all other Jews, that the report of them might spread to every part of the land. In the second place, such a day was much more suitable to the message conveyed; for why was a fast enjoined, except humbly to supplicate God’s mercy, and to deprecate his wrath? As then this was the design of a fast, the Jews ought to have been then, as it were, in a submissive state of mind, prepared calmly to receive these threatenings, and to profit by them.
We then see that there were two reasons why the Prophet, by God’s command, fixed on this day, — first, because there was a larger number of people, — and, secondly, because a fast ought to have rendered them teachable, so that they might more readily submit to God, acknowledge their sins, and, being terrified, might also flee to God’s mercy, and thus loathe themselves on account of their sins. The rest tomorrow.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(6) In the Lords house upon the fasting day.Literally, a fast day. We learn from Jer. 36:9 that this was one of the special fasts proclaimed in times of national distress (comp. Joe. 2:1; 2Ch. 20:3-4; 1Ki. 21:10), and it was accordingly a time when the courts of the Temple would be more than usually thronged, and when, it might be hoped, the people gathered in them would be more than usually disposed to listen to warnings and exhortations to repentance. Probably, however, the king had proclaimed the fast by the advice of the priests and false prophets, to rouse the people to the holy war of an enthusiastic religious resistance to the Chaldeans, and this may account for the eagerness of Jeremiah to counteract the scheme by the unlooked-for sermon. The addition, and also thou shalt read them in the ears of all Judah, implies that Baruch was, if opportunity offered, to read the words of the prophecy on other occasions and to other gatherings of the people. The ordinary fast of the Day of Atonement was, it will be remembered, in the seventh monthi.e., October; this accordingly was in November or December. This agrees, it may be noted, with the charcoal fire which was burning in the kings chamber (Jer. 36:22).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
6. The fasting day The fast day mentioned in Jer 36:9 is here intended. This was not a stated, but an extraordinary, fast. It would be a favourable time in which to read the book, because a day of holy convocation and because a day of solemnity and humiliation.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Jer 36:6 Therefore go thou, and read in the roll, which thou hast written from my mouth, the words of the LORD in the ears of the people in the LORD’S house upon the fasting day: and also thou shalt read them in the ears of all Judah that come out of their cities.
Ver. 6. Therefore go thou, and read in the roll. ] A minister, when he cannot himself officiate, must provide another in his stead.
Which thou hast written from my mouth.
Upon the fasting day.
a Genebrard., Ex Menologio Hebraeor.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
the fasting day = a fast day. Being in the ninth month (Jer 36:9), it was not that prescribed in the Law, which was in the seventh month (Lev 16:29; Lev 23:27).
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
and read: Jer 36:8, Eze 2:3-7
the words: Jer 7:2, Jer 18:11, Jer 19:14, Jer 22:2, Jer 26:2
upon: Jer 36:9, Lev 16:29-31, Lev 23:27-32, Act 27:9
Reciprocal: Num 11:25 – they prophesied 2Ki 22:10 – Shaphan Jer 17:19 – General Jer 22:19 – General Jer 36:2 – a roll Jer 36:10 – Then Heb 11:36 – bonds
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Jer 36:6. Baruch was to select a day when some fast would be proclaimed because he would then have opportunity of meeting the people coming there to worship.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
36:6 Therefore go thou, and read in the scroll, which thou hast written from my mouth, the words of the LORD in the ears of the people in the LORD’S house upon the {e} day of fasting: and also thou shalt read them in the ears of all Judah that come out of their cities.
(e) Which was proclaimed for fear of the Babylonians, as their custom was when they feared war, or any great plague of God.