{"id":19186,"date":"2022-09-24T07:53:05","date_gmt":"2022-09-24T12:53:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-jeremiah-822\/"},"modified":"2022-09-24T07:53:05","modified_gmt":"2022-09-24T12:53:05","slug":"exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-jeremiah-822","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-jeremiah-822\/","title":{"rendered":"Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 8:22"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3 align='center'><b><i> [Is there] no balm in Gilead; [is there] no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered? <\/i><\/b><\/h3>\n<p> <strong> 22<\/strong>. <em> balm<\/em> ] For balsam (balm) as a product of Gilead, see <span class='bible'>Gen 37:25<\/span> and cp. <span class='bible'>Gen 43:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 27:17<\/span>. As, however, some doubt has been thrown on Gilead as a place producing balsam, it has been suggested (so Pe.) that the meaning is mastic tree resin, which was obtained there.<\/p>\n<p><em> Gilead<\/em> ] a mountainous part of Palestine, east of the Jordan, south of Bashan, and north of Moab.<\/p>\n<p><em> is there no physician there?<\/em> ] Is there no priest or prophet, who can heal the sin of Israel or apply a remedy?<\/p>\n<p><em> the health  recovered<\/em> ] rather, <em> the fresh flesh of the daughter of my people come up<\/em> (upon her), i.e. gradually forming by cicatrisation over a wound. See Dr., p. 352.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P STYLE=\"text-indent: 0.75em\"><B>No physician there &#8211; <\/B>i. e., in Gilead. Balm used to grow in Israel for the healing of the nations. Her priests and prophets were the physicians. Has Israel then no balm for herself? Is there no physician in her who can bind up her wound? Gilead was to Israel what Israel spiritually was to the whole world.<\/P> <P STYLE=\"text-indent: 0.75em\"><B>Why then is not the health &#8230; recovered? &#8211; <\/B>Or, why then has no bandage, or plaster of balsam, been laid upon my people?<\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Albert Barnes&#8217; Notes on the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span class='bible'>Jer 8:22<\/span><\/p>\n<p><em>Is there no balm in Gilead?<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered?<em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Physic from heaven<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>The balsam tree is a little shrub, never growing past the height of two cubits, and spreading like a vine. The tree is of an ash colour, the boughs small and tender, the leaves are like to rue. Pliny saith the tree is all medicinable: the chief virtue is in the juice, the second in the seed, the third in the rind, the last and weakest in the stock. It comforts both by tasting and smelling. This Holy Word is here called balm: and, if we may compare spiritual with natural things, they agree in many resemblances. We may call Gods Word that balm tree whereon the fruit of life grows; a tree that heals, a tree that helps; a tree of both medicament and nutriment; like the tree of life (<span class='bible'>Rev 22:2<\/span>). Neither is the fruit only nourishing, but even the leaves of the tree were for healing of the nations. Now though the balm here, whereunto the Word is compared, is more generally taken for the juice, now fitted and ready for application; yet, I see not why it may not so be likened, both for general and particular properties. The tree itself is the Word. We find the eternal Word so compared (<span class='bible'>Joh 15:1<\/span>). He is a tree, but the root of this tree is in heaven at was once made flesh, and dwelt among us, etc. (<span class='bible'>Joh 1:14<\/span>). Now He is in heaven. Only this Word still speaks unto us by His Word: the Word incarnate by the Word written; made sounding in the mouth of His ministers. This Word of His is compared and expressed by many metaphors, to leaven, for seasoning; to honey, for sweetening; to the hammer, for breaking the stony heart (<span class='bible'>Jer 23:29<\/span>). It is here a tree, a balm tree, a salving, a saving tree. Albumasar saith that the more medicinable a plant is, the less it nourisheth. But this tree makes a sick soul sound, and a whole one sounder. It is not only physic when men be sick, but meat when they be whole. It carries a seed with it, an immortal and incorruptible seed (<span class='bible'>1Pe 1:13<\/span>), which concurs to the begetting of a new man, the old dying away: for it hath power of both, to mortify the flesh, to revive the spirit (<span class='bible'>Mat 13:3<\/span>). Happy is the good ground of the heart that receives it! The juice is no less powerful to mollify the stony heart, and make it tender and soft, as a heart of flesh. The seed convinceth the understanding; the juice mollifieth the affections. All is excellent; but still, the root that yields this seed, this juice, is the power of God. A tree hath manifest to the eye, leaves, and flowers, and fruits; but the root, most precious, lies hidden. In all things we see the accidents, not the form, not the substance. There are but few that rightly taste the seed and the juice; but who hath comprehended the root of this balm?<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>It spreads. No sharp frosts, nor nipping blasts, nor chilling airs, nor drizzling sleet can mar the beauty or enervate the virtue of this spiritual tree. The more it is stopped, the further it groweth. The Jews would have cut down this tree at the root; the Gentiles would have lopped off the branches. They struck at Christ, these at His ministers; both struck short. If they killed the messenger, they could not reach the message. The blood of the martyrs, spilt at the root of this tree, did make it spread more largely.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>As it gives boughs spaciously, so fruit pregnantly, plentifully. The graces of God hang upon this tree in clusters (<span class='bible'>Son 1:14<\/span>). No hungry soul shall go away from this tree unsatisfied. It is an effectual Word, never failing of the intended success What Gods Word affirms His truth performs, whether it be judgment or mercy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>As this balm spreads patently for shadow, potently for fruit, so all this ariseth from a little seed. Gods smallest springs prove at length main oceans. His least beginnings grow into great works, great wonders. Now, there is no action without motion, no motion without will, no will without knowledge, no knowledge without hearing (<span class='bible'>Rom 10:14<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>God must then, by this Word, call us to Himself. Let us come when and whiles He calls us, leaving our former evil loves and evil lives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>The leaves of the balsam are white; the Word of God is pure and spotless. Peter saith there is sincerity in it (<span class='bible'>1Pe 2:2<\/span>). It is white, immaculate, and so unblemishable that the very mouth of the devil could not sully it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The balsam, say the physicians, is sharp and biting in the taste, but wholesome in digestion. The Holy Word is no otherwise to the unregenerate palate, but to the sanctified soul it is sweeter than the honeycomb. The Word may relish bitter to many, but is wholesome. There cannot be sharper pills given to the usurer than to cast up his unjust gains.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>They write of the balsamum, that the manner of getting out the juice is by wounding the tree.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>The balsam tree weeps out a kind of gum, like tears; the Word of God doth compassionately bemoan our sins. Christ wept not only tears for Jerusalem, but blood for the world.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The way to get out the juice of balm from Gods Word is by cutting it, skilful division of it, rightly dividing the Word of truth (<span class='bible'>2Ti 2:15<\/span>). It is true that Gods Word is the bread of life; but whiles it is in the whole loaf, many cannot help themselves: it is needful for children to have it cut to them in pieces. Though the spice unbroken be sweet and excellent, yet doth it then treble the savour in delicacy when it is pounded in a mortar. There must be wisdom both in the dispensers and hearers of Gods mysteries; in the former to distribute, in the other to apportion their due and fit share of this balm.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>The balsam tree being wounded too deep, dies; the Word of God cannot be marred, it may be martyred, and forced to suffer injurious interpretations.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>When the balsam is cut, they use to set vials in the dens, to receive the juice or sap; when the Word is divided by preaching, the people should bring vials with them, to gather this saving balm. How many sermons are lost whiles you bring not with you the vessels of attention! Philosophy saith that there is no vacuity, no vessel is empty; if of water or other such liquid and material substances, yet not of air. So perhaps you bring hither vials to receive this balm of grace, and carry them away full, but only full of wind; a vast, incircumscribed, and swimming knowledge, a notion, a mere implicit and confused tendency of many things, which lie like corn, loose on the floor of their brains. How rare is it to see a vial carried from the Church full of balm, a conscience of grace!<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>The balsam tree was granted sometimes to one only people&#8211;Judea, as Pliny (Lib. 12. cap. 17) testifies. It was thence derived to other nations. Who that is a Christian doth not confess the appropriation of this spiritual balm once to that only nation? (<span class='bible'>Psa 147:19-20<\/span>.) Now, as their earthly balm was by their civil merchants transported to other nations; so when this heavenly balm was given to any Gentile, a merchant of their own, a prophet of Israel, carried it. Nineveh could not have it without a Jonah; nor Babylon without some Daniels; and though Paul and the apostles had a commission from Christ to preach the Gospel to all nations, yet observe how they take their leave of the Jews (<span class='bible'>Act 13:46<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>6. <\/strong>Pliny affirms, that even when the balsam tree grew only in Jewry, yet it was not growing commonly in the land, as other trees, either for timber, fruit, or medicine; but only in the kings garden. There is but one truth, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, etc. (<span class='bible'>Eph 4:5<\/span>). Even they that have held the greatest falsehoods, hold that there is but one truth. Nay, most will confess that this balsam tree is only in Gods garden; but they presume to temper the balm at their own pleasure, and will not minister it to the world except their own fancy hath compounded it, confounded it with their impure mixtures.<\/p>\n<p><strong>7. <\/strong>They write of the balsam tree, that though it spread spaciously as a vine, yet the boughs bear up themselves; and as you heard before that they must not be pruned, so now here, that they need not be supported: Gods Word needs no undersetting. It is firmly rooted in heaven, and all the cold storms of human reluctancy and opposition cannot shake it. Nay, the more it is shaken, the faster it grows.<\/p>\n<p><strong>8. <\/strong>Physicians write of balsamum, that it is easy and excellent to be prepared. This spiritual balm is prepared to our hands: it is but the administration that is required of us, and the application of you.<\/p>\n<p><strong>9. <\/strong>Balm is good against all diseases. Catholicon is a drug, a drudge to it. It purifieth our hearts from all defilings and obstructions in them. A better cornucopia than ever nature, had she been true to their desires and wants, could have produced: the bread of heaven, by which a man lives forever. A very supernatural stone, more precious than the Indies, if they were consolidate into one quarry; that turns all into purer gold than ever the land of Havilah boasted. A stronger armour than was Vulcans, to shield us from a more strange and savage enemy than ever Anak begot, the devil (<span class='bible'>Eph 6:11<\/span>). It is a pantry of wholesome food, against fenowed traditions; a physicians shop of antidotes, against the poisons of heresies and the plague of iniquities; a pandect of profitable laws, against rebellious spirits; a treasure of costly jewels, against beggarly rudiments. You have here the similitudes.<\/p>\n<p>Hear one or two discrepancies of these natural and supernatural balms.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>This earthly balm cannot preserve the body of itself, but by the accession of the spiritual balm. Nature itself declines her ordinary working, when Gods revocation hath chidden it. The Word without balm can cure; not the best balm without the Word.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>So this natural balm, when the blessing of the Word is even added to it, can at utmost but keep the body living till the lifes taper be burnt out; or after death, give a short and insensible preservation to it in the sareophagal grave. But this balm gives life after death, life against death, life without death.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The physicians. Is there no balm at Gilead? is there no physician there? The prophets are allegorically called physicians, as the Word is balm. So are the ministers of the Gospel in due measure, in their place. To speak properly and fully, Christ is our only physician, and we are but His ministers, bound to apply His saving physic to the sickly souls of His people.<\/p>\n<p>It is He only that cures the carcass, the conscience.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>No physician can heal the body without Him.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>No minister can heal the conscience where Christ hath not given a blessing to it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>We must administer the means of your redress which our God hath taught us, doing it with love, with alacrity.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The physician that lives among many patients, if he would have them tenderly and carefully preserve their healths, must himself keep a good diet among them. It is a strong argument to persuade the goodness of that he administers.<\/p>\n<p>This for ourselves. For you, I will contract all into these three uses, which necessarily arise from the present or precedent consideration&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Despise not your physicians.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>If your physician be worthy blame, yet sport not, with cursed Ham, at your fathers nakedness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Lastly, let this teach you to get yourselves familiar acquaintance with the Scriptures, that if you be put to it, in the absence of your physician, you may yet help yourselves. (<em>T. Adams.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The balm of Gilead<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Through fifty generations Gilead was famed for its plantations of aromatic and medicinal herbs. The balsam was a lowly tree&#8211;little better than a shrub, with scanty foliage and inconspicuous flower. Looking at it, you would scarcely have thought it profitable for any purpose,&#8211;for shade, for beauty, or for fruit. But on wounding its stem there flowed a pellucid gum, which was carefully collected, and was considered of all the substances known to pharmacy the most sovereign and wonderful. So early as the days of Joseph, this balm was an object of commerce, and was carried down from Gilead to Egypt. In the days of Solomon, the gardens where it grew were annexed to the crown, and become an item in the royal revenue. So precious were they deemed, that in the days of the Roman invasion a battle was fought for their possession; and among the other symbols of victory which Vespasian carried to Rome,&#8211;a balsam tree was borne through the streets in triumphal procession. But being an exotic, and being from that period entirely neglected, it has perished from the face of Palestine, and there is no balm in Gilead now. (<em>J. Hamilton.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Spiritual disease and its remedy<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>The melancholy fact that sin prevails. Sin is here, as in other places of Scripture, represented under the figurative character of a disease. And the representation is appropriate; for sin affects the soul much in the same way as disease affects the body. It is a derangement of the spiritual frame, by which its functions are impeded, its strength enfeebled, its comfort impaired, its proper ends counteracted, and its very existence, as a creature destined to immortal felicity, endangered or destroyed.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>It is a hereditary disease&#8211;not induced by outward or accidental circumstances, but entailed upon us as an attribute of our fallen nature, and cleaving to us with as much tenacity as if it were a part of our original being.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>It is a pervading disease&#8211;not limited to any one portion of our constitution, but dwelling in every department of it&#8211;influencing its intellectual powers, its moral dispositions, its sensitive organs: the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>It is a vital and inveterate disease&#8211;not touching merely the extreme or superficial parts of our system, and resisted in its progress by any inherent energies&#8211;but corrupting and preying upon our inmost soul, and so congenial to all that is within, and to all that is around us, as to grow with our growth, and strengthen with our strength.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>It is a deceitful disease&#8211;not always accompanied with those violent and decided symptoms which forbid us to mistake the nature or disregard the perils of our condition&#8211;but often assuming that gentle form which allays our apprehensions, and flatters us with the hopes of recovery.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>It is often withal a pailful and harassing disease&#8211;filling us with dissatisfaction and fear and trembling&#8211;rendering our days gloomy and our nights restless&#8211;or piercing us with agonies to which we can find neither utterance nor relief.<\/p>\n<p><strong>6. <\/strong>It is a mortal disease&#8211;not inflicting upon us a momentary pang, and then giving place to renovated vigour&#8211;but mocking at all human attempts to throw it off&#8211;sooner or later subduing us by its resistless, power&#8211;and consigning us to the pains and the terrors of the second death.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>Is there no balm in gilead, no remedy by which the disease of sin may be cured? Is there no physician there, no physician qualified to apply the remedy and able to make it effectual? Christ is set forth as the great Physician of souls. He has wisdom to devise whatever method may be necessary for rescuing the victims whom He has been sent to deliver. He has tenderness and compassion to induce Him to do, and bestow, and suffer all, whatever it may be, which their circumstances require. He has power to conquer every obstacle that would frustrate His exertions in their behalf, and to render effectual every means that may be employed for their recovery. And He has all these attributes in an indefinite degree; so that He is competent to heal those in whose instance the disease has assumed its most inveterate form, and even to call them back from the very gates of the grave. In the annals of Christianity we read of many who, though sin was preying on their very vitals as a deep seated and mortal distemper, and though they were ready to perish, because they had no ability to stay or to withstand its progress, yet escaped from its destroying power&#8211;felt that it had departed from them, manifested all the symptoms of renovated ragout, and rejoiced in the active exertion of those faculties which had been paralysed, and in the return of those comforts and those hopes which seemed to have fled from them forever. And they have testified that this happy change was wrought in their condition&#8211;because there is balm in Gilead, and because there is a Physician there.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>Some of the causes of such a melancholy phenomenon in the history of sinful men.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Many sinners are insensible to their need of a spiritual physician. They shut their eyes against all the light by which they might be made aware of the perils and the horrors of their condition. They palliate or explain away all the circumstances by which we would prove that guilt does attach to them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>There are many who, though aware in some measure of the disease of sin, of its inveteracy and of its danger, and not unconvinced of the necessity of applying to Him who alone can save them from its power and consequences, are yet indisposed from doing so, by carelessness, or procrastination, or dislike to the remedies which they know will be prescribed.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Sinners are not saved, or have not their spiritual health recovered, because they will not take the remedy simply and submissively as it is administered by Christ. They put their own ignorance on a level with His wisdom&#8211;their own weakness with His power&#8211;their own depravity with His merit. And thus they defeat the purpose of all that He offers to do for them. They counteract His saving work. They render fruitless the remedies that He prescribes. (<em>A. Thomson, D. D.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Treacle, or like cures like<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The word treacle is derived from the Greek word <em>therion, <\/em>which meant primarily a wild beast of any kind, but was afterwards more especially applied to animals which had a venomous bite. By many Greek writers the term was used to denote a serpent or viper specifically. But what connection, it may well be asked, can there be between a viper and treacle? How came such a sweet substance to have such a venomous origin? It was a popular belief at one time, that the bite of the viper could only be cured by the application to the wound of a piece of the vipers flesh, or a decoction called <em>viper<\/em><em>s wine, <\/em>or <em>Venice treacle <\/em>made by boiling the flesh in some fluid or other. Galen, the celebrated Greek physician of Pergamos, who lived in the second century, describes the custom as very prevalent in his time. At Aquileia, under the patronage of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, he prepared a system of pharmacy, which he published under the name of <em>Theriaca, <\/em>in allusion to this superstition. The name given to the extraordinary electuary of vipers flesh was <em>theriake, <\/em>from <em>therion, <\/em>a viper. By the usual process of alteration which takes place in the course of a few generations in words that are commonly used, <em>theriake <\/em>became <em>theriac. <\/em>Then it was transformed into the diminutive <em>theriacle, <\/em>afterwards <em>triacle, <\/em>in which form it was used by Chaucer; and, finally, it assumed its present mode of spelling as early as the time of Milton and Waller. It changed its meaning and application with its various changes of form, signifying first the confection of the vipers flesh applied to the wound inflicted by the vipers sting; then any antidote, whatever might be its nature, or whatever might be the origin of the evil it was intended to cure. The fundamental principle that gave origin to treacle was one that was extensively adopted and acted upon in ancient times. <em>Similia similibus curantur&#8211;<\/em>Like cures like&#8211;was the motto of nearly all the medical practitioners from Galen downwards. There are traces in the Bible of the principle of treacle as applied in the cure of disease, which are exceedingly interesting and instructive. Some of the most remarkable of our Lords miracles were based upon it. We are told by St. Mark of the healing of a man deaf and dumb in Galilee, by our Saviour putting His fingers to his ears and touching his tongue with His own spittle. <em>Saliva jejuna <\/em>was supposed by the ancients to possess general curative properties, and to be especially efficacious in ophthalmia and other inflammatory diseases of the eyes. We are not, however, to suppose for a moment that our Lord was misled by this popular notion and that He was here acting merely as an ordinary physician acquainted with certain remedies in use among men. It was not for its medicinal virtue that He made use of the spittle. The application of it was entirely a symbolical action, indicating that as it was the mans tongue that was bound, so the moisture of the tongue was to be the sign of its unloosing, and the means by which it would be enabled to move freely in the mouth, and to articulate words. And the use of Christs own saliva in the cure showed that the healing virtue resided in and came forth from Christs own body alone, and was imparted through loss of His substance. All Christs miracles, without exception, were in one sense illustrations of the principle. The effects of the curse in the diseases and disabilities of mankind were removed by Christ bearing the curse while performing the miracles. Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses. The evil that He cured He suffered in His own soul. The sorrow that He alleviated cost Himself an equal degree of sorrow. Virtue went out of Him in proportion to the amount of healing virtue imparted. Gain to others was loss to Him. By fasting and prayer He cast out unclean spirits; by groaning in spirit and weeping He raised the dead Lazarus to life. The curse that He removed He came under Himself. In the economy of redemption we find many remarkable examples of the principle of treacle. The rule that like cures like is engraved on the very forefront of our salvation. It is shadowed forth in type and symbol; it is foretold in prophecy; it is clearly seen in realised fact. The brazen serpent was lifted up by Moses in the wilderness to heal those who were bitten by the fiery serpents, as a prophetic symbol that the Son of Man would be lifted up on the Cross to heal those who had been deceived into sin by the old serpent, the devil. And in this type there was a significant fitness. It was not an actual dead serpent that was exhibited; for that would have implied that Christ was really sinful. It was a brazen serpent, formed of the brass of which the brazen altar and the brazen laver were made, in token that though Christ was our substitute, He was yet holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners. Throughout the whole of our Saviours propitiatory work, we can trace this similarity between the evil and the cure; a similarity indicated very plainly and emphatically in the first announcement of the scheme of redemption to our fallen first parents. The serpents head could only be bruised through the heel of the womans seed being wounded by the serpents fang. By faithlessness and pride, man sinned and fell; by treachery, false witness, and a cross, man is redeemed. It was not as God that Christ wrought out mans salvation, but as man. It was in the likeness of sinful flesh that He condemned sin in the flesh, that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. So, also, in order that we may realise personally and individually the benefits of Christs redemption, we must be identified with Him by faith; there must be mutual sympathy, partnership, and reciprocity of feeling&#8211;I in you, and ye in Me. We must be partakers of His nature as He was partaker of ours. We must take up our cross and follow Him. We must know the fellowship of His sufferings. If we be planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection; if we suffer with Him, we shall reign with Him. In medicine, also, the same principle may be found. Homoeopathy was anticipated by the ancient use of treacle. The essential character of Hahnemanns famous system is that such remedies should be employed against any disease, as in a healthy person would produce a similar, though not precisely the same disease. The method of administering remedies in infinitesimal doses is not necessarily a part of the system, and it was not originally practised, although in the end it was adopted as a vital article of the creed. The fundamental principle of homoeopathy is that like cures like; and, to find suitable medicines against any disease, experiments are made on healthy persons, in order to determine the effect upon them. Thus whooping cough and certain eruptions of the skin of a chronic nature are supposed to be cured by an attack of measles; inflammation of the eyes, asthma, and dysentery, are homoeopathically cured by smallpox; arnica heals bruises because it produces the nervous symptoms which accompany bruises; camphor cures typhus fever because in a poisonous dose it lowers the vitality of the system; wine is a good remedy for inflammation because it inflames the constitution; quinine or Peruvian bark is the best remedy against intermittent fever or ague because, when taken in considerable quantity by a healthy person, it produces feverishness and furred tongue; and so on over a long list of medicines. There is a profound philosophy in this principle of treacle that applies to all the relations and interest of life. In the sweat of a mans face does he take away the curse that causes his face to sweat. Not by ease and idleness and self-indulgence does a man remove the remediable evils of the world; but by the evils of toil and trouble and care. It is the tear of sympathy that dries the tear of sorrow; the salt of the grief that springs from fellow feeling that heals the salt spring of the grief that flows from human bereavement. We all know the relief to imprisoned feeling with which the heart is bursting&#8211;when we can find one whose susceptibilities can take it in as we outpour it all, Who can understand our emotions and take interest in our disclosures. There is no earthly solace like that; and it is only a higher degree of it that we experience when we feel that we have a brother born for adversity, who is afflicted in all our afflictions. That Jesus wept,&#8211;that He still sheds tears as salt and as round as ours&#8211;when He sees us sorrowing; this is the blessed homeopathy of suffering&#8211;this is the balm, the treacle to every heart wound. Then, too, why is repentance bitter? Is it not because sin is bitter? Conviction and conversion, whether on the lower levels of ordinary moral conduct and worldly well-being, or on the higher heights of spiritual life and Gospel experience, must always be attended with acute sorrow; and the measure of the pain in the loss of the soul must be the measure of the pain in its recovery and gain. Look again at love. What does it require? Is it wealth, or rank, or fame, or any of the outward possessions and glories of life? The Song of Songs says, and the experience of every true loving heart echoes the sentiment, If a man would give all the substance of his house for love, it would utterly be contemned. Love can only be satisfied with love. (<em>H. Macmillan, D. D.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Jesus Christ the Physician of His people<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>To describe your spiritual disease. Sin itself, and all its pernicious consequences, comprehends the whole disease of human nature.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>This disease has infected the whole race of mankind.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>This disease has infected the whole person of every individual. The members of the body are likewise infected with the disease of sin.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>What especially renders this disease an object of apprehension and sorrow is, that it is mortal. It has not only entirely deprived mankind of strength but has involved them in death itself.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>To explain and illustrate the nature of the remedy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Though this Physician healed the most inveterate diseases of the body with a word, He could cure the distempers of the soul with no other medicine but the balm of His own blood.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>With this precious balm our Physician heals all manner of diseases.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>The cures which the Physician performs by the balm of His blood are all forever perfect.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>This wonderful Physician heals His patients without money and without price. When Zeuxis the Grecian painter presented his incomparable paintings for nothing, his vanity prompted him to give this reason for his own conduct, that they were above all price. So Jesus, our Almighty Physician, who can never be suspected of having indulged a vain-glorious pride, performed His mighty work of healing freely, and without reward, because it was impossible to propose to Him any remuneration that would either merit His favour, or claim His acceptance. The case is precisely the same to this very day.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>Why, then, are there so many diseased souls among us?<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Because multitudes are ignorant and insensible of their real condition. The patient who labours under the violence of a fever may, in a fit of delirium, affirm that he is completely recovered from his indisposition; but this very circumstance is one of the most unpromising symptoms of his disease.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Others refuse the Physicians grace, and reject His kind offers of assistance, from an opinion that it is so near and easy to be obtained, that they may have it at whatever time they choose to ask it. What greater dishonour can you offer to the Physician? What greater abuse can you make of this precious remedy?<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>A third class continue under the power of their spiritual disease on account of their contempt for the person of the Physician, and their obstinate prejudices against His prescriptions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>Another reason why so many remain under the power of their spiritual distemper is, that they spend their all upon other physicians.<\/p>\n<p>Application&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Are you among the whole who need not the Physician? Awfully dangerous condition! Death approaches, and ye perceive it not! Beseech the Physician Himself to quicken you, and make you thoroughly sensible of your real condition by nature, that finding yourselves guilty, polluted, and condemned sinners, and feeling the plagues of your own deceitful and wicked hearts, you may humbly sue for mercy, and without delay repair to that all-sufficient Physician, whose blood is a balm for every wound of the sin-sick soul, who of God is made unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Are ye among the sick who need the Physician? Be not discouraged. Of such sickness it may be truly said, that it is not unto death, but for the glory of God. The more heinous your guilt, the more imminent your danger, so much more reason have you to apply for relief. Oh, then, speedily have recourse to this Physician! Thankfully accept of His remedy, and you shall find to your present comfort and everlasting joy that He is both able and willing to save to the very uttermost all who come unto God through Him.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Are ye now made whole? Go, and sin no more. Rejoice in the Physician and in His salutary aid. (<em>T. Thomson.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Balm in Gilead<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>The all-sufficiency of the salvation provided for our perishing souls.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>The glorious constitution of His person as God and Man in one Christ. He, who has undertaken the office of our great Physician, is Lord of lords, and King of kings. All the angels of God worship Him. He is Himself God over all, blessed for evermore. Yet, wonderful to tell, He is also Man, bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh, and made in all things, sin only excepted, like unto us; whom He is therefore not ashamed to call His brethren.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The wonderful way which He has taken to save us from sin. This way was by giving up to death this Person so gloriously constituted, that by thus dying He might atone for our sins.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The reason why so many persons, notwithstanding, continue in a perishing condition.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Some are altogether insensible of their disease. Engrossed with worldly business, sunk in sensual pleasures, they give no thought at all, or no serious thought, to the state of their soul. As to their sin, it gives them no concern. They regard it as light and trifling.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Some are too proud to accept or use the proffered medicine. They think that they can heal and cure themselves. The proposition of being saved wholly through the blood and sacrifice of another is too humbling for them. They cannot submit to be thus indebted to grace.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Others there are who use not the remedy prescribed because of its holy tendency. They know that, while it brings them to the Cross of Christ, it requires them to take up their cross, to crucify the flesh, and to be crucified to the world. But to these things, these acts of self-denial and godliness, they have no mind; therefore they go not to the Physician to heal them. (<em>E. Cooper, M. A.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The balm of Gilead<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Appalling as our condition may now be, the spectacle of a world abandoned to the reign of sin, without any corrective or mitigation, would be far more lawful. It is an instance of the Divine mercy for which we can never be sufficiently grateful, that where sin abounded grace doth much more abound. The interrogative form of this statement seems to contemplate, not so much cases of want or woe indiscriminately, as examples of peculiar and signal distress. Such examples every community might supply. There are families here and there whose afflictions have given them a sad preeminence among their neighbours. Stroke after stroke has fallen upon them, until their cup of bitterness seems filled to the very brim. A blessed thing it is to be allowed to go to a family in these circumstances, and say, We will not mock you with the tender of such consolations as the world may have to bestow. But rest assured there is balm in Gilead which can soothe your wounds, and a Physician there who knows how to apply it. It was long ago said, the heart knoweth his own bitterness. And the older we grow, the deeper must become the conviction of every thoughtful person, that the hearts are not few in number which have some secret sorrow.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Very many of these examples belong to the realm of the affections. Misplaced love, morbid sensibility, disappointed hopes, abused or unrequited confidence,&#8211;who can compute the measure of unhappiness in the world which flows from these sources? The world may sneer at the sentimentalism of such experiences. The essential spirit of the world is as coarse and cynical where human affections are concerned, as it is arrogant and impious in dealing with the prerogatives of the Deity. It may very well be that, in many instances, there is an ill-balanced constitution, or that a passion has been cherished in opposition to all reason, or that, in some way, the calamity has been self-imposed. But the consciousness of this only increases the bitterness of the cup; as it may also prompt to a more careful seclusion of it from every eye. It were a mission of Godlike philanthropy could one seek out all these afflicted ones, bowed down with their crushed hearts, and languishing under the weight of griefs too sacred to be shared by any earthly bosom, and say to them, Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no Physician there? Do not repel the suggestion as either unsuited to your state of mind or as unseasonable. What you need is a Friend whose sympathy can avail to relieve you, and whose arm can keep you from sinking; a Friend upon whom you can fix your lacerated affections with a confidence that He will never betray you; and whom you can love with the conviction that your attachment to Him can never become so absorbing as to be an occasion of self-reproach or of sin. Jesus of Nazareth will not disappoint you. Such is the essential perfection of His nature,&#8211;such its boundless amplitude,&#8211;that in Him all your griefs may be assuaged and all your cravings after happiness satisfied.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The moment we pass from the sphere of the affections into the realm of spiritual things, new forms of suffering meet the eye, as diversified in character as they are various in intensity. And here, no less than among the tribes of sickness and sorrow and disappointment, we have but too much occasion to ask, Is there no balm in Gilead, and no Physician there?<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> You have seen individuals under the terrors of an awakened conscience. God has come near to them and set their sins in order before their eyes. How hopeless is it to attempt to minister relief to a soul in this condition with any mere earthly specifics! Something widely different from this you must have before that agitated breast can be tranquillised. And the boundless mercy of God proffers you all that you need. Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no Physician there? Yes, thou heavy-laden sinner. Great as thy sins are, there is a greater Saviour. Ponderous as is thy burden, what will it be to Him whose hand holds up the firmament and guides the spheres in their orbits? Deep as may be the crimson dye of thy soul, the blood which cleansed Manasseh, and the dying thief, and Saul of Tarsus, can cleanse thee.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> A second glance around the realm we are now traversing reveals another class of sufferers. These are the doubting, the tempted, the desponding,&#8211;the bruised reeds and the smoking flax,&#8211;who desire to follow Christ, and would give worlds to know that He owned them as His disciples, but who walk in darkness. Long accustomed to dwell on their conscious sins and infirmities, their sense of personal unworthiness forbids them to appropriate the promises, and even restrains them from looking, with any confidence, to the Saviour. These doubts and misgivings have their rooting in unbelief, and in unworthy conceptions of the character of the Redeemer. Conscious ill-desert keeps you from going to Christ. But is there anything either in His character or in the events of His life to justify this feeling? How can you say, as you do practically say, There is no balm in Gilead, and no Physician there?<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> It is a dark portraiture which the Spirit has drawn of mans moral character, when, with a single graphic touch of the pencil, he is depicted as having a heart of stone. The sceptic resents the great indignity. A heart of stone! Look at the virtues which cluster around humanity! See the integrity and the truthfulness, the high-toned honour and the magnanimity, which embellish society! Let these testify how gross a libel that is upon the race, which ascribes to man a heart of stone! Granted all. Make the flattering inventory still more flattering, and its every item shall be acknowledged. The brighter the vestments in which you infold your idol, the clearer do you bring out the demonstration that his heart is a heart of stone. It is of his relations Godward that the Scriptures affirm this quality of him. But we are not now dealing with sceptics. There are those who, so far from cavilling at this representation, freely concede its truth. They have reasoned with themselves on the surpassing folly and impiety of living for this world only. They are convinced that Jesus Christ ought to be in their eyes the chief among ten thousand; that they ought to enthrone Him in their hearts with a grateful and confiding devotion; that they ought to delight in prayer, and to find their happiness in doing Gods will. They long for this. They would make any earthly sacrifice to accomplish it. They have laboured and struggled to bring themselves into this state of mind. But all in vain. The wayward affections will not relax their hold of earth at the bidding of reason and conscience. Here, at least, is a class of sufferers whom no earth-born philosophy can reach. But are they therefore to be abandoned to despair? Far from it. Your case is not hopeless. That heart of stone can be broken in pieces. That proud will can be subdued. Those intractable affections can be detached from earth and lifted to the skies. The love of Christ may yet burn with seraphic ardour in that breast which has hitherto refused Him its homage. In place of the ingratitude and distrust with which you have requited Him, your joyful protestation may yet be heard, Lord, Thou knowest all things: Thou knowest that I love Thee. Be it so, that your sins are of colossal magnitude, and as the stars of heaven for multitude. That is a cogent reason for repentance and contrition; it is no reason for declining to accept the balm in Gilead and the Physician there. You have no real sorrow for your sins. Christ is exalted as a Prince and a Saviour, to give repentance to Israel, and remission of sins. One glimpse of Him whom you have pierced, such as the Spirit can afford you, will make streams of penitential sorrow burst from that heart of stone as the waters gushed from the smitten rock. You have no faith. But can you not cry, Lord, I would believe. Help thou mine unbelief? You have no love. Who ever loved Him, except as he was loved by Him? We love Him, because He first loved us. Let Him but reveal His love to you, and that will kindle yours as nothing else can. (<em>H. A. Boardman, D. D.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The balm of Gilead<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>or every wrong there is a remedy. God is Almighty. The prophets of old believed this. The Church of Christ, in all ages, professes to believe this.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>There is balm in Gilead. And to Gilead we must go to seek and to find it. That is, the remedy for every wrong must be made the object of our effort to attain. Gilead&#8211;as all students of the Bible know&#8211;is the mountainous region east of Jordan, forming the frontier of the Holy Land. The name itself signifies a hard, rocky region, and there the fragrant, resinous gum, possessed of such famous healing properties, was to be found&#8211;found, however, not by the casual, unobservant traveller who happened to pass by that way, but by the man who clambered up the rocks, scaled the heights, diligently searched among the precious, storm-stunted shrubs, yielding the healing gum. And so, surely, is it the same with that which the balm of Gilead symbolises. The remedy for every, or for any, wrong is not to be found in religious idleness. It must ever be a serious business&#8211;a search, requiring an effort upwards, taxing all the strength that is vouchsafed. And does it very much matter by what name they are called, who in sincerity attempt the search? or, indeed, whether the balm they find is all identical in outward appearance? For instance, the balm of Gilead, the remedy for wrong, comes to us in modern times, certainly in one way, in the form of scientific truth. Scientific ignorance is the fruitful cause of how vast a waste of human life!&#8211;of disease, and wretchedness, and pain, and bereavement, and idiocy, and drink, and death! Gods laws and natures laws are one and the same, and the high priests of science serve at the altar of the Most High God. Or, again, the balm of Gilead, the remedy for wrong, comes to us in the form of philosophic thought. Social science, based upon historical research and experience, economic problems, thought out in the light of what has been, and what men are, and need&#8211;labelled by whatever name&#8211;if they are not self-condemned by insincerity, are all possessed with some healing virtue. So, too, with politics in the true and highest sense; but, alas! not with party politicalism, unless indeed that balm serves the purpose of an emetic. Again, the true balm of Gilead, the remedy for every wrong, is to be found upon the mountain top of revelation. The balm of revealed knowledge, the comfort of the Holy Ghost, the insight into the spiritual, is within the reach of all.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>But who is the Physician qualified to administer the balm, to tell us how, and where, and in what proportion it should be applied? For, indeed, without proper knowledge, a remedy itself may become a poison; the cure may be more fatal than the disease. In matters social and spiritual we have many teachers, and some who seem to be more interested in their own nostrums than in the cures they effect. But is there no true physician, is there none whose direction and advice we may follow with absolute confidence? An answer to that question some will immediately give. Our blessed Lord, they say, is the good Physician (a title which by implication only our Lord applies to Himself), and to follow Jesus Christ is to be healed of all that is wrong. Nothing could be truer, and yet is this all the truth? Does not our Lord Himself point onwards, to the revelation of the Holy Ghost, as the perfect Physician, as the Teacher, and Leader, and Guide, and Comforter of mens souls? He shall take of Mine, and shall show it unto you. Every spiritual man is a physician qualified, according to the measure of the light which he enjoys, to apply the healing balm to the sorrows and distresses of others. (<em>A. A. Toms, M. A.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>A cure for diseased souls<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>Mankind universally are in a diseased state.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Atheism, infidelity, or unbelief of Divine truths.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Ignorance of God and Gospel truths, even among those who profess to know Him (<span class='bible'>Hos 4:6<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Hardness of heart.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>Earthly mindedness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>Aversion to spiritual duties.<\/p>\n<p><strong>6. <\/strong>Hypocrisy and formality in Gods service.<\/p>\n<p><strong>7. <\/strong>Trusting to our own righteousness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>8. <\/strong>Indwelling corruption.<\/p>\n<p><strong>9. <\/strong>Backsliding.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>There is a Physician who can cure all diseases.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>He is infinite in knowledge, and understands all diseases, with the proper remedies, so that He never can err (<span class='bible'>Joh 21:17<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>He has sovereign authority and almighty power, so can command diseases to obey (<span class='bible'>Mat 9:2<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>He has infinite pity, ready to help the distressed, even unasked (<span class='bible'>Luk 10:33<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>He has wonderful patience towards the distressed; bears with their ingratitude, and works their perfect cure.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The remedy which he applies to effect the cure.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Principally, His own blood.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>But Scripture speaks of other subservient means.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> The Spirit of God, with His gracious operations on the soul.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> The Word and ordinances of Christ.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> Afflictions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> Faithful ministers.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(5)<\/strong> Prayers of pious Christians.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>His method of applying the remedy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>He makes sinners sensible that they are sick.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>He works faith in the soul by His Holy Spirit.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>He accomplishes and perfects the cure by the sanctifying influences of the Spirit.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>V. <\/strong>Why so few are healed, notwithstanding there is balm in gilead and a Physician there.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Many are ignorant of their disease, and wilfully so.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Many are in love with their disease more than with their Physician.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Many neglect the season of healing (<span class='bible'>Jer 8:20<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>Many will not trust Christ wholly for healing.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>Many will not submit to the prescriptions of Christ; self-examination, repentance, godly sorrow, mortification.<\/p>\n<p>Conclusion&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Let those in a diseased state see their danger, for it is great.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Balm of Gilead is freely offered in the Gospel.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Consider how long you have slighted this balm already.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>Those whom Christ has healed, manifest their gratitude by living to His glory. (<em>T. Hannam.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is there no Physician there?<\/strong><strong><em>&#8212;<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The Divine Physician<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>The physician is Jesus Christ the Son of God, who, being the Son of God, must needs be able and skilful; since He is the Christ, He wants not a call to the office, etc.; as He is Jesus, He cannot but be ready and willing to the work,&#8211;who can desire a better, who would seek after another Physician than Him in whom skill, and will, and ability, and authority do meet?<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The patients are those who stand in need of this Physician, and they most need Him who think they have least.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The disease of these patients is sin&#8211;a disease both hereditary, as to the root of it, which together with our nature we receive from our parents, and likewise contracted by ourselves, in the daily eruption of this corruption, by thoughts, words, and works.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>The medicine or balm which this Physician administereth to the patient for the cure of his disease is His own blood, which He is content to part with for our sakes.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>V. <\/strong>The method by which the cure is effected is by cleansing; no cordial like this to comfort our hearts and to rid us of the ill-humours of our sins, thereby restoring our spiritual health. (<em>Nath. Hardy.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The balm and the physician<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A distressed father, that had just left the sick bed of a beloved daughter, and was wandering through the streets in all the dejection of grief, may easily be supposed to have uttered himself in the language of the text. And if we may suppose that she had been long subjected to the want of a physician and a nurse, while death must now ensue as a consequence of that neglect, while there was a remedy at hand, and a physician hard by; but there was none at hand to call in that physician, or to apply that balm, by the application of which she might have been restored to health, joy, and life. One would grieve to hear the solitary moan of such a father, and haste to know if it is altogether too late to call in the kind and timely physician.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>The disease is one of universal application. There has been no nation found that is not totally depraved. They all practised a gross and God-provoking idolatry. They made their idols as stupid and as devilish as they could, practising as gross a perversion of their Supreme Deity as possible, and then they practised upon man all the outrages that a perverted intellect could contrive.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>This disease is, of all others, the most contagious. It has been communicated through the wide world, and gone into every little ramification of every kingdom under the whole heaven. It poisons all the human relations, and mars every human compact; and, first of all, mans covenant with his God. The result of this is, that it has filled and loaded him with misery to the full, and all nature groans and travails to be delivered from the bondage of corruption, and be brought into the glorious liberty of the sons of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>Why is not the plague healed?<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Sinners are not sensible that they are the subjects of this deplorable disease. The first object of a preached Gospel is to convince them of this fact.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>If to any extent they are conscious of their condition, they love the very disease that cleaves to them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>They do not love the Physician.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>They do not love the price at which they can be healed. It must be with Christ a mere gratuitous healing.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>Sinners do not relish the manner of the application. This deep repentance, and this being healed by faith, destroys all human agency and contrivance, and gives God all the glory. (<em>D. A. Clark.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Reasons for the irreligion of the masses<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>Our mortal and evangelical resources.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>No country in the world in all respects equal in privileges.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>No age comparable to this.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> Plenitude of Gods Word<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Good books.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> Evangelical ministry.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> Rich variety of social institutions.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The fearful evils which still exist.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Avowed infidelity.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>General neglect of Divine worship.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Juvenile precocity and profligacy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>Overwhelming intemperance.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The affecting inquiry presented. Why, then, etc. Three classes of reasons.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>In the Church.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> Prevalence of spiritual indifference.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Sectarian contentions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> Fewness of workers.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> Want of spiritual self-denial.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(5)<\/strong> Coldness in prayer.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(6)<\/strong> Feeble faith.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Reasons in the persons themselves. Feel separated from other classes; neglected, despised on account of poverty, etc.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Reasons in the world. Seductive temptations, dissipating scenes.<\/p>\n<p>Applications&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>We appeal to Church of Christ. Great responsibility.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Sinners are inexcusable. Every man must give account.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Gods mercy and grace are all-sufficient.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>The provisions of the Gospel are freely published. (<em>J. Burnt, D. D.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<p>.<\/p>\n<p><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/><\/strong><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P> Verse <span class='bible'>22<\/span>. <B>Is there <\/B><I><B>no balm in Gilead?<\/B><\/I>] Yes, the most excellent in the world. &#8220;Is there no physician there?&#8221; Yes, persons well skilled to apply it. &#8220;Why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?&#8221; Because ye have not applied to the physician, nor used the balm. Ye die because ye will not use the remedy. But to apply this metaphor: &#8211; The <I>Israelites<\/I> are represented as a <I>man dying<\/I> through disease; and a disease for the cure of which the <I>balm of Gilead<\/I> was well known to be a <I>specific<\/I>, when judiciously applied by a physician. But though there be <I>balm<\/I> and a <I>physician<\/I>, the people are not cured; neither their spiritual nor political evils are removed. But what may all this <I>spiritually<\/I> mean? The people are morally diseased; they have sinned against God, and provoked him to destroy them. They are warned by the prophet to repent and turn to God: they refuse, and sin on. Destruction is come upon them. Might they not have avoided it? Yes. Was it the fault of God? No. Did he not send his prophets with the richest offers of mercy? Did he not give them time, the best instructions, and the most effectual means of returning to him? Has not <I>mercy<\/I>, the heavenly <I>balm<\/I>, been ever at hand? And has not GOD, the great <I>Physician<\/I>, been ever ready to apply it? Yes. Why then are they not converted and healed? Because they would not apply to the Divine Physician, nor receive the only remedy by which they could be spiritually healed. They, then, that sin against the only remedy must perish, because they might have had it, but would not. It is not because there is a deficiency of grace, nor of the means of grace, that men are not saved; but because they either make no use, or a bad use, of them. Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, has tasted death for every man; but few are saved, because <I>they WILL NOT come unto him that they may<\/I> <I>have life<\/I>.<\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> In my old MS. Bible the text is rendered thus: &#8211; <\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> <I>Whether gumm is not in Galaad? Or a leche is not there? Why than<\/I> <I>the hid wounde of the daughter of my peple is not alle helid?<\/I><\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> How shall they escape who neglect so great a salvation? Reader, lay this to heart; and, while there is time, apply heartily to the great Physician for thy cure.<\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Adam Clarke&#8217;s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P> Gilead was eminent for balm, <span class='bible'>Gen 43:11<\/span>, taken for rosin or turpentine, which is a kind of more liquid rosin, and either flows or drops from certain trees of its own accord, or their juice flows from several holes pierced into them, as from the pine, cedar, cypress, or terebinth tree. Heb. tseri; Gr. <span class='_800000'><\/span>, from <span class='_800000'><\/span>, to flow, or run; Lat. resina; Engl. rosin. A near affinity of the words in each language, the nature whereof is to dissolve hardness, to clear and close up wounds. <\/P> <P>Physician, or chirurgeon: probably in a country where were such plenty of remedies there could not want artists, whereby their cures might be facilitated, by means of which the Gileadites and Arabians did excel there. <\/P> <P>Recovered, Heb. gone up; the like expression <span class='bible'>2Ch 24:13<\/span>, the work was perfected; Heb. the healing went up upon the work; and so <span class='bible'>Neh 4:7<\/span>; the prophet expresseth his grievous complaint by way of admiration, by a metaphor, implying the inveteracy and obstinacy of their hearts, that either would not come to the physician, or that they should be thus incurable, where they wanted not for prophets and teachers, or for any spiritual means, flowing down daily upon them; can Jerusalem and Judea be without spiritual physicians? Some understand it by way of sarcasm: q.d. Where are your medicines, your arms, your counsels, your confederates? And where are your physicians, your princes and priests, that promised you relief? Without God you see no help in any means. But the former more natural, and agrees best with the beginning of the next chapter. <\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P><B>22. balm<\/B><I>balsam;<\/I> to beapplied to the wounds of my people. Brought into Judea first fromArabia Felix, by the queen of Sheba, in Solomon&#8217;s time [JOSEPHUS,<I>Antiquities,<\/I> 8.2]. The <I>opobalsamum<\/I> of PLINY;or else [BOCHART] theresin drawn from the terebinth. It abounded in Gilead, east ofJordan, where, in consequence, many &#8220;physicians&#8221;established themselves (<span class='bible'>Jer 46:11<\/span>;<span class='bible'>Jer 51:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 37:25<\/span>;<span class='bible'>Gen 43:11<\/span>). <\/P><P>       <B>health . . . recovered<\/B>The<I>Hebrew<\/I> is literally, &#8220;lengthening out . . . gone up&#8221;;hence, <I>the long bandage applied<\/I> to bind up a wound. So the<I>Arabic<\/I> also [GESENIUS].<\/P><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown&#8217;s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible <\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong>Is there no balm in Gilead<\/strong>?&#8230;. Which was famous for it; see<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'>Ge 37:25<\/span>, or rather turpentine or rosin, a gum which drops from pine trees and the like; since balm or balsam grew on this side Jordan, near Jericho and Engedi, and not beyond Jordan, in the land of Gilead; and rosin is good for healing. Some render it &#8220;treacle&#8221;, but very wrongly, since, as Calvin observes, that is a composition of many things,<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is there no physician there<\/strong>? or surgeon, anyone that heals wounds and bruises; very probably there were many such lived in Gilead, since it was a place where proper medicines were to be got and applied: this may be understood of prophets and teachers, who, in a moral and spiritual sense, are instruments of healing of men, by showing them their evil, calling them to repentance, and directing where to go for healing or pardon of sin; namely, to Christ, the alone physician, and to his precious blood, shed for the remission of sins. Some reference may be had to Elijah, who was of Gilead, and to the school of the prophets there, <span class='bible'>1Ki 17:1<\/span>. The Targum is,<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;Jeremiah the prophet said, perhaps there are no good works in me, that I should supplicate for the house of Israel; should I not desire the doctrine of Elijah the prophet, who was of Gilead, whose words were healing?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered<\/strong>? that is, seeing there is balm in Gilead, and a physician there, how comes it to pass that such medicine is not made use of, and such a physician not applied to, that health might be restored? This shows the stupidity, sluggishness, and indolence of the people, and how inexcusable they were, as well as the prophet&#8217;s great concern for their welfare; the want of means of deliverance, or non-attendance to them, or the failure of them.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: John Gill&#8217;s Exposition of the Entire Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> The Prophet intimates in these words that the slaughter of the people would be so fatal that they would in vain seek remedies; as though he had said, that the disease would be incurable, and altogether deadly. The people, no doubt, ever devised for themselves many kinds of aids, according to what is commonly done; for ungodly men, when any danger appears, look around them on all sides; and when they think that they can be protected by any kind of assistance, or by any of the means they contrive, they rest secure and free from every trouble. Hence the Prophet, that he might dispel such vain confidences, says that there  would be no rosin  to heal their diseases. The rosin is a liquid which flows, not from every tree, but from the pine, and trees of that kind. <\/p>\n<p> We  may conclude from this passage, as well as from other passages, that the best and the most valuable rosin was found in that part of Judea, called Gilead. Indeed the whole of Judea produced rosin; but as it was more abundant in Gilead, and as that rosin was more odoriferous and more powerful, he expressly mentions that place. The word  &#1510;&#1512;&#1497;  tsari,  means also balsam: and as to this let each follow his own opinion, for the Jews themselves do not altogether agree. They who render it &#8220; treacle  &#8221; wholly depart from the meaning, and offer what is absurd; for we know that treacle is made up of several ingredients: now rosin is not any sort of gum, but a thick liquid, as I have said, which belongs to trees; and from it comes rosin, and mastic, and other things; for the liquid becomes thick after it has flown from the trees. <\/p>\n<p> He says then, as one astonished,  Is there not rosin in Gilead? Is there not a physician there?  But the Prophet foretells here by the Spirit, that there would be such a destruction as could not by any means be avoided, that the disease would be incurable.  For why,  he says,  does not health come to the daughter of my people?  The reason is added, because healing could not be expected by the people; not that the Jews perceived this, for, on the contrary, they boasted, as I have said, of their perfect safety. But the Prophet here declares that a deadly disease was at hand, which would inevitably destroy the wicked  (234) Afterwards follows &#8212; <\/p>\n<p>  (234) As the whole passage, from the 19 verse, is anticipative, and represents the ease of the Jews in captivity, this verse is to be viewed in the same light, and rendered in the past tense, &#8212; <\/p>\n<p> 22. Was there not balm in Gilead? Was there not a healer there?  Why then has not succeeded The recovery of the daughter of my people? <\/p>\n<p> Whether balm or rosin be meant, it makes no great difference; its healing virtues had become proverbial; and in this sense it is to be taken here.  Kimchi  held that it was balm or balsam, which  Josephus  reports was first brought to Judea by the Queen of Sheba. But the tree which produced  &#1510;&#1512;&#1497;, was not an exotic, but indigenous in Judea, as it appears from <span class='bible'>Gen 37:25<\/span>; and it grew especially in Gilead, as it appears from this passage and from <span class='bible'>Jer 46:11<\/span>  Bochart  maintained that rosin is meant by the word, the gum drawn from the Terebinthus or the turpentine tree, which possesses strong healing virtues. It is rendered, &#8220; &#8165;&#951;&#964;&#8055;&#957;&#951; &#8212; rosin,&#8221; by the  Septuagint,  the  Vulgate,  and the  Arabic;  and &#8220; cera &#8212; wax,&#8221; by the  Syriac.  &#8220;Healer,&#8221; or physician, is rendered &#8220; &#7984;&#945;&#964;&#961;&#8056;&#962; &#8212; healer,&#8221; by the  Septuagint,  and &#8220;  medicus   ,  &#8221; by the  Vulgate, Syriac,  and  Arabic.  It appears that Gilead was not only celebrated for its healing gum, but also for its medical men. <\/p>\n<p> The balm was the word of God, and the healer who applied it was the prophet or the teacher. <\/p>\n<p> Perhaps the most literal rendering of the first two lines is the following, and the most suitable to express astonishment, &#8212; <\/p>\n<p> The balm, not in Gilead!:  Verily, a healer, not there! <\/p>\n<p>&#8212;<\/p>\n<p> Ed.  <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Calvin&#8217;s Complete Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>(22) <strong>Is there no balm in Gilead . . .?<\/strong>The resinous gums of Gilead, identified by some naturalists with those of the terebinth, by others with mastich, the gum of the <em>Pistaccia lentiscus, <\/em>were prominent in the pharmacopia of Israel, and were exported to Egypt for the embalmment of the dead (<span class='bible'>Gen. 37:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen. 43:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer. 46:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer. 51:8<\/span>). A plaister of such gums was the received prescription for healing a wound. The question of the prophet is therefore a parable. Are there no means of healing, no healer to apply them, for the spiritual wounds of Israel? The prophets were her physicians, repentance and righteousness were her balm of Gilead. <em>Why has no balsam-plaister been laid on the daughter of my people? <\/em>Why so little result from the means which Jehovah has provided? The imagery re-appears in <span class='bible'>Jer. 46:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer. 51:8<\/span>. The balm which was grown at Jericho under the Roman Empire (Tac, <em>Hist. v.<\/em> 6; Plin., <em>Nat. Hist. xii.<\/em> 25), and was traditionally reported to have been brought by the Queen of Sheba, was probably <em>the Amyris Opobalsamum, <\/em>now cultivated at Mecca, which requires a more tropical climate than that of Gilead. Wyclifs version, Is there no <em>triacle <\/em>in Gilead? may be noted as illustrating the history of a word now obsolete. Triacle was the English form of <em>theriacum, <\/em>the medival panacea for all wounds, and specially for the bites of serpents and venomous beasts.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Ellicott&#8217;s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> 22<\/strong>. <strong> <\/strong> <strong> Balm in Gilead <\/strong> One of the precious productions of Palestine. See <span class='bible'>Gen 43:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 46:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 51:8<\/span>, etc., etc. <\/p>\n<p><strong> There <\/strong> Where the medicine is, there should be the skill for its use. Israel&rsquo;s &ldquo;priests and prophets were the physicians whose office it was to teach the remedy for human sin and woe. Has Israel then no balm for herself? Is there no physician in her who can bind up her wound? <em> &rdquo; Speaker&rsquo;s Commentary. <\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong> Health recovered <\/strong> Keil translates, <em> why, then, is no plaster laid on the daughter of my people? <\/em> But Furst and Nagelsbach support the common Version.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Whedon&#8217;s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong><em><span class='bible'>Jer 8:22<\/span><\/em><\/strong><strong>. <\/strong><strong><em>Is there no balm in Gilead?<\/em><\/strong><strong><\/strong> &#8220;Whence then comes it that the wound of my people hath not been closed? Is it my fault? Have I not sent you prophets? Have I not given you time, instructions, and means to return to your duty? Have ye wanted physic or physicians? Why then are you not cured? Doubtless it is because you would not make use of the remedies, nor consult the physicians.&#8221; The ancient physicians were all surgeons, and applied the remedies themselves. The <em>balm, resin, <\/em>or <em>turpentine <\/em>of Gilead, is celebrated in Scripture: compare <span class='bible'>Gen 37:25<\/span>. Joseph was sold to Ishmaelite merchants, who came from Gilead, and carried balm and sweet spices. Jeremiah, speaking to Egypt in chap. <span class=''>Jer 46:11<\/span> says, <em>Go up into Gilead, and take balm, O virgin, the daughter of Egypt. <\/em>Physicians inform us, that turpentine, and balm in general, are good to soften, assuage, warm, dissolve, cleanse, dry up, and purge. There are various sorts of turpentine, which are distinguished by their peculiar properties, and the trees which produce them; for the terebinthus or turpentine-tree, the lentisk, the larch, the cypress, the pine, the fir, the pitch-tree, and several others, alike respectively produce them. See Calmet, and Scheuchzer on the place. <\/p>\n<p><strong>REFLECTIONS.<\/strong>1st, In the dreadful desolations described in the former chapter, the unburied corpses lie exposed; here these savage invaders suffer not the dead to enjoy quiet repose. <\/p>\n<p>1. The graves and sepulchres of Judah&#8217;s kings and princes shall be opened, either through covetousness to search for treasures; or to show insult even to their ashes; or as a just judgment of God, who suffered the bones of the kings, priests, prophets, and people, who had so rebelled against him, to be exposed with infamy before those luminaries of heaven which they had <em>worshipped, loved, served, <\/em>and <em>sought: <\/em>they had walked in the most abominable idolatries, and set up these for their gods, as if their favour was to be desired, and their blessing to be obtained: foolish and impious the service! and now it appeared so, when they could not afford the least help, nor so much as collect their scattered bones, spread <em>for dung upon the face of the earth. Note; <\/em>In the day of Judgment the sinner&#8217;s loathsome carcase will be more shamefully exposed. <span class='bible'>Isa 66:24<\/span>. <\/p>\n<p>2. Death, the most dreaded of human evils, now shall be courted; not that it has lost aught of its horrors, but because life is become intolerable; not from a hope of happiness in the exchange, but from despair of rest or ease below. The survivors of <em>this evil family <\/em>shall be so harassed and tormented in every place whither they are driven, that they shall look with envy on those who have perished by famine and the sword, and count their lot more eligible than their own. <em>Note; <\/em>That case is terrible indeed, when life becomes a burden, and the sinner is tempted to prefer strangling and death. <\/p>\n<p>2nd, Never were people so infatuated to their ruin. <br \/>1. They persevered in their evil ways. In general, when a man falls, he seeks immediately to recover himself; and if he loses his way, he is solicitous to return into the right path; <em>Why then is this people of Jerusalem slidden back by a perpetual backsliding? <\/em>and instead of any desire to amend, <em>they hold fast deceit; <\/em>obstinate against every means of conviction, they refuse to return. <em>Note; <\/em>Nothing is so great a deceit as sin; it promises so much enjoyment, and ever produces so much misery. <\/p>\n<p>2. They disappointed (speaking after the manner of men) God&#8217;s expectations from them. He patiently waited and hearkened, in case they might at last be prevailed upon to change their note, and learn the language of penitence: but not one <em>spake aright, nor repented of his wickedness, <\/em>reflecting with shame upon his conduct: but just the very reverse; they urged on their mad career in sin with such determined waywardness and fearlessness, <em>as the horse rusheth into the battle.<\/em> <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) God is long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. (2.) The first step to real penitence is serious reflection upon the evil of our past ways, <em>What have I done? <\/em>(3.) The daring sinner who mocks at the terrors of the Lord as chimeras, and fearless rushes into the depths of iniquity, will find them fearful realities, and that half was not told him. <\/p>\n<p>3. They were more stupid and irrational than the fowls of heaven, while they made the higher pretensions to wisdom. The birds of passage by instinct know the proper season for their coming and going, and how to direct their flight; but <em>my people know not the judgment of the Lord; <\/em>neither how to improve the calls of mercy in God&#8217;s word, nor the corrections of affliction, nor his visitations on others; and yet they say, <em>We are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us. <\/em>How shameless their pretensions! when their whole conduct appeared so contradictory. In vain had they the law, and the pen of the scribes to write out copies or comments upon it; their expositions were false, or at least they paid no regard to them, if true. Their wise men themselves are confounded at calamities which they could neither foresee nor avert: nor can it be wondered at, when, <em>lo! they have rejected the word of the Lord, <\/em>sent by his prophets; and <em>what wisdom is in them, <\/em>when they reject the counsel of God, and refuse to be instructed. <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) Many enjoy plenty of means, have Bibles and ministers, and yet are never the wiser for them. (2.) Whatever pretences to wisdom they may make, who reject God&#8217;s revealed word, they will be confounded in the day of judgment at their own egregious folly. <\/p>\n<p>4. For their sins they shall suffer. Their sins are before charged on them, chap. <span class='bible'>Jer 6:13-15<\/span>. <em>Love of filthy lucre, <\/em>most scandalous in those who are to preach and to be examples to others of deadness to the world. <em>Insincerity; <\/em>their professions were false, and their doctrine diabolical, tending to lull the sinner&#8217;s soul into fatal security, instead of rousing him to a sense of his danger; and <em>daring impudence, <\/em>which knew not to blush, though convicted of their lies, and upbraided for their abominations. Therefore God&#8217;s wrath is upon them; their wives shall be captive, and concubines to their enemies; their land possessed by aliens; and they, in the time of visitation, when God makes inquisition for sin, shall fall with them that fall, cast down, and utterly consumed. <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) Companions in sin will fall together into the pit of destruction. (2.) They who have been instrumental to deceive others to their ruin, shall receive the greater damnation. <\/p>\n<p>3rdly, Wicked men are plagued for their offences. <br \/>1. God threatens utterly to consume them with famine and the sword. Blasting and mildew shall strip their vines and fig-trees bare, and leave not a leaf thereon: or their enemies would thus utterly consume their fruits, and rob them of all the providential gifts which God had so richly bestowed on them in that land of plenty; and the Chaldeans with a mortal sting, as the fiery flying serpents in the wilderness, shall bite them with their envenomed fangs, and no charm be found to sooth their rage, or stop their ravages. <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) It is just in God to take from us the mercies that we have abused. (2.) When the worm in hell begins to gnaw the sinner&#8217;s conscience, it never can be charmed to rest. <\/p>\n<p>2. Their complaints and distress are very bitter. To sit still in the country must be their ruin, where famine wasted, and which would be first over-run by the invaders; therefore they resolve to enter the defenced cities, and <em>be silent there; <\/em>either hoping for protection, or rather intimating, that it were useless to complain when they despaired of redress; because their destruction was from God, who, in just punishment for their sins, which they are compelled to own, though they perished in them, had given them this gall of affliction to drink. And herein they seem rather to speak the language of indignation against God for their sufferings, than of humiliation for their sins. Their expectations of peace, with which the lying prophets had flattered them, and their own foolish hearts promised them, were now at end. Nothing but trouble and terror were before them; the very neighing of the numerous cavalry advancing from Dan made them tremble, white they beheld the cities and country wasted, and the inhabitants captives or slain. <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) Unhumbled sinners in sullen silence behold their ruin approach, without power to avoid it, and without a heart to deprecate the wrath which they have provoked. (2.) When God sends his terrors before him, the strongest tremble for fear. (3.) They who continue in their sins look for peace in vain; for there is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked. <\/p>\n<p>3. All their confidence had failed. They buoyed themselves up with vain hopes that God, as king in Zion, would, notwithstanding all their provocations, not suffer the habitation of his holiness to be destroyed: and they expostulate with him, as if he was faithless to his promises, or his power weakened; but God replies, to their confusion, <em>Why have they provoked me to anger with their graven images? <\/em>Their destruction was of their own seeking; they first rejected him for their God, before he forsook them as his people. Their expectations from their Egyptian allies were disappointed also; they continued to hope that they would come and force the Chaldeans to raise the siege; but <em>the harvest is past, <\/em>when they expected them, in April and May; <em>the summer is ended, <\/em>in July; and winter now approached, without the least prospect of deliverance, <em>and we are not saved; <\/em>so that they sunk into despair. <em>Note; <\/em>When the day of grace is over, nothing remains for the sinner, but a fearful looking-for of judgment. <\/p>\n<p>4. The prophet bewails the miseries of his countrymen. <em>When I would comfort myself against sorrow, <\/em>either by meditating on God&#8217;s promises, or suggesting to himself arguments for hope and patience, <em>my heart is faint in me, <\/em>overcome with the views of the impending calamities. The cry of Zion&#8217;s inhabitants rung dolefully in his ears, groaning under the miseries that they endured from the siege, or in their hard captivity. He felt his heart wounded through them, and was broken by the tender sympathy of their sufferings; black as mourners in deepest distress, and overwhelmed with astonishment at the miseries he beheld. <em>Is there no balm in Gilead? is there no physician there? <\/em>either intimating the incurableness of their disease, and the death-stroke given to the kingdom; or as upbraiding them with their stupidity and obstinacy in refusing to be healed by the rich mercies of God, and rejecting the prophets whom he had sent to them. <em>Why then is not the health of my people recovered? <\/em>It was not for want of balm, or a physician, but intirely owing to their wilful opposition to all the means and methods that God had taken for their recovery. <em>Note; <\/em>(1.) A good man, a faithful minister, cannot but tenderly feel and lament the miseries which he sees disobedient sinners pulling on their own heads. (2.) There is balm in Gilead, a cure for every sin-sick soul; even the blood of Jesus; he is a physician whose skill no spiritual disease, however inveterate, can baffle; and in his hands the most desperate case never miscarries, when the penitent sinner casts himself upon him. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong>DISCOURSE: 1044<br \/>CHRIST OUR PHYSICIAN<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Jer 8:22<\/span>. <em>In there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?<\/em><\/p>\n<p>AS the Eastern languages in general, so the inspired writings in particular, abound in metaphors. In this view, they are peculiarly calculated to convey instruction; because they embody truth, as it were; they dress it in the most inviting colours, and bring it home to the mind with most commanding energy. Metaphors are of necessity founded on some acknowledged truth: if therefore the figure itself be just and apposite, the sentiment contained under it becomes so much the more luminous and impressive. The general idea intended to be conveyed in the words of our text, is this; that, though God was so severely punishing the Jewish nation, he was willing to remove his judgments from them, and to restore them to his favour, if they would use the means which his prophets had prescribed: lamentable as their state was become, they were not beyond the reach of mercy, if they would repent themselves, and turn unto their God. Now this sentiment is conveyed in metaphorical expressions; the literal import of which is, that no one with the means of recovery before him would be foolish enough to continue under the pressure of a painful and dangerous disorder. This truth every one feels and acknowledges: and consequently we must acknowledge yet more strongly the folly and wickedness of continuing under the displeasure of God, when we have at hand the certain means of deliverance from it.<br \/>To impress this thought upon your minds, we shall,<\/p>\n<p>I.<\/p>\n<p>Shew what is that state of recovery to which God desires to bring us<\/p>\n<p>That man is disordered by means of sin, is so evident, that we scarcely need insist upon it. We justly say in the general confession of our Church, There is no health in us: and we may as justly apply to our state that description of the Prophet Isaiah, From the sole of our foot even to the head there is no soundness in us, but wounds and bruises and putrefying sores. Still however there is such a thing as a state of health: and what that is, we may learn,<\/p>\n<p>1.<\/p>\n<p>From the condition of some who had never known sickness<\/p>\n<p>[Adam in Paradise was made after the Divine image: every perfection of the Deity, as far as it was communicable to a creature, was found in him. His dispositions were altogether in unison with the will of God. He communed with his Maker daily, as with his familiar friend; and sought all his happiness in the performance of his will, and in the enjoyment of his presence.<br \/>Our blessed Lord and Saviour also is another example of one who never knew sin. In his early years we have but little information about him, except that he was subject to his parents, and obedient to them in all things: and though we cannot consider this as <em>the whole<\/em> of a childs religion, we do not hesitate to say, that it is a most essential part of it, and that religion never can exist where this proof of it is wanting. When he had attained the age of twelve, we are enabled to speak determinately concerning him. Then, we know, that he loved the house of God, and found all his delight in the services of religion. Yea, with such intenseness was he engaged in communicating and receiving instruction, that he let his parents go from Jerusalem without him; and, when they found him in the temple after three days, expressed his wonder that they felt any solicitude about him, and that they did not at once conclude him to be occupied about his Fathers business, When he entered on his ministry, he made it his meat and drink to do his Fathers will: after labouring in his vocation the whole day, he would sometimes spend whole nights in prayer. He went about doing good amongst the poorest and vilest of mankind: and when his love was recompensed only by the most cruel insults and persecutions, he rendered nothing but good for evil: when he was reviled, he reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not: yea, rather, he wept over his enemies, and prayed for his very murderers.]<\/p>\n<p>2.<\/p>\n<p>From the condition of some who had experienced a recovery<\/p>\n<p>[We cannot easily find persons more diseased than <em>those to whom Peter addressed himself on the day of Pentecost<\/em>. They had withstood all the discourses and miracles of our blessed Lord; and their hands were yet reeking with the Saviours blood. But as soon as the grace of God reached their hearts, they were humbled for their sins, they believed in Christ as their only Saviour, they addicted themselves to the ministry of the Apostles, they felt the most cordial affection towards all the despised followers of Jesus, they sold all their possessions for the support of his Church and people, and they found all their happiness in the exercises of devotion, and the service of their God [Note: <span class='bible'>Act 2:41-47<\/span>.].<\/p>\n<p>The Apostle Paul is another instance of a most astonishing recovery. He had been filled with such a murderous zeal against the followers of Christ, that he breathed out nothing but threatenings and slaughter against them. But when he was stopped in his career, he became the most zealous and active of all the Apostles. No trials could deter him from prosecuting his Masters work: he counted not his life dear unto him; yea, if he should be offered upon the sacrifice and service of his brethrens faith, and pour out his blood as a libation for the Church, he considered it as a ground of most exalted joy and thanksgiving [Note: <span class='bible'>Php 2:17-18<\/span>.].]<\/p>\n<p>3.<\/p>\n<p>From these instances we may learn, I say, what a state of recovery is<\/p>\n<p>[It consists, first of all, in turning to the Lord Jesus Christ, with deep humiliation, and with lively faith, It consists, next, in mortifying all those corruptions which formerly led us captive, and in devoting all our powers to the service of our God. In a word, it consists in following the steps of our adorable Emmanuel, in being pure as he was pure, and perfect as he was perfect. And to this it is the earnest desire of our God to bring us: Wilt thou not be made clean? says he; O when shall it once be [Note: <span class='bible'>Jer 13:27<\/span>.]?]<\/p>\n<p>Now, if God really desire to bring us to this happy state, we should,<\/p>\n<p>II.<\/p>\n<p>Inquire, Whence it is that we do not already enjoy it?<\/p>\n<p>It is not for want of adequate provision for us on the part of God<br \/>[God himself appeals to us respecting this: Is there not balm in Gilead; is there not a Physician there? Has not God sent us a Physician from heaven, even his only dear Son, who perfectly knows the extent of our disorders, and is able to prescribe a remedy for them? Other physicians find their remedies in the productions of nature and of art; but this blessed Physician heals his people with his own stripes: he shed his own precious blood for us upon the cross, that it might be applied, as a sovereign balm, to our souls, to restore us to perfect health. And now we appeal to all of you: Is there any want of skill in this Physician, or any want of virtue in this balm? Have not thousands and millions of persons, dying of the malady of sin, experienced a perfect restoration of health through the application of the blood of Christ to their souls? Is there any reason to doubt, but that it would be as efficacious for you, as for them? And is not this remedy offered you without money and without price?<br \/>Behold then, ye are witnesses for God this day, that no blame attaches to him, and that the continuance of your maladies can in no respect be imputed to him.]<br \/>It is altogether owing to yourselves<\/p>\n<p>1.<\/p>\n<p>You do not believe that your disorders are so great and fatal as God has represented them<\/p>\n<p>[That sin has in a measure disordered your souls, you will readily acknowledge; but that your diseases are mortal, and that you must die to all eternity if they be not healed, you do not believe. We ask only what you would do, if you felt within yourselves a bodily disorder, which you were certain would destroy your life in a few hours if a remedy were not instantly applied? Would you not send for a physician without delay, and be in the utmost solicitude till he arrived for your relief? Why then is there not all this anxiety about your souls? Why are you not seeking the Lord Jesus Christ with your whole hearts? Our Lord assigns the true reason; The whole need not a physician, but they that are sick; and you feel no need of him, because you are not duly sensible of your sickness.]<\/p>\n<p>2.<\/p>\n<p>You do not like the prescriptions which the good Physician has appointed for you<\/p>\n<p>[<em>Repentance<\/em> is regarded by you as a bitter pill, which you are very averse to take. <em>Faith in the atoning blood of Christ<\/em> is so humiliating, that you cannot make up your minds to submit to it: you think that you may be excused going to him with all that contrition and self-renunciation which the Gospel requires. <em>The living henceforth not to yourselves, but unto him<\/em>, and the having your whole selves, body, soul, and spirit, sanctified and devoted to the Lord, is also regarded by you as an insufferable restraint. You would be far better pleased to be left in possession of those gratifications which are pleasing to your corrupt nature, and which foster the most deadly diseases of your souls.]<\/p>\n<p>3.<\/p>\n<p>You hope for some more convenient season for returning to your God<\/p>\n<p>[You have a general persuasion that you must experience a change before you go hence; but you wish to put it off to some future period. You are too young at present, or have too many engagements; and you think a time of sickness will be more favourable to reflection; and, as God has shewn mercy to many in their last hours, you hope he may to you. This completes what the other errors have begun. This lulls you asleep in fatal security. If ignorance slays its thousands, this procrastinating habit slays its ten thousands.]<\/p>\n<p>Having shewn you the true reasons why your health is not recovered, I would impress the subject yet further on your minds, by asking two questions:<br \/>1.<\/p>\n<p>Would not the recovery of your souls tend to your <em>present<\/em> happiness?<\/p>\n<p>[Grant that the votary of pleasure obtains all that he seeks after; is not he who has his sins forgiven, his corruptions mortified, his soul transformed into the Divine image, the sting of death removed, and a glorious inheritance secured to him, the happier man?    We will abide the decision of your own consciences.]<\/p>\n<p>2.<\/p>\n<p>Will not the consequence of dying in your present diseased state be terrible?<\/p>\n<p>[Terrible it will be to all; but most of all to those who have their diseases faithfully pointed out to them, and the heavenly Physician brought before them. O how pungent will that question be to them in the day of judgment, Why were not <em>ye<\/em> recovered, <em>ye<\/em>, who had the balm of Gilead freely offered you, and who withstood the most pressing solicitations to accept of mercy? O that ye may be wise in time! and that, instead of having <em>then<\/em> to regret the opportunities you have lost, you may <em>now<\/em> be enabled to say with the Psalmist, Bless the Lord, O my soul; who forgiveth all thy sins, and healeth all thy diseases!]<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/><\/strong><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Charles Simeon&#8217;s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> REFLECTIONS<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> BEHOLD my soul, from the perusal of this Chapter, what a poor, ignorant, unthinking, and improvident creature is man! The birds of the air, and the beasts of the field, do, by instinct, what man by reason, now in his fallen state doth not do. If the winter approacheth, the swallow seeks a warmer climate. If a storm falls, the cattle flee to the barn, or to the hedge for shelter. But neither the winter of life, nor the storm of threatened judgments, prevail upon the sinner, void of grace, to flee from the wrath to come.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> But is not the Lord in Zion? Is not her King in her? Shall there be balm in Gilead, and yet no remedy be applied? Shall Jesus indeed, the great Physician be there; and the health of his redeemed not be recovered? Oh! let thy name, thou dear Lord, be as ointment poured forth, that by the quickening and regenerating influences of thy blessed Spirit, such views of our misery, by reason of the fall, may open before us, and such a sense of thy suitability to all our wants may appear, and become desirable; that apprehending thee by faith, in thy Person, work, and offices, and in all thy relations, righteousness, and grace, our souls may find a recovery. Speak blessed Lord to my heart, to my conscience; and while thou speakest, in the same tender words as of old, to the diseased; wilt thou be made whole? Oh! give me grace and faith, in lively exercise, to answer and to believe, and to depend upon thy sovereign, power to heal. Oh! let me know thee by that precious name, Jehovah Rophe! And let me hear thy gracious voice as to Israel, saying, I am the Lord that healeth thee! Amen.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Hawker&#8217;s Poor Man&#8217;s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span class='bible'>Jer 8:22<\/span> [Is there] no balm in Gilead; [is there] no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?<\/p>\n<p> Ver. 22. <strong> Is there no balm in Gilead?<\/strong> ] Yes, surely, there or nowhere; in Gilead grew a balsam, good to make salves for all sores, they say. This balsam grew there only in two large gardens, which belonged to the king. The nature of the tree could not abide iron, but presently died if cut never so small a depth; they used, therefore, glass, bone knives, sharp stones, to get the gum out of the tree. <\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/p>\n<p> Is there no physician there?<\/strong> ] Or, No surgeon there, where this medicinal simple so aboundeth but this people&rsquo;s sorrow is immedicable, their disease desperate &#8211; <em> docta plus valet arte malum.<\/em> The learned is more strong by the knowledge of evil. The balm of the soul is prayer, saith the Chaldee paraphrast; is repentance, saith Jerome; is Christ applied by faith, say we. <em> Sanguis medici est curatio phrenetici.<\/em> The blood of the doctor is the cure of the mad. To this almighty Physician no disease can be incurable.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: John Trapp&#8217;s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>balm . . . physician. The words of the prophet, showing that healing remedies were employed; thus accounting for the silence respecting them. Compare Isa 1:6. <\/p>\n<p>balm = balSamaritan Pentateuch Compare Jer 51:8. <\/p>\n<p>Gilead. Compare Jer 46:11. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>no balm: Jer 46:11, Jer 51:8, Gen 37:25, Gen 43:11 <\/p>\n<p>no physician: Mat 9:11, Mat 9:12, Luk 5:31, Luk 5:32, Luk 8:43 <\/p>\n<p>why: Jer 30:12-17 <\/p>\n<p>recovered: Heb. gone up, Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6 <\/p>\n<p>Reciprocal: Exo 15:26 &#8211; for I am 2Ch 7:14 &#8211; heal their land 2Ch 16:12 &#8211; physicians Job 13:4 &#8211; physicians Psa 38:5 &#8211; My wounds Jer 6:26 &#8211; daughter Jer 9:1 &#8211; the daughter Jer 14:19 &#8211; no healing Jer 30:13 &#8211; hast Lam 2:13 &#8211; who can Eze 27:17 &#8211; balm Eze 34:4 &#8211; diseased Eze 47:12 &#8211; medicine Hos 11:3 &#8211; I healed Hos 14:4 &#8211; heal Mar 5:26 &#8211; had suffered Luk 16:20 &#8211; full<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>THE BALM OF GILEAD<\/p>\n<p>Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered?<\/p>\n<p>Jer 8:22<\/p>\n<p>It is wonderful what a parallel of the sacred, and the divine, and the eternal underlies the whole creation.<\/p>\n<p>Now both in the physical and the moral world, it has been Gods lawnot so much to prevent the existence of evil, as always to provide a sure and abiding remedy for all the evil which exists.<\/p>\n<p>It was so when sin came into the world, and all creation fell.<\/p>\n<p>Gilead was a large tract of country to the east of the Jordan; with a mountain called the mountain of Gilead rising nearly 3000 feet above the level of the valley of the river. In the early times it was the sojourning place of different flocks; and it was especially noted for its balsam tree; the balm from which was well known for its saving and healing properties. It was often applied to sores.<\/p>\n<p>As was natural, the character of the produce of the country attracted scientific men, and made it the abode of many physicians. Hence the question, almost ironicallystrongly involving an affirmativeIs there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there?<\/p>\n<p>But Jeremiah, or rather God speaking by Jeremiah, evidently used the words in a metaphorical sense, and addressing the sinful and afflicted people of God refers to a Divine Presence, and a supernatural power and wisdom; and argues with them and remonstrates with them as to why they should continue so afflicted and so distressed when there is such a provision which would effect an aid and cure. Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered?<\/p>\n<p>I. Now, even in this sense, referring it to bodily complaints, physical pains, may we not accept the word as belonging to all sick and sorrowing ones?Would God have sent that disease or painful trial without providing something to meet the caseits antidote? Isnt God the Great Healer, and has He not all means at His command, holding the very issues of life and death in His hand? Shouldnt both patient and doctor alike recognise and remember this? Be it the loss of health, and the anguish which it may bring ever so great, it has its object, it has its voice, which should never be forgotten.<\/p>\n<p>Then why do we not in all our sickness and sufferings go more straight to God? Pray to God, look to God, trust in God, Who Himself has so curiously and so wondrously made us, and knows and remembers all our frames, and Who has Himself given to all nature its secret virtues, and to man all his skill.<\/p>\n<p>Go first, go last, go always to God, and let everything else be secondarysecondary, as an instrument in His hands.<\/p>\n<p>I would that all doctors and all surgeons would always recognise themselves as what they are in their true charactersGods servants, sent by God, used by God, depending upon God: to work Gods work to Gods glory. Would so many then have to cry, Why is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered?<\/p>\n<p>Let me say, even upon human grounds, by natural cause and effectas I have seen thousands of times and know wellthere is no medicine in all the world so good and so effectual as peace of mind. And who is to give that quietness of mind, but God only?<\/p>\n<p>II. But I have to look at a deeper and more important meaning attaching to the words.There are worse diseases than the ills of the body, and there are better recoveries than the restoration of physical health. Christ, while He was upon earth, twice called Himself a Physician, a Physician of the soul! All sin is a disease. You may trace the resemblance. It is infectious, and it comes by contact. It has its degrees; it spreads and increases. But it has its own appointed antidotes and remedies. It may be prevented, or alleviated, or removed. Its course is subject to a law of progress or regress. If permitted, it kills, but taken hold of in time it may be cured.<\/p>\n<p>Now, from this disease of sin every one suffers. Nay, more, every one has the disease. The whole world is a leper-house, and every church is a hospital.<\/p>\n<p>The text positively says that there is One, that there is a Curer; and we know that Physician is infallible. The progress may be very slow, but the result is sure.<\/p>\n<p>At this moment, in this church, there is the Great Physician. More, more than the words represent, He is here to receive, to comfort, to restore, to heal every sick soul. Then why, why is any soul uncured? Why does any soul die? Why is any soul unhappy? Why, why? Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered? Why are you unhappy? Why? Because you do not believe in Him. You do not really and fully believe it.<\/p>\n<p>There may be some one saying, But the disciplineI am afraid of the discipline! It has been a dreadful discipline which could not cure the soul! But listen to the exact word. He does not propose long confinement, or the bitter draught, but balmIs there no balm in Gilead?<\/p>\n<p>The balm of forgiveness, the balm of a man quite at peace, the balm of a loving smile, the balm of the tenderness of the Tenderest One in the universeBalm, only balm, balm will do it.<\/p>\n<p>And yet the cry still goes forth, and which of you hears it: Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of My people recovered?<\/p>\n<p>Will no poor, sick, dying soul come and be healed? Come, my daughter; come, my son; take the balm, and you will be quite well!<\/p>\n<p>Rev. Jas. Vaughan.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Jer 8:22. Gilead was an extensive region just east of the Jordan and opposite the northern part of Palestine. Gilead was specially noted for its balm from &#8220;balm of Gilead&#8221; trees, which was worth twice its weight in silver. Funk and Wagnalls Bible Dictionary says of this balm that it was &#8220;used for the treatment of wounds. Jeremiah uses the word figuratively and in a plaintive strain asks if there is no physician in Gilead who could heal his people.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>8:22 [Is there] no balm {r} in Gilead; [is there] no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?<\/p>\n<p>(r) Meaning,that no man&#8217;s help or means could save them: for in Gilead was precious balm, Jer 46:11 or else deriding the vain confidence of the people, who looked to their priests for help, who would have been the physicians of their soul, and dwelt at Gilead, Hos 6:8 .<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Gilead, east of the Jordan River, was a source for healing balsam, but no healing was forthcoming for Judah. This is the source of the traditional American spiritual &quot;There Is a Balm in Gilead.&quot;<\/p>\n<p style=\"margin-left:36pt\">&quot;The balm referred to is the resin or gum of the storax tree. It was used medicinally (cf. Gen 37:25; Jer 46:11; Jer 51:8; Eze 27:17).&quot;<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: Feinberg, p. 439. See also P. J. King, Jeremiah: An Archaeological Companion, pp. 153-54.] <\/span><\/p>\n<p>No physician was on the horizon either, even though Yahweh was Israel&rsquo;s Great Physician (Exo 15:26). The prophet marveled that Israel&rsquo;s Great Physician had not provided healing for His people, but he knew that their affliction was judgment for their sins.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[Is there] no balm in Gilead; [is there] no physician there? why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered? 22. balm ] For balsam (balm) as a product of Gilead, see Gen 37:25 and cp. Gen 43:11; Eze 27:17. As, however, some doubt has been thrown on Gilead as a &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-jeremiah-822\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Jeremiah 8:22&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-19186","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-commentary"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/19186","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=19186"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/19186\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=19186"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=19186"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=19186"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}