Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Jeremiah 13:1 - 13:1

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com

Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Jeremiah 13:1 - 13:1


(Show All Books | Show All Chapters)

This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Jer 13:1-27. Symbolical prophecy (Jer 13:1-7).

Many of these figurative acts being either not possible, or not probable, or decorous, seem to have existed only in the mind of the prophet as part of his inward vision. [So Calvin]. The world he moved in was not the sensible, but the spiritual, world. Inward acts were, however, when it was possible and proper, materialized by outward performance, but not always, and necessarily so. The internal act made a naked statement more impressive and presented the subject when extending over long portions of space and time more concentrated. The interruption of Jeremiah’s official duty by a journey of more than two hundred miles twice is not likely to have literally taken place.

put it upon thy loins, etc. - expressing the close intimacy wherewith Jehovah had joined Israel and Judah to Him (Jer 13:11).

linen - implying it was the inner garment next the skin, not the outer one.

put it not in water - signifying the moral filth of His people, like the literal filth of a garment worn constantly next the skin, without being washed (Jer 13:10). Grotius understands a garment not bleached, but left in its native roughness, just as Judah had no beauty, but was adopted by the sole grace of God (Eze 16:4-6). “Neither wast thou washed in water,” etc.