Matthew Poole Commentary - Jeremiah 1:11 - 1:11

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Matthew Poole Commentary - Jeremiah 1:11 - 1:11


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This and the boiling caldron, Jer_1:13, is thought to be at the same time, and in the same vision, when he was first appointed to his work.



A rod of an almond tree, viz. that had leaves, and possibly blossoms, on it, like Aaron’s, Num_17:8; for without leaves at least it is possible he had not so readily guessed of what kind it had been. This is a tree that blossoms early and speedily, and hence hath its name in Hebrew scaked, signifying watchful, forward, nimble, or quick; and so it may point at either God’s readiness to smite, Jer_1:12, which is described elsewhere by summer fruit, Amo_8:1,2; or Israel’s ripeness to be smitten, as we have the like Eze_7:10,11; or both; this rod being like a portentous comet, showing to Jeremiah the miseries that were at hand, as the death of Josiah, which soon followed this vision, 2Ki_23:29, and the taxing them by Pharaoh-nechoh, 2Ki_23:35, and presently after the breaking in of the Chaldees, Syrians, Moabites, and Ammonites, 2Ki_24:2, and then the Babylonian captivity, 2Ki_24:10, which happened in the eighth year of Jehoiachin, 2Ki_24:12, when Nebuchadnezzar took him with others, and carried them away, about twenty-three years from hence; and about the fortieth year Jerusalem was taken, and the temple burnt.