Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, delivering an oracle concerning Philistia within the larger collection of oracles against the nations.
Philistia Overwhelmed: The Sword of the Lord Against the Coastlands
When the Lord commands judgment against proud and hostile powers, the sword cannot rest until His appointed word is fulfilled.
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When the Lord commands judgment against proud and hostile powers, the sword cannot rest until His appointed word is fulfilled.
Jeremiah 47 argues that the Lord's rule extends over Philistia and the coastlands, and that His commanded judgment cannot be stopped by human anguish, alliances, or military resistance. The invasion comes like waters from the north, showing that historical military movement is under divine command. The terror collapses ordinary human obligations, even the instinct of fathers to protect children.
Philistine cities mourn, allies are cut off, and the sword continues because the Lord has appointed it. The chapter confronts every assumption that the nations can live outside the Lord's moral government.
Philistia is the direct target, while Judah and the surrounding nations are indirect hearers who must recognize that the Lord rules all peoples and judges all hostile powers.
The oracle is given before Pharaoh attacked Gaza. The judgment imagery describes a devastating northern invasion sweeping over Philistine territory.
When the Lord commands judgment against proud and hostile powers, the sword cannot rest until His appointed word is fulfilled.
Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, delivering an oracle concerning Philistia within the larger collection of oracles against the nations.
Philistia is the direct target, while Judah and the surrounding nations are indirect hearers who must recognize that the Lord rules all peoples and judges all hostile powers.
The oracle is given before Pharaoh attacked Gaza. The judgment imagery describes a devastating northern invasion sweeping over Philistine territory.
- The Philistine cities face panic, military collapse, mourning, severed alliances, and the breakdown of ordinary family protection under overwhelming invasion.
Jeremiah 47 shows that the Lord's judgment extends beyond Judah and Egypt to long-standing neighboring peoples. The chapter preserves the prophetic theme that the God of Israel governs the nations, the sea coast, military powers, and historical upheaval.
The chapter moves from the historical heading concerning Philistia, to the image of northern waters overwhelming the land, to the collapse of parental and communal strength, to mourning over Gaza, Ashkelon, and the coastland, and finally to the unavoidable command of the Lord's sword.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
The chapter forms God's people to live with sober reverence before the Lord's command, refusing false security and responding to warning before judgment becomes unavoidable.
- 47:1:
- 47:2 3:
- 47:4:
- 47:5:
- 47:6 7:
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 47 argues that the Lord's rule extends over Philistia and the coastlands, and that His commanded judgment cannot be stopped by human anguish, alliances, or military resistance. The invasion comes like waters from the north, showing that historical military movement is under divine command. The terror collapses ordinary human obligations, even the instinct of fathers to protect children.
Philistine cities mourn, allies are cut off, and the sword continues because the Lord has appointed it. The chapter confronts every assumption that the nations can live outside the Lord's moral government.
The LORD announces a floodlike invasion, interprets it as his day against Philistia, exposes the grief of the cities, and explains that the sword cannot rest because he commanded it.
- 1.Philistia stands under the word of the LORD.
- 2.The coming invasion is overwhelming and unavoidable.
- 3.Human strength and social bonds collapse under appointed judgment.
- 4.The LORD, not blind history, is the decisive actor in Philistia's fall.
- 5.Human cries for judgment to stop cannot overturn the LORD's command.
Theological Focus
- The Lord's sovereignty over neighboring nations
- Judgment as commanded sword
- The terror of divine judgment
- The collapse of alliances
- Mourning under judgment
- The nations' accountability
- Divine Sovereignty over Nations
- Judgment
- Human Helplessness
- Providence
- False Security
- The Fear of the Lord
- Accountability of the Nations
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 47 is not addressed to Judah directly, yet it has covenant significance because it shows that the Lord who judges His covenant people also judges the nations around them. Philistia's long historical hostility toward Israel and Judah is not forgotten, and the Lord's sovereignty over the coastlands confirms that the covenant people must not fear neighboring powers as though they operate independently of Him.
- The Lord judges beyond Judah
- Hostile neighbors are accountable
- Alliances cannot overturn divine decree
- Judgment is commanded, not accidental
- Judah must learn not to absolutize nations
Canonical Connections
Philistia is a long-standing neighboring power often hostile to Israel, and Jeremiah 47 participates in the prophetic witness of its accountability.
The sword imagery belongs to the wider biblical theme of divine judgment executed under the Lord's command.
Rising waters often picture overwhelming military or destructive force.
The Philistine coastlands are repeatedly addressed in prophetic judgment texts.
Jeremiah 47 reinforces that all nations stand under the Lord's moral governance.
The seriousness of commanded judgment points canonically to the need for refuge in Christ, the Savior from wrath and appointed Judge.
Jeremiah 47 does not announce the gospel directly, but it reveals the need for gospel refuge. The sword commanded by the Lord cannot rest simply because people wish judgment would stop. The chapter presses the seriousness of divine judgment and the helplessness of human strength. In the fullness of Scripture, Christ is the refuge God provides before the final day.
At the cross, the judgment sinners deserve falls upon the willing Substitute, and in the resurrection Christ secures life for all who take refuge in Him. The same Christ who saves is also the appointed Judge. Therefore the chapter's warning should drive sinners away from false security and toward the mercy of God in Christ.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 47 contributes to the canonical witness that the Lord will judge hostile powers and bring every nation under His rule. The sword commanded against Philistia anticipates the broader biblical truth that divine judgment is not negotiable once appointed. In Christ, the Judge of all the earth is also the Savior who bears judgment for sinners and offers refuge before the final day.
The chapter's terror and grief press the urgency of fleeing to the true refuge appointed by God rather than standing under the sword of judgment.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 47 argues that the Lord's rule extends over Philistia and the coastlands, and that His commanded judgment cannot be stopped by human anguish, alliances, or military resistance. The invasion comes like waters from the north, showing that historical military movement is under divine command. The terror collapses ordinary human obligations, even the instinct of fathers to protect children.
Philistine cities mourn, allies are cut off, and the sword continues because the Lord has appointed it. The chapter confronts every assumption that the nations can live outside the Lord's moral government.
God holds nations accountable for their actions and executes judgment against persistent opposition.
God directs historical events and uses invading powers as instruments of His judgment.
Political alliances, military strength, and fortified cities cannot ultimately protect against God’s decrees.
The Lord speaks concerning Philistia and commands the sword against Ashkelon and the coast.
The chapter announces destructive judgment against Philistia, Gaza, Ashkelon, and the coastland.
The terror of invasion is so severe that fathers cannot turn back to rescue their children.
Historical invasion is interpreted as the commanded sword of the Lord, not as random movement.
Cities, alliances, and regional helpers cannot preserve Philistia from the Lord's decree.
The oracle calls readers to fear the Lord who commands the sword over nations.
Philistia is judged by the Lord even though it is outside Judah's covenant identity.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- The chapter forms God's people to live with sober reverence before the Lord's command, refusing false security and responding to warning before judgment becomes unavoidable.
Sense Philistines
Definition A coastal people long associated with the southwestern region near Judah and with repeated hostility toward Israel.
References Jeremiah 47:1, 47:4
Lexicon Philistines
Why it matters The chapter is directed against Philistia as a historical neighboring power under the Lord's judgment.
Sense Pharaoh, king of Egypt
Definition The royal title of Egypt's ruler.
References Jeremiah 47:1
Lexicon Pharaoh, king of Egypt
Why it matters The heading dates the oracle before Pharaoh attacked Gaza, linking Philistia's crisis to regional imperial conflict.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Gaza
Definition A major Philistine city in the coastal plain.
References Jeremiah 47:1, 47:5
Lexicon Gaza
Why it matters Gaza is named in the heading and later personified as mourning with shaved head.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense waters
Definition Water or waters, here metaphorically used for overwhelming invasion.
References Jeremiah 47:2
Lexicon waters
Why it matters The rising waters from the north picture the unstoppable force of judgment.
Sense north
Definition The direction north; in Jeremiah often associated with the direction from which judgment comes.
Lexicon north
Why it matters The rising waters from the north continue Jeremiah's repeated theme of northern judgment.
Sense overflowing stream or torrent
Definition A rushing or overflowing stream, used metaphorically for sweeping destruction.
References Jeremiah 47:2
Lexicon overflowing stream or torrent
Why it matters The phrase intensifies the invasion imagery as something that cannot be contained by human defenses.
Sense land, earth, territory
Definition Land, earth, or a territorial region.
References Jeremiah 47:2
Lexicon land, earth, territory
Why it matters The waters cover the land and all that is in it, emphasizing comprehensive territorial judgment.
Sense to cry out, call for help
Definition To cry out in distress, alarm, or appeal.
References Jeremiah 47:2
Lexicon to cry out, call for help
Why it matters The inhabitants cry out under judgment, showing terror and helplessness.
Sense horses
Definition Horses, especially in military contexts.
References Jeremiah 47:3
Lexicon horses
Why it matters The pounding of horses signals the terrifying military force behind the flood imagery.
Sense chariotry, chariots
Definition Chariots or chariot forces used in warfare.
References Jeremiah 47:3
Lexicon chariotry, chariots
Why it matters Chariots contribute to the auditory terror that causes the collapse of courage.
Sense loss of strength, courage, or ability
Definition A bodily image for helplessness, paralysis, or the collapse of courage.
References Jeremiah 47:3
Lexicon loss of strength, courage, or ability
Why it matters The fathers' limp hands show that judgment overwhelms even natural protective strength.
Sense day, appointed time
Definition A day or appointed time, often used in prophetic contexts for a decisive moment of judgment.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon day, appointed time
Why it matters The day has come to destroy the Philistines, stressing the appointed timing of judgment.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense to devastate, destroy, plunder
Definition To devastate, destroy, or plunder.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon to devastate, destroy, plunder
Why it matters The day is specifically one of destruction for the Philistines, clarifying the oracle's severity.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense helper, ally, one who assists
Definition One who helps or provides assistance.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon helper, ally, one who assists
Why it matters The Lord cuts off helpers from Tyre and Sidon, showing the failure of alliances in the day of judgment.
Sense Tyre
Definition A major Phoenician coastal city.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon Tyre
Why it matters Tyre is mentioned as part of the regional network affected by Philistia's judgment.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense Sidon
Definition A major Phoenician coastal city.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon Sidon
Why it matters Sidon, like Tyre, represents regional support that cannot survive the Lord's cutting off.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Caphtor
Definition A place associated with Philistine origins in the Old Testament.
References Jeremiah 47:4
Lexicon Caphtor
Why it matters The reference to the coasts of Caphtor identifies the Philistines with their ancestral or migratory origin tradition.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense baldness, shaved head
Definition Baldness or shaving of the head, often associated with mourning.
References Jeremiah 47:5
Lexicon baldness, shaved head
Why it matters Gaza's shaved head marks public grief under judgment.
Sense Ashkelon
Definition A major Philistine city on the coast.
References Jeremiah 47:5, 47:7
Lexicon Ashkelon
Why it matters Ashkelon is one of the named targets of the Lord's sword and is personified as silenced under judgment.
Sense remnant, remainder, survivors
Definition Those who remain after disaster or reduction.
References Jeremiah 47:5
Lexicon remnant, remainder, survivors
Why it matters The remnant of the coastland is addressed, showing that even survivors remain under the pressure of judgment.
Form in passage Hithpolel · Imperfect · 2nd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense to cut, gash oneself
Definition To cut or gash, sometimes in mourning rites.
References Jeremiah 47:5
Lexicon to cut, gash oneself
Why it matters The self-cutting image reflects desperate mourning practices under devastation.
Sense sword, warfare, violent judgment
Definition A sword used in war, often symbolizing judgment.
References Jeremiah 47:6-7
Lexicon sword, warfare, violent judgment
Why it matters The sword of the Lord is the dominant final image of the chapter, emphasizing commanded judgment.
Sense the covenant name of God
Definition The personal covenant name of the God of Israel.
References Jeremiah 47:6-7
Lexicon the covenant name of God
Why it matters The sword is the sword of the Lord, showing that Philistia's judgment is under divine authority.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 2nd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense to be quiet, rest, be still
Definition To be quiet, undisturbed, still, or at rest.
References Jeremiah 47:6-7
Lexicon to be quiet, rest, be still
Why it matters The sword cannot be quiet because the Lord has commanded it, making the final question of the chapter theological rather than emotional.
Sense sheath, scabbard
Definition A covering or sheath for a sword.
References Jeremiah 47:6
Lexicon sheath, scabbard
Why it matters The plea for the sword to return to its sheath dramatizes the longing for judgment to stop.
Sense to command, order, appoint
Definition To command or give authoritative instruction.
References Jeremiah 47:7
Lexicon to command, order, appoint
Why it matters The sword cannot rest because the Lord has commanded it, making divine command the theological center of the oracle.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense shore of the sea, coastland
Definition The coastal territory along the sea.
References Jeremiah 47:7
Lexicon shore of the sea, coastland
Why it matters The coast identifies Philistia's geographical identity and the scope of the Lord's appointed sword.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The chapter forms God's people to live with sober reverence before the Lord's command, refusing false security and responding to warning before judgment becomes unavoidable.
- Sober listening - Receive warnings from Scripture before circumstances make their truth painfully visible.
- False-security rejection - Name the powers, relationships, or systems You assume will always protect You.
- History under God - Interpret public upheaval with reverence and restraint, acknowledging the Lord's sovereignty without reckless speculation.
- Humble lament - Let grief become humility before God rather than self-destructive despair.
- Refuge seeking - Run to the Lord in repentance and faith before judgment hardens into consequence.
- Fear reordered - Fear the Lord more than the movements of nations, armies, or cultural powers.
- The chapter warns that no people, city, coastland, alliance, or family structure can withstand the Lord's commanded judgment when the appointed day arrives.
- Do not assume neighboring powers are beyond the Lord's reach.
- Do not mistake military invasion for merely human events.
- Do not trust alliances to save from divine decree.
- Do not delay repentance until judgment has already begun.
- Do not romanticize human strength under judgment.
- Do not assume grief itself cancels judgment.
- Jeremiah 47 is only a historical note about Philistine defeat. - The chapter is historically grounded, but its theological burden is that the Lord commands judgment over nations and their cities.
- The flood from the north must refer to literal water. - The waters function as a metaphor for overwhelming invasion, clarified by the sound of horses, chariots, and wheels.
- The sword of the Lord means the Lord delights in violence. - The sword imagery communicates judicial judgment under divine command, not arbitrary cruelty or delight in bloodshed.
- The fathers' failure to help their children means they are morally singled out as uniquely wicked. - The image emphasizes the overwhelming terror and helplessness of judgment, not a separate moral profile of fathers.
- The reference to Tyre and Sidon makes them the main target. - Tyre and Sidon are mentioned as losing help, but Philistia, Gaza, Ashkelon, and the coastland remain the primary target.
- The chapter has no relevance to Judah or the covenant storyline. - The oracle teaches Judah that the nations around them are accountable to the Lord and cannot function as ultimate threats or refuges.
- Where do I assume human powers can operate outside the Lord's command?
- What alliances, institutions, or networks do I treat as if they can secure me apart from God?
- Do I take the warnings of God seriously before consequences arrive?
- How does the image of fathers unable to help their children sober my view of human helplessness under judgment?
- What does it mean to mourn in a way that leads to humility rather than mere despair?
- Where am I asking the sword to rest while refusing to face the command of the Lord?
- How does Christ as true refuge change the urgency with which I respond to divine warning?
- Preach Jeremiah 47 as a compact and sobering oracle on the unstoppable command of God over the nations and the urgency of seeking refuge before judgment comes.
- Use the chapter carefully to help people distinguish ordinary suffering from divine judgment, while still taking seriously the reality that human strength is fragile before God.
- Teach believers that no nation, system, family structure, or alliance is ultimate. Only the Lord is final refuge.
- The sword imagery gives language for warning people who want relief from consequences without submission to God.
- Gaza and Ashkelon's mourning can help people see that lament under judgment must become humility before the Lord, not merely ritualized sorrow.
- The chapter frames regional conflict and imperial movement under divine sovereignty without requiring speculative claims beyond the text.
- Leaders should not give false assurance based on alliances, resources, or institutional reputation when the deeper issue is accountability before God.
- The inability of the sword to rest once commanded can serve as a sober bridge to the urgency of fleeing to Christ before final judgment.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from the historical heading concerning Philistia, to the image of northern waters overwhelming the land, to the collapse of parental and communal strength, to mourning over Gaza, Ashkelon, and the coastland, and finally to the unavoidable command of the Lord's sword.
Jeremiah 47 is not addressed to Judah directly, yet it has covenant significance because it shows that the Lord who judges His covenant people also judges the nations around them. Philistia's long historical hostility toward Israel and Judah is not forgotten, and the Lord's sovereignty over the coastlands confirms that the covenant people must not fear neighboring powers as though they operate independently of Him.
Jeremiah 47 does not announce the gospel directly, but it reveals the need for gospel refuge. The sword commanded by the Lord cannot rest simply because people wish judgment would stop. The chapter presses the seriousness of divine judgment and the helplessness of human strength. In the fullness of Scripture, Christ is the refuge God provides before the final day.
At the cross, the judgment sinners deserve falls upon the willing Substitute, and in the resurrection Christ secures life for all who take refuge in Him. The same Christ who saves is also the appointed Judge. Therefore the chapter's warning should drive sinners away from false security and toward the mercy of God in Christ.
Focus Points
- The Lord's sovereignty over neighboring nations
- Judgment as commanded sword
- The terror of divine judgment
- The collapse of alliances
- Mourning under judgment
- The nations' accountability
- Divine Sovereignty over Nations
- Judgment
- Human Helplessness
- Providence
- False Security
- The Fear of the Lord
- Accountability of the Nations
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 47:1-7
Jer 47:5-7 The prophet sees, in the spirit, the threatened desolation as already come upon Philistia, and portrays it in its effects upon the people and the country. "Baldness (a sign of the deepest and most painful sorrow) has come upon Gaza;" cf. Mic 1:16. נדמתה is rendered by the Vulgate conticuit . After this Graf and Nägelsbach take the meaning of being "speechless through pain and sorrow;" cf.
Lam 2:10. Others translate "to be destroyed." Both renderings are lexically permissible, for דּמה and דּמם have both meanings. In support of the first, the parallelism of the members has been adduced; but this is not decisive, for figurative and literal representations are often interchanged. On the whole, it is impossible to reach any definite conclusion; for both renderings give suitable ideas, and these not fundamentally different in reality the one from the other.
שׁארית עמקם, "the rest of their valley" (the suffix referring to Gaza and Ashkelon), is the low country round about Gaza and Ashkelon, which are specially mentioned from their being the two chief fortresses of Philistia. עמק is suitably applied to the low-lying belt of the country, elsewhere called שׁפלה, "the low country," as distinguished from the hill-country; for עמק does not always denote a deep valley, but is also sometimes used, as in Jos 17:16, etc.
, of the plain of Jezreel, and of other plains which are far from being deeply-sunk valleys. Thus there is no valid reason for following the arbitrary translation of the lxx, καὶ τὰ κατάλοιπα ̓Ενακείμ, and changing עמקם into ענקים, as Hitzig and Graf do; more especially is it utterly improbable that in the Chaldean period Anakim were still to be found in Philistia.
The mention of them, moreover, is out of place here; and still less can we follow Graf in his belief that the inhabitants of Gath are the "rest of the Anakim." In the last clause of Jer 47:5, Philistia is set forth as a woman, who tears her body (with her nails) in despair, makes incisions on her body; cf. Jer 16:6; Jer 41:5. The question, "How long dost thou tear thyself?"
forms a transition to the plaintive request, "Gather thyself," i. e. , draw thyself back into thy scabbard. But the seer replies, "How can it rest? for Jahveh hath given it a commission against Ashkelon and the Philistine sea-coast." For תּשׁקטי, in Jer 47:7, we must read the 3rd pers. fem. תּשׁקט, as the following להּ shows. The form probably got into the text from an oversight, through looking at תּשׁקטי in Jer 47:6.
חוף, "the sea-coast," a designation of Philistia, as in Eze 25:16. The prophecy concludes without a glance at the Messianic future. The threatened destruction of the Philistines has actually begun with the conquest of Philistia by Nebuchadnezzar, but has not yet culminated in the extermination of the people. The extermination and complete extirpation are thus not merely repeated by Ezek; Eze 25:15.
, but after the exile the threats are once more repeated against the Philistines by Zechariah (Zec 9:5): they only reached their complete fulfilment when, as Zechariah announces, in the addition made to Isa 14:30. , their idolatry also was removed from them, and their incorporation into the Church of God was accomplished through judgment. Cf. the remarks on Zep 2:10.
Concerning Moab The Moabites had spread themselves on the eastern side of the Dead Sea, where the Emims dwelt in former times (Deu 2:10). But previous to the immigration of the Israelites into Canaan, the Amorites, under King Sihon, had already taken forcible possession of the northern portion of this territory as far as the Arnon (Num 21:13). The Israelites, on their march through the desert, were not to treat the Moabites as enemies, nor touch their territory (Deu 2:9; cf.
Jdg 11:15, Jdg 11:18). But when Sihon, king of the Amorites, had been slain by the Israelites, and his kingdom subdued, the Israelites took possession of the territory north of the Arnon, that had formerly belonged to the Moabites, but had been conquered by Sihon: this was given to the tribe of Reuben for an inheritance (Num 21:24. ; Deu 2:32-36; Jos 13:15.)
The Moabites could not get over this loss of the northern half of their country. The victory of the Israelites over the powerful kings of the Amorites, viz. , Sihon in Heshbon and Og of Bashan, inspired them with terror for the power of this people; so that their king Balak, while the Israelites were encamped in the steppes of Moab opposite Jericho, fetched Balaam the sorcerer from Mesopotamia, with the design of destroying Israel through the power of his anathema.
And when this plan did not succeed, since Balaam was obliged, against his will, to bless Israel instead of cursing them, the Moabites sought to weaken them, and to render them powerless to do any injury, by seducing them to idolatry (cf. Num 22-25). Such malicious conduct was shown repeatedly afterwards. Not long after the death of Joshua, Eglon the king of Joab, aided by the Ammonites and Amalekites, crossed the Jordan and took Jericho, which he made the centre of operations for keeping the Israelites under subjection: these were thus oppressed for eighteen years, until they succeeded in defeating the Moabites and driving them back into their own land, after Ehud had assassinated King Eglon (Jdg 3:12.)
At a later period, Saul made war on them (1Sa 14:47); and David completely subdued them, severely chastised them, and made them tributary (2Sa 8:2). But after the death of Ahab, to whom King Mesha had paid a very considerable yearly tribute (2Ki 3:4), they revolted from Israel (2Ki 1:1; 2Ki 3:5). In the time of Jehoshaphat, in conjunction with the Ammonites and a portion of the Edomites, they even invaded Judah, with the design of taking Jerusalem; but they ruined themselves through mutual discords, so that Jehoshaphat obtained a glorious victory over them (2 Chron 20).
It was possibly also with the view of taking revenge for this exhibition of malicious spirit that the king of Judah afterwards, in conjunction with Joram king of Israel, carried war into their country, and defeated them (2 Kings 3:6-27). Still later, mention is made of an invasion of Israel by Moabite hosts during the reign of Joash (2Ki 13:20); and in the time of Hezekiah, we find them once more in possession of their ancient territory to the north of the Arnon, at a time when the trans-Jordanic tribes of Israel had been carried away by the Assyrians into exile.
Judging from these aphoristic notices, the Moabites, on the division of the kingdom after Solomon’s death, seem to have remained tributary to the kingdom of the ten tribes until the death of Ahab; then they revolted, but soon afterwards were once more reduced to subjection by Joram and Jehoshaphat. Still later, they certainly made several invasions into Israel, but without permanent result; nor was it till the carrying away of the trans-Jordanic tribes by the Assyrians that they succeeded in regaining permanent possession of the depopulated land of Reuben, their former territory.
This account, however, has been modified in several important respects by the recent discovery of an inscription on a monument raised by King Mesha after a victory he had gained; this "Moabite stone" was found in the neighbourhood of the ancient Dibon. The deciphering of the long inscription of thirty-four liens on this memorial stone, so far as success has followed the attempts hitherto made, has issued in its giving important disclosures concerning the relation of Moab to Israel.
From these we gather that Omri, king of Israel, had taken possession of the district of Medeba, and that the Moabites were heavily oppressed by him and his successor for forty years, until King Mesha succeeded, through the help of his god Chemosh, in regaining the territory that had been seized by the Israelites. We may further with certainty conclude, from various statements in this inscription, that the Moabites were by no means exterminated by the Israelites, when they took possession of the country to the north of the Arnon, which had been seized by the Amorites; they continued to live beside and among the Israelites.
Moreover, since the tribe of Reuben was chiefly engaged in the rearing of cattle, and thus appropriated the pastoral districts of the country, the Moabites were not utterly, at least not permanently subdued, but rather took every opportunity of weakening the Israelites, in order not merely to reclaim their old possessions, but also to make themselves independent of Israel. This object they seem to have actually attained, even so soon as immediately after the death of Solomon.
They continued independent until the powerful Omri restored the supremacy of Israel in the territory of Reuben; and Moab continued subject for forty years, at the end of which King Mesha again succeeded in breaking the yoke of Israel after the death of Ahab. Thenceforward, Israel never again got the upper hand, though Jeroboam II (as we are entitled to conclude from 2Ki 14:25) may have disputed the supremacy with the Moabites for a time.
Amos (Amo 2:1-3) and Isaiah (Jer 15 and 16) have already, before Jeremiah, threatened Moab with destruction, because of the acts of hostility against Israel of which they have been guilty. We have no historical notice concerning the fulfilment of these threatenings. Inasmuch as the power of the Assyrians in Eastern Asia was broken through the defeat of Sennacherib before Jerusalem, the Moabites may possibly have asserted their independence against the Assyrians.
Certainly it seems to follow, from the remark in 1Ch 5:17 (that the families of Gad were reckoned by genealogies in the days of Jotham king of Judah), that some of the Israelites on the east of Jordan came for a time under the sway of Judah. But even though this were allowed to hold true of the tribe of Reuben also, such a mastery could not have lasted long, since even towards the end of Jotham’s reign, Pekah the king of Israel joined with Hazael king of Syria in war against Judah (2Ki 15:37); and during the reign of Ahaz, Rezin invaded Gilead, and penetrating as far as the seaport of Elath, took it from Judah (2Ki 16:6).
At all events, up till the time of Nebuchadnezzar, the threats of Amos and Isaiah had attained only the feeblest beginnings of fulfilment; and (as is abundantly evident from the prophecy in this chapter) the Moabites were then more powerful than ever they had been before, and in undisturbed possession also of that portion of their ancient territory lying north of the Arnon, which had been taken from them by Sihon the Amorite; and after his defeat, the victorious Israelites had again apportioned it to the tribe of Reuben. This prophecy of Jeremiah concerning Moab is to be explained on the ground of these historical relations.
The day of ruin was to begin with the appearance of the Chaldeans in Palestine; this day had been predicted not merely by Amos and Isaiah, but even by Balaam, on the occasion of the first conflict of the Moabites with Israel. Jeremiah accordingly takes up anew the utterances of the old prophets regarding Moab which had not yet been fulfilled, but were now about to receive their accomplishment: these he reproduces in his own peculiar manner, taking as his foundation the oracular sentences of Isaiah concerning Moab, and combining these by means of the utterances of Amos and Balaam, not only regarding Moab, but also regarding the whole heathen world now ripe for judgment; and out of all this he frames a comprehensive announcement of the ruin to fall on this people, so haughty, and so filled with hatred against Israel.
The contents of this announcement are as follow: - The chief cities of Moab are perished, and with them their fame. Plans are being concocted for their destruction. On all sides there is a crying over the devastation, and wailing, and flight; Chemosh, with his priests and princes, wanders into exile, and country and city are laid waste (Jer 48:1-8). Let Moab escape with wings, in order to avoid the destruction; for although they have, in all time past, lived securely in their own land, they shall now be driven out of their dwellings, and come to dishonour with their god Chemosh, in spite of the bravery of their heroes (Jer 48:9-15).
The destruction of Moab draws near, their glory perishes, the whole country and all its towns are laid waste, and the power of Moab is broken (Jer 48:16-25). All this befalls them for their pride and loftiness of spirit; because of this they are punished, with the destruction of their glorious vines and their harvest; and the whole land becomes filled with sorrow and lamentation over the desolation, and the extermination of all those who make offerings to idols (Jer 48:26-35).
Meanwhile the prophet mourns with the hapless people, who are broken like a despised vessel (Jer 48:36-38). Moab becomes the laughing-stock and the horror of all around: the enemy captures all their fortresses, and none shall escape the ruin (Jer 48:39-44). Fire goes out from Heshbon and destroys the whole land, and the people must go into captivity; but at the end of the days, the Lord will turn the captivity of Moab (Jer 48:45-47).
According to this view of the whole, this prophecy falls into seven strophes of unequal length, of which every one concludes either with אמר יהוה or נאם. The middle one, which is also the longest (Jer 48:26-35), forms an apparent exception, inasmuch as נאם יהוה does not stand at the end, but in the middle of Jer 48:35; while in the second last strophe (Jer 48:39-44), the last two verses (Jer 48:43 and Jer 48:44) end with this formula.
Jer 47:5-7 The prophet sees, in the spirit, the threatened desolation as already come upon Philistia, and portrays it in its effects upon the people and the country. "Baldness (a sign of the deepest and most painful sorrow) has come upon Gaza;" cf. Mic 1:16. נדמתה is rendered by the Vulgate conticuit . After this Graf and Nägelsbach take the meaning of being "speechless through pain and sorrow;" cf.
Lam 2:10. Others translate "to be destroyed." Both renderings are lexically permissible, for דּמה and דּמם have both meanings. In support of the first, the parallelism of the members has been adduced; but this is not decisive, for figurative and literal representations are often interchanged. On the whole, it is impossible to reach any definite conclusion; for both renderings give suitable ideas, and these not fundamentally different in reality the one from the other.
שׁארית עמקם, "the rest of their valley" (the suffix referring to Gaza and Ashkelon), is the low country round about Gaza and Ashkelon, which are specially mentioned from their being the two chief fortresses of Philistia. עמק is suitably applied to the low-lying belt of the country, elsewhere called שׁפלה, "the low country," as distinguished from the hill-country; for עמק does not always denote a deep valley, but is also sometimes used, as in Jos 17:16, etc.
, of the plain of Jezreel, and of other plains which are far from being deeply-sunk valleys. Thus there is no valid reason for following the arbitrary translation of the lxx, καὶ τὰ κατάλοιπα ̓Ενακείμ, and changing עמקם into ענקים, as Hitzig and Graf do; more especially is it utterly improbable that in the Chaldean period Anakim were still to be found in Philistia.
The mention of them, moreover, is out of place here; and still less can we follow Graf in his belief that the inhabitants of Gath are the "rest of the Anakim." In the last clause of Jer 47:5, Philistia is set forth as a woman, who tears her body (with her nails) in despair, makes incisions on her body; cf. Jer 16:6; Jer 41:5. The question, "How long dost thou tear thyself?"
forms a transition to the plaintive request, "Gather thyself," i. e. , draw thyself back into thy scabbard. But the seer replies, "How can it rest? for Jahveh hath given it a commission against Ashkelon and the Philistine sea-coast." For תּשׁקטי, in Jer 47:7, we must read the 3rd pers. fem. תּשׁקט, as the following להּ shows. The form probably got into the text from an oversight, through looking at תּשׁקטי in Jer 47:6.
חוף, "the sea-coast," a designation of Philistia, as in Eze 25:16. The prophecy concludes without a glance at the Messianic future. The threatened destruction of the Philistines has actually begun with the conquest of Philistia by Nebuchadnezzar, but has not yet culminated in the extermination of the people. The extermination and complete extirpation are thus not merely repeated by Ezek; Eze 25:15.
, but after the exile the threats are once more repeated against the Philistines by Zechariah (Zec 9:5): they only reached their complete fulfilment when, as Zechariah announces, in the addition made to Isa 14:30. , their idolatry also was removed from them, and their incorporation into the Church of God was accomplished through judgment. Cf. the remarks on Zep 2:10.
Concerning Moab The Moabites had spread themselves on the eastern side of the Dead Sea, where the Emims dwelt in former times (Deu 2:10). But previous to the immigration of the Israelites into Canaan, the Amorites, under King Sihon, had already taken forcible possession of the northern portion of this territory as far as the Arnon (Num 21:13). The Israelites, on their march through the desert, were not to treat the Moabites as enemies, nor touch their territory (Deu 2:9; cf.
Jdg 11:15, Jdg 11:18). But when Sihon, king of the Amorites, had been slain by the Israelites, and his kingdom subdued, the Israelites took possession of the territory north of the Arnon, that had formerly belonged to the Moabites, but had been conquered by Sihon: this was given to the tribe of Reuben for an inheritance (Num 21:24. ; Deu 2:32-36; Jos 13:15.)
The Moabites could not get over this loss of the northern half of their country. The victory of the Israelites over the powerful kings of the Amorites, viz. , Sihon in Heshbon and Og of Bashan, inspired them with terror for the power of this people; so that their king Balak, while the Israelites were encamped in the steppes of Moab opposite Jericho, fetched Balaam the sorcerer from Mesopotamia, with the design of destroying Israel through the power of his anathema.
And when this plan did not succeed, since Balaam was obliged, against his will, to bless Israel instead of cursing them, the Moabites sought to weaken them, and to render them powerless to do any injury, by seducing them to idolatry (cf. Num 22-25). Such malicious conduct was shown repeatedly afterwards. Not long after the death of Joshua, Eglon the king of Joab, aided by the Ammonites and Amalekites, crossed the Jordan and took Jericho, which he made the centre of operations for keeping the Israelites under subjection: these were thus oppressed for eighteen years, until they succeeded in defeating the Moabites and driving them back into their own land, after Ehud had assassinated King Eglon (Jdg 3:12.)
At a later period, Saul made war on them (1Sa 14:47); and David completely subdued them, severely chastised them, and made them tributary (2Sa 8:2). But after the death of Ahab, to whom King Mesha had paid a very considerable yearly tribute (2Ki 3:4), they revolted from Israel (2Ki 1:1; 2Ki 3:5). In the time of Jehoshaphat, in conjunction with the Ammonites and a portion of the Edomites, they even invaded Judah, with the design of taking Jerusalem; but they ruined themselves through mutual discords, so that Jehoshaphat obtained a glorious victory over them (2 Chron 20).
It was possibly also with the view of taking revenge for this exhibition of malicious spirit that the king of Judah afterwards, in conjunction with Joram king of Israel, carried war into their country, and defeated them (2 Kings 3:6-27). Still later, mention is made of an invasion of Israel by Moabite hosts during the reign of Joash (2Ki 13:20); and in the time of Hezekiah, we find them once more in possession of their ancient territory to the north of the Arnon, at a time when the trans-Jordanic tribes of Israel had been carried away by the Assyrians into exile.
Judging from these aphoristic notices, the Moabites, on the division of the kingdom after Solomon’s death, seem to have remained tributary to the kingdom of the ten tribes until the death of Ahab; then they revolted, but soon afterwards were once more reduced to subjection by Joram and Jehoshaphat. Still later, they certainly made several invasions into Israel, but without permanent result; nor was it till the carrying away of the trans-Jordanic tribes by the Assyrians that they succeeded in regaining permanent possession of the depopulated land of Reuben, their former territory.
This account, however, has been modified in several important respects by the recent discovery of an inscription on a monument raised by King Mesha after a victory he had gained; this "Moabite stone" was found in the neighbourhood of the ancient Dibon. The deciphering of the long inscription of thirty-four liens on this memorial stone, so far as success has followed the attempts hitherto made, has issued in its giving important disclosures concerning the relation of Moab to Israel.
From these we gather that Omri, king of Israel, had taken possession of the district of Medeba, and that the Moabites were heavily oppressed by him and his successor for forty years, until King Mesha succeeded, through the help of his god Chemosh, in regaining the territory that had been seized by the Israelites. We may further with certainty conclude, from various statements in this inscription, that the Moabites were by no means exterminated by the Israelites, when they took possession of the country to the north of the Arnon, which had been seized by the Amorites; they continued to live beside and among the Israelites.
Moreover, since the tribe of Reuben was chiefly engaged in the rearing of cattle, and thus appropriated the pastoral districts of the country, the Moabites were not utterly, at least not permanently subdued, but rather took every opportunity of weakening the Israelites, in order not merely to reclaim their old possessions, but also to make themselves independent of Israel. This object they seem to have actually attained, even so soon as immediately after the death of Solomon.
They continued independent until the powerful Omri restored the supremacy of Israel in the territory of Reuben; and Moab continued subject for forty years, at the end of which King Mesha again succeeded in breaking the yoke of Israel after the death of Ahab. Thenceforward, Israel never again got the upper hand, though Jeroboam II (as we are entitled to conclude from 2Ki 14:25) may have disputed the supremacy with the Moabites for a time.
Amos (Amo 2:1-3) and Isaiah (Jer 15 and 16) have already, before Jeremiah, threatened Moab with destruction, because of the acts of hostility against Israel of which they have been guilty. We have no historical notice concerning the fulfilment of these threatenings. Inasmuch as the power of the Assyrians in Eastern Asia was broken through the defeat of Sennacherib before Jerusalem, the Moabites may possibly have asserted their independence against the Assyrians.
Certainly it seems to follow, from the remark in 1Ch 5:17 (that the families of Gad were reckoned by genealogies in the days of Jotham king of Judah), that some of the Israelites on the east of Jordan came for a time under the sway of Judah. But even though this were allowed to hold true of the tribe of Reuben also, such a mastery could not have lasted long, since even towards the end of Jotham’s reign, Pekah the king of Israel joined with Hazael king of Syria in war against Judah (2Ki 15:37); and during the reign of Ahaz, Rezin invaded Gilead, and penetrating as far as the seaport of Elath, took it from Judah (2Ki 16:6).
At all events, up till the time of Nebuchadnezzar, the threats of Amos and Isaiah had attained only the feeblest beginnings of fulfilment; and (as is abundantly evident from the prophecy in this chapter) the Moabites were then more powerful than ever they had been before, and in undisturbed possession also of that portion of their ancient territory lying north of the Arnon, which had been taken from them by Sihon the Amorite; and after his defeat, the victorious Israelites had again apportioned it to the tribe of Reuben. This prophecy of Jeremiah concerning Moab is to be explained on the ground of these historical relations.
The day of ruin was to begin with the appearance of the Chaldeans in Palestine; this day had been predicted not merely by Amos and Isaiah, but even by Balaam, on the occasion of the first conflict of the Moabites with Israel. Jeremiah accordingly takes up anew the utterances of the old prophets regarding Moab which had not yet been fulfilled, but were now about to receive their accomplishment: these he reproduces in his own peculiar manner, taking as his foundation the oracular sentences of Isaiah concerning Moab, and combining these by means of the utterances of Amos and Balaam, not only regarding Moab, but also regarding the whole heathen world now ripe for judgment; and out of all this he frames a comprehensive announcement of the ruin to fall on this people, so haughty, and so filled with hatred against Israel.
The contents of this announcement are as follow: - The chief cities of Moab are perished, and with them their fame. Plans are being concocted for their destruction. On all sides there is a crying over the devastation, and wailing, and flight; Chemosh, with his priests and princes, wanders into exile, and country and city are laid waste (Jer 48:1-8). Let Moab escape with wings, in order to avoid the destruction; for although they have, in all time past, lived securely in their own land, they shall now be driven out of their dwellings, and come to dishonour with their god Chemosh, in spite of the bravery of their heroes (Jer 48:9-15).
The destruction of Moab draws near, their glory perishes, the whole country and all its towns are laid waste, and the power of Moab is broken (Jer 48:16-25). All this befalls them for their pride and loftiness of spirit; because of this they are punished, with the destruction of their glorious vines and their harvest; and the whole land becomes filled with sorrow and lamentation over the desolation, and the extermination of all those who make offerings to idols (Jer 48:26-35).
Meanwhile the prophet mourns with the hapless people, who are broken like a despised vessel (Jer 48:36-38). Moab becomes the laughing-stock and the horror of all around: the enemy captures all their fortresses, and none shall escape the ruin (Jer 48:39-44). Fire goes out from Heshbon and destroys the whole land, and the people must go into captivity; but at the end of the days, the Lord will turn the captivity of Moab (Jer 48:45-47).
According to this view of the whole, this prophecy falls into seven strophes of unequal length, of which every one concludes either with אמר יהוה or נאם. The middle one, which is also the longest (Jer 48:26-35), forms an apparent exception, inasmuch as נאם יהוה does not stand at the end, but in the middle of Jer 48:35; while in the second last strophe (Jer 48:39-44), the last two verses (Jer 48:43 and Jer 48:44) end with this formula.
Jer 48:1-8 Calamities to come on Moab. - Jer 48:1 . "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Woe to Nebo, for it is laid waste! Kiriathaim is come to dishonour, it is taken: the fortress is come to dishonour and broken down. Jer 48:2 . Moab’s glory is no more. In Heshbon they have devised evil against her, [saying], Come, and let us cut her off from [being] a nation: thou also, O Madmen, art brought to silence; the sword shall go after thee.
Jer 48:3 . A sound of crying from Horonaim, desolation and great destruction. Jer 48:4 . Moab is destroyed; her little ones have caused a cry to be heard. Jer 48:5 . For they ascend the ascent of Luhith with weeping - weeping: for on the descent of Horonaim the enemies have heard a cry of destruction. Jer 48:6 . Flee, save your life! and be like one destitute in the wilderness.
Jer 48:7 . For, because they trust [was] in thy works, and in thy treasures, thou also shalt be taken; and Chemosh shall go into captivity, his priests and his princes together. Jer 48:8 . The destroyer shall come to every city, and no city shall escape; and the valley shall perish, and the plain shall be laid waste, as Jahveh hath said." With the exclamation "Woe!"
Jeremiah transports the hearers of the word of God at once into the midst of the catastrophe which is to come on Moab; this is with the view of humbling the pride of this people, and chastening them for their sins. The woe is uttered over Nebo, but holds also of the towns named afterwards. Nebo is not the mountain of that name (Deu 32:49; Deu 34:1), but the city, which probably did not lie far from the peak in the mountain-range of Abarim, which bore the same name (Num 32:3, Num 32:38; Isa 15:2), although in the Onomasticon, s.
v. Ναβαῦ, the situation of the mountain is given as being six Roman miles from Heshbon, towards the west, and s. v. Ναβώρ, that of the city, eight Roman miles south from Heshbon, for both accounts point to a situation in the south-west. The Arab. name nba= is still applied to some ruins; cf. Robinson’s Palestine , iii. p. 170. "Kiriathaim is taken." The site of this town, mentioned as early as Gen 14:5, has been fixed, since the time of Burckhardt, as that of a mass of ruins called et Teim, about five miles south of Heshbon; but Dietrich, in Merx' Archiv .
i. S. 337ff. , has shown this is incorrect. According to Eusebius, in his Onomasticon , Kiriathaim lay ten Roman miles to the west of Medeba: this suits not merely the position of et Teim , but also the ruins of Kereyat south-west from Medeba, on the ridge of Mount Attarus, a little to the south of M'kaur ( Machaerus ), and of Baara in the Wady Zerka Maein , where also is the plain mentioned in Gen 14:5, either in the plain stretching direct east from Kereyat between Wady Zerka Maein and Wady Wal, or south-east in the beautiful plain el Kura , described by Burckhardt, p.
371ff. , between the Wal and the Mojeb. Nebo and Kiriathaim lay on the eastern border of the high range of mountains, and seem to be comprehended under המּשׂגּב, "the height, the high fortress," in the third clause of Jer 48:1, as the representatives of the mountain country of Moab. Various expositors, certainly, take the word as a proper name designating an elevated region; Graf and Nägelsbach take it to be a name of Kir-Moab (Kir-heres, Kir-haresheth, Jer 48:31, Jer 48:36), the chief fortress in the country, the modern Kerek in the southern part of Moab; but no valid proof has been adduced.
By "the height" Hitzig understands the highlands, which learn of the fall of these towns in the lowlands, and feel this disgrace that has come on Moab, but have not yet themselves been taken. But this view is untenable, because the towns of Nebo and Kiriathaim are not situated in the level country. Again, since הובשׁה is common to the two clauses, the distinction between נלכּדה and חתּה could hardly be pressed so far as to make the latter the opposite of the former, in the sense of being still unconquered.
The meaning rather is, that through Nebo’s being laid waste, and the capture of Kiriathaim, the fortress on which the Moabites trusted is no more. And to this Jer 48:3 appropriately adds, "the boasting of Moab is gone," i. e. , Moab has no more ground for boasting. "In Heshbon they (the enemy, or the conquerors) plot evil against Moab." Heshbon was formerly the capital of the Amorite kingdom of Sihon (Num 21:26; Deu 2:24, etc.)
, and was assigned to the tribe of Reuben (Jos 13:17); but because it lay on the boundary of the territory belonging to the tribe, it was given up to the Gadites, and set apart as a Levitical city (Jos 21:37). It lay ten Roman miles east from the Jordan, opposite Jericho, almost intermediate between the Arnon and the Jabbok, and is still pointed out, though in ruins, under the old name Heshbân (see on Num 32:37).
At the time of Jeremiah it was taken possession of by the Ammonites (Jer 49:3), consequently it was the frontier town of the Moabite territory at that time; and being such, it is here named as the town where the enemy, coming from the north, deliberate regarding the conquest of Moab - "meditate evil," i. e. , decide upon conquest and devastation. The suffix of עליה refers to Moab as a country, and hence is feminine; cf.
v. 4. "We will destroy it (Moab) מגּוי, so that it shall no longer be a nation." Just as in בּחשׁבּון חשׁבוּ there is a play on the words, so is there also in the expression מדמן תּדּמּי which follows. This very circumstance forms an argument for taking Madmen as a proper name, instead of an appellative, as Venema and Hitzig have done, after the example of the lxx: "Yea, thou shalt be destroyed (and made into) a dunghill."
In support of this rendering they point to 2Ki 10:27; Ezr 6:11. But the verb דּמם, in its meaning, ill accords with מדמן in the sense of a dung-heap, and in this case there would be no foundation for a play upon the words (Graf). It is no proof of the non-existence of a place called Madmen in Moab, that it is not mentioned elsewhere; Madmena in the tribe of Benjamin (Isa 10:31), and Madmanna in Judah (Jos 15:31), are also mentioned but once.
These passages rather show that the name Madmen was not uncommon; and it was perhaps with reference to this name that Isaiah (Isa 25:10) chose the figure of the dunghill. דּמם, to be silent, means, in the Niphal, to be brought to silence, be exterminated, perish; cf. Jer 49:26; Jer 25:37; Jer 8:14, etc. As to the form תּדּמּי instead of תּדּמּי , cf. Ewald, §140, b ; Gesenius, §67, Rem.
5. The following clause refers to Madmen: "after thee shall the sword go;" cf. Jer 9:15.
Jer 48:1-8 Calamities to come on Moab. - Jer 48:1 . "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Woe to Nebo, for it is laid waste! Kiriathaim is come to dishonour, it is taken: the fortress is come to dishonour and broken down. Jer 48:2 . Moab’s glory is no more. In Heshbon they have devised evil against her, [saying], Come, and let us cut her off from [being] a nation: thou also, O Madmen, art brought to silence; the sword shall go after thee.
Jer 48:3 . A sound of crying from Horonaim, desolation and great destruction. Jer 48:4 . Moab is destroyed; her little ones have caused a cry to be heard. Jer 48:5 . For they ascend the ascent of Luhith with weeping - weeping: for on the descent of Horonaim the enemies have heard a cry of destruction. Jer 48:6 . Flee, save your life! and be like one destitute in the wilderness.
Jer 48:7 . For, because they trust [was] in thy works, and in thy treasures, thou also shalt be taken; and Chemosh shall go into captivity, his priests and his princes together. Jer 48:8 . The destroyer shall come to every city, and no city shall escape; and the valley shall perish, and the plain shall be laid waste, as Jahveh hath said." With the exclamation "Woe!"
Jeremiah transports the hearers of the word of God at once into the midst of the catastrophe which is to come on Moab; this is with the view of humbling the pride of this people, and chastening them for their sins. The woe is uttered over Nebo, but holds also of the towns named afterwards. Nebo is not the mountain of that name (Deu 32:49; Deu 34:1), but the city, which probably did not lie far from the peak in the mountain-range of Abarim, which bore the same name (Num 32:3, Num 32:38; Isa 15:2), although in the Onomasticon, s.
v. Ναβαῦ, the situation of the mountain is given as being six Roman miles from Heshbon, towards the west, and s. v. Ναβώρ, that of the city, eight Roman miles south from Heshbon, for both accounts point to a situation in the south-west. The Arab. name nba= is still applied to some ruins; cf. Robinson’s Palestine , iii. p. 170. "Kiriathaim is taken." The site of this town, mentioned as early as Gen 14:5, has been fixed, since the time of Burckhardt, as that of a mass of ruins called et Teim, about five miles south of Heshbon; but Dietrich, in Merx' Archiv .
i. S. 337ff. , has shown this is incorrect. According to Eusebius, in his Onomasticon , Kiriathaim lay ten Roman miles to the west of Medeba: this suits not merely the position of et Teim , but also the ruins of Kereyat south-west from Medeba, on the ridge of Mount Attarus, a little to the south of M'kaur ( Machaerus ), and of Baara in the Wady Zerka Maein , where also is the plain mentioned in Gen 14:5, either in the plain stretching direct east from Kereyat between Wady Zerka Maein and Wady Wal, or south-east in the beautiful plain el Kura , described by Burckhardt, p.
371ff. , between the Wal and the Mojeb. Nebo and Kiriathaim lay on the eastern border of the high range of mountains, and seem to be comprehended under המּשׂגּב, "the height, the high fortress," in the third clause of Jer 48:1, as the representatives of the mountain country of Moab. Various expositors, certainly, take the word as a proper name designating an elevated region; Graf and Nägelsbach take it to be a name of Kir-Moab (Kir-heres, Kir-haresheth, Jer 48:31, Jer 48:36), the chief fortress in the country, the modern Kerek in the southern part of Moab; but no valid proof has been adduced.
By "the height" Hitzig understands the highlands, which learn of the fall of these towns in the lowlands, and feel this disgrace that has come on Moab, but have not yet themselves been taken. But this view is untenable, because the towns of Nebo and Kiriathaim are not situated in the level country. Again, since הובשׁה is common to the two clauses, the distinction between נלכּדה and חתּה could hardly be pressed so far as to make the latter the opposite of the former, in the sense of being still unconquered.
The meaning rather is, that through Nebo’s being laid waste, and the capture of Kiriathaim, the fortress on which the Moabites trusted is no more. And to this Jer 48:3 appropriately adds, "the boasting of Moab is gone," i. e. , Moab has no more ground for boasting. "In Heshbon they (the enemy, or the conquerors) plot evil against Moab." Heshbon was formerly the capital of the Amorite kingdom of Sihon (Num 21:26; Deu 2:24, etc.)
, and was assigned to the tribe of Reuben (Jos 13:17); but because it lay on the boundary of the territory belonging to the tribe, it was given up to the Gadites, and set apart as a Levitical city (Jos 21:37). It lay ten Roman miles east from the Jordan, opposite Jericho, almost intermediate between the Arnon and the Jabbok, and is still pointed out, though in ruins, under the old name Heshbân (see on Num 32:37).
At the time of Jeremiah it was taken possession of by the Ammonites (Jer 49:3), consequently it was the frontier town of the Moabite territory at that time; and being such, it is here named as the town where the enemy, coming from the north, deliberate regarding the conquest of Moab - "meditate evil," i. e. , decide upon conquest and devastation. The suffix of עליה refers to Moab as a country, and hence is feminine; cf.
v. 4. "We will destroy it (Moab) מגּוי, so that it shall no longer be a nation." Just as in בּחשׁבּון חשׁבוּ there is a play on the words, so is there also in the expression מדמן תּדּמּי which follows. This very circumstance forms an argument for taking Madmen as a proper name, instead of an appellative, as Venema and Hitzig have done, after the example of the lxx: "Yea, thou shalt be destroyed (and made into) a dunghill."
In support of this rendering they point to 2Ki 10:27; Ezr 6:11. But the verb דּמם, in its meaning, ill accords with מדמן in the sense of a dung-heap, and in this case there would be no foundation for a play upon the words (Graf). It is no proof of the non-existence of a place called Madmen in Moab, that it is not mentioned elsewhere; Madmena in the tribe of Benjamin (Isa 10:31), and Madmanna in Judah (Jos 15:31), are also mentioned but once.
These passages rather show that the name Madmen was not uncommon; and it was perhaps with reference to this name that Isaiah (Isa 25:10) chose the figure of the dunghill. דּמם, to be silent, means, in the Niphal, to be brought to silence, be exterminated, perish; cf. Jer 49:26; Jer 25:37; Jer 8:14, etc. As to the form תּדּמּי instead of תּדּמּי , cf. Ewald, §140, b ; Gesenius, §67, Rem.
5. The following clause refers to Madmen: "after thee shall the sword go;" cf. Jer 9:15.
Jer 48:1-8 Calamities to come on Moab. - Jer 48:1 . "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Woe to Nebo, for it is laid waste! Kiriathaim is come to dishonour, it is taken: the fortress is come to dishonour and broken down. Jer 48:2 . Moab’s glory is no more. In Heshbon they have devised evil against her, [saying], Come, and let us cut her off from [being] a nation: thou also, O Madmen, art brought to silence; the sword shall go after thee.
Jer 48:3 . A sound of crying from Horonaim, desolation and great destruction. Jer 48:4 . Moab is destroyed; her little ones have caused a cry to be heard. Jer 48:5 . For they ascend the ascent of Luhith with weeping - weeping: for on the descent of Horonaim the enemies have heard a cry of destruction. Jer 48:6 . Flee, save your life! and be like one destitute in the wilderness.
Jer 48:7 . For, because they trust [was] in thy works, and in thy treasures, thou also shalt be taken; and Chemosh shall go into captivity, his priests and his princes together. Jer 48:8 . The destroyer shall come to every city, and no city shall escape; and the valley shall perish, and the plain shall be laid waste, as Jahveh hath said." With the exclamation "Woe!"
Jeremiah transports the hearers of the word of God at once into the midst of the catastrophe which is to come on Moab; this is with the view of humbling the pride of this people, and chastening them for their sins. The woe is uttered over Nebo, but holds also of the towns named afterwards. Nebo is not the mountain of that name (Deu 32:49; Deu 34:1), but the city, which probably did not lie far from the peak in the mountain-range of Abarim, which bore the same name (Num 32:3, Num 32:38; Isa 15:2), although in the Onomasticon, s.
v. Ναβαῦ, the situation of the mountain is given as being six Roman miles from Heshbon, towards the west, and s. v. Ναβώρ, that of the city, eight Roman miles south from Heshbon, for both accounts point to a situation in the south-west. The Arab. name nba= is still applied to some ruins; cf. Robinson’s Palestine , iii. p. 170. "Kiriathaim is taken." The site of this town, mentioned as early as Gen 14:5, has been fixed, since the time of Burckhardt, as that of a mass of ruins called et Teim, about five miles south of Heshbon; but Dietrich, in Merx' Archiv .
i. S. 337ff. , has shown this is incorrect. According to Eusebius, in his Onomasticon , Kiriathaim lay ten Roman miles to the west of Medeba: this suits not merely the position of et Teim , but also the ruins of Kereyat south-west from Medeba, on the ridge of Mount Attarus, a little to the south of M'kaur ( Machaerus ), and of Baara in the Wady Zerka Maein , where also is the plain mentioned in Gen 14:5, either in the plain stretching direct east from Kereyat between Wady Zerka Maein and Wady Wal, or south-east in the beautiful plain el Kura , described by Burckhardt, p.
371ff. , between the Wal and the Mojeb. Nebo and Kiriathaim lay on the eastern border of the high range of mountains, and seem to be comprehended under המּשׂגּב, "the height, the high fortress," in the third clause of Jer 48:1, as the representatives of the mountain country of Moab. Various expositors, certainly, take the word as a proper name designating an elevated region; Graf and Nägelsbach take it to be a name of Kir-Moab (Kir-heres, Kir-haresheth, Jer 48:31, Jer 48:36), the chief fortress in the country, the modern Kerek in the southern part of Moab; but no valid proof has been adduced.
By "the height" Hitzig understands the highlands, which learn of the fall of these towns in the lowlands, and feel this disgrace that has come on Moab, but have not yet themselves been taken. But this view is untenable, because the towns of Nebo and Kiriathaim are not situated in the level country. Again, since הובשׁה is common to the two clauses, the distinction between נלכּדה and חתּה could hardly be pressed so far as to make the latter the opposite of the former, in the sense of being still unconquered.
The meaning rather is, that through Nebo’s being laid waste, and the capture of Kiriathaim, the fortress on which the Moabites trusted is no more. And to this Jer 48:3 appropriately adds, "the boasting of Moab is gone," i. e. , Moab has no more ground for boasting. "In Heshbon they (the enemy, or the conquerors) plot evil against Moab." Heshbon was formerly the capital of the Amorite kingdom of Sihon (Num 21:26; Deu 2:24, etc.)
, and was assigned to the tribe of Reuben (Jos 13:17); but because it lay on the boundary of the territory belonging to the tribe, it was given up to the Gadites, and set apart as a Levitical city (Jos 21:37). It lay ten Roman miles east from the Jordan, opposite Jericho, almost intermediate between the Arnon and the Jabbok, and is still pointed out, though in ruins, under the old name Heshbân (see on Num 32:37).
At the time of Jeremiah it was taken possession of by the Ammonites (Jer 49:3), consequently it was the frontier town of the Moabite territory at that time; and being such, it is here named as the town where the enemy, coming from the north, deliberate regarding the conquest of Moab - "meditate evil," i. e. , decide upon conquest and devastation. The suffix of עליה refers to Moab as a country, and hence is feminine; cf.
v. 4. "We will destroy it (Moab) מגּוי, so that it shall no longer be a nation." Just as in בּחשׁבּון חשׁבוּ there is a play on the words, so is there also in the expression מדמן תּדּמּי which follows. This very circumstance forms an argument for taking Madmen as a proper name, instead of an appellative, as Venema and Hitzig have done, after the example of the lxx: "Yea, thou shalt be destroyed (and made into) a dunghill."
In support of this rendering they point to 2Ki 10:27; Ezr 6:11. But the verb דּמם, in its meaning, ill accords with מדמן in the sense of a dung-heap, and in this case there would be no foundation for a play upon the words (Graf). It is no proof of the non-existence of a place called Madmen in Moab, that it is not mentioned elsewhere; Madmena in the tribe of Benjamin (Isa 10:31), and Madmanna in Judah (Jos 15:31), are also mentioned but once.
These passages rather show that the name Madmen was not uncommon; and it was perhaps with reference to this name that Isaiah (Isa 25:10) chose the figure of the dunghill. דּמם, to be silent, means, in the Niphal, to be brought to silence, be exterminated, perish; cf. Jer 49:26; Jer 25:37; Jer 8:14, etc. As to the form תּדּמּי instead of תּדּמּי , cf. Ewald, §140, b ; Gesenius, §67, Rem.
5. The following clause refers to Madmen: "after thee shall the sword go;" cf. Jer 9:15.
Jer 48:1-8 Calamities to come on Moab. - Jer 48:1 . "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Woe to Nebo, for it is laid waste! Kiriathaim is come to dishonour, it is taken: the fortress is come to dishonour and broken down. Jer 48:2 . Moab’s glory is no more. In Heshbon they have devised evil against her, [saying], Come, and let us cut her off from [being] a nation: thou also, O Madmen, art brought to silence; the sword shall go after thee.
Jer 48:3 . A sound of crying from Horonaim, desolation and great destruction. Jer 48:4 . Moab is destroyed; her little ones have caused a cry to be heard. Jer 48:5 . For they ascend the ascent of Luhith with weeping - weeping: for on the descent of Horonaim the enemies have heard a cry of destruction. Jer 48:6 . Flee, save your life! and be like one destitute in the wilderness.
Jer 48:7 . For, because they trust [was] in thy works, and in thy treasures, thou also shalt be taken; and Chemosh shall go into captivity, his priests and his princes together. Jer 48:8 . The destroyer shall come to every city, and no city shall escape; and the valley shall perish, and the plain shall be laid waste, as Jahveh hath said." With the exclamation "Woe!"
Jeremiah transports the hearers of the word of God at once into the midst of the catastrophe which is to come on Moab; this is with the view of humbling the pride of this people, and chastening them for their sins. The woe is uttered over Nebo, but holds also of the towns named afterwards. Nebo is not the mountain of that name (Deu 32:49; Deu 34:1), but the city, which probably did not lie far from the peak in the mountain-range of Abarim, which bore the same name (Num 32:3, Num 32:38; Isa 15:2), although in the Onomasticon, s.
v. Ναβαῦ, the situation of the mountain is given as being six Roman miles from Heshbon, towards the west, and s. v. Ναβώρ, that of the city, eight Roman miles south from Heshbon, for both accounts point to a situation in the south-west. The Arab. name nba= is still applied to some ruins; cf. Robinson’s Palestine , iii. p. 170. "Kiriathaim is taken." The site of this town, mentioned as early as Gen 14:5, has been fixed, since the time of Burckhardt, as that of a mass of ruins called et Teim, about five miles south of Heshbon; but Dietrich, in Merx' Archiv .
i. S. 337ff. , has shown this is incorrect. According to Eusebius, in his Onomasticon , Kiriathaim lay ten Roman miles to the west of Medeba: this suits not merely the position of et Teim , but also the ruins of Kereyat south-west from Medeba, on the ridge of Mount Attarus, a little to the south of M'kaur ( Machaerus ), and of Baara in the Wady Zerka Maein , where also is the plain mentioned in Gen 14:5, either in the plain stretching direct east from Kereyat between Wady Zerka Maein and Wady Wal, or south-east in the beautiful plain el Kura , described by Burckhardt, p.
371ff. , between the Wal and the Mojeb. Nebo and Kiriathaim lay on the eastern border of the high range of mountains, and seem to be comprehended under המּשׂגּב, "the height, the high fortress," in the third clause of Jer 48:1, as the representatives of the mountain country of Moab. Various expositors, certainly, take the word as a proper name designating an elevated region; Graf and Nägelsbach take it to be a name of Kir-Moab (Kir-heres, Kir-haresheth, Jer 48:31, Jer 48:36), the chief fortress in the country, the modern Kerek in the southern part of Moab; but no valid proof has been adduced.
By "the height" Hitzig understands the highlands, which learn of the fall of these towns in the lowlands, and feel this disgrace that has come on Moab, but have not yet themselves been taken. But this view is untenable, because the towns of Nebo and Kiriathaim are not situated in the level country. Again, since הובשׁה is common to the two clauses, the distinction between נלכּדה and חתּה could hardly be pressed so far as to make the latter the opposite of the former, in the sense of being still unconquered.
The meaning rather is, that through Nebo’s being laid waste, and the capture of Kiriathaim, the fortress on which the Moabites trusted is no more. And to this Jer 48:3 appropriately adds, "the boasting of Moab is gone," i. e. , Moab has no more ground for boasting. "In Heshbon they (the enemy, or the conquerors) plot evil against Moab." Heshbon was formerly the capital of the Amorite kingdom of Sihon (Num 21:26; Deu 2:24, etc.)
, and was assigned to the tribe of Reuben (Jos 13:17); but because it lay on the boundary of the territory belonging to the tribe, it was given up to the Gadites, and set apart as a Levitical city (Jos 21:37). It lay ten Roman miles east from the Jordan, opposite Jericho, almost intermediate between the Arnon and the Jabbok, and is still pointed out, though in ruins, under the old name Heshbân (see on Num 32:37).
At the time of Jeremiah it was taken possession of by the Ammonites (Jer 49:3), consequently it was the frontier town of the Moabite territory at that time; and being such, it is here named as the town where the enemy, coming from the north, deliberate regarding the conquest of Moab - "meditate evil," i. e. , decide upon conquest and devastation. The suffix of עליה refers to Moab as a country, and hence is feminine; cf.
v. 4. "We will destroy it (Moab) מגּוי, so that it shall no longer be a nation." Just as in בּחשׁבּון חשׁבוּ there is a play on the words, so is there also in the expression מדמן תּדּמּי which follows. This very circumstance forms an argument for taking Madmen as a proper name, instead of an appellative, as Venema and Hitzig have done, after the example of the lxx: "Yea, thou shalt be destroyed (and made into) a dunghill."
In support of this rendering they point to 2Ki 10:27; Ezr 6:11. But the verb דּמם, in its meaning, ill accords with מדמן in the sense of a dung-heap, and in this case there would be no foundation for a play upon the words (Graf). It is no proof of the non-existence of a place called Madmen in Moab, that it is not mentioned elsewhere; Madmena in the tribe of Benjamin (Isa 10:31), and Madmanna in Judah (Jos 15:31), are also mentioned but once.
These passages rather show that the name Madmen was not uncommon; and it was perhaps with reference to this name that Isaiah (Isa 25:10) chose the figure of the dunghill. דּמם, to be silent, means, in the Niphal, to be brought to silence, be exterminated, perish; cf. Jer 49:26; Jer 25:37; Jer 8:14, etc. As to the form תּדּמּי instead of תּדּמּי , cf. Ewald, §140, b ; Gesenius, §67, Rem.
5. The following clause refers to Madmen: "after thee shall the sword go;" cf. Jer 9:15.