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4. Zion's Past and Present1 This chapter is an acrostic poem, the verses of which begin with the successive letters of the Hebrew alphabet.How the gold has lost its luster,the fine gold become dull! The sacred gems are scattered at every street corner.
2 How the precious children of Zion,
3 Even jackals offer their breasts
4 Because of thirst the infant’s tongue
5 Those who once ate delicacies
6 The punishment of my people
7 Their princes were brighter than snow
8 But now they are blacker than soot;
9 Those killed by the sword are better off
10 With their own hands compassionate women
11 The LORD has given full vent to his wrath;
12 The kings of the earth did not believe,
13 But it happened because of the sins of her prophets
14 Now they grope through the streets
15 “Go away! You are unclean!” people cry to them.
16 The LORD himself has scattered them;
17 Moreover, our eyes failed,
18 People stalked us at every step,
19 Our pursuers were swifter
20 The LORD’s anointed, our very life breath,
21 Rejoice and be glad, Daughter Edom,
22 Your punishment will end, Daughter Zion;
THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
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The Prophet comes now to the people, though he does not include the whole people, but brings forward those who were renowned, and excelled in honor and dignity. He then says, that they were become like earthen vessels and the work of the potter’s hands, which is very fitly added. Then by the sons of Sion, whom he calls precious or glorious, he means the chief men and the king’s counselors and those who were most eminent. And he seems to allude to that prophecy which we before explained’ for he had said that the people were like earthen vessels; and he went into the house of the potter, that he might see what was made there. When the potter made a vessel which did not please him, he remodeled it, and then it assumed another form; then God declared that the people were in his hand and at his will, as the clay was in the hand of the potter. (Jeremiah 18:2; 19:11.) When he now says, that the chief men were stripped of all dignity, and reduced to another form, so as to become like earthen vessels, he no doubt sets forth by this change the judgment of God, which the Jews had for a time disregarded. And we must bear in mind the Prophet’s object: he described the ruin of the Temple and city, that he might remind the people of the punishment which had at length been inflicted; for we know that the people had not only been deaf, but had also scoffed at and derided all prophecies and threatenings. As, then, they had not believed the doctrine of Jeremiah, he now shews that what he had predicted was really fulfilled, and that the people were finding to their cost that God did not trifle with them when he had so often threatened what at length happened. And hence we may conclude, that there was then a superfluous splendor in garments, for we read that they had been clad or clothed in gold; surely it was a display too sumptuous. There is, however, no wonder, for we know that Orientals are far too much given to such trumperies. Now, if the other reading, that the sons of Sion had been before compared to gold,
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The value, and not the appearance, is evidently meant: the “sons of Sion” were “precious,” as here expressly stated. In this respect they had been of the same estimate with gold; but now they were as worthless as potter’s vessels: they were so esteemed and treated, —
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