@Jer 43:1-13. THE JEWS CARRY JEREMIAH AND BARUCH INTO EGYPT. JEREMIAH FORETELLS BY A TYPE THE CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY NEBUCHADNEZZAR, AND THE FATE OF THE FUGITIVES.
2. Azariah--the author of the project of going into Egypt; a very
different man from the Azariah in Babylon (@Da 1:7 3:12-18).
proud--Pride is the parent of disobedience and contempt of God.
3. Baruch--He being the younger spake out the revelations which he received from Jeremiah more vehemently. From this cause, and from their knowing that he was in favor with the Chaldeans, arose their suspicion of him. Their perverse fickleness was astonishing. In the forty-second chapter they acknowledged the trustworthiness of Jeremiah, of which they had for so long so many proofs; yet here they accuse him of a lie. The mind of the unregenerate man is full of deceits.
5. remnant . . . returned from all nations--(@Jer 40:11,12).
6. the king's daughters--Zedekiah's (@Jer 41:10).
7. Tahpanhes--(See on Jer 2:16); Daphne on the Tanitic branch of the Nile, near Pelusium. They naturally came to it first, being on the frontier of Egypt, towards Palestine.
9. stones--to be laid as the foundation beneath Nebuchadnezzar's
throne (@Jer 43:10).
clay--mortar.
brick-kiln--Bricks in that hot country are generally dried in the
sun, not burned. The palace of Pharaoh was being built or repaired at
this time; hence arose the mortar and brick-kiln at the entry. Of the
same materials as that of which Pharaoh's house was built, the
substructure of Nebuchadnezzar's throne should be constructed. By a
visible symbol implying that the throne of the latter shall be raised on
the downfall of the former. Egypt at that time contended with Babylon
for the empire of the East.
10. my servant--God often makes one wicked man or nation a scourge
to another (@Eze 29:18,19,20).
royal pavilion--the rich tapestry (literally, "ornament") which hung
round the throne from above.
11. such as are for death to death--that is, the deadly plague. Some he shall cause to die by the plague arising from insufficient or bad food; others, by the sword; others he shall lead captive, according as God shall order it (see on Jer 15:2).
12. houses of . . . gods--He shall not spare even the temple, such
will be His fury. A reproof to the Jews that they betook themselves to
Egypt, a land whose own safety depended on helpless idols.
burn . . . carry . . . captives--burn the Egyptian idols of wood,
carry to Babylon those of gold and other metals.
array himself with the land, &c.--@Isa 49:18 has the same
metaphor.
as a shepherd, &c.--He shall become master of Egypt as speedily and
easily as a shepherd, about to pass on with his flock to another place,
puts on his garment.
13. images--statues or obelisks.
Beth-shemesh--that is, "the house of the sun," in Hebrew; called
by the Greeks "Heliopolis"; by the Egyptians, "On" (@Ge 41:45); east
of the Nile, and a few miles north of Memphis. Ephraim Syrus says, the
statue rose to the height of sixty cubits; the base was ten cubits.
Above there was a miter of a thousand pounds weight. Hieroglyphics are
traced around the only obelisk remaining in the present day, sixty or
seventy feet high. On the fifth year after the overthrow of Jerusalem,
Nebuchadnezzar, leaving the siege of Tyre, undertook his expedition to
Egypt [JOSEPHUS,
Antiquities, 10.9,7]. The Egyptians, according to
the Arabs, have a tradition that their land was devastated by
Nebuchadnezzar in consequence of their king having received the Jews
under his protection, and that it lay desolate forty years. But
see on Eze 29:2;
@Eze 29:13.
shall he burn--Here the act is attributed to Nebuchadnezzar, the
instrument, which in @Jer 43:12 is attributed to God. If even the
temples be not spared, much less private houses.