Jeremiah 12

Jeremiah’s Complaint

1 You are always righteous, LORD, when I bring a case before you. Yet I would speak with you about your justice: Why does the way of the wicked prosper? Why do all the faithless live at ease?
2 You have planted them, and they have taken root; they grow and bear fruit. You are always on their lips but far from their hearts.
3 Yet you know me, LORD; you see me and test my thoughts about you. Drag them off like sheep to be butchered! Set them apart for the day of slaughter!
4 How long will the land lie parched and the grass in every field be withered? Because those who live in it are wicked, the animals and birds have perished. Moreover, the people are saying, “He will not see what happens to us.”

God’s Answer

5 “If you have raced with men on foot and they have worn you out, how can you compete with horses? If you stumble[a] in safe country, how will you manage in the thickets by[b] the Jordan?
6 Your relatives, members of your own family— even they have betrayed you; they have raised a loud cry against you. Do not trust them, though they speak well of you.
7 “I will forsake my house, abandon my inheritance; I will give the one I love into the hands of her enemies.
8 My inheritance has become to me like a lion in the forest. She roars at me; therefore I hate her.
9 Has not my inheritance become to me like a speckled bird of prey that other birds of prey surround and attack? Go and gather all the wild beasts; bring them to devour.
10 Many shepherds will ruin my vineyard and trample down my field; they will turn my pleasant field into a desolate wasteland.
11 It will be made a wasteland, parched and desolate before me; the whole land will be laid waste because there is no one who cares.
12 Over all the barren heights in the desert destroyers will swarm, for the sword of the LORD will devour from one end of the land to the other; no one will be safe.
13 They will sow wheat but reap thorns; they will wear themselves out but gain nothing. They will bear the shame of their harvest because of the LORD’s fierce anger.”
14 This is what the LORD says: “As for all my wicked neighbors who seize the inheritance I gave my people Israel, I will uproot them from their lands and I will uproot the people of Judah from among them.
15 But after I uproot them, I will again have compassion and will bring each of them back to their own inheritance and their own country.
16 And if they learn well the ways of my people and swear by my name, saying, ‘As surely as the LORD lives’—even as they once taught my people to swear by Baal—then they will be established among my people.
17 But if any nation does not listen, I will completely uproot and destroy it,” declares the LORD.

Jeremiah 12 Commentary

Chapter 12

Jeremiah complains of the prosperity of the wicked. (1-6) The heavy judgments to come upon the nation. (7-13) Divine mercy to them, and even to the nations around. (14-17)

Verses 1-6 When we are most in the dark concerning God's dispensations, we must keep up right thoughts of God, believing that he never did the least wrong to any of his creatures. When we find it hard to understand any of his dealings with us, or others, we must look to general truths as our first principles, and abide by them: the Lord is righteous. The God with whom we have to do, knows how our hearts are toward him. He knows both the guile of the hypocrite and the sincerity of the upright. Divine judgments would pull the wicked out of their pasture as sheep for the slaughter. This fruitful land was turned into barrenness for the wickedness of those that dwelt therein. The Lord reproved the prophet. The opposition of the men of Anathoth was not so formidable as what he must expect from the rulers of Judah. Our grief that there should be so much evil is often mixed with peevishness on account of the trials it occasions us. And in this our favoured day, and under our trifling difficulties, let us consider how we should behave, if called to sufferings like those of saints in former ages.

Verses 7-13 God's people had been the dearly-beloved of his soul, precious in his sight, but they acted so, that he gave them up to their enemies. Many professing churches become like speckled birds, presenting a mixture of religion and the world, with its vain fashions, pursuits, and pollutions. God's people are as men wondered at, as a speckled bird; but this people had by their own folly made themselves so; and the beasts and birds are called to prey upon them. The whole land would be made desolate. But until the judgments were actually inflicted, none of the people would lay the warning to heart. When God's hand is lifted up, and men will not see, they shall be made to feel. Silver and gold shall not profit in the day of the Lord's anger. And the efforts of sinners to escape misery, without repentance and works answerable thereto, will end in confusion.

Verses 14-17 The Lord would plead the cause of his people against their evil neighbours. Yet he would afterwards show mercy to those nations, when they should learn true religion. This seems to look forward to the times when the fulness of the Gentiles shall come in. Those who would have their lot with God's people, and a last end like theirs, must learn their ways, and walk in them.

Cross References 44

  • 1. S Ezra 9:15; Job 8:3; Daniel 9:14
  • 2. S Job 5:8
  • 3. Ezekiel 18:25
  • 4. S Job 21:7,13; Psalms 37:7; Jeremiah 5:27-28
  • 5. S Jeremiah 11:17
  • 6. S Job 5:3
  • 7. S Isaiah 29:13; S Jeremiah 3:10; S Ezekiel 22:27; Matthew 15:8; Mark 7:6; Titus 1:16
  • 8. Psalms 7:9; Psalms 11:5; Psalms 139:1-4; Jeremiah 11:20
  • 9. S Psalms 44:11
  • 10. Jeremiah 16:18; Jeremiah 17:18; Jeremiah 20:11
  • 11. S Jeremiah 4:28
  • 12. S ver 11; S Jeremiah 4:26; Joel 1:10-12; Amos 1:2
  • 13. Deuteronomy 28:15-18; S Jeremiah 4:25; S Jeremiah 9:10
  • 14. Jeremiah 49:19; Jeremiah 50:44
  • 15. S Proverbs 26:24-25; Jeremiah 9:4
  • 16. Psalms 12:2
  • 17. S 2 Kings 21:14
  • 18. S Jeremiah 7:29
  • 19. Isaiah 5:1
  • 20. Jeremiah 17:4
  • 21. S Psalms 17:12
  • 22. Psalms 5:5; Hosea 9:15; Amos 6:8
  • 23. S Deuteronomy 28:26; Isaiah 56:9; Jeremiah 15:3; Ezekiel 23:25; Ezekiel 39:17-20
  • 24. Jeremiah 23:1; Jeremiah 25:34; Ezekiel 34:2-10
  • 25. Isaiah 5:1-7; Jeremiah 9:10; Jeremiah 25:11
  • 26. S Isaiah 5:6; S Isaiah 24:4
  • 27. ver 4; Isaiah 42:25; Jeremiah 9:12; Jeremiah 14:4; Jeremiah 23:10
  • 28. Ezekiel 21:3-4
  • 29. S Deuteronomy 32:41; Isaiah 31:8; Jeremiah 46:10; Jeremiah 47:6; Ezekiel 14:17; Ezekiel 21:28; Ezekiel 33:2
  • 30. S Deuteronomy 32:42
  • 31. Jeremiah 3:2
  • 32. Jeremiah 7:10
  • 33. S Leviticus 26:20; S Deuteronomy 28:38; Micah 6:15; Haggai 1:6
  • 34. S Exodus 15:7; S Jeremiah 4:26
  • 35. S Deuteronomy 29:28; S 2 Chronicles 7:20
  • 36. S Psalms 9:6; Zechariah 2:7-9
  • 37. S Deuteronomy 28:63
  • 38. S Psalms 6:2
  • 39. S Deuteronomy 30:3; Amos 9:14-15
  • 40. Jeremiah 18:8
  • 41. S Jeremiah 4:2
  • 42. S Joshua 23:7
  • 43. S Isaiah 26:18; Isaiah 49:6; Jeremiah 3:17
  • 44. S Genesis 27:29; Isaiah 60:12

Footnotes 2

Chapter Summary

INTRODUCTION TO JEREMIAH 12

This chapter contains the prophets complaint of the prosperity of the wicked, and the Lord's answer to it; an account of the deplorable and miserable estate of the Jewish nation; and a threatening to the neighbouring nations that had used them ill; with a promise of deliverance of the Jews from them, and settlement among God's people in case of obedience. The prophet's complaint is in Jer 12:1,2 in which he asserts the justice of God, yet seems at a loss to reconcile it with the prosperity of the wicked; and the rather, because of their hypocrisy; and appeals to the Lord for his own sincerity and uprightness, Jer 12:3 and prays for the destruction of the wicked, and that the time might hasten, for whose wickedness the land was desolate, and herbs, beasts, and birds, consumed, Jer 12:3,4, the Lord's answer, in which he reproves him for his pusillanimity, seeing he had greater trials than those to encounter with, and instructs him how to behave towards his treacherous friends, is in Jer 12:5,6 the account of the miserable condition of the Jewish nation is from Jer 12:7-14, under the simile of a house and heritage left by the Lord, given up to enemies, and compared to a lion and a speckled bird, hateful to God, and hated by those about it, Jer 12:7-9 and of a vineyard destroyed and trodden down by shepherds, and made desolate, Jer 12:10,11 even as a wilderness through the ravage of the sword; so that what is sown upon it comes to nothing, Jer 12:12,13 then follows a threatening to those who had carried the people of Israel captive, with a promise to deliver the Jews out of their hands, and bring them into their own land, and settle them among the Lord's people, in case they use diligence to learn their ways, Jer 12:14-16, but in case of disobedience are threatened to be plucked up and utterly destroyed, Jer 12:17.

Jeremiah 12 Commentaries

Scripture quoted by permission.  Quotations designated (NIV) are from THE HOLY BIBLE: NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®.  NIV®.  Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica.  All rights reserved worldwide.