20110718

Jeremiah 14

This is the word of the LORD that came to Jeremiah concerning the drought:
2 “Judah mourns, her cities languish;
they wail for the land, and a cry goes up from Jerusalem.
3 The nobles send their servants for water; they go to the cisterns
but find no water. They return with their jars unfilled;
dismayed and despairing, they cover their heads.
4 The ground is cracked because there is no rain in the land;
the farmers are dismayed and cover their heads.
5 Even the doe in the field eserts her newborn fawn 
because there is no grass. 6 Wild donkeys stand on the barren heights
and pant like jackals; their eyes fail for lack of food.”

7 Although our sins testify against us, do something, LORD, for the sake of your name.
For we have often rebelled; we have sinned against you.
8 You who are the hope of Israel, its Saviour in times of distress,
why are you like a stranger in the land, like a traveller who stays only a night?
9 Why are you like a man taken by surprise, like a warrior powerless to save?
You are among us, LORD, and we bear your name; do not forsake us!
10 This is what the LORD says about this people:
“They greatly love to wander; they do not restrain their feet.
So the LORD does not accept them; he will now remember their wickedness and punish them for their sins.”
11 Then the LORD said to me, “Do not pray for the well-being of this people. 12 Although they fast, I will not listen to their cry; though they offer burnt offerings and grain offerings, I will not accept them. Instead, I will destroy them with the sword, famine and plague.”
13 But I said, “Alas, Sovereign LORD! The prophets keep telling them, ‘You will not see the sword or suffer famine. Indeed, I will give you lasting peace in this place.’”
14 Then the LORD said to me, “The prophets are prophesying lies in my name. I have not sent them or appointed them or spoken to them. They are prophesying to you false visions, divinations, idolatries and the delusions of their own minds. 15 Therefore this is what the LORD says about the prophets who are prophesying in my name: I did not send them, yet they are saying, ‘No sword or famine will touch this land.’ Those same prophets will perish by sword and famine. 16 And the people they are prophesying to will be thrown out into the streets of Jerusalem because of the famine and sword. There will be no one to bury them, their wives, their sons and their daughters. I will pour out on them the calamity they deserve.
17 “Speak this word to them:
“‘Let my eyes overflow with tears night and day without ceasing;
for the Virgin Daughter, my people, has suffered a grievous wound, a crushing blow.
18 If I go into the country, I see those slain by the sword;
if I go into the city, I see the ravages of famine.
Both prophet and priest have gone to a land they know not.’”
19 Have you rejected Judah completely? Do you despise Zion? Why have you afflicted us so that we cannot be healed?
We hoped for peace but no good has come, for a time of healing but there is only terror.
20 We acknowledge our wickedness, LORD, and the guilt of our ancestors;
we have indeed sinned against you.
21 For the sake of your name do not despise us; do not dishonour your glorious throne.
Remember your covenant with us and do not break it.
22 Do any of the worthless idols of the nations bring rain? Do the skies themselves send down showers?
No, it is you, LORD our God. Therefore our hope is in you, for you are the one who does all this.

John Gill
Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause rain? The blessing wanted; none of the idols of the Gentiles, called vanities, because it was a vain thing to apply to them, or hope for anything from them, none of these could give a shower of rain; though the name of one of their idols was Jupiter Imbrius, or Pluvius, the god of rain, yet he could not make nor give a single drop; as Baal, in the times of Ahab, when there was a drought, could not.
Or can the heavens give showers? From whence they descend, and which are the second causes of rain; even these could not of themselves, and much less Heathen deities.
Art not thou he, O Lord our God? The everlasting and unchangeable He, or I AM, our covenant God and Father, thou, and thou only, canst give rain; this is the peculiar of the great God himself; see Acts 14:17. Therefore we will wait upon thee; for rain, by prayer and supplication, and hope for it, and wait the Lord's own time to give it: for thou hast made all these things; the rain and its showers, who have no other father than the Lord, Job 38:28, also the heavens from whence it descends, and the earth on which it falls, are made by him, who restrains and gives it at pleasure.
(Pausanias makes mention of an image of Jupiter Pluvius, and of altars erected to him in various places ... and in India, as Apollonius Tyanaeus relates, ... was a tub, which in time of drought they opened; from whence, as they pretended, clouds came forth and watered all the country. Near Rome was a stone called Lapis Manalis, which being brought into the city, was said to cause rain. A like fable is told of water being in the forehead of Jupiter Lycaeus, which being shook by an oaken branch in the hand of a priest, gathered clouds, and produced plentiful showers of rain when wanted; but these, with others, are all fables and lies. ...)