Bible Commentary

Jeremiah 2:8

The Pulpit Commentary on Jeremiah 2:8

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The priests, etc. The blame principally falls on the three leading classes (as in ; ). First on the priests who "handle the Law," i.e. who have a traditional knowledge of the details of the Law, and teach the people accordingly (; ; ; see also on ); next on the "pastors," or "shepherds" (in the Homeric sense), the civil and not the spiritual authorities; so generally in the Old Testament (see ; ; ; ; ; , , ; ); and lastly on the prophets, who sought their inspiration, not from Jehovah (comp.

note on ), but from Baal. To prophesy by (by means of) Baal or rather, the Baal, implies that prophecy is due to an impulse from the supernatural world; that it is not an objectifying of the imaginations of the prophet himself.

Even the Baal prophets yielded to an impulse from without, but how that impulse was produced the prophet does not tell us. We are told in , that even prophets of Jehovah could be led astray by a "lying spirit;" much more presumably could prophets of the Baal.

The Baal is here used as a representative of the idol-gods, in antithesis to Jehovah; sometimes "Baalim," or the Baals, is used instead (e.g. ; ), each town or city having its own Baal ("lord").

Things that do not profit. A synonym for idols (comp. ; ;. ). An enlightened regard for self-interest is encouraged by the religion of the Bible, at any rate educationally.

Contrast Comtism.

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