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Matthew Henry's Concise
Commentary on Jeremiah 23:5-8
Evangelical Predictions. B. C. 590.
5 Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will raise unto David a
righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and prosper, and shall execute
judgment and justice in the earth. 6 In his days Judah shall be saved, and
Israel shall dwell safely: and this is his name whereby he shall be called,
THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS. 7 Therefore, behold, the days come, saith the
LORD, that they shall no more say, The LORD liveth, which brought up the
children of Israel out of the land of Egypt; 8 But, The LORD liveth, which
brought up and which led the seed of the house of Israel out of the north
country, and from all countries whither I had driven them; and they shall
dwell in their own land.
…
2. Messiah the Prince, that great and good Shepherd of the sheep, shall in
the latter days be raised up to bless his church, and to be the glory of his
people Israel, v. 5, 6. The house of David seemed to be quite sunk and ruined by
that threatening against Jeconiah (ch. xxii. 30), that none of his seed should
ever sit upon the throne of David. But here is a promise which effectually
secures the honour of the covenant made with David notwithstanding; for by it
the house will be raised out of its ruins to a greater lustre than ever, and
shine brighter far than it did in Solomon himself. We have not so many
prophecies of Christ in this book as we had in that of the prophet Isaiah; but
here we have one, and a very illustrious one; of him doubtless the prophet here
speaks, of him, and of no other man. The first words intimate that it would be
long ere this promise should have its accomplishment: The days come, but they
are not yet. I shall see him, but not now. But all the rest intimate that the
accomplishment of it will be glorious.
(1.) Christ is here spoken of as a branch from David, the man the branch
(Zech. iii. 8), his appearance mean, his beginnings small, like those of a
bud or sprout, and his rise seemingly out of the earth, but growing to be
green, to be great, to be loaded with fruits. A branch from David's family,
when it seemed to be a root in a dry ground, buried, and not likely to
revive. Christ is the root and offspring of David, Rev. xxii. 16. In him
doth the horn of David bud, Ps. cxxxii. 17, 18. He is a branch of God's
raising up; he sanctified him, and sent him into the world, gave him his
commission and qualifications. He is a righteous branch, for he is righteous
himself, and through him many, even all that are his, are made righteous. As
an advocate, he is Jesus Christ the righteous.
(2.) He is here spoken of as his church's King. This branch shall be
raised as high as the throne of his father David, and there he shall reign
and prosper, not as the kings that now were of the house of David, who went
backward in all their affairs. No; he shall set up a kingdom in the world
that shall be victorious over all opposition. In the chariot of the
everlasting gospel he shall go forth, he shall go on conquering and to
conquer. If God raise him up, he will prosper him, for he will own the work
of his own hands; what is the good pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in the
hands of those to whom it is committed. He shall prosper; for he shall
execute judgment and justice in the earth, all the world over, Ps. xcvi. 13.
The present kings of the house of David were unjust and oppressive, and
therefore it is no wonder that they did not prosper. But Christ shall, by
his gospel, break the usurped power of Satan, institute a perfect rule of
holy living, and, as far as it prevails, make all the world righteous. The
effect of this shall be a holy security and serenity of mind in all his
faithful loyal subjects. In his days, under his dominion, Judah shall be
saved and Israel shall dwell safely; that is, all the spiritual seed of
believing Abraham and praying Jacob shall be protected from the curse of
heaven and the malice of hell, shall be privileged from the arrests of God's
law and delivered from the attempts of Satan's power, shall be saved from
sin, the guilt and dominion of it, and then shall dwell safely, and be quiet
from the fear of all evil. See Luke i. 74, 75. Those that shall be saved
hereafter from the wrath to come may dwell safely now; for, if God be for
us, who can be against us? In the days of Christ's government in the soul,
when he is uppermost there, the soul dwells at ease.
(3.) He is here spoken of as The Lord our righteousness. Observe,
[1.] Who and what he is. As God, he is Jehovah, the incommunicable
name of God, denoting his eternity and self-existence. As Mediator, he is
our righteousness. By making satisfaction to the justice of God for the sin
of man, he has brought in an everlasting righteousness, and so made it over
to us in the covenant of grace that, upon our believing consent to that
covenant, it becomes ours. His being Jehovah our righteousness implies that
he is so our righteousness as no creature could be. He is a sovereign,
all-sufficient, eternal righteousness. All our righteousness has its being
from him, and by him it subsists, and we are made the righteousness of God
in him.
[2.] The profession and declaration of this: This is the name whereby he
shall be called, not only he shall be so, but he shall be known to be so.
God shall call him by this name, for he shall appoint him to be our
righteousness. By this name Israel shall call him, every true believer shall
call him, and call upon him. That is our righteousness by which, as an
allowed plea, we are justified before God, acquitted from guilt, and
accepted into favour; and nothing else have we to plead but this, "Christ
has died, yea, rather has risen again;" and we have taken him for our Lord.
3. This great salvation, which will come to the Jews in the latter days of
their state, after their return out of Babylon, shall be so illustrious as
far to outshine the deliverance of Israel out of Egypt (v. 7, 8): They shall
no more say, The Lord liveth that brought up Israel out of Egypt; but, The
Lord liveth that brought them up out of the north. This we had before, ch.
xvi. 14, 15. But here it seems to point more plainly than it did there to
the days of the Messiah, and to compare not so much the two deliverances
themselves (giving the preference to the latter) as the two states to which
the church by degrees grew after those deliverances. Observe the proportion:
Just 480 years after they had come out of Egypt Solomon's temple was built
(1 Kings vi. 1); and at that time that nation, which was so wonderfully
brought up out of Egypt, had gradually arrived to its height, to its zenith.
Just 490 years (70 weeks) after they came out of Babylon Messiah the Prince
set up the gospel temple, which was the greatest glory of that nation that
was so wonderfully brought out of Babylon; see Dan. ix. 24, 25. Now the
spiritual glory of the second part of that nation, especially as transferred
to the gospel church, is much more admirable and illustrious than all the
temporal glory of the first part of it in the days of Solomon; for that was
no glory compared with the glory which excelleth.
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