Charles Ellicott Commentary


Charles Ellicott Commentary
"Woe unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, and his chambers by injustice; that useth his neighbor`s service without wages, and giveth him not his hire;" — Jeremiah 22:13 (ASV)
Woe unto him that buildeth ... — The prophet now turns to Jehoiakim, and apparently reproduces what he had before spoken in denouncing the selfish conduct of that king. The feelings of the people, already suffering from the miseries of foreign invasion, were outraged by the revival of the forced labor of the days of Solomon, pressing in this instance not on the “strangers” of alien blood (1 Kings 5:13–15; 2 Chronicles 2:17–18), but on the Israelites themselves. We are reminded of the general characteristics of Eastern, and perhaps of all other, despotism. Like the modern rulers of Constantinople, Jehoiakim went on building palaces when his kingdom was on the verge of ruin, and his subjects were groaning under their burdens.
His chambers. — Strictly speaking, the upper stories of the house. This is emphasized as aggravating the severity of the work.
Without wages. — The laborers were treated as slaves and, like the Israelites in their Egyptian bondage (Exodus 16:3), received their food, but nothing more.