John Calvin Commentary Jeremiah 36:7

John Calvin Commentary

Jeremiah 36:7

1509–1564
Protestant
John Calvin
John Calvin

John Calvin Commentary

Jeremiah 36:7

1509–1564
Protestant
SCRIPTURE

"It may be they will present their supplication before Jehovah, and will return every one from his evil way; for great is the anger and the wrath that Jehovah hath pronounced against this people." — Jeremiah 36:7 (ASV)

Jeremiah, after having dictated to the scribe Baruch what he had previously preached to the people, repeats what the object was, as we have previously observed. For it was God’s will to make the trial, whether the people could in any way be restored to a sound mind. This had, indeed, been attempted in vain for a long time, but God was still willing to proceed to the utmost extent in his mercy. Hence, Jeremiah now declares the purpose for which he wished the book to be read to the people. Nor is there any doubt that Baruch had been admonished in this way, so that he might exhort the people to repentance as if from the mouth of Jeremiah.

Now, there are two things mentioned as necessary in order to obtain pardon—prayer, and turning or conversion. For if anyone only in words seeks to be reconciled to God, he will not succeed. Turning or conversion cannot be separated from prayer. But even if a sinner were to repent a thousand times, he would still remain exposed to God’s judgment. For reconciliation, by which we are absolved, does not depend on repentance, but on the gratuitous favor of God. For God does not receive us into favor because he sees that we are changed to a better mind, as if conversion were the cause of pardon; but he embraces us according to his gratuitous mercy.

This, then, is the reason why Jeremiah joins together these two things—prayer, and conversion or repentance. For as I have said, hypocrites confess their sins in words and seek pardon, but it is with a feigned or a double heart. Hence, so that prayer may be genuine, repentance must be added, by which men show that they loathe themselves. And then, on the other hand, it is not enough for us to turn or repent, unless the sinner flees to the mercy of God, for pardon flows from that fountain. For God, as it has been said, does not forgive us for any merit in us, but because it seems good to him to bury our sins. The sum of the whole is that God would have the prophecies of Jeremiah recited before the whole people, as they were conducive to their safety and salvation. The manner is described—that the people were humbly to pray and also really to repent.

As to the expression, It may be, a prayer will fall, we have elsewhere explained its meaning. Scripture says of prayer that it rises and that it falls. Both expressions are suitable, though to be understood in a different way, for prayer cannot be rightly offered unless man ascends and falls.

These two things seem contrary, but they agree well together; indeed, they cannot be separated. For in prayer two things are necessary: faith and humility. By faith we rise up to God, and by humility we lie prostrate on the ground. This is the reason why Scripture often says that prayer ascends, for we cannot pray as we ought unless we raise our minds upward; and faith, sustained by promises, elevates us above all the world.

Thus, then, prayer is raised upward by faith; but by humility it falls down to the earth, for fear ought to be connected with faith. And as faith in our hearts produces alacrity through confidence, so also conscience casts us down and lays us prostrate. We now understand the meaning of the expression.

He adds, Because great is the wrath and indignation which Jehovah has pronounced, or has spoken, against this people. By wrath and indignation we are to understand God’s vengeance, the cause being put for the effect.

But the Prophet intimates that unless men are wholly blinded, and as if estranged in mind, they ought to be very deeply touched when God sets before them some dreadful judgment. When God chastises some slight fault, and when he does not so very grievously threaten us, we ought to feel alarmed; but when God shows his wrath to be so kindled that final ruin ought to be dreaded, we must be stupid indeed if such a threatening does not terrify us.

Then the Prophet says that there was no hope of relief, for God had pronounced no light or common judgment on the people; but he shows that God was prepared to destroy the whole nation, as the Jews had deserved extreme punishment.