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Verse Takeaways
1
A Hammer for Unbelief
John Calvin explains that Jeremiah's intense and dramatic language ('wail and cry') isn't just for emotional effect. It's meant to act like a 'hammer,' driving the truth of God's certain judgment into the hearts of his skeptical audience, who considered a powerful nation like Moab to be invincible. This shows how prophecy uses strong rhetoric to overcome disbelief.
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Book Overview
Jeremiah
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4
18th Century
Theologian
Or, Moab is ashamed, because she (Dibon) is broken by her fortifications being battered down.
19th Century
Bishop
Make ye him drunken ... —The image is suggested by the wine-cup of Jehovah’s fury in Jeremiah 25:15, and was familiar in …
16th Century
Theologian
We have stated why the Prophet describes so fully the ruin of the Moabites and dwells so long on a subject that is in no way obscure. It was not, i…
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17th Century
Pastor
Moab is confounded, for it is broken down This is the answer returned, by those that had escaped and were fleeing, to tho…