Geremia 20:17

17 Conciossiachè Iddio non mi abbia fatto morire fin dalla matrice, e non abbia fatto che mia madre fosse il mio sepolcro, e che la sua matrice fosse in perpetuo gravida.

Geremia 20:17 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 20:17

Because he slew me not from the womb
As soon as he came out of it; that is, as soon as he was born; either because God slew him not so soon, as Kimchi; or the angel of death, as Jarchi: or rather the man that carried the tidings of his birth to his father, who is all along spoken of in the two former verses; he curses him for not doing that, which, had he done, would have been exceeding criminal in him indeed; for not committing murder, even for not murdering an innocent babe; or that my mother might have been my grave;
he wishes he had died in her womb, and had never been brought forth; and so that had been his grave, where he should have been at ease and safety: and her womb [to be] always great [with me];
or, "her womb an everlasting conception" F13; his wish was, that she had been always conceiving, or ever big with child of him, but never bring forth; which was a more cruel and unnatural wish than the former concerning the man, the carrier of the tidings of his birth; since this was wishing a perpetual, painful, and intolerable evil to his own mother.


FOOTNOTES:

F13 (Mlwe trh hmxrw) "et ejus uterus, conceptus perpetuus", Munster; "et vulva ejus, conceptio perpetua", Pagninus, "et vulva ejus praegnans perpetuo", Vatablus.

Geremia 20:17 In-Context

15 Maledetto sia l’uomo che ne portò la novella a mio padre, dicendo: Un figliuol maschio ti è nato; e lo rallegrò grandemente.
16 E sia quell’uomo come quelle città che il Signore ha sovvertite, senza essersene mai pentito; e oda il grido la mattina, e lo stormo in sul mezzodì.
17 Conciossiachè Iddio non mi abbia fatto morire fin dalla matrice, e non abbia fatto che mia madre fosse il mio sepolcro, e che la sua matrice fosse in perpetuo gravida.
18 (H20-17) Perchè son io uscito della matrice, per veder travaglio, e tormento, e per finire i miei giorni in vituperio?
The Giovanni Diodati Bible is in the public domain.