Jérémie 15:9

9 Celle qui avait enfanté sept fils est désolée, Elle rend l'âme; Son soleil se couche quand il est encore jour; Elle est confuse, couverte de honte. Ceux qui restent, je les livre à l'épée devant leurs ennemis, Dit l'Eternel.

Jérémie 15:9 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 15:9

She that hath borne seven languisheth
Either the mother that has borne many children, seven being put for a large number, now being able to bear no more, and being bereaved of what she had, and who were her staff and support, and from whom she had her expectation, faints away, and dies through grief and trouble; or Jerusalem, which formerly abounded with young men, is now in a forlorn and destitute state; her children, the inhabitants of it, being slain with the sword, or dying of famine and the pestilence. In the Talmud F9, this is interpreted of seven wicked kings of Israel, as Jeroboam, Baasha, Ahab, Jehu, Pekah, Menahem, and Hoshea; and elsewhere of seven kings of Judah, thus reckoned, Jehoram, Joash, Ahaz, Manasseh, Amon, Jehoiakim, and Zedekiah F11: she hath given up the ghost;
or, "blew out her soul F12"; her breath departs; no life can be kept in her; she faints away at the calamities coming on her: her sun is gone down while it was yet day;
the darkness of affliction, and the evening of distress and calamity came upon her sooner than was expected, while in the midst of peace and prosperity that was promised, and hoped to be enjoyed for a long time to come; see ( Amos 8:9 ) : she hath been ashamed and confounded;
of her vain hope, trust, and confidence: and the residue of them will I deliver to the sword before their
enemies, saith the Lord;
that is; such who died not of the famine and pestilence, but at the breaking up of the city endeavoured to make their escape, these fell into the hands of the enemy, and perished by the sword, as the Lord here predicts; for whatsoever he says certainly comes to pass.


FOOTNOTES:

F9 T. Bab. Gittin, fol. 88. 1.
F11 Vid. Jarchi & Abendana in loc.
F12 (hvpn hxpn) "efflabit animam suam", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator; "exspiravit animam suam", Cocceius.

Jérémie 15:9 In-Context

7 Je les vanne avec le vent aux portes du pays; Je prive d'enfants, je fais périr mon peuple, Qui ne s'est pas détourné de ses voies.
8 Ses veuves sont plus nombreuses que les grains de sable de la mer; J'amène sur eux, sur la mère du jeune homme, Le dévastateur en plein midi; Je fais soudain tomber sur elle l'angoisse et la terreur.
9 Celle qui avait enfanté sept fils est désolée, Elle rend l'âme; Son soleil se couche quand il est encore jour; Elle est confuse, couverte de honte. Ceux qui restent, je les livre à l'épée devant leurs ennemis, Dit l'Eternel.
10 Malheur à moi, ma mère, de ce que tu m'as fait naître Homme de dispute et de querelle pour tout le pays! Je n'emprunte ni ne prête, Et cependant tous me maudissent.
11 L'Eternel dit: Certes, tu auras un avenir heureux; Certes, je forcerai l'ennemi à t'adresser ses supplications, Au temps du malheur et au temps de la détresse.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.