Jérémie 2:25

25 Ne t'expose pas à avoir les pieds nus, Ne dessèche pas ton gosier! Mais tu dis: C'est en vain, non! Car j'aime les dieux étrangers, je veux aller après eux.

Jérémie 2:25 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 2:25

Withhold thy foot from being unshod
That it may not be unshod, be naked and bare. The sense is, either, as some, do not take long journeys into foreign countries for help, as into Assyria and Egypt, whither they used to go barefoot; or wore out their shoes by their long journeys, and so returned without; or refrain from idolatry, as Jarchi interprets it, that thou mayest not go naked into captivity; or this is an euphemism, as others think, forbidding adulterous actions, showing the naked foot, the putting off of the shoes, in order to lie upon the bed, and prostitute herself to her lovers; and is to be understood of idolatry: and thy throat from thirst;
after wine, which excites lust; abstain from eager and burning lust after adulterous, that is, idolatrous practices; so the Targum,

``refrain thy feet from being joined with the people, and thy mouth from worshipping the idols of the people.''
The words are paraphrased in the Talmud F5 thus,
``withhold thyself from sinning, that thy foot may not become naked; (the gloss is, "when thou goest into captivity") refrain thy tongue from idle words, that thy throat may not thirst:''
this was said by the Lord, or by the prophets of the Lord sent unto them, to which the following is an answer: but thou saidst, there is no hope;
of ever being prevailed upon to relinquish those idolatrous practices, or of being received into the favour of God after such provocations: no; I will never refrain from them; I will not be persuaded to leave them: for I have loved strangers;
the strange gods of the nations: and after them will I go;
and worship them; so the Targum,
``I love to he joined to the people, and after the Worship of their idols will I go.''

FOOTNOTES:

F5 T. Bab. Yoma, fol. 77. 1.

Jérémie 2:25 In-Context

23 Comment dirais-tu: Je ne me suis point souillée, Je ne suis point allée après les Baals? Regarde tes pas dans la vallée, Reconnais ce que tu as fait, Dromadaire à la course légère et vagabonde!
24 Anesse sauvage, habituée au désert, Haletante dans l'ardeur de sa passion, Qui l'empêchera de satisfaire son désir? Tous ceux qui la cherchent n'ont pas à se fatiguer; Ils la trouvent pendant son mois.
25 Ne t'expose pas à avoir les pieds nus, Ne dessèche pas ton gosier! Mais tu dis: C'est en vain, non! Car j'aime les dieux étrangers, je veux aller après eux.
26 Comme un voleur est confus lorsqu'il est surpris, Ainsi seront confus ceux de la maison d'Israël, Eux, leurs rois, leurs chefs, Leurs sacrificateurs et leurs prophètes.
27 Ils disent au bois: Tu es mon père! Et à la pierre: Tu m'as donné la vie! Car ils me tournent le dos, ils ne me regardent pas. Et quand ils sont dans le malheur, ils disent: Lève-toi, sauve-nous!
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.