Jérémie 4:26

26 Je regarde, et voici, le Carmel est un désert; Et toutes ses villes sont détruites, devant l'Eternel, Devant son ardente colère.

Jérémie 4:26 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 4:26

I beheld, and, lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness
Or, "I beheld, and, lo, Carmel was a wilderness"; which was a particular part of the land of Israel, and was very fertile, and abounded in pastures and fruit trees, and yet this, as the rest, became desolate as a wilderness; see ( Isaiah 32:15 ) ( 35:2 ) though it may be put for the whole land, which was very fruitful; and so the Targum,

``I saw, and, lo, the land of Israel, which was planted as Carmel, was turned to be as a wilderness:''
and all the cities thereof;
not of Carmel only, but of the whole land: were broken down at the presence of the Lord, and by his fierce anger;
for though this was done by the Chaldeans, yet it was by the will and appointment of God, and as a token of his fierce anger against the people of the Jews, for their sins and transgressions. Jarchi cites a Midrash Agadah, or an allegorical exposition of this place, which interprets the "mountains", the Jewish fathers; the "hills", the mothers, and their merits; "no man", the worthiness of Moses, who was meeker than any man; and "Carmel", Elijah; without any manner of foundation.

Jérémie 4:26 In-Context

24 Je regarde les montagnes, et voici, elles sont ébranlées; Et toutes les collines chancellent.
25 Je regarde, et voici, il n'y a point d'homme; Et tous les oiseaux des cieux ont pris la fuite.
26 Je regarde, et voici, le Carmel est un désert; Et toutes ses villes sont détruites, devant l'Eternel, Devant son ardente colère.
27 Car ainsi parle l'Eternel: Tout le pays sera dévasté; Mais je ne ferai pas une entière destruction.
28 A cause de cela, le pays est en deuil, Et les cieux en haut sont obscurcis; Car je l'ai dit, je l'ai résolu, Et je ne m'en repens pas, je ne me rétracterai pas.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.