Jérémie 38:9

9 O roi, mon seigneur, ces hommes-ci ont mal agi dans tout ce qu'ils ont fait contre Jérémie, le prophète, en le jetant dans la citerne. Il serait déjà mort de faim dans le lieu où il était, puisqu'il n'y a plus de pain dans la ville.

Jérémie 38:9 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 38:9

My lord the king
He addresses him as a courtier, with great reverence and submission, and yet with great boldness: these men have done evil in all that they have done to Jeremiah the
prophet;
meaning the princes, who might be present, and whom he pointed at, and mentioned by name; which showed great courage and faithfulness, as well as great zeal for, and attachment to, the prophet; to charge after this manner persons of such great authority so publicly, and to the king, whom the king himself stood in fear of: he first brings a general charge against them, that they had done wrong in everything they had done to the prophet; in their angry words to him; in smiting him, and putting him in prison in Jonathan's house; and particularly in their last instance of ill will to him: whom they have cast into the dungeon;
he does not say where, or describe the dungeon, because well known to the king, and what a miserable place it was; and tacitly suggests the cruelty and inhumanity of the princes: and he is like to die for hunger in the place where he is, for [there
is] no more bread in the city;
or very little; there was none to be had but with great difficulty, as Kimchi observes; and therefore though the king had ordered a piece of bread to be given him daily, as long as there was any in the city; yet it being almost all consumed, and the prophet being out or sight, and so out of mind, and altogether disregarded, must be in perishing circumstances, and near death; and must inevitably perish, unless some immediate care be taken of him. It may be rendered, "he will die" F20 or the sense is, bread being exceeding scarce in the city, notwithstanding the king's order, very little was given to Jeremiah, while he was in the court of the prison; so that he was half starved, and was a mere skeleton then, and would have died for hunger there; wherefore it was barbarous in the princes to cast such a man into a dungeon. It may be rendered, "he would have died for hunger in the place where he was, seeing there was no more bread in the city" F21; wherefore, if the princes had let him alone where he was, he would have died through famine; and therefore acted a very wicked part in hastening his death, by throwing him into a dungeon; this is Jarchi's sense, with which Abarbinel agrees.


FOOTNOTES:

F20 (tmyw) "morietur enim", Schmidt.
F21 "Qui moriturus fuerat in loco suo propter famem", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator.

Jérémie 38:9 In-Context

7 Mais Ébed-Mélec, l'Éthiopien, eunuque de la maison du roi, apprit qu'ils avaient mis Jérémie dans la citerne. Or le roi était assis à la porte de Benjamin.
8 Et Ébed-Mélec sortit de la maison du roi, et parla au roi, disant:
9 O roi, mon seigneur, ces hommes-ci ont mal agi dans tout ce qu'ils ont fait contre Jérémie, le prophète, en le jetant dans la citerne. Il serait déjà mort de faim dans le lieu où il était, puisqu'il n'y a plus de pain dans la ville.
10 Et le roi donna cet ordre à Ébed-Mélec, l'Éthiopien: Prends ici trente hommes sous ta conduite, et fais remonter hors de la citerne Jérémie, le prophète, avant qu'il meure.
11 Ébed-Mélec prit donc ces hommes sous sa conduite, et vint dans la maison du roi, au-dessous du Trésor, où il prit de vieux lambeaux et de vieux haillons, qu'il descendit avec des cordes à Jérémie dans la citerne.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.