Jeremiah 51:20

20 conlidis tu mihi vasa belli et ego conlidam in te gentes et disperdam in te regna

Jeremiah 51:20 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 51:20

Thou [art] my battle axe [and] weapons of war
This is said by the Lord, either to Cyrus, as some, to which our version inclines, whom God made use of as an instrument to subdue nations and kingdoms, and destroy them; see ( Isaiah 45:1 ) ; or rather Babylon, and the king of it, who had been the hammer of the earth, ( Jeremiah 50:23 ) ; as it may be rendered here, "thou [art] my hammer" F19; or, "hast been"; an instrument in his hands, of beating the nations to pieces, as stones by a hammer, and of destroying them, as by weapons of war: this, and what follows, are observed to show, that though Babylon had been used by the Lord for the destruction of others, it should not be secure from it itself, but should share the same fate; unless this is to be understood of the church of God, and kingdom of Christ, which in the latter day will break in pieces all the kingdoms of the earth, ( Daniel 2:44 ) ; which sense seems to have some countenance and confirmation from ( Jeremiah 51:24 ) "in your sight". The Targum is,

``thou art a scatterer before me, a city in which are warlike arms;''
which seems to refer to Babylon: for with thee will I break in pieces the nations, and with thee will I
destroy kingdoms;
or, "with thee I have broke in pieces, [and] have destroyed"; the future instead of the past F20; as the nations and kingdoms of Judea, Egypt, Edom, Moab, Ammon, and others: or, "that I may break in pieces" F21 and so it expresses the end for which he was a hammer, as well as the use he had been or would be of.
FOOTNOTES:

F19 (yl hta Upm) "malleus es, [vel] fuisti mihi", Pagninus, Piscator, Cocceius, Schmidt.
F20 "Dispersi, perdidi", Lutherus; "conquassavi", Munster; "dissipavi", Piscator.
F21 (ytupnw) "ut dissiparem", Junius & Tremellius; "ut dispergam", Schmidt.

Jeremiah 51:20 In-Context

18 vana sunt opera et risu digna in tempore visitationis suae peribunt
19 non sicut haec pars Iacob quia qui fecit omnia ipse est et Israhel sceptrum hereditatis eius Dominus exercituum nomen eius
20 conlidis tu mihi vasa belli et ego conlidam in te gentes et disperdam in te regna
21 et conlidam in te equum et equitem eius et conlidam in te currum et ascensorem eius
22 et conlidam in te virum et mulierem et conlidam in te senem et puerum et conlidam in te iuvenem et virginem
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.