Introduction
A.M. 3416. B.C. 588.
In this chapter,
(1,) The prophet contrasts, in various affecting instances, the wretched and deplorable circumstances of the Jewish nation, with the flourishing state of their affairs in former times, 1-12.
(2,) He ascribes the unhappy change principally to the profligacy of their priests and prophets, which had drawn upon them the universal abhorrence of God and Man 1:13-15 .
(3,) The people proceed with lamenting their hopeless condition, and, in a particular manner, the captivity of their sovereign, 17-20.
(4,) The judgment of Edom is foretold, together with a final cessation of Zion’s calamities, 21, 22.
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