1. Here begins a series of prophecies concerning judgment upon Judah, that continue to the end of chapter 6.
2. First, the command is given to sound the trumpet throughout the land - calling the people of Judah to their fortified cities, (vs. 5; comp. Jeremiah 6:1; Hosea 8:1); there they are to flee for refuge, (vs. 6a).
3. From the North God is raising up an instrument of judgment against His erring people.
a. This "destroyer of nations" (evidently Babylon) is likened unto a lion emerging from his lair to seek prey, (vs. 7a; Jeremiah 5:6; Jeremiah 25:38; Jeremiah 50:17).
b. It is his intention to make Judah desolate; to destroy her cities without inhabitant, (vs. 7b; Jeremiah 2:15; comp. Isaiah 1:7; Isaiah 6:11).
4. Thus, Jeremiah calls upon Judah to repent; the fierce anger of the Lord is still not turned away from her abominations, (vs. 8; Jeremiah 30:24; Isaiah 5:25; Isaiah 10:4).
5. The leaders of Judah are pictured as totally confounded, (vs. 9).
a. King and princes are so stricken with fear as to be without understanding - their intellects utterly paralyzed! (vs. 9a; comp. Isaiah 22:3-5).
b. So with the religious leaders; the priests are stunned - the prophets utterly dumbfounded! (vs. 9b; comp. Isaiah 29:9-10; Ezekiel 13:916).
6. Scholars have long argued over whether verse 10 is the complaint of Jeremiah himself, or that of the mercenary priests and prophets who have persistently told the sinning nation what it wanted to hear.
a. It is the tendency of rebellious men to claim God’s blessings without heeding His warnings, or being too greatly concerned to meet His conditions.
b. Lying prophets (and preachers) often charge God with duplicity rather than acknowledge their own sin and accept the blame for its consequences.
c. There is no reason to believe (in view of his persistent warnings to Judah) that Jeremiah ever believed that his unrepentant people could escape the consequence of their stubborn rebellion and indescribable abominations!
7. Two figures are used here to describe the invader, and the nature of the discipline that God Himself is bringing upon Judah, (vs. 11-13).
a. First, his coming is likened unto a scorching sirocco that blows across the land when there is no cloud in the sky, (vs. 11; Jeremiah 13:24; comp. Jeremiah 51:1).
1) This wind is not for winnowing, or for cleansing; it is too strong for that.
2) It is a wind that moves under God’s own command - a wind of burning judgment, (Jeremiah 1:16).
b. Again, he is pictured as hovering over the land "as clouds." (comp. Jer Isaiah 19:1; Ezekiel 38:16); his chariots are as destructive as a tornado (Isaiah 5:28-29) - his horses being more swift than eagles, (La 4:19).
c. Jeremiah can already hear the cry of anguish that will go up from Judah when it is TOO LATE TO REPENT: "Woe unto us! for we are spoiled!", (comp. Isaiah 3:8).