Jeremiah 31:25 | |
25. For I have satiated the weary soul, and I have replenished every sorrowful soul. | 25. Quia irrigabo (vel, inebriabo) animam sitientem, et Omnem animam quae deficit implebo. |
By this verse he removes every doubt, lest any one should reject what he had promised as to the restoration of the people, because the Jews and the Israelites were at the time as dead men. He therefore says,
"I am as a dry land;"
weariness cannot be suitably applied to land; and in Isaiah 29:8, we have these words,
"As one dreaming he thinks that he eats; afterwards, when awake, his soul is empty: and as one who thinks that he drinks,"
etc. The Prophet employs there the same word, because there is hardly ever weariness without thirst; we contract thirst by weariness. Then the soul is said to be
The meaning is, that though the Israelites should hunger and thirst, and be for a time without food and drink, yet their want would not prevent God from affording them relief, for he had the power and the will to satisfy the hungry, and to give drink to the thirsty, or to those who were fainting on account of thirst. It now follows, --
1 Both the Sept. and Syr. render the first word "thirsty," and the second, "hungry," agreeably with the verbs which precede them. The "weary" and "sorrowful" of our version are no doubt wrong; the first, adopted from the Vulg.; and the second from the Targ.
For I will water the thirsty soul, And every hungry soul will I fill.
"Soul" here means the person, the individual, -- " I will water him that is thirsty," etc. -- Ed.