12. let not . . . buyer rejoice--because he has bought an estate at
a bargain price.
nor . . . seller mourn--because he has had to sell his land at a
sacrifice through poverty. The Chaldeans will be masters of the land,
so that neither shall the buyer have any good of his purchase, nor the
seller any loss; nor shall the latter
(Eze 7:13)
return to his inheritance at the jubilee year (see
Le 25:13).
Spiritually this holds good now, seeing that "the time is short"; "they
that rejoice should be as though they rejoiced not, and they that buy
as though they possessed not": Paul
(1Co 7:30)
seems to allude to Ezekiel here.
Jer 32:15, 37, 43,
seems to contradict Ezekiel here. But Ezekiel is speaking of the
parents, and of the present; Jeremiah, of the children, and of the
future. Jeremiah is addressing believers, that they should hope for a
restoration; Ezekiel, the reprobate, who were excluded from hope of
deliverance.
JFB.
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