Jeremiah 3:7 - Joseph Benson’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Bible Comments

After she had done all these things For which she might justly have been abandoned; I said, Turn thou unto me Namely, and I will receive thee. Though they had forsaken both the house of David and the house of Aaron, who both had their authority from God without dispute, yet God sent his prophets among them to call them to return to him, that is, to the worship of him only, not insisting so much upon their return to the house of David as to that of Aaron. We do not read that Elijah, that great prophet, ever mentioned their returning to the former, but only to the faithful service of the true God. It is serious and genuine piety that God regards more than any ritual observances, whether with respect to matters civil or religious. But she returned not Which God observed, and with which he was much displeased; and her treacherous sister Judah saw it A sister, because descended from the same common stock, Abraham and Jacob; and as Israel had the character of a back-slider, so Judah is called treacherous, because, though she professed to keep close to God when Israel had backslidden, and adhered to the kings and priests that were of God's own appointing, yet she proved treacherous, false, and unfaithful to her profession and promises, as is stated in the following verses.

Jeremiah 3:7

7 And I said after she had done all these things, Turn thou unto me. But she returned not. And her treacherous sister Judah saw it.