The Creation of God

Chapter xxxi, verse 22: "How long wilt thou go about, O thou

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backsliding daughter? for the Lord hath created a new thing in the earth. A woman shall compass a man"--meaning, Christ is promised.

These are the only two spots whence any possible allusion can be drawn.

This man is unlike the visionary, romantic dreamer Isaiah, whose imagination and nervous exaltation kept him more or less in a state of excitability and carried him into regions of dreamland where his hopes and wishes were planted. Jeremiah writes up the historical occurrences; passes judgment on his own people and on the nations his people had to struggle with, bewailing their corruption, wickedness, wretchedness, misery. He never dreams of Christ or Christianity, nor does he in any part allude to Christ. He also, like Isaiah, wrote and acted in accordance with the times he lived in. He was a steadfast friend to his disciple Baruch. His lamentations describing the miserable state of Jerusalem, bewailing its calamities, are perfectly human, and perfectly natural for a patriot and a poet of his time.

Ezekiel was in Chaldea among the captives about 590 B.C. This man is also largely endowed with a prolific imagination; he is a visionary man. He adopts a new method of talking; when the word of the Lord comes to him, "Son of Man" is the manner in which he is addressed. Jeremiah uses the expression, "Sayeth the Lord," or "the word to Jeremiah from the Lord saying"----Isaiah uses, "Thus saith the Lord."

Ezekiel wrote forty-eight chapters. The following are interpreted to mean Christ: