Behold, I will bring them from the north country, and
gather them from the coasts of the earth, and with them the blind and the lame,
the woman with child and her that travaileth with child together: a great
company shall return thither. (Jer. 31:8)
Though the Prophet addressed this discourse to the ancient
people, it yet contains a doctrine perpetually useful. We hence gather, that they
act preposterously who estimate God's favor according to present appearances.
But this is a mistake almost inbred in us by nature, and engrosses all our
thoughts and feelings. Hence arises want of confidence in God, and hence it
also happens, that all God's promises become frigid to us, or at least lose
their just value.
For when God promises anything, we look around us and
inquire how it can be fulfilled; and if our minds cannot comprehend the way and
manner, we reject what has proceeded from the mouth of God. Let us then attend
to this prophetic doctrine; and when God seems to promise what surpasses our
faith, nay, what appears to us by no means possible, let this doctrine come to
our minds, and let it serve as a corrective to check our false thoughts, lest
we, having our minds preoccupied by a false and preposterous opinion, should do
wrong to the power of God.
If, then, the deliverance which God promises seems
incredible, as to our perceptions, let us remember that it is in his power to
make the blind to see, the lame to walk, the pregnant and those lying in
childbed, to undertake a journey; for he can by his power surmount all
obstacles, so that we shall find our faith victorious, provided we learn to
rely on God’s promises, and firmly rest on them. (Commentaries)