Psalms 51:16-17

     16. Praise is better than sacrifice (Ps 50:14), and implying faith, penitence, and love, glorifies God. In true penitents the joys of pardon mingle with sorrow for sin.

Proverbs 21:3

     3. (Compare Ps 50:7-15; Isa 1:11, 17).

Jeremiah 6:20

Jeremiah 7:21-23

     21. Put . . . burnt offerings unto . . . sacrifices . . . eat fleshAdd the former (which the law required to be wholly burnt) to the latter (which were burnt only in part), and "eat flesh" even off the holocausts or burnt offerings. As far as I am concerned, saith Jehovah, you may do with one and the other alike. I will have neither (Isa 1:11; Ho 8:13; Am 5:21, 22).

     22. Not contradicting the divine obligation of the legal sacrifices. But, "I did not require sacrifices, unless combined with moral obedience" (Ps 50:8; 51:16, 17). The superior claim of the moral above the positive precepts of the law was marked by the ten commandments having been delivered first, and by the two tables of stone being deposited alone in the ark (De 5:6). The negative in Hebrew often supplies the want of the comparative: not excluding the thing denied, but only implying the prior claim of the thing set in opposition to it (Ho 6:6). "I will have mercy, and not sacrifice" (1Sa 15:22). Love to God is the supreme end, external observances only means towards that end. "The mere sacrifice was not so much what I commanded, as the sincere submission to My will gives to the sacrifice all its virtue" [MAGEE, Atonement, Note 57].

     23. (Ex 15:26; 19:5).

Jeremiah 14:12

     12. not hear—because their prayers are hypocritical: their hearts are still idolatrous. God never refuses to hear real prayer (Jer 7:21, 22; Pr 1:28; Isa 1:15; 58:3).

      sword . . . famine . . . pestilence—the three sorest judgments at once; any one of which would be enough for their ruin (2Sa 24:12, 13).

Amos 5:21-24

     21. I hate, I despise—The two verbs joined without a conjunction express God's strong abhorrence.

      your feast daysyours; not Mine; I do not acknowledge them: unlike those in Judah, yours are of human, not divine institution.

      I will not smell—that is, I will take no delight in the sacrifices offered (Ge 8:21; Le 26:31).

      in your solemn assemblies—literally, "days of restraint." Isa 1:10-15 is parallel. Isaiah is fuller; Amos, more condensed. Amos condemns Israel not only on the ground of their thinking to satisfy God by sacrifices without obedience (the charge brought by Isaiah against the Jews), but also because even their external ritual was a mere corruption, and unsanctioned by God.

     22. meat offerings—flour, &c. Unbloody offerings.

      peace offerings—offerings for obtaining from God peace and prosperity. Hebrew, "thank offerings."

     23. Take . . . away from me—literally, "Take away, from upon Me"; the idea being that of a burden pressing upon the bearer. So Isa 1:14, "They are a trouble unto Me (literally, 'a burden upon Me'): I am weary to bear them."

      the noise of thy songs—The hymns and instrumental music on sacred occasions are to Me nothing but a disagreeable noise.

      I will not hear—Isaiah substitutes "prayers" (Isa 1:15) for the "songs" and "melody" here; but, like Amos, closes with "I will not hear."

     24. judgment—justice.

      run down—literally, "roll," that is, flow abundantly (Isa 48:18). Without the desire to fulfil righteousness in the offerer, the sacrifice is hateful to God (1Sa 15:22; Ps 66:18; Ho 6:6; Mic 6:8).

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