Jeremiah
Jeremiah 4:21ESV·traditional attribution

How long must I see the standard and hear the sound of the trumpet?

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

He concludes that part of his discourse, which, as we have said, he embellished with figurative terms, in order more fully to rouse slow and torpid minds: but he confirms what he said at the beginning of the last verse (Jeremiah 4:20) “Distress has been summoned upon distress.” He indeed repeats in other words the same thing, How long shall I see the standard, he...

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

The prophet is here in an agony, and cries out like one upon the rack of pain with some acute distemper, or as a woman in travail. The expressions are very pathetic and moving, enough to melt a heart of stone into compassion: My bowels! my bowels! I am pained at my very heart; and yet well, and in health himself, and nothing ails him.

Commenting on Jeremiah 4:19-31

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

How long shall I see the standard,.... "Ensign" or "banner" displayed; either by the watchmen placed on high hills or towers, who, when they see the enemy approaching, lift up their ensign or banner, and blow with their trumpets, to give the people warning and notice of it, and to call them to battle, and that they might prepare for the same, as Kimchi observes...