Jeremiah 11:7
Context11:7 For I solemnly warned your ancestors to obey me. 1 I warned them again and again, 2 ever since I delivered them out of Egypt until this very day.
Jeremiah 11:23
Context11:23 Not one of them will survive. 3 I will bring disaster on those men from Anathoth who threatened you. 4 A day of reckoning is coming for them.” 5
Jeremiah 17:21
Context17:21 The Lord says, ‘Be very careful if you value your lives! 6 Do not carry any loads 7 in through 8 the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath day.
Jeremiah 38:28
Context38:28 So Jeremiah remained confined 9 in the courtyard of the guardhouse until the day Jerusalem 10 was captured.
The following events occurred when Jerusalem 11 was captured. 12
Jeremiah 42:21
Context42:21 This day 13 I have told you what he said. 14 But you do not want to obey the Lord by doing what he sent me to tell you. 15
Jeremiah 44:10
Context44:10 To this day your people 16 have shown no contrition! They have not revered me nor followed the laws and statutes I commanded 17 you and your ancestors.’
Jeremiah 50:27
Context50:27 Kill all her soldiers! 18
Let them be slaughtered! 19
They are doomed, 20 for their day of reckoning 21 has come,
the time for them to be punished.”
Jeremiah 52:6
Context52:6 By the ninth day of the fourth month 22 the famine in the city was so severe the residents 23 had no food.
Jeremiah 52:34
Context52:34 He was given daily provisions by the king of Babylon for the rest of his life until the day he died.
1 tn Heb “warned them…saying, ‘Obey me.’” However, it allows the long sentence to be broken up easier if the indirect quote is used.
2 tn For the explanation for this rendering see the note on 7:13.
3 tn Heb “There will be no survivors for/among them.”
4 tn Heb “the men of Anathoth.” For the rationale for adding the qualification see the notes on v. 21.
5 tn Heb “I will bring disaster on…, the year of their punishment.”
6 tn Heb “Be careful at the risk of your lives.” The expression with the preposition בְּ (bet) is unique. Elsewhere the verb “be careful” is used with the preposition לְ (lamed) in the sense of the reflexive. Hence the word “soul” cannot be simply reflexive here. BDB 1037 s.v. שָׁמַר Niph.1 understands this as a case where the preposition בְּ introduces the cost or price (cf. BDB 90 s.v. בּ III.3.a).
7 sn Comparison with Neh 13:15-18 suggests that these loads were merchandise or agricultural produce which were being brought in for sale. The loads that were carried out of the houses in the next verse were probably goods for barter.
8 tn Heb “carry loads on the Sabbath and bring [them] in through.” The two verbs “carry” and “bring in” are an example of hendiadys (see the note on “Be careful…by carrying”). This is supported by the next line where only “carry out” of the houses is mentioned.
9 tn Heb “And Jeremiah stayed/remained in the courtyard of the guardhouse…” The translation once again intends to reflect the situation. Jeremiah had a secret meeting with the king at the third entrance to the temple (v. 14). He was returned to the courtyard of the guardhouse (cf. v. 13) after the conversation with the king where the officials came to question him (v. 27). He was not sent back to the dungeon in Jonathan’s house as he feared, but was left confined in the courtyard of the guardhouse.
10 map For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
11 map For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
12 tc The precise meaning of this line and its relation to the context are somewhat uncertain. This line is missing from the Greek and Syriac versions and from a few Hebrew
13 tn Or “Today.”
14 tn The words “what he said” are not in the text but are implicit and seem necessary for clarity.
15 tn Heb “But you have not hearkened to the voice of [idiomatic for “obeyed” see BDB 1034 s.v. שָׁמַע Qal.1.m] the
16 tn Heb “they” but as H. Freedman (Jeremiah [SoBB], 284) notes the third person is used here to include the people just referred to as well as the current addressees. Hence “your people” or “the people of Judah.” It is possible that the third person again reflects the rhetorical distancing that was referred to earlier in 35:16 (see the translator’s note there for explanation) in which case one might translate “you have shown,” and “you have not revered.”
17 tn Heb “to set before.” According to BDB 817 s.v. פָּנֶה II.4.b(g) this refers to “propounding to someone for acceptance or choice.” This is clearly the usage in Deut 30:15, 19; Jer 21:8 and is likely the case here. However, to translate literally would not be good English idiom and “proposed to” might not be correctly understood, so the basic translation of נָתַן (natan) has been used here.
18 tn Heb “Kill all her young bulls.” Commentators are almost universally agreed that the reference to “young bulls” is figurative here for the princes and warriors (cf. BDB 831 s.v. פַּר 2.f, which compares Isa 34:7 and Ezek 39:18). This is virtually certain because of the reference to the time coming for them to be punished; this would scarcely fit literal bulls. For the verb rendered “kill” here see the translator’s note on v. 21.
19 tn Heb “Let them go down to the slaughter.”
20 tn Or “How terrible it will be for them”; Heb “Woe to them.” See the study note on 22:13 and compare the usage in 23:1; 48:1.
21 tn The words “of reckoning” are not in the text but are implicit from the context. They are supplied in the translation for clarity.
22 sn According to modern reckoning that would have been July 18, 586
23 tn Heb “the people of the land.”