Jeremiah 3:7
Context3:7 Yet even after she had done all that, I thought that she might come back to me. 1 But she did not. Her sister, unfaithful Judah, saw what she did. 2
Jeremiah 13:22
Context13:22 You will probably ask yourself, 3
‘Why have these things happened to me?
Why have I been treated like a disgraced adulteress
whose skirt has been torn off and her limbs exposed?’ 4
It is because you have sinned so much. 5
Jeremiah 14:2
Context14:2 “The people of Judah are in mourning.
The people in her cities are pining away.
They lie on the ground expressing their sorrow. 6
Cries of distress come up to me 7 from Jerusalem. 8
Jeremiah 31:16
Context“Stop crying! Do not shed any more tears! 10
For your heartfelt repentance 11 will be rewarded.
Your children will return from the land of the enemy.
I, the Lord, affirm it! 12
Jeremiah 46:22
Context46:22 Egypt will run away, hissing like a snake, 13
as the enemy comes marching up in force.
They will come against her with axes
as if they were woodsmen chopping down trees.
Jeremiah 48:35
Context48:35 I will put an end in Moab
to those who make offerings at her places of worship. 14
I will put an end to those who sacrifice to other gods.
I, the Lord, affirm it! 15
Jeremiah 49:7
Context49:7 The Lord who rules over all 16 spoke about Edom. 17
“Is wisdom no longer to be found in Teman? 18
Can Edom’s counselors not give her any good advice? 19
Has all of their wisdom turned bad? 20
Jeremiah 50:14
Context50:14 “Take up your battle positions all around Babylon,
all you soldiers who are armed with bows. 21
Shoot 22 all your arrows at her! Do not hold any back! 23
For she has sinned against the Lord.
Jeremiah 51:7
Context51:7 Babylonia had been a gold cup in the Lord’s hand.
She had made the whole world drunk.
The nations had drunk from the wine of her wrath. 24
So they have all gone mad. 25
Jeremiah 51:33
Context51:33 For the Lord God of Israel who rules over all says,
‘Fair Babylon 26 will be like a threshing floor
which has been trampled flat for harvest.
The time for her to be cut down and harvested
will come very soon.’ 27
Jeremiah 51:55-56
Context51:55 For the Lord is ready to destroy Babylon,
and put an end to her loud noise.
Their waves 28 will roar like turbulent 29 waters.
They will make a deafening noise. 30
51:56 For a destroyer is attacking Babylon. 31
Her warriors will be captured;
their bows will be broken. 32
For the Lord is a God who punishes; 33
he pays back in full. 34
Jeremiah 51:64
Context51:64 Then say, ‘In the same way Babylon will sink and never rise again because of the judgments 35 I am ready to bring upon her; they will grow faint.’”
The prophecies of Jeremiah end here. 36
1 tn Or “I said to her, ‘Come back to me!’” The verb אָמַר (’amar) usually means “to say,” but here it means “to think,” of an assumption that turns out to be wrong (so HALOT 66.4 s.v. אמר); cf. Gen 44:28; Jer 3:19; Pss 82:6; 139:11; Job 29:18; Ruth 4:4; Lam 3:18.
sn Open theists suggest that passages such as this indicate God has limited foreknowledge; however, more traditional theologians view this passage as an extended metaphor in which God presents himself as a deserted husband, hoping against hope that his adulterous wife might return to him. The point of the metaphor is not to make an assertion about God’s foreknowledge, but to develop the theme of God’s heartbreak due to Israel’s unrepentance.
2 tn The words “what she did” are not in the text but are implicit from the context and are supplied in the translation for clarification.
3 tn Heb “say in your heart.”
4 tn Heb “Your skirt has been uncovered and your heels have been treated with violence.” This is the generally accepted interpretation of these phrases. See, e.g., BDB 784 s.v. עָקֵב a and HALOT 329 s.v. I חָמַס Nif. The significance of the actions here are part of the metaphor (i.e., personification) of Jerusalem as an adulteress having left her husband and have been explained in the translation for the sake of readers unfamiliar with the metaphor.
sn The actions here were part of the treatment of an adulteress by her husband, intended to shame her. See Hos 2:3, 10 (2:5, 12 HT); Isa 47:4.
5 tn The translation has been restructured to break up a long sentence involving a conditional clause and an elliptical consequential clause. It has also been restructured to define more clearly what “these things” are. The Hebrew text reads: “And if you say, ‘Why have these things happened to me?’ Because of the greatness of your iniquity your skirts [= what your skirt covers] have been uncovered and your heels have been treated with violence.”
6 tn Heb “Judah mourns, its gates pine away, they are in mourning on the ground.” There are several figures of speech involved here. The basic figure is that of personification where Judah and it cities are said to be in mourning. However, in the third line the figure is a little hard to sustain because “they” are in mourning on the ground. That presses the imagination of most moderns a little too far. Hence the personification has been interpreted “people of” throughout. The term “gates” here is used as part for whole for the “cities” themselves as in several other passages in the OT (cf. BDB 1045 s.v. שַׁעַר 2.b, c and see, e.g., Isa 14:31).
7 tn The words “to me” are not in the text. They are implicit from the fact that the
8 map For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
9 tn The words “to her” are not in the text but are implicit from the context. They are supplied in the translation for clarity.
10 tn Heb “Refrain your voice from crying and your eyes from tears.”
11 tn Heb “your work.” Contextually her “work” refers to her weeping and refusing to be comforted, that is, signs of genuine repentance (v. 15).
12 tn Heb “Oracle of the
13 tn Or “Egypt will rustle away like a snake”; Heb “her sound goes like the snake,” or “her sound [is] like the snake [when] it goes.” The meaning of the simile is debated. Some see a reference to the impotent hiss of a fleeing serpent (F. B. Huey, Jeremiah, Lamentations [NAC], 382), others the sound of a serpent stealthily crawling away when it is disturbed (H. Freedman, Jeremiah [SoBB], 297-98). The translation follows the former interpretation because of the irony involved.
sn Several commentators point out the irony of the snake slithering away (or hissing away) in retreat. The coiled serpent was a part of the royal insignia, signifying its readiness to strike. Pharaoh had boasted of great things (v. 8) but was just a big noise (v. 17); now all he could do was hiss as he beat his retreat (v. 22).
14 tn Heb “high place[s].” For the meaning and significance of this term see the study note on 7:31.
15 tn Heb “Oracle of the
16 tn Heb “Yahweh of armies.” See the study note on 2:19 for this title.
17 sn Edom was a kingdom to the south and east of Judah. Its borders varied over time but basically Edom lay in the hundred mile strip between the Gulf of Aqaba on the south and the Zered River on the north. It straddled the Arabah leading down from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba, having as its northern neighbors both Judah and Moab. A long history of hostility existed between Israel and Edom, making Edom one of the favorite objects of the prophets’ oracles of judgment (cf., e.g., Isa 21:11-12; 34:5-15; 63:1-6; Amos 1:11-12; Ezek 25:12-14; 35:1-15; Obad 1-16). Not much is known about Edom at this time other than the fact that they participated in the discussions regarding rebellion against Nebuchadnezzar in 594
18 sn Teman was the name of one of Esau’s descendants, the name of an Edomite clan and the name of the district where they lived (Gen 36:11, 15, 34). Like the name Bozrah, it is used poetically for all of Edom (Jer 49:20; Ezek 25:13).
19 tn Heb “Has counsel perished from men of understanding?”
20 tn The meaning of this last word is based on the definition given in KBL 668 s.v. II סָרַח Nif and HALOT 726 s.v. II סָרַח Nif, which give the nuance “to be [or become] corrupt” rather than that of BDB 710 s.v. סָרַח Niph who give the nuance “let loose (i.e., to be dismissed; to be gone)” from a verb that is elsewhere used of the overhanging of a curtains or a cliff.
21 tn Heb “all you who draw the bow.”
22 tc The verb here should probably be read as a Qal imperative יְרוּ (yÿru) from יָרָה (yarah) with a few Hebrew
23 tn Heb “Shoot at her! Don’t save any arrows!”
24 tn The words “of her wrath” are not in the Hebrew text but are supplied in the translation to help those readers who are not familiar with the figure of the “cup of the
sn The figure of the cup of the
25 tn Heb “upon the grounds of such conditions the nations have gone mad.”
26 sn Heb “Daughter Babylon.” See the study note at 50:42 for explanation.
27 tn Heb “Daughter Babylon will be [or is; there is no verb and the tense has to be supplied from the context] like a threshing floor at the time one tramples it. Yet a little while and the time of the harvest will come for her.” It is generally agreed that there are two figures here: one of leveling the threshing floor and stamping it into a smooth, hard surface and the other of the harvest where the grain is cut, taken to the threshing floor, and threshed by trampling the sheaves of grain to loosen the grain from the straw, and finally winnowed by throwing the mixture into the air (cf., e.g., J. A. Thompson, Jeremiah [NICOT], 760). The translation has sought to convey those ideas as clearly as possible without digressing too far from the literal.
sn There are two figures involved here: one of the threshing floor being leveled and stamped down hard and smooth and the other of the harvest. At harvest time the stalks of grain were cut down, gathered in sheaves, taken to the harvest floor where the grain was loosened from the husk by driving oxen and threshing sleds over them. The grain was then separated from the mixture of grain, straw and husks by repeatedly throwing it in the air and letting the wind blow away the lighter husks and ground-up straw. The figure of harvest is often used of judgment in the OT. See, e.g., Joel 3:13 (4:13 Hebrew text) and Hos 6:11 and compare also Mic 4:12-13 and Jer 51:2 where different steps in this process are also used figuratively in connection with judgment. Babylon will be leveled to the ground and its people cut down in judgment.
28 tn The antecedent of the third masculine plural pronominal suffix is not entirely clear. It probably refers back to the “destroyers” mentioned in v. 53 as the agents of God’s judgment on Babylon.
29 tn Or “mighty waters.”
30 tn Heb “and the noise of their sound will be given,”
31 tn Heb “for a destroyer is coming against her, against Babylon.”
32 tn The Piel form (which would be intransitive here, see GKC 142 §52.k) should probably be emended to Qal.
33 tn Or “God of retribution.”
34 tn The infinitive absolute emphasizes the following finite verb. Another option is to translate, “he certainly pays one back.” The translation assumes that the imperfect verbal form here describes the
35 tn Or “disaster”; or “calamity.”
36 sn The final chapter of the book of Jeremiah does not mention Jeremiah or record any of his prophecies.