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Jeremiah 4:29

Context

4:29 At the sound of the approaching horsemen and archers

the people of every town will flee.

Some of them will hide in the thickets.

Others will climb up among the rocks.

All the cities will be deserted.

No one will remain in them.

Jeremiah 9:2

Context

9:2 (9:1) I wish I had a lodging place in the desert

where I could spend some time like a weary traveler. 1 

Then I would desert my people

and walk away from them

because they are all unfaithful to God,

a congregation 2  of people that has been disloyal to him. 3 

Jeremiah 18:18

Context
Jeremiah Petitions the Lord to Punish Those Who Attack Him

18:18 Then some people 4  said, “Come on! Let us consider how to deal with Jeremiah! 5  There will still be priests to instruct us, wise men to give us advice, and prophets to declare God’s word. 6  Come on! Let’s bring charges against him and get rid of him! 7  Then we will not need to pay attention to anything he says.”

Jeremiah 26:10

Context

26:10 However, some of the officials 8  of Judah heard about what was happening 9  and they rushed up to the Lord’s temple from the royal palace. They set up court 10  at the entrance of the New Gate of the Lord’s temple. 11 

Jeremiah 38:11

Context
38:11 So Ebed Melech took the men with him and went to a room under the treasure room in the palace. 12  He got some worn-out clothes and old rags 13  from there and let them down by ropes to Jeremiah in the cistern.

Jeremiah 38:14

Context
Jeremiah Responds to Zedekiah’s Request for Secret Advice

38:14 Some time later 14  Zedekiah sent and had Jeremiah brought to him at the third entrance 15  of the Lord’s temple. The king said to Jeremiah, “I would like to ask you a question. Do not hide anything from me when you answer.” 16 

Jeremiah 40:9

Context
40:9 Gedaliah, the son of Ahikam and grandson of Shaphan, took an oath so as to give them and their troops some assurance of safety. 17  “Do not be afraid to submit to the Babylonians. 18  Settle down in the land and submit to the king of Babylon. Then things will go well for you.

Jeremiah 40:11

Context
40:11 Moreover, all the Judeans who were in Moab, Ammon, Edom, and all the other countries heard what had happened. They heard that the king of Babylon had allowed some people to stay in Judah and that he had appointed Gedaliah, the son of Ahikam and grandson of Shaphan, to govern them.

Jeremiah 44:28

Context
44:28 Some who survive in battle will return to the land of Judah from the land of Egypt. But they will be very few indeed! 19  Then the Judean remnant who have come to live in the land of Egypt will know whose word proves true, 20  mine or theirs.’

1 tn Heb “I wish I had in the desert a lodging place [inn, or place to spend the night] for travelers.”

2 tn Or “bunch,” but this loses the irony; the word is used for the solemn assemblies at the religious feasts.

3 tn Heb “they are all adulterers, a congregation of unfaithful people.” However, spiritual adultery is, of course, meant, not literal adultery. So the literal translation would be misleading.

4 tn Heb “They.” The referent is unidentified; “some people” has been used in the translation.

5 tn Heb “Let us make plans against Jeremiah.” See 18:18 where this has sinister overtones as it does here.

6 tn Heb “Instruction will not perish from priest, counsel from the wise, word from the prophet.”

sn These are the three channels through whom God spoke to his people in the OT. See Jer 8:8-10 and Ezek 7:26.

7 tn Heb “Let us smite him with our tongues.” It is clear from the context that this involved plots to kill him.

8 sn These officials of Judah were officials from the royal court. They may have included some of the officials mentioned in Jer 36:12-25. They would have been concerned about any possible “illegal” proceedings going on in the temple.

9 tn Heb “these things.”

10 tn Heb “they sat” or “they took their seats.” However, the context is one of judicial trial.

sn The gateway or gate complex of an ancient Near Eastern city was often used for court assemblies (cf. Deut 21:19; 22:15; Ruth 4:1; Isa 29:21). Here the gate of the temple was used for the convening of a court to try Jeremiah for the charge of being a false prophet.

11 tn The translation follows many Hebrew mss and ancient versions in reading the word “house” (= temple) here. The majority of Hebrew mss do not have this word. It is, however, implicit in the construction “the New Gate of the Lord.”

sn The location of the New Gate is uncertain. It is mentioned again in Jer 36:10 where it is connected with the upper (i.e., inner) court of the temple. Some equate it with the Upper Gate that Jotham rebuilt during his reign (2 Kgs 15:35; Jotham reigned from 750-735 b.c.). That gate, however, has already been referred to as the Upper Gate of Benjamin in Jer 20:2 (for more detail see the study note there) and would not likely have been called something different here.

12 tn Heb “went into the palace in under the treasury.” Several of the commentaries (e.g., J. Bright, Jeremiah [AB], 227; J. A. Thompson, Jeremiah [NICOT], 639, n. 6) emend the prepositional phrase “in under” (אֶל־תַּחַת, ’el-takhat) to the noun “wardrobe” plus the preposition “to” (אֶל־מֶלְתַחַת, ’el-meltakhat). This is a plausible emendation which would involve dropping out מֶל (mel) due to its similarity with the אֶל (’el) which precedes it. However, there is no textual or versional evidence for such a reading and the compound preposition is not in itself objectionable (cf. BDB 1066 s.v. תַּחַת III.1.a). The Greek version reads “the part underground” (representing a Hebrew Vorlage of אֶל תַּחַת הָאָרֶץ, ’el takhat haarets) in place of אֶל תַּחַת הָאוֹצָר (’el takhat haotsar). The translation follows the Hebrew text but adds the word “room” for the sake of English style.

13 tn Heb “worn-out clothes and worn-out rags.”

14 tn The words “Some time later” are not in the text but are a way of translating the conjunction “And” or “Then” that introduces this narrative.

15 sn The precise location of this entrance is unknown since it is mentioned nowhere else in the OT. Many commentators equate this with the “king’s outer entry” (mentioned in 2 Kgs 16:18) which appears to have been a private entryway between the temple and the palace.

16 tn The words “when you answer” are not in the text but are implicit in the connection. They are supplied in the translation for the sake of clarity and smoothness of style.

17 tn The words “so as to give them some assurance of safety” are not in the text but are generally understood by all commentators. This would be a case of substitution of cause for effect, the oath, put for the effect, the assurance of safety (NJPS translates directly “reassured them”).

18 tn Heb “Chaldeans.” See the study note on 21:4 for explanation.

19 tn Heb “The survivors of the sword will return from the land of Egypt to the land of Judah few in number [more literally, “men of number”; for the idiom see BDB 709 s.v. מִסְפָּר 1.a].” The term “survivors of the sword” may be intended to represent both those who survive death in war or death by starvation or disease, a synecdoche of species for all three genera.

sn This statement shows that the preceding “none,” “never again,” “all” in vv. 26-27 are rhetorical hyperbole. Not all but almost all; very few would survive. The following statement implies that the reason that they are left alive is to bear witness to the fact that the Lord’s threats were indeed carried out. See vv. 11-14 for a parallel use of “all” and “none” qualified by a “few.”

20 tn Heb “will stand,” i.e., in the sense of being fulfilled, proving to be true, or succeeding (see BDB 878 s.v. קוּם 7.g).



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