Jeremiah 5:17
![Click this icon to open a Bible text only page](images/text.gif)
Context5:17 They will eat up your crops and your food.
They will kill off 1 your sons and your daughters.
They will eat up your sheep and your cattle.
They will destroy your vines and your fig trees. 2
Their weapons will batter down 3
the fortified cities you trust in.
Jeremiah 9:10
Context“I will weep and mourn 5 for the grasslands on the mountains, 6
I will sing a mournful song for the pastures in the wilderness
because they are so scorched no one travels through them.
The sound of livestock is no longer heard there.
Even the birds in the sky and the wild animals in the fields
have fled and are gone.”
Jeremiah 19:11
Context19:11 Tell them the Lord who rules over all says, 7 ‘I will do just as Jeremiah has done. 8 I will smash this nation and this city as though it were a potter’s vessel which is broken beyond repair. 9 The dead will be buried here in Topheth until there is no more room to bury them.’ 10
Jeremiah 44:23
Context44:23 You have sacrificed to other gods! You have sinned against the Lord! You have not obeyed the Lord! You have not followed his laws, his statutes, and his decrees! That is why this disaster that is evident to this day has happened to you.” 11
1 tn Heb “eat up.”
2 tn Or “eat up your grapes and figs”; Heb “eat up your vines and your fig trees.”
sn It was typical for an army in time of war in the ancient Near East not only to eat up the crops but to destroy the means of further production.
3 tn Heb “They will beat down with the sword.” The term “sword” is a figure of speech (synecdoche) for military weapons in general. Siege ramps, not swords, beat down city walls; swords kill people, not city walls.
4 tn The words “I said” are not in the text, but there is general agreement that Jeremiah is the speaker. Cf. the lament in 8:18-9:1. These words are supplied in the translation for clarity. Some English versions follow the Greek text which reads a plural imperative here. Since this reading would make the transition between 9:10 and 9:11 easier it is probably not original but a translator’s way of smoothing over a difficulty.
5 tn Heb “I will lift up weeping and mourning.”
6 tn Heb “for the mountains.” However, the context makes clear that it is the grasslands or pastures on the mountains that are meant. The words “for the grasslands” are supplied in the translation for clarity.
7 tn Heb “Thus says Yahweh of armies.” For this title see the study note on 2:19. The translation attempts to avoid the confusion of embedding quotes within quotes by reducing this one to an indirect quote.
8 tn The adverb “Thus” or “Like this” normally points back to something previously mentioned. See, e.g., Exod 29:35; Num 11:15; 15:11; Deut 25:9.
9 tn Heb “Like this I will break this people and this city, just as one breaks the vessel of a potter which is not able to be repaired.”
10 sn See Jer 7:22-23 for parallels.
11 tn Heb “Because you have sacrificed and you have sinned against the