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Jeremiah 6:5

Context

6:5 So come on, let’s go ahead and attack it by night

and destroy all its fortified buildings.’

Jeremiah 8:20

Context

8:20 “They cry, 1  ‘Harvest time has come and gone, and the summer is over, 2 

and still we have not been delivered.’

Jeremiah 19:10

Context

19:10 The Lord continued, 3  “Now break the jar in front of those who have come here with you.

Jeremiah 29:12

Context
29:12 When you call out to me and come to me in prayer, 4  I will hear your prayers. 5 

Jeremiah 48:24

Context
48:24 on Kerioth and Bozrah. It will come on all the towns of Moab, both far and near.

Jeremiah 51:54

Context

51:54 Cries of anguish will come from Babylon,

the sound of great destruction from the land of the Babylonians.

Jeremiah 51:60

Context
51:60 Jeremiah recorded 6  on one scroll all the judgments 7  that would come upon Babylon – all these prophecies 8  written about Babylon.

1 tn The words “They say” are not in the text; they are supplied in the translation to make clear that the lament of the people begun in v. 19b is continued here after the interruption of the Lord’s words in v. 19c.

2 tn Heb “Harvest time has passed, the summer is over.”

sn This appears to be a proverbial statement for “time marches on.” The people appear to be expressing their frustration that the Lord has not gone about his business of rescuing them as they expected. For a similar misguided feeling based on the offering of shallow repentance see Hos 6:1-3 (and note the Lord’s reply in 6:4-6).

3 tn The words “And the Lord continued” are not in the text. However, they are necessary to take us clearly back to the flow of the narrative begun in vv. 1-2 and interrupted by the long speech in vv. 3-9.

4 tn Heb “come and pray to me.” This is an example of verbal hendiadys where two verb formally joined by “and” convey a main concept with the second verb functioning as an adverbial qualifier.

5 tn Or “You will call out to me and come to me in prayer and I will hear your prayers.” The verbs are vav consecutive perfects and can be taken either as unconditional futures or as contingent futures. See GKC 337 §112.kk and 494 §159.g and compare the usage in Gen 44:22 for the use of the vav consecutive perfects in contingent futures. The conditional clause in the middle of 29:13 and the deuteronomic theology reflected in both Deut 30:1-5 and 1 Kgs 8:46-48 suggest that the verbs are continent futures here. For the same demand for wholehearted seeking in these contexts which presuppose exile see especially Deut 30:2, 1 Kgs 8:48.

6 tn Or “wrote.”

7 tn Or “disaster”; or “calamity.”

8 tn Heb “words” (or “things”).



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