Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, commanded by the Lord to purchase a clay jar and perform a public sign-act before elders and priests.
The Broken Jar, Topheth, and the Disaster Judah Cannot Repair
Because Judah has forsaken the Lord, polluted the land with idolatry and innocent blood, and stiffened its neck against His word, the Lord will break Jerusalem like a smashed potter’s jar that cannot be repaired.
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Because Judah has forsaken the Lord, polluted the land with idolatry and innocent blood, and stiffened its neck against His word, the Lord will break Jerusalem like a smashed potter’s jar that cannot be repaired.
Jeremiah 19 argues that persistent covenant rebellion moves judgment from warning to irreversibility. The people who refused the potter’s summons to repent in Jeremiah 18 now face the sign of a shattered vessel in Jeremiah 19.
The kings of Judah, the people of Jerusalem, the elders of the people, the elders of the priests, and those gathered near the Potsherd Gate and the Valley of Ben Hinnom.
Jeremiah 19 follows Jeremiah 18, where Jeremiah watched a potter reshape spoiled clay into another vessel. Jeremiah 19 intensifies the potter imagery: now Jeremiah buys a finished clay jar and smashes it as a sign that Judah and Jerusalem will be broken beyond repair. The setting moves from the potter’s house to the Valley of Ben Hinnom, especially Topheth, a place associated with idolatry and child sacrifice.
Because Judah has forsaken the Lord, polluted the land with idolatry and innocent blood, and stiffened its neck against His word, the Lord will break Jerusalem like a smashed potter’s jar that cannot be repaired.
Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, commanded by the Lord to purchase a clay jar and perform a public sign-act before elders and priests.
The kings of Judah, the people of Jerusalem, the elders of the people, the elders of the priests, and those gathered near the Potsherd Gate and the Valley of Ben Hinnom.
Jeremiah 19 follows Jeremiah 18, where Jeremiah watched a potter reshape spoiled clay into another vessel. Jeremiah 19 intensifies the potter imagery: now Jeremiah buys a finished clay jar and smashes it as a sign that Judah and Jerusalem will be broken beyond repair. The setting moves from the potter’s house to the Valley of Ben Hinnom, especially Topheth, a place associated with idolatry and child sacrifice.
- Judah and Jerusalem are under prophetic warning but remain hardened, polluted by idolatry, confident in temple and city structures, and guilty of bloodshed and child sacrifice. Religious and civic leadership are implicated.
The chapter assumes pottery manufacture, finished earthenware vessels, public sign-acts, elders as civic and religious representatives, the Valley of Ben Hinnom, Topheth, child sacrifice to Baal, bloodguilt, city siege, cannibalism as covenant curse, burial customs, rooftop astral worship, drink offerings to other gods, temple court proclamation, and hard-necked refusal to hear.
Jeremiah 19 is a decisive judgment sign after the mercy-shaped warning of Jeremiah 18. In Jeremiah 18 the vessel was still reworkable in the potter’s hand; in Jeremiah 19 the jar is smashed beyond repair. The chapter shows judgment moving from conditional warning to enacted irreversibility because Judah refuses to listen.
The chapter moves from the Lord’s command to buy a potter’s jar and gather leaders, to a public oracle at the Valley of Ben Hinnom, to the naming of Judah’s abominations and bloodguilt, to the renaming of Topheth as the Valley of Slaughter, to siege horrors including cannibalism, to Jeremiah’s smashing of the jar as an irreversible sign, to the declaration that Jerusalem will become like Topheth, and finally to Jeremiah’s temple-court proclamation that disaster will come because the people stiffened their necks and would not listen.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Jeremiah 19 clarifies the gospel by showing the severity of covenant guilt and the impossibility of self-repair once judgment falls. Judah is not merely cracked; the jar is smashed beyond repair. The gospel does not announce human self-improvement but divine rescue through Christ, who bears the curse, exposes false worship, suffers innocent bloodshed, and brings new creation to those who cannot repair themselves.
Jeremiah buys a potter’s jar and gathers civic and priestly elders near the Valley of Ben Hinnom.
The Lord announces disaster that will make hearers’ ears tingle.
Judah’s crimes include forsaking the Lord, foreign worship, innocent blood, Baal worship, and child sacrifice.
Topheth becomes the Valley of Slaughter, and siege horrors fall on Jerusalem.
The smashed jar signifies that Judah and Jerusalem will be broken beyond repair.
Jerusalem and its palaces become like Topheth because idolatry has spread across the city.
Jeremiah announces in the temple court that disaster is coming because the people stiffened their necks and refused to listen.
- 19:1: The Lord commands Jeremiah to purchase a clay jar and take elders of the people and priests with Him.
- 19:2: The sign-act is to be performed near the entrance of the Potsherd Gate in a place associated with idolatrous judgment.
- 19:3: The Lord announces shocking disaster against the kings of Judah and the people of Jerusalem.
- 19:4: They have burned incense to other gods and filled the place with innocent blood.
- 19:5: They built high places of Baal to burn their children, an abomination the Lord never commanded or conceived.
- 19:6: The Lord declares a new name for the valley, transforming an idolatrous site into a slaughter site.
- 19:7: Judah will fall by sword before enemies, and corpses will become food for birds and wild animals.
- 19:8: The city will be devastated and scorned by those who pass by.
- 19:9: The people will eat the flesh of sons, daughters, and one another under siege distress.
- 19:10: Jeremiah smashes the jar in the presence of the elders who accompanied Him.
- 19:11: The Lord will break Judah and Jerusalem like a potter’s jar that cannot be repaired.
- 19:11: Topheth will become a burial place because normal burial space will fail.
- 19:12: The city and its inhabitants will be treated like the defiled place of judgment.
- 19:13: Jerusalem’s houses and royal palaces are defiled by astral worship and drink offerings to other gods.
- 19:14: Jeremiah returns from Topheth and stands in the court of the Lord’s house.
- 19:15: The Lord will bring the announced disaster because the people stiffened their necks and refused His words.
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 19 argues that persistent covenant rebellion moves judgment from warning to irreversibility. The people who refused the potter’s summons to repent in Jeremiah 18 now face the sign of a shattered vessel in Jeremiah 19.
From bought jar to public oracle, from indictment to Valley of Slaughter, from siege horror to smashed vessel, from Topheth’s defilement to city-wide defilement, and from valley sign-act to temple proclamation.
- 1.The LORD turns a common clay jar into a public covenant sign.
- 2.The coming disaster is shocking because Judah’s crimes are shocking.
- 3.Idolatry makes the covenant place foreign.
- 4.Innocent blood brings judicial reckoning.
- 5.The LORD rejects child sacrifice utterly.
- 6.The site of idolatrous burning becomes the site of slaughter.
- 7.Judah’s plans collapse under the LORD’s judgment.
- 8.Covenant curse reaches siege, corpse exposure, and cannibalism.
- 9.After persistent refusal, judgment becomes irreparable.
- 10.Jerusalem itself has become like Topheth.
- 11.The final cause is hardened refusal to listen.
Theological Focus
- Prophetic sign-act
- Potter’s jar
- Irreversible judgment
- Topheth
- Valley of Ben Hinnom
- Potsherd Gate
- Ears tingling
- Forsaking the Lord
- Foreign worship
- Incense to other gods
- Innocent blood
- High places of Baal
- Child sacrifice
- Valley of Slaughter
- Ruined plans
- Sword judgment
- Corpse exposure
- City horror
- Siege cannibalism
- Smashed vessel
- No repair
- Jerusalem like Topheth
- Rooftop astral worship
- Drink offerings to other gods
- Temple proclamation
- Stiff neck
- Refusal to listen
- Judgment Beyond Repair
- Prophetic Sign-Act
- Civic and Religious Leadership Implicated
- The Lord Almighty, God of Israel
- Idolatry as Alienation
- Innocent Blood
- The Lord’s Hatred of Child Sacrifice
- Renaming as Judgment
- Failed Human Plans
- Covenant Curse Horror
- City-Wide Defilement
- Refusal to Hear
- Covenant Judgment
- Irreversible Judgment
- Idolatry
- Bloodguilt
- Divine Holiness
- Human Hardness
- False Security
- Covenant Curse
- Christ the Curse-Bearer
- Christ and New Creation
Theological Themes
The smashed jar signifies a judgment that cannot be repaired after persistent refusal to hear.
Jeremiah does not merely speak the word; He enacts it before representative leaders.
Elders of the people and priests witness the sign, showing that both civic and religious leadership are under the word.
The divine title stresses that the coming disaster is from the covenant Lord with sovereign power.
Judah’s root sin is abandoning the Lord and turning to gods unknown to the covenant fathers.
The place becomes foreign because alien gods are worshiped there.
Judah’s violence and child sacrifice fill the place with bloodguilt.
The Lord denies any command, speech, or thought authorizing child sacrifice.
Topheth and the Valley of Ben Hinnom are renamed the Valley of Slaughter.
The Lord ruins Judah’s plans, exposing the futility of strategy against divine judgment.
Sword, corpse exposure, desolation, and cannibalism reflect covenant curse extremity.
Jerusalem’s houses and royal palaces become defiled like Topheth through rooftop idolatry.
The chapter ends by identifying stiff-necked refusal to listen as the decisive issue.
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 19 shows covenant judgment reaching an irreversible stage. Judah has violated covenant loyalty by forsaking the Lord, worshiping other gods, shedding innocent blood, sacrificing children, and refusing to listen. The covenant curses announced in Torah now fall in shocking specificity: sword, corpse exposure, siege terror, cannibalism, desolation, and loss of burial space.
- Covenant sign-act - The smashed jar publicly embodies the covenant consequence of hardened rebellion.
- Covenant leadership summoned - Elders and priests witness the sign and hear the indictment.
- Covenant place profaned - The land and city are made foreign through alien worship.
- Covenant bloodguilt - Innocent blood fills the place, demanding judicial response.
- Covenant abomination - Child sacrifice to Baal represents a radical violation of the Lord’s will.
- Covenant curse enacted - Sword, corpse exposure, siege, cannibalism, horror, and hissing unfold as curse realities.
- Covenant city defiled - Jerusalem and the royal palaces become like Topheth because idolatry has spread everywhere.
- Covenant hearing refused - The disaster comes because the people stiffened their necks and would not listen.
- Leviticus 18:21 - Israel must not give children to Molek and profane the name of God.
- Leviticus 20:1-5 - The Lord commands judgment against those who give children to Molek.
- Deuteronomy 12:29-31 - Israel must not imitate nations who burn sons and daughters in the fire to their gods.
- Deuteronomy 28:26 - The corpses of the disobedient become food for birds and beasts.
- Deuteronomy 28:53-57 - Disobedience brings siege conditions so severe that people eat their own children.
- 2 Kings 21:1-16 - Manasseh’s sins include idolatry, child sacrifice, and innocent blood.
- 2 Kings 23:10 - Josiah defiled Topheth so no one would sacrifice a son or daughter in the fire.
- Jeremiah 7:31-34 - Jeremiah previously announced that Topheth would become the Valley of Slaughter.
Canonical Connections
Jeremiah 19 must be read after Jeremiah 18: the reworkable clay becomes the smashed jar after stubborn refusal.
Jeremiah’s Topheth oracle continues earlier denunciations of child sacrifice and Valley of Slaughter judgment.
The siege cannibalism and corpse exposure echo the curses of Deuteronomy.
The ear-tingling phrase connects Jeremiah’s disaster oracle with earlier catastrophic judgment announcements.
Judah’s refusal to listen continues the biblical pattern of hard-necked rebellion.
Jeremiah’s temple-court proclamation connects with earlier warnings against trusting in the temple while disobeying.
Judah’s innocent bloodguilt anticipates later biblical indictment of Jerusalem’s violence against the righteous.
The judgment setting outside the city and covenant curse horizon point canonically toward Christ’s curse-bearing death.
Cross References
Jeremiah 19 clarifies the gospel by showing the severity of covenant guilt and the impossibility of self-repair once judgment falls. Judah is not merely cracked; the jar is smashed beyond repair. The gospel does not announce human self-improvement but divine rescue through Christ, who bears the curse, exposes false worship, suffers innocent bloodshed, and brings new creation to those who cannot repair themselves.
- The human problem - Judah forsakes the Lord, worships other gods, sheds innocent blood, sacrifices children, and refuses to listen.
- The judgment reality - The broken jar signifies judgment beyond human repair.
- The false refuge - Temple proximity, city identity, leadership status, and human plans cannot shield disobedience.
- The curse horror - Sword, corpse exposure, siege, and cannibalism reveal the extremity of covenant curse.
- Christ the curse-bearer - Christ redeems His people from the curse by bearing judgment in their place.
- Christ the innocent one - Judah’s innocent blood theme reaches its deepest contrast in Christ, the righteous one unjustly killed.
- Christ outside the gate - Judgment imagery outside the city points canonically toward Christ suffering outside the gate to sanctify His people.
- Christ and new creation - What cannot be repaired by human hands can be made new by God’s grace in Christ.
- Do not soften Jeremiah 19 into a generic lesson about brokenness. It is a covenant judgment sign against hardened rebellion.
- Do not preach the broken jar without the prior call to repentance in Jeremiah 18.
- Do not use temple presence or religious service as comfort apart from obedience to the Lord’s word.
- Do not reduce child sacrifice to metaphor. The text condemns actual abomination and bloodguilt.
- Do not promise self-repair. The jar cannot be repaired. Gospel hope is divine rescue and new creation in Christ.
- Do not bypass judgment when preaching grace. Grace is glorious because the curse is real and Christ bears it.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 19 contributes to Christology by showing the horror of sin that only decisive judgment and atoning mercy can answer. The broken jar announces irreversible judgment on hardened Judah, while the larger canon points to Christ as the one who bears covenant curse, suffers outside the city, and opens the only way for broken sinners to be made new. The chapter also anticipates Christ’s prophetic role: like Jeremiah, He confronts hardened religious leadership, exposes bloodguilt and false worship, and is rejected by those who refuse to listen.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 19 argues that persistent covenant rebellion moves judgment from warning to irreversibility. The people who refused the potter’s summons to repent in Jeremiah 18 now face the sign of a shattered vessel in Jeremiah 19.
God’s spoken word through His prophets carries binding authority.
God holds His covenant people accountable for abandoning Him and adopting pagan practices.
The devastating consequences of siege and famine reflect the warnings given in the covenant law.
God executes the warnings He has proclaimed when people persist in rebellion.
God responds to idolatry and violence with righteous judgment.
Persistent resistance to God’s word leads to spiritual blindness and judgment.
Worship of false gods corrupts both individuals and societies.
Certain acts of rebellion bring historical consequences that cannot be undone.
Prophets often perform symbolic actions to communicate God’s message vividly.
External participation in worship does not replace genuine obedience to God.
The shedding of innocent blood is a grave offense against God.
Judah faces severe judgment because of idolatry, bloodguilt, child sacrifice, and refusal to hear.
The smashed jar visually enacts the Lord’s judgment against Judah and Jerusalem.
The jar broken beyond repair signifies judgment that cannot be reversed by human means.
Judah has burned incense to other gods, worshiped Baal, served the stars, and poured drink offerings to other gods.
Judah has filled the place with innocent blood, including child sacrifice.
The Lord utterly rejects child sacrifice and defiling worship.
The people stiffened their necks and refused to listen to the Lord’s words.
Jerusalem, temple court, royal palaces, and religious structures cannot protect a disobedient people.
Sword, corpse exposure, siege, cannibalism, and desolation echo Torah curse language.
The severity of curse judgment points toward the need for Christ, who bears the curse for His people.
The jar beyond repair exposes the need for divine new creation rather than human repair.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Jeremiah 19 clarifies the gospel by showing the severity of covenant guilt and the impossibility of self-repair once judgment falls. Judah is not merely cracked; the jar is smashed beyond repair. The gospel does not announce human self-improvement but divine rescue through Christ, who bears the curse, exposes false worship, suffers innocent bloodshed, and brings new creation to those who cannot repair themselves.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense potter’s earthenware jar
Definition A clay vessel produced by a potter, likely narrow-necked and breakable.
References Jeremiah 19:1
Lexicon potter’s earthenware jar
Why it matters The jar becomes the central sign-object of irreversible judgment.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense one who forms, potter
Definition A craftsman who forms clay vessels.
References Jeremiah 19:1
Lexicon one who forms, potter
Why it matters The potter connection ties Jeremiah 19 to Jeremiah 18 while intensifying the sign.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense elders, leaders
Definition Older men or leaders with civic or religious authority.
References Jeremiah 19:1
Lexicon elders, leaders
Why it matters Representative leaders witness the sign-act and hear the indictment.
Sense priests
Definition Cultic officials responsible for worship and instruction.
References Jeremiah 19:1
Lexicon priests
Why it matters The priestly elders are implicated in the public warning.
Sense Valley of the son of Hinnom
Definition A valley associated with idolatrous practices and judgment imagery.
References Jeremiah 19:2, 19:6
Lexicon Valley of the son of Hinnom
Why it matters The sign-act occurs in the valley associated with Topheth and child sacrifice.
Sense Potsherd Gate
Definition A gate associated with broken pottery or pottery refuse.
References Jeremiah 19:2
Lexicon Potsherd Gate
Why it matters The location reinforces the pottery-breaking sign-act.
Sense to call, proclaim, announce
Definition To call out or publicly proclaim.
References Jeremiah 19:2, 19:14-15
Lexicon to call, proclaim, announce
Why it matters Jeremiah must publicly proclaim the Lord’s words at the valley and temple court.
Sense kings of Judah
Definition The royal rulers or royal house of Judah.
References Jeremiah 19:3
Lexicon kings of Judah
Why it matters The royal leadership is directly addressed under judgment.
Sense LORD of armies, LORD Almighty
Definition The covenant name joined with the title of sovereign command over hosts.
References Jeremiah 19:3
Lexicon LORD of armies, LORD Almighty
Why it matters The title underscores the power and authority behind the announced disaster.
Sense God of Israel
Definition The LORD as the covenant God of Israel.
References Jeremiah 19:3
Lexicon God of Israel
Why it matters Judah’s sin is against the God who owns covenant claim over them.
Sense disaster, calamity, evil
Definition Calamity or disaster brought as judgment.
References Jeremiah 19:3, 19:15
Lexicon disaster, calamity, evil
Why it matters The Lord is bringing disaster because of Judah’s covenant crimes.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Feminine · Plural What is this?
Sense ears will tingle/ring
Definition A phrase for shocking news of catastrophic judgment.
References Jeremiah 19:3
Lexicon ears will tingle/ring
Why it matters The disaster will be so severe that it shocks all hearers.
Sense they have forsaken me
Definition To abandon, leave, or forsake.
References Jeremiah 19:4
Lexicon they have forsaken me
Why it matters Judah’s root covenant breach is forsaking the Lord.
Sense they made this place alien/foreign
Definition To treat or make something foreign, strange, or alien.
References Jeremiah 19:4
Lexicon they made this place alien/foreign
Why it matters Idolatry alienates the covenant place from its proper devotion to the Lord.
Sense burned incense, made smoke offerings
Definition To burn incense in worship.
References Jeremiah 19:4, 19:13
Lexicon burned incense, made smoke offerings
Why it matters Judah offers worship to other gods instead of the Lord.
Sense other gods, alien deities
Definition False objects of worship besides the LORD.
References Jeremiah 19:4, 19:13
Lexicon other gods, alien deities
Why it matters Other gods are central to Judah’s covenant betrayal.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense innocent blood
Definition Blood of the innocent or guiltless.
References Jeremiah 19:4
Lexicon innocent blood
Why it matters Judah’s shedding of innocent blood is a major cause of judgment.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Construct What is this?
Sense high places, cultic sites
Definition Elevated worship sites, often associated with illicit worship.
References Jeremiah 19:5
Lexicon high places, cultic sites
Why it matters Judah built high places for Baal, intensifying idolatry.
Sense Baal, Canaanite deity/title
Definition A Canaanite deity or title meaning lord/master.
References Jeremiah 19:5
Lexicon Baal, Canaanite deity/title
Why it matters Baal worship is linked with child sacrifice in the indictment.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense burn their sons in the fire
Definition Child sacrifice by fire.
References Jeremiah 19:5
Lexicon burn their sons in the fire
Why it matters The Lord utterly rejects this abomination as never commanded, spoken, or conceived by Him.
Sense I commanded
Definition To command or order.
References Jeremiah 19:5
Lexicon I commanded
Why it matters The Lord denies that He ever commanded child sacrifice.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense came up upon my heart/mind
Definition A Hebrew idiom for something entering intention or thought.
References Jeremiah 19:5
Lexicon came up upon my heart/mind
Why it matters The Lord emphatically denies any divine approval of child sacrifice.
Sense Topheth, idolatrous burning site
Definition A site in the Valley of Ben Hinnom associated with child sacrifice and judgment.
References Jeremiah 19:6, 19:11-14
Lexicon Topheth, idolatrous burning site
Why it matters Topheth is renamed the Valley of Slaughter and becomes a symbol of judgment.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense Valley of Slaughter
Definition A judgment name for the Valley of Ben Hinnom/Topheth.
References Jeremiah 19:6
Lexicon Valley of Slaughter
Why it matters The place of child sacrifice becomes the place symbolizing Judah’s slaughter.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense empty out counsel, ruin plans
Definition To empty, pour out, or make void counsel/plans.
References Jeremiah 19:7
Lexicon empty out counsel, ruin plans
Why it matters The Lord will frustrate Judah’s plans before enemies.
Sense sword, warfare, violent judgment
Definition A sword or war as an instrument of judgment.
References Jeremiah 19:7
Lexicon sword, warfare, violent judgment
Why it matters Judah will fall by the sword before enemies.
Sense enemies
Definition Hostile opponents or attackers.
References Jeremiah 19:7, 19:9
Lexicon enemies
Why it matters The Lord gives Judah over before enemies as judgment.
Sense food for birds of the sky and beasts of the earth
Definition Corpse exposure to scavengers and animals.
References Jeremiah 19:7
Lexicon food for birds of the sky and beasts of the earth
Why it matters The image evokes covenant curse and public shame.
Sense desolation, horror, devastation
Definition A devastated condition that horrifies observers.
References Jeremiah 19:8
Lexicon desolation, horror, devastation
Why it matters Jerusalem becomes an object of horror because of the Lord’s judgment.
Sense hissing, scorn, derision
Definition A sound of shock, contempt, or derision.
References Jeremiah 19:8
Lexicon hissing, scorn, derision
Why it matters Those passing by will hiss at Jerusalem’s wounds.
Sense eat flesh
Definition Cannibalistic eating under extreme siege conditions.
References Jeremiah 19:9
Lexicon eat flesh
Why it matters The horror directly recalls covenant curse language from Deuteronomy.
Sense siege, blockade
Definition Military encirclement and pressure around a city.
References Jeremiah 19:9
Lexicon siege, blockade
Why it matters Siege distress becomes the setting for covenant curse horror.
Sense distress, pressure, anguish
Definition Severe pressure, distress, or anguish.
References Jeremiah 19:9
Lexicon distress, pressure, anguish
Why it matters The people will experience distress under enemy siege.
Sense to break, shatter
Definition To break, shatter, or smash.
References Jeremiah 19:10-11
Lexicon to break, shatter
Why it matters Jeremiah breaks the jar, and the Lord will break the nation and city.
Sense cannot be healed/repaired
Definition Unable to be restored, healed, or repaired.
References Jeremiah 19:11
Lexicon cannot be healed/repaired
Why it matters The sign stresses the irreversibility of the coming judgment.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to bury
Definition To bury the dead.
References Jeremiah 19:11
Lexicon to bury
Why it matters Topheth becomes a burial place until there is no room left.
Sense unclean, defiled
Definition Ritually or morally defiled.
References Jeremiah 19:13
Lexicon unclean, defiled
Why it matters Jerusalem’s houses and royal palaces are defiled like Topheth.
Sense roofs, rooftops
Definition Flat rooftops used for activity, including illicit worship.
References Jeremiah 19:13
Lexicon roofs, rooftops
Why it matters Rooftop worship shows idolatry spread into household and city life.
Sense host of heaven, celestial bodies
Definition The heavenly bodies or celestial host, often objects of forbidden worship.
References Jeremiah 19:13
Lexicon host of heaven, celestial bodies
Why it matters Rooftop incense to the heavenly host indicates astral worship.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense pour drink offerings
Definition To pour out liquid offerings in worship.
References Jeremiah 19:13
Lexicon pour drink offerings
Why it matters Judah pours offerings to other gods, corrupting worship.
Sense court of the LORD’s house
Definition The temple court, a public space for worship and proclamation.
References Jeremiah 19:14
Lexicon court of the LORD’s house
Why it matters Jeremiah brings the judgment word from Topheth into the temple court.
Sense cities, towns, villages
Definition Settlements belonging to Jerusalem’s wider sphere.
References Jeremiah 19:15
Lexicon cities, towns, villages
Why it matters The disaster affects Jerusalem and all its surrounding towns.
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 3rd Person · Common · Plural What is this?
Sense made their neck stiff
Definition A metaphor for stubborn refusal and resistance.
References Jeremiah 19:15
Lexicon made their neck stiff
Why it matters The final reason for judgment is their hard-necked refusal to listen.
Form in passage Qal · Infinitive construct What is this?
Sense to hear, listen, obey
Definition To hear with obedient response.
References Jeremiah 19:15
Lexicon to hear, listen, obey
Why it matters Judah’s refusal to listen brings the announced disaster.
Sense potter’s earthenware jar
Definition potter’s earthenware jar
Why it matters The jar is smashed to signify judgment beyond repair.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Lord will not forever tolerate a people who forsake Him, defile worship, shed innocent blood, and refuse to hear His words; judgment may come as a breaking that no human hand can repair.
Help God’s people feel the terror of hardened refusal, reject defiling idolatries, value innocent life, stop hiding behind religious forms, and flee to the mercy and new creation found in Christ.
Reverent fear, repentance, teachability, holy listening, hatred of idolatry, protection of the vulnerable, humility before judgment, and urgent dependence on grace.
- Read Jeremiah 18 and 19 together to feel the movement from warning to breaking.
- Ask the Lord to reveal where You have stiffened Your neck under correction.
- Identify one idol that has made part of Your life foreign to the Lord.
- Confess any practice where religious language is covering disobedience.
- Pray for a tender conscience toward innocent blood and vulnerable life.
- Reject any confidence in sacred spaces or ministry activity apart from listening obedience.
- Seek the Lord’s mercy before consequences become irreversible.
- Look to Christ as the one who bears curse and makes new what human hands cannot repair.
- Jeremiah 19 is one of the strongest warning chapters in Jeremiah. It warns that when a people persistently forsake the Lord, pollute worship, shed innocent blood, and refuse to hear His words, judgment can move from warning to irreversible breaking.
- Treating the broken jar as the same sign as the potter’s reworked clay in Jeremiah 18. - Jeremiah 18 shows a vessel still reworkable in the potter’s hand · Jeremiah 19 shows a finished jar smashed beyond repair, intensifying the warning.
- Assuming the judgment is arbitrary or excessive. - The chapter gives explicit reasons: forsaking the Lord, foreign worship, innocent blood, Baal worship, child sacrifice, and refusal to listen.
- Viewing child sacrifice as merely ancient religious difference. - The Lord condemns it absolutely as something He did not command, mention, or imagine.
- Limiting Topheth’s defilement to one isolated location. - Jeremiah 19 says Jerusalem’s houses and royal palaces become like Topheth because idolatry has spread.
- Thinking temple presence cancels judgment. - Jeremiah returns to the temple court and announces the same disaster there.
- Reading cannibalism language as mere metaphor. - It echoes covenant curse siege language and should be treated as a concrete horror of judgment.
- Ignoring the leadership dimension. - Elders of the people and priests are summoned as witnesses · the kings of Judah and people of Jerusalem are addressed.
- Softening stiff-necked refusal. - The chapter ends by identifying refusal to listen as the reason disaster falls.
- Where have I ignored repeated warnings from the Lord’s word?
- What idols have made parts of my life foreign to the Lord?
- Do I treat innocent life, vulnerability, and bloodguilt with the seriousness God does?
- Am I practicing anything in God’s name that God has not commanded or approved?
- What plans am I relying on that the Lord could ruin in a moment?
- Where has sin spread from a hidden valley into the rooftop and palace areas of my life?
- Am I assuming sacred activity or religious proximity will protect me while I refuse obedience?
- Where is my neck becoming stiff under correction?
- Do I listen quickly, or do I delay until warning becomes breaking?
- How does the broken jar drive me to seek mercy and new creation in Christ?
- Jeremiah 19 should be preached as a severe warning about irreversible judgment after persistent refusal, with careful connection to Jeremiah 18’s prior call to repentance.
- Elders and priests are present as witnesses, reminding leaders that they stand under the word they are responsible to uphold.
- The chapter exposes idolatry as defiling, violent, and city-wide rather than private and harmless.
- Judah’s shedding of innocent blood and child sacrifice demand strong pastoral clarity about the Lord’s hatred of sacrificed children and vulnerable bloodshed.
- Jeremiah’s temple-court proclamation warns against using religious places or rituals as shields from obedience.
- The stiff-necked conclusion helps diagnose people who have moved beyond confusion into refusal to listen.
- The chapter calls communities to respond before warnings become irreversible consequences.
- The broken jar reveals the depth of judgment and prepares hearers to see Christ as the one who bears curse and gives new creation beyond human repair.
Jeremiah 18’s possibility of reshaping is followed by Jeremiah 19’s irreversible breaking after refusal.
The jar leads to a courtroom-like proclamation before leaders.
The place of idolatrous sacrifice becomes a place of judgment.
Judah’s shedding of blood leads to the Lord’s judgment in bloodshed and corpse exposure.
The Lord ruins Judah’s plans because they are formed in rebellion.
The sin of Topheth spreads symbolically across houses and palaces.
Jeremiah brings the word from Topheth back to the temple court, confronting false security.
Refusal to listen culminates in irreversible judgment.
The gospel hope is not that sinners repair themselves but that God makes new through Christ.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from the Lord’s command to buy a potter’s jar and gather leaders, to a public oracle at the Valley of Ben Hinnom, to the naming of Judah’s abominations and bloodguilt, to the renaming of Topheth as the Valley of Slaughter, to siege horrors including cannibalism, to Jeremiah’s smashing of the jar as an irreversible sign, to the declaration that Jerusalem will become like Topheth, and finally to Jeremiah’s temple-court proclamation that disaster will come because the people stiffened their necks and would not listen.
Jeremiah 19 shows covenant judgment reaching an irreversible stage. Judah has violated covenant loyalty by forsaking the Lord, worshiping other gods, shedding innocent blood, sacrificing children, and refusing to listen. The covenant curses announced in Torah now fall in shocking specificity: sword, corpse exposure, siege terror, cannibalism, desolation, and loss of burial space.
Jeremiah 19 clarifies the gospel by showing the severity of covenant guilt and the impossibility of self-repair once judgment falls. Judah is not merely cracked; the jar is smashed beyond repair. The gospel does not announce human self-improvement but divine rescue through Christ, who bears the curse, exposes false worship, suffers innocent bloodshed, and brings new creation to those who cannot repair themselves.
Reverent fear, repentance, teachability, holy listening, hatred of idolatry, protection of the vulnerable, humility before judgment, and urgent dependence on grace.
Focus Points
- Prophetic sign-act
- Potter’s jar
- Irreversible judgment
- Topheth
- Valley of Ben Hinnom
- Potsherd Gate
- Ears tingling
- Forsaking the Lord
- Foreign worship
- Incense to other gods
- Innocent blood
- High places of Baal
- Child sacrifice
- Valley of Slaughter
- Ruined plans
- Sword judgment
- Corpse exposure
- City horror
- Siege cannibalism
- Smashed vessel
- No repair
- Jerusalem like Topheth
- Rooftop astral worship
- Drink offerings to other gods
- Temple proclamation
- Stiff neck
- Refusal to listen
- Judgment Beyond Repair
- Civic and Religious Leadership Implicated
- The Lord Almighty, God of Israel
- Idolatry as Alienation
- The Lord’s Hatred of Child Sacrifice
- Renaming as Judgment
- Failed Human Plans
- Covenant Curse Horror
- City-Wide Defilement
- Refusal to Hear
- Covenant Judgment
- Idolatry
- Bloodguilt
- Divine Holiness
- Human Hardness
- False Security
- Covenant Curse
- Christ the Curse-Bearer
- Christ and New Creation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 19:1-6
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:1-13 The Broken Pitcher. - Jer 19:1 . "Thus said Jahveh: Go and buy a potter’s vessel, and take of the elders of the people and of the elders of the priests, Jer 19:2 . And go forth into the valley of Benhinnom, which is before the gate Harsuth, and proclaim there the words which I shall speak unto thee, Jer 19:3 . And say: Hear the word of Jahveh, ye kings of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth his ears shall tingle.
Jer 19:4 . Because they have forsaken me, and disowned this place, and burnt incense in it to other gods whom they knew not, they, and their fathers, and the kings of Judah, and have filled this place with the blood of innocents, Jer 19:5 . And have built high places for Baal, to burn their sons in the fire as burnt-offerings to Baal, which I have neither commanded nor spoken, nor came it into my heart.
Jer 19:6 . Therefore, behold, days come, saith Jahve, that this place shall no longer be called Tophet and Valley of Benhinnom, but Valley of Slaughter. Jer 19:7 . And I make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place, and cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and by the hand of them that seek their lives, and give their carcases to be food for the fowls of the heaven and the beast of the earth.
Jer 19:8 . And make this city a dismay and a scoffing; every one that passeth thereby shall be dismayed and hiss because of all her strokes; Jer 19:9 . And make them eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of their daughters, and each shall eat his neighbour’s flesh in the siege and straitness wherewith their enemies and they that seek after their lives shall straiten them.
- Jer 19:10. And break the pitcher before the eyes of the men that go with thee, Jer 19:11. And say to them: Thus hath Jahve of hosts said: Even so will I break this people and this city as one breaketh this potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again; and in Tophet shall they bury them, because there is no room to bury. Jer 19:12. Thus will I do unto this place, saith Jahveh, and its inhabitants, to make this city as Tophet.
Jer 19:13. And the houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall become, as the place Tophet, unclean, all the houses upon whose roofs they have burnt incense to the whole host of heaven and poured out drink-offerings to other gods." The purpose for which Jeremiah was to buy the earthen jar is told in Jer 19:10, and the meaning of breaking it in the valley of Benhinnom is shown in Jer 19:11-13.
בּקבּק, from בּקק, to pour out, is a jar with a narrow neck, so called from the sound heard when liquid is poured out of it, although the vessel was used for storing honey, 1Ki 14:3. The appellation יוצר, former of earthen vessels, i. e. , potter, is given to denote the jar as one which, on being broken, would shiver into many fragments. Before "of the elders of the people" a verb seems to be awanting, for which cause many supply ולקחתּ (according to Jer 41:12; Jer 43:10, etc.)
, rightly so far as sense is concerned; but we are hardly entitled to assume a lacuna in the text. That assumption is opposed by the ו before מזּקני; for we cannot straightway presume that this ו was put in after the verb had dropped out of the text. In that case the whole word would have been restored. We have here rather, as Schnur. saw, a bold constructio praegnans , the verb "buy" being also joined in zeugma with "of the elders:" buy a jar and (take) certain of the elders; cf.
similar, only less bold, zeugmatic constr. in Job 4:10; Job 10:12; Isa 58:5. "Elders of the priests," as in 2Ki 19:2, probably identical with the "princes (שׂרי) of the priests," 2Ch 36:14, are doubtless virtually the same as the "heads (ראשׁי) of the priests," Neh 12:7, the priests highest in esteem, not merely for their age, but also in virtue of their rank; just as the "elders of the people" were a permanent representation of the people, consisting of the heads of tribes, houses or septs, and families; cf.
1Ki 8:1-3, and my Bibl. Archäol . ii. S. 218. Jeremiah was to take elders of the people and of the priesthood, because it was most readily to be expected of them that the word of God to be proclaimed would find a hearing amongst them. As to the valley of Benhinnom, see on Jer 7:31. שׁער החרסוּת, not Sun-gate (after חרס, Job 9:7; Jdg 8:13), but Pottery or Sherd-gate, from חרס = חרשׂ, in rabbin.
חרסית, potter’s clay. The Chet . חרסוּת is the ancient form, not the modern (Hitz.) , for the Keri is adapted to the rabbinical form. The clause, "which is before the Harsuth-gate ," is not meant to describe more particularly the locality, sufficiently well known in Jerusalem, but has reference to the act to be performed there. The name, gate of חרסוּת, which nowhere else occurs, points no doubt to the breaking to shivers of the jar.
Hence we are rather to translate Sherd-gate than Pottery-gate, the name having probably arisen amongst the people from the broken fragments which lay about this gate. Comm. are not at one as to which of the known city gates is meant. Hitz. and Kimchi are wrong in thinking of a gate of the court of the temple - the southern one. The context demands one of the city gates, two of which led into the Benhinnom valley: the Spring-or Fountain-gate at the south-east corner, and the Dung-gate on the south-west side of Zion; see on Neh 3:13-15.
One of these two must be meant, but which of them it cannot be decided. there Jeremiah is to cry aloud the words which follow, Jer 19:3-8, and which bear on the kings of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "Kings" in the plural, as in Jer 13:13, because the matter concerned not the reigning king only, but his successors too, who had been guilty of the sins to be punished.
Jer 19:14-15 The Prophet Jeremiah and the Temple-Warden Pashur. - Jer 19:14. When Jeremiah, having performed the divine command, returned from Tophet to the city, he went into the court of the house of God and spoke to the people assembled there, v. 15: "Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring upon this city, and all its cities, all the evil that I have pronounced against it, because they stiffened their necks not to hear my words."
"All the people" is the people present in the court of the temple as distinguished from the men who had accompanied Jeremiah into the valley of Benhinnom (Jer 19:10). מבי, the א having dropped off, as in Jer 39:16; 1Ki 21:21, 1Ki 21:29; 2Sa 5:2, and often. "All its cities" are the towns that belonged to Jerusalem, were subject to it (Jer 34:1); in other words, the cities of Judah, Jer 1:15; Jer 9:10, etc.
All the evil that I have pronounced against it, not merely in the valley of Benhinnom (Jer 19:3-13), but generally up till this time, by the mouth of Jeremiah. If we limit the reference of this view to the prophecy in Tophet, we must assume, with Näg. , that Jeremiah repeated the substance of it here; and besides, that prophecy is not in keeping with "all its cities," inasmuch as it (Jer 19:3-13) deals with Jerusalem alone.
Apparently Jeremiah must have said more than is written in the verse, and described the evil somewhat more closely; so that the new matter spoken by him here consists in the "Behold I bring," etc. , i. e. , in his forewarning them of the speedy fulfilment of the threatenings against Jerusalem and Judah, as was the case with the prophecy in the valley of Benhinnom, which also, Jer 19:3, begins with הנני מביא.
On "they stiffened their necks," etc. , cf. Jer 17:23; Jer 7:26.
Jer 19:14-15 The Prophet Jeremiah and the Temple-Warden Pashur. - Jer 19:14. When Jeremiah, having performed the divine command, returned from Tophet to the city, he went into the court of the house of God and spoke to the people assembled there, v. 15: "Thus hath said Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I bring upon this city, and all its cities, all the evil that I have pronounced against it, because they stiffened their necks not to hear my words."
"All the people" is the people present in the court of the temple as distinguished from the men who had accompanied Jeremiah into the valley of Benhinnom (Jer 19:10). מבי, the א having dropped off, as in Jer 39:16; 1Ki 21:21, 1Ki 21:29; 2Sa 5:2, and often. "All its cities" are the towns that belonged to Jerusalem, were subject to it (Jer 34:1); in other words, the cities of Judah, Jer 1:15; Jer 9:10, etc.
All the evil that I have pronounced against it, not merely in the valley of Benhinnom (Jer 19:3-13), but generally up till this time, by the mouth of Jeremiah. If we limit the reference of this view to the prophecy in Tophet, we must assume, with Näg. , that Jeremiah repeated the substance of it here; and besides, that prophecy is not in keeping with "all its cities," inasmuch as it (Jer 19:3-13) deals with Jerusalem alone.
Apparently Jeremiah must have said more than is written in the verse, and described the evil somewhat more closely; so that the new matter spoken by him here consists in the "Behold I bring," etc. , i. e. , in his forewarning them of the speedy fulfilment of the threatenings against Jerusalem and Judah, as was the case with the prophecy in the valley of Benhinnom, which also, Jer 19:3, begins with הנני מביא.
On "they stiffened their necks," etc. , cf. Jer 17:23; Jer 7:26.
Jer 20:1-3 When the chief overseer of the temple, Pashur, heard this prophecy, he had the prophet beaten, and put him over-night in the stocks at the upper gate of Benjamin in the temple. Pashur is by the appellation: son of Immer , distinguished from other priests of this name, e. g. , Pashur, son of Malchijah, 1Ch 9:12. It cannot be determined whether Immer is here the name of the 16th class of priests (1Ch 24:14) or of one of the greater priestly clans (Ezr 2:37; Neh 7:40).
Pashur held the office of פּקיד נגיד, chief overseer in the house of God. נגיד is an official name attached to פּקיד to explain it. In the latter word lies the idea of overseeing, while the former denotes the official standing or rank of the overseer. The position of נגיד was a high one, as may be seen from the fact that the priest Zephaniah, who, according to Jer 29:26, held this post, is quoted in Jer 52:24 (2Ki 25:18) as next to the high priest.
The compound expression without article implies that there were several נגידים of the temple. In 2Ch 35:8 there are three mentioned under Josiah; which is not contradicted by 2Ch 31:13; 1Ch 9:11; Neh 11:11, where particular persons are called 'נגיד. As chief overseer of the temple, Pashur conceived it to be his duty to take summary magisterial steps against Jeremiah, for his public appearance in the temple.
To put this procedure of the priest and temple-warden in its proper light, Jeremiah is designated by the name of his office, הנּביא. In virtue of the summary authority which belonged to him (cf. Jer 29:26), Pashur smote the prophet, i. e. , caused him to be beaten with stripes, perhaps according to the precept Deu 25:3, cf. 2Co 11:24, and then threw him into prison till the following day, and put him in the stocks.
מהפּכת, twisting, was an instrument of torture by which the body was forced into a distorted, unnatural posture; the culprit’s hands and feet were presumably bound, so as to keep the position so; see on 2Ch 16:10, cf. with Act 16:24. The upper gate of Benjamin in the house of Jahveh is the northern gate at the upper, i. e. , inner court of the temple, the same with the upper gate or the gate of the inner court, looking northwards, Eze 9:2 and Eze 8:3.
By the designation "which is in the house," etc. , it is distinguished from the city gate of like name, Jer 37:13; Jer 38:7. - When on the next day Pashur released the prophet from imprisonment, the latter made known to him the divine punishment for his misdeed: "Not Pashur will Jahveh call thy name, but Magor-Missabib" (i. e. , Fear round about). The name is expressive of the thing.
And so: Jahveh will call the name, is, in other words, He will make the person to be that which the name expresses; in this case, make Pashur to be an object of fear round about. Under the presumption that the name Magor-Missabib conveyed a meaning the most directly opposed to that of Pashur , comm. have in various ways attempted to interpret פּשׁחוּר. It is supposed to be composed of פּוּשׁ, Chald.
augeri , and חוּר, nobilitas , with the force: abundantia claritatis (Rashi); or after Arab. fs̀ , gloriatus est de nobilitate (Simonis); or from Arab. hsh , amplus fuit locus , and the Chald. סחור, circumcirca: de securitate circumcirca ; or finally, by Ew. , from פּשׁ from פּוּשׁ, spring, leap, rejoice (Mal 3:18), and חור = חול, joy round about. All these interpretations are arbitrary.
פּוּשׁ sig. leap and gallop about, Mal 3:18 and Hab 1:8, and in Niph. Nah 3:18, to be scattered (see on Hab 1:8); and x#$ap@f sig. in Lam 3:11 to tear. But the syllable chowr חור can by no means have the sig. of מסּביב claimed for it. Nor are there, indeed, sufficient grounds for assuming that Jeremiah turned the original name upside down in an etymological or philological reference.
The new name given by Jeremiah to Pashur is meant to intimate the man’s destiny. On "Fear round about," see on Jer 6:25. What the words of the new name signify is explained in Jer 20:4-6.
Jer 20:1-3 When the chief overseer of the temple, Pashur, heard this prophecy, he had the prophet beaten, and put him over-night in the stocks at the upper gate of Benjamin in the temple. Pashur is by the appellation: son of Immer , distinguished from other priests of this name, e. g. , Pashur, son of Malchijah, 1Ch 9:12. It cannot be determined whether Immer is here the name of the 16th class of priests (1Ch 24:14) or of one of the greater priestly clans (Ezr 2:37; Neh 7:40).
Pashur held the office of פּקיד נגיד, chief overseer in the house of God. נגיד is an official name attached to פּקיד to explain it. In the latter word lies the idea of overseeing, while the former denotes the official standing or rank of the overseer. The position of נגיד was a high one, as may be seen from the fact that the priest Zephaniah, who, according to Jer 29:26, held this post, is quoted in Jer 52:24 (2Ki 25:18) as next to the high priest.
The compound expression without article implies that there were several נגידים of the temple. In 2Ch 35:8 there are three mentioned under Josiah; which is not contradicted by 2Ch 31:13; 1Ch 9:11; Neh 11:11, where particular persons are called 'נגיד. As chief overseer of the temple, Pashur conceived it to be his duty to take summary magisterial steps against Jeremiah, for his public appearance in the temple.
To put this procedure of the priest and temple-warden in its proper light, Jeremiah is designated by the name of his office, הנּביא. In virtue of the summary authority which belonged to him (cf. Jer 29:26), Pashur smote the prophet, i. e. , caused him to be beaten with stripes, perhaps according to the precept Deu 25:3, cf. 2Co 11:24, and then threw him into prison till the following day, and put him in the stocks.
מהפּכת, twisting, was an instrument of torture by which the body was forced into a distorted, unnatural posture; the culprit’s hands and feet were presumably bound, so as to keep the position so; see on 2Ch 16:10, cf. with Act 16:24. The upper gate of Benjamin in the house of Jahveh is the northern gate at the upper, i. e. , inner court of the temple, the same with the upper gate or the gate of the inner court, looking northwards, Eze 9:2 and Eze 8:3.
By the designation "which is in the house," etc. , it is distinguished from the city gate of like name, Jer 37:13; Jer 38:7. - When on the next day Pashur released the prophet from imprisonment, the latter made known to him the divine punishment for his misdeed: "Not Pashur will Jahveh call thy name, but Magor-Missabib" (i. e. , Fear round about). The name is expressive of the thing.
And so: Jahveh will call the name, is, in other words, He will make the person to be that which the name expresses; in this case, make Pashur to be an object of fear round about. Under the presumption that the name Magor-Missabib conveyed a meaning the most directly opposed to that of Pashur , comm. have in various ways attempted to interpret פּשׁחוּר. It is supposed to be composed of פּוּשׁ, Chald.
augeri , and חוּר, nobilitas , with the force: abundantia claritatis (Rashi); or after Arab. fs̀ , gloriatus est de nobilitate (Simonis); or from Arab. hsh , amplus fuit locus , and the Chald. סחור, circumcirca: de securitate circumcirca ; or finally, by Ew. , from פּשׁ from פּוּשׁ, spring, leap, rejoice (Mal 3:18), and חור = חול, joy round about. All these interpretations are arbitrary.
פּוּשׁ sig. leap and gallop about, Mal 3:18 and Hab 1:8, and in Niph. Nah 3:18, to be scattered (see on Hab 1:8); and x#$ap@f sig. in Lam 3:11 to tear. But the syllable chowr חור can by no means have the sig. of מסּביב claimed for it. Nor are there, indeed, sufficient grounds for assuming that Jeremiah turned the original name upside down in an etymological or philological reference.
The new name given by Jeremiah to Pashur is meant to intimate the man’s destiny. On "Fear round about," see on Jer 6:25. What the words of the new name signify is explained in Jer 20:4-6.
Jer 20:1-3 When the chief overseer of the temple, Pashur, heard this prophecy, he had the prophet beaten, and put him over-night in the stocks at the upper gate of Benjamin in the temple. Pashur is by the appellation: son of Immer , distinguished from other priests of this name, e. g. , Pashur, son of Malchijah, 1Ch 9:12. It cannot be determined whether Immer is here the name of the 16th class of priests (1Ch 24:14) or of one of the greater priestly clans (Ezr 2:37; Neh 7:40).
Pashur held the office of פּקיד נגיד, chief overseer in the house of God. נגיד is an official name attached to פּקיד to explain it. In the latter word lies the idea of overseeing, while the former denotes the official standing or rank of the overseer. The position of נגיד was a high one, as may be seen from the fact that the priest Zephaniah, who, according to Jer 29:26, held this post, is quoted in Jer 52:24 (2Ki 25:18) as next to the high priest.
The compound expression without article implies that there were several נגידים of the temple. In 2Ch 35:8 there are three mentioned under Josiah; which is not contradicted by 2Ch 31:13; 1Ch 9:11; Neh 11:11, where particular persons are called 'נגיד. As chief overseer of the temple, Pashur conceived it to be his duty to take summary magisterial steps against Jeremiah, for his public appearance in the temple.
To put this procedure of the priest and temple-warden in its proper light, Jeremiah is designated by the name of his office, הנּביא. In virtue of the summary authority which belonged to him (cf. Jer 29:26), Pashur smote the prophet, i. e. , caused him to be beaten with stripes, perhaps according to the precept Deu 25:3, cf. 2Co 11:24, and then threw him into prison till the following day, and put him in the stocks.
מהפּכת, twisting, was an instrument of torture by which the body was forced into a distorted, unnatural posture; the culprit’s hands and feet were presumably bound, so as to keep the position so; see on 2Ch 16:10, cf. with Act 16:24. The upper gate of Benjamin in the house of Jahveh is the northern gate at the upper, i. e. , inner court of the temple, the same with the upper gate or the gate of the inner court, looking northwards, Eze 9:2 and Eze 8:3.
By the designation "which is in the house," etc. , it is distinguished from the city gate of like name, Jer 37:13; Jer 38:7. - When on the next day Pashur released the prophet from imprisonment, the latter made known to him the divine punishment for his misdeed: "Not Pashur will Jahveh call thy name, but Magor-Missabib" (i. e. , Fear round about). The name is expressive of the thing.
And so: Jahveh will call the name, is, in other words, He will make the person to be that which the name expresses; in this case, make Pashur to be an object of fear round about. Under the presumption that the name Magor-Missabib conveyed a meaning the most directly opposed to that of Pashur , comm. have in various ways attempted to interpret פּשׁחוּר. It is supposed to be composed of פּוּשׁ, Chald.
augeri , and חוּר, nobilitas , with the force: abundantia claritatis (Rashi); or after Arab. fs̀ , gloriatus est de nobilitate (Simonis); or from Arab. hsh , amplus fuit locus , and the Chald. סחור, circumcirca: de securitate circumcirca ; or finally, by Ew. , from פּשׁ from פּוּשׁ, spring, leap, rejoice (Mal 3:18), and חור = חול, joy round about. All these interpretations are arbitrary.
פּוּשׁ sig. leap and gallop about, Mal 3:18 and Hab 1:8, and in Niph. Nah 3:18, to be scattered (see on Hab 1:8); and x#$ap@f sig. in Lam 3:11 to tear. But the syllable chowr חור can by no means have the sig. of מסּביב claimed for it. Nor are there, indeed, sufficient grounds for assuming that Jeremiah turned the original name upside down in an etymological or philological reference.
The new name given by Jeremiah to Pashur is meant to intimate the man’s destiny. On "Fear round about," see on Jer 6:25. What the words of the new name signify is explained in Jer 20:4-6.
Jer 20:4-6 Jer 20:4 . "For thus hath Jahveh said: Behold, I make thee a terror to thyself and to all thy friends, and they shall fall by the sword of their enemies and thine eyes behold it; and all Judah will I give into the hand of the king of Babylon, that he may carry them captive to Babylon and smite them with the sword. Jer 20:5 . And I will give all the stores of this city, and all its gains, and all its splendour, and all the treasures of the kings of Judah will I give into the hand of their enemies, who shall plunder them and take and bring them to Babylon.
Jer 20:6 . And thou, Pashur, and all that dwell in thine house shall go into captivity, and to Babylon shalt thou come, and there die, and there be buried, thou and all thy friends, to whom thou hast prophesied lyingly." - Pashur will become a fear or terror to himself and all his friends, because of his own and his friend’s fate; for he will see his friends fall by the sword of the enemy, and then he himself, with those of his house and his friends not as yet slain, will go forth into exile to Babylon and die there.
So that not to himself merely, but to all about him, he will be an object of fear. Näg. wrongly translates נתנך למגור, I deliver thee up to fear, and brings into the text the contrast that Pashur is not to become the victim of death itself, but of perpetual fear of death. Along with Pashur’s friends, all Judah is to be given into the hand of the king of Babylon, and be partly exiled to Babylon, partly put to death with the sword.
All the goods and gear of Jerusalem, together with the king’s treasures, are to be plundered and carried off by the enemy. We must not press "all thy friends" in Jer 20:4 and Jer 20:6; and so we escape the apparent contradiction, that while in Jer 20:4 it is said of all the friends that they shall die by the sword, it is said of all in Jer 20:6 that they shall go into exile.
The friends are those who take Pashur’s side, his partisans. From the last clause of Jer 20:6 we see that Pashur was also of the number of the false prophets, who prophesied the verse of Jeremiah’s prediction, namely, welfare and peace (cf. Jer 23:17; Jer 14:13). - This saying of Jeremiah was most probably fulfilled at the taking of Jerusalem under Jechoniah, Pashur and the better part of the people being carried off to Babylon.
The Prophet’s Complaints as to the Sufferings Met with in his Calling. - This portion contains, first, a complaint addressed to the Lord regarding the persecutions which the preaching of God’s word draws down on Jeremiah, but the complaint passes into a jubilant cry of hope (Jer 20:7-13); secondly, a cursing of the day of his birth (Jer 20:13-18). The first complaint runs thus: