Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah during the final decades before Jerusalem's fall.
The Two Baskets of Figs and the Mercy Hidden in Exile
The Lord distinguishes between outward security and true covenant hope, preserving the exiles for restoration while judging those who remain hardened in false confidence.
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The Lord distinguishes between outward security and true covenant hope, preserving the exiles for restoration while judging those who remain hardened in false confidence.
Jeremiah 24 argues that God's covenant future is not determined by outward location, visible security, temple proximity, or political survival. The exiles in Babylon, though outwardly humbled, are the people whom the Lord will preserve for good, restore to the land, and renew with a heart to know Him. Those remaining in Jerusalem under Zedekiah, though outwardly nearer to temple and land, are like rotten figs because they remain hardened under judgment.
The chapter teaches that divine discipline can become severe mercy, while apparent safety can conceal deep rebellion.
Judah, including the exiles in Babylon, those remaining in Jerusalem under Zedekiah, and those who fled or lived in Egypt.
The vision occurs after the deportation of King Jehoiachin and leading members of Judah's society to Babylon, but before the final destruction of Jerusalem in 586 BC.
The Lord distinguishes between outward security and true covenant hope, preserving the exiles for restoration while judging those who remain hardened in false confidence.
Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah during the final decades before Jerusalem's fall.
Judah, including the exiles in Babylon, those remaining in Jerusalem under Zedekiah, and those who fled or lived in Egypt.
The vision occurs after the deportation of King Jehoiachin and leading members of Judah's society to Babylon, but before the final destruction of Jerusalem in 586 BC.
- The deportation has removed royal, administrative, skilled, and artisan classes from Jerusalem, creating a fractured community split between exile and those who remain.
Jeremiah 24 clarifies that the future of God's covenant people will not be preserved through Zedekiah's Jerusalem but through the exiled remnant whom the Lord will renew.
The chapter moves from historical placement after Jehoiachin's exile, to the vision of two baskets of figs, to the Lord's promise of restoration for the good figs, and finally to the judgment of the bad figs.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Jeremiah 24 forms humility under God's providence, distrust of appearances, hunger for heart renewal, and hope in God's restoring mercy.
- 1-3: The two baskets of figs placed before the temple present a symbolic contrast between two groups in Judah.
- 4-5: The exiles whom the Lord sent to Babylon are identified as those under His preserving purpose for good.
- 6-7: The Lord will watch over the exiles, bring them back, build and plant them, give them a heart to know Him, and receive their wholehearted return.
- 8-10: Those who remain in Jerusalem or seek refuge in Egypt apart from repentance will become objects of horror and suffer sword, famine, and plague.
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 24 argues that God's covenant future is not determined by outward location, visible security, temple proximity, or political survival. The exiles in Babylon, though outwardly humbled, are the people whom the Lord will preserve for good, restore to the land, and renew with a heart to know Him. Those remaining in Jerusalem under Zedekiah, though outwardly nearer to temple and land, are like rotten figs because they remain hardened under judgment.
The chapter teaches that divine discipline can become severe mercy, while apparent safety can conceal deep rebellion.
From symbolic vision, to surprising identification, to restoration promise, to judgment on false security.
- 1.Outward circumstances do not always reveal spiritual reality.
- 2.Exile can function as preserving discipline under God's mercy.
- 3.Restoration is God's initiative from beginning to end.
- 4.True restoration requires heart renewal.
- 5.False security remains under judgment.
- 6.The future remnant will be defined by knowing the LORD.
Theological Focus
- Severe Mercy
- Remnant Theology
- Heart Renewal
- False Security
- Divine Sovereignty
- Covenant Identity
- Judgment and Restoration
- Providence
- Remnant
- Covenant Relationship
- Judgment
- Repentance
- Gospel Preparation
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 24 is a covenant-renewal chapter within the theology of exile. It shows that the covenant people cannot be restored merely by remaining in the land or preserving institutions. They need the Lord to give them a heart to know Him, restore them to Himself, and reestablish them as His people.
- Exile, sword, famine, plague, scattering, and reproach reflect covenant curse realities.
- The Lord preserves a remnant in Babylon for their good, showing that judgment does not extinguish covenant mercy.
- The phrase 'they will be my people, and I will be their God' signals restored covenant relationship.
- The gift of a heart to know the Lord anticipates the internal renewal later developed in Jeremiah's new covenant promise.
- The Lord promises to bring the exiles back to the land, build them, and plant them, reversing displacement.
Canonical Connections
The Lord distinguishes between outward security and true covenant hope, preserving the exiles for restoration while judging those who remain hardened in false confidence.
Jeremiah 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that salvation is not secured by proximity to holy places, outward identity, or survival in familiar circumstances. The hope of God's people rests in God's gracious initiative: He watches over them for good, restores them, gives them a heart to know Him, and brings them back to Himself. In Christ, this promise finds its deepest fulfillment.
The Son bears judgment for sinners, gathers the scattered, brings them into covenant fellowship, and by the Spirit gives the heart-renewal necessary to know and return to God.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 24 contributes to the canonical hope fulfilled in Christ by emphasizing that God's people need more than external return; they need a God-given heart to know Him. The exiled remnant preserved for restoration anticipates the deeper work of the new covenant, where Christ gathers scattered sinners, bears the curse of judgment, restores them to God, and gives them new life by the Spirit.
The chapter's promise of a heart to know the Lord prepares for the gospel reality that knowledge of God comes through the Son and is written inwardly by divine grace.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 24 argues that God's covenant future is not determined by outward location, visible security, temple proximity, or political survival. The exiles in Babylon, though outwardly humbled, are the people whom the Lord will preserve for good, restore to the land, and renew with a heart to know Him. Those remaining in Jerusalem under Zedekiah, though outwardly nearer to temple and land, are like rotten figs because they remain hardened under judgment.
The chapter teaches that divine discipline can become severe mercy, while apparent safety can conceal deep rebellion.
God examines His covenant people and distinguishes between faithfulness and rebellion.
Persistent covenant rebellion results in the activation of covenant curses described in the Mosaic law.
The formula 'they will be my people and I will be their God' expresses restored covenant fellowship.
God perfectly evaluates the spiritual condition of individuals and groups among His people.
God’s judgments are righteous responses to persistent disobedience and covenant violation.
Exile represents the severe consequence of rejecting God’s covenant rule.
True covenant faithfulness requires an inner transformation given by God.
God’s people are responsible for responding to divine discipline with repentance rather than resistance.
God’s disciplinary actions toward His people serve redemptive purposes rather than mere punishment.
Even events that appear purely disastrous may serve God’s redemptive purposes.
God preserves and restores a faithful remnant even after national judgment.
The Lord sends into exile, watches over, restores, judges, scatters, and destroys according to His covenant purposes.
The Lord can use painful circumstances, including exile, for the good of His people.
The exiled group identified as good figs becomes the preserved remnant through whom restoration will come.
The Lord must give a heart to know Him; true restoration is inward and relational.
The promise 'they will be my people, and I will be their God' signals renewed covenant identity.
Sword, famine, plague, reproach, and scattering fall on those who remain hardened in false security.
The restored people return to the Lord with all their heart, showing repentance as whole-person covenant return.
The promise of a heart to know the Lord prepares for new covenant fulfillment in Christ and the Spirit.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Jeremiah 24 forms humility under God's providence, distrust of appearances, hunger for heart renewal, and hope in God's restoring mercy.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense figs, fruit of the fig tree
Definition A common fruit used here symbolically to represent two groups within Judah.
References Jeremiah 24:1-3
Lexicon figs, fruit of the fig tree
Why it matters The two baskets of figs embody the chapter's central contrast between the exiles preserved for good and those remaining under judgment.
Sense good, beneficial, pleasing, fitting
Definition That which is good, beneficial, desirable, or morally fitting.
References Jeremiah 24:2, 5-6
Lexicon good, beneficial, pleasing, fitting
Why it matters The Lord says the exiles are sent away for good, redefining exile as severe mercy for the preserved remnant.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense bad, evil, harmful, rotten
Definition That which is bad, evil, harmful, or spoiled.
References Jeremiah 24:2-3, 8
Lexicon bad, evil, harmful, rotten
Why it matters The bad figs symbolize those who remain hardened in false security and are unfit for restoration in their present condition.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense exile, captivity, deportation
Definition The condition of being removed from one's land and taken into captivity.
References Jeremiah 24:5
Lexicon exile, captivity, deportation
Why it matters The exiles are the surprising objects of God's restoring purpose, showing that exile can function as preserving discipline.
Sense to set one's eye upon, watch attentively
Definition To fix attention upon someone, often with purposeful care or judgment.
References Jeremiah 24:6
Lexicon to set one's eye upon, watch attentively
Why it matters The Lord sets His eyes on the exiles for good, emphasizing active, personal providential care.
Sense to build, establish, rebuild
Definition To construct, establish, or restore.
References Jeremiah 24:6
Lexicon to build, establish, rebuild
Why it matters The Lord promises to build the exiles up, reversing earlier judgment language of tearing down.
Cross-language bridge 4 links · View in lexicon
Sense to plant, establish in place
Definition To place, plant, or establish for growth.
References Jeremiah 24:6
Lexicon to plant, establish in place
Why it matters The Lord's promise to plant reverses uprooting and signals stable restoration in the land.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to tear down, demolish, destroy
Definition To break down or demolish.
References Jeremiah 24:6
Lexicon to tear down, demolish, destroy
Why it matters The Lord declares that His future work toward the good figs will not be tearing down, but building up.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to uproot, pull up, pluck up
Definition To remove by pulling up from the root.
References Jeremiah 24:6
Lexicon to uproot, pull up, pluck up
Why it matters The promise not to uproot the good figs reverses the judgment pattern announced in Jeremiah's calling.
Sense heart, inner person, will, mind, affections
Definition The inner center of thought, desire, will, and covenant response.
References Jeremiah 24:7
Lexicon heart, inner person, will, mind, affections
Why it matters The Lord gives a heart to know Him, showing that restoration must reach the inner person.
Sense to know, recognize, understand relationally
Definition To know personally, relationally, and covenantally.
References Jeremiah 24:7
Lexicon to know, recognize, understand relationally
Why it matters The promised heart is for knowing the Lord, not merely for outward conformity or national restoration.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to return, turn back, repent
Definition To turn, return, come back, or repent.
References Jeremiah 24:7
Lexicon to return, turn back, repent
Why it matters The exiles will return to the Lord with all their heart, expressing covenant repentance and restoration.
Sense with all their heart, wholeheartedly
Definition With the whole inner person, undivided in desire, will, and allegiance.
References Jeremiah 24:7
Lexicon with all their heart, wholeheartedly
Why it matters The Lord's renewing work results in wholehearted return, not partial or superficial religion.
Sense horror, terror, object of dread
Definition Something that causes trembling, horror, or shock.
References Jeremiah 24:9
Lexicon horror, terror, object of dread
Why it matters The bad figs become a public sign of covenant judgment among the nations.
Sense sword, warfare, violent judgment
Definition A sword or warfare, often used as an instrument of judgment.
References Jeremiah 24:10
Lexicon sword, warfare, violent judgment
Why it matters Sword forms part of the covenant curse sent against the bad figs.
Sense famine, hunger, scarcity of food
Definition A severe lack of food, often connected to siege and covenant judgment.
References Jeremiah 24:10
Lexicon famine, hunger, scarcity of food
Why it matters Famine joins sword and plague as judgment on those hardened in false security.
Sense pestilence, plague
Definition A deadly disease or pestilence, often appearing in judgment contexts.
References Jeremiah 24:10
Lexicon pestilence, plague
Why it matters Plague completes the judgment triad against the bad figs.
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
Jeremiah 24 forms humility under God's providence, distrust of appearances, hunger for heart renewal, and hope in God's restoring mercy.
- Providential humility - Interpret circumstances under God's word rather than by immediate appearance.
- Heart examination - Ask whether nearness to religious activity is matched by true knowledge of the Lord.
- Wholehearted return - Practice repentance that returns to God with an undivided heart.
- Discipline reception - Receive the Lord's humbling work as potentially restorative rather than merely punitive.
- False-refuge rejection - Identify Egypt-like patterns where the heart seeks safety apart from God's word.
- New-heart prayer - Ask the Lord to give deeper knowledge, love, and obedience from the heart.
- Jeremiah 24 warns against judging spiritual reality by outward circumstances and against mistaking visible religious proximity for covenant favor.
- Do not assume hardship means abandonment by God.
- Do not assume survival in familiar places means divine favor.
- Do not trust temple proximity without heart repentance.
- Do not flee to alternative securities like Egypt when the Lord has spoken.
- Do not reduce restoration to external return.
- Do not despise discipline when God is using it for good.
- The exiles are good figs because they were morally superior in themselves. - The chapter emphasizes the Lord's gracious identification and action. He sent them, watched over them, restored them, and gave them a heart to know Him.
- Exile is presented as pleasant or painless. - Exile remains judgment and suffering, but for the good figs it becomes severe mercy under God's preserving purpose.
- Those in Jerusalem are condemned simply because they did not go to Babylon. - They represent hardened resistance under Zedekiah and false confidence in remaining in land, city, or Egypt apart from obedience.
- The chapter teaches that location determines salvation. - The chapter actually overturns location-based assumptions. What matters is the Lord's gracious purpose and the heart He gives to know Him.
- The promise of a heart to know God is merely intellectual knowledge. - The knowledge promised is covenantal, relational, obedient, and expressed in wholehearted return.
- The bad figs are beyond the seriousness of God's providence. - Even their judgment is under the Lord's sovereign hand, but it is judgment rather than preserving restoration.
- Where do I assume that visible comfort means spiritual safety?
- Where do I assume that hardship means God has abandoned me?
- Am I more concerned with being in the right place outwardly or knowing the Lord with a renewed heart?
- What circumstances has God used to humble me for my good?
- What false refuge do I run toward when obedience feels costly?
- Do I ask the Lord to give me a heart to know Him, or do I rely on familiarity with religious things?
- How does Christ fulfill the hope of being restored to God with a new heart?
- Preach Jeremiah 24 as a reversal of appearances. The exiles who seem rejected are the objects of preserving mercy, while those who appear secure are under judgment.
- Use the chapter to help suffering believers avoid interpreting hardship as automatic abandonment. God may be using painful providence to preserve, correct, and restore.
- Warn congregations that proximity to church, doctrine, history, or tradition is no substitute for a heart that knows the Lord.
- Teach that genuine return to God requires heart renewal. The goal is not merely religious participation but wholehearted covenant response.
- Help leaders avoid measuring spiritual health by visible stability alone. The remnant may be found among the humbled rather than the apparently strong.
- Encourage those under consequences that God's good purposes may still be active when they submit to Him.
- Clarify that the gospel does not offer surface improvement only. God gives new life, restores sinners to Himself, and changes the heart.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace the Spirit's presence, empowerment, renewal, and mission-bearing work across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from historical placement after Jehoiachin's exile, to the vision of two baskets of figs, to the Lord's promise of restoration for the good figs, and finally to the judgment of the bad figs.
Jeremiah 24 is a covenant-renewal chapter within the theology of exile. It shows that the covenant people cannot be restored merely by remaining in the land or preserving institutions. They need the Lord to give them a heart to know Him, restore them to Himself, and reestablish them as His people.
Jeremiah 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that salvation is not secured by proximity to holy places, outward identity, or survival in familiar circumstances. The hope of God's people rests in God's gracious initiative: He watches over them for good, restores them, gives them a heart to know Him, and brings them back to Himself. In Christ, this promise finds its deepest fulfillment.
The Son bears judgment for sinners, gathers the scattered, brings them into covenant fellowship, and by the Spirit gives the heart-renewal necessary to know and return to God.
Focus Points
- Severe Mercy
- Remnant Theology
- Heart Renewal
- False Security
- Divine Sovereignty
- Covenant Identity
- Judgment and Restoration
- Providence
- Remnant
- Covenant Relationship
- Judgment
- Repentance
- Gospel Preparation
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 24:1-3
Jer 24:4-7 The interpretation of the symbol. Jer 24:5. Like the good figs, the Lord will look on the captives in Chaldea for good ("for good" belongs to the verb "look on them"). The point of resemblance is: as one looks with pleasure on good figs, takes them and keeps them, so will I bestow my favour on Judah’s captives. Looking on them for good is explained, Jer 24:6 : the Lord will set His eye on them, bring them back into their land and build them up again.
With "build them," etc. , cf. Jer 1:10. The building and planting of the captives is not to consist solely in the restoration of their former civil well-being, but will be a spiritual regeneration of the people. God will give them a heart to know Him as their God, so that they may be in truth His people, and He their God. "For they will return," not: when they return (Ew.
, Hitz.) The turning to the Lord cannot be regarded as the condition of their receiving favour, because God will give them a heart to know Him; it is the working of the knowledge of the Lord put in their hearts. And this is adduced to certify the idea that they will then be really the Lord’s people.
Jer 24:4-7 The interpretation of the symbol. Jer 24:5. Like the good figs, the Lord will look on the captives in Chaldea for good ("for good" belongs to the verb "look on them"). The point of resemblance is: as one looks with pleasure on good figs, takes them and keeps them, so will I bestow my favour on Judah’s captives. Looking on them for good is explained, Jer 24:6 : the Lord will set His eye on them, bring them back into their land and build them up again.
With "build them," etc. , cf. Jer 1:10. The building and planting of the captives is not to consist solely in the restoration of their former civil well-being, but will be a spiritual regeneration of the people. God will give them a heart to know Him as their God, so that they may be in truth His people, and He their God. "For they will return," not: when they return (Ew.
, Hitz.) The turning to the Lord cannot be regarded as the condition of their receiving favour, because God will give them a heart to know Him; it is the working of the knowledge of the Lord put in their hearts. And this is adduced to certify the idea that they will then be really the Lord’s people.
Jer 24:8-10 And as one deals with the bad uneatable figs, i. e. , throws them away, so will the Lord deliver up to ignominious ruin Zedekiah with his princes and the remainder of the people, both those still staying in the land and those living in Egypt. This, the fate awaiting them, is more fully described in Jer 24:9 and Jer 24:10. In Jer 24:8 the "yea, thus saith," is inserted into the sentence by way of repetition of the "thus saith," Jer 24:5.
כּן is resumed and expanded by וּנתתּים in Jer 24:9. The "princes" are Zedekiah’s courtiers. Those in Egypt are they who during the war had fled thither to hide themselves from judgment. From the beginning of Jer 24:9 to הארץ is verbally the same as Jer 15:4, save that לרעה is added to make more marked the contrast to לטובּהּ, Jer 24:5 - the evil, namely, that is done to them.
Hitz. , Ew. , Umbr. , Gr. , following the lxx, delete this word, but without due cause. The further description of the ill-usage in "for a reproach," etc. , is based on Deu 28:37; and is intensified by the addition of "and for an object of cursing," to show that in their case the curse there recorded will be fulfilled. From the last words, according to which disgrace will light on them in all the lands they are driven into, it appears that captivity will fall to the lot of such as are yet to be found in the land.
But captivity involves new hostile invasions, and a repeated siege and capture of Jerusalem; during which many will perish by sword, famine, and plague. Thus and by deportation they shall be utterly rooted out of the land of their fathers. Cf. Jer 29:17. , where Jeremiah repeats the main idea of this threatening.
Jer 24:8-10 And as one deals with the bad uneatable figs, i. e. , throws them away, so will the Lord deliver up to ignominious ruin Zedekiah with his princes and the remainder of the people, both those still staying in the land and those living in Egypt. This, the fate awaiting them, is more fully described in Jer 24:9 and Jer 24:10. In Jer 24:8 the "yea, thus saith," is inserted into the sentence by way of repetition of the "thus saith," Jer 24:5.
כּן is resumed and expanded by וּנתתּים in Jer 24:9. The "princes" are Zedekiah’s courtiers. Those in Egypt are they who during the war had fled thither to hide themselves from judgment. From the beginning of Jer 24:9 to הארץ is verbally the same as Jer 15:4, save that לרעה is added to make more marked the contrast to לטובּהּ, Jer 24:5 - the evil, namely, that is done to them.
Hitz. , Ew. , Umbr. , Gr. , following the lxx, delete this word, but without due cause. The further description of the ill-usage in "for a reproach," etc. , is based on Deu 28:37; and is intensified by the addition of "and for an object of cursing," to show that in their case the curse there recorded will be fulfilled. From the last words, according to which disgrace will light on them in all the lands they are driven into, it appears that captivity will fall to the lot of such as are yet to be found in the land.
But captivity involves new hostile invasions, and a repeated siege and capture of Jerusalem; during which many will perish by sword, famine, and plague. Thus and by deportation they shall be utterly rooted out of the land of their fathers. Cf. Jer 29:17. , where Jeremiah repeats the main idea of this threatening.
Jer 24:8-10 And as one deals with the bad uneatable figs, i. e. , throws them away, so will the Lord deliver up to ignominious ruin Zedekiah with his princes and the remainder of the people, both those still staying in the land and those living in Egypt. This, the fate awaiting them, is more fully described in Jer 24:9 and Jer 24:10. In Jer 24:8 the "yea, thus saith," is inserted into the sentence by way of repetition of the "thus saith," Jer 24:5.
כּן is resumed and expanded by וּנתתּים in Jer 24:9. The "princes" are Zedekiah’s courtiers. Those in Egypt are they who during the war had fled thither to hide themselves from judgment. From the beginning of Jer 24:9 to הארץ is verbally the same as Jer 15:4, save that לרעה is added to make more marked the contrast to לטובּהּ, Jer 24:5 - the evil, namely, that is done to them.
Hitz. , Ew. , Umbr. , Gr. , following the lxx, delete this word, but without due cause. The further description of the ill-usage in "for a reproach," etc. , is based on Deu 28:37; and is intensified by the addition of "and for an object of cursing," to show that in their case the curse there recorded will be fulfilled. From the last words, according to which disgrace will light on them in all the lands they are driven into, it appears that captivity will fall to the lot of such as are yet to be found in the land.
But captivity involves new hostile invasions, and a repeated siege and capture of Jerusalem; during which many will perish by sword, famine, and plague. Thus and by deportation they shall be utterly rooted out of the land of their fathers. Cf. Jer 29:17. , where Jeremiah repeats the main idea of this threatening.
Jer 25:1-2 The prediction of this chapter is introduced by a full heading, which details with sufficient precision the time of its composition. Jer 25:1. "The word that came (befell) to (על for אל) Jeremiah concerning the whole people of Judah, in the fourth year of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah, that is, the first year of Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon; Jer 25:2 .
Which Jeremiah the prophet spake to the whole people of Judah and to all the inhabitants of Jerusalem, saying." - All the discourses of Jeremiah delivered before this time contain either no dates at all, or only very general ones, such as Jer 3:6 : In the days of Josiah, or: at the beginning of the reign of Jehoiakim (Jer 26:1). And it is only some of those of the following period that are so completely dated, as Jer 28:1; Jer 32:1; Jer 36:1; Jer 39:1, etc.
The present heading is in this further respect peculiar, that besides the year of the king of Judah’s reign, we are also told that of the king of Babylon. This is suggested by the contents of this prediction, in which the people are told of the near approach of the judgment which Nebuchadnezzar is to execute on Judah and on all the surrounding nations far and near, until after seventy years judgment fall on Babylon itself.
The fourth year of Jehoiakim is accordingly a notable turning-point for the kingdom of Judah. It is called the first year of Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon, because then, at the command of his old and decrepit father Nabopolassar, Nebuchadnezzar had undertaken the conduct of the war against Pharaoh Necho of Egypt, who had penetrated as far as the Euphrates. At Carchemish he defeated Necho (Jer 46:2), and in the same year he came in pursuit of the fleeing Egyptians to Judah, took Jerusalem, and made King Jehoiakim tributary.
With the first taking of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, i. e. , in 606 b. c. , begins the seventy years’ Babylonian bondage or exile of Judah, foretold by Jeremiah in Jer 25:11 of the present chapter. Nebuchadnezzar was then only commander of his father’s armies; but he is here, and in 2Ki 24:1; Dan 1:1, called king of Babylon, because, equipped with kingly authority, he dictated to the Jews, and treated them as if he had been really king.
Not till the following year, when he was at the head of his army in Farther Asia, did his father Nabopolassar die; whereupon he hastened to Babylon to mount the throne; see on Dan 1:1 and 1 Kings 24:1. - In Jer 25:2 it is again specified that Jeremiah spoke the word of that Lord that came to him to the whole people and to all the inhabitants of Jerusalem (על for אל again).
There is no cogent reason for doubting, as Graf does, the correctness of these dates. Jer 36:5 tells us that Jeremiah in the same year caused Baruch to write down the prophecies he had hitherto delivered, in order to read them to the people assembled in the temple, and this because he himself was imprisoned; but it does not follow from this, that at the time of receiving this prophecy he was prevented from going into the temple.
The occurrence of Jer 36 falls in any case into a later time of Jehoiakim’s fourth year than the present chapter. Ew. , too, finds it very probable that the discourse of this chapter was, in substance at least, publicly delivered. The contents of it tell strongly in favour of this view. It falls into three parts. In the first, Jer 25:3-11, the people of Judah are told that he (Jeremiah) has for twenty-three years long unceasingly preached the word of the Lord to the people with a view to their repentance, without Judah’s having paid any heed to his sayings, or to the exhortations of the other prophets, so that now all the kings of the north, headed by Nebuchadnezzar, will come against Judah and the surrounding nations, will plunder everything, and make these lands tributary to the king of Babylon; and then, Jer 25:12-14, that after seventy years judgment will come on the king of Babylon and his land.
In the second part, Jer 25:15-29, Jeremiah receives the cup of the Lord’s wrath, to give it to all the people to drink, beginning with Jerusalem and the cities of Judah, proceeding to the Egyptians and the nationalities in the west and east as far as Elam and Media, and concluding with the king of Babylon. Then in the third part, vv. 30-38, judgment to come upon all peoples is set forth in plain statement.
- The first part of this discourse would have failed of its effect if Jeremiah had only composed it in writing, and had not delivered it publicly before the people, in its main substance at least. And the two other parts are so closely bound up with the first, that they cannot be separated from it. The judgment made to pass on Judah by Nebuchadnezzar is only the beginning of the judgment which is to pass on one nation after another, until it culminates in judgment upon the whole world.
As to the import of the judgment of the Babylonian exile, cf. the remm. in the Comm. on Daniel, Introd. §2. The announcement of the judgment, whose beginning was now at hand, was of the highest importance for Judah. Even the proclamations concerning the other peoples were designed to take effect in the first instance on the covenant people, that so they might learn to fear the Lord their God as the Lord of the whole world and as the Ruler of all the peoples, who by judgment is preparing the way for and advancing the salvation of the whole world.
The ungodly were, by the warning of what was to come on all flesh, to be terrified out of their security and led to turn to God; while by a knowledge beforehand of the coming affliction and the time it was appointed to endure, the God-fearing would be strengthened with confidence in the power and grace of the Lord, so that they might bear calamity with patience and self-devotion as a chastisement necessary to their well-being, without taking false views of God’s covenant promises or being overwhelmed by their distresses.
Jer 25:1-2 The prediction of this chapter is introduced by a full heading, which details with sufficient precision the time of its composition. Jer 25:1. "The word that came (befell) to (על for אל) Jeremiah concerning the whole people of Judah, in the fourth year of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah, that is, the first year of Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon; Jer 25:2 .
Which Jeremiah the prophet spake to the whole people of Judah and to all the inhabitants of Jerusalem, saying." - All the discourses of Jeremiah delivered before this time contain either no dates at all, or only very general ones, such as Jer 3:6 : In the days of Josiah, or: at the beginning of the reign of Jehoiakim (Jer 26:1). And it is only some of those of the following period that are so completely dated, as Jer 28:1; Jer 32:1; Jer 36:1; Jer 39:1, etc.
The present heading is in this further respect peculiar, that besides the year of the king of Judah’s reign, we are also told that of the king of Babylon. This is suggested by the contents of this prediction, in which the people are told of the near approach of the judgment which Nebuchadnezzar is to execute on Judah and on all the surrounding nations far and near, until after seventy years judgment fall on Babylon itself.
The fourth year of Jehoiakim is accordingly a notable turning-point for the kingdom of Judah. It is called the first year of Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon, because then, at the command of his old and decrepit father Nabopolassar, Nebuchadnezzar had undertaken the conduct of the war against Pharaoh Necho of Egypt, who had penetrated as far as the Euphrates. At Carchemish he defeated Necho (Jer 46:2), and in the same year he came in pursuit of the fleeing Egyptians to Judah, took Jerusalem, and made King Jehoiakim tributary.
With the first taking of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, i. e. , in 606 b. c. , begins the seventy years’ Babylonian bondage or exile of Judah, foretold by Jeremiah in Jer 25:11 of the present chapter. Nebuchadnezzar was then only commander of his father’s armies; but he is here, and in 2Ki 24:1; Dan 1:1, called king of Babylon, because, equipped with kingly authority, he dictated to the Jews, and treated them as if he had been really king.
Not till the following year, when he was at the head of his army in Farther Asia, did his father Nabopolassar die; whereupon he hastened to Babylon to mount the throne; see on Dan 1:1 and 1 Kings 24:1. - In Jer 25:2 it is again specified that Jeremiah spoke the word of that Lord that came to him to the whole people and to all the inhabitants of Jerusalem (על for אל again).
There is no cogent reason for doubting, as Graf does, the correctness of these dates. Jer 36:5 tells us that Jeremiah in the same year caused Baruch to write down the prophecies he had hitherto delivered, in order to read them to the people assembled in the temple, and this because he himself was imprisoned; but it does not follow from this, that at the time of receiving this prophecy he was prevented from going into the temple.
The occurrence of Jer 36 falls in any case into a later time of Jehoiakim’s fourth year than the present chapter. Ew. , too, finds it very probable that the discourse of this chapter was, in substance at least, publicly delivered. The contents of it tell strongly in favour of this view. It falls into three parts. In the first, Jer 25:3-11, the people of Judah are told that he (Jeremiah) has for twenty-three years long unceasingly preached the word of the Lord to the people with a view to their repentance, without Judah’s having paid any heed to his sayings, or to the exhortations of the other prophets, so that now all the kings of the north, headed by Nebuchadnezzar, will come against Judah and the surrounding nations, will plunder everything, and make these lands tributary to the king of Babylon; and then, Jer 25:12-14, that after seventy years judgment will come on the king of Babylon and his land.
In the second part, Jer 25:15-29, Jeremiah receives the cup of the Lord’s wrath, to give it to all the people to drink, beginning with Jerusalem and the cities of Judah, proceeding to the Egyptians and the nationalities in the west and east as far as Elam and Media, and concluding with the king of Babylon. Then in the third part, vv. 30-38, judgment to come upon all peoples is set forth in plain statement.
- The first part of this discourse would have failed of its effect if Jeremiah had only composed it in writing, and had not delivered it publicly before the people, in its main substance at least. And the two other parts are so closely bound up with the first, that they cannot be separated from it. The judgment made to pass on Judah by Nebuchadnezzar is only the beginning of the judgment which is to pass on one nation after another, until it culminates in judgment upon the whole world.
As to the import of the judgment of the Babylonian exile, cf. the remm. in the Comm. on Daniel, Introd. §2. The announcement of the judgment, whose beginning was now at hand, was of the highest importance for Judah. Even the proclamations concerning the other peoples were designed to take effect in the first instance on the covenant people, that so they might learn to fear the Lord their God as the Lord of the whole world and as the Ruler of all the peoples, who by judgment is preparing the way for and advancing the salvation of the whole world.
The ungodly were, by the warning of what was to come on all flesh, to be terrified out of their security and led to turn to God; while by a knowledge beforehand of the coming affliction and the time it was appointed to endure, the God-fearing would be strengthened with confidence in the power and grace of the Lord, so that they might bear calamity with patience and self-devotion as a chastisement necessary to their well-being, without taking false views of God’s covenant promises or being overwhelmed by their distresses.
Jer 25:3-7 The seventy years’ Chaldean bondage of Judah and the peoples. - Jer 25:3 . "From the thirteenth year of Josiah, son of Amon king of Judah, unto this day, these three and twenty years, came the word of Jahveh to me, and I spake to you, from early morn onwards speaking, but ye hearkened not. Jer 25:4 . And Jahveh sent to you all His servants, the prophets, from early morning on sending them, but ye hearkened not, and inclined not your ear to hear.
Jer 25:5 . They said: Turn ye now each from his evil way and from the evil of your doings, so shall ye abide in the land which Jahveh hath given to your fathers from everlasting to everlasting. Jer 25:6 . And go not after other gods, to serve them and to worship them, that ye provoke me not with the work of your hands, and that I do you no evil. Jer 25:7 . But ye hearkened not to me, to provoke me by the work of your hands, to your own hurt.
Jer 25:8 . Therefore thus hath said Jahveh of hosts: Because ye have not heard my words, Jer 25:9 . Behold, I send and take all the families of the north, saith Jahveh, and to Nebuchadrezzar my servant (I send), and bring them upon this land, and upon its inhabitants, and upon all these peoples round about, and ban them, and make them an astonishment and a derision and everlasting desolations, Jer 25:10.
And destroy from among them the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, the sound of the mill and the light of the lamp. Jer 25:11. And this land shall become a desert, a desolation, and these peoples shall serve the king of Babylon seventy years." The very beginning of this discourse points to the great crisis in the fortunes of Judah. Jeremiah recalls into the memory of the people not merely the whole time of his own labours hitherto, but also the labours of many other prophets, who, like himself, have unremittingly preached repentance to the people, called on them to forsake idolatry and their evil ways, and to return to the God of their fathers - but in vain (Jer 25:3-7).
The 23 years, from the 13th of Josiah till the 4th of Jehoiakim, are thus made up: 19 years of Josiah and 4 years of Jehoiakim, including the 3 months’ reign of Jehoahaz. The form אשׁכּים might be an Aramaism; but it is more probably a clerical error, since we have השׁכּם everywhere else; cf. Jer 25:4, Jer 7:13; Jer 35:14, etc. , and Olsh. Gramm . §191, g . For syntactical reasons it cannot be 1st pers.
imperf . , as Hitz. thinks it is. On the significance of this infin. abs. see on Jer 7:13. As to the thought of Jer 25:4 cf. Jer 7:25. and Jer 11:7. לאמר introduces the contents of the discourses of Jeremiah and the other prophets, though formally it is connected with ושׁלח, Jer 25:4. As to the fact, cf. Jer 35:15. וּשׁבוּ, so shall ye dwell, cf. Jer 7:7. - With Jer 25:6 cf.
Jer 7:6; Jer 1:16, etc. (ארע, imperf. Hiph . from רעע). הכעסוּני cannot be the reading of its Chet . , for the 3rd person will not do. The ו seems to have found its way in by an error in writing and the Keri to be the proper reading, since למען is construed with the infinitive.
Jer 25:3-7 The seventy years’ Chaldean bondage of Judah and the peoples. - Jer 25:3 . "From the thirteenth year of Josiah, son of Amon king of Judah, unto this day, these three and twenty years, came the word of Jahveh to me, and I spake to you, from early morn onwards speaking, but ye hearkened not. Jer 25:4 . And Jahveh sent to you all His servants, the prophets, from early morning on sending them, but ye hearkened not, and inclined not your ear to hear.
Jer 25:5 . They said: Turn ye now each from his evil way and from the evil of your doings, so shall ye abide in the land which Jahveh hath given to your fathers from everlasting to everlasting. Jer 25:6 . And go not after other gods, to serve them and to worship them, that ye provoke me not with the work of your hands, and that I do you no evil. Jer 25:7 . But ye hearkened not to me, to provoke me by the work of your hands, to your own hurt.
Jer 25:8 . Therefore thus hath said Jahveh of hosts: Because ye have not heard my words, Jer 25:9 . Behold, I send and take all the families of the north, saith Jahveh, and to Nebuchadrezzar my servant (I send), and bring them upon this land, and upon its inhabitants, and upon all these peoples round about, and ban them, and make them an astonishment and a derision and everlasting desolations, Jer 25:10.
And destroy from among them the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, the sound of the mill and the light of the lamp. Jer 25:11. And this land shall become a desert, a desolation, and these peoples shall serve the king of Babylon seventy years." The very beginning of this discourse points to the great crisis in the fortunes of Judah. Jeremiah recalls into the memory of the people not merely the whole time of his own labours hitherto, but also the labours of many other prophets, who, like himself, have unremittingly preached repentance to the people, called on them to forsake idolatry and their evil ways, and to return to the God of their fathers - but in vain (Jer 25:3-7).
The 23 years, from the 13th of Josiah till the 4th of Jehoiakim, are thus made up: 19 years of Josiah and 4 years of Jehoiakim, including the 3 months’ reign of Jehoahaz. The form אשׁכּים might be an Aramaism; but it is more probably a clerical error, since we have השׁכּם everywhere else; cf. Jer 25:4, Jer 7:13; Jer 35:14, etc. , and Olsh. Gramm . §191, g . For syntactical reasons it cannot be 1st pers.
imperf . , as Hitz. thinks it is. On the significance of this infin. abs. see on Jer 7:13. As to the thought of Jer 25:4 cf. Jer 7:25. and Jer 11:7. לאמר introduces the contents of the discourses of Jeremiah and the other prophets, though formally it is connected with ושׁלח, Jer 25:4. As to the fact, cf. Jer 35:15. וּשׁבוּ, so shall ye dwell, cf. Jer 7:7. - With Jer 25:6 cf.
Jer 7:6; Jer 1:16, etc. (ארע, imperf. Hiph . from רעע). הכעסוּני cannot be the reading of its Chet . , for the 3rd person will not do. The ו seems to have found its way in by an error in writing and the Keri to be the proper reading, since למען is construed with the infinitive.