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Jeremiah 28

Hananiah Breaks the Yoke and the Lord Exposes False Peace

False prophecy may sound hopeful, but when it contradicts the Lord's word and teaches rebellion, it becomes deadly deception under divine judgment.

Chapter Summary

False prophecy may sound hopeful, but when it contradicts the Lord's word and teaches rebellion, it becomes deadly deception under divine judgment.

Overview

Jeremiah 28 argues that a hopeful message is not necessarily a true message. Hananiah speaks in the Lord's name, uses temple restoration language, and promises national relief, but His word contradicts the Lord's already revealed discipline through Jeremiah. Jeremiah shows that true prophecy is not measured by emotional appeal but by divine sending, covenant consistency, and fulfillment.

Hananiah's breaking of the wooden yoke cannot undo the Lord's decree; it only results in an iron yoke. The chapter warns that false peace is not harmless. It makes people trust in lies, teaches rebellion against the Lord, and brings death.

Context
Author

Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah during the final decades before Jerusalem's fall.

Audience

Zedekiah-era Judah, especially the priests and people gathered in the temple, along with readers needing to discern true and false prophecy.

Setting

The confrontation occurs in the temple, in the presence of priests and all the people, during the reign of Zedekiah king of Judah.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from Hananiah's public promise of quick deliverance, to Jeremiah's cautious test of peace prophecy, to Hananiah's symbolic breaking of the wooden yoke, to the Lord's counterword of iron yokes, and finally to Hananiah's death as judgment for lying rebellion.

Covenant Significance

Jeremiah 28 shows the covenant danger of rejecting the Lord's disciplinary word through false prophecy. Judah is under covenant judgment through Babylon, and the false promise of quick restoration encourages the people to resist the Lord rather than repent under His hand. True covenant hope must follow the Lord's word and timing, not the people's desired timetable.

Gospel Clarity

Jeremiah 28 clarifies the gospel by distinguishing false peace from true peace. Hananiah promises relief without the Lord's appointed judgment, but God exposes that as a lie. The gospel does not declare peace by pretending judgment is unreal. It declares peace because Christ has borne judgment in the place of sinners. False peace says, 'The yoke is broken,' when God has not spoken. True peace says, 'Christ has made peace through His blood,' because God has acted in the cross and resurrection.

Focus Points

  • True and False Prophecy
  • False Peace
  • Prophetic Testing
  • Divine Sending
  • Judgment Intensified by Resistance
  • Trust and Deception
  • Rebellion Against the Lord
  • Death of the False Prophet
  • Prophetic Revelation
  • False Teaching
  • Divine Sovereignty
  • Judgment
  • Peace
  • Human Responsibility
  • Rebellion
  • Christology

Passages

Book Arc