Jeremiah 36:27-32
Human attempts to destroy God’s word cannot stop its proclamation or prevent the fulfillment of His judgment.
Scripture Text
36:27 Then Yahweh’s word came to Jeremiah, after the king had burned the scroll, and the words which Baruch wrote at the mouth of Jeremiah, saying,
36:28 “Take again another scroll, and write in it all the former words that were in the first scroll, which Jehoiakim the king of Judah has burned.
36:29 Concerning Jehoiakim king of Judah You shall say, ‘Yahweh says: “You have burned this scroll, saying, “Why have You written therein, saying, ‘The king of Babylon will certainly come and destroy this land, and will cause to cease from there man and animal?’ ” ’
36:30 Therefore Yahweh says concerning Jehoiakim king of Judah: “He will have no one to sit on David’s throne. His dead body will be cast out in the day to the heat, and in the night to the frost.
36:31 I will punish Him, His offspring, and His servants for their iniquity. I will bring on them, on the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and on the men of Judah, all the evil that I have pronounced against them, but they didn’t listen.” ’ ”
36:32 Then took Jeremiah another scroll, and gave it to Baruch the scribe, the son of Neriah, who wrote therein from the mouth of Jeremiah all the words of the book which Jehoiakim king of Judah had burned in the fire; and many similar words were added to them.
Human attempts to destroy God’s word cannot stop its proclamation or prevent the fulfillment of His judgment.
Although King Jehoiakim burned the scroll containing God’s prophetic message, the Lord commanded Jeremiah to rewrite it and added further judgment against the king, demonstrating the indestructibility of God’s word.
- 1-4
- 5-10
- 11-19
- 20-26
- 27-32
The chapter moves from the Lord's command to write His words, to Baruch's public reading, to the officials' fearful response, to Jehoiakim's defiant burning of the scroll, to the Lord's judgment on the king, and finally to the rewritten and expanded scroll.
Jeremiah 36 argues that the word of the Lord is mercifully given, publicly proclaimed, legitimately written, fearfully weighty, violently rejected, sovereignly preserved, and ultimately fulfilled. Jehoiakim's attempt to destroy the scroll is not merely disrespect for a religious document; it is rejection of the Lord's call to repentance. The burning of the scroll exposes the king's heart. Unlike Josiah, who tore His clothes when the Book of the Law was read, Jehoiakim cuts the prophetic scroll and burns it without fear. But the Lord's word is not consumed by fire. It is rewritten and expanded, and the king who tried to erase judgment is Himself judged.
Theological logic
- The written prophetic word is given as mercy before judgment.
- Restriction of the messenger does not restrict the message.
- The LORD's word demands fear, repentance, and response.
- Jehoiakim's burning of the scroll is rebellion against the LORD.
- Human hostility cannot destroy God's word.
- Rejecting the word does not cancel judgment; it intensifies accountability.
- The LORD protects his servants until their work is complete.
- Do not assume that destroying the scroll altered God’s message or prevented its fulfillment.
- Do not overlook the added prophetic judgment against Jehoiakim as a direct response to His defiance.
- Do not reduce the event to literary preservation alone; it demonstrates divine authority over revelation.
- Do not interpret the rewriting of the scroll as a mere literary detail rather than a theological statement about God’s sovereignty.
- Do not overlook the added judgments against Jehoiakim as evidence of accountability for rejecting God’s word.
- Do not assume human opposition can nullify divine revelation.
- Do not detach the passage from the larger prophetic warnings throughout Jeremiah.
- God’s word cannot be destroyed or silenced by human opposition.
- Faithful servants must continue proclaiming truth even after rejection.
- Resistance to God’s word often leads to deeper accountability and judgment.
- The preservation of Scripture demonstrates God’s sovereign care over revelation.
- Reverent reading - Approach Scripture as the living word of the Lord, not as material to manage.
- Whole-scroll submission - Submit to the full counsel of God's word, including hard warnings.
- Repentant response - Let warning move You to turn from wicked ways and seek forgiveness.
- Public proclamation - Read and declare God's word faithfully in gathered settings.
- Scribal faithfulness - Honor the quiet labor of recording, preserving, copying, teaching, and transmitting truth.
- Courage under opposition - Continue serving the word when powerful people reject it.
- Christ-centered confidence - Rest in Christ, the Word who was rejected and vindicated, and in the Scripture that testifies to Him.
- Chapter Summary : Jehoiakim can cut and burn the scroll, but He cannot destroy the word of the Lord; the rejected word is rewritten, expanded, and fulfilled in judgment.
Jehoiakim’s destruction of the scroll illustrates humanity’s attempt to suppress God’s truth. The gospel reveals that God’s word cannot be destroyed, and through Christ that word continues to bring both judgment upon sin and the offer of forgiveness.