Jeremiah
Introduction
It is difficult to speak about Jeremiah without comparing him to Isaiah. It might be wrong to center everything on the differences between their reactions to God’s call, namely, Isaiah’s enthusiasm (Is 6:8) as opposed to Jeremiah’s fear (Jer 1:6). It might have been only a question of their different temperaments. Their respective vocation and mission should be complementary, both in terms of what refers to their lives and writings and to the influence that both of them were going to exercise among believers.
Isaiah is the prophecy while Jeremiah is the prophet. The two faces of prophetism complement each other and they are both equally necessary to reorient history. Isaiah represents the message to which people will always need to refer in order to reaffirm their faith. Jeremiah is the ever-present example of the suffering of human beings when God bursts into their lives.
There is no room, therefore, for a sentimental view of a young, peaceful and defenseless Jeremiah who suffered in silence from the wickedness of his persecutors. There were hints of violence in the prophet (11:20-23). In spite of the fact that he passed into history because of his own sufferings, Jeremiah was not always the victim of the calamities that he had announced.
In his first announcement, Jeremiah said that God had given him authority to uproot and to destroy, to build and to plant, specifying that the mission that had been entrusted to him encompassed not only his small country but also “the nations.” The magnitude of such a task assigned to a man without credentials might surprise us, yet it is where the finger of God does appear. Starting with the ruin of the kingdom of Judah, followed by the Exile, until we come to the time of the Gospels, God is going to reveal his way of saving the world, his strength that is manifested in weakness and the victory of Love. All of these always presuppose the acceptance of suffering.
Not without reason did the Jews of later times believe that after he had died, Jeremiah was present before God interceding for them (2 Mac 2:1; 14:14). However, that intercession was not what mattered most; and “second Isaiah” would infer it: we are going to find some echoes of Jeremiah in the poems of the Servant of the Lord (49:1; 50:4; 52:13).
Jeremiah’s Preaching
Jeremiah’s first prophecies have their roots in the discourse of the Book of Deuteronomy (2 K 23; Jer 11). Deuteronomy emphasizes the Covenant made between God and Israel, a Covenant that had made Israel into a people set apart and endowed with their own wisdom. The Lord is a personal God who wants to be served and loved.
Jeremiah came on the scene at the time when Israel was taking refuge in the infallible protection that their God and their temple insured. Jeremiah was persecuted because he denied that God should be identified with a temple of stone (Jer 7 and 26) just as it would occur with Jesus and his apostles (Mk 14:58, Acts 6:13). Jeremiah does not want any God other than the one who is discovered in truth. His preaching (and that of Deuteronomy) is no longer the same as the preaching of Joshua and the Judges, that is to say, “you will possess the land if you obey and you will lose it if you disobey” or “everything is going wrong because you are not following the law….” Jeremiah is asking people to convert to wisdom (Jer 9:22; 10) and he is speaking of a return to fidelity that means, first and foremost, a change of heart (Jer 17:5).
The announcement of the new Covenant, that is the culmination of Jeremiah’s message (Jer 31:31), is the logical consequence of the chapters that deal only with death and ruin. It was necessary for all the vestiges of a life in which God was absent to disappear so that the people, or better yet, the hearts would open up to another dimension of human existence. After the ruin of the kingdom of Israel, the people of God would enter into a new era.
We cannot understand the promises of happiness that form part of Jeremiah’s prophecy (Jer 29:31) without this interior transformation. Jeremiah did not let himself be carried away by Ezekiel’s imagination to rebuild an ideal Palestine with a purified temple. The logical consequence of the promises to Jeremiah does not mean Ezra’s efforts to publish the law and to organize Judaism but it is simply the Gospel.
Historical Data
Jeremiah received his call in the year 626 B.C. He was from a family of priests of Anathoth, close to Jerusalem. A few years later, the discovery of the law brought about a religious renewal (2 K 22:1). During Jeremiah’s ministry, that lasted almost forty years, (we should situate the prophet’s death around the year 586 B.C.), changes took place at an impressive pace: Josiah’s religious reform, as well as the national rebirth that accompanied it (the years 622–609 B.C.). Then, three wars took place: one against Egypt in the year 609 B.C., one against Babylon in the year 597 B.C. and the year 587, followed by three waves of deportations (the years 597, 587, and 582 B.C.).
THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH
In the year 604 B.C., Jeremiah dictated part of his preaching to Baruch who was both the “secretary” of the king and the secretary of Jeremiah. These prophecies are most probably found in Chapters 1–20. There must have been another document relating Jeremiah’s sufferings: Chapters 26–44. Yet another document must have dealt with prophecies against the nations (Chaps. 46-51). Other collections, referring to the kings (21–23), the prophecies (23:9-40) or to the new Covenant (30–33) were added.
THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH: 1:1–20:18 (the conclusion is in 25:1-38)
PROPHECIES AGAINST THE KINGS AND THE PROPHETS: 21:1–24:10
THE BOOK OF THE NEW COVENANT: 26:1–33:26
CONTINUOUS REBELLION OF ISRAEL: 34:1–36:18
JEREMIAH’S SUFFERINGS: 36:1–45:5
ORACLES AGAINST THE NATIONS: 46:1–51:64
CONCLUSION: THE END OF THE KINGDOM OF JUDAH (52:1-34)
1.4 Jeremiah says little about his vocation. We have no flashing revelation from God. The two visions—the branch of the watching-tree (the almond tree) and the boiling caldron—seem quite ordinary for such a transcendental mission. This helps us understand that God’s call was first of all something interior.
I have put my words in your mouth (v. 9). Jeremiah is made a prophet: from now on, he will proclaim the word of God. That does not mean that God will always tell him what he must announce, rather, since he now thinks and feels like the Lord, he will be able to comment on every word of God given to him.
You will go whatever be the mission I am entrusting to you (v. 7). From now on, Jeremiah will be guided by the power of the Spirit; he will obey, whatever the risks and in spite of the resistance of his timid nature. Be not scared of them or I will scare you in their presence (v. 17)! This is an amazing revelation of the demanding love of the Lord. He has decided to make this lad his chosen one and forces him to overcome and forget his human weakness.
I am with you to rescue you (v. 19). The Lord repeats what he said to Moses when he called him (Ex 3:12) and what he will also say to Paul (Acts 26:17). Moreover, Jeremiah is assured that the Lord destined him for this mission, of which he had never thought, and which frightens him: Even before I formed you in the womb I have known you; even before you were born I had set you apart (v. 5). Later, the same will be said of John the Baptist (Lk 1:15), of Christ (see Is 49) and of Paul (Gal 1:15).
These words spoken to Jeremiah are, somehow, also meant for us: we are not the product of chance. In Ephesians 1, Paul praises this foreknowledge of God who called us from eternity to know Christ and to have a share in the divine riches. But what is said to Jeremiah urges us to reflect that God, in his eternal designs, clearly sees—next to Christ—those who are given a more transcendental mission. It would be difficult for them to escape God’s irresistible call.
God seems to force Jeremiah’s freedom, but that is but an impression of ours because we have not experienced real freedom, and words rarely fully express reality.
I give you authority over the nations; to uproot and to destroy (v. 10). From now on, Jeremiah will carry the Lord’s creative word. In the first years, this word seems rather destructive. Jeremiah knows that when he pronounces a condemnation, he expresses God’s judgment which will shortly take place.
Jeremiah’s mission, to uproot and to destroy; to build and to plant will be the mission of any worker in the Lord’s vineyard. There can be no compromise between a semblance of Christian life and authentic faith; the genuine apostle must destroy in order to build.
2.1 Chapters 2–6 except for 3:6-18 contain Jeremiah’s preaching in the first years following his call. After the godless kings Manasseh and Amon, there was very little concern for religion; Jeremiah daringly opposes general indifference. His language resembles that of Hosea who, a century before, had spoken in similar circumstances in the northern kingdom. For the Israelites, the Lord is God, or a god, but not someone who lives close to them. For Jeremiah, he is both Father and Husband.
I remember your kindness as a youth (v. 2). You will note the longing for the time of the desert, the days of Moses, when the people were wandering and poor, but trusted in the Lord who helped them. As they built their houses, planted their vineyards and had children, the Israelites became rich and forgot their benefactor: “No one can serve two masters.” The Lord appears as the jealous husband: those people, so easily satisfied, had not yet discovered God’s passionate love.
My people have exchanged their glory for what is worthless (v. 11). Jeremiah is thinking about his contemporaries who are unable to discover the invisible God and who feel secure with their painted gods and predictions which chase after all that is flashy and new.
They have forsaken me, the fountain of living water (v. 13). Abandoning God had taken three forms:
– Their leaders stopped seeking the will of God. The three categories of authority in Judah are named: priests, shepherds (governors), and prophets.
– They restored the worship of false gods, to whom they offered sacrifices and vows.
– They formed alliances with powerful nations like Assyria and Egypt with the idea of guaranteeing their own security, but without seeing that such alliances were making them just like other people. Their vocation was to keep their faith in the Lord, knowing that he would never abandon them if they carried out justice among the people.
See also the commentary on Isaiah 30:22.
Know and see that it is bitter and evil to forsake the Lord, your God (v. 19). Maybe Jeremiah and the prophets sometimes had an overly simplistic vision of the justice of God in this world. We know that prosperity or misfortune is not sure proof that we are leading good or evil lives. Nevertheless, those who meditate on their lives and on history do verify Jeremiah’s words: sin always brings its punishment.
The blood of the innocent poor (v. 34). In many parts of the Scriptures, we find reference to children sacrificed to the idols.
3.1 This is the beginning of the poem which will continue in 3:19–4:2.
If a man divorces his wife. We cannot understand sin if we have not known love. Jeremiah declares that this hard-hearted people, “the bride” of the Lord has behaved like a prostitute. An adulterous woman who abandoned her husband and sacrificed her children to go after other men.
Contrary to what usually happens, the abandoned husband looks for the guilty woman. Judah does not deserve the Lord’s return and people cannot complain when misfortunes befall them. Yet, the Lord’s love urges him to look for these unfaithful people.
6. This part begun in 3:1 is interrupted by two paragraphs.
Verses 6-13. These verses were written when Josiah recaptured part of the northern kingdom (kingdom of Israel). See the commentary on 2 Kings 23:15. Even after so many threats, the hope of conversion is never lost.
Verses 14-18. These words were probably proclaimed by Jeremiah after the destruction of Jerusalem in the year 587 B.C. and they contain promises of restoration. They were inserted here in the book to tone down the pessimistic impression caused by so many condemnations. In fact, these threats of punishment had to be completely carried out before God would offer new hope.
5.1 This passage referring to an invasion from the north was begun in Chapter 4.
Search the entire city squares and find, if you can, even one man who acts justly and seeks the truth. The Lord would forgive everything for the sake of one “just person,” just as we saw in Genesis 18. The search is in vain, and Jeremiah also looks in vain for someone who would understand. After so many invasions this one sounds the alarm announcing the final destruction. This is how people and nations remain deaf until they perish. In the New Testament, John the Baptist and then Jesus and his apostles try to arouse their compatriots and they issue the same call: be converted because the tragedy—the judgment—is at hand.
7.1 For four centuries the Lord protected Jerusalem. The Jews were convinced that there was a blessing for them and for the temple, the dwelling place of the Lord, where he was present, and from where he blessed his people.
Temple of the Lord, temple of the Lord! (v. 4). They come there and, confident in the Lord’s gifts, they think that they do not need to change their lives. It is true that the Lord ordered the sacrifices, but can people be reconciled to the Lord at the cost of a sacrificed animal? What is the value of these rituals if there is no change in behavior?
What I did in Shiloh, I will likewise do to this temple (v. 14). God has successively destroyed the sacred objects and the institutions he gave his people. People always replace God with means that lead to God, or with holy objects, or with persons who represent God. We are forever fleeing from a personal encounter whether it be with God or neighbor because it makes us afraid and we take refuge in the bazaar of religion.
All that God gives is for a time to make us cross into another stage: God gave kings and then suppressed them, he demanded sacrifices and then he destroyed the temple when he gave us the Son “in whom dwells the fullness of God.” He gave the Law, and later showed how ineffective it was. He gave priests and then replaced them with Christ.
Here Jeremiah speaks of the temple. In 3:16 he also speaks of the Ark of the Covenant: they will no longer exist in the time of the New Covenant. In 4:4, Jeremiah mentions circumcision: it will no longer serve in a world of truth: Romans 2:25-30.
Following this text, we have three more texts, dealing with worship:
– the people of God are reprimanded for worshiping the Lord and other gods at the same time;
– they perform rituals but are not concerned about heeding the word of God and doing what is pleasing to God.
How many believe that they can be called Christians without converting from their materialistic way of life far removed from any Christian community!
21. Jeremiah repeats the warnings of Deuteronomy. This book had just been discovered (2 K 22). The chosen people will have peace if they listen to the word of their God. In the same way, we also must go beyond our religious practices and listen to the Lord.
8.1 These three chapters combine several of Jeremiah’s oracles which were delivered in the days of King Jehoiakim.
Our Scripture did not yet exist in those days. The parts that were already written never left the temple library. For the people, the word of God consisted of the traditions kept by the priests and their decisions that applied the Law of God; it also meant the words of the prophets who transmitted the word of God for their day.
However, these two sources of faith were corrupted: it was no longer possible to know the meaning of the events which the nation was experiencing.
In verses 10-12 we have a repetition of what was said in 6:12-15.
In verses 21 and 23 we see Jeremiah’s sensitivity to the misfortunes of his people.
9.11 As we have said with regard to 8:8, the wisdom of believers is not like a rule of individual life which everyone could read in the same way in the Scriptures and practice regardless of the place and time. Their wisdom consists in “understanding events.” In every age, the people of God should respond to the challenge that God offers them through the circumstances of the present time.
Nowadays it is not enough to know the letter of the Scriptures: we need to have the guidance of the Church and its prophets help us apply the text to our present situation.
22. We put a great deal of emphasis on helping young people to study. Many parents make sacrifices throughout their lives to have one of their children become a good technician or go to the university. Jeremiah reminds us that this alone does not give true wisdom. We should be ashamed when we compare the time we spend with sterile occupations (interminable gossiping, profitless reading, superficial programs on TV and the internet) with the time we dedicate to knowing God.
I am the Lord, the merciful; I implement justice and rule the world with righteousness (v. 23) is the means whereby we remain steadfast in the face of evil: it will stir up our desire to imitate God and to dedicate ourselves to bringing kindness, law, and justice into this world.
10.23 Correct us, Lord, with prudence (v. 24). Here, suddenly, the heart of Jeremiah manifests itself. He does not forget he is an Israelite and he asks God to restore justice, to punish those powerful nations that come to destroy Judah whenever they like. After repeating many times that those enemy nations were sent by God himself against Judah, he now rebels.
11.1 This chapter is one of the few offering us the preaching of Jeremiah in the years following the “discovery of the Law” and Josiah’s reform (see 2 K 22). For a while, wishing to do his best to serve the Lord, King Josiah aroused a new fervor. Yet, when we read what Jeremiah says here, we see that the conversion of the people was not, nor could be, in depth.
Jeremiah knew that to be faithful to God, one must be moved and transformed by him.
12.1 For the first time, Jeremiah questions the prosperity of evil people, as will Psalms 73 and 49 and, above all, the Book of Job. It is not without reason that Jeremiah wonders: for he is constantly persecuted.
If you tire when running with those on foot, how can you compete with horses? (v. 5). The Lord answer seems harsh: it only predicts more cruel trials for Jeremiah (that is the meaning of the refrain). When his true friends hesitate, God does not make the way easier for them: he knows that by proposing new sacrifices to them, he will once again, bring about their generous surrender.
13.12 Those who refuse to see, God will make blind (Jn 9:39). Those who scorn him, God will bring to disgrace through their own evil ways (Rom 1:24). Those who prefer to follow foolish ways, God will make drunk so that they will lose themselves because of their own foolishness.
14.1 The passage beginning here concludes in 15:4. Jeremiah appears before the Lord as the Jews used to do in the temple to publicly confess the sins of the people, in the hope that the priests would give them an encouraging answer on behalf of the God who forgives. Jeremiah stands in solidarity with his people and with their sins. But God does not want to listen to him.
O Lord, do not abandon us (v. 9)! Jeremiah is distressed over his people’s situation. Maybe God cannot forgive; maybe he cannot save? Here the human being is confronted by the mystery of God. Jeremiah does not get an answer: God does not answer Job either; and Jesus does not get an answer in his agony in the garden of Gethsemane.
You know what the prophets are saying to them: you will not see the sword (v. 13). There are plenty of false prophets reassuring a society based on false principles. Compared with them, Jeremiah appears weak and bitter, as the one who does not give the Lord’s answer. A true prophet is not accepted by his own people whereas those who provide opium for the people are praised.
15.10 An amazing text where Jeremiah reveals his personal crisis.
Being a prophet is not easy at all. God’s word is not welcomed. Anyone who struggles for the truth is surrounded by people wishing evil on him and trying to bring him down: he is rarely understood even in his own home. The situation is even worse for God’s prophet. The Lord shares with him his own way of seeing and feeling things. The prophet can no longer join in the cheap joy and the meaningless conversations that fill so many lives.
Your words were my happiness (v. 16). God’s word brings the taste of truth and something of the very presence of God. The price of this joy is that he is condemned to live alone. Today the prophet feels the presence of God who helps him, but as a creature, he begins to doubt: What if God keeps himself aloof tomorrow? And he becomes faint.
God does not approve of his prophet’s weakness: Draw the gold from the dross (v. 19), namely, let what is good and noble in you speak out, and silence these fears and complaints which come from a weak nature.
16.1 Do not take a wife (v. 2). The prophets discover that God is the true Spouse. God’s passionate and faithful love for his people is the model for married love. Since prophets become the mouthpiece and the representative of God, all that they do becomes a sign. Thus, they cannot seek a happy marriage as long as Israel, the Lord’s bride, turns her back on her God.
And so, before Jeremiah, another prophet, Hosea, only knew the suffering of the betrayed husband in his home and he had to constantly forgive his adulterous wife (Hos 3:1). Ezekiel sees his wife die suddenly (Ezk 24:15). Jeremiah will have neither wife nor children; it is not fitting for him to marry at the very time the first covenant is being destroyed. Later, neither John the Baptist, nor the apostle John, nor Paul will marry: this will become a sign. Thus, they will help us understand that they only live for the coming marriage of Christ and his glorified Church, of which marriage is only an image.
10. Following we have parts of discourses that Jeremiah made on very different occasions.
– You will notice in 17:5-11 that similar content is found in several Psalms, and especially in Psalm 1. Where it says “he”, can also be read as “she”.
– The prayer 17:14-18.
17.19 Refrain from work on the day of the Sabbath (v. 22). Jeremiah often denounces the religious practices which are not accompanied by an upright life; but that does not mean that he minimizes the respect towards God which is manifested externally.
The Law of Rest (such is the meaning in Hebrew of the word Sabbath) is a way for us to allow room for God in our life. Not working on that day is a way to state that people will not be happier by becoming slaves to work, but rather by giving something to God which God will give back a hundredfold (see Gen 2:3; Ex 20:8; Lev 25:20).
18.1 In several parts of the Scriptures, the comparison with the potter serves to show that God is absolute master and directs the lives of all according to his will: individuals as well as nations (see Is 29:16 and Rom 9:20). Here the same comparison is used to provide another teaching which complements the first: namely that we are free.
If they change their ways, I will then relent and refrain from doing the harm I had intended to do (v. 8). At any time, one can be converted and God will act accordingly. There is no plan of God written beforehand that we have to follow, pushed to do good or evil by some fatal destiny. God is continually creating us and he achieves his plan for the world while renewing each day the free relation it maintains with us. Scripture supports these two statements, that nothing escapes God and that we are free.
19.14 Jeremiah is prophesying alone. Apparently, he has no followers or religious groups to help him. Some people are getting tired of always hearing him threaten. The leaders and the priests are angry at this individual’s condemnation of a society in which they live without problems.
20.7 This “confession” recalls the one in Chapter 15. The Bearer of the Truth is rejected and mocked simply because he speaks by virtue of a personal mission which the people do not accept. Let us not forget that Jeremiah lived six centuries before Jesus, long before there was any thought of the beyond, so we will have a better understanding of why he cries for divine justice.
You have taken me by force (v. 7): is there anything more understandable if God is Love?
But his word is like a fire in my bones (cf. v. 9). What is really amazing is the irresistible power of God’s word. It is more difficult to resist it than to face human opposition. Paul will declare, in a fairly similar way, that he cannot evade the responsibility of preaching the Gospel (1 Cor 9:16). This text forces us to revise and deepen the very simplistic ideas we have concerning our freedom: being faithful to the most demanding mission is also to be free.
The curse in verses 14-18 will be picked up and developed in the third chapter of Job.
22.1 The passage in 21:1-10 refers to the second siege of Jerusalem in the year 588 B.C. Then from 22:1-28 we have several oracles against the royal family, before the first siege, in the years 605-598 B.C. See 2 Kings 23:31-37 concerning those kings.
In those days, the nobility and the civil servants of Jerusalem lived as usual, without being concerned about the ongoing crises of the kingdom. Yet, before long, they would all be killed or exiled.
The same is also true now: rich countries and people are enjoying themselves and live in indifference on top of a volcano. A few words of Dom Helder Camara are appropriate here:
“There has always been violence. But now it is perhaps more massive than ever; it is everywhere and it takes on many forms: brutal, open, subtle, blind, rationalized, consolidated, anonymous, abstract, irresponsible.
If the powerful of the underdeveloped world do not have the courage to let go of their privileges and to bring justice to millions of people living in subhuman situations; if governments make reforms only on paper; how can we stop the young people who are tempted to adopt radically violent positions?
How long will atomic bombs be feared more than the bomb of poverty which is being built in the heart of the third world?”
23.1 Woe to the shepherds who mislead and scatter! This new attack against evil leaders is the prelude to words of hope.
I will gather the remnant of my sheep (v. 3). The destruction of the “physical” Israel prepares for the coming of the “spiritual” Israel. People were used to seeing their leaders abuse power, and their rulers become richer. But God is preparing for his people a shepherd who will look after the sheep.
They will call him the Lord-is-our-justice: this is a way of contrasting him with the king of the time, Zedekiah, which means the Lord-is-my-justice.
I will appoint shepherds who will take care of them (v. 4). As well as the just king, Jeremiah sees other shepherds: besides the only Shepherd, Christ, there is room for others determined to be responsible for their brothers and sisters.
No longer will they fear (v. 4). God promises lasting peace. The new people of God will be more than a mere continuation of the old kingdom of Israel, and the new king will be more than the earthly kings (see how Jesus develops this point in John 10).
Humankind hopes for unity in peace, and the Church now must offer the witness of different people gathered in Christ. The reality, however, will be achieved only in the heavenly Jerusalem (Rev 21:22).
Jeremiah expresses the same hope elsewhere, especially in 33:15-18. In Ezekiel 34 we find the same image of the Good Shepherd preparing for what Jesus will say in John 10, Luke 15:4 and Matthew 9:36.
9. See also Deuteronomy 13:6 and 18:22 and Jeremiah 28 on the subject of false prophets.
Those who are not well-versed in their faith marvel at visions and dreams, forgetting that dreams can be particularly deceptive.
24.1 The first siege of Jerusalem occurred in the year 598 B.C., along with the capitulation of King Jehoiakim, and a first exile. In the ten years that followed, the new king, Zedekiah, along with the people who remained, acted as if nothing had happened. Though they were defeated and poor, the people of Jerusalem came to think that they were better off and that they only had to lament over the fate of those in exile. Jeremiah rejects this opinion. God is interested in those in exile for they are the beginning of the future renewed people. On the other hand, something worse is going to happen to those remaining in Jerusalem.
25.1 This chapter combines verses 1-13, an introduction which must have come before Jeremiah’s prophecies against the people of Judah and which now form Chapters 1–24 of his book. Note in this passage the prophecy concerning the seventy years which was to be the duration of the exile of the Jews in Babylon. It is a symbolic number since there were two exiles, in the years 598 and 587 B.C. and many left after the year 538 B.C.
Verses 15-38 an introduction which must have come before the prophecies against the foreign nations gathered in Chapters 46–51.
26.1 In 7:1-15 we had the discourse against people who trust in the temple. Here Jeremiah’s secretary, Baruch—about whom we will speak later—summarizes the discourse and tells us what impact it had.
– The people defend Jeremiah against the priests and the prophets.
– Jeremiah maintains his position firmly: he cannot provide proof or miracles to confirm what he is saying. He is saved by the conversion of the people: they have recognized the voice of truth.
– They recall the words of the prophet Micah 3:12 in the previous century.
– At the end of the chapter, there is mention of the family of Shaphan, the secretary of the king who had favored the religious reform of King Josiah (see 2 K 22:8). Shaphan and his family will protect Jeremiah on several occasions.
The confrontation between Jeremiah and the priests is not accidental. Oftentimes the priests who kept the word of God opposed the prophets of their times. John the Baptist was ignored by the priests and Jesus was condemned by them. The reason is that often the ministers of religion think first of preserving the institutions and the system of which they are the guardians and which provide them with a livelihood, whereas the prophets invite us to forge ahead and be mindful of what is essential.
28.1 As we saw in 22:1, the ten years separating the two sieges of Jerusalem, from 598 to 588, were times of madness and false illusions. People were always predicting the collapse of the empire of Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, and the return of the exiles. Jeremiah rises courageously against such false hope and predicts submission to Nebuchadnezzar and so the Jewish leaders consider him an enemy of the nation.
Jeremiah confronts the false prophets. When prophets do not agree, how can people know the authentic prophet? See Deuteronomy 13:6 and 18:22 on this.
The prophet who prophesies peace will not be recognized until his predictions are fulfilled (v. 9). Jeremiah says something more than Deuteronomy. Ever since Elijah (see 1 K 19:18), the mission of the prophets had been to predict the gradual fall of the kingdom of Israel and to announce that another kingdom would come later. They predicted a few victories, but these would not stop a continuous slipping towards destruction. Therefore, the Jews should have distrusted Hananiah who was promising prosperity more than Jeremiah who insisted on the Lord’s threats.
The prophets were sent to a sinful people to form their conscience regarding sin and not to put it to sleep. When we live in the midst of injustice, we must distrust those who promise prosperity.
29.1 In the years from 598 to 587 B.C., while the people in Jerusalem are becoming more and more blind, Jeremiah wants to guide the exiles. There is a temptation for them to believe that things could revert to what they were before. There are even prophets among them who keep up the illusion of a quick defeat of Babylon. One of them sends letters to Jerusalem to have Jeremiah put in jail (vv. 24-28).
In fact, they have to accept defeat, to realize their unfaithfulness to the Lord, which is the actual cause of their humiliation, and change their outlook. At that very moment another prophet, Ezekiel, who is a true prophet speaks in a similar way among the exiles.
A slow transformation is going to take place among the priests, the nobility, the artisans and the civil servants who are exiled and, after seventy years of exile, their children will return to Jerusalem as “the poor ones looking for the Lord.”
30.1 Chapters 30 and 31 bring us back to the happy years of King Josiah. Besides promoting the renewal of faith and the worship of the Lord, he managed to conquer part of what had been the kingdom of Israel before it became an Assyrian province after the fall of Samaria.
The days are coming when I shall bring my captive people Israel and Judah back (v. 3). The Israelites had been expelled from the land and scattered. Now, they are not there to listen to Jeremiah, but he addresses them through time and space. What he is telling them also applies to Judah which, in its turn, is going to be destroyed and dispersed.
This time the Lord speaks like the Father to the prodigal son. He recalls their sins of the past which forced him to punish them and he promises that he will bring about the return of his dispersed children.
Similar promises fill Chapters 40–55 of the Book of Isaiah.
31.31 Here we must underscore verses 31-34 where Jeremiah delivers his most famous prophecy. During the bitter days, which the Jewish people are experiencing, God reveals and Jeremiah announces the New and eternal Covenant between God and his people.
I will forge a new Covenant. This is like saying that the Sinai Covenant which made Israel God’s people, had become obsolete or insufficient. God had bound himself to a family (Abraham’s) which became a people under Moses’ leadership. And apparently, his promises were more for the community than for individuals.
The expression the prophet uses, “a new Covenant” does not mean that God is forsaking his former promises to Israel. It clearly illustrates the characteristic of the Covenant which God wants to establish between him and humanity through Israel. This novelty is that of love because true love is always fresh and new. Although the people of God had broken the Covenant, God who is always faithful, will respond by a gift, through his son, born of Mary.
I will forge a new Covenant with Israel (v. 31). Jeremiah predicts the day when the Lord will reveal himself to all believers as he had done with his great prophets. The law will be in their hearts and the hand of God will keep them on the right path, as was the case with Jeremiah when he doubted.
They broke my Covenant (v. 32). Actually, this Covenant between the Lord and Israel on Sinai had failed, through Israel’s fault, not the Lord’s. But it is not a matter of renewing it as Joshua, Samuel, Hezekiah, and Josiah had done so many times. Nor is it a matter of making another one like it, since this old Covenant had already proven its weakness: people are sinful and unable to escape from their sins. Moreover, no laws, or human solidarity, or any form of education can bring God’s grace to a nation or a collectivity and preserve them in the faith. Only a personal acceptance of the divine Truth makes one a true believer. The true people of God cannot be confused with any people or human community: only those who are reborn will become part of God’s people.
I will put my law in their hearts (v. 33). Now, Jeremiah knows the secret of the New Covenant. For he is aware of the change, which occurred in him, when the Lord made him a prophet. Then, he discovered an intimate relationship with God which is entirely different from a religion of mere practices.
I will forgive their wrongdoing and no longer remember their sin (v. 34). A New Covenant will be achieved through the death of Christ on the cross for the forgiveness of sins. In celebrating the Last Supper, Jesus says: “This cup is the New Covenant sealed in my blood” (Lk 22:20). The author of the Letter to the Hebrews will develop the meaning of the New Covenant (see Heb 8:8 and 10:16).
The Gospel of John will also clarify the meaning of they will all know me: in the Christian faith, not everyone receives personal revelations, but everyone is guided by the Father to Christ in whom are found all the treasures of knowledge and wisdom.
Perhaps Jeremiah himself had not seen all the consequences of this revelation, but it certainly throws a decisive light on the history of the people of Israel. We understand that God’s teaching, his way of leading and instructing his people through events was a pedagogy, leading to a definitive truth to be given through Christ and through the gift of the Spirit. It is understandable that Jesus and his apostles so often recalled the message of the prophets to justify the revolution of the Gospel and the birth of a Church rooted in the Jewish people but now independent of its national history.
32.1 During the second siege and prior to the destruction of Jerusalem, Jeremiah buys a field as if to prove that the land has not lost its worth; one day the fallen nation will rise again. The end of the chapter (32:37) renews for Judah the same promise of the New Covenant which Jeremiah had predicted for Israel a few years before (Chaps. 30 and 31:31).
34.1 This chapter includes two events from the second siege of Jerusalem.
Verses 1-7: Jeremiah invites Zedekiah to surrender to the Chaldeans as Jehoiakim had done during the first siege. This dialogue is also related in 21:1-7.
Verses 9-22: Concerning the liberation of slaves. Scripture does not allow that any member of the people of God should lose freedom forever. If due to debts a person had to sell himself and become the servant of his creditor, this was not to last more than seven years. Every seven years a sabbatical year was proclaimed (see Dt 15:12) during which slaves of Hebrew descent were to be given their freedom.
The truth is that social laws were poorly observed in those days. And so, before the threat of siege, the most believing among the people of Jerusalem realized that the best way to obtain God’s blessing would be to follow the social laws of the Scriptures and to liberate their slaves.
The Lord rises in favor of the oppressed: he will destroy his own country if that is necessary to punish those who so despise their brothers and sisters.
36.1 Chapters 36–44 could be called “Jeremiah’s sufferings:” they describe the fate of the prophet during the sieges of the years 598 and 587 B.C. and after the destruction of Jerusalem.
These are the last days of the kingdom of Judah. The events briefly related at the end of the second Book of Kings take on a new meaning here because someone with much insight is experiencing them. In the midst of the masses who suffer without understanding, Jeremiah knows what God’s plans are. These people, who neither believe nor obey the Lord, must lose their material illusions, and then later the best of their children will come to a more profound faith.
Nevertheless, Jeremiah is crushed by his people’s disaster. After having suffered because of them, he is now suffering with them and he becomes the figure of the suffering Savior, Christ.
Baruch, son of Neriah, was a secretary (v. 26), something like the chancellor of the king. He was also Jeremiah’s secretary and he may have written these chapters.
Verse 23: The episode of the burned scroll takes place during the first blockade. Let us remember that in those days people wrote on strips of parchment, or sheepskin, which were rolled up.
37.1 Zedekiah is respectful toward Jeremiah. He is, in fact, at the mercy of his officials. Here, as in the Passion of Jesus, the rulers do not rule but follow the mood of the majority.
IS JEREMIAH A TRAITOR?
How strange is Jeremiah’s attitude during this war in which the Jews defend their independence to death!
Jeremiah accuses his people and not the Chaldeans in whom he only sees God’s instrument.
Jeremiah advises surrender and submission to foreign power. He even invites the exiled Jews to promote the prosperity of their conquerors.
And we cannot say that these are mistakes on the part of the prophet since his attitude cannot be separated from his message. Two reasons clarify Jeremiah’s position:
– On one hand, the Jewish nationalists do not know what God wants to do with Israel in the future. They see only defeat and slavery and they prefer to fight to death. Jeremiah, however, knows the extraordinary future that the Lord has in store for Israel. Israel bears the hopes of the future world, and so they must not disappear in a hopeless struggle.
– On the other hand, the Jewish leaders focus only on the appearances of freedom and patriotism. To them, everything seems lost if they submit to foreign authority. Jeremiah, for his part, focuses on the heart. To be Jewish means to preserve Israel’s ideals and reasons for living; to be free means to serve the Lord alone. And so, it is essential to him that his compatriots do not become contaminated by the gods and the false values of the Chaldeans; by comparison, to submit to the yoke of a Chaldean master seems a much lesser evil. Besides, Jeremiah shares the ideas expressed particularly in the Book of Judges: if Israel keeps the faith and observes the Law, sooner or later it will recover its independence and return home.
Put in modern terms, Jeremiah’s attitude can be summarized like:
Do not insist on fighting for causes or institutions which are no longer relevant to a world which has undergone irreversible changes and in which God calls us to a different mission.
Know that a people’s true independence is seen in their moral and cultural independence. It would be tragic if their children, dazzled by a foreign way of life, were to sacrifice their traditional moral values, or in a subservient way, adopt norms and forms of development imposed from outside.
39.15 Just as Jesus in his passion, Jeremiah has something to give back to the people who were compassionate towards him.
40.7 The Chaldeans had made Judah a province of their empire. As its governor they named a Jew, Gedaliah, belonging to the Shaphan family who had always been favorable to Jeremiah. The resistance party murders him and only gains a new dispersion of the Jews.
Chapters 42–44 show us Jeremiah fighting his people for the last time. There is not even one faction that listens to the prophet. Those favoring resistance to the Chaldeans, as well as those in favor of submission, follow their own whims and refuse to obey the Lord.
46.1 In Jeremiah, as well as in the other prophets, we can read prophecies against foreign nations. The prophets lived in a specific time and their mission was to spread a new breed of people, more lucid, more responsible, and with a more interior faith, in a world which was falling apart. While the prestigious civilizations of Egypt and Babylon inhibited people and did not allow them to discover new values, the individualism of small nations led them to disappear. It was not Israel alone that had to pass through death, but all people; however, only Israel would rise up for a much greater destiny.
50.1 Chapters 50 and 51 have the oracles against Babylon: various discourses dealing with the fall of Babylon and the return of the exiles.
51.20 You were my hammer. A century before, Isaiah had seen in Assur the rod with which God would punish the nations. But Assur was destroyed by Babylon which became the hammer with which the Lord was beating the nations and destroying them. After blindly fulfilling God’s will against Judah, Babylon would also head towards its own collapse: fifty years later, it would be destroyed by the Persians.
Jeremiah urges us not to fear the great powers of today’s world. In the past, great nations emerged and tried to destroy Christianity which had become complacent and asleep; revolutions and persecutions destroyed the fragile structures in which Christians had placed their trust. But before the next generation, another giant appears and overcomes the first, while the Church, seemingly despoiled and poorer, rises with renewed strength.
When we finish reading Jeremiah, we can turn to the 40th chapter of Isaiah: the small land of Judah will come back to life while the great empires of Assyria and Babylon will leave behind nothing but ruins.