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JEREMIAH 14
PARAGRAPH DIVISIONS OF MODERN TRANSLATIONS
(The parentheses represent poetic literary units)
NASB | NKJV | NRSV | TEV | NJB |
Drought and A Prayer for Mercy | Sword, Famine and Pestilence | The Great Drought (14:1-15:4) |
The Terrible Drought | Lament Over Catastrophic Drought and the Coming Military Defeat of Jerusalem (14:1-15:9) |
14:1 | 14:1 | 14:1-6 (1-6) |
14:1-9 (1-9) |
14:1-6 (1-6) |
14:2-9 (2-9) |
14:2-6 (2-6) |
|||
14:7-9 (7-9) |
14:7-9 (7-9) |
14:7-9 (7-9) |
||
14:10-12 | 14:10 (10) |
14:10 | 14:10 | 14:10 (10) |
False Prophets | 14:11-16 | 14:11-12 | 14:11-12 | 14:11-12 |
14:13-18 | 14:13 | 14:13 | 14:13-16 | |
14:14-16 | 14:14-16 | |||
(17-18) | 14:17-18 (17-18) |
14:17-18 (17-18) |
14:17-18 (17-18) |
14:17-18 (17-18) |
The People Plead For Mercy | The People Plead with the Lord | |||
14:19-22 (19-22) |
14:19-22 (19-22) |
14:19-22 (19-22) |
14:19-22 (19-22) |
14:19-15:9 (19-22) |
READING CYCLE THREE (see "Bible Interpretation Seminar")
FOLLOWING THE ORIGINAL AUTHOR'S INTENT AT PARAGRAPH LEVEL
This is a study guide commentary, which
means that you are responsible for your own interpretation of the Bible. Each of us must walk in the
light we have. You, the Bible, and the Holy Spirit are priority in interpretation. You must not
relinquish this to a commentator.
Read the chapter in one sitting. Identify the subjects (reading cycle #3). Compare your subject divisions with the five translations above. Paragraphing is not inspired, but it is the key to following the original author's intent, which is the heart of interpretation. Every paragraph has one and only one subject.
CONTEXTUAL INSIGHTS
WORD AND PHRASE STUDY
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: JEREMIAH 14:1
1That which came as the word of the Lord to Jeremiah in regard to the drought:
14:1 "That which came as the word of the Lord to Jeremiah" This is a rather unusual phrase found in Jer. 46:1; 47:1; 49:34. It is an assertion of revelation.
▣ "drought" This is literally "droughts" (BDB 131, cf. NKJV, JPSOA). We learn from Lev. 26:19-20; Deut. 11:17; 28:23-24 (the opposite of Jer. 28:12) that drought was one of the covenant curses if the people of God did not fulfill their obligations. Throughout the OT drought is used as a way to force the people of God to depend on Him. The problem here was they thought Ba'al worship was insuring the rains (cf. Jer. 5:24).
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: JEREMIAH 14:2-9
2"Judah mourns
And her gates languish;
They sit on the ground in mourning,
And the cry of Jerusalem has ascended.
3Their nobles have sent their servants for water;
They have come to the cisterns and found no water.
They have returned with their vessels empty;
They have been put to shame and humiliated,
And they cover their heads.
4Because the ground is cracked,
For there has been no rain on the land;
The farmers have been put to shame,
They have covered their heads.
5For even the doe in the field has given birth only to abandon her young,
Because there is no grass.
6The wild donkeys stand on the bare heights;
They pant for air like jackals,
Their eyes fail
For there is no vegetation.
7Although our iniquities testify against us,
O Lord, act for Your name's sake!
Truly our apostasies have been many,
We have sinned against You.
8O Hope of Israel,
Its Savior in time of distress,
Why are You like a stranger in the land
Or like a traveler who has pitched his tent for the night?
9Why are You like a man dismayed,
Like a mighty man who cannot save?
Yet You are in our midst, O Lord,
And we are called by Your name;
Do not forsake us!"
14:2 This verse contains a series of mourning VERBS.
The drought caused the Judeans to pray (cf. Jer. 14:7-9).
▣ "her gates" This is the place where the life of the city was centralized. It was a place of social and civic justice (i.e., Deut. 16:18; Ruth 4).
▣ "the cry of Jerusalem has ascended" The prayers of these unrepentant idolaters will not be heard (cf. Jer. 11:11; Isa. 1:15; Zech. 7:13).
14:3 This verse describes the wealthy seeking water.
Therefore, the wealthy
▣ As Jer. 14:3 describes the wealthy, Jer. 14:4 describes the farmer's problem (i.e., no water).
Therefore, the farmers
14:5-6 The results of the drought on the wildlife is described.
All creation is affected by human sin (cf. Genesis 3; Rom. 8:18-23), note Jer. 12:4,11! YHWH's covenant was targeted to agricultural blessings of the ANE. Its violation resulted in agricultural failures (cf. Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 27-28).
14:7 Verse 7 should begin a new paragraph (cf. NKJV, NRSV, NJB). Notice the thrust of the verse is a corporate intercession ("our," "we"). Jeremiah basically confesses the following sins of the people.
Here Jeremiah collectively confesses the sins of Israel, like Abraham, Moses (see note at Jer. 15:1), the high priest (i.e., Leviticus 16), or like the father of a family (i.e., Job 1:5).
It is also possible that Jer. 14:7-9 were temple liturgy, said on specific feast or fast days.
SPECIAL TOPIC: INTERCESSORY PRAYER
▣ "O Lord, act for Your name's sake" Jeremiah does not plead for God's forgiveness based on the people's worthiness, but on God's character (cf. Ezek. 20:9,14,22,24; 36:22,23). He is the God who acts (BDB 793, KB 889, Qal IMPERATIVE). The hope of Israel is in the character of God.
SPECIAL TOPIC: CHARACTERISTICS OF ISRAEL'S GOD (OT)
SPECIAL TOPIC: "THE NAME" OF YHWH
▣ Notice how Judah is described.
14:8 YHWH (specified in the LXX of Jer. 14:8) is described by two covenant titles.
▣ "Why are You like a stranger in the land
Or like a traveler who has pitched his tent for the night" This is very similar to Jer. 9:2. Verses 8c-9e are the people's response to Jeremiah's message. They suggest a shocking picture of YHWH as someone who is incapable and doesn't care, when in reality, He cared deeply as we have seen in Jer. 8:18-9:16. It was not YHWH's weakness but the people's sin that forced Him to act. The problem was not YHWH but idolatry (cf. Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 27-28).
14:9 | |
NASB | "dismayed" |
NKJV | "astonished" |
NRSV | "bemused" |
TEV | "taken by surprise" |
NJB | "confused" |
JPSOA | "who is stunned" |
REB | "suddenly overcome" |
LXX | "asleep" |
NET Bible | "helpless" |
This is the only time this word appears in the OT. The Hebrew term (BDB 187, KB 214, Niphal PARTICIPLE), according to BDB, means "astonish," but KB alludes to a seventh century B.C. inscription where it contextually means "helpless." Hapax Legomenon (words used only once) are so hard to translate. The proper procedure is to look at
The LXX's meaning comes from a one consonant change in the MT.
14:9c-e This is theologically similar to Jer. 14:7b. It magnifies YHWH.
Because of these two truths, these lines ask YHWH not to forsake them (BDB 628, KB 679, Hiphil IMPERFECT used in a JUSSIVE sense). This is an unusual meaning for this VERB. It is found only here and Ps. 119:121, in the sense of "abandon." Its basic meaning is "rest," but it is used in the sense of "remain" in Jer. 27:11.
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: JEREMIAH 14:10-12
10Thus says the Lord to this people, "Even so they have loved to wander; they have not kept their feet in check. Therefore the Lord does not accept them; now He will remember their iniquity and call their sins to account." 11So the Lord said to me, "Do not pray for the welfare of this people. 12When they fast, I am not going to listen to their cry; and when they offer burnt offering and grain offering, I am not going to accept them. Rather I am going to make an end of them by the sword, famine and pestilence."
14:10-12 This is God's response to Jeremiah's intercessory prayer. It is shocking in its harsh statements. He characterizes Judah.
Therefore, YHWH will
14:12 "burnt offering and grain offering" These are two of the types of offerings discussed in Leviticus 1-7 (burnt ‒ BDB 750; grain ‒ BDB 585).
SPECIAL TOPIC: SACRIFICIAL SYSTEMS OF THE ANE , V. A. and B.
▣ "sword, famine and pestilence" These three form the triad of the terrible results of invasion (cf. Jer. 5:12; 14:15; 27:8; 29:18). They are the predicted consequences of covenant disobedience (cf. Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 28).
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: JEREMIAH 14:13-18
13But, "Ah, Lord God!" I said, "Look, the prophets are telling them, 'You will not see the sword nor will you have famine, but I will give you lasting peace in this place.'" 14Then the Lord said to me, "The prophets are prophesying falsehood in My name. I have neither sent them nor commanded them nor spoken to them; they are prophesying to you a false vision, divination, futility and the deception of their own minds. 15Therefore thus says the Lord concerning the prophets who are prophesying in My name, although it was not I who sent them-yet they keep saying, 'There will be no sword or famine in this land'-by sword and famine those prophets shall meet their end! 16The people also to whom they are prophesying will be thrown out into the streets of Jerusalem because of the famine and the sword; and there will be no one to bury them-neither them, nor their wives, nor their sons, nor their daughters-for I will pour out their own wickedness on them.
17You will say this word to them,
'Let my eyes flow down with tears night and day,
And let them not cease;
For the virgin daughter of my people has been crushed with a mighty blow,
With a sorely infected wound.
18'If I go out to the country,
Behold, those slain with the sword!
Or if I enter the city,
Behold, diseases of famine!
For both prophet and priest
Have gone roving about in the land that they do not know.'"
14:13 This is the prophet's attempt to blame the people's religious apostasy on the religious leaders. Although there is some truth to this, the leaders were certainly far from God, the people were still responsible for their own acts (cf. Ezekiel 18). They should have recognized a false teacher (cf. Deut. 13:1-5; 18:22).
▣ "but I will give you lasting peace in this place" This was the promise of YHWH that the false prophets kept alluding to. It was surely a covenant promise. Isaiah uses it in encouraging Hezekiah not to surrender to the Assyrians (cf. Isaiah 36-37). But Jeremiah makes it very plain that this promise had conditions, covenant conditions that Judah had hopelessly violated! Invasion and exile were coming!
See D. Brent Sandy, Plowshares and Pruning Hooks, pp. 44-47, "Conditional or Unconditional." This is crucial in understanding the relationship between the OT and the NT.
SPECIAL TOPIC: WHY DO OT COVENANT PROMISES SEEM SO DIFFERENT FROM NT COVENANT PROMISES?
14:14-18 This is God's response to the prophet's prayer to forgive the people because of the false teachers (cf. Jer. 23; 28; Deut. 18:9-22). YHWH admits that the leaders had been idolatrous, but also that the people are responsible. The prophets will bear the burden of their sin as will the people (cf. Ezekiel 18).
Notice how YHWH characterizes the false prophets (cf. Deut. 13:1-5; 18:9-22).
14:17-18 In this poetic strophe we again see, not only the grief of the prophet, but the grief of YHWH (cf. Jer. 8:18-9:9). It is such an important truth that God does not rejoice in judgment but rejoices in blessing. Fallen humans force Him to discipline them because of their flagrant, continuing rebellion and willful idolatry. The discipline is an act of parental love and desire to use Israel to inform the nations about Himself.
14:17d-e These last two poetic lines describe the covenant people (i.e., the virgin daughter, cf. Jer. 8:21; 18:13; 31:4,21; 46:11; see full note at Jer. 46:11).
14:18 | |
NASB | "have gone roving about in the land that they do not know" |
NKJV | "go about. . ." |
NRSV | "roam the country at their wit's end" |
TEV (footnote) | "have been dragged away to a land they know nothing about" |
NJB | "ply their trade throughout the land, and have no knowledge" |
JPSOA | "roam the land, they know not where" |
REB | "wander without rest in the land" |
Peshitta | "begging in the land unrecognized" |
The NJB is closest to the MT. The NASB, NKJV, JPSOA follow the LXX. The options are
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: JEREMIAH 14:19-22
19Have You completely rejected Judah?
Or have You loathed Zion?
Why have You stricken us so that we are beyond healing?
We waited for peace, but nothing good came;
And for a time of healing, but behold, terror!
20We know our wickedness, O Lord ,
The iniquity of our fathers, for we have sinned against You.
21Do not despise us, for Your own name's sake;
Do not disgrace the throne of Your glory;
Remember and do not annul Your covenant with us.
22Are there any among the idols of the nations who give rain?
Or can the heavens grant showers?
Is it not You, O Lord our God?
Therefore we hope in You,
For You are the one who has done all these things.
14:19-22 These verses contain the prophet's questions and prayers for God's mercy. One wonders if these may also be liturgical pieces quoted regularly at the temple (cf. Jer. 14:7-9).
14:19 There are three questions here which are emphatic in the Hebrew.
This third question is the central issue — Has the conditional covenant with Abraham been totally abrogated by Israel and Judah's continual disobedience? Well, yes and no!
14:20-22 The prophet attempts a corporate prayer (see SPECIAL TOPIC: INTERCESSORY PRAYER) again.
In light of these confessions Jeremiah pleads for YHWH to act because of His own character and purposes (cf. Jer. 14:7; Ezek. 36:22-38).
14:20 All three Hebrew words for sin are found in this verse, which shows the waywardness of the people of God.
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