Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, speaking after the broken-jar sign of Jeremiah 19 and suffering direct persecution from temple leadership.
Pashhur, Terror on Every Side, and the Fire Shut Up in Jeremiah’s Bones
The Lord’s word brings Jeremiah persecution, ridicule, and anguish, yet it burns with irresistible force within Him, and the Lord remains His mighty warrior against those who oppose the truth.
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The Lord’s word brings Jeremiah persecution, ridicule, and anguish, yet it burns with irresistible force within Him, and the Lord remains His mighty warrior against those who oppose the truth.
Jeremiah 20 argues that rejecting the Lord’s word often becomes hostility toward the Lord’s messenger, but persecution cannot silence the true word because the prophet is constrained by God and sustained by God.
Pashhur son of Immer, the priest and chief officer in the Lord’s temple; the people of Judah and Jerusalem; Jeremiah’s persecutors; and all who must hear the cost of rejecting the Lord’s word.
Jeremiah 20 follows Jeremiah 19, where Jeremiah smashed the clay jar and proclaimed judgment in the temple court. Pashhur, a priest and temple official, responds by beating Jeremiah and placing Him in the stocks at the Upper Gate of Benjamin at the Lord’s house. The chapter moves from public persecution to prophetic judgment against Pashhur, then into one of Jeremiah’s most intense personal laments.
The Lord’s word brings Jeremiah persecution, ridicule, and anguish, yet it burns with irresistible force within Him, and the Lord remains His mighty warrior against those who oppose the truth.
Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, speaking after the broken-jar sign of Jeremiah 19 and suffering direct persecution from temple leadership.
Pashhur son of Immer, the priest and chief officer in the Lord’s temple; the people of Judah and Jerusalem; Jeremiah’s persecutors; and all who must hear the cost of rejecting the Lord’s word.
Jeremiah 20 follows Jeremiah 19, where Jeremiah smashed the clay jar and proclaimed judgment in the temple court. Pashhur, a priest and temple official, responds by beating Jeremiah and placing Him in the stocks at the Upper Gate of Benjamin at the Lord’s house. The chapter moves from public persecution to prophetic judgment against Pashhur, then into one of Jeremiah’s most intense personal laments.
- Jeremiah faces institutional opposition, public shame, physical abuse, confinement, mockery, slander, betrayal, and emotional anguish. Temple leadership resists His message while Judah continues toward Babylonian judgment.
The chapter assumes priestly temple authority, stocks as public humiliation, gate locations as public spaces, prophetic name-signs, Babylonian conquest, exile, temple treasure plunder, divine compulsion in prophetic vocation, public derision, lament tradition, imprecatory prayer, covenant lawsuit, and birth-lament language similar to Job.
Jeremiah 20 completes the Jeremiah 11-20 conflict cycle by showing the prophet publicly persecuted and inwardly crushed. The chapter exposes the cost of bearing the Lord’s word and reveals that prophetic ministry is sustained not by emotional ease but by the Lord’s irresistible word and preserving presence. It also anticipates the suffering of Christ, the faithful prophet rejected by religious leaders, mocked, struck, and yet obedient to the Father’s word.
The chapter moves from Pashhur hearing Jeremiah’s temple proclamation, to Pashhur beating and imprisoning Jeremiah, to Jeremiah announcing Pashhur’s new name and Babylonian doom, to Jeremiah’s lament over being overpowered by the Lord’s call, to the burning word He cannot hold in, to His confidence that the Lord is with Him like a mighty warrior, to praise for deliverance, and finally to a deep birth lament expressing the prophet’s anguish.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Jeremiah 20 clarifies the gospel by showing the world’s hostility toward the true word of God and the suffering of the faithful prophet. Jeremiah is beaten, mocked, slandered, and trapped in anguish, yet He cannot silence the word. This prepares the way for Christ, the greater Prophet, who is struck, mocked, betrayed, rejected by religious leaders, and yet speaks the Father’s word perfectly.
Christ does more than endure persecution; He bears sin, suffers judgment, and rises in vindication to rescue the needy from the hands of the wicked.
Pashhur hears Jeremiah, beats Him, and places Him in the stocks at the Lord’s house.
Jeremiah renames Pashhur Terror on Every Side and announces Babylonian defeat, plunder, exile, and death.
Jeremiah laments the compulsion, ridicule, and social betrayal tied to speaking the Lord’s word.
Jeremiah confesses the Lord as mighty warrior, asks for vindication, and praises the Lord’s rescue.
Jeremiah curses the day of His birth and laments a life filled with trouble and shame.
- 20:1: Pashhur son of Immer, priest and chief officer in the temple, hears Jeremiah’s words.
- 20:2: Jeremiah is physically abused and publicly humiliated at the Upper Gate of Benjamin.
- 20:3: The Lord renames Pashhur Magor-Missabib, Terror on Every Side.
- 20:4: Pashhur will see His friends fall by the sword and will be filled with terror.
- 20:4: The Lord will hand Judah over to the king of Babylon, who will carry some away and kill others.
- 20:5: The city’s wealth, produce, valuables, and royal treasures will be given to enemies and carried to Babylon.
- 20:6: Pashhur and those to whom He prophesied lies will go into exile and die in Babylon.
- 20:7: Jeremiah cries that the Lord persuaded or overpowered Him, leaving Him mocked all day long.
- 20:8: Because He cries violence and destruction, the word of the Lord brings insult and reproach.
- 20:9: When Jeremiah tries not to speak, the word becomes like fire shut up in His bones, and He cannot hold it in.
- 20:10: Many whisper 'Terror on every side,' and even friends watch for Jeremiah to stumble.
- 20:11: Jeremiah’s persecutors will stumble and fail because the Lord is with Him.
- 20:12: Jeremiah asks the righteous Judge to let Him see vengeance on His persecutors.
- 20:13: Jeremiah sings to the Lord who rescues the needy from the hands of the wicked.
- 20:14: Jeremiah’s anguish erupts into a birth lament.
- 20:15-17: He curses the man who announced His birth and wishes that man had been like cities overthrown without pity.
- 20:18: He laments that His life has been trouble, sorrow, and shame.
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 20 argues that rejecting the Lord’s word often becomes hostility toward the Lord’s messenger, but persecution cannot silence the true word because the prophet is constrained by God and sustained by God.
From temple persecution to judgment on the persecutor, from public oracle to private lament, from burning compulsion to confidence in the mighty warrior, and from praise to unresolved birth anguish.
- 1.Institutional religion can oppose the true word of the LORD.
- 2.Persecuting the prophet cannot silence the judgment word.
- 3.False peace becomes terror when the LORD’s judgment arrives.
- 4.Babylonian judgment will expose false prophecy and false confidence.
- 5.Prophetic calling may feel like divine overpowering.
- 6.Faithful proclamation may bring ridicule rather than applause.
- 7.The LORD’s word cannot be contained by the true prophet.
- 8.Prophetic opposition includes slander and betrayal by friends.
- 9.The LORD’s presence is stronger than persecution.
- 10.The prophet entrusts vindication to the righteous Judge.
- 11.Faith can praise and lament in the same chapter.
Theological Focus
- Temple opposition
- Priestly abuse
- Stocks and public shame
- False prophecy
- Pashhur renamed
- Terror on every side
- Babylonian judgment
- Exile to Babylon
- Plunder of Jerusalem
- Prophetic compulsion
- Ridicule and reproach
- Violence and destruction
- Word like fire
- Fire in the bones
- Slander
- Betrayal by friends
- The Lord as mighty warrior
- Divine testing
- Heart and mind examined
- Vengeance entrusted to God
- Rescue of the needy
- Birth lament
- Trouble, sorrow, and shame
- Institutional Opposition to God’s Word
- Prophetic Suffering
- False Prophecy Exposed
- Terror on Every Side
- Babylon as Instrument of Judgment
- The Irresistible Word
- The Cost of Speaking Judgment
- Betrayal by Friends
- The Lord as Mighty Warrior
- The Lord Who Tests Heart and Mind
- Praise in Distress
- Unresolved Lament
- The Word of God
- False Prophecy
- Covenant Judgment
- Exile
- Divine Presence
- Divine Vindication
- Divine Omniscience
- Lament
- Christ the True Prophet
- Christ the Righteous Sufferer
Theological Themes
A temple officer and priest persecutes Jeremiah, showing that religious office does not guarantee submission to the Lord.
Jeremiah is beaten, imprisoned, mocked, slandered, and emotionally crushed because of the word He bears.
Pashhur and those who heard His lies will go into exile and die in Babylon.
The phrase becomes both Pashhur’s new name and the atmosphere of judgment and persecution.
Judah, Jerusalem’s wealth, royal treasures, and Pashhur’s household will be handed over to Babylon.
The Lord’s word burns in Jeremiah like fire shut up in His bones.
Jeremiah’s message of violence and destruction brings Him insult and reproach.
Jeremiah’s close companions watch for His fall and seek to overpower Him.
Against persecutors, the Lord is with Jeremiah like a terrifying warrior.
Jeremiah appeals to the Lord who sees inward truth and judges rightly.
Jeremiah calls for song because the Lord rescues the needy from the wicked.
The chapter ends with anguish, showing that faithful ministry can include deep sorrow before God.
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 20 shows covenant rejection reaching the point where temple leadership persecutes the covenant prophet. Pashhur’s false confidence and lies are answered by Babylonian exile. The treasures of Jerusalem and the royal house will be given over, showing that temple, monarchy, and city cannot protect a stiff-necked people who reject the Lord’s word.
- Covenant prophet abused - Jeremiah is beaten and put in stocks for speaking the Lord’s word.
- Covenant temple leadership judged - Pashhur’s office does not protect Him from the Lord’s judgment.
- Covenant falsehood exposed - Pashhur’s lies are exposed by the coming Babylonian disaster.
- Covenant city handed over - Jerusalem’s wealth, treasures, and people will be handed to Babylon.
- Covenant exile declared - Pashhur, His household, and His hearers will go into exile and die in Babylon.
- Covenant word irresistible - The Lord’s word cannot be suppressed by prophet or persecutor.
- Covenant judge sees the heart - The Lord tests the righteous and probes heart and mind.
- Covenant servant preserved - The Lord is with Jeremiah like a mighty warrior, fulfilling the promise that opponents will not prevail.
- Jeremiah 1:8 - The Lord promised to be with Jeremiah and rescue Him.
- Jeremiah 1:18-19 - Jeremiah was made a fortified city, iron pillar, and bronze wall · opponents would fight but not overcome.
- Jeremiah 19:14-15 - Jeremiah proclaimed disaster in the temple court before Pashhur beat Him.
- Jeremiah 11:20 - Jeremiah appealed earlier to the Lord who judges righteously and tests heart and mind.
- Jeremiah 17:10 - The Lord searches the heart and examines the mind.
- Job 3:1-26 - Job curses the day of His birth in anguish.
- 1 Kings 22:24-28 - Micaiah is struck and imprisoned for speaking the Lord’s word.
Canonical Connections
Jeremiah’s beating and confinement belong to the pattern of prophets suffering for the true word.
Jeremiah’s confidence in the mighty warrior echoes the Lord’s call promise.
The Lord’s word is described elsewhere as fire that consumes and tests.
Jeremiah repeatedly appeals to the Lord who sees inward reality.
Jeremiah’s curse of His birth parallels Job’s lament under suffering.
Jeremiah 20 anticipates the coming exile and plunder fulfilled later in Judah’s fall.
Jeremiah’s rejection by temple authority points forward to Christ’s rejection by Jerusalem’s leaders.
Jeremiah’s appeal for vindication is fulfilled in Christ’s perfect entrusting of Himself to the righteous Judge.
Cross References
Jeremiah 20 clarifies the gospel by showing the world’s hostility toward the true word of God and the suffering of the faithful prophet. Jeremiah is beaten, mocked, slandered, and trapped in anguish, yet He cannot silence the word. This prepares the way for Christ, the greater Prophet, who is struck, mocked, betrayed, rejected by religious leaders, and yet speaks the Father’s word perfectly.
Christ does more than endure persecution; He bears sin, suffers judgment, and rises in vindication to rescue the needy from the hands of the wicked.
- The human problem - People can hold religious office and still oppose the Lord’s word.
- The false refuge - Temple position, public authority, and false prophecy cannot prevent judgment.
- The prophetic cost - The true word brings reproach, mockery, slander, and suffering.
- The divine compulsion - The word of God burns with irresistible force in the faithful messenger.
- The preserving presence - The Lord is with His servant like a mighty warrior.
- Christ the greater Prophet - Christ fulfills the rejected-prophet pattern and speaks the Father’s word perfectly.
- Christ the righteous sufferer - Christ is mocked, struck, betrayed, and rejected, yet entrusts Himself to the righteous Judge.
- Christ the rescuer - The Lord rescues the needy · in Christ this rescue is accomplished through cross and resurrection.
- Do not use Jeremiah 20:9 as a shallow passion slogan. It is about the costly compulsion of God’s word amid suffering.
- Do not portray Jeremiah as emotionally invulnerable. His faith includes deep anguish.
- Do not treat religious leadership as automatically faithful. Pashhur’s office does not protect Him from judgment.
- Do not preach lament as unbelief. Jeremiah laments to the Lord while continuing to obey.
- Do not end with human endurance alone. The chapter points to the Lord’s sustaining presence and ultimately to Christ, the rejected and vindicated Prophet.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 20 contributes richly to Christology by portraying the rejected prophet who is struck, publicly shamed, opposed by religious authority, slandered, and yet compelled to speak the word of God. Christ fulfills this pattern perfectly: He is the true Prophet, rejected by temple authorities, struck and mocked, betrayed by those near Him, yet obedient to the Father’s word.
Jeremiah’s anguish anticipates but does not equal Christ’s greater suffering, where the faithful Son bears rejection, curse, and death to rescue the needy from the hands of the wicked.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 20 argues that rejecting the Lord’s word often becomes hostility toward the Lord’s messenger, but persecution cannot silence the true word because the prophet is constrained by God and sustained by God.
The message of God carries irresistible authority and cannot ultimately be suppressed.
God receives the cries of His servants even when they express anguish and confusion.
God ultimately judges those who oppose His word and mislead His people.
God ultimately defends and vindicates those who faithfully serve Him.
Religious leaders may falsely reassure people of peace when judgment is approaching.
Scripture allows believers to bring deep grief and frustration honestly before the Lord.
Those who serve God faithfully may endure intense emotional and spiritual distress.
Those who proclaim God’s truth often face opposition and suffering from those who reject the message.
God sustains His servants so they remain faithful to their calling despite hardship.
God’s word delivered through His prophet carries authority even when rejected by religious authorities.
The responsibility of proclaiming God’s message carries significant personal cost.
Faithful servants of God often endure ridicule, rejection, and hardship.
The Lord’s word is irresistible in Jeremiah, like fire shut up in His bones.
Jeremiah is beaten, imprisoned, mocked, slandered, and emotionally afflicted because of His calling.
Pashhur prophesied lies and will go into exile with those who heard Him.
Judah, Jerusalem’s wealth, and Pashhur’s household will be handed over to Babylon.
Pashhur and His household will go into exile and die in Babylon.
The Lord is with Jeremiah like a mighty warrior.
Jeremiah entrusts His cause to the Lord who tests heart and mind.
The Lord examines the righteous and probes heart and mind.
Jeremiah’s anguish includes complaint, confidence, praise, and birth lament.
Jeremiah’s rejected-prophet suffering anticipates Christ’s greater rejection and obedience.
Jeremiah’s unjust suffering points toward Christ, who suffers righteously and is vindicated.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Jeremiah 20 clarifies the gospel by showing the world’s hostility toward the true word of God and the suffering of the faithful prophet. Jeremiah is beaten, mocked, slandered, and trapped in anguish, yet He cannot silence the word. This prepares the way for Christ, the greater Prophet, who is struck, mocked, betrayed, rejected by religious leaders, and yet speaks the Father’s word perfectly. Christ does more than endure persecution; He bears sin, suffers judgment, and rises in vindication to rescue the needy from the hands of the wicked.
Sense Pashhur, priest and temple official
Definition A priest, son of Immer, and chief officer in the LORD’s temple.
References Jeremiah 20:1
Lexicon Pashhur, priest and temple official
Why it matters Pashhur represents temple authority opposing the true prophet.
Sense Immer, priestly family/name
Definition A priestly family or ancestor associated with Pashhur.
References Jeremiah 20:1
Lexicon Immer, priestly family/name
Why it matters The reference locates Pashhur within priestly structures.
Sense priest
Definition A cultic official responsible for temple service and instruction.
References Jeremiah 20:1
Lexicon priest
Why it matters The priestly office is used here to oppose rather than receive the Lord’s word.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense official, overseer, chief officer
Definition A person appointed to oversight or leadership authority.
References Jeremiah 20:1
Lexicon official, overseer, chief officer
Why it matters Pashhur’s temple authority heightens the seriousness of His opposition.
Sense house of the LORD, temple
Definition The temple, the central place of worship in Jerusalem.
References Jeremiah 20:1-2
Lexicon house of the LORD, temple
Why it matters The abuse occurs in connection with the Lord’s house, exposing temple false security.
Sense to strike, beat
Definition To strike, beat, smite, or wound.
References Jeremiah 20:2
Lexicon to strike, beat
Why it matters Jeremiah suffers physical abuse for speaking the Lord’s word.
Sense stocks, restraint device
Definition An instrument of confinement and public humiliation.
References Jeremiah 20:2
Lexicon stocks, restraint device
Why it matters Jeremiah is publicly shamed and restrained at the temple gate.
Sense Upper Benjamin Gate
Definition A gate associated with the temple area and Benjamin direction.
References Jeremiah 20:2
Lexicon Upper Benjamin Gate
Why it matters The location makes Jeremiah’s shame public and temple-associated.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense terror all around, terror on every side
Definition A phrase/name signifying encircling terror and judgment.
References Jeremiah 20:3-4, 20:10
Lexicon terror all around, terror on every side
Why it matters The Lord renames Pashhur according to His coming judgment.
Sense friends, lovers, those who love you
Definition Those attached to or allied with someone.
References Jeremiah 20:4
Lexicon friends, lovers, those who love you
Why it matters Pashhur will see His friends fall by the sword.
Sense king of Babylon
Definition The Babylonian ruler who will conquer Judah.
References Jeremiah 20:4
Lexicon king of Babylon
Why it matters Babylon is named as the instrument of the Lord’s judgment.
Sense to uncover, remove, go into exile
Definition To be carried away or deported into exile.
References Jeremiah 20:4, 20:6
Lexicon to uncover, remove, go into exile
Why it matters Pashhur and many in Judah will be carried to Babylon.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Construct What is this?
Sense treasures, storehouses
Definition Stored wealth or valuable goods.
References Jeremiah 20:5
Lexicon treasures, storehouses
Why it matters Jerusalem’s treasures will be plundered and taken to Babylon.
Sense precious things, valuables
Definition Costly or valuable items.
References Jeremiah 20:5
Lexicon precious things, valuables
Why it matters The city’s valuables will not protect it but become spoil.
Form in passage Niphal · Perfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense you prophesied falsely
Definition To claim prophetic speech falsely or deceptively.
References Jeremiah 20:6
Lexicon you prophesied falsely
Why it matters Pashhur’s sin includes false prophetic assurance.
Sense persuaded, enticed, overpowered
Definition To persuade, entice, or overcome by influence.
References Jeremiah 20:7
Lexicon persuaded, enticed, overpowered
Why it matters Jeremiah describes the prophetic call as stronger than His own resistance.
Sense to prevail, overpower, be able
Definition To be able, prevail, or overcome.
References Jeremiah 20:7
Lexicon to prevail, overpower, be able
Why it matters The Lord prevailed over Jeremiah’s reluctance, compelling Him to speak.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense laughter, laughingstock
Definition Laughter, ridicule, or object of mockery.
References Jeremiah 20:7
Lexicon laughter, laughingstock
Why it matters Jeremiah’s obedience makes Him an object of public ridicule.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense to mock, deride
Definition To deride, mock, or scorn.
References Jeremiah 20:7
Lexicon to mock, deride
Why it matters The prophet’s suffering includes constant social mockery.
Sense violence, wrong, oppression
Definition Violence or injustice.
References Jeremiah 20:8
Lexicon violence, wrong, oppression
Why it matters Jeremiah’s message constantly names violence and judgment.
Sense destruction, devastation
Definition Devastation, ruin, or destruction.
References Jeremiah 20:8
Lexicon destruction, devastation
Why it matters The message of destruction brings Jeremiah reproach.
Sense word of the LORD
Definition The revealed speech of the covenant LORD.
References Jeremiah 20:8-9
Lexicon word of the LORD
Why it matters The word both compels Jeremiah and brings Him reproach.
Sense reproach, disgrace, insult
Definition Shame, reproach, or insult.
References Jeremiah 20:8
Lexicon reproach, disgrace, insult
Why it matters The word of the Lord brings Jeremiah public shame.
Sense fire
Definition Fire as burning force or divine word imagery.
References Jeremiah 20:9
Lexicon fire
Why it matters The Lord’s word burns inside Jeremiah when He tries to keep silent.
Sense heart, inner person
Definition The inner center of thought, desire, will, and emotion.
References Jeremiah 20:9
Lexicon heart, inner person
Why it matters The word burns in Jeremiah’s inner person.
Sense bones
Definition Bones, often representing deep physical and inner life.
References Jeremiah 20:9
Lexicon bones
Why it matters The word’s pressure reaches Jeremiah’s deepest embodied existence.
Sense to grow weary, be exhausted
Definition To become weary or unable to continue.
References Jeremiah 20:9
Lexicon to grow weary, be exhausted
Why it matters Jeremiah becomes weary of holding in the word and cannot do it.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense whispering, evil report, slander
Definition Defaming report, whispering, or slander.
References Jeremiah 20:10
Lexicon whispering, evil report, slander
Why it matters Jeremiah is surrounded by slander and hostile rumor.
Form in passage Hiphil · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense report, declare, denounce
Definition To report, announce, or denounce.
References Jeremiah 20:10
Lexicon report, declare, denounce
Why it matters Jeremiah’s enemies urge one another to report Him.
Sense men of my peace, close friends
Definition Those who were trusted companions or allies.
References Jeremiah 20:10
Lexicon men of my peace, close friends
Why it matters Jeremiah suffers betrayal from those expected to be near Him.
Sense limping, stumbling, faltering
Definition A fall, limp, or stumbling vulnerability.
References Jeremiah 20:10
Lexicon limping, stumbling, faltering
Why it matters Jeremiah’s friends watch for His fall.
Sense mighty warrior, terrifying champion
Definition A powerful warrior or dread champion.
References Jeremiah 20:11
Lexicon mighty warrior, terrifying champion
Why it matters The Lord’s presence with Jeremiah is described as overwhelming warrior strength.
Sense pursuers, persecutors
Definition Those who chase, pursue, or persecute.
References Jeremiah 20:11
Lexicon pursuers, persecutors
Why it matters Jeremiah’s persecutors will stumble and not prevail.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to prevail, overcome
Definition To be able, prevail, or overcome.
References Jeremiah 20:11
Lexicon to prevail, overcome
Why it matters Jeremiah’s opponents will not prevail because the Lord is with Him.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense everlasting shame/disgrace
Definition A lasting shame that is not forgotten.
References Jeremiah 20:11
Lexicon everlasting shame/disgrace
Why it matters Jeremiah’s persecutors will bear the shame they tried to put on Him.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense testing the righteous
Definition Examining, proving, or testing the righteous person.
References Jeremiah 20:12
Lexicon testing the righteous
Why it matters Jeremiah appeals to the Lord who tests and knows His servant truly.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense inward parts and heart
Definition The deepest motives, thoughts, and affections.
References Jeremiah 20:12
Lexicon inward parts and heart
Why it matters The Lord sees what persecutors and observers cannot see.
Sense vengeance, vindicating justice
Definition Judicial vengeance or vindicating justice.
References Jeremiah 20:12
Lexicon vengeance, vindicating justice
Why it matters Jeremiah entrusts vengeance to the Lord, not Himself.
Form in passage Piel · Perfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense laid bare my case/cause
Definition To disclose one’s legal cause or dispute before another.
References Jeremiah 20:12
Lexicon laid bare my case/cause
Why it matters Jeremiah brings His case before the Lord as righteous judge.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense sing
Definition To sing praise.
References Jeremiah 20:13
Lexicon sing
Why it matters Jeremiah calls for praise amid suffering.
Form in passage Piel · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense praise
Definition To praise, boast in, or celebrate.
References Jeremiah 20:13
Lexicon praise
Why it matters The prophet praises the Lord who rescues the needy.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to rescue, deliver
Definition To rescue, deliver, or snatch away.
References Jeremiah 20:13
Lexicon to rescue, deliver
Why it matters The Lord rescues the needy from wicked hands.
Sense needy, poor, afflicted
Definition One who is poor, needy, weak, or vulnerable.
References Jeremiah 20:13
Lexicon needy, poor, afflicted
Why it matters Jeremiah identifies with the needy whom the Lord rescues.
Form in passage Hiphil · Participle active What is this?
Sense evildoers, wicked ones
Definition Those who do evil or harm.
References Jeremiah 20:13
Lexicon evildoers, wicked ones
Why it matters Jeremiah trusts the Lord to rescue from wicked hands.
Sense cursed
Definition Placed under curse or spoken against in lament.
References Jeremiah 20:14-15
Lexicon cursed
Why it matters Jeremiah curses the day of His birth in deep anguish.
Form in passage Qal passive · Perfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense day of birth
Definition The day on which Jeremiah was born.
References Jeremiah 20:14
Lexicon day of birth
Why it matters The birth lament expresses extreme prophetic anguish.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to overthrow, overturn
Definition To overturn, overthrow, or destroy.
References Jeremiah 20:16
Lexicon to overthrow, overturn
Why it matters Jeremiah compares the cursed messenger to cities the Lord overthrew.
Sense womb
Definition The womb, place of gestation and birth.
References Jeremiah 20:17-18
Lexicon womb
Why it matters Jeremiah laments that He was not killed in the womb, showing extreme anguish.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense trouble, toil, misery
Definition Trouble, labor, misery, or hardship.
References Jeremiah 20:18
Lexicon trouble, toil, misery
Why it matters Jeremiah summarizes His life as filled with trouble.
Sense sorrow, grief
Definition Grief, sorrow, or anguish.
References Jeremiah 20:18
Lexicon sorrow, grief
Why it matters Jeremiah’s vocation has brought deep grief.
Sense shame, disgrace
Definition Shame or disgrace.
References Jeremiah 20:18
Lexicon shame, disgrace
Why it matters Jeremiah’s days end in shame because of public reproach and prophetic suffering.
Sense terror on every side
Definition terror on every side
Why it matters The Lord renames Pashhur according to the terror coming on Him and Judah.
Sense persuade, entice, overpower
Definition persuade, entice, overpower
Why it matters Jeremiah expresses the overpowering nature of the prophetic call.
Sense inward parts and heart
Definition inward parts and heart
Why it matters The Lord sees motives and judges righteously.
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
The Lord’s word cannot be imprisoned by religious power, human shame, or the prophet’s own reluctance; it burns, judges, exposes lies, and sustains the servant through the Lord’s presence.
Help God’s people and leaders tremble at the danger of opposing the word, understand the cost of faithful ministry, and look to the Lord as mighty warrior when obedience brings pain.
Courage, truthful speech, endurance, humility, emotional honesty, discernment, prayerful dependence, refusal of false peace, and Christ-centered perseverance.
- Examine whether You resist the Lord’s word when it confronts Your position or comfort.
- Ask where You are tempted to silence truth because it brings ridicule.
- Pray for the word of God to burn rightly in Your heart, not as ego, but as holy compulsion.
- Bring slander and betrayal to the Lord rather than answering in the flesh.
- Remember that the Lord’s presence does not always remove pain, but it prevents final defeat.
- Let Jeremiah teach You that lament and faith can coexist.
- Reject any ministry success built on false peace.
- Look to Christ, the rejected and vindicated Prophet, for strength to endure.
- Jeremiah 20 warns that religious office, temple proximity, and public authority cannot protect those who reject and persecute the Lord’s word. False prophecy will be exposed, and those who oppose the truth may become terror to themselves and others.
- Treating Pashhur as merely a political opponent. - Pashhur is a priest and chief officer in the Lord’s temple, making this religious institutional opposition to the true word.
- Thinking Jeremiah’s suffering means the Lord abandoned Him. - Jeremiah suffers deeply, but He confesses that the Lord is with Him like a mighty warrior.
- Using Jeremiah 20:9 as a generic motivational slogan. - The fire in Jeremiah’s bones is the painful compulsion of the Lord’s judgment word amid persecution, not mere personal passion.
- Assuming Jeremiah’s lament is unbelief. - Jeremiah’s lament is spoken to the Lord and coexists with trust, praise, and prophetic obedience.
- Flattening the chapter into victory without sorrow. - The chapter includes confidence and praise but ends with birth lament, preserving the complexity of faithful suffering.
- Treating Pashhur’s new name as a private insult. - The renaming is a prophetic sign-name declaring Pashhur’s judgment and the terror coming on Judah.
- Ignoring false prophecy in verse 6. - Pashhur’s guilt includes prophesying lies, not only abusing Jeremiah.
- Seeing Jeremiah’s imprecation as petty revenge. - Jeremiah entrusts judgment to the Lord who tests heart and mind and judges righteously.
- Where might I be trusting religious position or activity more than submission to the Lord’s word?
- Am I willing to speak truth after suffering for it?
- Have I confused opposition to me with abandonment by God?
- Is the word of God burning within me, or do I speak only when it is convenient?
- Where am I tempted to stay silent because the message brings reproach?
- How do I respond when friends or close companions misunderstand, slander, or wait for me to fall?
- Do I believe the Lord is with His servants like a mighty warrior?
- Am I entrusting vindication to the Lord who tests heart and mind?
- Can I praise the Lord in one breath and lament honestly in the next?
- How does Jeremiah’s suffering point me to Christ, the greater rejected Prophet?
- Jeremiah 20 should be preached as a chapter on the cost of bearing the word, the danger of religious resistance, and the sustaining presence of the Lord amid anguish.
- Jeremiah’s fire-in-the-bones confession helps pastors understand the burden of speaking truth when silence would feel easier.
- Pashhur warns religious leaders that office can become a platform for opposing the Lord if the heart rejects His word.
- Jeremiah’s lament gives room for deep emotional honesty without treating anguish as spiritual failure.
- Pashhur’s lies and coming exile warn that false prophecy may comfort temporarily but collapses under God’s judgment.
- Jeremiah endures not because He is emotionally unbreakable but because the Lord is with Him like a mighty warrior.
- Jeremiah models bringing slander, betrayal, and persecution before the Lord.
- The rejected prophet motif opens a path to Christ, who is struck, mocked, rejected, and vindicated for the salvation of His people.
Jeremiah’s word in the temple court leads to abuse by a temple official.
Pashhur tries to shame Jeremiah, but the Lord names Pashhur’s destiny.
Pashhur’s lying assurance becomes terror on every side.
Jeremiah tries to stop speaking, but the word burns until He cannot hold it in.
The ridicule Jeremiah suffers outwardly becomes lament before God inwardly.
Even when friends watch for His fall, Jeremiah remembers the Lord’s presence.
Jeremiah asks for vindication and praises the Lord who rescues the needy.
The chapter refuses tidy resolution; prophetic faith can remain in anguish.
Jeremiah’s suffering anticipates the greater rejection and vindication of Christ.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from Pashhur hearing Jeremiah’s temple proclamation, to Pashhur beating and imprisoning Jeremiah, to Jeremiah announcing Pashhur’s new name and Babylonian doom, to Jeremiah’s lament over being overpowered by the Lord’s call, to the burning word He cannot hold in, to His confidence that the Lord is with Him like a mighty warrior, to praise for deliverance, and finally to a deep birth lament expressing the prophet’s anguish.
Jeremiah 20 shows covenant rejection reaching the point where temple leadership persecutes the covenant prophet. Pashhur’s false confidence and lies are answered by Babylonian exile. The treasures of Jerusalem and the royal house will be given over, showing that temple, monarchy, and city cannot protect a stiff-necked people who reject the Lord’s word.
Jeremiah 20 clarifies the gospel by showing the world’s hostility toward the true word of God and the suffering of the faithful prophet. Jeremiah is beaten, mocked, slandered, and trapped in anguish, yet He cannot silence the word. This prepares the way for Christ, the greater Prophet, who is struck, mocked, betrayed, rejected by religious leaders, and yet speaks the Father’s word perfectly.
Christ does more than endure persecution; He bears sin, suffers judgment, and rises in vindication to rescue the needy from the hands of the wicked.
Courage, truthful speech, endurance, humility, emotional honesty, discernment, prayerful dependence, refusal of false peace, and Christ-centered perseverance.
Focus Points
- Temple opposition
- Priestly abuse
- Stocks and public shame
- False prophecy
- Pashhur renamed
- Terror on every side
- Babylonian judgment
- Exile to Babylon
- Plunder of Jerusalem
- Prophetic compulsion
- Ridicule and reproach
- Violence and destruction
- Word like fire
- Fire in the bones
- Slander
- Betrayal by friends
- The Lord as mighty warrior
- Divine testing
- Heart and mind examined
- Vengeance entrusted to God
- Rescue of the needy
- Birth lament
- Trouble, sorrow, and shame
- Institutional Opposition to God’s Word
- Prophetic Suffering
- False Prophecy Exposed
- Babylon as Instrument of Judgment
- The Irresistible Word
- The Cost of Speaking Judgment
- The Lord Who Tests Heart and Mind
- Praise in Distress
- Unresolved Lament
- The Word of God
- Covenant Judgment
- Exile
- Divine Presence
- Divine Vindication
- Divine Omniscience
- Lament
- Christ the True Prophet
- Christ the Righteous Sufferer
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 20:1-6
Jer 20:4-6 Jer 20:4 . "For thus hath Jahveh said: Behold, I make thee a terror to thyself and to all thy friends, and they shall fall by the sword of their enemies and thine eyes behold it; and all Judah will I give into the hand of the king of Babylon, that he may carry them captive to Babylon and smite them with the sword. Jer 20:5 . And I will give all the stores of this city, and all its gains, and all its splendour, and all the treasures of the kings of Judah will I give into the hand of their enemies, who shall plunder them and take and bring them to Babylon.
Jer 20:6 . And thou, Pashur, and all that dwell in thine house shall go into captivity, and to Babylon shalt thou come, and there die, and there be buried, thou and all thy friends, to whom thou hast prophesied lyingly." - Pashur will become a fear or terror to himself and all his friends, because of his own and his friend’s fate; for he will see his friends fall by the sword of the enemy, and then he himself, with those of his house and his friends not as yet slain, will go forth into exile to Babylon and die there.
So that not to himself merely, but to all about him, he will be an object of fear. Näg. wrongly translates נתנך למגור, I deliver thee up to fear, and brings into the text the contrast that Pashur is not to become the victim of death itself, but of perpetual fear of death. Along with Pashur’s friends, all Judah is to be given into the hand of the king of Babylon, and be partly exiled to Babylon, partly put to death with the sword.
All the goods and gear of Jerusalem, together with the king’s treasures, are to be plundered and carried off by the enemy. We must not press "all thy friends" in Jer 20:4 and Jer 20:6; and so we escape the apparent contradiction, that while in Jer 20:4 it is said of all the friends that they shall die by the sword, it is said of all in Jer 20:6 that they shall go into exile.
The friends are those who take Pashur’s side, his partisans. From the last clause of Jer 20:6 we see that Pashur was also of the number of the false prophets, who prophesied the verse of Jeremiah’s prediction, namely, welfare and peace (cf. Jer 23:17; Jer 14:13). - This saying of Jeremiah was most probably fulfilled at the taking of Jerusalem under Jechoniah, Pashur and the better part of the people being carried off to Babylon.
The Prophet’s Complaints as to the Sufferings Met with in his Calling. - This portion contains, first, a complaint addressed to the Lord regarding the persecutions which the preaching of God’s word draws down on Jeremiah, but the complaint passes into a jubilant cry of hope (Jer 20:7-13); secondly, a cursing of the day of his birth (Jer 20:13-18). The first complaint runs thus:
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:7-13 "Thou hast persuaded me, Jahveh, and I let myself be persuaded; Thou hast laid hold on me and hast prevailed. I am become a laughter the whole day long, every one mocketh at me. Jer 20:8 . For as often as I speak, I must call out and cry violence and spoil, for the word of Jahveh is made a reproach and a derision to me all the day. Jer 20:9 . And I said, I will not more remember nor speak more in His name; then was it in my heart as burning fire, shut up in my bones, and I become weary of holding out, and cannot.
Jer 20:10. For I heard the talk of many: Fear round about! Report, and let us report him! Every man of my friendship lies in wait for my downfall: Peradventure he will let himself be enticed, that we may prevail against him and take our revenge on him. Jer 20:11. But Jahveh stands by me as a mighty warrior; therefore shall my persecutors stumble and not prevail, shall be greatly put to shame, because they have not dealt wisely, with everlasting disgrace which will not be forgotten.
Jer 20:12. And, Jahveh of hosts that trieth the righteous, that seeth reins and heart, let me see Thy vengeance on them, for to Thee have I committed my cause. Jer 20:13. Sing to Jahveh, praise Jahveh, for He saves the soul of the poor from the hand of the evil-doers." This lament as to the hatred and persecution brought upon him by the preaching of the word of the Lord, is chiefly called forth by the proceedings, recounted in Jer 20:1, Jer 20:2, of the temple-warden Pashur against him.
This is clear from the מגור ; for, as Näg. truly remarks, the use of this expression against the prophet may certainly be most easily explained by the use he had so pregnantly made of it against one so distinguished as Pashur. Besides, the bitterness of the complaint, rising at last to the extent of cursing the day of his birth (Jer 20:14.) , is only intelligible as a consequence of such ill-usage as Pashur had already inflicted on him.
For although his enemies had schemed against his life, they had never yet ventured positively to lay hands on his person. Pashur first caused him to be beaten, and then had him kept a whole night long in the torture of the stocks. From torture like this his enemies might proceed even to taking his life, if the Lord did not miraculously shield him from their vengeance.
- The complaint, Jer 20:7-13, is an outpouring of the heart to God, a prayer that begins with complaint, passes into confidence in the Lord’s protection, and ends in a triumph of hope. In Jer 20:7 and Jer 20:8 Jeremiah complains of the evil consequences of his labours. God has persuaded him to undertake the office of prophet, so that he has yielded to the call of God.
The words of Jer 20:7 are not an upbraiding, nor are they given in an upbraiding tone (Hitz.) ; for פּתּה does not mean befool, but persuade, induce by words to do a thing. חזק used transitively, but not as 1Ki 16:22, overpower (Ros. , Graf, etc.) ; for then it would not be in keeping with the following ותּוּכל, which after "overpower" would seem very feeble.
It means: lay hold of; as usually in the Hiph. , so here in Kal. It thus corresponds to חזקת יד, Isa 8:11, denoting the state of being laid hold of by the power of the Spirit of God in order to prophesy. תּוּכל, not: Thou hast been able, but: Thou hast prevailed, conquered. A sharp contrast to this is presented by the issue of his prophetic labours: I am become a laughing-stock all the day, i.
e. , incessantly. כּלּה, its (the people’s) entirety = all the people. - In Jer 20:8 "call" is explained by "cry out violence and spoil:" complain of the violence and spoliation that are practised. The word of Jahveh is become a reproach and obloquy, i. e. , the proclamation of it has brought him only contempt and obloquy. The two cases of כּי are co-ordinate; the two clauses give two reasons for everybody mocking at him.
One is objective: so often as he speaks he can do nothing but complain of violence, so that he is ridiculed by the mass of the people; and one is subjective: his preaching brings him only disgrace. Most comm. refer "violence and spoiling" to the ill-usage the prophet experiences; but this does not exhaust the reference of the words.
Jer 20:14-18 The day of his birth cursed. - Jer 20:14. "Cursed be the day wherein I was born! The day my mother bare me, let it not be blessed! Jer 20:15. Cursed be the man that brought the good tidings to my father, saying: A man-child is born to thee, who made him very glad. Jer 20:16. Let that man be as the cities which Jahveh overthrew without repenting; let him hear crying in the morning and a war-cry at noon-tide, Jer 20:17.
Because he slew me not from the womb, and so my mother should have been my grave, and her womb should have been always great. Jer 20:18. Wherefore am I come forth out of the womb to see hardship and sorrow, and that my days should wear away in shame?" Inasmuch as the foregoing lamentation had ended in assured hope of deliverance, and in the praise rendered to God therefor, it seems surprising that now there should follow curses on the day of his birth, without any hint to show that at the end this temptation, too, had been overcome.
For this reason Ew. wishes to rearrange the two parts of the complaint, setting Jer 20:14-18 before Jer 20:7-12. This transposition he holds to be so unquestionably certain, that he speaks of the order ad numbering of the verses in the text as an example, clear as it is remarkable, of displacement. But against this hypothesis we have to consider the improbability that, if individual copyists had omitted the second portion (Jer 20:14-18) or written it on the margin, others should have introduced it into an unsuitable place.
Copyists did not go to work with the biblical text in such an arbitrary and clumsy fashion. Nor is the position occupied by the piece in question so incomprehensible as Ew. imagines. The cursing of the day of his birth, or of his life, after the preceding exaltation to hopeful assurance is not psychologically inconceivable. It may well be understood, if we but think of the two parts of the lamentation as not following one another in the prophet’s soul in such immediate succession as they do in the text; if we regard them as spiritual struggles, separated by an interval of time, through which the prophet must successively pass.
In vanquishing the temptation that arose from the plots of his enemies against his life, Jeremiah had a strong support in the promise which the Lord gave him at his call, that those who strove against him should not prevail against him; and the deliverance out of the hand of Pashur which he had just experience, must have given him an actual proof that the Lord was fulfilling His promise. The feeling of this might fill the trembling heart with strength to conquer his temptation, and to elevate himself again, in the joyful confidence of faith, to the praising of the Lord, who delivers the soul of the poor from the hand of the ungodly.
But the power of the temptation was not finally vanquished by the renewal of his confidence that the Lord will defend him against all his foes. The unsuccess of his mission might stir up sore struggles in his soul, and not only rob him of all heart to continue his labours, but excite bitter discontent with a life full or hardship and sorrow - a discontent which found vent in his cursing the day of his birth.
The curse uttered in Jer 20:14-18 against the day of his birth, while it reminds us of the verses, Jer 3:3. , in which Job curses the day of his conception and of his birth, is markedly distinguished in form and substance from that dreadful utterance of Job's. Job’s words are much more violent and passionate, and are turned directly against God, who has given life to him, to a man whose way is hid, whom God hath hedged round.
Jeremiah, on the other hand, curses first the day of his birth (Jer 20:14), then the man that brought his father the joyful news of the birth of a son (Jer 20:15-17), because his life is passing away in hardship, trials, sorrow, and shame, without expressly blaming God as the author of that life. Jer 20:14 The day on which I was born, let it be cursed and not blessed, sc.
because life has never been a blessing to me. Job wishes that the day of his birth and the night of his conception may perish, be annihilated.
Jer 20:14-18 The day of his birth cursed. - Jer 20:14. "Cursed be the day wherein I was born! The day my mother bare me, let it not be blessed! Jer 20:15. Cursed be the man that brought the good tidings to my father, saying: A man-child is born to thee, who made him very glad. Jer 20:16. Let that man be as the cities which Jahveh overthrew without repenting; let him hear crying in the morning and a war-cry at noon-tide, Jer 20:17.
Because he slew me not from the womb, and so my mother should have been my grave, and her womb should have been always great. Jer 20:18. Wherefore am I come forth out of the womb to see hardship and sorrow, and that my days should wear away in shame?" Inasmuch as the foregoing lamentation had ended in assured hope of deliverance, and in the praise rendered to God therefor, it seems surprising that now there should follow curses on the day of his birth, without any hint to show that at the end this temptation, too, had been overcome.
For this reason Ew. wishes to rearrange the two parts of the complaint, setting Jer 20:14-18 before Jer 20:7-12. This transposition he holds to be so unquestionably certain, that he speaks of the order ad numbering of the verses in the text as an example, clear as it is remarkable, of displacement. But against this hypothesis we have to consider the improbability that, if individual copyists had omitted the second portion (Jer 20:14-18) or written it on the margin, others should have introduced it into an unsuitable place.
Copyists did not go to work with the biblical text in such an arbitrary and clumsy fashion. Nor is the position occupied by the piece in question so incomprehensible as Ew. imagines. The cursing of the day of his birth, or of his life, after the preceding exaltation to hopeful assurance is not psychologically inconceivable. It may well be understood, if we but think of the two parts of the lamentation as not following one another in the prophet’s soul in such immediate succession as they do in the text; if we regard them as spiritual struggles, separated by an interval of time, through which the prophet must successively pass.
In vanquishing the temptation that arose from the plots of his enemies against his life, Jeremiah had a strong support in the promise which the Lord gave him at his call, that those who strove against him should not prevail against him; and the deliverance out of the hand of Pashur which he had just experience, must have given him an actual proof that the Lord was fulfilling His promise. The feeling of this might fill the trembling heart with strength to conquer his temptation, and to elevate himself again, in the joyful confidence of faith, to the praising of the Lord, who delivers the soul of the poor from the hand of the ungodly.
But the power of the temptation was not finally vanquished by the renewal of his confidence that the Lord will defend him against all his foes. The unsuccess of his mission might stir up sore struggles in his soul, and not only rob him of all heart to continue his labours, but excite bitter discontent with a life full or hardship and sorrow - a discontent which found vent in his cursing the day of his birth.
The curse uttered in Jer 20:14-18 against the day of his birth, while it reminds us of the verses, Jer 3:3. , in which Job curses the day of his conception and of his birth, is markedly distinguished in form and substance from that dreadful utterance of Job's. Job’s words are much more violent and passionate, and are turned directly against God, who has given life to him, to a man whose way is hid, whom God hath hedged round.
Jeremiah, on the other hand, curses first the day of his birth (Jer 20:14), then the man that brought his father the joyful news of the birth of a son (Jer 20:15-17), because his life is passing away in hardship, trials, sorrow, and shame, without expressly blaming God as the author of that life. Jer 20:14 The day on which I was born, let it be cursed and not blessed, sc.
because life has never been a blessing to me. Job wishes that the day of his birth and the night of his conception may perish, be annihilated.
Jer 20:14-18 The day of his birth cursed. - Jer 20:14. "Cursed be the day wherein I was born! The day my mother bare me, let it not be blessed! Jer 20:15. Cursed be the man that brought the good tidings to my father, saying: A man-child is born to thee, who made him very glad. Jer 20:16. Let that man be as the cities which Jahveh overthrew without repenting; let him hear crying in the morning and a war-cry at noon-tide, Jer 20:17.
Because he slew me not from the womb, and so my mother should have been my grave, and her womb should have been always great. Jer 20:18. Wherefore am I come forth out of the womb to see hardship and sorrow, and that my days should wear away in shame?" Inasmuch as the foregoing lamentation had ended in assured hope of deliverance, and in the praise rendered to God therefor, it seems surprising that now there should follow curses on the day of his birth, without any hint to show that at the end this temptation, too, had been overcome.
For this reason Ew. wishes to rearrange the two parts of the complaint, setting Jer 20:14-18 before Jer 20:7-12. This transposition he holds to be so unquestionably certain, that he speaks of the order ad numbering of the verses in the text as an example, clear as it is remarkable, of displacement. But against this hypothesis we have to consider the improbability that, if individual copyists had omitted the second portion (Jer 20:14-18) or written it on the margin, others should have introduced it into an unsuitable place.
Copyists did not go to work with the biblical text in such an arbitrary and clumsy fashion. Nor is the position occupied by the piece in question so incomprehensible as Ew. imagines. The cursing of the day of his birth, or of his life, after the preceding exaltation to hopeful assurance is not psychologically inconceivable. It may well be understood, if we but think of the two parts of the lamentation as not following one another in the prophet’s soul in such immediate succession as they do in the text; if we regard them as spiritual struggles, separated by an interval of time, through which the prophet must successively pass.
In vanquishing the temptation that arose from the plots of his enemies against his life, Jeremiah had a strong support in the promise which the Lord gave him at his call, that those who strove against him should not prevail against him; and the deliverance out of the hand of Pashur which he had just experience, must have given him an actual proof that the Lord was fulfilling His promise. The feeling of this might fill the trembling heart with strength to conquer his temptation, and to elevate himself again, in the joyful confidence of faith, to the praising of the Lord, who delivers the soul of the poor from the hand of the ungodly.
But the power of the temptation was not finally vanquished by the renewal of his confidence that the Lord will defend him against all his foes. The unsuccess of his mission might stir up sore struggles in his soul, and not only rob him of all heart to continue his labours, but excite bitter discontent with a life full or hardship and sorrow - a discontent which found vent in his cursing the day of his birth.
The curse uttered in Jer 20:14-18 against the day of his birth, while it reminds us of the verses, Jer 3:3. , in which Job curses the day of his conception and of his birth, is markedly distinguished in form and substance from that dreadful utterance of Job's. Job’s words are much more violent and passionate, and are turned directly against God, who has given life to him, to a man whose way is hid, whom God hath hedged round.
Jeremiah, on the other hand, curses first the day of his birth (Jer 20:14), then the man that brought his father the joyful news of the birth of a son (Jer 20:15-17), because his life is passing away in hardship, trials, sorrow, and shame, without expressly blaming God as the author of that life. Jer 20:14 The day on which I was born, let it be cursed and not blessed, sc.
because life has never been a blessing to me. Job wishes that the day of his birth and the night of his conception may perish, be annihilated.
Jer 20:14-18 The day of his birth cursed. - Jer 20:14. "Cursed be the day wherein I was born! The day my mother bare me, let it not be blessed! Jer 20:15. Cursed be the man that brought the good tidings to my father, saying: A man-child is born to thee, who made him very glad. Jer 20:16. Let that man be as the cities which Jahveh overthrew without repenting; let him hear crying in the morning and a war-cry at noon-tide, Jer 20:17.
Because he slew me not from the womb, and so my mother should have been my grave, and her womb should have been always great. Jer 20:18. Wherefore am I come forth out of the womb to see hardship and sorrow, and that my days should wear away in shame?" Inasmuch as the foregoing lamentation had ended in assured hope of deliverance, and in the praise rendered to God therefor, it seems surprising that now there should follow curses on the day of his birth, without any hint to show that at the end this temptation, too, had been overcome.
For this reason Ew. wishes to rearrange the two parts of the complaint, setting Jer 20:14-18 before Jer 20:7-12. This transposition he holds to be so unquestionably certain, that he speaks of the order ad numbering of the verses in the text as an example, clear as it is remarkable, of displacement. But against this hypothesis we have to consider the improbability that, if individual copyists had omitted the second portion (Jer 20:14-18) or written it on the margin, others should have introduced it into an unsuitable place.
Copyists did not go to work with the biblical text in such an arbitrary and clumsy fashion. Nor is the position occupied by the piece in question so incomprehensible as Ew. imagines. The cursing of the day of his birth, or of his life, after the preceding exaltation to hopeful assurance is not psychologically inconceivable. It may well be understood, if we but think of the two parts of the lamentation as not following one another in the prophet’s soul in such immediate succession as they do in the text; if we regard them as spiritual struggles, separated by an interval of time, through which the prophet must successively pass.
In vanquishing the temptation that arose from the plots of his enemies against his life, Jeremiah had a strong support in the promise which the Lord gave him at his call, that those who strove against him should not prevail against him; and the deliverance out of the hand of Pashur which he had just experience, must have given him an actual proof that the Lord was fulfilling His promise. The feeling of this might fill the trembling heart with strength to conquer his temptation, and to elevate himself again, in the joyful confidence of faith, to the praising of the Lord, who delivers the soul of the poor from the hand of the ungodly.
But the power of the temptation was not finally vanquished by the renewal of his confidence that the Lord will defend him against all his foes. The unsuccess of his mission might stir up sore struggles in his soul, and not only rob him of all heart to continue his labours, but excite bitter discontent with a life full or hardship and sorrow - a discontent which found vent in his cursing the day of his birth.
The curse uttered in Jer 20:14-18 against the day of his birth, while it reminds us of the verses, Jer 3:3. , in which Job curses the day of his conception and of his birth, is markedly distinguished in form and substance from that dreadful utterance of Job's. Job’s words are much more violent and passionate, and are turned directly against God, who has given life to him, to a man whose way is hid, whom God hath hedged round.
Jeremiah, on the other hand, curses first the day of his birth (Jer 20:14), then the man that brought his father the joyful news of the birth of a son (Jer 20:15-17), because his life is passing away in hardship, trials, sorrow, and shame, without expressly blaming God as the author of that life. Jer 20:14 The day on which I was born, let it be cursed and not blessed, sc.
because life has never been a blessing to me. Job wishes that the day of his birth and the night of his conception may perish, be annihilated.
Jer 20:14-18 The day of his birth cursed. - Jer 20:14. "Cursed be the day wherein I was born! The day my mother bare me, let it not be blessed! Jer 20:15. Cursed be the man that brought the good tidings to my father, saying: A man-child is born to thee, who made him very glad. Jer 20:16. Let that man be as the cities which Jahveh overthrew without repenting; let him hear crying in the morning and a war-cry at noon-tide, Jer 20:17.
Because he slew me not from the womb, and so my mother should have been my grave, and her womb should have been always great. Jer 20:18. Wherefore am I come forth out of the womb to see hardship and sorrow, and that my days should wear away in shame?" Inasmuch as the foregoing lamentation had ended in assured hope of deliverance, and in the praise rendered to God therefor, it seems surprising that now there should follow curses on the day of his birth, without any hint to show that at the end this temptation, too, had been overcome.
For this reason Ew. wishes to rearrange the two parts of the complaint, setting Jer 20:14-18 before Jer 20:7-12. This transposition he holds to be so unquestionably certain, that he speaks of the order ad numbering of the verses in the text as an example, clear as it is remarkable, of displacement. But against this hypothesis we have to consider the improbability that, if individual copyists had omitted the second portion (Jer 20:14-18) or written it on the margin, others should have introduced it into an unsuitable place.
Copyists did not go to work with the biblical text in such an arbitrary and clumsy fashion. Nor is the position occupied by the piece in question so incomprehensible as Ew. imagines. The cursing of the day of his birth, or of his life, after the preceding exaltation to hopeful assurance is not psychologically inconceivable. It may well be understood, if we but think of the two parts of the lamentation as not following one another in the prophet’s soul in such immediate succession as they do in the text; if we regard them as spiritual struggles, separated by an interval of time, through which the prophet must successively pass.
In vanquishing the temptation that arose from the plots of his enemies against his life, Jeremiah had a strong support in the promise which the Lord gave him at his call, that those who strove against him should not prevail against him; and the deliverance out of the hand of Pashur which he had just experience, must have given him an actual proof that the Lord was fulfilling His promise. The feeling of this might fill the trembling heart with strength to conquer his temptation, and to elevate himself again, in the joyful confidence of faith, to the praising of the Lord, who delivers the soul of the poor from the hand of the ungodly.
But the power of the temptation was not finally vanquished by the renewal of his confidence that the Lord will defend him against all his foes. The unsuccess of his mission might stir up sore struggles in his soul, and not only rob him of all heart to continue his labours, but excite bitter discontent with a life full or hardship and sorrow - a discontent which found vent in his cursing the day of his birth.
The curse uttered in Jer 20:14-18 against the day of his birth, while it reminds us of the verses, Jer 3:3. , in which Job curses the day of his conception and of his birth, is markedly distinguished in form and substance from that dreadful utterance of Job's. Job’s words are much more violent and passionate, and are turned directly against God, who has given life to him, to a man whose way is hid, whom God hath hedged round.
Jeremiah, on the other hand, curses first the day of his birth (Jer 20:14), then the man that brought his father the joyful news of the birth of a son (Jer 20:15-17), because his life is passing away in hardship, trials, sorrow, and shame, without expressly blaming God as the author of that life. Jer 20:14 The day on which I was born, let it be cursed and not blessed, sc.
because life has never been a blessing to me. Job wishes that the day of his birth and the night of his conception may perish, be annihilated.
Jer 21:1 The Taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans. - Jer 21:1 and Jer 21:2. The heading specifying the occasion for the following prediction. "The word of the Lord came to Jeremiah when King Zedekiah sent unto him Pashur the son of Malchiah, and Zephaniah the son of Maaseiah the priest, saying: Inquire now of Jahveh for us, for Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon maketh war against us; if so be that the Lord will deal with us according to all His wondrous works, that he may go up from us."
The fighting of Nebuchadrezzar is in Jer 21:4 stated to be the besieging of the city. From this it appears that the siege had begun ere the king sent the two men to the prophet. Pashur the son of Malchiah is held by Hitz. , Graf, Näg. , etc. , to be a distinguished priest of the class of Malchiah. But this is without sufficient reason; for he is not called a priest, as is the case with Zephaniah the son of Maaseiah, and with Pashur the son of Immer (Jer 21:1).
Nor is anything proved by the circumstance that Pashur and Malchiah occur in several places as the names of priests, e. g. , 1Ch 9:12; for both names are also used of persons not priests, e. g. , Malchiah, Ezr 10:25, Ezr 10:31, and Pashur, Jer 38:1, where this son of Gedaliah is certainly a laic. From this passage, where Pashur ben Malchiah appears again, it is clear that the four men there named, who accused Jeremiah for his speech, were government authorities or court officials, since in Jer 38:4 they are called שׂרים.
Ros. is therefore right in saying of the Pashur under consideration: videtur unus ex principibus sive aulicis fuisse , cf. Jer 38:4. Only Zephaniah the son of Maaseiah is called priest; and he, acc. to Jer 29:25; Jer 37:3; Jer 52:24, held a high position in the priesthood. Inquire for us of Jahveh, i. e. , ask for a revelation for us, as 2Ki 22:13, cf. Gen 25:22.
It is not: pray for His help on our behalf, which is expressed by התפּלּל בּעדנוּ, Jer 37:3, cf. Jer 52:2. In the request for a revelation the element of intercession is certainly not excluded, but it is not directly expressed. But it is on this that the king founds his hope: Peradventure Jahveh will do with us (אותנוּ for אתּנוּ) according to all His wondrous works, i.
e. , in the miraculous manner in which He has so often saved us, e. g. , under Hezekiah, and also, during the blockade of the city by Sennacherib, had recourse to the prophet Isaiah and besought his intercession with the Lord, 2Ki 19:2. , Isa 37:2. That he (Nebuch.) may go up from us. עלה, to march against a city in order to besiege it or take it, but with מעל, to withdraw from it, cf.
Jer 37:5; 1Ki 15:19. As to the name Nebuchadrezzar, which corresponds more exactly than the Aramaic-Jewish Nebuchadnezzar with the Nebucadurriusur of the inscriptions (נבו כדר אצר, i. e. , Nebo coronam servat ), see Comm. on Daniel at Dan 1:1. The Lord’s reply through Jeremiah consists of three parts: a . The answer to the king’s hope that the Lord will save Jerusalem from the Chaldeans (Jer 21:4-7); b .
The counsel given to the people and the royal family as to how they may avert ruin (Jer 21:8-12); c . The prediction that Jerusalem will be punished for her sins (Jer 21:13 and Jer 21:14).
Jer 21:3-6 The answer. - Jer 21:3 . "And Jeremiah said to them: Thus shall ye say to Zedekiah: Jer 21:4 . Thus hath Jahveh the God of Israel said: Behold, I turn back the weapons of war that are in your hands, wherewith ye fight against the king of Babylon and the Chaldeans, which besiege you without the walls, and gather them together into the midst of this city.
Jer 21:5 . And I fight against you with outstretched hand and strong arm, and with anger and fury and great wrath, Jer 21:6 . And smite the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast; of a great plague they shall die. Jer 21:7 . And afterward, saith Jahveh, I will give Zedekiah the king of Judah, and his servants, and the people - namely, such as in this city are left of the plague, of the sword, and of the famine - into the hand of Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon, and into the hand of their enemies, and into the hand of those that seek after their life, that he may smite them according to the sharpness of the sword, not spare them, neither have pity nor mercy."
This answer is intended to disabuse the king and his servants of all hope of help from God. So far from saving them from the Chaldeans, God will fight against them, will drive back into the city its defenders that are still holding out without the walls against the enemy; consume the inhabitants by sword, pestilence, famine; deliver the king, with his servants and all that survive inside the lines of the besiegers, into the hand of the latter, and unsparingly cause them to be put to death.
"I make the weapons of war turn back" is carried on and explained by "I gather them into the city." The sense is: I will bring it about that ye, who still fight without the walls against the beleaguerers, must turn back with your weapons and retreat into the city. "Without the walls" is not to be joined to מסב, because this is too remote, and מחוּץ is by usage locative, not ablative.
It should go with "wherewith ye fight," etc. : wherewith ye fight without the walls against the beleaguering enemies. The siege had but just begun, so that the Jews were still trying to hinder the enemy from taking possession of stronger positions and from a closer blockade of the city. In this they will not succeed, but their weapons will be thrust back into the city.
Jer 21:3-6 The answer. - Jer 21:3 . "And Jeremiah said to them: Thus shall ye say to Zedekiah: Jer 21:4 . Thus hath Jahveh the God of Israel said: Behold, I turn back the weapons of war that are in your hands, wherewith ye fight against the king of Babylon and the Chaldeans, which besiege you without the walls, and gather them together into the midst of this city.
Jer 21:5 . And I fight against you with outstretched hand and strong arm, and with anger and fury and great wrath, Jer 21:6 . And smite the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast; of a great plague they shall die. Jer 21:7 . And afterward, saith Jahveh, I will give Zedekiah the king of Judah, and his servants, and the people - namely, such as in this city are left of the plague, of the sword, and of the famine - into the hand of Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon, and into the hand of their enemies, and into the hand of those that seek after their life, that he may smite them according to the sharpness of the sword, not spare them, neither have pity nor mercy."
This answer is intended to disabuse the king and his servants of all hope of help from God. So far from saving them from the Chaldeans, God will fight against them, will drive back into the city its defenders that are still holding out without the walls against the enemy; consume the inhabitants by sword, pestilence, famine; deliver the king, with his servants and all that survive inside the lines of the besiegers, into the hand of the latter, and unsparingly cause them to be put to death.
"I make the weapons of war turn back" is carried on and explained by "I gather them into the city." The sense is: I will bring it about that ye, who still fight without the walls against the beleaguerers, must turn back with your weapons and retreat into the city. "Without the walls" is not to be joined to מסב, because this is too remote, and מחוּץ is by usage locative, not ablative.
It should go with "wherewith ye fight," etc. : wherewith ye fight without the walls against the beleaguering enemies. The siege had but just begun, so that the Jews were still trying to hinder the enemy from taking possession of stronger positions and from a closer blockade of the city. In this they will not succeed, but their weapons will be thrust back into the city.