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Jeremiah 35

The Rekabites Obey Their Father, but Judah Refuses the Lord

The Rekabites’ faithful obedience to their ancestor exposes Judah’s shameful refusal to obey the Lord, who repeatedly sent His prophets and called His people to turn from evil.

Chapter Summary

The Rekabites’ faithful obedience to their ancestor exposes Judah’s shameful refusal to obey the Lord, who repeatedly sent His prophets and called His people to turn from evil.

Overview

Jeremiah 35 argues that Judah's disobedience is inexcusable. The Rekabites obeyed the command of their human ancestor Jonadab for generations, even under displacement and pressure. Judah, however, refused the repeated speech of the Lord, who rose early and sent prophets again and again. The issue is not that Rekabite lifestyle practices are binding on all God's people, but that their steadfast obedience exposes Judah's failure to listen.

The chapter reveals the seriousness of hearing. Judah did not merely lack information. They rejected repeated calls to turn from wicked ways, reform their actions, abandon other gods, and remain in the land. Therefore disaster is not arbitrary; it is the righteous consequence of refusing the Lord's persistent word.

Context
Author

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

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, especially those who had refused repeated prophetic calls to repentance.

Setting

The chapter is set during the reign of Jehoiakim son of Josiah, when Babylonian pressure is rising and the Rekabites have taken refuge in Jerusalem because of invading armies.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from the Lord's command to test the Rekabites with wine, to their refusal based on ancestral obedience, to the Lord's contrast between their faithfulness and Judah's refusal to listen, and finally to judgment on Judah and blessing on the Rekabites.

Covenant Significance

Jeremiah 35 is a covenant contrast chapter. The Rekabites are not the central covenant nation, yet they preserve obedience to their father's instruction. Judah, the covenant people who possess the Lord's word and temple, refuses the Lord's repeated prophetic commands. The chapter exposes covenant privilege without covenant obedience as greater guilt.

Gospel Clarity

Jeremiah 35 clarifies the gospel by revealing that the human problem is not merely ignorance of God's will but refusal to listen. Judah had prophets, warnings, commands, temple access, and time to repent, yet refused. The gospel answers this refusal not by lowering the demand for obedience but by giving Christ, the obedient Son, who fulfills righteousness and establishes the New Covenant. In Him, sinners are forgiven for their refusal and renewed by the Spirit to become people who hear and obey the Lord's word.

Focus Points

  • Obedience and Hearing
  • Generational Faithfulness
  • Prophetic Persistence
  • Refusal to Listen
  • Repentance
  • Idolatry
  • Embodied Rebuke
  • Judgment According to Refused Word
  • Rewarded Faithfulness
  • Authority of God's Word
  • Human Responsibility
  • Prophetic Ministry
  • Judgment
  • Obedience
  • Christ's Obedience
  • New Covenant Transformation

Passages

Chapter opening: Jeremiah 35:1-11

Book Arc