Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah before, during, and after the fall of Jerusalem.
Jerusalem Falls, Zedekiah Is Captured, and the Lord Preserves His Servants
Jerusalem falls exactly as the Lord said, proving that His word of judgment cannot fail, yet the Lord also preserves Jeremiah and rescues Ebed-Melek because His mercy is as sure as His judgment.
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Jerusalem falls exactly as the Lord said, proving that His word of judgment cannot fail, yet the Lord also preserves Jeremiah and rescues Ebed-Melek because His mercy is as sure as His judgment.
Jeremiah 39 argues that the Lord's word is certain in both judgment and mercy. Jerusalem falls not because Babylon is ultimate, but because the Lord has spoken judgment against a city that refused His word. Zedekiah's end is the tragic fulfillment of the warnings He feared too much to obey. He tried to avoid shame by refusing surrender, but He receives deeper shame, family loss, blindness, chains, and exile.
Yet the chapter also shows that judgment is not indiscriminate chaos. Jeremiah is preserved, and Ebed-Melek is rescued because He trusted the Lord. The same fall that crushes the unbelieving king becomes the context in which the Lord vindicates His prophet and protects a faithful outsider.
Judah, survivors of Jerusalem's fall, exiles, and later readers needing to understand the theological meaning of Jerusalem's destruction.
The final Babylonian siege of Jerusalem under Zedekiah and the immediate aftermath of the city's fall.
Jerusalem falls exactly as the Lord said, proving that His word of judgment cannot fail, yet the Lord also preserves Jeremiah and rescues Ebed-Melek because His mercy is as sure as His judgment.
Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah before, during, and after the fall of Jerusalem.
Judah, survivors of Jerusalem's fall, exiles, and later readers needing to understand the theological meaning of Jerusalem's destruction.
The final Babylonian siege of Jerusalem under Zedekiah and the immediate aftermath of the city's fall.
- The city suffers siege, military breach, execution of leaders, royal humiliation, burning of homes, deportation, and land redistribution to the poor who remain.
Jeremiah 39 is the historical fulfillment of decades of prophetic warning and a major turning point from pre-exilic warning to post-fall survival, remnant life, and continued prophetic ministry.
The chapter moves from the Babylonian siege and breach of Jerusalem, to Zedekiah's flight and capture, to the destruction and deportation of the city, to Jeremiah's release, and finally to the Lord's promise of deliverance for Ebed-Melek.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Jeremiah 39 forms reverence before the fulfilled word, sober fear of disobedience, trust in the Lord amid judgment, and hope in the faithful King who preserves His people.
- 1-3: Jerusalem is besieged, breached, and occupied by Babylonian officials.
- 4-7: Zedekiah flees but is overtaken, judged, blinded, bound, and taken to Babylon.
- 8-10: Babylon burns the city, destroys its walls, deports survivors, and leaves some of the poor with land.
- 11-14: Nebuchadnezzar commands that Jeremiah be protected, and He is released into Gedaliah's care.
- 15-18: The Lord promises Ebed-Melek personal deliverance amid the disaster He will witness.
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 39 argues that the Lord's word is certain in both judgment and mercy. Jerusalem falls not because Babylon is ultimate, but because the Lord has spoken judgment against a city that refused His word. Zedekiah's end is the tragic fulfillment of the warnings He feared too much to obey. He tried to avoid shame by refusing surrender, but He receives deeper shame, family loss, blindness, chains, and exile.
Yet the chapter also shows that judgment is not indiscriminate chaos. Jeremiah is preserved, and Ebed-Melek is rescued because He trusted the Lord. The same fall that crushes the unbelieving king becomes the context in which the Lord vindicates His prophet and protects a faithful outsider.
From siege, to breach, to royal judgment, to city destruction, to prophetic preservation, to personal rescue for Ebed-Melek.
- 1.The fall of Jerusalem fulfills the LORD's word.
- 2.Zedekiah's disobedience leads to the shame he feared.
- 3.Babylon is an instrument under divine sovereignty.
- 4.Judgment distinguishes between hardened rebellion and trusting faith.
- 5.The LORD preserves faithful witnesses through the collapse of systems around them.
- 6.Trust in the LORD is safer than fear of men.
- 7.The poor remnant remains in the land under changed conditions.
Theological Focus
- Fulfilled Judgment
- The Collapse of Fearful Kingship
- Divine Sovereignty Over Empires
- Prophetic Vindication
- Mercy Amid Judgment
- Trust in the Lord
- Remnant and Land
- The Cost of Refusing the Word
- Fulfillment of God's Word
- Divine Judgment
- Divine Mercy
- Providence
- Fear of Man
- Remnant
- Failed Kingship
- Christ the Faithful King
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 39 is the historical arrival of covenant curse on Jerusalem. The city, king, palace, walls, and people come under the consequences of generations of covenant disobedience. Yet the chapter also preserves covenant mercy: Jeremiah remains among the people, the poor remnant is left with land, and Ebed-Melek is rescued because He trusts in the Lord. Judgment falls, but the Lord's purpose continues.
- Siege, breach, burning, exile, royal humiliation, and loss of land security fulfill covenant judgment patterns.
- Zedekiah's capture and exile display the visible collapse of Judah's monarchy under judgment.
- The covenant lawsuit preached by Jeremiah is confirmed by historical fulfillment.
- Some poor people remain in the land and receive fields and vineyards.
- Ebed-Melek is personally rescued because He trusted the Lord.
- Jeremiah remains with the people, preparing for the post-destruction narratives.
Canonical Connections
Jerusalem falls exactly as the Lord said, proving that His word of judgment cannot fail, yet the Lord also preserves Jeremiah and rescues Ebed-Melek because His mercy is as sure as His judgment.
Jeremiah 39 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's warnings are not empty threats and God's mercy is not vague sentiment. Zedekiah refused the word and came under judgment. Ebed-Melek trusted the Lord and received life as His prize. The chapter does not teach salvation by heroic works, but it does show that trust in the Lord is the dividing line amid judgment.
The gospel fulfills this pattern in Christ. Jesus, the faithful King, enters the judgment sinners deserve, rises in victory, and rescues all who trust in Him. The fall of Jerusalem warns that refusing God's word leads to ruin; the rescue of Ebed-Melek points to the mercy God gives to those who entrust themselves to Him.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 39 contributes to Christ-centered theology by showing that judgment on Jerusalem and the Davidic king raises the question of how the promises of Davidic rule, covenant restoration, and mercy will continue after the monarchy collapses visibly. Zedekiah is not the faithful king who can save His people. He is blinded, bound, and exiled. The chapter therefore deepens longing for the righteous Branch promised earlier in Jeremiah, the King who will execute justice and righteousness.
At the same time, the preservation of Jeremiah and the rescue of Ebed-Melek show that the Lord knows how to preserve those who trust Him amid judgment. In Christ, the true King bears judgment, secures mercy, gathers the remnant, and fulfills the hope that Zedekiah could not.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 39 argues that the Lord's word is certain in both judgment and mercy. Jerusalem falls not because Babylon is ultimate, but because the Lord has spoken judgment against a city that refused His word. Zedekiah's end is the tragic fulfillment of the warnings He feared too much to obey. He tried to avoid shame by refusing surrender, but He receives deeper shame, family loss, blindness, chains, and exile.
Yet the chapter also shows that judgment is not indiscriminate chaos. Jeremiah is preserved, and Ebed-Melek is rescued because He trusted the Lord. The same fall that crushes the unbelieving king becomes the context in which the Lord vindicates His prophet and protects a faithful outsider.
Israel’s national suffering reflects the covenant curses warned in the Mosaic law.
God executes judgment against persistent rebellion when His warnings are ignored.
God recognizes and rewards acts of righteousness even when they come from unexpected individuals.
God sovereignly preserves His servants even through the actions of foreign rulers.
Those who trust in the Lord receive His protection and favor.
Those who remain faithful to proclaim God’s truth will ultimately be vindicated.
The fulfillment of Jeremiah’s prophecies demonstrates that God’s word always comes to pass.
Even in judgment God preserves a remnant to continue His redemptive purposes.
God governs the actions of kings and empires to fulfill His purposes.
God’s mercy extends beyond Israel to those who demonstrate genuine faith.
Jerusalem's fall fulfills the word the Lord spoke repeatedly through Jeremiah.
The siege, breach, burning, exile, and royal punishment express the Lord's judgment against Judah.
Jeremiah is preserved and Ebed-Melek is rescued amid the fall.
The Lord uses Babylonian officials to protect Jeremiah and fulfill His purposes.
Zedekiah's fear-driven refusal leads to deeper judgment and shame.
Ebed-Melek escapes with His life because He trusted in the Lord.
Some poor people are left in the land and receive vineyards and fields.
Zedekiah's fall exposes the need for the righteous Davidic King promised elsewhere in Jeremiah.
The collapse of Zedekiah points canonically toward Christ, the King who bears judgment and rescues His people.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Jeremiah 39 forms reverence before the fulfilled word, sober fear of disobedience, trust in the Lord amid judgment, and hope in the faithful King who preserves His people.
Sense to besiege, confine, lay siege
Definition To besiege or press a city militarily.
References Jeremiah 39:1
Lexicon to besiege, confine, lay siege
Why it matters The siege is the historical pressure through which the Lord's warning is fulfilled.
Form in passage Hophal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense to split, break through, breach
Definition To split open or break through a wall or barrier.
References Jeremiah 39:2
Lexicon to split, break through, breach
Why it matters The breaching of Jerusalem's wall marks the irreversible arrival of judgment.
Sense gate, city entrance, place of authority
Definition A city gate, often a place of judgment, authority, and public administration.
References Jeremiah 39:3
Lexicon gate, city entrance, place of authority
Why it matters Babylonian officials sit in the gate, symbolizing Jerusalem's conquered authority.
Sense to flee, run away
Definition To flee or escape from danger.
References Jeremiah 39:4
Lexicon to flee, run away
Why it matters Zedekiah flees instead of obeying the Lord's prior call to surrender.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense king's garden
Definition A royal garden area connected with the escape route from Jerusalem.
References Jeremiah 39:4
Lexicon king's garden
Why it matters The royal escape route contrasts with Zedekiah's failed kingship and inability to escape God's word.
Sense Arabah, desert plain
Definition The Jordan Valley or desert plain region.
References Jeremiah 39:4
Lexicon Arabah, desert plain
Why it matters Zedekiah flees toward the Arabah but is overtaken before escape is achieved.
Sense to pursue, chase, follow after
Definition To pursue or chase an enemy or fugitive.
References Jeremiah 39:5
Lexicon to pursue, chase, follow after
Why it matters The Babylonian pursuit shows that Zedekiah cannot outrun the judgment the Lord had spoken.
Sense to overtake, reach, catch up with
Definition To overtake or catch someone in pursuit.
References Jeremiah 39:5
Lexicon to overtake, reach, catch up with
Why it matters Zedekiah is overtaken in the plains of Jericho, proving flight cannot escape the Lord's judgment.
Sense Riblah, Babylonian military headquarters location
Definition A location in Hamath where Nebuchadnezzar held court and pronounced judgment.
References Jeremiah 39:5-6
Lexicon Riblah, Babylonian military headquarters location
Why it matters Zedekiah is brought to Riblah for sentencing by Nebuchadnezzar.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense speak judgments, pronounce sentence
Definition To pronounce judicial decisions or sentences.
References Jeremiah 39:5
Lexicon speak judgments, pronounce sentence
Why it matters Nebuchadnezzar's sentence against Zedekiah functions as the historical execution of the Lord's prior prophetic sentence.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to slaughter, kill
Definition To slaughter or kill, often violently.
References Jeremiah 39:6
Lexicon to slaughter, kill
Why it matters Zedekiah's sons and nobles are killed before His eyes, intensifying the royal judgment.
Sense eyes, sight
Definition Eyes or faculty of sight.
References Jeremiah 39:6-7
Lexicon eyes, sight
Why it matters Zedekiah's last sight is His sons' death before He is blinded, a severe sign of judgment.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Piel · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to blind, put out eyes
Definition To blind or deprive of sight.
References Jeremiah 39:7
Lexicon to blind, put out eyes
Why it matters Zedekiah's physical blindness reflects the tragic end of His spiritual refusal to see and obey.
Sense bronze fetters, bronze chains
Definition Bronze chains or shackles used for prisoners.
References Jeremiah 39:7
Lexicon bronze fetters, bronze chains
Why it matters The king who refused obedient surrender is taken to Babylon in chains.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Common · Plural What is this?
Sense to burn, consume by fire
Definition To burn or consume with fire.
References Jeremiah 39:8
Lexicon to burn, consume by fire
Why it matters Jerusalem's burning fulfills Jeremiah's warnings and marks the city under covenant judgment.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Construct What is this?
Sense walls, city defenses
Definition Defensive city walls.
References Jeremiah 39:8
Lexicon walls, city defenses
Why it matters The breaking of Jerusalem's walls signifies the end of its security and independence.
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to exile, deport, uncover
Definition To take into exile or deport from the land.
References Jeremiah 39:9
Lexicon to exile, deport, uncover
Why it matters Deportation fulfills the exile warnings given through Jeremiah.
Sense poor of the people, lowly people
Definition The poor, lowly, or socially powerless people of the land.
References Jeremiah 39:10
Lexicon poor of the people, lowly people
Why it matters Some of the poor are left in the land and receive vineyards and fields, showing a remnant reversal within judgment.
Form in passage Both · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense vineyards
Definition Vineyards or cultivated grape fields.
References Jeremiah 39:10
Lexicon vineyards
Why it matters The poor receive vineyards, a surprising land provision after the city's devastation.
Sense fields, agricultural plots
Definition Agricultural land or fields.
References Jeremiah 39:10
Lexicon fields, agricultural plots
Why it matters Land given to the poor points to remnant survival and reversal after judgment.
Sense Nebuzaradan, commander of the imperial guard
Definition A Babylonian official responsible for carrying out orders after Jerusalem's fall.
References Jeremiah 39:9-13
Lexicon Nebuzaradan, commander of the imperial guard
Why it matters He becomes the means through which Jeremiah is protected and released.
Sense set your eyes on him, look after him
Definition An idiom meaning to attend carefully to someone.
References Jeremiah 39:12
Lexicon set your eyes on him, look after him
Why it matters Nebuchadnezzar orders careful protection for Jeremiah, reversing Judah's mistreatment of Him.
Form in passage Qal · Jussive · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense do not do him any harm
Definition A command not to injure or mistreat someone.
References Jeremiah 39:12
Lexicon do not do him any harm
Why it matters Jeremiah is protected by the very empire He had been accused of favoring, under the Lord's providence.
Sense court of the guard, guarded courtyard
Definition A guarded courtyard where Jeremiah was confined.
References Jeremiah 39:14-15
Lexicon court of the guard, guarded courtyard
Why it matters Jeremiah is taken from the place of confinement into protected release.
Sense Gedaliah, 'Yahweh is great'
Definition Son of Ahikam, entrusted with Jeremiah and later appointed over the remnant in Judah.
References Jeremiah 39:14
Lexicon Gedaliah, 'Yahweh is great'
Why it matters Gedaliah becomes central to the immediate post-fall remnant narrative.
Sense Ebed-Melek, servant of the king
Definition The Cushite palace official who rescued Jeremiah from the cistern.
References Jeremiah 39:15-18
Lexicon Ebed-Melek, servant of the king
Why it matters He receives a personal promise of rescue because He trusted in the Lord.
Sense Cushite, person from Cush
Definition A person associated with Cush, often south of Egypt.
References Jeremiah 39:16
Lexicon Cushite, person from Cush
Why it matters The Cushite outsider trusts the Lord and is rescued, contrasting with Judah's unbelieving leaders.
Sense to rescue, deliver, snatch away
Definition To rescue or deliver from danger.
References Jeremiah 39:17-18
Lexicon to rescue, deliver, snatch away
Why it matters The Lord promises to rescue Ebed-Melek from the men He fears.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense fall by the sword, die in battle or execution
Definition To die by violent sword judgment.
References Jeremiah 39:18
Lexicon fall by the sword, die in battle or execution
Why it matters Ebed-Melek will not die by the sword in the city's fall.
Sense your life as spoil, escape with life
Definition An idiom meaning one's life will be preserved as the prize or spoil.
References Jeremiah 39:18
Lexicon your life as spoil, escape with life
Why it matters The same life-as-spoil promise associated with surrender is given to Ebed-Melek because He trusted the Lord.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to trust, rely upon, feel secure
Definition To trust, rely upon, or place confidence in someone.
References Jeremiah 39:18
Lexicon to trust, rely upon, feel secure
Why it matters Ebed-Melek's deliverance is explicitly grounded in His trust in the Lord.
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
Jeremiah 39 forms reverence before the fulfilled word, sober fear of disobedience, trust in the Lord amid judgment, and hope in the faithful King who preserves His people.
- Fulfillment remembrance - Regularly remember that God's warnings and promises are not empty.
- Fear-of-man repentance - Confess where fear of people has ruled decisions more than obedience.
- Prompt obedience - Respond to God's word before the consequences harden.
- Trust under collapse - Practice entrusting Your life to the Lord when visible structures fail.
- Mercy recognition - Look for God's preserving mercy even in seasons of severe discipline.
- Remnant faithfulness - Serve faithfully among the people who remain after loss.
- Christ-centered kingship hope - Anchor hope not in fearful human leaders but in Christ, the righteous Branch.
- Jeremiah 39 warns that the Lord's word cannot be avoided by delay, denial, flight, political strategy, or fear-driven compromise.
- Do not assume delayed judgment means judgment will not come.
- Do not think flight can escape the Lord's word.
- Do not fear people more than God.
- Do not reject the path of life when God has made it clear.
- Do not confuse royal status with safety.
- Do not assume judgment erases God's mercy.
- Do not despise the trust of an outsider.
- Jerusalem fell only because Babylon was stronger. - Babylon was the historical instrument, but Jeremiah 39 presents the fall as fulfillment of the Lord's word.
- Zedekiah's fate was unavoidable regardless of His response. - Jeremiah 38 had given Him a real word: surrender and live, refuse and see disaster. Jeremiah 39 shows the result of refusal.
- Jeremiah was spared because Babylon respected Him independently of God's providence. - Babylon's order is the means, but the broader narrative shows the Lord preserving His prophet.
- The poor left in the land means the judgment was mild. - The city is burned, walls broken, leaders judged, and many deported. The poor remnant signals mercy within severe judgment.
- Ebed-Melek is rescued because of ethnic status or court rank. - The Lord explicitly says He will be rescued because He trusted in Him.
- The chapter ends only in despair. - The fall is devastating, but Jeremiah's preservation, the poor remnant, and Ebed-Melek's rescue show that mercy remains.
- Zedekiah's blinding is random cruelty without theological significance. - It fulfills the trajectory of warning and exposes the tragic end of a king who would not see and obey the Lord's word.
- What warning from God's word am I tempted to treat as distant or unlikely?
- Where am I trying to flee consequences instead of obeying the Lord?
- How has fear of people already cost me more than obedience would have?
- Do I trust the Lord enough to act like Ebed-Melek when the city around me is collapsing?
- What does Jeremiah's preservation teach me about faithfulness during institutional collapse?
- How does the fall of Zedekiah deepen my gratitude for Christ, the faithful King?
- Am I receiving the Lord's mercy now, or waiting until after the breach?
- Preach Jeremiah 39 as fulfillment, not merely tragedy. The fall proves the truth of the Lord's word and the danger of ignoring repeated warnings.
- Use Zedekiah to counsel those whose fear of people keeps them from obedience. Avoidance may delay shame but usually deepens it.
- Zedekiah is a devastating warning that fearful leadership can destroy families, communities, and institutions.
- Jeremiah's preservation encourages faithful servants who feel trapped in collapsing systems. The Lord knows how to keep His servants.
- Ebed-Melek's promise shows the Lord sees courageous trust, especially when shown by those overlooked by the powerful.
- Teach that judgment and mercy are not contradictions. The same chapter contains burning city, preserved prophet, poor remnant, and rescued believer.
- Move from Zedekiah's failed kingship to Christ, the righteous King who does not flee judgment but bears it to rescue His people.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from the Babylonian siege and breach of Jerusalem, to Zedekiah's flight and capture, to the destruction and deportation of the city, to Jeremiah's release, and finally to the Lord's promise of deliverance for Ebed-Melek.
Jeremiah 39 is the historical arrival of covenant curse on Jerusalem. The city, king, palace, walls, and people come under the consequences of generations of covenant disobedience. Yet the chapter also preserves covenant mercy: Jeremiah remains among the people, the poor remnant is left with land, and Ebed-Melek is rescued because He trusts in the Lord. Judgment falls, but the Lord's purpose continues.
Jeremiah 39 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's warnings are not empty threats and God's mercy is not vague sentiment. Zedekiah refused the word and came under judgment. Ebed-Melek trusted the Lord and received life as His prize. The chapter does not teach salvation by heroic works, but it does show that trust in the Lord is the dividing line amid judgment.
The gospel fulfills this pattern in Christ. Jesus, the faithful King, enters the judgment sinners deserve, rises in victory, and rescues all who trust in Him. The fall of Jerusalem warns that refusing God's word leads to ruin; the rescue of Ebed-Melek points to the mercy God gives to those who entrust themselves to Him.
Focus Points
- Fulfilled Judgment
- The Collapse of Fearful Kingship
- Divine Sovereignty Over Empires
- Prophetic Vindication
- Mercy Amid Judgment
- Trust in the Lord
- Remnant and Land
- The Cost of Refusing the Word
- Fulfillment of God's Word
- Divine Judgment
- Divine Mercy
- Providence
- Fear of Man
- Remnant
- Failed Kingship
- Christ the Faithful King
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 39:1-10
Jer 39:4-7 In Jer 39:4-7 are narrated the flight of Zedekiah, his capture, and his condemnation, like what we find in Jer 52:7-11 and 2Ki 25:4-7. "When Zedekiah the king of Judah and all the men of war saw them (the Chaldean generals who had taken up their position at the mid-gate), they fled by night out of the city, by the way of the king’s garden, by a gate between the walls, and he went out by the way to the Arabah.
Jer 39:5. But the army of the Chaldeans pursued after them, and overtook Zedekiah in the steppes of Jericho, and captured him, and brought him to Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, to Riblah, in the land of Hamath; and he pronounced judgment on him." Hitzig and Graf consider that the connection of these events, made by כּאשׁר ראם, is awkward, and say that the king would not have waited till the Chaldean generals took up their position at the mid-gate, nor could he see these in the night-time; that, moreover, he would hardly have waited till the city was taken before he fled.
These objections are utterly worthless. If the city of Zion, in which the royal palace stood, was separated from the lower city by a wall, then the king might still be quite at ease, with his men of war, in the upper city or city of Zion, so long as the enemy, who were pushing into the lower city from the north, remained at the separating wall, near the middle gate in it; and only when he saw that the city of Zion, too, could no longer be held, did he need to betake himself to flight with the men of war around him.
In actual fact, then, he might have been able to see the Chaldean generals with his own eyes, although we need not press ראם so much as to extract this meaning from it. Even at this juncture, flight was still possible through the south gate, at the king’s garden, between the two walls. Thenius, on 2Ki 25:4, takes חמתים to mean a double wall, which at the southern end of Ophel closed up the ravine between Ophel and Zion.
But a double wall must also have had two gates, and Thenius, indeed, has exhibited them in his plan of Jerusalem; but the text speaks of but one gate (שׁער). "The two walls" are rather the walls which ran along the eastern border of Zion and the western border of Ophel. The gate between these was situated in the wall which ran across the Tyropoean valley, and united the wall of Zion and that of Ophel; it was called the horse-gate (Neh 3:28), and occupied the position of the modern "dung-gate" ( Bab-el Moghâribeh ); see on Neh 3:27-28.
It was not the "gate of the fountain," as Thenius ( Bücher der Kön . S. 456), Nägelsbach, and others imagine, founding on the supposed existence of the double wall at the south end of Ophel. Outside this gate, where the valley of the Tyropoeon joined with the valley of the Kidron, lay the king’s garden, in the vicinity of the pool of Siloam; see on Neh 3:15.
The words 'ויּצא וגו introduce further details as to the king’s flight. In spite of the preceding plurals ויּברחוּ , the sing. יצא is quite suitable here, since the narrator wishes to give further details with regard to the flight of the king alone, without bringing into consideration the warriors who fled along with him. Nor does the following אחריהם militate against this view; for the Chaldean warriors pursued the king and his followers, not to capture these followers, but the king.
Escaped from the city, the king took the direction of the ערבה, the plain of the Jordan, in order to escape over Jordan to Gilead. But the pursuing enemy overtook him in the steppes of Jericho (see Comm. on Joshua on Jos 4:13), and thus before he had crossed the Jordan; they led him, bound, to Riblah, before the king of Babylon. "Riblah in the land of Hamath" is still called Ribleh , a wretched village about 20 miles S.
S. W. from Hums (Emesa) on the river el Ahsy (Orontes), in a large fertile plain in the northern portion of the Bekâa , on the great caravan-track which passes from Palestine through Damascus, Emesa, and Hamath to Thapsacus and Carchemish on the Euphrates; see Robinson’s Bibl. Res . iii. 545, and on Comm. on Kings at 2Ki 23:33. - On דּבּר משׁפּטים, to speak judgment, pronounce sentence of punishment, see on Jer 1:16.
Nebuchadnezzar caused the sons of Zedekiah and all the princes of Judah (חרים, nobles, lords, as in 27:30) to be slain before the eyes of the Jewish king; then he put out his eyes and bound him with brazen fetters, to carry him away to Babylon (לביא for להביא), where, according to Jer 52:11, he remained in confinement till his death.
Jer 39:4-7 In Jer 39:4-7 are narrated the flight of Zedekiah, his capture, and his condemnation, like what we find in Jer 52:7-11 and 2Ki 25:4-7. "When Zedekiah the king of Judah and all the men of war saw them (the Chaldean generals who had taken up their position at the mid-gate), they fled by night out of the city, by the way of the king’s garden, by a gate between the walls, and he went out by the way to the Arabah.
Jer 39:5. But the army of the Chaldeans pursued after them, and overtook Zedekiah in the steppes of Jericho, and captured him, and brought him to Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, to Riblah, in the land of Hamath; and he pronounced judgment on him." Hitzig and Graf consider that the connection of these events, made by כּאשׁר ראם, is awkward, and say that the king would not have waited till the Chaldean generals took up their position at the mid-gate, nor could he see these in the night-time; that, moreover, he would hardly have waited till the city was taken before he fled.
These objections are utterly worthless. If the city of Zion, in which the royal palace stood, was separated from the lower city by a wall, then the king might still be quite at ease, with his men of war, in the upper city or city of Zion, so long as the enemy, who were pushing into the lower city from the north, remained at the separating wall, near the middle gate in it; and only when he saw that the city of Zion, too, could no longer be held, did he need to betake himself to flight with the men of war around him.
In actual fact, then, he might have been able to see the Chaldean generals with his own eyes, although we need not press ראם so much as to extract this meaning from it. Even at this juncture, flight was still possible through the south gate, at the king’s garden, between the two walls. Thenius, on 2Ki 25:4, takes חמתים to mean a double wall, which at the southern end of Ophel closed up the ravine between Ophel and Zion.
But a double wall must also have had two gates, and Thenius, indeed, has exhibited them in his plan of Jerusalem; but the text speaks of but one gate (שׁער). "The two walls" are rather the walls which ran along the eastern border of Zion and the western border of Ophel. The gate between these was situated in the wall which ran across the Tyropoean valley, and united the wall of Zion and that of Ophel; it was called the horse-gate (Neh 3:28), and occupied the position of the modern "dung-gate" ( Bab-el Moghâribeh ); see on Neh 3:27-28.
It was not the "gate of the fountain," as Thenius ( Bücher der Kön . S. 456), Nägelsbach, and others imagine, founding on the supposed existence of the double wall at the south end of Ophel. Outside this gate, where the valley of the Tyropoeon joined with the valley of the Kidron, lay the king’s garden, in the vicinity of the pool of Siloam; see on Neh 3:15.
The words 'ויּצא וגו introduce further details as to the king’s flight. In spite of the preceding plurals ויּברחוּ , the sing. יצא is quite suitable here, since the narrator wishes to give further details with regard to the flight of the king alone, without bringing into consideration the warriors who fled along with him. Nor does the following אחריהם militate against this view; for the Chaldean warriors pursued the king and his followers, not to capture these followers, but the king.
Escaped from the city, the king took the direction of the ערבה, the plain of the Jordan, in order to escape over Jordan to Gilead. But the pursuing enemy overtook him in the steppes of Jericho (see Comm. on Joshua on Jos 4:13), and thus before he had crossed the Jordan; they led him, bound, to Riblah, before the king of Babylon. "Riblah in the land of Hamath" is still called Ribleh , a wretched village about 20 miles S.
S. W. from Hums (Emesa) on the river el Ahsy (Orontes), in a large fertile plain in the northern portion of the Bekâa , on the great caravan-track which passes from Palestine through Damascus, Emesa, and Hamath to Thapsacus and Carchemish on the Euphrates; see Robinson’s Bibl. Res . iii. 545, and on Comm. on Kings at 2Ki 23:33. - On דּבּר משׁפּטים, to speak judgment, pronounce sentence of punishment, see on Jer 1:16.
Nebuchadnezzar caused the sons of Zedekiah and all the princes of Judah (חרים, nobles, lords, as in 27:30) to be slain before the eyes of the Jewish king; then he put out his eyes and bound him with brazen fetters, to carry him away to Babylon (לביא for להביא), where, according to Jer 52:11, he remained in confinement till his death.
Jer 39:8-10 Jer 39:8-10 contain a brief notice regarding the fate of the city of Jerusalem and its inhabitants, joined on to the passage preceding, in order to prepare the way for a short account of the treatment which Jeremiah experienced at the same time. From the more detailed notice regarding the fate of the city, given in Jer 52:12. , 2Ki 25:8. , we see that the destruction of the city and the carrying away of the people took place one month after their fall, and that the king of Babylon had appointed Nebuzaradan, the commander of his body-guards, to go to Jerusalem for the purpose of carrying out these matters.
In these verses of ours, also, Nebuzaradan is mentioned as the one who carried out the judgment that had been pronounced (Jer 39:10.) ; but the fact of his being sent from Riblah and the date of the execution of his commission are here omitted, so that it appears as if it had all occurred immediately after the capture of the city, and as if Nebuzaradan had been always on the spot.
For the writer of this chapter did not need to give a historically exact account of the separate events; it was merely necessary briefly to mention the chief points, in order to place in proper light the treatment experienced by the prophet. The Chaldeans burned the king’s house (the palace) and בּית־העם. This latter expression, taken in connection with "the king’s house," signifies the rest of the city apart from the king’s palace; hence בּית is used in a collective sense.
the temple is not mentioned, as being of no consequence for the immediate purpose of this short notice.
Jer 39:8-10 Jer 39:8-10 contain a brief notice regarding the fate of the city of Jerusalem and its inhabitants, joined on to the passage preceding, in order to prepare the way for a short account of the treatment which Jeremiah experienced at the same time. From the more detailed notice regarding the fate of the city, given in Jer 52:12. , 2Ki 25:8. , we see that the destruction of the city and the carrying away of the people took place one month after their fall, and that the king of Babylon had appointed Nebuzaradan, the commander of his body-guards, to go to Jerusalem for the purpose of carrying out these matters.
In these verses of ours, also, Nebuzaradan is mentioned as the one who carried out the judgment that had been pronounced (Jer 39:10.) ; but the fact of his being sent from Riblah and the date of the execution of his commission are here omitted, so that it appears as if it had all occurred immediately after the capture of the city, and as if Nebuzaradan had been always on the spot.
For the writer of this chapter did not need to give a historically exact account of the separate events; it was merely necessary briefly to mention the chief points, in order to place in proper light the treatment experienced by the prophet. The Chaldeans burned the king’s house (the palace) and בּית־העם. This latter expression, taken in connection with "the king’s house," signifies the rest of the city apart from the king’s palace; hence בּית is used in a collective sense.
the temple is not mentioned, as being of no consequence for the immediate purpose of this short notice.
Jer 39:8-10 Jer 39:8-10 contain a brief notice regarding the fate of the city of Jerusalem and its inhabitants, joined on to the passage preceding, in order to prepare the way for a short account of the treatment which Jeremiah experienced at the same time. From the more detailed notice regarding the fate of the city, given in Jer 52:12. , 2Ki 25:8. , we see that the destruction of the city and the carrying away of the people took place one month after their fall, and that the king of Babylon had appointed Nebuzaradan, the commander of his body-guards, to go to Jerusalem for the purpose of carrying out these matters.
In these verses of ours, also, Nebuzaradan is mentioned as the one who carried out the judgment that had been pronounced (Jer 39:10.) ; but the fact of his being sent from Riblah and the date of the execution of his commission are here omitted, so that it appears as if it had all occurred immediately after the capture of the city, and as if Nebuzaradan had been always on the spot.
For the writer of this chapter did not need to give a historically exact account of the separate events; it was merely necessary briefly to mention the chief points, in order to place in proper light the treatment experienced by the prophet. The Chaldeans burned the king’s house (the palace) and בּית־העם. This latter expression, taken in connection with "the king’s house," signifies the rest of the city apart from the king’s palace; hence בּית is used in a collective sense.
the temple is not mentioned, as being of no consequence for the immediate purpose of this short notice.
Jer 39:11-14 Nebuchadnezzar gave orders regarding Jeremiah, through Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards: "Take him, and set thine eyes upon him, and do him no harm; but, just as he telleth thee, so do with him." In obedience to this command, "Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards, sent-and Nebushasban the head chamberlain, and Nergal-sharezer the chief magician, and all (the other) chief men of the king of Babylon-they sent and took Jeremiah out of the court of the prison, and delivered him over to Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the son of Shaphan, to take him out to the house.
Thus he dwelt among the people." - On the names of the Chaldean grandees, see on Jer 39:3. Instead of the chief chamberlain (רב־סריס) Sarsechim, there is here named, as occupying this office, Nebushasban, who, it seems, along with Nebuzaradan, was not sent from Riblah till after the taking of Jerusalem, when Sarsechim was relieved. We cannot come to any certain conclusion regarding the relation in which the two persons or names stand to one another, since Nebushasban is only mentioned in Jer 39:13, just as Sarsechim is mentioned only in Jer 39:3.
Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the man who had already on a former occasion given protection to Jeremiah (Jer 26:24), was, according to Jer 40:5, placed by the king of Babylon over the cities of Judah, i. e. , was nominated the Chaldean governor over Judah and the Jews who were left in the land. To him, as such, Jeremiah is here (Jer 39:14) delivered, that he may take him into the house.
בּית is neither the temple (Hitzig) nor the palace, the king’s house (Graf), but the house in which Gedaliah resided as the governor; and we find here הבּית, not בּביתו, since the house was neither the property nor the permanent dwelling-place of Gedaliah. - According to this account, Jeremiah seems to have remained in the court of the prison till Nebuchadnezzar came, to have been liberated by Nebuzaradan only at the command of the king, and to have been sent to Gedaliah the governor.
But this is contradicted by the account in Jer 40:1. , according to which, Nebuzaradan liberated the prophet in Ramah, where he had been kept, confined by manacles, among the captives of Judah that were to be carried to Babylon: Nebuzaradan sent for him, and gave him his liberty. This contradiction has arisen simply from the intense brevity with which, in this verse, the fate of Jeremiah at the capture and destruction of Jerusalem is recorded; it is easy to settle the difference in this way: - When the city was taken, those inhabitants, especially males, who had not carried arms, were seized by the Chaldeans and carried out of the city to Ramah, where they were held prisoners till the decision of the king regarding their fate should be made known.
Jeremiah shared this lot with his fellow-countrymen. When, after this, Nebuzaradan came to Jerusalem to execute the king’s commands regarding the city and its inhabitants, at the special order of his monarch, he sent for Jeremiah the prophet, taking him out from among the crowd of prisoners who had been already carried away to Ramah, loosed him from his fetters, and gave him permission to choose his place of residence.
This liberation of Jeremiah from his confinement might, in a summary account, be called a sending for him out of the court of the prison, even though the prophet, at the exact moment of his liberation, was no longer in the court of the prison of the palace at Jerusalem, but had been already carried away to Ramah as a captive.
Jer 39:11-14 Nebuchadnezzar gave orders regarding Jeremiah, through Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards: "Take him, and set thine eyes upon him, and do him no harm; but, just as he telleth thee, so do with him." In obedience to this command, "Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards, sent-and Nebushasban the head chamberlain, and Nergal-sharezer the chief magician, and all (the other) chief men of the king of Babylon-they sent and took Jeremiah out of the court of the prison, and delivered him over to Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the son of Shaphan, to take him out to the house.
Thus he dwelt among the people." - On the names of the Chaldean grandees, see on Jer 39:3. Instead of the chief chamberlain (רב־סריס) Sarsechim, there is here named, as occupying this office, Nebushasban, who, it seems, along with Nebuzaradan, was not sent from Riblah till after the taking of Jerusalem, when Sarsechim was relieved. We cannot come to any certain conclusion regarding the relation in which the two persons or names stand to one another, since Nebushasban is only mentioned in Jer 39:13, just as Sarsechim is mentioned only in Jer 39:3.
Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the man who had already on a former occasion given protection to Jeremiah (Jer 26:24), was, according to Jer 40:5, placed by the king of Babylon over the cities of Judah, i. e. , was nominated the Chaldean governor over Judah and the Jews who were left in the land. To him, as such, Jeremiah is here (Jer 39:14) delivered, that he may take him into the house.
בּית is neither the temple (Hitzig) nor the palace, the king’s house (Graf), but the house in which Gedaliah resided as the governor; and we find here הבּית, not בּביתו, since the house was neither the property nor the permanent dwelling-place of Gedaliah. - According to this account, Jeremiah seems to have remained in the court of the prison till Nebuchadnezzar came, to have been liberated by Nebuzaradan only at the command of the king, and to have been sent to Gedaliah the governor.
But this is contradicted by the account in Jer 40:1. , according to which, Nebuzaradan liberated the prophet in Ramah, where he had been kept, confined by manacles, among the captives of Judah that were to be carried to Babylon: Nebuzaradan sent for him, and gave him his liberty. This contradiction has arisen simply from the intense brevity with which, in this verse, the fate of Jeremiah at the capture and destruction of Jerusalem is recorded; it is easy to settle the difference in this way: - When the city was taken, those inhabitants, especially males, who had not carried arms, were seized by the Chaldeans and carried out of the city to Ramah, where they were held prisoners till the decision of the king regarding their fate should be made known.
Jeremiah shared this lot with his fellow-countrymen. When, after this, Nebuzaradan came to Jerusalem to execute the king’s commands regarding the city and its inhabitants, at the special order of his monarch, he sent for Jeremiah the prophet, taking him out from among the crowd of prisoners who had been already carried away to Ramah, loosed him from his fetters, and gave him permission to choose his place of residence.
This liberation of Jeremiah from his confinement might, in a summary account, be called a sending for him out of the court of the prison, even though the prophet, at the exact moment of his liberation, was no longer in the court of the prison of the palace at Jerusalem, but had been already carried away to Ramah as a captive.
Jer 39:11-14 Nebuchadnezzar gave orders regarding Jeremiah, through Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards: "Take him, and set thine eyes upon him, and do him no harm; but, just as he telleth thee, so do with him." In obedience to this command, "Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards, sent-and Nebushasban the head chamberlain, and Nergal-sharezer the chief magician, and all (the other) chief men of the king of Babylon-they sent and took Jeremiah out of the court of the prison, and delivered him over to Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the son of Shaphan, to take him out to the house.
Thus he dwelt among the people." - On the names of the Chaldean grandees, see on Jer 39:3. Instead of the chief chamberlain (רב־סריס) Sarsechim, there is here named, as occupying this office, Nebushasban, who, it seems, along with Nebuzaradan, was not sent from Riblah till after the taking of Jerusalem, when Sarsechim was relieved. We cannot come to any certain conclusion regarding the relation in which the two persons or names stand to one another, since Nebushasban is only mentioned in Jer 39:13, just as Sarsechim is mentioned only in Jer 39:3.
Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the man who had already on a former occasion given protection to Jeremiah (Jer 26:24), was, according to Jer 40:5, placed by the king of Babylon over the cities of Judah, i. e. , was nominated the Chaldean governor over Judah and the Jews who were left in the land. To him, as such, Jeremiah is here (Jer 39:14) delivered, that he may take him into the house.
בּית is neither the temple (Hitzig) nor the palace, the king’s house (Graf), but the house in which Gedaliah resided as the governor; and we find here הבּית, not בּביתו, since the house was neither the property nor the permanent dwelling-place of Gedaliah. - According to this account, Jeremiah seems to have remained in the court of the prison till Nebuchadnezzar came, to have been liberated by Nebuzaradan only at the command of the king, and to have been sent to Gedaliah the governor.
But this is contradicted by the account in Jer 40:1. , according to which, Nebuzaradan liberated the prophet in Ramah, where he had been kept, confined by manacles, among the captives of Judah that were to be carried to Babylon: Nebuzaradan sent for him, and gave him his liberty. This contradiction has arisen simply from the intense brevity with which, in this verse, the fate of Jeremiah at the capture and destruction of Jerusalem is recorded; it is easy to settle the difference in this way: - When the city was taken, those inhabitants, especially males, who had not carried arms, were seized by the Chaldeans and carried out of the city to Ramah, where they were held prisoners till the decision of the king regarding their fate should be made known.
Jeremiah shared this lot with his fellow-countrymen. When, after this, Nebuzaradan came to Jerusalem to execute the king’s commands regarding the city and its inhabitants, at the special order of his monarch, he sent for Jeremiah the prophet, taking him out from among the crowd of prisoners who had been already carried away to Ramah, loosed him from his fetters, and gave him permission to choose his place of residence.
This liberation of Jeremiah from his confinement might, in a summary account, be called a sending for him out of the court of the prison, even though the prophet, at the exact moment of his liberation, was no longer in the court of the prison of the palace at Jerusalem, but had been already carried away to Ramah as a captive.
Jer 39:11-14 Nebuchadnezzar gave orders regarding Jeremiah, through Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards: "Take him, and set thine eyes upon him, and do him no harm; but, just as he telleth thee, so do with him." In obedience to this command, "Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards, sent-and Nebushasban the head chamberlain, and Nergal-sharezer the chief magician, and all (the other) chief men of the king of Babylon-they sent and took Jeremiah out of the court of the prison, and delivered him over to Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the son of Shaphan, to take him out to the house.
Thus he dwelt among the people." - On the names of the Chaldean grandees, see on Jer 39:3. Instead of the chief chamberlain (רב־סריס) Sarsechim, there is here named, as occupying this office, Nebushasban, who, it seems, along with Nebuzaradan, was not sent from Riblah till after the taking of Jerusalem, when Sarsechim was relieved. We cannot come to any certain conclusion regarding the relation in which the two persons or names stand to one another, since Nebushasban is only mentioned in Jer 39:13, just as Sarsechim is mentioned only in Jer 39:3.
Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the man who had already on a former occasion given protection to Jeremiah (Jer 26:24), was, according to Jer 40:5, placed by the king of Babylon over the cities of Judah, i. e. , was nominated the Chaldean governor over Judah and the Jews who were left in the land. To him, as such, Jeremiah is here (Jer 39:14) delivered, that he may take him into the house.
בּית is neither the temple (Hitzig) nor the palace, the king’s house (Graf), but the house in which Gedaliah resided as the governor; and we find here הבּית, not בּביתו, since the house was neither the property nor the permanent dwelling-place of Gedaliah. - According to this account, Jeremiah seems to have remained in the court of the prison till Nebuchadnezzar came, to have been liberated by Nebuzaradan only at the command of the king, and to have been sent to Gedaliah the governor.
But this is contradicted by the account in Jer 40:1. , according to which, Nebuzaradan liberated the prophet in Ramah, where he had been kept, confined by manacles, among the captives of Judah that were to be carried to Babylon: Nebuzaradan sent for him, and gave him his liberty. This contradiction has arisen simply from the intense brevity with which, in this verse, the fate of Jeremiah at the capture and destruction of Jerusalem is recorded; it is easy to settle the difference in this way: - When the city was taken, those inhabitants, especially males, who had not carried arms, were seized by the Chaldeans and carried out of the city to Ramah, where they were held prisoners till the decision of the king regarding their fate should be made known.
Jeremiah shared this lot with his fellow-countrymen. When, after this, Nebuzaradan came to Jerusalem to execute the king’s commands regarding the city and its inhabitants, at the special order of his monarch, he sent for Jeremiah the prophet, taking him out from among the crowd of prisoners who had been already carried away to Ramah, loosed him from his fetters, and gave him permission to choose his place of residence.
This liberation of Jeremiah from his confinement might, in a summary account, be called a sending for him out of the court of the prison, even though the prophet, at the exact moment of his liberation, was no longer in the court of the prison of the palace at Jerusalem, but had been already carried away to Ramah as a captive.
Jer 39:15-18 Jeremiah’s message of comfort to Ebedmelech. - Jer 39:15. "Now to Jeremiah there had come the word of the Lord, while he remained shut up in the court of the prison, as follows: Jer 39:16. Go and speak to Ebedmelech the Cushite, saying, Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will bring my words against this city for evil and not for good, and they shall take place before thee on that day.
Jer 39:17. But I will deliver thee on that day, saith Jahveh; neither shalt thou be given into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid. Jer 39:18. For I will surely save thee, neither shalt thou fall by the sword, and thine own life shall be thy spoil, because thou hast trusted me, saith Jahveh." - This word of God for Ebedmelech came to the prophet, no doubt, very soon after his deliverance from the miry pit by this pious Ethiopian; but it is not given till now, and this by way of supplement, lest its introduction previously should break the chain of events which occurred at the time of that deliverance, Jer 38:14-39:13.
Hence היה, Jer 39:15, is to be translated as a pluperfect. "Go and say," etc. , is not inconsistent with the fact that Jeremiah, from being in confinement, could not leave the court of the prison. For Ebedmelech could come into the prison, and then Jeremiah could go to him and declare the word of God. "Behold, I will bring my words against this city," i. e. , I shall cause the evil with which I have threatened Jerusalem and its inhabitants to come, or, to be accomplished (מבי with א dropped, as in Jer 19:15, and אל־ for על).
והיוּ לפּניך, "and these words are to take place before thy face," i. e. , thou shalt with thine own eyes behold their fulfilment, בּיום ההוּא, i. e. , at the time of their occurrence. But thou shalt be saved, not fall into the hands of the enemy and be killed, but carry away thy body out of it all as booty; cf. Jer 21:9; Jer 38:2. "Because thou hast trusted me;" i.
e. , through the aid afforded to my prophet thou hast continued thy faith in me.
Jer 39:15-18 Jeremiah’s message of comfort to Ebedmelech. - Jer 39:15. "Now to Jeremiah there had come the word of the Lord, while he remained shut up in the court of the prison, as follows: Jer 39:16. Go and speak to Ebedmelech the Cushite, saying, Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will bring my words against this city for evil and not for good, and they shall take place before thee on that day.
Jer 39:17. But I will deliver thee on that day, saith Jahveh; neither shalt thou be given into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid. Jer 39:18. For I will surely save thee, neither shalt thou fall by the sword, and thine own life shall be thy spoil, because thou hast trusted me, saith Jahveh." - This word of God for Ebedmelech came to the prophet, no doubt, very soon after his deliverance from the miry pit by this pious Ethiopian; but it is not given till now, and this by way of supplement, lest its introduction previously should break the chain of events which occurred at the time of that deliverance, Jer 38:14-39:13.
Hence היה, Jer 39:15, is to be translated as a pluperfect. "Go and say," etc. , is not inconsistent with the fact that Jeremiah, from being in confinement, could not leave the court of the prison. For Ebedmelech could come into the prison, and then Jeremiah could go to him and declare the word of God. "Behold, I will bring my words against this city," i. e. , I shall cause the evil with which I have threatened Jerusalem and its inhabitants to come, or, to be accomplished (מבי with א dropped, as in Jer 19:15, and אל־ for על).
והיוּ לפּניך, "and these words are to take place before thy face," i. e. , thou shalt with thine own eyes behold their fulfilment, בּיום ההוּא, i. e. , at the time of their occurrence. But thou shalt be saved, not fall into the hands of the enemy and be killed, but carry away thy body out of it all as booty; cf. Jer 21:9; Jer 38:2. "Because thou hast trusted me;" i.
e. , through the aid afforded to my prophet thou hast continued thy faith in me.
Jer 39:15-18 Jeremiah’s message of comfort to Ebedmelech. - Jer 39:15. "Now to Jeremiah there had come the word of the Lord, while he remained shut up in the court of the prison, as follows: Jer 39:16. Go and speak to Ebedmelech the Cushite, saying, Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will bring my words against this city for evil and not for good, and they shall take place before thee on that day.
Jer 39:17. But I will deliver thee on that day, saith Jahveh; neither shalt thou be given into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid. Jer 39:18. For I will surely save thee, neither shalt thou fall by the sword, and thine own life shall be thy spoil, because thou hast trusted me, saith Jahveh." - This word of God for Ebedmelech came to the prophet, no doubt, very soon after his deliverance from the miry pit by this pious Ethiopian; but it is not given till now, and this by way of supplement, lest its introduction previously should break the chain of events which occurred at the time of that deliverance, Jer 38:14-39:13.
Hence היה, Jer 39:15, is to be translated as a pluperfect. "Go and say," etc. , is not inconsistent with the fact that Jeremiah, from being in confinement, could not leave the court of the prison. For Ebedmelech could come into the prison, and then Jeremiah could go to him and declare the word of God. "Behold, I will bring my words against this city," i. e. , I shall cause the evil with which I have threatened Jerusalem and its inhabitants to come, or, to be accomplished (מבי with א dropped, as in Jer 19:15, and אל־ for על).
והיוּ לפּניך, "and these words are to take place before thy face," i. e. , thou shalt with thine own eyes behold their fulfilment, בּיום ההוּא, i. e. , at the time of their occurrence. But thou shalt be saved, not fall into the hands of the enemy and be killed, but carry away thy body out of it all as booty; cf. Jer 21:9; Jer 38:2. "Because thou hast trusted me;" i.
e. , through the aid afforded to my prophet thou hast continued thy faith in me.
Jer 39:15-18 Jeremiah’s message of comfort to Ebedmelech. - Jer 39:15. "Now to Jeremiah there had come the word of the Lord, while he remained shut up in the court of the prison, as follows: Jer 39:16. Go and speak to Ebedmelech the Cushite, saying, Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will bring my words against this city for evil and not for good, and they shall take place before thee on that day.
Jer 39:17. But I will deliver thee on that day, saith Jahveh; neither shalt thou be given into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid. Jer 39:18. For I will surely save thee, neither shalt thou fall by the sword, and thine own life shall be thy spoil, because thou hast trusted me, saith Jahveh." - This word of God for Ebedmelech came to the prophet, no doubt, very soon after his deliverance from the miry pit by this pious Ethiopian; but it is not given till now, and this by way of supplement, lest its introduction previously should break the chain of events which occurred at the time of that deliverance, Jer 38:14-39:13.
Hence היה, Jer 39:15, is to be translated as a pluperfect. "Go and say," etc. , is not inconsistent with the fact that Jeremiah, from being in confinement, could not leave the court of the prison. For Ebedmelech could come into the prison, and then Jeremiah could go to him and declare the word of God. "Behold, I will bring my words against this city," i. e. , I shall cause the evil with which I have threatened Jerusalem and its inhabitants to come, or, to be accomplished (מבי with א dropped, as in Jer 19:15, and אל־ for על).
והיוּ לפּניך, "and these words are to take place before thy face," i. e. , thou shalt with thine own eyes behold their fulfilment, בּיום ההוּא, i. e. , at the time of their occurrence. But thou shalt be saved, not fall into the hands of the enemy and be killed, but carry away thy body out of it all as booty; cf. Jer 21:9; Jer 38:2. "Because thou hast trusted me;" i.
e. , through the aid afforded to my prophet thou hast continued thy faith in me.
Jer 40:1 The liberation of Jeremiah by Nebuzaradan, the chief of the body-guards. - The superscription, "The word which came to Jeremiah from the Lord, after that Nebuzaradan, the captain of the body-guard, had let him go from Ramah," does not seem to be appropriate; for in what follows there is no word of God declared by Jeremiah, but first, Jer 1:2-6, we are told that Jeremiah was liberated and given in charge to Gedaliah; then is told, Jer 40:7-41:18, the story of the murder of Gedaliah the governor by Ishmael, together with its consequences; and not till Jer 42:7.
is there communicated a word of God, which Jeremiah uttered regarding the Jews who wished to flee to Egypt, and had besought him for some revelation from God (Jer 42:1-6). The heading of our verse cannot refer to this prophecy, not merely for the reason that it is too far removed, but still more because it has a historical notice introducing it, Jer 42:1-6. Our superscription rather refers to Jer 1:1-3; and דּבר here, as well as there, means, not a single prophecy, but a number of prophecies.
Just as דבר in Jer 1:2 forms the heading for all the prophecies uttered by Jeremiah from the thirteenth year of Josiah till the destruction of Jerusalem and the carrying away of the people in the eleventh year of Zedekiah, so the words 'הדּבר אשׁר וגו of this verse form the superscription for the prophecies which Jeremiah uttered after the destruction of Jerusalem, i. e.
, to the section formed by Jer 40-45, although Jer 44; Jer 45:1-5 have headings of their own; these, however, are subordinate to the heading of this chapter, in the same way as the titles in Jer 7:1; Jer 11:11; Jer 14:1, etc. fall under the general title given in Jer 1:2-3. - Regarding Nebuzaradan and the discharge of Jeremiah at Ramah (i. e. , er Râm , see on Jer 31:15), cf.
the explanations given on Jer 39:13 (p. 335 of this volume). In what follows, from בּקחתּו onwards, further details are given regarding Jeremiah’s liberation. "When he (Nebuzaradan) sent for him, he (Jeremiah), bound with fetters, was among all the captives of Jerusalem and Judah who were being carried away to Babylon." Those who were to be carried away had been gathered together to Ramah, which lies about five miles north from Jerusalem; thence they were to set out for Babylon.
אזקּים (= זקּים, Job 36:8; Isa 45:14), "fetters," - here, according to Jer 40:4, "manacles," by which, perhaps, two or more prisoners were fastened to one another.
Jer 40:2-3 When Jeremiah had been brought, the commander of the guards said to him, "The Lord thy God hath declared this evil against this place, and the Lord hath brought it on (brought it to pass), and hath done as He spake; for ye have sinned against the Lord, and have not hearkened to His voice: thus hath this thing happened to you." The mode of expression is that of Jeremiah; but Nebuzaradan may have expressed the thought , that now there had been fulfilled what Jeremiah had predicted in the name of God, because the people, by their rebellion, had broken the oath they had sworn before their God (cf.
Eze 17:13.) , and had thereby sinned against Him. The article before דּבר, required by the Qeri , is unnecessary; cf. Ewald, §293, a ; Gesenius, §112, 2, a .
Jer 40:2-3 When Jeremiah had been brought, the commander of the guards said to him, "The Lord thy God hath declared this evil against this place, and the Lord hath brought it on (brought it to pass), and hath done as He spake; for ye have sinned against the Lord, and have not hearkened to His voice: thus hath this thing happened to you." The mode of expression is that of Jeremiah; but Nebuzaradan may have expressed the thought , that now there had been fulfilled what Jeremiah had predicted in the name of God, because the people, by their rebellion, had broken the oath they had sworn before their God (cf.
Eze 17:13.) , and had thereby sinned against Him. The article before דּבר, required by the Qeri , is unnecessary; cf. Ewald, §293, a ; Gesenius, §112, 2, a .
Jer 40:4-6 Nebuzaradan then declared him free: "And now, behold, I free thee this day from the shackles on thine hands. If it please thee to come with me to Babylon, then come, and I will set mine eye upon thee (i. e. , take thee under my protection, cf. Jer 39:12). But if it please thee not to come with me to Babylon, then let it be so. See, the whole country is before thee (cf.
Gen 13:9; Gen 20:5, etc.) ; whithersoever it pleases thee, and seems right to thee to go, go." Jer 40:5. And because Jeremiah had not yet returned, he said, "Go back to Gedaliah,... whom the king of Babylon hath set over the cities of Judah, and remain with him among the people; or go wherever it seemeth right to thee to go." And the commander of the guard gave him what provisions he required and a present, and sent him away; thereafter Jeremiah went to Gedaliah to Mizpah, and remained there among the people who had been left behind in the land (Jer 40:6).
The words ועדנּוּ were certainly misunderstood by the old translators, who made various conjectures as to their meaning; even yet, Dahler, Movers, Graf, and Nägelsbach are of opinion that "it is impossible to understand" this sentence, and that the text is plainly corrupt. Luther renders: "for no one will any longer return thither." Hitzig considers this translation substantially correct, and only requiring to be a little more exactly rendered: "but there, no one returns home again."
Apart, however, from the consideration that on this view עדנּוּ, which stands at the head of the sentence, does not get full justice paid to it, the thought does not accord with what precedes, and the reference of the suffix to the indefinite "person" or "one" is extremely forced. According to what goes before, in which Nebuzaradan gives the prophet full liberty of choosing whether he would go with him to Babylon or remain in the country, in whatever part he likes, and from the following advice which he gives him, "Go, or return, to Gedaliah," the words עדנּוּ לא ישׁוּב, on account of the third person (ישׁוּב), cannot certainly be an address of the chief captain to Jeremiah, and as little can they contain a remark about going to Babylon.
The words are evidently, both as to their form and their contents, a circumstantial clause, containing a statement regarding the relation of Jeremiah to the proposal of the chief captain (and this is the view taken long ago by Kimchi), i. e. , a parenthetical remark of the narrator, according to which Nebuzaradan demands that he shall remain with Gedaliah, in the sense, "and yet he was not going back," or, still better, on account of the imperfect ישׁוּב, "because he was still unwilling to go back," namely, to this or that place indefinitely; then Nebuzaradan further said, "Return, then, to Gedaliah."
If we supply ויּאמר before 'ושׁוּבה וגו, with which Nebuzaradan brings the matter to a close, the meaning is quite clear. It is evident from Jer 40:4 that Nebuzaradan stopped a little in order to let Jeremiah decide; but since the prophet did not return, i. e. , neither decided in the one way nor the other, he adds 'ושׁוּבה וגו, and thereby puts an end to the indecision.
ארחה means a portion of food, or victuals; cf. Jer 52:34 and Pro 15:17. Mizpah, where Gedaliah had taken up his position, is the Mizpah of the tribe of Benjamin, where Samuel judged the people and chose Saul to be king (1Sa 7:15. , Jer 10:17); doubtless the modern Neby Samwil , five miles north-west from Jerusalem, a short distance south-west from Ramah; see on Jos 18:26.