Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah before, during, and after Jerusalem's fall.
Jeremiah Released, Gedaliah Appointed, and the Fragile Remnant in the Land
After Jerusalem's fall, the Lord preserves Jeremiah and leaves a fragile remnant in the land under Gedaliah, yet the remnant's future is immediately threatened by internal treachery and ignored warning.
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After Jerusalem's fall, the Lord preserves Jeremiah and leaves a fragile remnant in the land under Gedaliah, yet the remnant's future is immediately threatened by internal treachery and ignored warning.
Jeremiah 40 argues that life after judgment must still be lived under the word of the Lord. Jerusalem has fallen, but the story is not finished. Jeremiah is preserved, the poor remain, refugees return, and the land produces abundance. Yet the remnant's future remains precarious because the sinful patterns that led to judgment have not disappeared. Gedaliah rightly calls the people to settle under Babylonian rule, which aligns with Jeremiah's prior word that submission to Babylon is the path of life.
But Gedaliah fails to discern and respond to treachery. The chapter therefore holds mercy and danger together: the Lord gives a remnant space to live, but the remnant remains vulnerable to fear, factionalism, assassination, and ignored warnings.
The surviving remnant in Judah, the exiles, and later readers needing to understand the fragile post-fall situation after Jerusalem's destruction.
After the fall of Jerusalem in 586 BC, with captives gathered at Ramah for deportation and a remnant left in Judah under Babylonian administration.
After Jerusalem's fall, the Lord preserves Jeremiah and leaves a fragile remnant in the land under Gedaliah, yet the remnant's future is immediately threatened by internal treachery and ignored warning.
Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah before, during, and after Jerusalem's fall.
The surviving remnant in Judah, the exiles, and later readers needing to understand the fragile post-fall situation after Jerusalem's destruction.
After the fall of Jerusalem in 586 BC, with captives gathered at Ramah for deportation and a remnant left in Judah under Babylonian administration.
- The surviving population includes poor people left in the land, scattered soldiers, refugees returning from surrounding nations, and traumatized survivors trying to gather food and rebuild life.
Jeremiah 40 begins the remnant-after-judgment section. It tests whether the survivors will live humbly under the discipline the Lord has brought or repeat the same patterns of fear, violence, and unbelief.
The chapter moves from Jeremiah's release at Ramah, to Nebuzaradan's theological explanation of Judah's fall, to Jeremiah's choice to remain with Gedaliah, to the gathering and stabilization of the remnant, to the return of scattered Judeans, and finally to the warning of Ishmael's assassination plot.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Jeremiah 40 forms truthful repentance, humble survival, pastoral solidarity, disciplined rebuilding, wise discernment, and hope in Christ beyond fragile human governance.
- 1-4: Jeremiah is released at Ramah, and Nebuzaradan acknowledges that Judah's disaster came because the people sinned and did not obey the Lord.
- 5-6: Jeremiah is directed to Gedaliah at Mizpah and chooses to stay among the people left in the land.
- 7-10: Gedaliah urges the officers and people not to fear Babylon but to dwell in the land, gather produce, and live.
- 11-12: Refugees from surrounding nations return to Judah and harvest abundant wine and summer fruit.
- 13-16: Johanan warns Gedaliah about Ishmael's assassination plot, but Gedaliah refuses to believe him.
Pastoral Entry
דָּבָר (dabar) is one of the most theologically rich words in the Hebrew Bible. The same word covers 'word' in the sense of spoken utterance, 'matter' or 'thing' in the sense of a real-world event, and 'affair' in the sense of a legal or administrative case. The range itself is significant: in Hebrew thought, a dabar is not merely a sound or a symbol but a living reality that connects speech and event, utterance and outcome.
The dabar YHWH (word of the Lord) is the primary theological use — the formula that introduces prophetic speech throughout the OT ('the word of the Lord came to me,' Jer 1:4; Ezek 1:3; etc.). The word of the Lord is not merely information about God's intentions; it is the active agency of God Himself entering history. When God speaks, things happen: Genesis 1 creates by dabar — 'God said, "Let there be light," and there was light.' The dabar of God does not describe a reality that already exists; it creates the reality it names.
Isaiah 40:8 gives the dabar its most famous statement of permanence: 'The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word (dabar) of our God will stand forever.' In context, this is a promise about the reliability of God's purposes for Israel — the imperial powers and their words will pass away, but God's dabar will not. The NT reads this as the ground for the gospel's permanence (1 Pet 1:24-25 quotes Isa 40:8 for 'the living and abiding word of God' by which people are born again).
Psalm 119 is the OT's most sustained meditation on the dabar of God — 176 verses of engagement with the word, instruction, statutes, and commands. The central claim running through all 22 stanzas is that the dabar of God is the source of life, wisdom, comfort, and orientation. 'I have stored up your word (dabar) in my heart, that I might not sin against you' (Ps 119:11). The dabar is not merely read but internalized — hidden in the heart where it becomes the motivation for faithful living.
For the preacher, דָּבָר is the word that insists God speaks and that His speech does things. The sermon is not commentary on the word; it is the continued vehicle of the word's active agency in the congregation.
Sense word, matter, event
Definition A word, matter, or event; here the word of the LORD continuing after Jerusalem's fall.
References Jeremiah 40:1
Lexicon word, matter, event
Why it matters The chapter begins by affirming that the word of the Lord still comes after judgment.
Pastoral Entry
שָׁלַח is the Hebrew word Scripture reaches for whenever someone or something is dispatched, released, stretched out, or set in motion toward a destination or purpose. At its most basic it describes the act of sending — a messenger to a king, a letter to a distant nation, a bird from the hand of Noah over the waters. But to reduce שָׁלַח to a logistical word is to miss the theological weight it carries across the local OT index count of about 847 uses in the Hebrew Bible. In theologically weighted uses, something or someone moves because someone with authority has caused them to move. Sending implies a sender, a purpose, and an accountability on the part of the one sent.
This verb carries an enormous range of application in Scripture: God sends his prophets to warn a rebellious people; he sends plagues upon Egypt; he sends his word to accomplish what he purposes; he sends his Spirit; he sends fire; he sends angels. In each case, the sending is not incidental — it is the expression of his sovereign will entering a situation that needs it. When God stretches out his hand (שָׁלַח יָד), the gesture carries either rescue or judgment depending on the direction of his purpose.
Human beings also send in the pages of Scripture: Abraham sends his servant to find a wife for Isaac; Moses is sent before Pharaoh; the spies are sent into Canaan; Elijah is sent back into the wilderness with provision. But perhaps more poignant is the use of שָׁלַח in contexts of release or dismissal — the sending away of Hagar, the releasing of slaves in the Sabbath year, the divorce that sends a wife from her husband's house. The word covers the whole range of human relationships, obligations, authority, and consequence.
Pastorally, שָׁלַח anchors the biblical theology of mission. It is not a New Testament import. The God who sends is the God of Genesis through Malachi — the God whose word does not return void, whose messengers are not mere volunteers, and whose purposes are carried forward by those he commissions. When Isaiah says 'send me' (שְׁלָחֵנִי), he is stepping into a current already flowing through the whole of Scripture: God sends, God's purposes move outward, and the ones sent go with the authority and accountability of the one who dispatched them.
Form in passage Piel · Infinitive construct What is this?
Sense to send, release, let go
Definition To send away, let go, or release.
References Jeremiah 40:1, 5
Lexicon to send, release, let go
Why it matters Jeremiah is released from captivity, demonstrating the Lord's preservation of his prophet.
Sense Ramah, height
Definition A town north of Jerusalem used as a gathering point for captives.
References Jeremiah 40:1
Lexicon Ramah, height
Why it matters Jeremiah is found bound among the exiles at Ramah before being released.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense bound in fetters, chained
Definition Restrained with chains or fetters.
References Jeremiah 40:1
Lexicon bound in fetters, chained
Why it matters Jeremiah, though innocent and faithful, is found chained among the captives before release.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense exile, captivity, deported group
Definition Exile or a group taken into captivity.
References Jeremiah 40:1
Lexicon exile, captivity, deported group
Why it matters Jeremiah is found among those being taken into exile, though he is released from their fate.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense chief of the guard, commander of executioners/bodyguard
Definition A high-ranking Babylonian officer responsible for imperial guard or execution duties.
References Jeremiah 40:1-2
Lexicon chief of the guard, commander of executioners/bodyguard
Why it matters Nebuzaradan becomes the instrument of Jeremiah's release and protection.
Pastoral Entry
רַע (raʿ) is the primary Hebrew word for evil, but it covers a semantic range that English 'evil' does not fully capture. In Hebrew, raʿ can describe: (1) moral wickedness — the intentional doing of what God has declared wrong; (2) harm or injury — something that causes physical, social, or spiritual damage; (3) misfortune or calamity — 'evil' in the sense of disaster befalling a person; and (4) aesthetic or practical badness — something of poor quality.
The root is also the basis of the noun rāʿāh (H7451 variant, calamity/evil/affliction). The most theologically charged uses of raʿ are: (1) 'evil in the sight (eyes) of the Lord' (rāʿ bĕʿênê YHWH) — the covenant diagnostic formula that appears repeatedly in the OT, especially in Kings and Chronicles, evaluating every king's reign by whether it was covenant-faithful or covenant-breaking; (2) 'the knowledge of good and evil' (tôb wārāʿ) — the tree in Eden that represents autonomous moral judgment; and (3) the prophetic category of raʿ as the covenant breach that calls forth divine response.
The OT's understanding of evil is consistently theological and relational: raʿ is not merely unfortunate or suboptimal — it is a rupture in the covenant relationship with the God who is tôb (good). The prophets diagnose the raʿ of Israel not as a deficiency of information or civilization but as the refusal of the covenant relationship that defines what tôb means.
Sense evil, disaster, calamity
Definition Evil or calamity, depending on context; here the disaster of Jerusalem's fall.
References Jeremiah 40:2-3
Lexicon evil, disaster, calamity
Why it matters Nebuzaradan acknowledges that the Lord brought disaster because of Judah's sin.
Pastoral Entry
חָטָא is the OT's primary word for sin as a moral and relational reality. The root image is missing — not hitting what you aimed at, not arriving where you were bound to go. But this is not mere imprecision. In the OT, missing is ordinarily relational: it happens in relation to someone. Joseph says 'How could I sin against God?' (Gen 39:9). David says 'Against You, You only, have I sinned' (Ps 51:4).
Sin is not failure measured against an abstract standard; it is an offense committed against a Person. The word also spans remedy: the Piel stem means to decontaminate, to perform the priestly act that removes what the Qal named. The architecture is built into the root itself: the same word that names the wound also names the work of cleansing it.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to sin, miss the mark, offend
Definition To sin or commit offense against God.
References Jeremiah 40:3
Lexicon to sin, miss the mark, offend
Why it matters The disaster is explicitly tied to Judah's sin against the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
שָׁמַע is among the most theologically important verbs in the Hebrew Bible because it holds together what English separates: hearing and obeying. In Hebrew, to šāmaʿ to someone is not merely to receive audio input; it is to hear in a way that results in a response. The same verb describes physical hearing (Gen 3:10: Adam heard the sound of the Lord), understanding (Gen 11:7: so that they may not understand one another's speech), and obedience (Exod 19:5: if you will indeed obey my voice).
The theological weight of this semantic fusion is immense: the God who speaks expects a šāmaʿ that moves, not merely a šāmaʿ that registers. The Shema of Deuteronomy 6:4 — Shĕmaʿ Yiśrāʾēl, YHWH ʾĕlōhênû YHWH ʾeḥād — is one of the most important sentences in the OT. Its imperative is šāmaʿ. Israel is summoned not merely to hear a proposition about divine unity but to hear-and-obey the reality that the Lord alone is God.
Covenant renewal in the OT is repeatedly framed as a call to shama; apostasy is frequently characterized as not hearing, not heeding, refusing to listen. The prophets diagnose Israel's failure in šāmaʿ terms: 'they have ears but do not hear' (Jer 5:21; Ezek 12:2). Jesus takes this language directly: 'he who has ears to hear, let him hear' (Matt 11:15; 13:9) — the repeated call to šāmaʿ that characterizes prophetic address, applied to the hearing of the kingdom.
Sense to hear, listen, obey
Definition To hear attentively and obey.
References Jeremiah 40:3
Lexicon to hear, listen, obey
Why it matters Judah's fall is explained by refusal to obey the Lord's voice.
Pastoral Entry
קוֹל (qol) is the Hebrew word for voice and sound — the primary word for auditory experience in the OT, appearing 505 times. It covers every kind of sound: the human voice, the divine voice at Sinai and Horeb, the sevenfold voice of YHWH in the storm of Psalm 29, the still small voice after the fire at Horeb (1 Kgs 19:12), the voice crying in the wilderness of Isaiah 40, and the voice of the beloved in the Song of Songs. The qol is never merely acoustic — it is always relational and transformative.
Genesis 3:8 gives qol its first theological use and its most haunting context: 'They heard the sound (qol) of YHWH God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of YHWH God.' The qol of YHWH was heard before the fall — it was the expected sound of the daily walk together. After the fall, the qol is still heard, but the response has changed: they hide. The first consequence of sin is not that the qol goes silent but that the hearers go into hiding. The entire redemptive story is, in one sense, YHWH's pursuit of people who are hiding from his qol.
Psalm 29 is the OT's great qol text — the sevenfold qol YHWH in the storm: 'The qol of YHWH is over the waters; the God of glory thunders, YHWH, over many waters. The qol of YHWH is powerful (bekhoach); the qol of YHWH is full of majesty (behadar). The qol of YHWH breaks (shever) the cedars... The qol of YHWH flashes forth flames of fire. The qol of YHWH shakes the wilderness. The qol of YHWH makes the deer give birth... In his temple all cry, "Glory!"' Seven attributes and seven effects of the divine qol, structured around the sevenfold repetition of qol YHWH. The qol of YHWH does not merely announce — it acts.
First Kings 19:12 gives qol its most paradoxical form: 'after the fire a still small voice (qol demamah daqah, a voice of gentle stillness or a thin, quiet sound).' Elijah, who fled from Jezebel, encounters YHWH not in the wind that tears mountains (the cherev of Ps 29's qol), not in the earthquake, not in the fire — but in the demamah daqah. The qol YHWH can be the overwhelming sevenfold storm of Psalm 29 or the gentle stillness of Horeb. The theological point is the same: YHWH speaks, and the task is to listen.
Isaiah 40:3 introduces the qol of the herald: 'A qol of one crying: In the wilderness prepare the way of YHWH; make straight in the desert a highway for our God.' The qol is heard before the speaker is identified. All four Gospels apply this qol to John the Baptist (Matt 3:3, Mark 1:3, Luke 3:4, John 1:23). The qol prepares before the one it announces arrives.
For the preacher, קוֹל (qol) asks the fundamental question of every sermon: are we hiding from YHWH's voice, or are we listening for the still, quiet sound that Elijah needed to hear?
Sense voice, sound, proclamation
Definition Voice, sound, or spoken command.
References Jeremiah 40:3
Lexicon voice, sound, proclamation
Why it matters The people did not obey the voice of the Lord, summarizing the covenant failure.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense fetters, chains
Definition Chains or fetters for prisoners.
References Jeremiah 40:4
Lexicon fetters, chains
Why it matters The removal of Jeremiah's chains signals his preservation and release.
Sense good and right, pleasing and proper
Definition What is good, agreeable, right, or fitting.
References Jeremiah 40:4
Lexicon good and right, pleasing and proper
Why it matters Jeremiah is given freedom to choose where to go, a reversal from prior confinement.
Sense Gedaliah, 'Yahweh is great'
Definition Son of Ahikam and grandson of Shaphan, appointed by Babylon over the towns of Judah.
References Jeremiah 40:5-16
Lexicon Gedaliah, 'Yahweh is great'
Why it matters Gedaliah becomes the governor-like figure around whom the remnant gathers.
Sense Ahikam, 'my brother has risen'
Definition Father of Gedaliah; earlier associated with protecting Jeremiah.
References Jeremiah 40:5
Lexicon Ahikam, 'my brother has risen'
Why it matters Gedaliah's lineage connects him with a family previously favorable to Jeremiah.
Sense Shaphan
Definition Grandfather of Gedaliah and part of a scribal family significant in Judah's reforms and Jeremiah narratives.
References Jeremiah 40:5
Lexicon Shaphan
Why it matters Gedaliah's Shaphanide connection signals continuity with pro-prophetic circles in Judah.
Pastoral Entry
פָּקַד is one of the richest verbs in the OT precisely because it is one of the most difficult to translate with a single English word. English translations render it as visit, attend to, appoint, muster, number, punish, and several others — because פָּקַד is the verb for the act of a superior giving attention to something under their authority in a way that changes the situation.
The common thread across all its uses is the movement of a superior's attention toward someone or something, with consequences that follow. BDB identifies the range: to visit (in any sense — for blessing or for judgment), to attend to, to appoint, to deposit with, to number, to muster (troops), to commission. The word is currently counted by the local OT index at about 304 uses in the OT and is the foundational term for divine visitation — the moment when God turns his attention toward a person or people and acts.
The theological weight of פָּקַד in the OT oscillates between blessing and judgment. 'The Lord visited Sarah' (Gen 21:1) — the result is the birth of Isaac, the fulfillment of the promise. 'The Lord visited the Egyptians' (Exod 4:31 context; 12:12) — the result is the plagues and the Exodus. 'I will visit their transgression with the rod' (Ps 89:32) — the result is discipline.
'When you visit men, what are you doing to them?' (Ps 8:4 — though this verse uses פָּקַד to name the wonder of God's attention to humanity). The double edge of פָּקַד — it can mean a visit of blessing or a visit of judgment — is part of its theological content. When the OT says God פָּקַד his people, both possibilities are open until the context clarifies. The Exodus confession in Exod 4:31 — when Moses delivers the message and the people hear that 'the Lord had visited the children of Israel' — produces worship (שָׁחָה), because they know this פָּקַד is a visitation of liberation.
The word runs through Genesis to Revelation: from God remembering and visiting the barren (Gen 21:1) to God visiting the imprisoned Joseph (Gen 50:24-25) to God visiting the nations in judgment. The NT's ἐπισκέπτομαι (to visit, to attend to) carries the same range.
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to appoint, attend, oversee, visit
Definition To appoint, set over, attend to, or visit.
References Jeremiah 40:5, 7, 11
Lexicon to appoint, attend, oversee, visit
Why it matters Gedaliah is appointed over the towns of Judah by Babylon, forming the post-fall administration.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense provision, ration, allowance
Definition Provision or ration for support.
References Jeremiah 40:5
Lexicon provision, ration, allowance
Why it matters Jeremiah receives material provision after release, showing concrete care.
Sense gift, present, portion
Definition A gift, present, or portion.
References Jeremiah 40:5
Lexicon gift, present, portion
Why it matters The gift given to Jeremiah marks his release with favor and provision.
Sense Mizpah, watchtower
Definition A town in Benjamin that becomes Gedaliah's administrative center.
References Jeremiah 40:6, 8, 10, 12-13, 15
Lexicon Mizpah, watchtower
Why it matters Mizpah becomes the gathering place of the post-fall remnant and the site of coming tragedy.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense remnant, remainder, survivors
Definition Those who remain after judgment, war, or disaster.
References Jeremiah 40:11, 15
Lexicon remnant, remainder, survivors
Why it matters The chapter concerns the remnant left in Judah after exile and destruction.
Sense poor, lowly, weak
Definition Poor, low, weak, or socially disadvantaged.
References Jeremiah 40:7
Lexicon poor, lowly, weak
Why it matters Babylon leaves the poor in the land, and they become part of the surviving remnant.
Pastoral Entry
יָרֵא (yare) is the Hebrew verb for fear and reverence — a single word that covers both the terror-of-the-holy and the reverent-awe-of-the-beloved. The English word 'fear' has lost most of its awe-dimension in modern usage; the Hebrew yare still holds both together: the trembling of one who has encountered real power and the reverence of one who has been undone by holiness. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 329 occurrences in the OT.
Proverbs 1:7 places the fear of the Lord at the beginning of all wisdom: 'The fear of the Lord (yir'at YHWH) is the beginning of wisdom; fools despise wisdom and instruction.' The yir'ah here is not slavish terror but the foundational orientation that rightly orders all other knowledge — seeing reality from beneath God rather than from a position of independent evaluation. The person who fears the Lord has the right starting point for all thinking; the fool who does not fear God has no coherent framework because they have placed themselves at the center.
Genesis 22:12 gives the most concentrated example of yir'ah in narrative: 'now I know that you fear God (yere Elohim), seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.' The fear of God that Abraham demonstrates is the willingness to obey God absolutely, including in the thing that cost him everything. This is yir'ah as the motivating force of obedience: not the terror of punishment avoided but the awe of the God who is worth obeying even when obedience is the hardest thing imaginable.
The wisdom tradition consistently develops the yir'at YHWH as the orienting principle of human life: it is the beginning of wisdom (Prov 1:7), its crown (Prov 9:10), the thing that prolongs life (Prov 10:27), what keeps one from evil (Prov 16:6), and the source of what the Lord shares with those who fear Him (Ps 25:14). The yir'ah-tradition is the OT's answer to the deepest human question: where do I find the framework for living well? The answer is: in the awe of the God who made you, sustains you, and calls you.
For the preacher, יָרֵא is the word that restores the dimension of awe to the God-relationship — and insists that genuine love of God is not only warmth and affection but also the trembling recognition of who He is.
Sense do not fear
Definition A command not to fear or be afraid.
References Jeremiah 40:9
Lexicon do not fear
Why it matters Gedaliah calls the remnant not to fear serving Babylon, echoing the need for trustful submission to the Lord's discipline.
Pastoral Entry
עָבַד is the primary Hebrew verb for work, service, and worship — three realities the word holds together without separating them. In its basic range it means to labor, to till, to serve a master, or to perform assigned work. But the same root also carries the full weight of religious devotion: to serve God, to worship, to do the acts of obedience that belong to the covenant relationship. The noun form עֶבֶד (servant, slave) and the related עֲבֹדָה (service, labor, worship) share the same root, so that in Hebrew thought the servant and the worshiper are joined by the same word.
Deuteronomy is the book of עָבַד in concentrated form. Deuteronomy 6:13 — 'Fear the Lord your God, serve him only (אֹתוֹ תַעֲבֹד), and take your oaths in his name' — places service alongside fear and oath-taking as the defining posture of covenant loyalty. The same verse is cited by Jesus in the wilderness temptation when Satan offers him the kingdoms of the world: 'Worship the Lord your God and serve him only' (Matthew 4:10). Service to God is presented as exclusive: Israel may not עָבַד other gods (Deuteronomy 6:14, 7:16, 13:5). The verb marks out who or what receives the devotion that belongs to God alone.
Deuteronomy 28:47-48 uses the word at the hinge of the curse section: 'Because you did not serve (עָבַד) the Lord your God with joyfulness and gladness of heart, when you had abundance of all things, therefore you shall serve your enemies.' The failure to serve God with joy — not merely to perform religious duty but to do it with the affective quality of delight — becomes the root of covenant breach and its consequences. Joyless worship is not neutral. It is a form of withheld service that the covenant cannot tolerate.
Across the OT, עָבַד names the vocation of Israel: to serve the living God, not idols. The prophets use it to indict Israel for serving Baals (Jeremiah 2:20), and to promise restoration when Israel will return to serve God rightly (Isaiah 40:26-31; Malachi 3:14-18). The NT builds on this foundation: Jesus comes as the Servant (using the Greek δοῦλος and διάκονος), and Paul calls himself a δοῦλος of Christ. The category of servant-worship is not abolished in the NT but transformed — those who serve the risen Lord do so not from duty under threat but from love in the Spirit.
Sense to serve, work, worship
Definition To serve, labor, or be subject to.
References Jeremiah 40:9
Lexicon to serve, work, worship
Why it matters Serving Babylon is the required posture of survival under the Lord's judgment.
Pastoral Entry
יָטַב (yatav) is the Hebrew verb for being good, doing good, and going well — and in its Deuteronomic form it is the covenantal promise and obligation that structures the whole of Israel's life in the land. 'Keep his statutes, that it may go well (yitav) with you' is the great covenant summary: right relationship with YHWH produces the good of yatav in every domain of life. The local Hebrew artifact indexes this verb at about 112 OT occurrences.
Deuteronomy 6:18 gives yatav its core covenant-good use: 'And you shall do what is right and good (hatov vehayashar) in the sight of YHWH, that it may go well (yitav) with you and that you may go in and take possession of the good land.' The yatav flows from covenant faithfulness: do what is good and right in YHWH's sight, and it will go well with you. The yatav is not the achievement of circumstances but the consequence of covenant orientation.
Deuteronomy 4:40 gives yatav its generational form: 'Keep his statutes and his commandments, which I command you today, that it may go well (yitav) with you and with your children after you, and that you may prolong your days in the land that YHWH your God is giving you for all time.' The yatav of covenant faithfulness extends across generations: the child who inherits a parent who feared YHWH inherits the yatav-consequence of that faithfulness. The covenant blessing is not exhausted in one generation.
Genesis 4:7 gives yatav its moral-threshold form: 'If you do well (hetev), will you not be accepted? And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door.' YHWH's word to Cain before the murder of Abel is the earliest use of yatav's moral-threshold meaning: the one who does well (yatav in the Hiphil, hetev) is accepted; the one who does not, faces the crouching power of sin. The yatav is the covenant-good that deflects the alternative.
Psalm 119:68 gives yatav its divine-character use: 'You are good (tov) and do good (meitiv); teach me your statutes.' YHWH himself is the supreme yatav — he is good by nature, and his doing-good (meitiv, Hiphil of yatav) flows from what he is. The psalmist's request to be taught YHWH's statutes rests on YHWH's own goodness: you who are good and do good — teach me to be like you.
Deuteronomy 8:16 gives yatav its providential-suffering form: 'He who fed you in the wilderness with manna... that he might humble you and test you, to do you good (leheitiv lakh) in the end.' YHWH's purpose in the wilderness testing was yatav: the humbling and testing were not ends in themselves but means to the ultimate yatav — doing good to Israel in the end. The suffering that precedes the yatav is not evidence of YHWH's unfaithfulness but of his deeper faithfulness.
For the preacher, יָטַב (yatav) gives the congregation the covenant logic of the good life: what goes well is the consequence of what is done well in YHWH's sight. And YHWH himself is the supreme yatav-one: tov umeitiv, good and doing good.
Sense it will go well, be good for you
Definition To be good, go well, or be favorable.
References Jeremiah 40:9
Lexicon it will go well, be good for you
Why it matters Gedaliah promises that humble settlement under Babylon will result in relative well-being.
Sense stand before, represent before
Definition To stand before another, often as representative or servant.
References Jeremiah 40:10
Lexicon stand before, represent before
Why it matters Gedaliah will stand before the Babylonians on behalf of the people.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to gather, collect, assemble
Definition To gather, collect, or bring together.
References Jeremiah 40:10, 12
Lexicon to gather, collect, assemble
Why it matters The remnant gathers produce, signaling ordinary life and provision after judgment.
Sense wine
Definition Wine from grapes.
References Jeremiah 40:10, 12
Lexicon wine
Why it matters Wine gathered by the remnant shows agricultural provision after devastation.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense summer fruit, ripe fruit
Definition Summer produce, often figs or ripe seasonal fruit.
References Jeremiah 40:10, 12
Lexicon summer fruit, ripe fruit
Why it matters Summer fruit gathered in abundance signals survival and mercy in the land.
Pastoral Entry
שֶׁמֶן (shemen) is the Hebrew word for oil — olive oil as daily provision, ritual anointing oil, the oil of consecration for priests and kings, and the figurative richness and fruitfulness of YHWH's blessing. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 193 H8081 uses. The most theologically concentrated uses are the anointing of the king with shemen (1 Sam 10:1, 16:13) and Psalm 45:7's shemen sasson (oil of gladness), which Hebrews 1:9 applies to Christ as the anointed one above all others.
Psalm 45:7 gives shemen its most christologically rich use: 'You have loved righteousness and hated wickedness; therefore God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness (shemen sasson) above your companions.' The anointing with shemen sasson is the reward of righteousness: the righteous king is anointed with a joy-oil that sets him above all others. Hebrews 1:9 quotes this verse and applies it to Christ: 'God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness beyond your companions.' The shemen sasson of Psalm 45:7 is the ultimate anointing — Christ's anointing by the Father, above all messianic predecessors.
Exodus 30:22-32 gives shemen its consecration use: YHWH gives Moses the formula for the sacred anointing oil (shemen ha-mishchah) — a specific blend of myrrh, cinnamon, aromatic cane, cassia, and olive oil — to be used exclusively for the tabernacle, its vessels, Aaron, and his sons. The shemen ha-mishchah is the sacred anointing that sets apart for YHWH's service: 'by it the tabernacle and all its furnishings are consecrated... Aaron and his sons you shall anoint and consecrate, that they may serve me as priests' (v. 26-30). The shemen marks the boundary between ordinary and holy — it is the substance of consecration.
First Samuel 16:13 gives shemen its kingship-anointing use: 'Then Samuel took the horn of oil (shemen) and anointed him in the midst of his brothers. And the Spirit of YHWH rushed upon David from that day forward.' The shemen-anointing and the Spirit's arrival are simultaneous — the oil is the visible sign of the invisible Spirit-anointing. The mashiach (anointed one, H4899) is the king anointed with shemen; and the Spirit who comes upon David at the shemen-anointing is the same Spirit who comes upon Jesus at his baptism (Luke 3:22). The Messiah is the anointed one — the one upon whom the Spirit rests as signified by the oil.
Psalm 23:5 gives shemen its pastoral-abundance use: 'You anoint my head with shemen; my cup overflows.' In the context of the shepherd-psalm's table prepared in the presence of enemies (v. 5), the anointing with shemen is the sign of honor and welcome given to the honored guest by the host — and by YHWH the shepherd to his sheep. The cup overflows alongside the head-anointing: YHWH's provision is not measured but extravagant.
For the preacher, שֶׁמֶן (shemen) holds together the physical (olive oil as daily provision, the widow's jar of 1 Kgs 17), the ritual (the sacred anointing oil of Exodus 30), the royal (David's anointing and the Spirit's coming), and the eschatological (Christ anointed above all, Ps 45:7 / Heb 1:9). The shemen is the substance of consecration, provision, and gladness.
Sense oil, olive oil
Definition Oil, especially olive oil, used for food, light, and anointing.
References Jeremiah 40:10
Lexicon oil, olive oil
Why it matters Oil gathered by the remnant represents restored ordinary provision.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Moab
Definition A nation east of the Dead Sea where Judean refugees had fled.
References Jeremiah 40:11
Lexicon Moab
Why it matters Judeans return from Moab as part of the remnant regathering.
Sense Ammonites, children of Ammon
Definition A nation east of the Jordan, connected here both to refugee return and Baalis's plot.
References Jeremiah 40:11, 14
Lexicon Ammonites, children of Ammon
Why it matters Ammon is both a place of Judean refuge and the source of the assassination plot through Baalis.
Sense Edom
Definition A nation southeast of Judah where some Judean refugees had fled.
References Jeremiah 40:11
Lexicon Edom
Why it matters Return from Edom shows the scattered nature of the surviving Judean population.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense very much, great abundance
Definition A phrase indicating great quantity or abundance.
References Jeremiah 40:12
Lexicon very much, great abundance
Why it matters The abundant produce underscores mercy and provision after the devastation of judgment.
Sense Johanan, 'Yahweh has shown grace'
Definition Son of Kareah, a Judean military leader who warns Gedaliah about Ishmael.
References Jeremiah 40:8, 13, 15
Lexicon Johanan, 'Yahweh has shown grace'
Why it matters Johanan sees the threat Gedaliah refuses to believe and later becomes central in the remnant's choices.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Baalis, king of the Ammonites
Definition The king of the Ammonites who reportedly sends Ishmael to assassinate Gedaliah.
References Jeremiah 40:14
Lexicon Baalis, king of the Ammonites
Why it matters Baalis represents external political interference threatening the remnant's stability.
Sense Ishmael, 'God hears'
Definition Son of Nethaniah, of royal blood, who is warned about as Gedaliah's would-be assassin.
References Jeremiah 40:8, 14-16
Lexicon Ishmael, 'God hears'
Why it matters Ishmael becomes the agent of internal treachery that destabilizes the remnant.
Pastoral Entry
נָכָה (nakah) is the Hebrew verb for striking — one of the OT's most frequent violent verbs, currently indexed about 502 times in the local Hebrew index and appearing chiefly in the Hiphil stem (hikah, to cause to be struck). It covers Moses striking the Egyptian, YHWH striking the Egyptians in the plagues, armies defeating enemies, and — most theologically — YHWH striking the Servant in Isaiah 53. The nakah-logic of the OT is that the one struck is under the power of the one striking, that judgment comes in the form of nakah, and that the most astonishing theological reversal in the OT is the nakah that falls on the innocent Servant in place of those who deserved it.
Exodus 12:12-13 is the foundational divine nakah: 'I will strike (hikah) all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and animal.' The Passover lamb's blood is the protection against the nakah — the striker passes over the marked houses. The nakah of the firstborn is the culminating plague judgment, concentrated and total. The Passover's protection from the nakah is the template for every subsequent blood-atonement: the nakah that should fall on the guilty is diverted by the substitutionary blood.
Isaiah 53:4 is the theological pivot of the entire OT's nakah theology: 'Yet we considered him struck (nakah) by God and afflicted.' The nakah the Servant receives is interpreted by the watching community as divine judgment on the Servant himself — a reasonable interpretation (the nakah of Exodus 12 was divine judgment). But the passage corrects this: 'surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows' (v. 4a). The nakah falls on the Servant for the many. The nakah of judgment hits the innocent one, and the many who deserved nakah are spared.
Zechariah 13:7 takes the nakah into explicit divine agency over the Servant-Shepherd: 'Awake, O sword, against my shepherd, against the man who stands next to me, declares YHWH of hosts. Strike (hikah) the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered.' YHWH commands the striking of the one who stands beside him — the shepherd and YHWH are in intimate proximity, and still the nakah command is given. Jesus quotes this verse at Gethsemane (Mark 14:27, Matt 26:31) as the interpretive frame for his arrest and the disciples' scattering.
For the preacher, נָכָה (nakah) makes the substitutionary question explicit: who is struck, and for whom?
Sense to strike, smite, kill
Definition To strike, attack, or kill.
References Jeremiah 40:15
Lexicon to strike, smite, kill
Why it matters Johanan offers to strike Ishmael to prevent the assassination of Gedaliah.
Sense to scatter, disperse
Definition To scatter or disperse a people.
References Jeremiah 40:15
Lexicon to scatter, disperse
Why it matters Johanan warns that Gedaliah's death will scatter the remnant that has begun to gather.
Pastoral Entry
שֶׁקֶר is the Hebrew noun for falsehood, lie, deception — but its range is wider than a single English word captures. BDB's definitions include: falsehood, lying, deception, what is false, disappointment, and vanity (in the sense of what comes to nothing). The root idea is that which does not correspond to reality — the word, the action, or the claim that presents a false picture.
שֶׁקֶר is currently counted by the local OT index at about 113 uses across several major registers. First, the judicial register: 'you shall not bear false witness' (Exod 20:16 uses שָׁוְא, the synonym, but Exod 23:7 uses שֶׁקֶר — 'keep far from a false matter'); a witness who testifies שֶׁקֶר destroys justice at its source. Second, the prophetic register: the false prophets speak שֶׁקֶר (Jer 14:14, 'prophesying a lie'; Jer 23:25-26, 'they prophesy lies in my name; I did not send them'); the prophet who claims to speak for God when God has not sent them is the paradigmatic שֶׁקֶר-speaker.
Third, the idolatry register: idols are called שֶׁקֶר because they are false — they claim divine status they do not have; Jer 10:14 calls the idol-maker's product שֶׁקֶר ('the molten image is falsehood, and there is no breath in them'). Fourth, the relational register: friends and allies who prove unfaithful are called שֶׁקֶר; trust that is not warranted by reality is trust placed in falsehood.
The Psalms' use of שֶׁקֶר is particularly concentrated: Psalm 119 alone uses it 8 times to express the psalmist's hatred of falsehood and love of the true (אֱמֶת) in contrast. The fundamental theological claim embedded in שֶׁקֶר is that the God who is true (אֱמֶת is one of his primary attributes) is the judge of all שֶׁקֶר. Jeremiah's contrast between the false prophets who speak שֶׁקֶר and the true prophet who speaks what God actually said is the OT's paradigmatic account of the conflict between the true word and the false word.
Sense lie, falsehood, deception
Definition A lie or false report.
References Jeremiah 40:16
Lexicon lie, falsehood, deception
Why it matters Gedaliah wrongly accuses Johanan of lying, rejecting a true warning.
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
| v.1 | H1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7971שָׁלַחPiel · Infinitive constructH631אָסַרQal · Participle passive |
| v.10 | H3427יָשַׁבQal · ParticipleH935בּוֹאQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH622אָסַףQal · Imperative · ImperativeH8610תָּפַשׂQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.11 | H8085שָׁמַעQal · Perfect · IndicativeH5414נָתַןQal · Perfect · IndicativeH6485פָּקַדHiphil · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.12 | H5080נָדַחNiphal · Perfect · IndicativeH7235רָבָהHiphil · Infinitive absolute |
| v.13 | H935בּוֹאQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.14 | H3045יָדַעQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7971שָׁלַחQal · Perfect · IndicativeH539אָמַןHiphil · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.15 | H559אָמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH3212יָלַךְQal · CohortativeH3045יָדַעQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.16 | H6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · JussiveH6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · JussiveH1696דָבַרQal · Participle |
| v.2 | H1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.3 | H1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH2398חָטָאQal · Perfect · IndicativeH8085שָׁמַעQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.4 | H935בּוֹאQal · Imperative · ImperativeH7489רָעַעQal · Perfect · IndicativeH2308חָדַלQal · Imperative · ImperativeH7200רָאָהQal · Imperative · ImperativeH3212יָלַךְQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.5 | H7725שׁוּבQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6485פָּקַדHiphil · Perfect · IndicativeH3212יָלַךְQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.7 | H6485פָּקַדHiphil · Perfect · IndicativeH6485פָּקַדHiphil · Perfect · IndicativeH1540גָּלָהHophal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.9 | H3372יָרֵאQal · Imperfect · JussiveH3427יָשַׁבQal · Imperative · Imperative |
Aspect in Hebrew is grammatical form, not tense. Perfect = completed action; Imperfect = incomplete/ongoing. Stem modifies action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive).
Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 40 argues that life after judgment must still be lived under the word of the Lord. Jerusalem has fallen, but the story is not finished. Jeremiah is preserved, the poor remain, refugees return, and the land produces abundance. Yet the remnant's future remains precarious because the sinful patterns that led to judgment have not disappeared. Gedaliah rightly calls the people to settle under Babylonian rule, which aligns with Jeremiah's prior word that submission to Babylon is the path of life.
But Gedaliah fails to discern and respond to treachery. The chapter therefore holds mercy and danger together: the Lord gives a remnant space to live, but the remnant remains vulnerable to fear, factionalism, assassination, and ignored warnings.
From release, to theological interpretation, to remnant settlement, to refugee return, to conspiracy warning.
- 1.The fall of Jerusalem was the LORD's righteous judgment.
- 2.The LORD preserves his prophet after the city rejects him.
- 3.Jeremiah identifies with the remnant.
- 4.Submission under Babylon remains the path of life after the fall.
- 5.The LORD leaves mercy in the land after judgment.
- 6.Post-judgment mercy can be endangered by internal sin and political violence.
- 7.Leadership requires discernment as well as goodwill.
Theological Focus
- The Lord's Judgment Explained
- Prophetic Preservation
- Remnant Mercy
- Submission to Discipline
- Life in the Land After Judgment
- Leadership and Discernment
- Ignored Warning
- Internal Threats After External Judgment
- Divine Judgment
- Providence
- Remnant
- Mercy After Judgment
- Submission to Divine Discipline
- Prophetic Ministry
- Leadership Discernment
- Christ the Shepherd-King
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 40 shows the transition from covenant curse to remnant survival. The city has fallen because the people sinned and did not obey the Lord's voice. Yet the Lord has not erased Judah from the land entirely. Poor survivors remain, refugees return, fields still yield produce, and Jeremiah stays with the remnant. Covenant judgment has fallen, but covenant mercy continues in a humbled form.
- Nebuzaradan states that disaster came because Judah sinned against the Lord and did not obey him.
- A remnant of poor people, women, children, soldiers, and returning refugees remains in Judah.
- The land still produces wine, summer fruit, and oil after the fall.
- Serving Babylon is the humble posture required under the Lord's judgment.
- Jeremiah remains with the people after judgment, showing continued access to the Lord's word.
- The remnant remains threatened by violence and unwise refusal to heed warning.
Canonical Connections
After Jerusalem's fall, the Lord preserves Jeremiah and leaves a fragile remnant in the land under Gedaliah, yet the remnant's future is immediately threatened by internal treachery and ignored warning.
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Jeremiah 40 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's judgment is deserved and God's mercy is undeserved. Judah's fall came because of sin and refusal to obey. Yet the Lord preserves a prophet, leaves a remnant, allows refugees to return, and provides food from the land. This is mercy in the ashes, not earned restoration. The gospel brings this pattern to its fullness in Christ: sinners deserve judgment because they have not obeyed the Lord's voice, yet God preserves life through the one who bears judgment in their place.
Christ gathers the scattered, remains with his people, and gives a better hope than fragile survival under Gedaliah.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 40 contributes to Christ-centered theology by showing life after judgment with a humbled remnant, a preserved prophet, and a failed provisional governor. Gedaliah offers a temporary structure for survival but cannot secure the remnant from treachery. The chapter deepens the need for a faithful shepherd-king who can gather, protect, and govern God's people in righteousness.
Jeremiah's choice to remain among the remnant also anticipates the pattern of a faithful servant dwelling with a broken people. In Christ, the true Word and faithful Shepherd comes not merely to stay with a remnant after judgment but to bear judgment, gather his scattered people, and secure their final peace.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 40 argues that life after judgment must still be lived under the word of the Lord. Jerusalem has fallen, but the story is not finished. Jeremiah is preserved, the poor remain, refugees return, and the land produces abundance. Yet the remnant's future remains precarious because the sinful patterns that led to judgment have not disappeared. Gedaliah rightly calls the people to settle under Babylonian rule, which aligns with Jeremiah's prior word that submission to Babylon is the path of life.
But Gedaliah fails to discern and respond to treachery. The chapter therefore holds mercy and danger together: the Lord gives a remnant space to live, but the remnant remains vulnerable to fear, factionalism, assassination, and ignored warnings.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Sin and judgment often leave communities vulnerable to internal conflict and instability.
The fall of Jerusalem demonstrates the certainty of God’s judgment against persistent rebellion.
God preserves and directs the circumstances of His faithful servants even during national catastrophe.
Even well-intentioned leaders may fail to discern threats or respond wisely in times of crisis.
God’s people must exercise wisdom when evaluating warnings and threats.
God preserves a surviving community even after severe judgment.
Accepting God’s appointed circumstances can be part of faithful obedience.
The fulfillment of Jeremiah’s warnings confirms the truth of God’s revealed word.
Judah's disaster came because the people sinned and did not obey the Lord's voice.
The Lord preserves Jeremiah through Babylonian release and places him among the remnant.
A poor remnant remains in Judah, and refugees return from surrounding nations.
The remnant receives land, produce, and opportunity for settled life after catastrophe.
Gedaliah's counsel to serve Babylon aligns with the Lord's prior word through Jeremiah.
Jeremiah's ministry continues after Jerusalem's fall and among the remaining people.
Gedaliah's failure to heed warning exposes the danger of naive leadership.
The fragile remnant under vulnerable governance points canonically toward Christ's faithful shepherding rule.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Jeremiah 40 forms truthful repentance, humble survival, pastoral solidarity, disciplined rebuilding, wise discernment, and hope in Christ beyond fragile human governance.
Jeremiah 40 forms truthful repentance, humble survival, pastoral solidarity, disciplined rebuilding, wise discernment, and hope in Christ beyond fragile human governance.
- Truthful interpretation - Interpret suffering and consequences under the authority of God's word, not self-protective explanations.
- Humble rebuilding - Practice ordinary faithfulness after loss: settle, gather, work, and obey.
- Solidarity with survivors - Stay present with broken people when God calls you to remain.
- Receiving provision - Give thanks for wine, fruit, oil, fields, and daily mercies after devastation.
- Discernment in leadership - Combine goodwill with alertness to real danger.
- Warning reception - Listen carefully when faithful people raise concerns about threats to the flock.
- Christ-centered hope - Anchor hope in Christ's shepherding rule, not fragile human arrangements.
- Jeremiah 40 warns that after judgment, God's people still need humility, obedience, discernment, and readiness to heed warnings.
- Do not forget why judgment came.
- Do not treat survival as proof of spiritual health.
- Do not despise humble life under discipline.
- Do not confuse mercy with full restoration.
- Do not ignore credible warnings because they are uncomfortable.
- Do not assume goodwill is the same as wisdom.
- Do not underestimate internal threats after external crisis.
- Nebuzaradan's words mean he had full covenant faith. - The text records him stating the theological truth of Judah's fall, but it does not present a full conversion account.
- Jeremiah was released because Babylon was morally superior. - Babylon remains the empire of conquest. Jeremiah's release shows the Lord's providential preservation, not Babylon's righteousness.
- Gedaliah's appointment means Judah is now restored. - Gedaliah's governorship is a fragile post-judgment arrangement under Babylon, not full covenant restoration.
- Serving Babylon is always a biblical duty in every context. - In this specific covenant-historical setting, Babylon is the Lord's appointed instrument of discipline, so submission is the path of life.
- The returning refugees show that everything is now well. - Their return is mercy, but the chapter ends with an assassination plot that threatens the remnant.
- Gedaliah's refusal to believe Johanan is automatically admirable charity. - The next chapter shows that the warning was true. Charity without discernment can endanger the flock.
- Johanan's offer is simple heroism. - The narrative shows he rightly identifies the danger, but the ethics of preemptive killing are complex and should not be flattened.
- When I experience consequences, do I explain them honestly before the Lord or only blame circumstances?
- Where has God preserved me after discipline, and how should I steward that mercy?
- Am I willing to remain with broken people when comfort elsewhere is available?
- What would humble obedience look like in a season where I cannot undo the past?
- Do I despise ordinary provision because I am grieving former abundance?
- Am I ignoring a credible warning because I want to believe the best without discernment?
- How does the fragility of human leadership deepen my trust in Christ the Shepherd-King?
- Preach Jeremiah 40 as mercy in the aftermath. Judgment has fallen, but the Lord has not stopped speaking, preserving, and providing.
- Use the chapter for people living after consequences. The question becomes: will you now live humbly, truthfully, and obediently under God's discipline?
- Gedaliah shows the need for stabilizing leadership, but also warns that peaceable leadership without discernment can endanger the remnant.
- Jeremiah's choice to remain among the people models pastoral solidarity with those left after collapse.
- The returning Judeans from Moab, Ammon, Edom, and other lands provide a pastoral lens for displaced people seeking to rebuild.
- Johanan's warning teaches leaders not to dismiss credible threats because they do not fit a preferred narrative of peace.
- Move from fragile remnant mercy to Christ, who gathers the scattered and secures a peace no Gedaliah can guarantee.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from Jeremiah's release at Ramah, to Nebuzaradan's theological explanation of Judah's fall, to Jeremiah's choice to remain with Gedaliah, to the gathering and stabilization of the remnant, to the return of scattered Judeans, and finally to the warning of Ishmael's assassination plot.
Jeremiah 40 shows the transition from covenant curse to remnant survival. The city has fallen because the people sinned and did not obey the Lord's voice. Yet the Lord has not erased Judah from the land entirely. Poor survivors remain, refugees return, fields still yield produce, and Jeremiah stays with the remnant. Covenant judgment has fallen, but covenant mercy continues in a humbled form.
Jeremiah 40 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's judgment is deserved and God's mercy is undeserved. Judah's fall came because of sin and refusal to obey. Yet the Lord preserves a prophet, leaves a remnant, allows refugees to return, and provides food from the land. This is mercy in the ashes, not earned restoration. The gospel brings this pattern to its fullness in Christ: sinners deserve judgment because they have not obeyed the Lord's voice, yet God preserves life through the one who bears judgment in their place.
Christ gathers the scattered, remains with his people, and gives a better hope than fragile survival under Gedaliah.
Focus Points
- The Lord's Judgment Explained
- Prophetic Preservation
- Remnant Mercy
- Submission to Discipline
- Life in the Land After Judgment
- Leadership and Discernment
- Ignored Warning
- Internal Threats After External Judgment
- Divine Judgment
- Providence
- Remnant
- Mercy After Judgment
- Submission to Divine Discipline
- Prophetic Ministry
- Leadership Discernment
- Christ the Shepherd-King
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 40:1-6
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.
Jer 40:7 Return of those who had been dispersed: they gather round Gedaliah . - Whilst the country and its capital were being conquered, many of the men of war had dispersed here and there through the land, and fled for refuge to regions difficult of access, where they could not be reached by the Chaldeans; others had even escaped into the territory of the Moabites, Ammonites, and Edomites.
When these heard that now, after the destruction of Jerusalem and the carrying away of the captives, the king of Babylon had appointed Gedaliah as governor over the few people who had been left behind in the country, they returned from their several places of refuge, and came to Mizpah to Gedaliah, who promised them protection and safety, on condition that they would recognise the authority of the king of Babylon and peaceably cultivate the soil. שׂרי חילים, "leaders of the forces, captains."
בּשׂדה, "in the country," as opposed to the city; שׂדה, "fields," as in Jer 17:3. אנשׁיהם, "their men," the troops under the captains. כּי הפקיד אתּו, "that he had committed to his oversight and care." "Men," viz. , old, weak, infirm men; "women and children," whose husbands and fathers had perished; "and some of the poor of the country, of those who had not been carried captive to Babylon" (מן partitive), i.
e. , the poor and mean people whom the Chaldeans had left behind in the country (Jer 39:10).
Jer 40:8-12 These captains came to Mizpah, namely (ו explicative), Ishmael the son of Nethaniah (according to Jer 41:1, the grandson of Elishama, and of royal blood), Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kareah (cf. Jer 40:13 and Jer 41:11, Jer 41:16; Jer 42:1. ; the name Jonathan is omitted in 2Ki 25:23; see on this passage), Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth, and the sons of Ephai the Netophathite (from Netophah in the vicinity of Bethlehem, 1Ch 2:54; Ezr 2:22), Jezaniah (יזניהוּ; but in 2Ki 25:23 יאזניהוּ), the Maachathite, from Maachah, a district in Syria near Hermon, Deu 3:14; Jos 12:5.
These men, who had borne arms against the Chaldeans, were concerned for their safety when they returned into the country. Gedaliah sware to them, i. e. , promised them on oath, "Be not afraid to serve the Chaldeans; remain in the country and serve the king of Babylon, and it shall be well with you. And as for me, behold, I shall remain at Mizpah to stand before the Chaldeans who will come to us," i.
e. , as lieutenant of the king of Babylon, to represent you before the Chaldean officers and armies, to maintain your rights and interests, so that you may be able to settle down where you choose, without anxiety, and cultivate the land. "And as for yourselves, father ye wine and fruit (קיץ, see on 2Sa 16:1) and oil, and put them in your vessels." אסף is used of the ingathering of the fruits of the ground.
It was during the fifth or sixth month (2Ki 25:8), the end of July or beginning of August, that grapes, figs, and olives became ripe; and these had grown so plentifully in comparison with the small number of those who had returned, that they could gather sufficient for their wants. "And dwell in your cities, cities which ye seize," i. e. , which you shall take possession of.
Jer 40:11. Those Jews also who had fled, during the war, into the neighbouring countries of Moab, Ammon, Edom, etc. , returned to Judah when they learned that the king of Babylon had left a remnant, and placed Gedaliah over them; they came to Mizpah and Gedaliah, who appointed them places to dwell in, and they gathered much wine and fruit, i. e. , made a rich vintage and fruit harvest.
נתן שׁארית, "to give a remainder," as it were to leave a remainder ('הותיר שׁ'( redniamer, Jer 44:7, or 'שׂוּם שׁ, Gen 45:7).
Jer 40:8-12 These captains came to Mizpah, namely (ו explicative), Ishmael the son of Nethaniah (according to Jer 41:1, the grandson of Elishama, and of royal blood), Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kareah (cf. Jer 40:13 and Jer 41:11, Jer 41:16; Jer 42:1. ; the name Jonathan is omitted in 2Ki 25:23; see on this passage), Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth, and the sons of Ephai the Netophathite (from Netophah in the vicinity of Bethlehem, 1Ch 2:54; Ezr 2:22), Jezaniah (יזניהוּ; but in 2Ki 25:23 יאזניהוּ), the Maachathite, from Maachah, a district in Syria near Hermon, Deu 3:14; Jos 12:5.
These men, who had borne arms against the Chaldeans, were concerned for their safety when they returned into the country. Gedaliah sware to them, i. e. , promised them on oath, "Be not afraid to serve the Chaldeans; remain in the country and serve the king of Babylon, and it shall be well with you. And as for me, behold, I shall remain at Mizpah to stand before the Chaldeans who will come to us," i.
e. , as lieutenant of the king of Babylon, to represent you before the Chaldean officers and armies, to maintain your rights and interests, so that you may be able to settle down where you choose, without anxiety, and cultivate the land. "And as for yourselves, father ye wine and fruit (קיץ, see on 2Sa 16:1) and oil, and put them in your vessels." אסף is used of the ingathering of the fruits of the ground.
It was during the fifth or sixth month (2Ki 25:8), the end of July or beginning of August, that grapes, figs, and olives became ripe; and these had grown so plentifully in comparison with the small number of those who had returned, that they could gather sufficient for their wants. "And dwell in your cities, cities which ye seize," i. e. , which you shall take possession of.
Jer 40:11. Those Jews also who had fled, during the war, into the neighbouring countries of Moab, Ammon, Edom, etc. , returned to Judah when they learned that the king of Babylon had left a remnant, and placed Gedaliah over them; they came to Mizpah and Gedaliah, who appointed them places to dwell in, and they gathered much wine and fruit, i. e. , made a rich vintage and fruit harvest.
נתן שׁארית, "to give a remainder," as it were to leave a remainder ('הותיר שׁ'( redniamer, Jer 44:7, or 'שׂוּם שׁ, Gen 45:7).
Jer 40:8-12 These captains came to Mizpah, namely (ו explicative), Ishmael the son of Nethaniah (according to Jer 41:1, the grandson of Elishama, and of royal blood), Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kareah (cf. Jer 40:13 and Jer 41:11, Jer 41:16; Jer 42:1. ; the name Jonathan is omitted in 2Ki 25:23; see on this passage), Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth, and the sons of Ephai the Netophathite (from Netophah in the vicinity of Bethlehem, 1Ch 2:54; Ezr 2:22), Jezaniah (יזניהוּ; but in 2Ki 25:23 יאזניהוּ), the Maachathite, from Maachah, a district in Syria near Hermon, Deu 3:14; Jos 12:5.
These men, who had borne arms against the Chaldeans, were concerned for their safety when they returned into the country. Gedaliah sware to them, i. e. , promised them on oath, "Be not afraid to serve the Chaldeans; remain in the country and serve the king of Babylon, and it shall be well with you. And as for me, behold, I shall remain at Mizpah to stand before the Chaldeans who will come to us," i.
e. , as lieutenant of the king of Babylon, to represent you before the Chaldean officers and armies, to maintain your rights and interests, so that you may be able to settle down where you choose, without anxiety, and cultivate the land. "And as for yourselves, father ye wine and fruit (קיץ, see on 2Sa 16:1) and oil, and put them in your vessels." אסף is used of the ingathering of the fruits of the ground.
It was during the fifth or sixth month (2Ki 25:8), the end of July or beginning of August, that grapes, figs, and olives became ripe; and these had grown so plentifully in comparison with the small number of those who had returned, that they could gather sufficient for their wants. "And dwell in your cities, cities which ye seize," i. e. , which you shall take possession of.
Jer 40:11. Those Jews also who had fled, during the war, into the neighbouring countries of Moab, Ammon, Edom, etc. , returned to Judah when they learned that the king of Babylon had left a remnant, and placed Gedaliah over them; they came to Mizpah and Gedaliah, who appointed them places to dwell in, and they gathered much wine and fruit, i. e. , made a rich vintage and fruit harvest.
נתן שׁארית, "to give a remainder," as it were to leave a remainder ('הותיר שׁ'( redniamer, Jer 44:7, or 'שׂוּם שׁ, Gen 45:7).
Jer 40:8-12 These captains came to Mizpah, namely (ו explicative), Ishmael the son of Nethaniah (according to Jer 41:1, the grandson of Elishama, and of royal blood), Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kareah (cf. Jer 40:13 and Jer 41:11, Jer 41:16; Jer 42:1. ; the name Jonathan is omitted in 2Ki 25:23; see on this passage), Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth, and the sons of Ephai the Netophathite (from Netophah in the vicinity of Bethlehem, 1Ch 2:54; Ezr 2:22), Jezaniah (יזניהוּ; but in 2Ki 25:23 יאזניהוּ), the Maachathite, from Maachah, a district in Syria near Hermon, Deu 3:14; Jos 12:5.
These men, who had borne arms against the Chaldeans, were concerned for their safety when they returned into the country. Gedaliah sware to them, i. e. , promised them on oath, "Be not afraid to serve the Chaldeans; remain in the country and serve the king of Babylon, and it shall be well with you. And as for me, behold, I shall remain at Mizpah to stand before the Chaldeans who will come to us," i.
e. , as lieutenant of the king of Babylon, to represent you before the Chaldean officers and armies, to maintain your rights and interests, so that you may be able to settle down where you choose, without anxiety, and cultivate the land. "And as for yourselves, father ye wine and fruit (קיץ, see on 2Sa 16:1) and oil, and put them in your vessels." אסף is used of the ingathering of the fruits of the ground.
It was during the fifth or sixth month (2Ki 25:8), the end of July or beginning of August, that grapes, figs, and olives became ripe; and these had grown so plentifully in comparison with the small number of those who had returned, that they could gather sufficient for their wants. "And dwell in your cities, cities which ye seize," i. e. , which you shall take possession of.
Jer 40:11. Those Jews also who had fled, during the war, into the neighbouring countries of Moab, Ammon, Edom, etc. , returned to Judah when they learned that the king of Babylon had left a remnant, and placed Gedaliah over them; they came to Mizpah and Gedaliah, who appointed them places to dwell in, and they gathered much wine and fruit, i. e. , made a rich vintage and fruit harvest.
נתן שׁארית, "to give a remainder," as it were to leave a remainder ('הותיר שׁ'( redniamer, Jer 44:7, or 'שׂוּם שׁ, Gen 45:7).
Jer 40:8-12 These captains came to Mizpah, namely (ו explicative), Ishmael the son of Nethaniah (according to Jer 41:1, the grandson of Elishama, and of royal blood), Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kareah (cf. Jer 40:13 and Jer 41:11, Jer 41:16; Jer 42:1. ; the name Jonathan is omitted in 2Ki 25:23; see on this passage), Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth, and the sons of Ephai the Netophathite (from Netophah in the vicinity of Bethlehem, 1Ch 2:54; Ezr 2:22), Jezaniah (יזניהוּ; but in 2Ki 25:23 יאזניהוּ), the Maachathite, from Maachah, a district in Syria near Hermon, Deu 3:14; Jos 12:5.
These men, who had borne arms against the Chaldeans, were concerned for their safety when they returned into the country. Gedaliah sware to them, i. e. , promised them on oath, "Be not afraid to serve the Chaldeans; remain in the country and serve the king of Babylon, and it shall be well with you. And as for me, behold, I shall remain at Mizpah to stand before the Chaldeans who will come to us," i.
e. , as lieutenant of the king of Babylon, to represent you before the Chaldean officers and armies, to maintain your rights and interests, so that you may be able to settle down where you choose, without anxiety, and cultivate the land. "And as for yourselves, father ye wine and fruit (קיץ, see on 2Sa 16:1) and oil, and put them in your vessels." אסף is used of the ingathering of the fruits of the ground.
It was during the fifth or sixth month (2Ki 25:8), the end of July or beginning of August, that grapes, figs, and olives became ripe; and these had grown so plentifully in comparison with the small number of those who had returned, that they could gather sufficient for their wants. "And dwell in your cities, cities which ye seize," i. e. , which you shall take possession of.
Jer 40:11. Those Jews also who had fled, during the war, into the neighbouring countries of Moab, Ammon, Edom, etc. , returned to Judah when they learned that the king of Babylon had left a remnant, and placed Gedaliah over them; they came to Mizpah and Gedaliah, who appointed them places to dwell in, and they gathered much wine and fruit, i. e. , made a rich vintage and fruit harvest.
נתן שׁארית, "to give a remainder," as it were to leave a remainder ('הותיר שׁ'( redniamer, Jer 44:7, or 'שׂוּם שׁ, Gen 45:7).
Jer 40:13-16 Gedaliah is forewarned of Ishmael’s intention to murder him. - After the return of those who had taken refuge in Moab, etc. , Johanan the son of Kareah, together with the rest of the captains who were scattered here and there through the country, came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, to say to him: "Dost thou know indeed that Baalis the king of the Ammonites hath sent Ishmael the son of Nethaniah to take thy life?"
The words "that were in the country" are neither a gloss, nor a thoughtless repetition by some scribe from Jer 40:7 (as Hitzig and Graf suppose), but they are repeated for the purpose of distinguishing plainly between the captains with their men from the Jews who had returned out of Moab, Ammon, and Edom. הכּות, "to strike the soul, life" = to kill; cf. Gen 37:21; Deu 19:6.
What induced the king of Ammon to think of assassination - whether it was personal hostility towards Gedaliah, or the hope of destroying the only remaining support of the Jews, and thereby perhaps putting himself in possession of the country, - cannot be determined. That he employed Ishmael for the accomplishment of his purpose, may have been owing to the fact that this man had a personal envy of Gedaliah; for Ishmael, being sprung from the royal family (Jer 40:1), probably could not endure being subordinate to Gedaliah.
- The plot had become known, and Gedaliah was secretly informed of it by Johanan; but the former did not believe the rumour. Johanan then secretly offered to slay Ishmael, taking care that no one should know who did it, and urged compliance in the following terms: "Why should he slay thee, and all the Jews who have gathered themselves round thee be scattered, and the remnant of Judah perish?"
Johanan thus called his attention to the evil consequences which would result to the remnant left in the land were he killed; but Gedaliah replied, "Do not this thing, for thou speakest a lie against Ishmael." The Qeri needlessly changes אל־תּעשׂ into אל־תּעשׂה; cf. Jer 39:12.
Jer 40:13-16 Gedaliah is forewarned of Ishmael’s intention to murder him. - After the return of those who had taken refuge in Moab, etc. , Johanan the son of Kareah, together with the rest of the captains who were scattered here and there through the country, came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, to say to him: "Dost thou know indeed that Baalis the king of the Ammonites hath sent Ishmael the son of Nethaniah to take thy life?"
The words "that were in the country" are neither a gloss, nor a thoughtless repetition by some scribe from Jer 40:7 (as Hitzig and Graf suppose), but they are repeated for the purpose of distinguishing plainly between the captains with their men from the Jews who had returned out of Moab, Ammon, and Edom. הכּות, "to strike the soul, life" = to kill; cf. Gen 37:21; Deu 19:6.
What induced the king of Ammon to think of assassination - whether it was personal hostility towards Gedaliah, or the hope of destroying the only remaining support of the Jews, and thereby perhaps putting himself in possession of the country, - cannot be determined. That he employed Ishmael for the accomplishment of his purpose, may have been owing to the fact that this man had a personal envy of Gedaliah; for Ishmael, being sprung from the royal family (Jer 40:1), probably could not endure being subordinate to Gedaliah.
- The plot had become known, and Gedaliah was secretly informed of it by Johanan; but the former did not believe the rumour. Johanan then secretly offered to slay Ishmael, taking care that no one should know who did it, and urged compliance in the following terms: "Why should he slay thee, and all the Jews who have gathered themselves round thee be scattered, and the remnant of Judah perish?"
Johanan thus called his attention to the evil consequences which would result to the remnant left in the land were he killed; but Gedaliah replied, "Do not this thing, for thou speakest a lie against Ishmael." The Qeri needlessly changes אל־תּעשׂ into אל־תּעשׂה; cf. Jer 39:12.
Jer 40:13-16 Gedaliah is forewarned of Ishmael’s intention to murder him. - After the return of those who had taken refuge in Moab, etc. , Johanan the son of Kareah, together with the rest of the captains who were scattered here and there through the country, came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, to say to him: "Dost thou know indeed that Baalis the king of the Ammonites hath sent Ishmael the son of Nethaniah to take thy life?"
The words "that were in the country" are neither a gloss, nor a thoughtless repetition by some scribe from Jer 40:7 (as Hitzig and Graf suppose), but they are repeated for the purpose of distinguishing plainly between the captains with their men from the Jews who had returned out of Moab, Ammon, and Edom. הכּות, "to strike the soul, life" = to kill; cf. Gen 37:21; Deu 19:6.
What induced the king of Ammon to think of assassination - whether it was personal hostility towards Gedaliah, or the hope of destroying the only remaining support of the Jews, and thereby perhaps putting himself in possession of the country, - cannot be determined. That he employed Ishmael for the accomplishment of his purpose, may have been owing to the fact that this man had a personal envy of Gedaliah; for Ishmael, being sprung from the royal family (Jer 40:1), probably could not endure being subordinate to Gedaliah.
- The plot had become known, and Gedaliah was secretly informed of it by Johanan; but the former did not believe the rumour. Johanan then secretly offered to slay Ishmael, taking care that no one should know who did it, and urged compliance in the following terms: "Why should he slay thee, and all the Jews who have gathered themselves round thee be scattered, and the remnant of Judah perish?"
Johanan thus called his attention to the evil consequences which would result to the remnant left in the land were he killed; but Gedaliah replied, "Do not this thing, for thou speakest a lie against Ishmael." The Qeri needlessly changes אל־תּעשׂ into אל־תּעשׂה; cf. Jer 39:12.
Jer 40:13-16 Gedaliah is forewarned of Ishmael’s intention to murder him. - After the return of those who had taken refuge in Moab, etc. , Johanan the son of Kareah, together with the rest of the captains who were scattered here and there through the country, came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, to say to him: "Dost thou know indeed that Baalis the king of the Ammonites hath sent Ishmael the son of Nethaniah to take thy life?"
The words "that were in the country" are neither a gloss, nor a thoughtless repetition by some scribe from Jer 40:7 (as Hitzig and Graf suppose), but they are repeated for the purpose of distinguishing plainly between the captains with their men from the Jews who had returned out of Moab, Ammon, and Edom. הכּות, "to strike the soul, life" = to kill; cf. Gen 37:21; Deu 19:6.
What induced the king of Ammon to think of assassination - whether it was personal hostility towards Gedaliah, or the hope of destroying the only remaining support of the Jews, and thereby perhaps putting himself in possession of the country, - cannot be determined. That he employed Ishmael for the accomplishment of his purpose, may have been owing to the fact that this man had a personal envy of Gedaliah; for Ishmael, being sprung from the royal family (Jer 40:1), probably could not endure being subordinate to Gedaliah.
- The plot had become known, and Gedaliah was secretly informed of it by Johanan; but the former did not believe the rumour. Johanan then secretly offered to slay Ishmael, taking care that no one should know who did it, and urged compliance in the following terms: "Why should he slay thee, and all the Jews who have gathered themselves round thee be scattered, and the remnant of Judah perish?"
Johanan thus called his attention to the evil consequences which would result to the remnant left in the land were he killed; but Gedaliah replied, "Do not this thing, for thou speakest a lie against Ishmael." The Qeri needlessly changes אל־תּעשׂ into אל־תּעשׂה; cf. Jer 39:12.
Jer 41:1-3 Murder of Gedaliah and his followers, as well as other Jews, by Ishmael. - Jer 41:1-3. The warning of Johanan had been only too well founded. In the seventh month - only two months, therefore, after the destruction of Jerusalem and the appointment of Gedaliah as governor - Ishmael came with the men to Mizpah, and was hospitably received by Gedaliah and invited to his table.
Ishmael is here more exactly described as to his family descent, for the purpose of throwing a stronger light upon the exceeding cruelty of the murders afterwards ascribed to him. He was the son of Nethaniah, the son of Elishama - perhaps the secretary of state mentioned Jer 36:12, or more likely the son of David who bore this name, 2Sa 5:6; 1Ch 3:8; 1Ch 14:7; so that Ishmael would belong to a lateral branch of the house of David, be of royal extraction, and one of the royal lords.
ורבּי המּלך cannot be joined with Ishmael as the subject, because in what follows there is no further mention made of the royal lords, but only of Ishmael and his ten men; it belongs to what precedes, מזּרע המּלוּכּה, so that we must repeat מן before רבּי. The objections of Nägelsbach to this view will not stand examination. It is not self-evident that Ishmael, because he was of royal blood, was therefore also one of the royal nobles; for the רבּים certainly did not form a hereditary caste, but were perhaps a class of nobles in the service of the king, to which class the princes did not belong simply in virtue of their being princes.
But the improbability that Ishmael should have been able with ten men to overpower the whole of the Jewish followers of Gedaliah, together with the Chaldean warriors, and (according to Jer 41:7) out of eighty men to kill some, making prisoners of the rest, is not so great as to compel us to take רבּי המּלך in such a meaning as to make it stand in contradiction with the statement, repeated twice, over, that Ishmael, with his ten men, did all this. Eleven men who are determined to commit murder can kill a large number of persons who are not prepared against such an attempt, and may also keep a whole district in terror.
"And they did eat bread there together," i. e. , they were invited by Gedaliah to his table. While at meat, Ishmael and his ten men rose and slew Gedaliah with the sword. On account of ויּמת אתו, which comes after, Hitzig and Graf would change ויּכּוּ into ויּכּוּ, he slew him , Gedaliah; this alteration is possibly warranted, but by no means absolutely necessary.
The words 'ויּמת אתו וגו, "and he killed him," contain a reflection of the narrator as to the greatness of the crime; in conformity with the facts of the case, the murder is ascribed only to the originator of the deed, since the ten men of Ishmael’s retinue were simply his executioners. Besides Gedaliah, Ishmael killed "all the Jews that were with him, with Gedaliah in Mizpah, and the Chaldeans that were found there, the men of war."
The very expression shows that, of the Jews, only those are meant who were present in the house with Gedaliah, and, of the Chaldean soldiers, only those warriors who had been allowed him as a guard, who for the time being were his servants, and who, though they were not, as Schmidt thinks, hausto liberalius vino inebri ati, yet, as Chr. B. Michaelis remarks, were tunc temporis inermes et imparati .
The Jews of post-exile times used to keep the third day of the seventh month as a fast-day, in commemoration of the murder of Gedaliah; see on Zec 7:3.
Jer 41:1-3 Murder of Gedaliah and his followers, as well as other Jews, by Ishmael. - Jer 41:1-3. The warning of Johanan had been only too well founded. In the seventh month - only two months, therefore, after the destruction of Jerusalem and the appointment of Gedaliah as governor - Ishmael came with the men to Mizpah, and was hospitably received by Gedaliah and invited to his table.
Ishmael is here more exactly described as to his family descent, for the purpose of throwing a stronger light upon the exceeding cruelty of the murders afterwards ascribed to him. He was the son of Nethaniah, the son of Elishama - perhaps the secretary of state mentioned Jer 36:12, or more likely the son of David who bore this name, 2Sa 5:6; 1Ch 3:8; 1Ch 14:7; so that Ishmael would belong to a lateral branch of the house of David, be of royal extraction, and one of the royal lords.
ורבּי המּלך cannot be joined with Ishmael as the subject, because in what follows there is no further mention made of the royal lords, but only of Ishmael and his ten men; it belongs to what precedes, מזּרע המּלוּכּה, so that we must repeat מן before רבּי. The objections of Nägelsbach to this view will not stand examination. It is not self-evident that Ishmael, because he was of royal blood, was therefore also one of the royal nobles; for the רבּים certainly did not form a hereditary caste, but were perhaps a class of nobles in the service of the king, to which class the princes did not belong simply in virtue of their being princes.
But the improbability that Ishmael should have been able with ten men to overpower the whole of the Jewish followers of Gedaliah, together with the Chaldean warriors, and (according to Jer 41:7) out of eighty men to kill some, making prisoners of the rest, is not so great as to compel us to take רבּי המּלך in such a meaning as to make it stand in contradiction with the statement, repeated twice, over, that Ishmael, with his ten men, did all this. Eleven men who are determined to commit murder can kill a large number of persons who are not prepared against such an attempt, and may also keep a whole district in terror.
"And they did eat bread there together," i. e. , they were invited by Gedaliah to his table. While at meat, Ishmael and his ten men rose and slew Gedaliah with the sword. On account of ויּמת אתו, which comes after, Hitzig and Graf would change ויּכּוּ into ויּכּוּ, he slew him , Gedaliah; this alteration is possibly warranted, but by no means absolutely necessary.
The words 'ויּמת אתו וגו, "and he killed him," contain a reflection of the narrator as to the greatness of the crime; in conformity with the facts of the case, the murder is ascribed only to the originator of the deed, since the ten men of Ishmael’s retinue were simply his executioners. Besides Gedaliah, Ishmael killed "all the Jews that were with him, with Gedaliah in Mizpah, and the Chaldeans that were found there, the men of war."
The very expression shows that, of the Jews, only those are meant who were present in the house with Gedaliah, and, of the Chaldean soldiers, only those warriors who had been allowed him as a guard, who for the time being were his servants, and who, though they were not, as Schmidt thinks, hausto liberalius vino inebri ati, yet, as Chr. B. Michaelis remarks, were tunc temporis inermes et imparati .
The Jews of post-exile times used to keep the third day of the seventh month as a fast-day, in commemoration of the murder of Gedaliah; see on Zec 7:3.
Jer 41:1-3 Murder of Gedaliah and his followers, as well as other Jews, by Ishmael. - Jer 41:1-3. The warning of Johanan had been only too well founded. In the seventh month - only two months, therefore, after the destruction of Jerusalem and the appointment of Gedaliah as governor - Ishmael came with the men to Mizpah, and was hospitably received by Gedaliah and invited to his table.
Ishmael is here more exactly described as to his family descent, for the purpose of throwing a stronger light upon the exceeding cruelty of the murders afterwards ascribed to him. He was the son of Nethaniah, the son of Elishama - perhaps the secretary of state mentioned Jer 36:12, or more likely the son of David who bore this name, 2Sa 5:6; 1Ch 3:8; 1Ch 14:7; so that Ishmael would belong to a lateral branch of the house of David, be of royal extraction, and one of the royal lords.
ורבּי המּלך cannot be joined with Ishmael as the subject, because in what follows there is no further mention made of the royal lords, but only of Ishmael and his ten men; it belongs to what precedes, מזּרע המּלוּכּה, so that we must repeat מן before רבּי. The objections of Nägelsbach to this view will not stand examination. It is not self-evident that Ishmael, because he was of royal blood, was therefore also one of the royal nobles; for the רבּים certainly did not form a hereditary caste, but were perhaps a class of nobles in the service of the king, to which class the princes did not belong simply in virtue of their being princes.
But the improbability that Ishmael should have been able with ten men to overpower the whole of the Jewish followers of Gedaliah, together with the Chaldean warriors, and (according to Jer 41:7) out of eighty men to kill some, making prisoners of the rest, is not so great as to compel us to take רבּי המּלך in such a meaning as to make it stand in contradiction with the statement, repeated twice, over, that Ishmael, with his ten men, did all this. Eleven men who are determined to commit murder can kill a large number of persons who are not prepared against such an attempt, and may also keep a whole district in terror.
"And they did eat bread there together," i. e. , they were invited by Gedaliah to his table. While at meat, Ishmael and his ten men rose and slew Gedaliah with the sword. On account of ויּמת אתו, which comes after, Hitzig and Graf would change ויּכּוּ into ויּכּוּ, he slew him , Gedaliah; this alteration is possibly warranted, but by no means absolutely necessary.
The words 'ויּמת אתו וגו, "and he killed him," contain a reflection of the narrator as to the greatness of the crime; in conformity with the facts of the case, the murder is ascribed only to the originator of the deed, since the ten men of Ishmael’s retinue were simply his executioners. Besides Gedaliah, Ishmael killed "all the Jews that were with him, with Gedaliah in Mizpah, and the Chaldeans that were found there, the men of war."
The very expression shows that, of the Jews, only those are meant who were present in the house with Gedaliah, and, of the Chaldean soldiers, only those warriors who had been allowed him as a guard, who for the time being were his servants, and who, though they were not, as Schmidt thinks, hausto liberalius vino inebri ati, yet, as Chr. B. Michaelis remarks, were tunc temporis inermes et imparati .
The Jews of post-exile times used to keep the third day of the seventh month as a fast-day, in commemoration of the murder of Gedaliah; see on Zec 7:3.
Jer 41:4-5 On the next day after the murder of Gedaliah, "when no man knew it," i. e. , before the deed had become known beyond Mizpah, "there came eighty men from Shechem, Shiloh, and Samaria," having all the tokens of mourning, "with their beards shaven, their clothes rent, and with cuts and scratches on their bodies (מתגּדדים, see on Jer 16:6), and a meat-offering and frankincense in their hand, to bring them into the house of Jahveh."
The order in which the towns are named is not geographical; for Shiloh lay south from Shechem, and a little to the side from the straight road leading from Shechem to Jerusalem. Instead of שׁלו, the lxx ( Cod. Vat. ) have Σαλήμ; they use the same word as the name of a place in Gen 33:18, although the Hebrew שׁלם is there an adjective, meaning safe , in good condition .
According to Robinson ( Bibl. Res . iii. 102), there is a village named Sâlim three miles east from Nablûs (Shechem); Hitzig and Graf, on the strength of this, prefer the reading of the lxx, to preserve the order of the names in the text. But Hitzig has renounced this conjecture in the second edition of his Commentary, "because Sâlim in Hebrew would be שׁולם, not שׁלם."
There is absolutely no foundation for the view in the lxx and in Gen 33:18; the supposition, moreover, that the three towns are given in their topographical order, and must have stood near each other, is also unfounded. Shechem may have been named first because the greater number of these men came from that city, and other men from Shiloh and Samaria accompanied them.
These men were pious descendants of the Israelites who belonged to the kingdom of Israel; they dwelt among the heathen colonists who had been settled in the country under Esarhaddon (2Ki 17:24.) , but, from the days of Hezekiah or Josiah, had continued to serve Jahveh in Jerusalem, where they used to attend the feasts (2Ch 34:9, cf. Jer 30:11). Nay, even after the destruction of Jerusalem, at the seasons of the sacred feasts, they were still content to bring at least unbloody offerings - meat-offerings and incense - on the still sacred spot where these things used to be offered to Jahveh; but just because this could now be done only on the ruins of what had once been the sanctuary, they appeared there with all the signs of deep sorrow for the destruction of this holy place and the cessation of sacrificial worship.
In illustration of this, Grotius has adduced a passage from Papinian’s instit. de rerum divis. § sacrae: "Locus in quo aedes sacrae sunt aedificatae, etiam diruto aedificio, sacer adhuc manet."