Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, continuing to speak after Jerusalem's fall and during the remnant's disobedient flight to Egypt.
The Flight to Egypt: Rebellion After a Clear Word
When God's people reject a clear word in order to secure themselves, the refuge they choose becomes the place where the word they rejected confronts them.
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When God's people reject a clear word in order to secure themselves, the refuge they choose becomes the place where the word they rejected confronts them.
Jeremiah 43 argues that rejecting the Lord's word does not free people from the Lord's authority. The remnant accuses Jeremiah of lying because the word given through Him forbids their preferred refuge. Their rebellion moves from suspicion to accusation to disobedient action. Yet once they arrive in Egypt, the word of the Lord comes again, proving that geography cannot silence God.
Egypt is not beyond the Lord's rule, Pharaoh's palace is not beyond the Lord's reach, and Babylon's advance is not outside the Lord's sovereignty. The chapter exposes false refuge and shows that disobedience carries judgment into the very place chosen for safety.
The surviving remnant of Judah, especially Johanan son of Kareah, Azariah son of Hoshaiah, the army officers, and the people who had asked Jeremiah to seek the Lord's word.
After the destruction of Jerusalem, the assassination of Gedaliah, the rescue of the captives from Ishmael, and the remnant's refusal to remain in Judah. The chapter moves geographically from Judah to Tahpanhes in Egypt.
When God's people reject a clear word in order to secure themselves, the refuge they choose becomes the place where the word they rejected confronts them.
Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, continuing to speak after Jerusalem's fall and during the remnant's disobedient flight to Egypt.
The surviving remnant of Judah, especially Johanan son of Kareah, Azariah son of Hoshaiah, the army officers, and the people who had asked Jeremiah to seek the Lord's word.
After the destruction of Jerusalem, the assassination of Gedaliah, the rescue of the captives from Ishmael, and the remnant's refusal to remain in Judah. The chapter moves geographically from Judah to Tahpanhes in Egypt.
- The people are traumatized by war, leaderless after Gedaliah's assassination, suspicious of prophetic authority, fearful of Babylon, and desperate for visible security.
This chapter belongs to Jeremiah's post-fall remnant narratives. It shows that exile-like judgment now follows the people beyond the land because their rebellion has followed them into Egypt.
The chapter moves from accusation against Jeremiah, to refusal of the Lord's command, to forced migration into Egypt, to a prophetic sign-act at Tahpanhes, and finally to the announcement that Babylon will strike Egypt.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
The chapter forms God's people to submit to God's word when it confronts preference, to resist arrogant reinterpretation, and to seek refuge only where the Lord Himself grants refuge.
- 43:1 3:
- 43:4 7:
- 43:8 10A:
- 43:10B 13:
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 43 argues that rejecting the Lord's word does not free people from the Lord's authority. The remnant accuses Jeremiah of lying because the word given through Him forbids their preferred refuge. Their rebellion moves from suspicion to accusation to disobedient action. Yet once they arrive in Egypt, the word of the Lord comes again, proving that geography cannot silence God.
Egypt is not beyond the Lord's rule, Pharaoh's palace is not beyond the Lord's reach, and Babylon's advance is not outside the Lord's sovereignty. The chapter exposes false refuge and shows that disobedience carries judgment into the very place chosen for safety.
The people reject the word, flee to Egypt, and then receive a sign that the word they rejected will overtake them there.
- 1.A rejected word remains the LORD's word.
- 2.Arrogance often disguises rebellion as discernment.
- 3.Disobedience becomes communal when leaders move vulnerable people into rebellion.
- 4.The LORD rules in Egypt as surely as he rules in Judah.
- 5.False refuges become places of judgment when chosen against God's word.
Theological Focus
- The authority of the word of the Lord
- Arrogant unbelief
- False refuge
- The sovereignty of God over nations
- Judgment following disobedience
- Prophetic sign-act
- Nebuchadnezzar as the Lord's servant
- Authority of God's Word
- Human Sinfulness
- Pride and Arrogance
- Divine Sovereignty
- Judgment
- False Refuge
- Idolatry Judged
- Prophetic Ministry
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 43 shows the remnant breaking its own covenantal vow from Jeremiah 42. The people had called the Lord as witness and promised to obey whether the word was favorable or unfavorable. Their flight to Egypt is therefore not ignorance but covenant treachery. The chapter also reverses the exodus pattern: the people delivered from Egypt in Israel's foundational story now choose Egypt as refuge against the Lord's command.
- Vowed obedience is violated
- Egypt becomes covenant regression
- The remnant remains accountable
- The land question remains theological
- The Lord's dominion extends beyond the land
Canonical Connections
Jeremiah 43 stands in the long canonical pattern where returning toward Egypt in unbelief represents distrust of the Lord's saving rule.
The rejection of Jeremiah fits the broader biblical pattern of resisting God's messengers.
The Lord's use of Nebuchadnezzar and judgment of Egypt show that nations and empires remain under divine rule.
The breaking of Egypt's sacred pillars belongs to the biblical theme of the Lord humiliating rival gods and powers.
Egypt's failure as refuge clarifies the biblical call to find refuge in the Lord Himself.
Christ's faithful obedience and deliverance from fear answer the remnant's disobedient flight.
Jeremiah 43 exposes the human heart's rejection of God's word and its instinct to seek refuge apart from Him. The remnant hears the word, rejects the messenger, flees to Egypt, and discovers that chosen refuge cannot save from judgment. The gospel announces the better refuge God Himself provides in Christ. Jesus is the obedient Son who does not flee the Father's will, the true Prophet whose word must be heard, the crucified and risen Savior who bears judgment for sinners, and the Shepherd who leads His people out of bondage rather than back into it.
In Him, God's people receive forgiveness, deliverance from fear, and the Spirit-given power to obey.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 43 contributes to the biblical need for a faithful remnant, a true mediator, and a refuge that cannot be overturned by judgment. The people's refusal of the Lord's word exposes the heart's hostility to divine authority. Their flight to Egypt shows humanity's impulse to seek salvation in visible powers. Christ stands as the obedient Son who receives and fulfills the Father's will, the true Prophet whose word must not be rejected, and the true refuge in whom God's people are saved from wrath, fear, and bondage.
Where Judah is dragged toward Egypt in unbelief, Christ leads His people in a new exodus through His death and resurrection.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 43 argues that rejecting the Lord's word does not free people from the Lord's authority. The remnant accuses Jeremiah of lying because the word given through Him forbids their preferred refuge. Their rebellion moves from suspicion to accusation to disobedient action. Yet once they arrive in Egypt, the word of the Lord comes again, proving that geography cannot silence God.
Egypt is not beyond the Lord's rule, Pharaoh's palace is not beyond the Lord's reach, and Babylon's advance is not outside the Lord's sovereignty. The chapter exposes false refuge and shows that disobedience carries judgment into the very place chosen for safety.
Deliberate defiance of God’s command places individuals and communities outside His promised protection.
God directs the rise and fall of kingdoms and uses rulers to accomplish His purposes.
Human attempts to escape divine authority by relocating or trusting political power cannot succeed.
Pride blinds people to the truth of God’s word and leads to rebellion.
False gods and their temples ultimately fall under the judgment of the Lord.
God’s message may be rejected when it conflicts with human plans and desires.
The chapter centers on the rejection of a clear prophetic word and shows that human disbelief cannot cancel divine authority.
The leaders respond to the Lord's word with accusation, blame-shifting, and rebellion.
The rejecting men are identified as arrogant, showing that their refusal is moral and spiritual, not merely intellectual.
The Lord commands events in Egypt and Babylon, declaring that Nebuchadnezzar will set His throne at Pharaoh's palace.
The Lord announces death, captivity, sword, burning of temples, and the breaking of Egyptian sacred pillars.
Egypt is exposed as unable to protect those who flee there in disobedience.
Egypt's gods and sacred pillars are humiliated, showing the Lord's supremacy over idols.
Jeremiah's ministry includes speaking rejected truth and embodying judgment through sign-act.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- The chapter forms God's people to submit to God's word when it confronts preference, to resist arrogant reinterpretation, and to seek refuge only where the Lord Himself grants refuge.
Sense Azariah, son of Hoshaiah
Definition One of the leaders who rejects Jeremiah's word and accuses him of falsehood.
Lexicon Azariah, son of Hoshaiah
Why it matters His leadership role shows that the rebellion is not isolated but directed by influential men.
Sense Johanan, son of Kareah
Definition A military leader who previously rescued the remnant from Ishmael but now leads them into Egypt against the LORD's command.
Lexicon Johanan, son of Kareah
Why it matters Johanan's arc warns that courage in one crisis does not guarantee obedience in the next.
Sense Baruch, son of Neriah
Definition Jeremiah's scribe and associate, falsely accused of inciting Jeremiah against the people.
Lexicon Baruch, son of Neriah
Why it matters The attack on Baruch shows how rejection of God's word can become personal accusation against faithful servants.
Sense royal residence or administrative center of Pharaoh
Definition The Egyptian royal site where Jeremiah buries stones as a sign of Babylon's coming throne.
Lexicon royal residence or administrative center of Pharaoh
Why it matters The sign-act at Pharaoh's palace confronts Egypt's political power with the Lord's decree.
Sense Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon
Definition The Babylonian king whom the LORD identifies as his servant for judgment against Egypt.
Lexicon Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon
Why it matters His coming to Egypt proves that the remnant cannot escape the Lord's appointed judgment by changing geography.
Sense house of the sun
Definition An Egyptian religious center associated with the sun, mentioned in connection with sacred pillars.
Lexicon house of the sun
Why it matters The breaking of its pillars signals judgment against Egypt's religious confidence.
Sense to complete, finish, bring to an end
Definition To finish or complete an action.
References Jeremiah 43:1
Lexicon to complete, finish, bring to an end
Why it matters Jeremiah finishes speaking all the words commanded by the Lord before the people reject Him, emphasizing that their disobedience follows a complete and clear prophetic word.
Sense to command, charge, appoint
Definition To give authoritative instruction or command.
References Jeremiah 43:1
Lexicon to command, charge, appoint
Why it matters Jeremiah's message is not advice but divine command. Rejecting it is rebellion against the Lord, not merely disagreement with Jeremiah.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense proud, arrogant, presumptuous
Definition A term for the proud or insolent who act presumptuously.
References Jeremiah 43:2
Lexicon proud, arrogant, presumptuous
Why it matters The narrative identifies the rejection of Jeremiah's word as arrogance, not careful discernment.
Sense lie, falsehood, deception
Definition That which is false, deceptive, or unreliable.
References Jeremiah 43:2
Lexicon lie, falsehood, deception
Why it matters The leaders accuse Jeremiah of speaking falsehood, reversing reality: they call the Lord's true word a lie because it confronts their chosen path.
Sense to hear, listen, obey
Definition To hear with responsive attention, often including obedience.
References Jeremiah 43:4, 43:7
Lexicon to hear, listen, obey
Why it matters The people's failure is framed as not listening to the voice of the Lord, showing that true hearing requires obedience.
Sense voice, sound
Definition A voice, sound, or spoken command.
References Jeremiah 43:4, 43:7
Lexicon voice, sound
Why it matters The chapter repeats that the people do not obey the voice of the Lord, connecting their rebellion to covenant hearing failure.
Sense to sit, dwell, remain, inhabit
Definition To dwell, settle, remain, or inhabit.
References Jeremiah 43:4
Lexicon to sit, dwell, remain, inhabit
Why it matters The command was to remain in Judah. Their refusal to dwell there marks the concrete form of their disobedience.
Sense Egypt
Definition The nation of Egypt, associated in Israel's story with bondage and, in prophetic critique, false refuge when trusted apart from the LORD.
References Jeremiah 43:7, 43:11-13
Lexicon Egypt
Why it matters Egypt is the forbidden refuge chosen by the remnant and the place where the Lord announces Babylonian judgment.
Sense Tahpanhes, an Egyptian location
Definition A city in Egypt where the Judean remnant arrives and where Jeremiah performs the sign-act.
References Jeremiah 43:7-9
Lexicon Tahpanhes, an Egyptian location
Why it matters Tahpanhes becomes the stage where the Lord declares that Babylon's throne will be set at Pharaoh's doorstep.
Sense servant, slave, agent
Definition One who serves or acts under the authority of another.
References Jeremiah 43:10
Lexicon servant, slave, agent
Why it matters Nebuchadnezzar is called the Lord's servant, identifying Him as an instrument in God's sovereign judgment, not as an autonomous ruler beyond divine control.
Sense seat, throne
Definition A royal seat or throne representing rule and authority.
References Jeremiah 43:10
Lexicon seat, throne
Why it matters Nebuchadnezzar's throne set over the buried stones symbolizes Babylonian dominion reaching into Egypt under the Lord's decree.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense to strike, smite, kill
Definition To strike, defeat, or kill.
References Jeremiah 43:11
Lexicon to strike, smite, kill
Why it matters The Lord announces that Babylon will strike Egypt, overturning the people's expectation that Egypt can shield them.
Sense houses of the gods of Egypt
Definition Egyptian temples or shrine-houses dedicated to its gods.
References Jeremiah 43:12
Lexicon houses of the gods of Egypt
Why it matters The burning of Egypt's temples shows that the Lord's judgment humiliates the religious powers Judah may have associated with safety.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Construct What is this?
Sense pillar, standing stone, sacred monument
Definition A standing stone or pillar, often with religious or memorial significance.
References Jeremiah 43:13
Lexicon pillar, standing stone, sacred monument
Why it matters The breaking of Egypt's sacred pillars at Heliopolis signifies the Lord's supremacy over Egyptian religious symbols.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The chapter forms God's people to submit to God's word when it confronts preference, to resist arrogant reinterpretation, and to seek refuge only where the Lord Himself grants refuge.
- Humble reception of correction - When corrected by Scripture, pause before forming accusations against the messenger.
- Fear examination - Name the fear beneath resistance and bring it under God's promises and commands.
- Refuge testing - Ask whether the place or strategy that feels safe requires disobedience.
- Communal responsibility - Consider how personal fear-led choices affect families, churches, and vulnerable people.
- Warning responsiveness - Respond to God's warning while there is still time to turn.
- Sovereignty remembrance - Remember that no nation, institution, or private refuge exists outside the Lord's reach.
- The chapter warns that rejecting God's word often begins with attacking the messenger, blaming others, and redefining rebellion as wisdom.
- Do not call God's word false because it confronts Your preferred plan.
- Do not use suspicion to avoid obedience.
- Do not let arrogance masquerade as discernment.
- Do not lead others into disobedience for the sake of visible security.
- Do not assume distance from the place of judgment means distance from God.
- Do not trust a refuge God has forbidden.
- Do not imagine that idols or empires can protect from the Lord's decree.
- The people reject Jeremiah because the message was unclear. - The message in Jeremiah 42 was clear. Their rejection arises from unwillingness, not confusion.
- Johanan is simply a faithful leader because He rescued the people in chapter 41. - Johanan's rescue was courageous, but chapter 43 shows Him leading the people in disobedience to the Lord's command.
- The accusation against Baruch may be a legitimate concern. - The narrative presents the accusation as part of arrogant rejection. No evidence is given that Baruch manipulated Jeremiah.
- Egypt itself is always sinful as a location. - Egypt is sinful here because the Lord specifically forbade this remnant to go there and because they sought it as refuge against His word.
- Nebuchadnezzar being called the Lord's servant means Babylon is morally righteous. - The phrase identifies Babylon as an instrument of divine judgment, not as morally innocent or covenantally faithful.
- Jeremiah's sign-act is symbolic only and has no historical force. - The sign-act symbolically announces a concrete historical claim: Babylon will enter Egypt and humiliate its power.
- The chapter is only about ancient geopolitics. - The geopolitics are real, but the chapter's theological burden is obedience, false refuge, and the sovereignty of the Lord over the nations.
- When God's word confronts my plan, do I examine my heart or attack the messenger?
- Where am I tempted to call conviction 'confusion' because obedience would be costly?
- Who might be affected if I lead from fear rather than faith?
- What is the 'Egypt' I am tempted to trust because it looks safer than obedience?
- Am I blaming someone else because I do not want to submit to what God has made clear?
- Do I believe that distance, relocation, or changed circumstances can remove me from the authority of God's word?
- How should I receive hard warnings as mercy rather than hostility?
- What would obedience look like before consequences confirm the warning?
- Preach Jeremiah 43 as the tragic sequel to insincere guidance-seeking. The sermon should press the danger of asking for God's word while reserving the right to reject it.
- Use the chapter to help people see when accusation, suspicion, and blame are functioning as defenses against obedience.
- Leaders must understand that fear-driven decisions can carry entire communities into disobedience.
- The chapter warns churches not to spiritualize a decision-making process and then reject Scripture when it contradicts the desired outcome.
- Train believers to ask whether their resistance to correction is rooted in careful discernment or proud self-protection.
- Jeremiah's sign-act shows that vivid, concrete warning can be a faithful pastoral act when people are moving toward harm.
- A disobedient people lose the clarity of witness because their decisions announce that God's word is less trustworthy than visible power.
- Trauma and fear must be handled tenderly, but they must not be allowed to become unquestioned authorities over obedience.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from accusation against Jeremiah, to refusal of the Lord's command, to forced migration into Egypt, to a prophetic sign-act at Tahpanhes, and finally to the announcement that Babylon will strike Egypt.
Jeremiah 43 shows the remnant breaking its own covenantal vow from Jeremiah 42. The people had called the Lord as witness and promised to obey whether the word was favorable or unfavorable. Their flight to Egypt is therefore not ignorance but covenant treachery. The chapter also reverses the exodus pattern: the people delivered from Egypt in Israel's foundational story now choose Egypt as refuge against the Lord's command.
Jeremiah 43 exposes the human heart's rejection of God's word and its instinct to seek refuge apart from Him. The remnant hears the word, rejects the messenger, flees to Egypt, and discovers that chosen refuge cannot save from judgment. The gospel announces the better refuge God Himself provides in Christ. Jesus is the obedient Son who does not flee the Father's will, the true Prophet whose word must be heard, the crucified and risen Savior who bears judgment for sinners, and the Shepherd who leads His people out of bondage rather than back into it.
In Him, God's people receive forgiveness, deliverance from fear, and the Spirit-given power to obey.
Focus Points
- The authority of the word of the Lord
- Arrogant unbelief
- False refuge
- The sovereignty of God over nations
- Judgment following disobedience
- Prophetic sign-act
- Nebuchadnezzar as the Lord's servant
- Authority of God's Word
- Human Sinfulness
- Pride and Arrogance
- Divine Sovereignty
- Judgment
- Idolatry Judged
- Prophetic Ministry
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 43:1-7
Jer 43:4-7 Thereupon Johanan and the other captains took "all the remnant of Judah, that had returned from all the nations whither they had been driven, to dwell in the land of Judah-the men and women and children, the king’s daughters, and all the souls whom Nebuzaradan, chief of the body-guard, had committed to Gedaliah... and Jeremiah the prophet, and Baruch the son of Neriah, - and went to the land of Egypt - for they did not hearken to the voice of Jahveh - and came to Tahpanhes."
In this enumeration of those who were conducted to Egypt, Hitzig, Graf, and others distinguish two classes: (1) the men, women, children, etc. , who had been in Mizpah with Gedaliah, and had been led to Gibeon, after the murder of the latter, by Ishmael, but had afterwards been brought to Bethlehem by Johanan and the other captains (Jer 43:6, cf. Jer 40:7; Jer 41:10, Jer 41:16); (2) those who had returned from the foreign countries whither they had fled, but who had hitherto lived in the country, scattered here and there, and who must have joined the company led by Johanan to Bethlehem during the ten days of halt at that resting-place (Jer 43:5, cf.
Jer 40:11-12). There is no foundation, however, for this distinction. Neither in the present chapter is there anything mentioned of those who had been dispersed through the land joining those who had marched to Bethlehem; nor are the Jews who had returned from Moab, Ammon, Edom, and other countries to their own home distinguished, in Jer 40 and 41, as a different class from those who had been with Gedaliah in Mizpah; but on the other hand, according to Jer 40:12, these returned Jews also came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, and gathered grapes and fruit.
Besides, in these verses the distinction can only be made after the insertion into the text of the conjunction ו before את־הגּברים. To "all the remnant of Judah who had returned from the nations" belong the men, women, children, etc. , whom Nebuzaradan had committed to the care of Gedaliah. The enumeration in Jer 43:6 gives only one specification of the "whole remnant of Judah," as in Jer 41:16.
"And all the souls;" as if it were said, "and whoever else was still left alive;" cf. Jos 10:28. Tahpanhes was a frontier town of Egypt on the Pelusian branch of the Nile, and named Δάφναι by the Greeks; see on Jer 2:16. Here, on the borders of Egypt, a halt was made, for the purpose of coming to further resolutions regarding their residence in that country.
Here, too, Jeremiah received a revelation from God regarding the fate now impending on Egypt.
Jer 43:4-7 Thereupon Johanan and the other captains took "all the remnant of Judah, that had returned from all the nations whither they had been driven, to dwell in the land of Judah-the men and women and children, the king’s daughters, and all the souls whom Nebuzaradan, chief of the body-guard, had committed to Gedaliah... and Jeremiah the prophet, and Baruch the son of Neriah, - and went to the land of Egypt - for they did not hearken to the voice of Jahveh - and came to Tahpanhes."
In this enumeration of those who were conducted to Egypt, Hitzig, Graf, and others distinguish two classes: (1) the men, women, children, etc. , who had been in Mizpah with Gedaliah, and had been led to Gibeon, after the murder of the latter, by Ishmael, but had afterwards been brought to Bethlehem by Johanan and the other captains (Jer 43:6, cf. Jer 40:7; Jer 41:10, Jer 41:16); (2) those who had returned from the foreign countries whither they had fled, but who had hitherto lived in the country, scattered here and there, and who must have joined the company led by Johanan to Bethlehem during the ten days of halt at that resting-place (Jer 43:5, cf.
Jer 40:11-12). There is no foundation, however, for this distinction. Neither in the present chapter is there anything mentioned of those who had been dispersed through the land joining those who had marched to Bethlehem; nor are the Jews who had returned from Moab, Ammon, Edom, and other countries to their own home distinguished, in Jer 40 and 41, as a different class from those who had been with Gedaliah in Mizpah; but on the other hand, according to Jer 40:12, these returned Jews also came to Gedaliah at Mizpah, and gathered grapes and fruit.
Besides, in these verses the distinction can only be made after the insertion into the text of the conjunction ו before את־הגּברים. To "all the remnant of Judah who had returned from the nations" belong the men, women, children, etc. , whom Nebuzaradan had committed to the care of Gedaliah. The enumeration in Jer 43:6 gives only one specification of the "whole remnant of Judah," as in Jer 41:16.
"And all the souls;" as if it were said, "and whoever else was still left alive;" cf. Jos 10:28. Tahpanhes was a frontier town of Egypt on the Pelusian branch of the Nile, and named Δάφναι by the Greeks; see on Jer 2:16. Here, on the borders of Egypt, a halt was made, for the purpose of coming to further resolutions regarding their residence in that country.
Here, too, Jeremiah received a revelation from God regarding the fate now impending on Egypt.
Jer 43:8-11 Prediction regarding Egypt. - Jer 43:8. "And the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah in Tahpanhes, saying, Jer 43:9. Take in thine hand large stones, and hide them in the clay in the brick-kiln, which is at the entrance to the house of Pharaoh in Taphanhes, in the eyes of the Jews; Jer 43:10. And say to them: Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadrezzar, the king of Babylon, my servant, and will place his throne over these stones which I have hidden, and he shall stretch his tapestry over them.
Jer 43:11. And he shall come and smite the land of Egypt, (he who is) for death, to death, - (he who is) for captivity, to captivity, - (he who is) for the sword, to the sword. Jer 43:12. And I will kindle fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt, and he shall burn them and carry them away; and he shall wrap the land of Egypt round him as the shepherd wraps his cloak round him, and thence depart in peace.
Jer 43:13. And he shall destroy the pillars of Beth-shemesh, which is in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians shall he burn with fire." This prophecy is introduced by a symbolical action, on which it is based. But in spite of the fact that the object of the action is stated in the address which follows, the action itself is not quite plain from the occurrence of בּמּלבּן, whose usual meaning, "brick-kiln" (cf.
Nah 3:14), does not seem suitable here. Eichhorn and Hitzig think it absurd that there should be found before the door of a royal habitation a brick-kiln on which a king was to place his throne. From the Arabic malbin , which also signifies a rectangular figure like tile or brick, and is used of the projecting entablature of doors, - from the employment, also, in the Talmud of the word מלבּן to signify a quadrangular tablet in the form of a tile, - Hitzig would claim for the word the meaning of a stone floor , and accordingly renders, "and insert them with mortar into the stone flooring."
But the entablatures over doors, or quadrangular figures like bricks, are nothing like a stone flooring or pavement before a palace. Besides, in the way of attaching to the word the signification of a "brick-kiln," - a meaning which is well established, - or even of a brickwork, the difficulties are not so great as to compel us to accept interpretations that have no foundation.
We do not need to think of a brick-kiln or brickwork as being always before the palace; as Neumann has observed, it may have indeed ben there, although only for a short time, during the erecting of some part of the palace; nor need it have been just at the palace gateway, but a considerable distance away from it, and on the opposite side. Alongside of it there was lying mortar, an indispensable building material.
טמן, "to hide," perhaps means here not merely to embed, but to embed in such a way that the stones could not very readily be perceived. Jeremiah was to press down the big stones, not into the brick-kiln, but into the mortar which was lying at (near) the brick-kiln, - to put them, too, before the eyes of the Jews, inasmuch as the meaning of this act had a primary reference to the fate of the Jews in Egypt.
The object of the action is thus stated in what follows: Jahveh shall bring the king of Babylon and set his throne on these stones, so that he shall spread out his beautiful tapestry over them. שׁפרוּר ( Qeri שׁפריר), an intensive form of שׁפר, שׁפרה, "splendour, beauty," signifies a glittering ornament, - here, the decoration of the throne, the gorgeous tapestry with which the seat of the throne was covered.
The stones must thus form the basis for the throne, which the king of Babylon will set up in front of the palace of the king of Egypt at Tahpanhes. But the symbolical meaning of this action is not thereby exhausted. Not merely is the laying of the stones significant, but also the place where they are laid, - at the entrance, or opposite Pharaoh’s palace. This palace was built of tiles or bricks: this is indicated by the brick-kiln and the mortar.
The throne of the king of Babylon, on the contrary, is set up on large stones. The materials of which the palace and the throne are formed, shadow forth the strength and stability of the kingdom. Pharaoh’s dominion is like crumbling clay, the material of bricks; the throne which Nebuchadnezzar shall set up opposite the clay-building of the Pharaohs rests on large stones, - his rule will be powerful and permanent.
According to Jeremiah’s further development of the symbol in Jer 43:11. , Nebuchadnezzar will come to Egypt (the Kethib באה is to be read בּאה, "he came down," to Egypt, בּוא being construed with the accus.) , and will smite the land together with its inhabitants, so that every man will receive his appointed lot, viz. , death by pestilence, imprisonment, and the sword, i.
e. , death in battle. On the mode of representation here, cf. Jer 15:2.
Jer 43:8-11 Prediction regarding Egypt. - Jer 43:8. "And the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah in Tahpanhes, saying, Jer 43:9. Take in thine hand large stones, and hide them in the clay in the brick-kiln, which is at the entrance to the house of Pharaoh in Taphanhes, in the eyes of the Jews; Jer 43:10. And say to them: Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadrezzar, the king of Babylon, my servant, and will place his throne over these stones which I have hidden, and he shall stretch his tapestry over them.
Jer 43:11. And he shall come and smite the land of Egypt, (he who is) for death, to death, - (he who is) for captivity, to captivity, - (he who is) for the sword, to the sword. Jer 43:12. And I will kindle fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt, and he shall burn them and carry them away; and he shall wrap the land of Egypt round him as the shepherd wraps his cloak round him, and thence depart in peace.
Jer 43:13. And he shall destroy the pillars of Beth-shemesh, which is in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians shall he burn with fire." This prophecy is introduced by a symbolical action, on which it is based. But in spite of the fact that the object of the action is stated in the address which follows, the action itself is not quite plain from the occurrence of בּמּלבּן, whose usual meaning, "brick-kiln" (cf.
Nah 3:14), does not seem suitable here. Eichhorn and Hitzig think it absurd that there should be found before the door of a royal habitation a brick-kiln on which a king was to place his throne. From the Arabic malbin , which also signifies a rectangular figure like tile or brick, and is used of the projecting entablature of doors, - from the employment, also, in the Talmud of the word מלבּן to signify a quadrangular tablet in the form of a tile, - Hitzig would claim for the word the meaning of a stone floor , and accordingly renders, "and insert them with mortar into the stone flooring."
But the entablatures over doors, or quadrangular figures like bricks, are nothing like a stone flooring or pavement before a palace. Besides, in the way of attaching to the word the signification of a "brick-kiln," - a meaning which is well established, - or even of a brickwork, the difficulties are not so great as to compel us to accept interpretations that have no foundation.
We do not need to think of a brick-kiln or brickwork as being always before the palace; as Neumann has observed, it may have indeed ben there, although only for a short time, during the erecting of some part of the palace; nor need it have been just at the palace gateway, but a considerable distance away from it, and on the opposite side. Alongside of it there was lying mortar, an indispensable building material.
טמן, "to hide," perhaps means here not merely to embed, but to embed in such a way that the stones could not very readily be perceived. Jeremiah was to press down the big stones, not into the brick-kiln, but into the mortar which was lying at (near) the brick-kiln, - to put them, too, before the eyes of the Jews, inasmuch as the meaning of this act had a primary reference to the fate of the Jews in Egypt.
The object of the action is thus stated in what follows: Jahveh shall bring the king of Babylon and set his throne on these stones, so that he shall spread out his beautiful tapestry over them. שׁפרוּר ( Qeri שׁפריר), an intensive form of שׁפר, שׁפרה, "splendour, beauty," signifies a glittering ornament, - here, the decoration of the throne, the gorgeous tapestry with which the seat of the throne was covered.
The stones must thus form the basis for the throne, which the king of Babylon will set up in front of the palace of the king of Egypt at Tahpanhes. But the symbolical meaning of this action is not thereby exhausted. Not merely is the laying of the stones significant, but also the place where they are laid, - at the entrance, or opposite Pharaoh’s palace. This palace was built of tiles or bricks: this is indicated by the brick-kiln and the mortar.
The throne of the king of Babylon, on the contrary, is set up on large stones. The materials of which the palace and the throne are formed, shadow forth the strength and stability of the kingdom. Pharaoh’s dominion is like crumbling clay, the material of bricks; the throne which Nebuchadnezzar shall set up opposite the clay-building of the Pharaohs rests on large stones, - his rule will be powerful and permanent.
According to Jeremiah’s further development of the symbol in Jer 43:11. , Nebuchadnezzar will come to Egypt (the Kethib באה is to be read בּאה, "he came down," to Egypt, בּוא being construed with the accus.) , and will smite the land together with its inhabitants, so that every man will receive his appointed lot, viz. , death by pestilence, imprisonment, and the sword, i.
e. , death in battle. On the mode of representation here, cf. Jer 15:2.
Jer 43:8-11 Prediction regarding Egypt. - Jer 43:8. "And the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah in Tahpanhes, saying, Jer 43:9. Take in thine hand large stones, and hide them in the clay in the brick-kiln, which is at the entrance to the house of Pharaoh in Taphanhes, in the eyes of the Jews; Jer 43:10. And say to them: Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadrezzar, the king of Babylon, my servant, and will place his throne over these stones which I have hidden, and he shall stretch his tapestry over them.
Jer 43:11. And he shall come and smite the land of Egypt, (he who is) for death, to death, - (he who is) for captivity, to captivity, - (he who is) for the sword, to the sword. Jer 43:12. And I will kindle fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt, and he shall burn them and carry them away; and he shall wrap the land of Egypt round him as the shepherd wraps his cloak round him, and thence depart in peace.
Jer 43:13. And he shall destroy the pillars of Beth-shemesh, which is in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians shall he burn with fire." This prophecy is introduced by a symbolical action, on which it is based. But in spite of the fact that the object of the action is stated in the address which follows, the action itself is not quite plain from the occurrence of בּמּלבּן, whose usual meaning, "brick-kiln" (cf.
Nah 3:14), does not seem suitable here. Eichhorn and Hitzig think it absurd that there should be found before the door of a royal habitation a brick-kiln on which a king was to place his throne. From the Arabic malbin , which also signifies a rectangular figure like tile or brick, and is used of the projecting entablature of doors, - from the employment, also, in the Talmud of the word מלבּן to signify a quadrangular tablet in the form of a tile, - Hitzig would claim for the word the meaning of a stone floor , and accordingly renders, "and insert them with mortar into the stone flooring."
But the entablatures over doors, or quadrangular figures like bricks, are nothing like a stone flooring or pavement before a palace. Besides, in the way of attaching to the word the signification of a "brick-kiln," - a meaning which is well established, - or even of a brickwork, the difficulties are not so great as to compel us to accept interpretations that have no foundation.
We do not need to think of a brick-kiln or brickwork as being always before the palace; as Neumann has observed, it may have indeed ben there, although only for a short time, during the erecting of some part of the palace; nor need it have been just at the palace gateway, but a considerable distance away from it, and on the opposite side. Alongside of it there was lying mortar, an indispensable building material.
טמן, "to hide," perhaps means here not merely to embed, but to embed in such a way that the stones could not very readily be perceived. Jeremiah was to press down the big stones, not into the brick-kiln, but into the mortar which was lying at (near) the brick-kiln, - to put them, too, before the eyes of the Jews, inasmuch as the meaning of this act had a primary reference to the fate of the Jews in Egypt.
The object of the action is thus stated in what follows: Jahveh shall bring the king of Babylon and set his throne on these stones, so that he shall spread out his beautiful tapestry over them. שׁפרוּר ( Qeri שׁפריר), an intensive form of שׁפר, שׁפרה, "splendour, beauty," signifies a glittering ornament, - here, the decoration of the throne, the gorgeous tapestry with which the seat of the throne was covered.
The stones must thus form the basis for the throne, which the king of Babylon will set up in front of the palace of the king of Egypt at Tahpanhes. But the symbolical meaning of this action is not thereby exhausted. Not merely is the laying of the stones significant, but also the place where they are laid, - at the entrance, or opposite Pharaoh’s palace. This palace was built of tiles or bricks: this is indicated by the brick-kiln and the mortar.
The throne of the king of Babylon, on the contrary, is set up on large stones. The materials of which the palace and the throne are formed, shadow forth the strength and stability of the kingdom. Pharaoh’s dominion is like crumbling clay, the material of bricks; the throne which Nebuchadnezzar shall set up opposite the clay-building of the Pharaohs rests on large stones, - his rule will be powerful and permanent.
According to Jeremiah’s further development of the symbol in Jer 43:11. , Nebuchadnezzar will come to Egypt (the Kethib באה is to be read בּאה, "he came down," to Egypt, בּוא being construed with the accus.) , and will smite the land together with its inhabitants, so that every man will receive his appointed lot, viz. , death by pestilence, imprisonment, and the sword, i.
e. , death in battle. On the mode of representation here, cf. Jer 15:2.
Jer 43:8-11 Prediction regarding Egypt. - Jer 43:8. "And the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah in Tahpanhes, saying, Jer 43:9. Take in thine hand large stones, and hide them in the clay in the brick-kiln, which is at the entrance to the house of Pharaoh in Taphanhes, in the eyes of the Jews; Jer 43:10. And say to them: Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel, Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadrezzar, the king of Babylon, my servant, and will place his throne over these stones which I have hidden, and he shall stretch his tapestry over them.
Jer 43:11. And he shall come and smite the land of Egypt, (he who is) for death, to death, - (he who is) for captivity, to captivity, - (he who is) for the sword, to the sword. Jer 43:12. And I will kindle fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt, and he shall burn them and carry them away; and he shall wrap the land of Egypt round him as the shepherd wraps his cloak round him, and thence depart in peace.
Jer 43:13. And he shall destroy the pillars of Beth-shemesh, which is in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians shall he burn with fire." This prophecy is introduced by a symbolical action, on which it is based. But in spite of the fact that the object of the action is stated in the address which follows, the action itself is not quite plain from the occurrence of בּמּלבּן, whose usual meaning, "brick-kiln" (cf.
Nah 3:14), does not seem suitable here. Eichhorn and Hitzig think it absurd that there should be found before the door of a royal habitation a brick-kiln on which a king was to place his throne. From the Arabic malbin , which also signifies a rectangular figure like tile or brick, and is used of the projecting entablature of doors, - from the employment, also, in the Talmud of the word מלבּן to signify a quadrangular tablet in the form of a tile, - Hitzig would claim for the word the meaning of a stone floor , and accordingly renders, "and insert them with mortar into the stone flooring."
But the entablatures over doors, or quadrangular figures like bricks, are nothing like a stone flooring or pavement before a palace. Besides, in the way of attaching to the word the signification of a "brick-kiln," - a meaning which is well established, - or even of a brickwork, the difficulties are not so great as to compel us to accept interpretations that have no foundation.
We do not need to think of a brick-kiln or brickwork as being always before the palace; as Neumann has observed, it may have indeed ben there, although only for a short time, during the erecting of some part of the palace; nor need it have been just at the palace gateway, but a considerable distance away from it, and on the opposite side. Alongside of it there was lying mortar, an indispensable building material.
טמן, "to hide," perhaps means here not merely to embed, but to embed in such a way that the stones could not very readily be perceived. Jeremiah was to press down the big stones, not into the brick-kiln, but into the mortar which was lying at (near) the brick-kiln, - to put them, too, before the eyes of the Jews, inasmuch as the meaning of this act had a primary reference to the fate of the Jews in Egypt.
The object of the action is thus stated in what follows: Jahveh shall bring the king of Babylon and set his throne on these stones, so that he shall spread out his beautiful tapestry over them. שׁפרוּר ( Qeri שׁפריר), an intensive form of שׁפר, שׁפרה, "splendour, beauty," signifies a glittering ornament, - here, the decoration of the throne, the gorgeous tapestry with which the seat of the throne was covered.
The stones must thus form the basis for the throne, which the king of Babylon will set up in front of the palace of the king of Egypt at Tahpanhes. But the symbolical meaning of this action is not thereby exhausted. Not merely is the laying of the stones significant, but also the place where they are laid, - at the entrance, or opposite Pharaoh’s palace. This palace was built of tiles or bricks: this is indicated by the brick-kiln and the mortar.
The throne of the king of Babylon, on the contrary, is set up on large stones. The materials of which the palace and the throne are formed, shadow forth the strength and stability of the kingdom. Pharaoh’s dominion is like crumbling clay, the material of bricks; the throne which Nebuchadnezzar shall set up opposite the clay-building of the Pharaohs rests on large stones, - his rule will be powerful and permanent.
According to Jeremiah’s further development of the symbol in Jer 43:11. , Nebuchadnezzar will come to Egypt (the Kethib באה is to be read בּאה, "he came down," to Egypt, בּוא being construed with the accus.) , and will smite the land together with its inhabitants, so that every man will receive his appointed lot, viz. , death by pestilence, imprisonment, and the sword, i.
e. , death in battle. On the mode of representation here, cf. Jer 15:2.
Jer 43:12 He shall burn the temples of the gods of Egypt, and carry away the idols. The first person הצּתּי, for which lxx, Syriac, and Vulgate have the third, must not be meddled with; it corresponds to שׂמתּי in Jer 43:10. What Nebuchadnezzar does as Jahveh’s servant (עבדּי, Jer 43:10) is done by God. The suffixes in שׂרפם and שׁבּם are assigned in such a way that the one is to be referred to the temples, the other to the idols; see on Jer 48:7.
- ועטה has been variously interpreted. עטה with the accus. מעיל or שׂלמה means the envelope one’s self with a garment, put on a garment, wrap the cloak round; cf. 1Sa 28:14; Psa 109:19; Isa 59:17, etc. This is the meaning of the verb here, as is shown by the clause expressing the comparison. The point of likeness is the easiness of the action. Ewald has very well explained the meaning of the whole: "As easily as any shepherd in the open field wraps himself in his cloak, so will he take the whole of Egypt in his hand, and be able to throw it round him like a light garment, that he may then, thus dressed as it were with booty, leave the land in peace, without a foe, - a complete victor."
Other explanations of the word are far-fetched, and lexically untenable.
Jer 43:13 In conclusion, mention is further made of the destruction of the famous temple of the Sun at Heliopolis, to show the fulfilment of the prophecy that all Egypt would fall under the power of Nebuchadnezzar. בּית שׁמשׁ, "House of the Sun," is the Hebrew rendering of the Egyptian Pe - râ , i. e. , House of the Sun, the sacred name of the city vulgarly called On ; see on Gen 41:45.
It lay north-east from Cairo, near the modern village of Matarieh, and thus pretty far inland; it was renowned for its magnificent temple, dedicated to Râ , the Sun-god. At the entrance to this building stood several larger and smaller obelisks, of which the two larger, added to the two older ones by Pheron the son of Sesostris, were about 150 feet high. One of these the Emperor Augustus caused to be brought to Rome; the other was thrown down in the year 1160; while one of the more ancient but smaller obelisks still stands in its original position, raising its head in the midst of a beautiful garden over a mass of dense foliage.
These obelisks are signified by מצּבות. The additional clause, "which is in the land of Egypt," does not belong to Beth-shemesh, as if it were appended for the purpose of distinguishing the city so named from Beth-shemesh in the land of Judah; the words are rather connected with מצּבות, and correspond with אלהי מצרים in the parallel member of the verse. The obelisks of the most famous temple of the Egyptian Sun-god are well known as the most splendid representatives of the glory of the Egyptian idolatry: the destruction of these monuments indicates the ruin of all the sanctuaries of the ancient kingdom of the Pharaohs.
The last clause is a kind of re-echo from Jer 43:12 ; ישׂרף is strengthened by the addition of בּאשׁ for the purpose of giving a sonorous ending to the whole. - The king of Egypt is not named in the prophecy, but according to Jer 44:30 it is Pharaoh-Hophra , who is to be given into the power of Nebuchadnezzar. When we inquire as to the fulfilment of this prediction, we find M.
Duncker, in his Gesch. des Alterthums , i. 841, giving a reply in these words: "Nebuchadnezzar did not fulfil these expectations (of Jeremiah, Jer 43:8-13; Jer 44:30, and of Ezekiel, Jer 29:32). He contented himself with having repelled the renewed attack of Egypt. The establishment of his dominion in Syria did not depend on his conquering Egypt; but Syria must obey him, throughout its whole extent.
The capture of Jerusalem followed the siege of the island-town of Tyre (b. c. 586), the last city that had maintained its independence. The army of the Chaldean slay thirteen years before Tyre without being able to bring the king Ethbaal (Ithobal) under subjection. At last, in the year 573, a treaty was concluded, in which the Tyrians recognised the supremacy of the king of Babylon."
That Tyre was brought into subjection is inferred by Duncker (in a note, p. 682), first, from the generally accepted statement of Berosus, that the whole of Phoenicia was subdued by Nebuchadnezzar (Josephus’ Ant . x. 11. 1, and contra Ap. i. 19); secondly, from Josephus’ statement ( contra Ap. i. 21), that the kings Merbal and Hiram had been brought by the Tyrians from Babylon; and lastly, from the fact that, with the close of the siege, the reign of Ithobal ends and that of Baal begins.
"It would thus appear that Ithobal was removed, and his family carried to Babylon." These facts, which are also acknowledged by Duncker, sufficiently show (what we have already pointed out in Ezekiel) that the siege of Tyre ended with the taking of this island-city. For, unless the besieged city had been taken by storm, or at least compelled to surrender, the king would not have let himself be dethroned and carried to Babylon.
- But whence has Duncker derived the information that Nebuchadnezzar had no concern with the subjugation of Egypt, but merely with the establishment of his authority in Syria? Although Nebuchadnezzar began the siege of the island-city of Tyre soon after the destruction of Jerusalem, and required thirteen years to reduce it, yet it does not by any means follow from this that he had only to do with the strengthening of his authority in Syria, and no connection with the subjugation of Egypt; all that we can safely infer is, that he thought he could not attempt the conquest of Egypt with any certain prospect of success until he had subdued the whole of Syria.
Besides, so long as such an one as Pharaoh-Hophra occupied the throne of Egypt, - who had not only sent an army to Zedekiah king of Judah to raise the siege of Jerusalem, but also (according to Herodotus, ii. 161, who draws from Egyptian sources) led an army to Sidon and fought a naval battle with the Tyrians; who (as Diod. Sic. i. 68 relates, also following Egyptian tradition) set out for Cyprus with abundant war-material and a strong army and fleet, and took Sidon by storm, while the rest of the towns submitted through fear; who, moreover, had defeated the Phoenicians and Cyprians in a naval engagement, and had returned to Egypt with immense spoil; - how could Nebuchadnezzar possibly think that his rule in Syria was firmly established?
Such statements as those now referred to even Duncker does not venture to reject. We must, however, view them with a regard to the usual exaggerations by which the Egyptians were accustomed to extol the deeds of their Pharaohs; but after making all due allowance, we are led to this, that, after the fall of Tyre, Hophra sought to prevent the island of Cyprus as well as Tyre from becoming a dependency of Nebuchadnezzar.
Could Nebuchadnezzar leave unmolested such an enemy as this, who, on the first suitable opportunity, would attempt to wrest the whole of Syria from him? So short-sighted a policy we could not attribute to such a conqueror as Nebuchadnezzar. Much more considerate is the judgment previously expressed regarding this by Vitringa, on Isa 19: "Etiamsi omnis historia hic sileret, non est probabile, Nebucadnezarem magnum dominatorem gentium, post Palaestinam et Phoeniciam subactam, non tentasse Aegyptum, et si tentaverit, tentasse frustra; et quâ parte Aegyptum occupavit, eam non vastasse et desolasse."
It is also to be borne in mind that the conquest of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar, which is denied by Hitzig and Graf as well as Duncker, as it formerly was by Volney, is vouched for by the trustworthy testimony of Berosus (in Josephus, contra Ap. i. 19), who says that Nebuchadnezzar took Egypt (κρατῆσαι Αἰγύπτου, ̓Αραβίας, κ. τ. λ.) ; the denial, too, rests on a mere inference from the account given by Herodotus from the traditions of the priests regarding the reign of Apriës (Hophra).
If the witness of Berosus regarding the conquest of Syria and Phoenicia be trustworthy, why should his testimony concerning Egypt be unreliable? The account of Josephus ( Ant . x. 9. 7), that Nebuchadnezzar, in the fifth year after the capture of Jerusalem, and the twenty-third year of his reign, invaded Egypt, killed the king (Hophra), put another in his place, and led captive to Babylon the Jews that had fled to Egypt, - this account will not admit of being brought forward (as has often been attempted, and anew, of late, by Mrc.
von Niebuhr, Assur und Babel , S. 215) as sufficient testimony for a successful campaign carried on by Nebuchadnezzar against Egypt during the siege of Tyre. The difficulty in the way of proving that such a campaign actually took place is not so much that the death of Hophra in battle with Nebuchadnezzar, or his execution afterwards, contradicts all authenticated history, as that the particular statements of Josephus regarding this campaign, both as to the date and the carrying away to Babylon of the Jews that had fled to Egypt, are simply conclusions drawn from a combination of Jer 43:8-13 and Jer 44:30 with Jer 52:20; besides, the execution of King Hophra by Nebuchadnezzar is foretold neither by Jeremiah nor by Ezekiel.
Ezekiel, in Jer 29-32, merely predicts the decline of the Egyptian influence, the breaking of the arm of Pharaoh, i. e. , of his military power, and his fall into Sheol; but he does it in so ideal a manner, that even the words of Jer 30:13, "there shall be no more a prince out of the land of Egypt," - i. e. , Egypt shall lose all her princes, just as her idols have been destroyed, - even these words cannot well be applied to the execution of Pharaoh-Hophra.
But Jeremiah, in Jer 43:1-13 and in Jer 46:13. , predicts merely the downfall of the pride and power of Pharaoh, and the conquest, devastation, and spoiling of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar. And even in the words of Jer 44:30, "I (Jahveh) will deliver Pharaoh-Hophra into the hand of his enemies, and of those who seek his life, just as I delivered Zedekiah the king of Judah into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar his enemy, and of those who sought after his life," there is nothing definitely stated regarding Hophra’s being executed by Nebuchadnezzar, or killed in battle with him.
Such a reference cannot be made out from the words, even though we lay no emphasis on the plural "his enemies," in contrast with the expression "Nebuchadnezzar his enemy," and, according to Jer 46:26, understand Nebuchadnezzar and his servants as being included under the "enemies;" for certainly Zedekiah was not killed by Nebuchadnezzar, but merely taken prisoner and carried to Babylon. Besides, there was no need of special proof that the prophecies of Jeremiah regarding Egypt declare much more important matters than merely an expedition of Chaldean soldiers to Egypt, as well as the plunder of some cities and the carrying away of the Jews who resided there; and that, in Jer 44, what the Jews who went to Egypt against the will of God are threatened with, is not transportation to Babylon, but destruction in Egypt by sword, hunger, and pestilence, until only a few individuals shall escape, and these shall return to Judah (Jer 44:14, Jer 44:27-28).
But if we compare with the prophecy of Jeremiah in Jer 43:8-13, and in Jer 46:13-26, that of Ezekiel in Jer 29:17-21, which was uttered or composed in the twenty-seventh year of the captivity of Jehoiachin, i. e. , in the year 573, it becomes abundantly evident that Nebuchadnezzar cannot have invaded and conquered Egypt before that year, and not till after the fall of Tyre, which immediately ensued.
And that this was actually the case, is put beyond doubt by the statement of Herodotus, ii. 161ff. , regarding Apriës, that he lost his throne and his life in consequence of being defeated in battle with the Cyrenians. What Herodotus assigns as the cause of the fall of Apriës, is insufficient to account for the unhappy end of this king. Herodotus himself states, ii.
169, that the Egyptians were filled with the most intense hatred against Apriës; the monuments also bear witness to this fact. This bitter feeling must have had a deeper source than merely the unsuccessful issue of a war with Cyrene; it receives its explanation only when we find that Apriës, by his attempts against Nebuchadnezzar, had deserved and brought on the subjugation of Egypt by the king of Babylon; cf.
Hävernick on Ezekiel, p. 500. By sending an auxiliary army to Judah, for the purpose of driving back the Chaldeans, and by forming an expedition to Cyprus and the cities of Phoenicia, which was evidently directed against the establishment of the Chaldean power in Phoenicia, Apriës had so provoked the king of Babylon, that the latter, immediately after the subjugation of Tyre, entered on the campaign against Egypt, which he invaded, subdued, and spoiled, without, however, killing the king; him he preferred allowing to rule on, but as his vassal, and under the promise that he would recognise his authority and pay tribute, just as had been done with King Jehoiakim when Jerusalem was first taken.
If all this actually took place (which we may well assume), Apriës might probably have begun another war against Cyrene, after the Chaldeans had departed, in the hope of procuring some small compensation to the Egyptians for the defeat they had suffered from the Chaldeans, by subduing that province in the west; in this war the king might have lost his life, as Herodotus relates, through want of success in his attempt. In this say, the account of Herodotus regarding the death of Apriës quite agrees with the conquest of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar.
But that Herodotus makes no mention of the conquest of Egypt, is sufficiently accounted for when we remember that he derived his information from the stories of the priests, who carefully omitted all mention of a struggle between Egypt and the power of Chaldea, since this had ended in the humiliation of Egypt; hence also mention was made only of the victories and mighty deeds of Necho II, while his defeat at Carchemish was passed over in silence. Warning Against Idolatry, and Intimation of Its Punishment When the Jews had settled down in Egypt in different places, they betook themselves zealously to the worship of the queen of heaven; to this they were probably induced by the example of the heathen round about them, and by the vain expectation of thereby promoting their interests as members of the community (cf.
Jer 44:17.) Accordingly, when all the people who were living here and there through the country had assembled in Upper Egypt (Jer 44:15) for the celebration of the festival, the prophet seized the opportunity of setting before them, in an earnest manner, the ruinous consequences of their doings. First of all, he reminds them of the judgments which they and their fathers, by their continued apostasy from the Lord, and by their idolatry, had brought on Jerusalem and Judah (Jer 44:2-7); and he warns them not to bring destruction on the remnant of Judah still left, by continuing in their idolatry (Jer 44:8-10).
The threatening also is expressed, that the Lord will destroy all those who marched to Egypt with the sword, famine, and pestilence (Jer 44:11-14). But the whole assembly declare to him that they will not obey his word, but persist in worshipping the queen of heaven; alleging that their fathers prospered so long as they honoured her, and war and famine had come on them only after they ceased to do so (Jer 44:15-19).
Jeremiah refutes this false notion (Jer 44:20-23), and once more solemnly announces to them the sentence of destruction by sword and famine in Egypt. As a sign that the Lord will keep His word, he finally predicts that King Hophra shall be delivered into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar.
Jer 44:1 "The word that came to Jeremiah regarding all the Jews who were living in the land of Egypt, who dwelt in Migdol, in Tahpanhes, in Noph, and in the land of Pathros." From this heading we perceive that those who (according to Jer 43:1-13) had gone to Egypt, had settled there in various parts of the country, and that the following denunciations, which at the same time form his last prophecy, were uttered a long time after that which is given in Jer 43:8-13 as having been delivered at Tahpanhes.
The date of it cannot, indeed, be determined exactly. From the threatening that King Hophra shall be delivered over to the power of Nebuchadnezzar (Jer 44:24-30), only this much is clear, that Egypt was not yet occupied by the Chaldeans, which, as we have shown above (p. 353), did not take place before the year 572. But it by no means follows from this that Jeremiah did not utter these words of threatening till shortly before this event.
He may have done so even five or ten years before, in the period between 585 and 580, as we have already observed on p. 12. The Jews had settled down, not merely in the two northern frontier towns, Migdol (i. e. , Magdolo , Μαγδώλος, according to the Itiner. Anton. , twelve Roman miles from Pelusium, Copt. Meschtôl , Egypt. Ma'ktr , the most northerly place in Egypt; see on Eze 29:10) and Tahpanhes (i.
e. , Daphne , see on Jer 43:7), but also in more inland places, in Noph (i. e. , Memphis , see on Jer 2:16) and the land of Pathros (lxx Παθούρης, Egypt. Petorees , i. e. , Southland , viz. , Upper Egypt, the Thebais of the Greeks and Romans; see on Eze 29:14). The word of the Lord runs as follows: -
Jer 44:2-14 The warning and threatening. - "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Ye yourselves have been all the evil which I have brought on Jerusalem, and on all the cities of Judah; and, behold, they are a desolation this day, and there is no inhabitant in them; Jer 44:3 . Because of their wickedness which they have done, by provoking me through going to burn incense, (and) to serve other gods whom they knew not, (neither) they (nor) ye, nor your fathers.
Jer 44:4 . And I sent unto you all my servants the prophets, rising early and sending (them), to say, Do not this abominable thing which I hate. Jer 44:5 . But they did not hear, nor inclined their ear to turn from their wickedness, by not burning incense to other gods. Jer 44:6 . Therefore my wrath and mine anger poured itself out, and burned up the cities of Judah and the streets of Jerusalem; so that they have become a desolation and a waste, as at this day.
Jer 44:7 . Now therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Why do ye great evil against your souls, by cutting off from yourselves man and women, child and suckling, out of the midst of Judah, so leaving no remnant for yourselves; Jer 44:8 . Through provoking me by the works of your hands, burning incense to other gods in the land of Egypt, whither ye have gone to sojourn, that ye might bring destruction on yourselves, and that ye might become a curse and a reproach among all the nations of the earth?
Jer 44:9 . Have ye forgotten the evil deeds of your fathers, and the evil deeds of the kings of Judah, and the evil deeds of their wives, and your own evil deeds, and the evil deeds of your wives, which they committed in the land of Judah and on the streets of Jerusalem? Jer 44:10. They have not been contrite to this day, and are not afraid, nor do they walk in my law, and in my statutes, which I have set before you and before your fathers.
Jer 44:11. Therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will set my face against you for evil, and to cut off all Judah. Jer 44:12. And I will take the remnant of Judah, that have set their faces to go to the land of Egypt in order to sojourn there, and they shall all be consumed; in the land of Egypt shall they fall, by sword and famine shall they be consumed; small and great, by sword and famine shall they die, and they shall become an execration and an astonishment, and a curse and a reproach.
Jer 44:13. And I will punish those who dwell in the land of Egypt, as I punished Jerusalem, by sword, and famine, and pestilence. Jer 44:14. There shall not be one escaped or left to the remnant of Judah that came to sojourn there in the land of Egypt, so as to return to the land of Judah, whither they long to return and dwell; for they shall not return except as escaped ones."
Jer 44:2-6 In order to make an impression on the people by his warning against idolatry, Jeremiah begins his address with a reference to the great calamity which the fathers have brought on the kingdom of Judah through their continued idolatry (Jer 44:2-6). "Ye have seen all the evil," etc. ; all the cities are laid waste and depopulated, because their inhabitants have roused the anger of the Lord, and have not let themselves be dissuaded by the admonitions of the prophets whom God has sent.
"This day," i. e. , now, at present. On Jer 44:3, cf. Jer 11:17; Jer 19:4; Jer 32:32, etc. ; and as to the meaning of קטּר, see on Jer 1:16. In Jer 44:3 the address becomes more direct, through the change into the second person, "ye;" the audience then present only continue these sins of their fathers. On Jer 44:4, cf. Jer 7:25; Jer 25:4, etc. דּבר התּעבה הזּאת, "the thing of this abomination," which is equivalent to "this abominable idolatry."
דּבר serves to render the subject more prominent, as in Jdg 19:24. On Jer 44:6, cf. Jer 42:18; Jer 7:20. The wrath of God burned in the cities, for the fire of destruction was a manifestation of the divine wrath. As to כּיום הזּה, see on Jer 11:5.
Jer 44:2-14 The warning and threatening. - "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Ye yourselves have been all the evil which I have brought on Jerusalem, and on all the cities of Judah; and, behold, they are a desolation this day, and there is no inhabitant in them; Jer 44:3 . Because of their wickedness which they have done, by provoking me through going to burn incense, (and) to serve other gods whom they knew not, (neither) they (nor) ye, nor your fathers.
Jer 44:4 . And I sent unto you all my servants the prophets, rising early and sending (them), to say, Do not this abominable thing which I hate. Jer 44:5 . But they did not hear, nor inclined their ear to turn from their wickedness, by not burning incense to other gods. Jer 44:6 . Therefore my wrath and mine anger poured itself out, and burned up the cities of Judah and the streets of Jerusalem; so that they have become a desolation and a waste, as at this day.
Jer 44:7 . Now therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Why do ye great evil against your souls, by cutting off from yourselves man and women, child and suckling, out of the midst of Judah, so leaving no remnant for yourselves; Jer 44:8 . Through provoking me by the works of your hands, burning incense to other gods in the land of Egypt, whither ye have gone to sojourn, that ye might bring destruction on yourselves, and that ye might become a curse and a reproach among all the nations of the earth?
Jer 44:9 . Have ye forgotten the evil deeds of your fathers, and the evil deeds of the kings of Judah, and the evil deeds of their wives, and your own evil deeds, and the evil deeds of your wives, which they committed in the land of Judah and on the streets of Jerusalem? Jer 44:10. They have not been contrite to this day, and are not afraid, nor do they walk in my law, and in my statutes, which I have set before you and before your fathers.
Jer 44:11. Therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will set my face against you for evil, and to cut off all Judah. Jer 44:12. And I will take the remnant of Judah, that have set their faces to go to the land of Egypt in order to sojourn there, and they shall all be consumed; in the land of Egypt shall they fall, by sword and famine shall they be consumed; small and great, by sword and famine shall they die, and they shall become an execration and an astonishment, and a curse and a reproach.
Jer 44:13. And I will punish those who dwell in the land of Egypt, as I punished Jerusalem, by sword, and famine, and pestilence. Jer 44:14. There shall not be one escaped or left to the remnant of Judah that came to sojourn there in the land of Egypt, so as to return to the land of Judah, whither they long to return and dwell; for they shall not return except as escaped ones."
Jer 44:2-6 In order to make an impression on the people by his warning against idolatry, Jeremiah begins his address with a reference to the great calamity which the fathers have brought on the kingdom of Judah through their continued idolatry (Jer 44:2-6). "Ye have seen all the evil," etc. ; all the cities are laid waste and depopulated, because their inhabitants have roused the anger of the Lord, and have not let themselves be dissuaded by the admonitions of the prophets whom God has sent.
"This day," i. e. , now, at present. On Jer 44:3, cf. Jer 11:17; Jer 19:4; Jer 32:32, etc. ; and as to the meaning of קטּר, see on Jer 1:16. In Jer 44:3 the address becomes more direct, through the change into the second person, "ye;" the audience then present only continue these sins of their fathers. On Jer 44:4, cf. Jer 7:25; Jer 25:4, etc. דּבר התּעבה הזּאת, "the thing of this abomination," which is equivalent to "this abominable idolatry."
דּבר serves to render the subject more prominent, as in Jdg 19:24. On Jer 44:6, cf. Jer 42:18; Jer 7:20. The wrath of God burned in the cities, for the fire of destruction was a manifestation of the divine wrath. As to כּיום הזּה, see on Jer 11:5.
Jer 44:2-14 The warning and threatening. - "Thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Ye yourselves have been all the evil which I have brought on Jerusalem, and on all the cities of Judah; and, behold, they are a desolation this day, and there is no inhabitant in them; Jer 44:3 . Because of their wickedness which they have done, by provoking me through going to burn incense, (and) to serve other gods whom they knew not, (neither) they (nor) ye, nor your fathers.
Jer 44:4 . And I sent unto you all my servants the prophets, rising early and sending (them), to say, Do not this abominable thing which I hate. Jer 44:5 . But they did not hear, nor inclined their ear to turn from their wickedness, by not burning incense to other gods. Jer 44:6 . Therefore my wrath and mine anger poured itself out, and burned up the cities of Judah and the streets of Jerusalem; so that they have become a desolation and a waste, as at this day.
Jer 44:7 . Now therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Why do ye great evil against your souls, by cutting off from yourselves man and women, child and suckling, out of the midst of Judah, so leaving no remnant for yourselves; Jer 44:8 . Through provoking me by the works of your hands, burning incense to other gods in the land of Egypt, whither ye have gone to sojourn, that ye might bring destruction on yourselves, and that ye might become a curse and a reproach among all the nations of the earth?
Jer 44:9 . Have ye forgotten the evil deeds of your fathers, and the evil deeds of the kings of Judah, and the evil deeds of their wives, and your own evil deeds, and the evil deeds of your wives, which they committed in the land of Judah and on the streets of Jerusalem? Jer 44:10. They have not been contrite to this day, and are not afraid, nor do they walk in my law, and in my statutes, which I have set before you and before your fathers.
Jer 44:11. Therefore thus saith Jahveh of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will set my face against you for evil, and to cut off all Judah. Jer 44:12. And I will take the remnant of Judah, that have set their faces to go to the land of Egypt in order to sojourn there, and they shall all be consumed; in the land of Egypt shall they fall, by sword and famine shall they be consumed; small and great, by sword and famine shall they die, and they shall become an execration and an astonishment, and a curse and a reproach.
Jer 44:13. And I will punish those who dwell in the land of Egypt, as I punished Jerusalem, by sword, and famine, and pestilence. Jer 44:14. There shall not be one escaped or left to the remnant of Judah that came to sojourn there in the land of Egypt, so as to return to the land of Judah, whither they long to return and dwell; for they shall not return except as escaped ones."
Jer 44:2-6 In order to make an impression on the people by his warning against idolatry, Jeremiah begins his address with a reference to the great calamity which the fathers have brought on the kingdom of Judah through their continued idolatry (Jer 44:2-6). "Ye have seen all the evil," etc. ; all the cities are laid waste and depopulated, because their inhabitants have roused the anger of the Lord, and have not let themselves be dissuaded by the admonitions of the prophets whom God has sent.
"This day," i. e. , now, at present. On Jer 44:3, cf. Jer 11:17; Jer 19:4; Jer 32:32, etc. ; and as to the meaning of קטּר, see on Jer 1:16. In Jer 44:3 the address becomes more direct, through the change into the second person, "ye;" the audience then present only continue these sins of their fathers. On Jer 44:4, cf. Jer 7:25; Jer 25:4, etc. דּבר התּעבה הזּאת, "the thing of this abomination," which is equivalent to "this abominable idolatry."
דּבר serves to render the subject more prominent, as in Jdg 19:24. On Jer 44:6, cf. Jer 42:18; Jer 7:20. The wrath of God burned in the cities, for the fire of destruction was a manifestation of the divine wrath. As to כּיום הזּה, see on Jer 11:5.