Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, delivering a personal word from the Lord to Baruch son of Neriah.
A Word for Baruch: Do Not Seek Great Things in a Day of Judgment
When the Lord is judging a collapsing order, His servants must surrender personal greatness and receive preserved life as mercy enough.
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When the Lord is judging a collapsing order, His servants must surrender personal greatness and receive preserved life as mercy enough.
Jeremiah 45 argues that personal ambition must be judged by the larger work of God in history. Baruch is weary and sorrowful because serving the word of the Lord has brought pain, instability, and no rest. Yet the Lord's answer does not center Baruch's desired outcome. Instead, the Lord reveals the scale of judgment: He is tearing down and uprooting what He Himself had built and planted.
In such a moment, seeking great things for oneself is spiritually disordered. The faithful servant is called to relinquish self-exalting expectations and to receive preserved life as mercy. The chapter teaches that God's servants must not demand greatness when God is humbling a people, and they must not despise preservation when God gives it as grace.
Baruch son of Neriah, Jeremiah's scribe, associate, and faithful servant in the prophetic ministry.
The fourth year of Jehoiakim son of Josiah, king of Judah, when Baruch wrote on a scroll the words Jeremiah dictated to Him.
When the Lord is judging a collapsing order, His servants must surrender personal greatness and receive preserved life as mercy enough.
Jeremiah, the prophet of the Lord, delivering a personal word from the Lord to Baruch son of Neriah.
Baruch son of Neriah, Jeremiah's scribe, associate, and faithful servant in the prophetic ministry.
The fourth year of Jehoiakim son of Josiah, king of Judah, when Baruch wrote on a scroll the words Jeremiah dictated to Him.
- Baruch serves during a time of national instability, royal hostility, prophetic rejection, and public judgment. His grief and exhaustion arise from carrying ministry responsibility in a collapsing covenant community.
The chapter shows that the Lord's judgment on Judah affects not only kings, priests, and false prophets, but also faithful servants who must learn to live without self-protective ambition in the midst of covenant collapse.
The chapter moves from the historical setting of Baruch writing Jeremiah's words, to Baruch's weary lament, to the Lord's explanation of widespread judgment, to the command not to seek great things, and finally to the promise that Baruch's life will be preserved wherever He goes.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
The chapter forms God's servants to embrace humble faithfulness, surrender self-seeking greatness, and treasure the preserving mercy of God during seasons of judgment, collapse, and weariness.
- 45:1:
- 45:2 3:
- 45:4:
- 45:5A:
- 45:5B:
Theological Argument
Jeremiah 45 argues that personal ambition must be judged by the larger work of God in history. Baruch is weary and sorrowful because serving the word of the Lord has brought pain, instability, and no rest. Yet the Lord's answer does not center Baruch's desired outcome. Instead, the Lord reveals the scale of judgment: He is tearing down and uprooting what He Himself had built and planted.
In such a moment, seeking great things for oneself is spiritually disordered. The faithful servant is called to relinquish self-exalting expectations and to receive preserved life as mercy. The chapter teaches that God's servants must not demand greatness when God is humbling a people, and they must not despise preservation when God gives it as grace.
Baruch's grief is acknowledged, his perspective is corrected, his ambition is restrained, and his life is promised as mercy.
- 1.Faithful service can bring real sorrow and exhaustion.
- 2.Personal grief must be interpreted within the LORD's larger covenantal work.
- 3.A season of divine judgment is not a season for self-seeking greatness.
- 4.The LORD's servants are not entitled to ease, prominence, or escape from the upheaval around them.
- 5.Preserved life is not a small mercy when judgment is widespread.
Theological Focus
- Faithful service under judgment
- The danger of self-seeking ambition
- Divine sovereignty over collapse
- Pastoral mercy for weary servants
- Life as grace
- Perspective correction
- Divine Sovereignty
- Human Ambition
- Pastoral Care of the Weary
- Judgment
- Grace and Preservation
- Vocation
- Servanthood
- Perseverance
Covenant Significance
Jeremiah 45 uses Jeremiah's covenant vocabulary of building, planting, tearing down, and uprooting to explain Baruch's situation. Judah is under covenant judgment. The Lord is dismantling what He had established because of persistent rebellion. Baruch, though faithful, must live through the consequences of that covenant crisis. His task is not to seek personal advancement within a collapsing order but to remain faithful under the Lord's word and receive preservation as mercy.
- Judah's collapse is covenantal
- Faithful servants suffer within communal judgment
- Personal ambition must submit to covenant reality
- Preservation is covenant mercy
- The servant's calling is faithfulness, not status
Canonical Connections
Baruch's scroll work connects Him to the preservation and proclamation of the prophetic word, though Jeremiah 45 reminds Him that ministry usefulness does not justify self-seeking greatness.
The chapter uses Jeremiah's core vocabulary of judgment and restoration to frame Baruch's personal word within the book's larger theology.
Baruch's correction fits the wider biblical call to humble service rather than self-exaltation.
The promise of life as a prize stands within a biblical pattern of personal preservation amid widespread judgment.
Baruch's weariness belongs to the wider experience of servants whose labor is costly but seen by God.
Christ redefines greatness as humble service, obedience, and self-giving love.
Jeremiah 45 exposes the servant's need for grace when sorrow, ambition, and uncertainty press upon the heart. Baruch is not saved by His role, His nearness to Jeremiah, or His usefulness in preserving the prophetic word. He receives life as mercy from the Lord. In the fullness of Scripture, Christ is the true Servant who did not seek selfish greatness, but humbled Himself, obeyed the Father, gave His life for sinners, and was raised in glory.
Through Christ, weary servants receive forgiveness for self-seeking ambition, rest for burdened souls, and life that is not merely preserved through judgment but secured eternally in resurrection hope.
Primary Emphasis
Jeremiah 45 contributes to the biblical pattern of humble service under the judgment-bearing purposes of God. Baruch must not seek great things for Himself while the Lord is tearing down the old order. This points canonically toward Christ, the true Servant who did not grasp at self-exalting greatness but humbled Himself in obedience, bore judgment for sinners, and received vindication from the Father.
Where Baruch is promised His life as a prize, Christ gives His life as a ransom and rises to secure life for His people. The chapter also trains Christ's servants to embrace humble faithfulness rather than ambition for prominence in a world under judgment.
Chapter Contribution
Jeremiah 45 argues that personal ambition must be judged by the larger work of God in history. Baruch is weary and sorrowful because serving the word of the Lord has brought pain, instability, and no rest. Yet the Lord's answer does not center Baruch's desired outcome. Instead, the Lord reveals the scale of judgment: He is tearing down and uprooting what He Himself had built and planted.
In such a moment, seeking great things for oneself is spiritually disordered. The faithful servant is called to relinquish self-exalting expectations and to receive preserved life as mercy. The chapter teaches that God's servants must not demand greatness when God is humbling a people, and they must not despise preservation when God gives it as grace.
God governs the rise and fall of nations and determines when what He built must be torn down.
God calls His servants to obedience and humility rather than personal ambition during times of crisis.
God preserves the lives of His servants according to His purposes even amid widespread judgment.
The Lord is the one tearing down what He built and uprooting what He planted, showing His active rule over Judah's collapse.
The command not to seek great things for oneself directly confronts self-seeking ambition in the servant of God.
The Lord personally addresses Baruch's sorrow, pain, groaning, and restlessness.
Disaster is coming upon all people, and Baruch must interpret His life in that context.
Baruch's life is given to Him as a prize, emphasizing preservation as divine mercy.
Baruch's role as scribe places Him within the ministry of the word, but His calling must be marked by humility rather than self-exaltation.
The chapter forms a theology of hidden, costly, humble service under the word of the Lord.
The promise that Baruch's life will be preserved wherever He goes calls Him to continue under uncertainty.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- The chapter forms God's servants to embrace humble faithfulness, surrender self-seeking greatness, and treasure the preserving mercy of God during seasons of judgment, collapse, and weariness.
Sense Baruch, son of Neriah
Definition Jeremiah's scribe and associate who wrote the prophet's dictated words on a scroll.
Lexicon Baruch, son of Neriah
Why it matters Baruch represents the faithful but weary servant whose hidden ministry carries great cost.
Sense Jehoiakim, king of Judah
Definition A king of Judah during whose fourth year Baruch wrote Jeremiah's words on a scroll.
Lexicon Jehoiakim, king of Judah
Why it matters The dating connects Jeremiah 45 to the scroll crisis of Jeremiah 36 and to Judah's escalating rejection of the prophetic word.
Sense great things, prominent things
Definition The self-directed aspirations Baruch is forbidden to seek in a time of judgment.
Lexicon great things, prominent things
Why it matters This is the chapter's central discipleship pressure: faithful servants must surrender self-seeking ambition.
Sense word, matter, event
Definition A word, speech, matter, or event, often referring to the authoritative word of the LORD.
References Jeremiah 45:1
Lexicon word, matter, event
Why it matters Baruch's life and sorrow are bound to the ministry of receiving, writing, and preserving the word of the Lord.
Sense book, scroll, written document
Definition A written document, scroll, or book.
References Jeremiah 45:1
Lexicon book, scroll, written document
Why it matters Baruch's work on the scroll connects this chapter to the preservation and transmission of Jeremiah's prophetic words.
Sense woe, alas
Definition An exclamation of grief, lament, or distress.
References Jeremiah 45:3
Lexicon woe, alas
Why it matters Baruch's cry reveals the depth of His anguish and the personal cost of serving in a day of judgment.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense grief, sorrow
Definition Deep sorrow, grief, or anguish.
References Jeremiah 45:3
Lexicon grief, sorrow
Why it matters The Lord names the grief Baruch feels, showing that faithful servants' sorrow is not invisible to God.
Sense pain, suffering, anguish
Definition Physical or emotional pain and anguish.
References Jeremiah 45:3
Lexicon pain, suffering, anguish
Why it matters Baruch's ministry burden is described in terms of pain, showing the embodied cost of prophetic service.
Sense sighing, groaning
Definition A sigh, groan, or expression of deep distress.
References Jeremiah 45:3
Lexicon sighing, groaning
Why it matters Baruch is worn out with groaning, giving language for spiritual and emotional exhaustion in ministry.
Sense rest, resting place, repose
Definition Rest, repose, or a settled place of relief.
References Jeremiah 45:3
Lexicon rest, resting place, repose
Why it matters Baruch's inability to find rest highlights the deep instability of serving during covenant collapse.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to build, rebuild, establish
Definition To build, construct, or establish.
References Jeremiah 45:4
Lexicon to build, rebuild, establish
Why it matters The Lord says He is overthrowing what He built, placing Baruch's pain inside the larger reversal of Judah's covenant life.
Cross-language bridge 4 links · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense to tear down, demolish, overthrow
Definition To break down, demolish, or overthrow.
References Jeremiah 45:4
Lexicon to tear down, demolish, overthrow
Why it matters The Lord is actively tearing down what He had built, showing that Baruch's world is collapsing under divine judgment, not mere political accident.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to plant, establish
Definition To plant or establish something in place.
References Jeremiah 45:4
Lexicon to plant, establish
Why it matters The Lord had planted Judah, but now He is uprooting what He planted, echoing Jeremiah's major judgment-restoration vocabulary.
Form in passage Qal · Participle active What is this?
Sense to uproot, pluck up, pull out
Definition To pull up or uproot, especially in judgment imagery.
References Jeremiah 45:4
Lexicon to uproot, pluck up, pull out
Why it matters The Lord's uprooting language ties Baruch's personal word to Jeremiah's prophetic commission and Judah's covenant judgment.
Form in passage Piel · Imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to seek, desire, request
Definition To seek, desire, pursue, or request.
References Jeremiah 45:5
Lexicon to seek, desire, request
Why it matters The Lord's command turns on what Baruch is seeking. His desires must be reordered under God's judgment and mercy.
Sense great things, large things, prominent things
Definition Things considered great, large, important, or prominent.
References Jeremiah 45:5
Lexicon great things, large things, prominent things
Why it matters The central correction forbids Baruch from pursuing personal greatness in a time of divine judgment.
Sense evil, disaster, calamity
Definition Moral evil or calamity, depending on context.
References Jeremiah 45:5
Lexicon evil, disaster, calamity
Why it matters The Lord is bringing disaster on all people, so Baruch must not interpret His life by private aspiration alone.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense life, soul, person, self
Definition Life, living being, personhood, or self.
References Jeremiah 45:5
Lexicon life, soul, person, self
Why it matters The promised gift is Baruch's life, emphasizing preservation of His person amid widespread judgment.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense spoil, plunder, prize
Definition Spoil or plunder taken from danger or battle, used here metaphorically for life preserved.
References Jeremiah 45:5
Lexicon spoil, plunder, prize
Why it matters Baruch's life is given as a prize, meaning survival itself is gracious gain in a time of disaster.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
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 servants to embrace humble faithfulness, surrender self-seeking greatness, and treasure the preserving mercy of God during seasons of judgment, collapse, and weariness.
- Honest lament - Speak grief to the Lord plainly without pretending that faithful service is painless.
- Perspective submission - Ask how God's larger work should reshape personal expectations.
- Ambition examination - Identify where desire for influence, recognition, comfort, or success has become self-seeking.
- Hidden faithfulness - Serve well even when the work is behind the scenes and the surrounding culture is collapsing.
- Mercy gratitude - Thank the Lord for preserved life, daily grace, and continued usefulness instead of despising them as too small.
- Endurance without prominence - Keep obeying when no visible greatness is promised.
- Calling under judgment - Recognize that some seasons are not for expansion of personal dreams but for faithfulness under God's humbling hand.
- The chapter warns God's servants not to seek personal greatness, prominence, or self-protective success when the Lord is humbling a people under judgment.
- Do not make ministry hardship proof that God has wronged You.
- Do not seek personal greatness in a day of divine tearing down.
- Do not interpret national or communal collapse through personal ambition.
- Do not despise preserved life as though it were too small a mercy.
- Do not assume faithfulness guarantees rest, recognition, or ease in the present age.
- Do not use proximity to holy work as a platform for self-exaltation.
- Baruch is condemned as wicked or faithless. - The chapter corrects Baruch, but it also comforts Him. His sorrow is named, and His life is promised as mercy.
- The command not to seek great things means believers should never pursue excellence, responsibility, or meaningful service. - The rebuke concerns self-seeking greatness in a day of judgment, not faithful diligence or obedient stewardship.
- The promise of life as a prize is small and disappointing. - In a time when disaster is coming on all people, preserved life is a profound mercy.
- The chapter is disconnected from the rest of Jeremiah because it is so short and personal. - The chapter uses major Jeremiah themes: the written word, judgment, building, planting, uprooting, servant suffering, and preservation.
- Baruch's pain is treated as irrelevant. - The Lord directly names Baruch's pain and addresses Him personally, but He also corrects His perspective.
- The chapter teaches that spiritual leaders should have no personal desires or emotional struggles. - The chapter acknowledges Baruch's emotional distress while calling Him to surrender self-seeking ambition.
- God's promise to Baruch guarantees comfort or safety from all trouble. - The promise is preservation of life amid danger, not exemption from hardship.
- Where has weariness in service become resentment toward the Lord?
- What 'great things' am I seeking for myself in a season that calls for humble faithfulness?
- Am I demanding rest, recognition, or visible success as the condition for continued obedience?
- How does God's larger work in this moment correct my personal expectations?
- Do I despise ordinary preservation because I wanted extraordinary prominence?
- Can I serve faithfully when the results around me look like tearing down rather than building up?
- Where might the Lord be calling me to receive life as a gift rather than greatness as an entitlement?
- Does my sense of calling make me humble, or has proximity to holy work become a platform for self-importance?
- Preach Jeremiah 45 as a deeply pastoral word to weary servants who are tempted to seek significance, recognition, or rest in a season of spiritual collapse.
- Use the chapter to comfort exhausted ministry workers without flattering ambition. The Lord both hears sorrow and corrects self-seeking expectations.
- Leaders must not pursue platform-building when the moment calls for lament, repentance, endurance, and humble obedience.
- The chapter helps people distinguish between honest grief and the demand that God make their life feel great in the middle of judgment or loss.
- Teach believers that faithfulness may mean receiving life and continued obedience as enough, even without visible greatness.
- Baruch's word is essential for scribes, teachers, assistants, administrators, and hidden servants who carry heavy burdens behind public ministry.
- The chapter calls for killing self-centered ambition without killing zeal for faithful service.
- Help believers interpret personal distress within God's larger purposes rather than making personal comfort the measure of God's goodness.
- The promise 'wherever You go' gives durable comfort for servants whose calling takes them through uncertain and unstable places.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from the historical setting of Baruch writing Jeremiah's words, to Baruch's weary lament, to the Lord's explanation of widespread judgment, to the command not to seek great things, and finally to the promise that Baruch's life will be preserved wherever He goes.
Jeremiah 45 uses Jeremiah's covenant vocabulary of building, planting, tearing down, and uprooting to explain Baruch's situation. Judah is under covenant judgment. The Lord is dismantling what He had established because of persistent rebellion. Baruch, though faithful, must live through the consequences of that covenant crisis. His task is not to seek personal advancement within a collapsing order but to remain faithful under the Lord's word and receive preservation as mercy.
Jeremiah 45 exposes the servant's need for grace when sorrow, ambition, and uncertainty press upon the heart. Baruch is not saved by His role, His nearness to Jeremiah, or His usefulness in preserving the prophetic word. He receives life as mercy from the Lord. In the fullness of Scripture, Christ is the true Servant who did not seek selfish greatness, but humbled Himself, obeyed the Father, gave His life for sinners, and was raised in glory.
Through Christ, weary servants receive forgiveness for self-seeking ambition, rest for burdened souls, and life that is not merely preserved through judgment but secured eternally in resurrection hope.
Focus Points
- Faithful service under judgment
- The danger of self-seeking ambition
- Divine sovereignty over collapse
- Pastoral mercy for weary servants
- Life as grace
- Perspective correction
- Divine Sovereignty
- Human Ambition
- Pastoral Care of the Weary
- Judgment
- Grace and Preservation
- Vocation
- Servanthood
- Perseverance
Passages
Chapter opening: Jeremiah 45:1-5
Jer 46:1-2 Superscriptions . - Jer 46:1 contains the title for the whole collection of prophecies regarding the nations (הגּוים, as contrasted with Israel, mean the heathen nations), Jer 46-51. As to the formula, "What came as the word of Jahveh to Jeremiah," etc. , cf. the remarks on Jer 14:1. - In Jer 46:2, the special heading of this chapter begins with the word מצרים .
למצרים is subordinated by ל to the general title, - properly, "with regard to Egypt:" cf. למואב, etc. , Jer 48:1; Jer 49:1, Jer 49:7,Jer 49:23, Jer 49:28, also Jer 23:9. This chapter contains two prophecies regarding Egypt, Jer 46:2-12, and vv. 13-28. למצרים refers to both. After this there follows an account of the occasion for the first of these two prophecies, in the words, "Concerning the army of Pharaoh-Necho, the king of Egypt, which was at the river Euphrates, near Carchemish, which Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon smote in the fourth year of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah."
נכו, as in 2Ch 35:20, or נכּה, as in 2Ki 23:29, in lxx Νεχαώ; Egyptian, according to Brugsch ( Hist. d'Egypte , i. p. 252), Nekaaou ; in Herodotus Νεκώς, - is said by Manetho to have been the sixth king of the twenty-sixth (Saïte) dynasty, the second Pharaoh of this name, the son of Psammetichus I, and grandson of Necho I. Brugsch says he reigned from 611 to 595 b.
c. See on 2 Chr. 23:29. The two relative clauses are co-ordinate, i. e. , אשׁר in each case depends on חיל. The first clause merely states where Pharaoh’s army was, the second tells what befall it at the Euphrates. It is to this that the following prophecy refers. Pharaoh-Necho, soon after ascending the throne, in the last year of Josiah’s reign (610 b. c.) , had landed in Palestine, at the bay of Acre, with the view of subjugating Hither Asia as far as the Euphrates, and had defeated the slain King Josiah, who marched out against him.
He next deposed Jehoahaz, whom the people had raised to the throne as Josiah’s successor, and carried him to Egypt, after having substituted Eliakim, the elder brother of Jehoahaz, and made him his vassal-king, under the name of Jehoiakim. When he had thus laid Judah under tribute, he advanced farther into Syria, towards the Euphrates, and had reached Carchemish on that river, as is stated in this verse: there his army was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar, in the fourth year of the reign of Jehoiakim (606 b.
c.) ; see on 2Ki 23:29. Carchemish is Κιρκήσιον, Circesium , or Cercusium of the classical writers, Arabic karqi=si=yat , a fortified city at the junction of the Chebar with the Euphrates, built on the peninsula formed by the two rivers (Ammian. Marc. xxiii. 5, Procop. bell. Pers. ii. 5, and Marasç. under Karkesija ). All that now remains of it are ruins, called by the modern Arabs Abu Psera , and situated on the Mesopotamian side of the Euphrates, where that river is joined by the Chebar (Ausland, 1864, S.
1058). This fortress was either taken, or at least besieged, by Necho. The statement, "in the fourth year of Jehoiakim," can be referred exegetically only to the time of the defeat of the Egyptians at Carchemish, or the year of the battle, and is actually so understood by most interpreters. No one but Niebuhr ( Gesch. Ass. u. Babl. S. 59, 86, 370ff.) alters the date of the battle, which he places in the third year of Jehoiakim, partly from consideration of Dan 1:1, partly from other chronological calculations; he would refer the date given in our verse to the time when the following song was composed or published.
But Dan 1:1 does not necessarily require us to make any such assumption (see on that passage), and the other chronological computations are quite uncertain. Exegetically, it is as impossible to insert a period after "which Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon smote" (Nieb. p. 86, note 3), as to connect the date "in the fourth year of Jehoiakim" with "which word came to Jeremiah" (Jer 46:10).
The title in Jer 46:1 certainly does not refer specially to the prophecy about Egypt, but to על־הגּוים. But if we wished to make the whole of Jer 46:2 dependent on 'אשׁר היה דבר , which would, at all events, be a forced, unnatural construction, then, from the combination of the title in Jer 46:1 with the specification of time at the end of Jer 46:2, it would follow that all the prophecies regarding the nations had come to Jeremiah in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, - which would contradict what is said in the heading to the oracle against Elam (Jer 49:34), not to mention the oracle against Babylon.
Moreover, there is nothing to prevent us from assuming that the first prophecy against Egypt was revealed to Jeremiah, and uttered by him, in the same fourth year of Jehoiakim in which Necho was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar. In this way, the argument brought forward by Niebuhr in support of his forced interpretation, viz. , that all specifications of time in the addresses of Jeremiah refer to the period of composition, loses all its force.
In Jer 45:1 also, and in Jer 51:9, the time when the event occurred coincides with the time when the utterance regarding it was pronounced. Although we assume this to hold in the case before us, yet it by no means follows that what succeeds, in Jer 46:3-12, is not a prophecy, but a song or lyric celebrating so important a battle, "the picture of an event that had already occurred," as Niebuhr, Ewald, and Hitzig assume.
This neither follows from the statement in the title, "which Nebuchadnezzar in the fourth year of Jehoiakim smote," nor from the contents of the succeeding address. The superscription does not naturally belong to what Jeremiah has said or uttered, but must have been prefixed, for the first time, only when the address was committed to writing and inserted in the collection, and this not till after the battle had been fought; but it is evident that the address is to be viewed as substantially a prophecy (see Jer 46:6 and Jer 46:10 ), although Jeremiah depicts, in the most lively and dramatic way, not merely the preparation of the mighty host, Jer 46:3, and its formidable advance, Jer 46:7-9, but also its flight and annihilation, in Jer 46:5 and in Jer 46:10-12.
Jer 46:1-2 Superscriptions . - Jer 46:1 contains the title for the whole collection of prophecies regarding the nations (הגּוים, as contrasted with Israel, mean the heathen nations), Jer 46-51. As to the formula, "What came as the word of Jahveh to Jeremiah," etc. , cf. the remarks on Jer 14:1. - In Jer 46:2, the special heading of this chapter begins with the word מצרים .
למצרים is subordinated by ל to the general title, - properly, "with regard to Egypt:" cf. למואב, etc. , Jer 48:1; Jer 49:1, Jer 49:7,Jer 49:23, Jer 49:28, also Jer 23:9. This chapter contains two prophecies regarding Egypt, Jer 46:2-12, and vv. 13-28. למצרים refers to both. After this there follows an account of the occasion for the first of these two prophecies, in the words, "Concerning the army of Pharaoh-Necho, the king of Egypt, which was at the river Euphrates, near Carchemish, which Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon smote in the fourth year of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah."
נכו, as in 2Ch 35:20, or נכּה, as in 2Ki 23:29, in lxx Νεχαώ; Egyptian, according to Brugsch ( Hist. d'Egypte , i. p. 252), Nekaaou ; in Herodotus Νεκώς, - is said by Manetho to have been the sixth king of the twenty-sixth (Saïte) dynasty, the second Pharaoh of this name, the son of Psammetichus I, and grandson of Necho I. Brugsch says he reigned from 611 to 595 b.
c. See on 2 Chr. 23:29. The two relative clauses are co-ordinate, i. e. , אשׁר in each case depends on חיל. The first clause merely states where Pharaoh’s army was, the second tells what befall it at the Euphrates. It is to this that the following prophecy refers. Pharaoh-Necho, soon after ascending the throne, in the last year of Josiah’s reign (610 b. c.) , had landed in Palestine, at the bay of Acre, with the view of subjugating Hither Asia as far as the Euphrates, and had defeated the slain King Josiah, who marched out against him.
He next deposed Jehoahaz, whom the people had raised to the throne as Josiah’s successor, and carried him to Egypt, after having substituted Eliakim, the elder brother of Jehoahaz, and made him his vassal-king, under the name of Jehoiakim. When he had thus laid Judah under tribute, he advanced farther into Syria, towards the Euphrates, and had reached Carchemish on that river, as is stated in this verse: there his army was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar, in the fourth year of the reign of Jehoiakim (606 b.
c.) ; see on 2Ki 23:29. Carchemish is Κιρκήσιον, Circesium , or Cercusium of the classical writers, Arabic karqi=si=yat , a fortified city at the junction of the Chebar with the Euphrates, built on the peninsula formed by the two rivers (Ammian. Marc. xxiii. 5, Procop. bell. Pers. ii. 5, and Marasç. under Karkesija ). All that now remains of it are ruins, called by the modern Arabs Abu Psera , and situated on the Mesopotamian side of the Euphrates, where that river is joined by the Chebar (Ausland, 1864, S.
1058). This fortress was either taken, or at least besieged, by Necho. The statement, "in the fourth year of Jehoiakim," can be referred exegetically only to the time of the defeat of the Egyptians at Carchemish, or the year of the battle, and is actually so understood by most interpreters. No one but Niebuhr ( Gesch. Ass. u. Babl. S. 59, 86, 370ff.) alters the date of the battle, which he places in the third year of Jehoiakim, partly from consideration of Dan 1:1, partly from other chronological calculations; he would refer the date given in our verse to the time when the following song was composed or published.
But Dan 1:1 does not necessarily require us to make any such assumption (see on that passage), and the other chronological computations are quite uncertain. Exegetically, it is as impossible to insert a period after "which Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon smote" (Nieb. p. 86, note 3), as to connect the date "in the fourth year of Jehoiakim" with "which word came to Jeremiah" (Jer 46:10).
The title in Jer 46:1 certainly does not refer specially to the prophecy about Egypt, but to על־הגּוים. But if we wished to make the whole of Jer 46:2 dependent on 'אשׁר היה דבר , which would, at all events, be a forced, unnatural construction, then, from the combination of the title in Jer 46:1 with the specification of time at the end of Jer 46:2, it would follow that all the prophecies regarding the nations had come to Jeremiah in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, - which would contradict what is said in the heading to the oracle against Elam (Jer 49:34), not to mention the oracle against Babylon.
Moreover, there is nothing to prevent us from assuming that the first prophecy against Egypt was revealed to Jeremiah, and uttered by him, in the same fourth year of Jehoiakim in which Necho was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar. In this way, the argument brought forward by Niebuhr in support of his forced interpretation, viz. , that all specifications of time in the addresses of Jeremiah refer to the period of composition, loses all its force.
In Jer 45:1 also, and in Jer 51:9, the time when the event occurred coincides with the time when the utterance regarding it was pronounced. Although we assume this to hold in the case before us, yet it by no means follows that what succeeds, in Jer 46:3-12, is not a prophecy, but a song or lyric celebrating so important a battle, "the picture of an event that had already occurred," as Niebuhr, Ewald, and Hitzig assume.
This neither follows from the statement in the title, "which Nebuchadnezzar in the fourth year of Jehoiakim smote," nor from the contents of the succeeding address. The superscription does not naturally belong to what Jeremiah has said or uttered, but must have been prefixed, for the first time, only when the address was committed to writing and inserted in the collection, and this not till after the battle had been fought; but it is evident that the address is to be viewed as substantially a prophecy (see Jer 46:6 and Jer 46:10 ), although Jeremiah depicts, in the most lively and dramatic way, not merely the preparation of the mighty host, Jer 46:3, and its formidable advance, Jer 46:7-9, but also its flight and annihilation, in Jer 46:5 and in Jer 46:10-12.
Jer 46:3-4 "Prepare shield and target, and advance to the battle. Jer 46:4. Yoke the horses [to the chariots]; mount the steeds, and stand with helmets on; polish the spears, put on the armour. Jer 46:5. Why do I see? they are terrified and turned back, and their heroes are beaten, and flee in flight, and do not turn: terror is round about, saith Jahveh. Jer 46:6.
Let not the swift one flee, nor let the hero escape; towards the north, by the side of the river Euphrates, they stumble and fall. Jer 46:7. Who is this that cometh up like the Nile? his waters wave like the rivers. Jer 46:8. Egypt cometh up like the Nile, [his] waters are moved like the rivers; and he saith, I will go up, I will cover the earth; I will destroy the city, and those who dwell in it.
Jer 46:9. Go up, ye horses; and drive furiously, ye chariots; and let the heroes go forth; Cushites and Phutites, bearing the shield; and Lydians, handling [and] bending the bow. Jer 46:10. But that day [belongs] to the Lord Jahveh of hosts, a day of vengeance for avenging Himself on His enemies: and the sword shall devour and be satisfied, and shall drink its fill of their blood; for the Lord Jahveh of hosts holdeth a slaying of sacrifices in the land of the north at the river Euphrates.
Jer 46:11. Go up to Gilead, and take balsam, O virgin, daughter of Egypt: in vain hast thou multiplied medicines; cure there is none for thee. Jer 46:12. The nations have heard of thine ignominy, and thy cry hath filled the earth: for heroes stumble against heroes, both of them fall together." This address falls into two strophes, Jer 46:3-6 and Jer 46:7-12.
In both are depicted in a lively manner, first the advance of the Egyptian host to the battle, then their flight and destruction. The whole has been arranged so as to form a climax: in the first strophe, the admirable equipment of the armies, and their sudden flight and defeat, are set forth in brief sentences; in the second, there is fully described not merely the powerful advance of the host that covers the earth, but also the judgment of inevitable destruction passed on them by God: the reason for the whole is also assigned.
Jer 46:3. In order to represent the matter in a lively way, the description begins with the call addressed to the army, to make ready for the battle. "Make ready shield and target," the two main pieces of defensive armour. מגן was the small [round] shield; צנּה, scutum , the large shield, covering the whole body. "Advance to the fight," i. e. , go forward into the battle.
Then the address turns to the several portions of the army: first to those who fight from chariots, who are to yoke the horses; then to the horsemen, to mount the steeds. פּרשׁים are not horsemen, but riding-horses, as in 1Ki 5:6; 1Ki 10:26; Eze 27:14. עלה is construed with the accus. , as in Gen 49:4. The rendering given by Dahler and Umbreit, "Mount, ye horsemen," and that of Hitzig, "Advance, ye horsemen," are against the parallelism; and the remark of the last-named writer, that "Mount the steeds" would be רכבוּ, does not accord with 1Sa 30:17.
Next, the address is directed to the foot-soldiers, who formed the main portion of the army. These are to take up their position with helmets on, to polish the spears, i. e. , to sharpen them, and to put on the pieces of armour, in order to be arrayed for battle. מרק, to rub, polish, remove rust from the spear, and thereby sharpen it. סריון, here and in Jer 51:3 for שׁריון, a coat of mail, pieces of armour.
Jer 46:3-4 "Prepare shield and target, and advance to the battle. Jer 46:4. Yoke the horses [to the chariots]; mount the steeds, and stand with helmets on; polish the spears, put on the armour. Jer 46:5. Why do I see? they are terrified and turned back, and their heroes are beaten, and flee in flight, and do not turn: terror is round about, saith Jahveh. Jer 46:6.
Let not the swift one flee, nor let the hero escape; towards the north, by the side of the river Euphrates, they stumble and fall. Jer 46:7. Who is this that cometh up like the Nile? his waters wave like the rivers. Jer 46:8. Egypt cometh up like the Nile, [his] waters are moved like the rivers; and he saith, I will go up, I will cover the earth; I will destroy the city, and those who dwell in it.
Jer 46:9. Go up, ye horses; and drive furiously, ye chariots; and let the heroes go forth; Cushites and Phutites, bearing the shield; and Lydians, handling [and] bending the bow. Jer 46:10. But that day [belongs] to the Lord Jahveh of hosts, a day of vengeance for avenging Himself on His enemies: and the sword shall devour and be satisfied, and shall drink its fill of their blood; for the Lord Jahveh of hosts holdeth a slaying of sacrifices in the land of the north at the river Euphrates.
Jer 46:11. Go up to Gilead, and take balsam, O virgin, daughter of Egypt: in vain hast thou multiplied medicines; cure there is none for thee. Jer 46:12. The nations have heard of thine ignominy, and thy cry hath filled the earth: for heroes stumble against heroes, both of them fall together." This address falls into two strophes, Jer 46:3-6 and Jer 46:7-12.
In both are depicted in a lively manner, first the advance of the Egyptian host to the battle, then their flight and destruction. The whole has been arranged so as to form a climax: in the first strophe, the admirable equipment of the armies, and their sudden flight and defeat, are set forth in brief sentences; in the second, there is fully described not merely the powerful advance of the host that covers the earth, but also the judgment of inevitable destruction passed on them by God: the reason for the whole is also assigned.
Jer 46:3. In order to represent the matter in a lively way, the description begins with the call addressed to the army, to make ready for the battle. "Make ready shield and target," the two main pieces of defensive armour. מגן was the small [round] shield; צנּה, scutum , the large shield, covering the whole body. "Advance to the fight," i. e. , go forward into the battle.
Then the address turns to the several portions of the army: first to those who fight from chariots, who are to yoke the horses; then to the horsemen, to mount the steeds. פּרשׁים are not horsemen, but riding-horses, as in 1Ki 5:6; 1Ki 10:26; Eze 27:14. עלה is construed with the accus. , as in Gen 49:4. The rendering given by Dahler and Umbreit, "Mount, ye horsemen," and that of Hitzig, "Advance, ye horsemen," are against the parallelism; and the remark of the last-named writer, that "Mount the steeds" would be רכבוּ, does not accord with 1Sa 30:17.
Next, the address is directed to the foot-soldiers, who formed the main portion of the army. These are to take up their position with helmets on, to polish the spears, i. e. , to sharpen them, and to put on the pieces of armour, in order to be arrayed for battle. מרק, to rub, polish, remove rust from the spear, and thereby sharpen it. סריון, here and in Jer 51:3 for שׁריון, a coat of mail, pieces of armour.