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Bible Commentaries
Jeremiah 6

Old & New Testament Restoration CommentaryRestoration Commentary

Verse 1

Jer 6:1

Jeremiah 6:1-2

DESTRUCTION FROM THE NORTH;

THE SIEGE OF JERUSALEM;

DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM

A number of such titles as the ones cited here are assigned to this chapter by various authors. There is very little in the chapter that requires any extensive research; and we shall depart from our usual procedure by giving our own paraphrase of this tragic prophecy.

True to the pattern throughout Jeremiah, the three subjects treated here, namely, (1) a description of the tragic fate of the city, (2) the character and identification of the instrument (the destroyer) God would use in the execution of his judgment against the city, and (3) a summary of the reasons why God judged Jerusalem and Judah to be worthy of the penalty about to fall upon them, Jeremiah jumbled all of these topics together. In our paraphrase, we shall reorganize them topically.

THE AWFUL FATE TO BEFALL JUDAH AND JERUSALEM

The daughter of Zion (a poetic name for Jerusalem) shall be cut off (Jeremiah 6:2); she shall be encircled with tents (Jeremiah 6:3); the lengthening shadows mark the closing of the Day of God’s Favor upon racial Israel (Jeremiah 6:4); her palaces shall be destroyed (Jeremiah 6:5); the military shall cast up a mound against her (Jeremiah 6:6); she shall be uninhabited, a desolation (Jeremiah 6:8); the vine of Israel shall be stripped and gleaned (Jeremiah 6:9); the wrath of God shall be poured out upon her children, the young men, the husbands and wives, and even upon all the old people (Jeremiah 6:11); the houses, fields, and wives of the people shall be taken away from them and given to the invaders (Jeremiah 6:12); the nation shall fall; it shall be cast down (Jeremiah 6:25); God will bring evil upon her people (Jeremiah 6:19); God will place stumblingblocks in their way; fathers and sons, friends and neighbors shall perish (Jeremiah 6:21); the power of the defenders shall be feeble, and anguish shall overwhelm them (Jeremiah 6:24); the people will fear to go outside, for the sword of the enemy will be everywhere (Jeremiah 6:25); they shall clothe themselves in sackcloth and ashes, mourning as for an only son; destruction shall descend suddenly upon them (Jeremiah 6:26).

CHARACTER AND IDENTITY OF INVADERS

This had been accomplished already by the specifics Jeremiah gave in the preceding chapter, which made it certain that God’s instrument in the fall of Jerusalem and the deportation of the people was to be Babylon; but some of the same clues are mentioned again.

It will be a military destruction from the north with tents, military equipment, trumpets, etc. (Jeremiah 6:1; Jeremiah 6:4; Jeremiah 6:17, and Jeremiah 6:22); the result shall be accomplished by a siege, as indicated by the tents and the mound against the city, earmarks of an all-out war (Jeremiah 6:4); the great nation from the north will have skilled bowmen, cruel, merciless horsemen who shall bring death to thousands (Jeremiah 6:23); their approach to Jerusalem shall be like the roaring sea-surge of a mighty hurricane (Jeremiah 6:23); the merciless swords of the enemy, lurking everywhere, shall spare no one (Jeremiah 6:25); they will strike suddenly (Jeremiah 6:16), as already indicated in Jeremiah 5 by the comparison with the leopard, the swiftest of animals; they shall burn Israel as a refiner burns metal to remove the dross; only Israel is all dross (Jeremiah 6:30).

WHY PUNISHMENT OF ISRAEL WAS REQUIRED

God made it perfectly clear why it was required by the Divine justice that punishment and destruction were to be meted out to racial Israel. Jerusalem was producing nothing but wickedness, violence, and oppression (Jeremiah 6:7); they would not hear the Word of God (Jeremiah 6:10); they hated the word of God (Jeremiah 6:10); all of them were covetous and dealt falsely (Jeremiah 6:13); they loved their false prophets who cried, Peace, peace, when there was no peace (Jeremiah 6:14); they refused to be ashamed of their sins (Jeremiah 6:15); they declared, "We will not listen to God" (Jeremiah 6:17); their thoughts were evil, and as for God’s Law, they rejected it (Jeremiah 6:19); their hypocritical and insincere offerings were not acceptable to God (Jeremiah 6:21); Israel had become a nation of grievous revolters, all of them habitual slanderers, and dealing falsely (Jeremiah 6:28); after God had repeatedly pleaded with and corrected his people, and after the exercise of near-infinite patience, and after it was perfectly clear that Israel had no intention of returning to God or in any sense mending their ways, God finally summarily rejected them and consigned their nation to destruction and captivity (Jeremiah 6:30).

Jeremiah 6:1-2

We shall now examine the text of this chapter.

"Flee for safety, ye children of Benjamin, out of the midst of Jerusalem. and blow the trumpet in Tekoa, and raise up a signal on Beth-haccherem; for evil looketh forth from the north, and a great destruction. The comely and the delicate one, the daughter of Zion, will I cut off."

"Ye children of Benjamin ..." (Jeremiah 6:1). "The reason that Benjamin is mentioned here is that Jerusalem geographically belonged to the territory of Benjamin.”

"Out of the midst of Jerusalem ..." (Jeremiah 6:1). In Jeremiah 4:6, the people were warned to flee "to Jerusalem"; but here, they are warned to get out of Jerusalem. The capital of Judah is doomed to destruction. "The capital being doomed, and the destruction coming from the north, the only safety would have been toward the south.” Also, it may be supposed that some sought the safety of the rugged mountains toward the Dead Sea.

"Tekoa... and Beth-haccherem ..." (Jeremiah 6:1) These towns in the vicinity of Jerusalem were mentioned to indicate the near approach of the enemy, Tekoa being "only ten or twelve miles south of Jerusalem,” and Beth-haccherem being only "four and a half miles west of Jerusalem.”

Verses 1-5

Jer 6:1-5

Chapter 6 contains a dramatic description of the advance of the foe against Jerusalem (Jeremiah 6:1-5) and the subsequent siege of that city (Jeremiah 6:6-8). The enemy will be completely successful in destroying the city (Jeremiah 6:9-15). At this point in. the chapter Jeremiah offers to the people a prescription of deliverance from impending judgment (Jeremiah 6:16-21). Then he reverts to a description of the coming conqueror (Jeremiah 6:22-26). The chapter concludes with an indication of the hopeless task of the prophet of God (Jeremiah 6:27-30).

1. The advance of the foe (Jeremiah 6:1-5)

Projecting himself mentally into the future Jeremiah describes the scene as the foe from the north sweeps toward Jerusalem. In Jeremiah 4:6 the people of the countryside are exhorted to flee to Jerusalem. But the capital now no longer appears to be safe and the prophet can see refugees streaming southward from her gates. Being himself a Benjaminite, Jeremiah calls for his fellow tribesmen to get out of the midst of Jerusalem. The city of Jerusalem was actually located on the border between Judah and Benjamin and hence many Benjaminites made that city their home. In Tekoa, twelve miles south of Jerusalem, a trumpet is sounded to assemble the people in their flight to the wilderness of southwestern Judah. At BethHakkerem, thought to be a hill east of Bethlehem, a sign post or fiery beacon is set up to give further guidance to fugitives. This flight is wise and necessary because the ugly monster of calamity is peering down (lit., bending forward) from the north (Jeremiah 6:1). By means of the ruthless armies of Nebuchadnezzar God will cut off or destroy the beautiful and dainty daughter of Zion, i.e., the inhabitants of Jerusalem (Jeremiah 6:2). Zion was the hill chosen by the Lord as His earthly abode and was part of the city of Jerusalem. No longer will the delicate lady, the bride of God and daughter of Jerusalem, receive the loving and tender treatment of the past. Instead, foreign commanders with their armies will come up against Jerusalem like shepherds with their flocks. Each “shepherd” will allow his flock to graze that part of Judah which is “at his hand” i.e., which has been assigned to his jurisdiction. As sheep graze a pasture land until nothing but bare soil remains so will these “shepherds” and their “flocks” utterly depasture and devastate the land of Judah (Jeremiah 6:3). Jeremiah 6:4 opens with an exhortation addressed to the invading force. “Sanctify against her war!” War in antiquity was a sacred undertaking. Sacrifices were frequently offered before battle (e.g., 1 Samuel 7:9; 1 Samuel 13:9) and inspirational addresses were given (e.g., Judges 7:18). Following the exhortation which he addresses to the enemy, Jeremiah takes his audience into the very camp of the enemy. The enemy is planning a surprise attack at noontime, a time when usually both sides in a conflict rested. As the shadows of evening lengthen the enemy forces lament the fact that they have not been able to complete their work of destruction (Jeremiah 6:4). Rather than retire to the camp for rest and refreshment the enemy commanders urge their men forward in a daring and decisive night attack designed to bring them within the walls of Jerusalem. They will not wait till morning for the final assault (Jeremiah 6:5).

Verses 3-4

Jer 6:3-4

Jeremiah 6:3-4

"Shepherds with their flocks shall come unto her; they shall pitch their tents against her round about; they shall feed everyone in his place. Prepare ye war against her; arise, and let us go up at noon. Woe unto us! for the day declineth, for the shadows of the evening are stretched out."

"Shepherds shall pitch their tents against Jerusalem... shall feed every one in his place ..." (Jeremiah 6:3). The armies of Babylon are here compared to the large numbers of shepherds that once pastured the area around Jerusalem; but this verse, "Describes the soldiers, eager to feed upon the richness of the area.”

"Prepare ye war against her ..." (Jeremiah 6:4). "This expression derives from the ancient institution of Holy War.” In ancient times, one nation making war against another always undertook the venture by extensive preparations, making sacrifices to their gods, consulting so-called oracles, and making all of the preparations that in later years came to be associated with a formal declaration of war.

Verses 5-6

Jer 6:5-6

Jeremiah 6:5-6

"Arise, and let us go up by night, and let us destroy her palaces. For thus hath Jehovah of hosts said, Hew ye down her trees, and cast up a mound against Jerusalem: this is the city to be visited; she is wholly oppression in the midst of her."

"Hew ye down her trees ..." (Jeremiah 6:6). This does not refer to fruit trees, which would be utilized for feeding a besieging army, but to all the other trees, which according to Clarke, would have been utilized "to build towers, for overlooking the city, and for the mounting of their machines.”

The siege which is certainly prophesied here, "means that this description cannot fit the Scythians, who did not have engines for besieging cities; but it is appropriate in describing the Babylonians.”

Verses 7-8

Jer 6:7-8

Jeremiah 6:7-8

"As a well casteth forth its waters, so she casteth forth her wickedness: violence and destruction are found in her; before me continually is sickness and wounds. Be thou instructed, O Jerusalem, lest my soul be alienated from thee; lest I make thee a desolation, a land not inhabited."

The meaning of Jeremiah 6:7 is that, "just as a water well maintained its waters at a constant level, no matter how much was taken out of it; in the same way Jerusalem maintained its full level of producing wickedness, violence, and destruction, continually.

"Be thou instructed, O Jerusalem ..." (Jeremiah 6:8) "This seems to indicate that the tragedy might be averted if the people would repent.” Maybe the passage does indicate such a thing; but, even if it does, it was purely a theoretical premise suggested by the prophet. Not only did Israel not repent, they despised and rejected God’s law.

2. The siege of Jerusalem (Jeremiah 6:6-8)

The God of Israel is the Lord of the enemy hosts. He issues the commands; they are merely instruments in His hands. “Cut her trees! Pour out against Jerusalem a mound!” The Assyrian kings boast of how they cut down the trees of the enemy. The timber was sometimes taken home, sometimes used to construct battering rams, catapults and other weapons used in the siege. Baskets of earth were poured out to form high mounds from which missiles could the more easily be hurled against the walls or into the besieged city. Jerusalem is to be punished by God because oppression exists throughout that city (Jeremiah 6:6). Just as a well always yields a supply of cool, fresh water so Jerusalem seems to constantly cause her wickedness to bubble forth. Deeds of violence and oppression against the less fortunate are commonplace. As a result of this mistreatment people suffer physical agony. Diseases produced by deprivation, want and wounds resulting from violent deeds cause the people to cry out to God about their plight (Jeremiah 6:7). Jeremiah earnestly appeals to Jerusalem to accept divine chastisement, to amend her ways, to repent. If they fail to heed this appeal God will completely, finally, and totally remove (lit., pull out, tear away) Himself from their midst. The land of Judah will become uninhabited, an astonishment to all who might look upon the desolation (Jeremiah 6:8).

Verses 9-15

Jer 6:9-15

Jeremiah 6:9-13

"Thus saith Jehovah of hosts, they shall thoroughly glean the remnant of Israel as a vine: turn again thy hand as a grape-gatherer into the baskets. To whom shall I speak and testify, that they may hear? behold, their ear is uncircumcised, and they cannot hearken: behold, the word of Jehovah is become unto them a reproach, they have no delight in it. Therefore I am full of the wrath of Jehovah; I am weary with holding in: pour it out upon the children in the street, and upon the assembly of the young men together; for even the husband with the wife shall be taken, the aged with him that is full of days. And their houses shall be turned unto others, their fields, and their wives together; for I will stretch out my hand upon the inhabitants of the land, saith Jehovah. For from the least of them even unto the greatest of them everyone is given to covetousness; and from the prophet even unto the priest everyone dealeth falsely."

"Glean the remnant of Israel... turn again ... as a grape-gatherer ..." (Jeremiah 6:9). "God here authorized the enemy to search out even the remnant of Israel and take them captive ... The enemy will not be satisfied with one invasion, but will repeat it.”

Not even this gleaning of Israel, however, could nullify God’s promise of there remaining a "righteous remnant" who would return to Jerusalem from Babylon (Jeremiah 4:27; Jeremiah 5:10; Jeremiah 5:18).

This is a terrible paragraph. The judgment of God will fall upon all segments of human life, from children playing in the streets to aged men, five different categories being cited.

Notice also that houses, fields, wives, etc. in fact, everything shall be stripped away and become booty for the invaders. What a horrible destruction of the people!

Jeremiah 6:14-15

"They have healed also the hurt of my people slightly, saying Peace, peace; when there is no peace. Were they ashamed when they had committed abominations? nay, they were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush: therefore they shall fall among them that fall; at the time that I visit them they shall be cast down, saith Jehovah."

"They have healed the hurt of my people slightly ..." (Jeremiah 6:14) This appears to be a reference to the reforms so vigorously pressed by king Josiah, but they were reforms that did not at all reach the hearts of the people. The false prophets were the ones who cried, "Peace, peace, when there was no peace."

"They were not at all ashamed ..." (Jeremiah 6:15). The hardened sinners of Israel had lost all sense of shame and had no feelings either of regret or remorse for their transgressions. There remained absolutely nothing else for God to do except to visit the people with divine punishment.

3. The success of the foe (Jeremiah 6:9-15)

Once again comparing Israel to a vineyard Jeremiah paints the picture of a complete and thorough judgment. Only a remnant of once powerful Israel remained after the ten northern tribes were ravished and deported by the Assyrians. Yet now even this remnant, i.e., Judah, is to undergo a severe sifting process. The enemy will thoroughly spoil sinful Judah as a grape gatherer who leaves nothing but leaves behind. The hand of the grape gatherer moves incessantly back and forth from the vine to the basket until the final grapes are picked (Jeremiah 6:9). Here is a picture of the repeated calamities, deportations, and attacks which Judah experienced in the twenty years following the Battle of Carchemish in 605 B.C. So was the remnant of Israel, Judah, itself made a remnant.

Jeremiah’s prophetic discouragement comes out in Jeremiah 6:10. No one will listen to him as he sounds the warning of impending judgment. The word of the Lord is treated with derision. The ear of the people seems to be uncircumcised, covered as it were with a foreskin which prevents the prophetic word from penetrating their mind (cf. Acts 7:51). Discouraged though he is, Jeremiah cannot refrain from preaching the word of judgment. He is filled with the message of divine wrath; it burns within him. He tries very hard to hold it back but only succeeds in making himself weary. In the last part of Jeremiah 6:11 the problem arises as to who is speaking and to whom. Some think God is talking to Jeremiah urging him to pour out his message of doom upon the population. Others think Jeremiah is talking to God urging Him to hasten the day of judgment. The best view seems to be that Jeremiah is talking to himself. These are words of self-exhortation. He calls upon himself to announce the terrible day of God’s wrath. Whether or not the people listen he must sound the alarm. He must pour out his message to all segments of the population, from the very youngest to the very oldest, for all will ultimately be involved in the outpouring of divine judgment (Jeremiah 6:11). Their houses, and fields, and wives will be turned over to the invading soldiers; for the hand of the Lord, once stretched out against the enemies of Israel (Exodus 3:20; Deuteronomy 7:19) is now stretched out against them (Jeremiah 6:12).

The judgment described in Jeremiah 6:12 is appropriate to the root sin of the men of Judah, covetousness. Everyone in the nation, from the least to the greatest, was greedy for illicit gain. Even the prophets and priests practice deception and fraud to curry favor with the populace and thereby secure their good will and their gifts (Jeremiah 6:13). For the love of filthy lucre they would offer flattering pictures of the future prospects of the nation (cf. Micah 3:5). “All is well,” they would say. “Peace! Peace!” These soft-soaping, self-seeking clergymen completely failed to come to grips with the serious ailment of the nation. The pious platitudes of these leaders would no more cure the wound of Judah than mercurochrome could heal a skin cancer. These leaders feel no shame at present, they have no conscience, they do not know how to blush. But the leaders will eventually share the fate of those they had misguided. They shall fall among those who are slain in battle; they shall disrespectfully be thrown to the ground by the ruthless conqueror (Jeremiah 6:15).

Verses 16-21

Jer 6:16-21

Jeremiah 6:16

"Thus saith Jehovah, Stand ye in the ways and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way; and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls: but they said, We will not walk therein."

James Hastings made this verse the text of one of his sermons on "Great Texts of the Bible.” This is indeed a great text.

SEEK YE THE OLD PATHS

The title is a little misleading. One of the oldest paths is that of rebellion and licentiousness; thus a better title would be "Ask for the good way!"

I. There is a challenge for serious thought. "Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask." What a stupid folly it is for men to proceed through life without a thoughtful, careful examination of "the way" they have chosen.

II. In this text, the ancient ways were the ways of faith, devotion, and honor of the One True God of Israel, as revealed and certified unto the people in the Pentateuch. In our own times the "good way" is the way of the Gospel of Christ.

III. There is the call for action. It is not enough to know about the good way; let men "Walk in it!"

IV. Those who walk in the good way, "Shall find rest unto your souls." Jesus Christ surely identified himself with this good way in the glorying words of the Great Invitation (Matthew 11:28-30).

V. Today, no less than in the times of Jeremiah, the people are vainly searching for "something new" in religion. "Give us anything except the way our father’s did it!" is the motto adopted by some. A church in our community recently appointed a committee with instructions to come up every week with a novel way of structuring the Lord’s Day services! Why not try jumping out the windows after church, some Sunday, instead of using the normal exits? "Idolatry and apostasy are the `modern way’; the worship of God is the old way."

It is a remarkable fact that Geoffrey Chaucer, in his Canterbury Tales, has one that is called Chaucer’s Tale, the same being a sermon on this very text, a sermon which Adam Clarke called, "an excellent sermon."

Jeremiah 6:17-19

"And I set watchmen over you saying, Hearken to the sound of the trumpet; but they said, We will not hearken. Therefore hear, ye nations, and know, O congregation, what is among them. Hear, O earth; behold, I will bring evil upon this people, even the fruit of their thoughts, because they have not hearkened unto my words; and as for my law, they have rejected it."

"We will not hearken ..." (Jeremiah 6:17). One needs to read this with the similar response in the preceding verse, where Israel rejected God’s invitation to walk in the good way, saying, "We will not walk therein." The meaning is simply that the Chosen People had lost all desire to continue in the favor of God.

"Hear, ye nations, Hear O earth ..." (Jeremiah 6:18-19). This solemn invitation to the whole Gentile world, as well as the whole earth itself to hear what God will do is such an introduction that requires a special understanding of God’s promise here to "bring evil upon this people." The Dean of Canterbury, quoting Cyprian, stated that: "A decree so solemnly proclaimed can be of no light importance; and therefore the Fathers (the Ante-Nicenes) not without reason understood it as referring to the rejection of the Jews from being God’s Church.” This is a profoundly true observation, provided only that it should be understood as a removal only of the racial angle of God’s favor to Israel. After the captivity of the Jews, the racial Israel never again enjoyed the status of being the wife of God. All of the promises to Abraham would afterward be fulfilled in the New Israel, which is Christ; but no Jew was ever rejected because of his race; but at the same time, he would never again be automatically a member of the true Israel on account of his race.

Jeremiah 6:20-21

"For what purpose cometh there to me frankincense from Sheba, and the sweet cane from a far country? your burnt-offerings are not acceptable, nor your sacrifices pleasing unto me. Therefore thus saith Jehovah, Behold, I will lay stumbling-blocks before this people; and the fathers and the sons together shall stumble against them; the neighbor and his friend shall perish."

"Your burnt-offerings are not acceptable ..." (Jeremiah 6:20). "This does not mean that Jehovah was against sacrifices per se; he was only against unethical sacrifices.” When habitual sinners, insincere, hypocritical, and rebellious against God brought sacrifices to God, they were not merely unacceptable but were an abomination to the Holy God.

There was nothing capricious or vindictive on God’s part who is represented here as placing "stumbling blocks" in the way of Israel. "The stumbling blocks confronting the people were of their own making,” when they had deliberately refused to walk in the good way (Jeremiah 6:17). Yes God had placed the stumblingblocks in the way of evil which Judah elected to take with such disastrous consequences. It is, as if God had said, "Take your choice; choose your way, either (1) the ancient paths, the good way, or (2) the way with the stumbling-blocks.”

3. The success of the foe (Jeremiah 6:9-15)

Once again comparing Israel to a vineyard Jeremiah paints the picture of a complete and thorough judgment. Only a remnant of once powerful Israel remained after the ten northern tribes were ravished and deported by the Assyrians. Yet now even this remnant, i.e., Judah, is to undergo a severe sifting process. The enemy will thoroughly spoil sinful Judah as a grape gatherer who leaves nothing but leaves behind. The hand of the grape gatherer moves incessantly back and forth from the vine to the basket until the final grapes are picked (Jeremiah 6:9). Here is a picture of the repeated calamities, deportations, and attacks which Judah experienced in the twenty years following the Battle of Carchemish in 605 B.C. So was the remnant of Israel, Judah, itself made a remnant.

Jeremiah’s prophetic discouragement comes out in Jeremiah 6:10. No one will listen to him as he sounds the warning of impending judgment. The word of the Lord is treated with derision. The ear of the people seems to be uncircumcised, covered as it were with a foreskin which prevents the prophetic word from penetrating their mind (cf. Acts 7:51). Discouraged though he is, Jeremiah cannot refrain from preaching the word of judgment. He is filled with the message of divine wrath; it burns within him. He tries very hard to hold it back but only succeeds in making himself weary. In the last part of Jeremiah 6:11 the problem arises as to who is speaking and to whom. Some think God is talking to Jeremiah urging him to pour out his message of doom upon the population. Others think Jeremiah is talking to God urging Him to hasten the day of judgment. The best view seems to be that Jeremiah is talking to himself. These are words of self-exhortation. He calls upon himself to announce the terrible day of God’s wrath. Whether or not the people listen he must sound the alarm. He must pour out his message to all segments of the population, from the very youngest to the very oldest, for all will ultimately be involved in the outpouring of divine judgment (Jeremiah 6:11). Their houses, and fields, and wives will be turned over to the invading soldiers; for the hand of the Lord, once stretched out against the enemies of Israel (Exodus 3:20; Deuteronomy 7:19) is now stretched out against them (Jeremiah 6:12).

The judgment described in Jeremiah 6:12 is appropriate to the root sin of the men of Judah, covetousness. Everyone in the nation, from the least to the greatest, was greedy for illicit gain. Even the prophets and priests practice deception and fraud to curry favor with the populace and thereby secure their good will and their gifts (Jeremiah 6:13). For the love of filthy lucre they would offer flattering pictures of the future prospects of the nation (cf. Micah 3:5). “All is well,” they would say. “Peace! Peace!” These soft-soaping, self-seeking clergymen completely failed to come to grips with the serious ailment of the nation. The pious platitudes of these leaders would no more cure the wound of Judah than mercurochrome could heal a skin cancer. These leaders feel no shame at present, they have no conscience, they do not know how to blush. But the leaders will eventually share the fate of those they had misguided. They shall fall among those who are slain in battle; they shall disrespectfully be thrown to the ground by the ruthless conqueror (Jeremiah 6:15).

Verses 22-26

Jer 6:22-26

Jeremiah 6:22-24

"Thus saith Jehovah, Behold, a people cometh from the north country; and a great nation shall be stirred up from the uttermost parts of the earth. They lay hold on the bow and the spear, they are cruel, and have no mercy; their voice roareth like the sea, and they ride upon horses, every one set in array, as a man to the battle, against thee, O daughter of Zion. We have heard the report thereof; our hands wax feeble: anguish hath taken hold of us; and pangs, as of a woman in travail."

"Everyone set in array, as a man for the battle ..." (Jeremiah 6:23). This reference to an army marching in closed ranks "could not apply to the barbaric Scythians.”

The Babylonians indeed were a merciless and cruel invader, but perhaps not so terrible as the Assyrians; and some have found an element of mercy in God’s deliverance of Judah to Babylon instead of Assyria; but either nation was more than terrible enough.

Feinberg noted that the use of cavalry in a military charge, as contrasted with the use of horses in drawing the chariots such as those used in Egypt, was apparently a new thing here.

Jeremiah 6:25-26

"Go not forth into the field, nor walk by the way: for the sword of the enemy and terror, are on every side. O daughter of my people, gird thee with sackcloth, and wallow thyself in ashes: make thee mourning, as for an only son, most bitter lamentation; for the destroyer shall suddenly come upon us."

"O daughter of my people ..." (Jeremiah 6:26). The pathos in the heart of the prophet with such a tragic message shows in this pathetic remark; the very words seem to drip with tears. Note in the final clause the pronoun "us." Jeremiah surely identified himself with the miseries coming upon the beloved city.

"Wallow thyself in ashes ..." (Jeremiah 6:26). "It was the custom of Jewish mourners to cast ashes only upon their heads; wallowing in them therefore refers to something far more than ordinary grief.” Actually, there was no adequate manner for symbolizing the horrible grief that overcame the people of God in their capture and captivity.

5. Description of the foe (Jeremiah 6:22-26)

In order to impress once again upon the minds of the people what the nation of Judah is up against, Jeremiah describes in terrifying detail the foe from the north. In contrast to tiny Judah the northern foe is a great nation. They come “from the uttermost part of the earth” (v, 22). In Jeremiah 31:8 this phrase is used of Babylon (cf. Jeremiah 25:32; Isaiah 14:13). The enemy soldiers carry both bow and spear. They are ruthless and have compassion on no one. The cruelty of the Mesopotamian armies in antiquity is well documented in the monuments, They were feared throughout the ancient Near East (cf. Nahum 3:1; Habakkuk 1:6-7). The noise of their countless horsemen and chariotry resembled the roar of the sea. This vast and invincible army will shortly come to make war against the daughter of Zion, the inhabitants of Jerusalem (Jeremiah 6:23).

In Jeremiah 6:24 the prophet again projects himself into the future to describe the reaction of the populace of Jerusalem as this vast host approaches. He identifies himself with his people and expresses the general feeling of anxiety and pain which will prevail in the city at that time. The Jewish soldiers lose their courage; they are too scared to resist. Throughout Jerusalem there is panic and pain which can only be compared to that which a woman experiences in childbirth (Jeremiah 6:24). No one is safe; the enemy is everywhere. No one should venture outside the walls of Jerusalem. Terror surrounds the city (Jeremiah 6:25). In view of the spoiler’s rapid descent on Jerusalem, Jeremiah calls his countrymen to bitter lamentation. The bereavement for the loss of an only son was the most severe a Hebrew could suffer (cf. Amos 8:10; Zechariah 12:10). Jeremiah loves his nation as a father loves his daughter and thus he addresses Judah as “the daughter of my people.” They refused to shed the tears of repentance; they will now be forced to shed the tears of lamentation (Jeremiah 6:26).

Verses 27-30

Jer 6:27-30

Jeremiah 6:27-28

"I have made thee a trier and a fortress among my people; that thou mayest know and try their way. They are all grievous revolters, going about with slanders; they are brass and iron: they all of them deal corruptly."

"Going about with slanders ..." (Jeremiah 6:28) "This means going about with the intention of spreading slanders.”

Jeremiah 6:29-30

"The bellows blow fiercely; the lead is consumed of the fire; in vain do they go on refining; for the wicked are not plucked away. Refuse silver shall men call them, because Jehovah hath rejected them."

Scholars admit the difficulty of these verses, suggesting that the text might have been damaged; but the general meaning is clear enough. The figure is that of a refiner of silver; and the admonition here is that, "The silver (a metaphor for Judah) is so full of alloy as to be utterly worthless.”

6. The hopeless task of the Prophet (Jeremiah 6:27-30)

In Jeremiah 6:27 God addresses Jeremiah. God has made His prophet as strong as a tower a fortified city; the people will not be successful in attacking him. Jeremiah can then fearlessly test and try the way of the people by his preaching(Jeremiah 6:27). Elsewhere in Scripture men are tested in fire or furnace of trials and tribulations in order to refine and purify them from the dross of sin. See Proverbs 17:3; Zechariah 13:9; Jeremiah 6:29; Jeremiah 9:7.

In this and the following verses metallurgic phraseology is employed with a moral application. The men of Judah are unfaithful to God for they are in open rebellion against Him. They are unfaithful to their fellowmen because they engage in malicious slander. These wicked men are as hard as brass and iron. Their way of life is corruption; all of them are rotten to the core (Jeremiah 6:28). Try as he may the assayer is not able to extract any precious metal from the worthless ore of the nation Judah. The fire is so hot that the bellows are scorched. The lead which served as a flux to carry away the impurities melts. But no silver remains. There were no righteous ones from whom the wicked could be separated (Jeremiah 6:29). Once Israel had been as precious to God as silver (Deuteronomy 5:27-29). Now that silver had become “refuse silver” i.e., worthless silver, good for nothing dross (Jeremiah 6:30).

Jerusalem Under Siege - Jeremiah 6:1-30

Open It

1. What positive or negative associations do you have with the word "tradition"?

2. How do we use predictions about the future in our everyday lives?

Explore It

3. What warning did Jeremiah issue to the people of Jerusalem? (Jeremiah 6:1-3)

4. What plans did Jeremiah envision being made by invaders? (Jeremiah 6:4-5)

5. What did Jeremiah say would happen if the people didn’t heed his warning? (Jeremiah 6:6-8)

6. When Babylon finished "gleaning" the vine of Israel, how many would be left? (Jeremiah 6:9)

7. What kind of response did Jeremiah get to his prophecies? (Jeremiah 6:10)

8. What did Jeremiah predict would happen when God judged the world? (Jeremiah 6:11-12)

9. How had the prophets and priests sinned against God? (Jeremiah 6:13-15)

10. For what did God recommend that the people ask? (Jeremiah 6:16)

11. What did God’s appointed watchmen tell the people? (Jeremiah 6:17)

12. What did God call the rest of the earth to observe about Israel? (Jeremiah 6:18-19)

13. How did God view the sacrifices and expensive incense offered by Israel and Judah? (Jeremiah 6:20)

14. What did God say would cause many people to stumble? (Jeremiah 6:21)

15. How did Jeremiah describe the invading army of Babylon? (Jeremiah 6:22-23)

16. How did Jeremiah predict that people would react to the invaders? (Jeremiah 6:24-26)

17. How did Israel respond to God’s refining? (Jeremiah 6:27-30)

Get It

18. Why do you think Jeremiah kept on talking about the level of devastation that Israel’s enemies would bring?

19. When have you received a "we will not listen" response to a message about God, as did Jeremiah?

20. Who do you know to whom the Word of the Lord is offensive?

21. Why are some people offended by what the Bible says?

22. By Jeremiah’s day, how long had God been revealing His path to righteousness and blessing?

23. What sometimes motivates people in leadership to deceive the people they lead?

24. Why do you think people sometimes put more emphasis on expense and appearance in religious observances than on sincerity of heart?

25. When have you experienced God’s refining in your life?

26. How should we respond when God seeks to refine us?

Apply It

27. To whom do you need to communicate God’s Word, even if he or she finds it (the message, not you) offensive?

28. Where can you read in the Bible this week to remember God’s will and commands?

Questions on Jeremiah Chapter Six

By Brent Kercheville

1 What is God’s message (Jeremiah 6:1-8)? Take special note of verse 7.

2 What are the two reasons for God’s wrath coming (Jeremiah 6:10-11)? What do we learn from this?

3 What sins have the people committed (Jeremiah 6:13-15)? How extensive is the sinning?

4 What are the people called to do (Jeremiah 6:16)? What does this mean? Would the people do it?

5 Why is the people’s worship rejected (Jeremiah 6:19-20)?

6 What will God do (Jeremiah 6:21-30)?

7 What exactly is God doing (6:27)?

8 What will be the result of God’s testing (6:30)?

TRANSFORMATION:

How does this relationship change your relationship with God? What did you learn about him? What will

you do differently in your life?

Bibliographical Information
"Commentary on Jeremiah 6". "Old & New Testament Restoration Commentary". https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/onr/jeremiah-6.html.
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