Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Jeremiah >  Exposition >  II. Prophecies about Judah chs. 2--45 >  A. Warnings of judgment on Judah and Jerusalem chs. 2-25 >  3. Warnings in view of Judah's hard heart 15:10-25:38 >  A collection of Jeremiah's denunciations of Judah's kings and false prophets chs. 21-23 > 
Prophecies about false prophets 23:9-40 
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Having given a true prophecy about the future, Jeremiah proceeded to announce God's judgment on the false prophets who were misleading His people with false prophecies (cf. v. 1). This section consists of six different messages that Jeremiah delivered at various times, which the writer placed together in the text because of their common subject (vv. 9-12, 13-15, 16-22, 23-24, 25-32, and 33-40).

The first pericope is a general indictment of the false prophets (vv. 9-12).

23:9 Jeremiah had become like a drunken man in that the prophecies God had given him concerning the false prophets sent him reeling. They disturbed his mind deeply and broke his heart. This verse serves as a superscription for the entire series of prophecies about the false prophets that follows in verses 10-40.

23:10 The false prophets were unfaithful to the Lord in their attachment to pagan deities. They were off course in their direction, and they were strong only in doing wrong. The evidence of their corruption was the curse that the land was experiencing from departing from the Mosaic Covenant. Baal was supposed to produce fertility, but worshipping him had only resulted in parched and barren land for Judah.

23:11 The Lord announced that both prophets and priests were polluted with unfaithfulness. They even practiced their wickedness in the temple, where of all places they should have been faithful to the Lord (cf. 2 Kings 21:3-7; 23:4-7; Ezek. 8).

23:12 Therefore the Lord would make them unstable. He would allow them to fall into perilous situations (Ps. 35:6; 73:18) and wander off into obscurity (cf. 13:16). At the proper time He would bring calamity on them.

". . . they will be like men sliding on a slippery trail in the darkness, stumbling and falling on top of one another."320

The next prophecy compares the false prophets of the Southern Kingdom to the false prophets in the then defunct Northern Kingdom (vv. 13-15).

23:13 The prophets of Samaria, the capital of the Northern Kingdom, had offended the Lord by prophesying in Baal's name and by leading God's people astray.

23:14 But the prophets of Jerusalem, the capital of the Southern Kingdom, had been even more unfaithful since they prophesied falsely in Yahweh's name. They also committed spiritual (and physical) adultery, lived lies, and encouraged evildoers. Consequently the Judahites had not repented of their wickedness but had become as wicked as the sinners of Sodom and Gomorrah who espoused departure from God's will openly (Gen. 18:22-19:29; Ezek. 16). Jerusalem could expect severe judgment since the Lord had judged these pagan cities severely.

"Along with easy views of sin go rosy views of judgment . . ."321

23:15 Almighty Yahweh would make the false prophets experience bitterness and tragedy, as when one eats bitter food and drinks poisoned water (cf. 8:14; 9:15), because they had embittered and poisoned the people. He would pollute them because they polluted the people and the land with their sins.

The following message criticizes the false prophets for delivering unauthorized prophecies as though they came from Yahweh (vv. 16-22).

23:16 The almighty Lord warned His people through Jeremiah not to listen to the false prophets who were leading them into empty hopes. They were claiming that their own invented prophecies came from the Lord, but they were speaking empty words; they were just windbags.

23:17 They were falsely assuring the people, who despised Yahweh and resisted His will, that nothing bad would happen to them. Peace would continue and calamity would never overtake the people, they claimed.

23:18 They had not taken counsel from Yahweh nor received His prophetic messages. They had not listened to Him and obeyed Him (cf. Matt. 11:27; John 1:18; 8:38, 40). The picture of the heavenly throne room of God is common in the Old Testament (e.g., 1 Kings 22:19-22; Job 1:1-2:7; Ps. 82; Isa. 6; Ezek. 1).

"It is a word of judgment and not peace that should be proclaimed by one who really knows the mind of Yahweh. But one needs to stand in Yahweh's council, see what goes on there, hear and pay attention to Yahweh's word and obey it, to give such a word."322

23:19-20 The judgment of God would come on the wicked like a whirlwind. He would carry out His purposes fully and not draw back in mercy. When His judgment fell, the wicked would understand it as His judgment. "In the last days"refers to the last days of Jerusalem before its total destruction; this is not an eschatological reference here.323

23:21 The Lord had not sent the false prophets or given them messages, but they had claimed to bring prophecies from Him to the people.

"As an analogy in modern terms we could compare the speculations of journalists over some matter of government which is being decided behind closed doors, with the actual announcement entrusted to a spokesman from the conclave itself."324

23:22 If they had listened to the Lord, they would have tried to turn the people back from their evil ways.

"How could a prophet confuse his own word with God's word? How could a prophet fail to speak condemnation to the sinful, covenant-breaking situation? Perhaps part of the answer was political and economic. The prophets were often part of the establishment; as such they were concerned with the maintenance of the establishment for their own security and well-being. Another part of the issue may have been purely rationalistic: Yes, some of our folks are sinful, but look at the pagans around us; they don't even worship God, and they practice the grossest of sins; by comparison, we're good folk and surely God will take that into account. Our' sins are acceptable, but their' sins are not. Besides, who wants to hear judgment preached all the time; just preach on the love of God."325

The brief message that follows corrected a false view of God that the false prophets were apparently promoting (vv. 23-24).

23:23 Evidently some of the false prophets were stressing the immanency of God but disregarding His transcendence. They were saying that He was with His people and would protect them, but they were not saying that He was also holy and must judge sin.

23:24 The people tried to hide from God in the sense that they did evil that they thought He could not see. The Lord reminded His people through Jeremiah that He is everywhere in the universe. There is no place where they could go to hide from Him (cf. Ps. 139; Amos 9:2-4).

Jeremiah condemned the false prophets for advertising their own dreams as revelations from Yahweh (vv. 25-32).

23:25 The Lord was aware that the prophets were falsely claiming to have had dreams in which they received messages from Him (cf. Zech. 10:2).

Dreams were one way that Yahweh communicated His revelations to people in ancient times (cf. Gen. 28:10-17; 37:5-11; 40; 41:1-45; Num. 12:6-8; 1 Kings 3:5-15; Dan. 2; 4:4-27; 7; Joel 2:28; Zech. 1:7-6:8). The pagans also viewed dreams as a way the gods communicated with them. Consequently it was possible to claim a revelation in a dream and to obtain an audience. The person who received a revelation from Yahweh in a dream knew it, but it was very difficult for someone else to know if the dream that a prophet claimed really came from Yahweh.

23:26-27 How long would these prophets continue to make the people forget the Lord's Word by continually claiming that they had received some new revelation from Him in a dream?! They were really leading the people away from Him just as their ancestors pursued Baal and forgot the Lord.

23:28 The false prophets could relate their dreams just as the true prophets could declare the Lord's words. But it would become clear eventually that the difference between these prophecies was as great as that between straw and grain. The one was insubstantial and worthless while the other was nourishing.

23:29 God's true words were as penetrating as fire and as powerful as a hammer. Both fire and a hammer are destructive yet refining.326

23:30-32 Yahweh announced His antagonism to the false prophets because they got messages from one another, or from their own minds, or from a dream, and then claimed that they were from the Lord. They were misleading God's people and were not benefiting them in the least (cf. vv. 1-4). In our day many liberal preachers begin their messages with "In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,"and then proceed to deliver an unbiblical sermon.

The final message in this group deals with another claim by the false prophets. In addition to receiving dreams, they professed to communicate oracles from Yahweh (vv. 33-40).

23:33 When the people or the prophets or the priests asked Jeremiah what message he had received from the Lord, he was to reply that the Lord was going to abandon them. When they asked, What is the burden of the Lord? he was to respond, You are a burden to Him and He will cast you off.

The Hebrew word massa', "oracle,"comes from the same root as the verb nasa', meaning "to lift, bear, or carry."Usually the noun refers to an imposed burden, imposed by a deity or master. Metaphorically it refers to any heavy burden, such as the burdens of leadership or duty. In the prophets, it often suggests a judgment or catastrophe. Thus an oracle is a burden or depressing message that deals with judgment (cf. Isa. 15:1; 17:1; 19:1; et al.).

23:34 Anyone who claimed to have a message from the Lord but did not would incur God's punishment (cf. Rev. 22:18).

23:35-36 The people would be confused about what the Lord really had said. They would not remember the messages that the Lord really had sent them because they were always wanting to hear messages from the Lord that pleased them. They did not respond to the ones the living God, Almighty Yahweh their God, really did send, but they twisted them.

23:37-38 When someone asked a false prophet what message he had received from the Lord and the false prophet responded, "An oracle from Yahweh,"he was lying. He should not claim to have an oracle from Yahweh when he did not have one. God commanded that this phrase should no longer be used because the false prophets had perverted His words (cf. vv. 25-32).

". . . though the term oracle' was used by canonical prophets (e.g., Isa 13:1; Nah 1:1; Hab 1:1; Zech 9:1; Mal 1:1), Jeremiah never used it of his own prophecies because it had become the hallmark of the lying prophets."327

23:39 Anyone who used this phrase would come under God's judgment. Because the false prophets made this claim, the Lord promised to forget them and throw them into exile (as a burden) along with the rest of the people of Jerusalem. This was especially sad because God had given Jerusalem to them and their forefathers.

23:40 Yahweh would also curse these false prophets with the eventual reproach of the people and their consequent shame forever. People would always remember them as false prophets. This was only fitting since they had made the people forget the Lord (v. 27). The people might forget the Lord, but they would never forget the coming judgment.

"The whole argument comes to us as rather complex, probably because the pun is developed in such a sustained manner. The two senses of massa', prophetic utterance' and burden,' and the verb nasa'occur a number of times. The massa'of Yahweh is that the people are a massa'."328



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