32:2 Now at that time, 3 the armies of the king of Babylon were besieging Jerusalem. 4 The prophet Jeremiah was confined in the courtyard of the guardhouse 5 attached to the royal palace of Judah.
23:12 So the paths they follow will be dark and slippery.
They will stumble and fall headlong.
For I will bring disaster on them.
A day of reckoning is coming for them.” 6
The Lord affirms it! 7
1:5 I will remove 8 those who worship the stars in the sky from their rooftops, 9
those who swear allegiance to the Lord 10 while taking oaths in the name of 11 their ‘king,’ 12
1 tn Heb “The Chaldeans.” See the study note on 21:4 for further explanation.
2 sn Compare Jer 19:13.
3 sn Jer 32:2-5 are parenthetical, giving the background for the actual report of what the
4 sn According to Jer 39:1 the siege began in Zedekiah’s ninth year (i.e., in 589/88
5 tn Heb “the courtyard of the guarding” or “place of guarding.” This expression occurs only in the book of Jeremiah (32:2, 8, 12; 33:1; 37:21; 38:6, 12, 28; 39:14, 15) and in Neh 3:25. It is not the same as an enclosed prison which is where Jeremiah was initially confined (37:15-16; literally a “house of imprisoning” [בֵּית הָאֵסוּר, bet ha’esur] or “house of confining” [בֵּית הַכֶּלֶא, bet hakkele’]). It is said to have been in the palace compound (32:2) near the citadel or upper palace (Neh 3:25). Though it was a place of confinement (32:2; 33:1; 39:15) Jeremiah was able to receive visitors, e.g., his cousin Hanamel (32:8) and the scribe Baruch (32:12), and conduct business there (32:12). According to 32:12 other Judeans were also housed there. A cistern of one of the royal princes, Malkijah, was located in this courtyard, so this is probably not a “prison compound” as NJPS interpret but a courtyard adjacent to a guardhouse or guard post (so G. L. Keown, P. J. Scalise, T. G. Smothers, Jeremiah 26-52 [WBC], 151, and compare Neh 12:39 where reference is made to a Gate of the Guard/Guardhouse) used here for housing political prisoners who did not deserve death or solitary confinement as some of the officials though Jeremiah did.
6 tn For the last two lines see 11:23 and the notes there.
7 tn Heb “Oracle of the
8 tn The words “I will remove” are repeated from v. 4b for stylistic reasons. In the Hebrew text vv. 4b-6 contain a long list of objects for the verb “I will remove” in v. 4b. In the present translation a new sentence was begun at the beginning of v. 5 in keeping with the tendency of contemporary English to use shorter sentences.
9 tn Heb “those who worship on their roofs the host of heaven.” The “host of heaven” included the sun, moon, planets, and stars, all of which were deified in the ancient Near East.
10 tc The MT reads, “those who worship, those who swear allegiance to the
11 tn Heb “those who swear by.”
12 tn The referent of “their king” is unclear. It may refer sarcastically to a pagan god (perhaps Baal) worshiped by the people. Some English versions (cf. NEB, NASB, NRSV) prefer to emend the text to “Milcom,” the name of an Ammonite god (following some LXX