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Jeremiah 2:7

Context

2:7 I brought you 1  into a fertile land

so you could enjoy 2  its fruits and its rich bounty.

But when you entered my land, you defiled it; 3 

you made the land I call my own 4  loathsome to me.

Jeremiah 12:7-8

Context

12:7 “I will abandon my nation. 5 

I will forsake the people I call my own. 6 

I will turn my beloved people 7 

over to the power 8  of their enemies.

12:8 The people I call my own 9  have turned on me

like a lion 10  in the forest.

They have roared defiantly 11  at me.

So I will treat them as though I hate them. 12 

Jeremiah 22:7

Context

22:7 I will send men against it to destroy it 13 

with their axes and hatchets.

They will hack up its fine cedar panels and columns

and throw them into the fire.

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[2:7]  1 sn Note how contemporary Israel is again identified with her early ancestors. See the study note on 2:2.

[2:7]  2 tn Heb “eat.”

[2:7]  3 sn I.e., made it ceremonially unclean. See Lev 18:19-30; Num 35:34; Deut 21:23.

[2:7]  4 tn Heb “my inheritance.” Or “the land [i.e., inheritance] I gave you,” reading the pronoun as indicating source rather than possession. The parallelism and the common use in Jeremiah of the term to refer to the land or people as the Lord’s (e.g., 12:7, 8, 9; 16:18; 50:11) make the possessive use more likely here.

[12:7]  5 tn Heb “my house.” Or “I have abandoned my nation.” The word “house” has been used throughout Jeremiah for both the temple (e.g., 7:2, 10), the nation or people of Israel or of Judah (e.g. 3:18, 20), or the descendants of Jacob (i.e., the Israelites, e.g., 2:4). Here the parallelism argues that it refers to the nation of Judah. The translation throughout vv. 5-17 assumes that the verb forms are prophetic perfects, the form that conceives of the action as being as good as done. It is possible that the forms are true perfects and refer to a past destruction of Judah. If so, it may have been connected with the assaults against Judah in 598/7 b.c. by the Babylonians and the nations surrounding Judah recorded in 2 Kgs 24:14. No other major recent English version reflects these as prophetic perfects besides NIV and NCV, which does not use the future until v. 10. Hence the translation is somewhat tentative. C. Feinberg, “Jeremiah,” EBC 6:459 takes them as prophetic perfects and H. Freedman (Jeremiah [SoBB], 88) mentions that as a possibility for explaining the presence of this passage here. For another example of an extended use of the prophetic perfect without imperfects interspersed see Isa 8:23-9:6. The translation assumes they are prophetic and are part of the Lord’s answer to the complaint about the prosperity of the wicked; both the wicked Judeans and the wicked nations God will use to punish them will be punished.

[12:7]  6 tn Heb “my inheritance.”

[12:7]  7 tn Heb “the beloved of my soul.” Here “soul” stands for the person and is equivalent to “my.”

[12:7]  8 tn Heb “will give…into the hands of.”

[12:8]  9 tn See the note on the previous verse.

[12:8]  10 tn Heb “have become to me like a lion.”

[12:8]  11 tn Heb “have given against me with her voice.”

[12:8]  12 tn Or “so I will reject her.” The word “hate” is sometimes used in a figurative way to refer to being neglected, i.e., treated as though unloved. In these contexts it does not have the same emotive connotations that a typical modern reader would associate with hate. See Gen 29:31, 33 and E. W. Bullinger, Figures of Speech, 556.

[22:7]  13 sn Heb “I will sanctify destroyers against it.” If this is not an attenuated use of the term “sanctify” the traditions of Israel’s holy wars are being turned against her. See also 6:4. In Israel’s early wars in the wilderness and in the conquest, the Lord fought for her against the enemies (cf., e.g., Josh 10:11, 14, 42; 24:7; Judg 5:20; 1 Sam 7:10). Now he is going to fight against them (21:5, 13) and use the enemy as his instruments of destruction. For a similar picture of destruction in the temple see the lament in Ps 74:3-7.



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