Jeremiah 22:9
Context22:9 The answer will come back, “It is because they broke their covenant with the Lord their God and worshiped and served other gods.”
Jeremiah 48:28
Context48:28 Leave your towns, you inhabitants of Moab.
Go and live in the cliffs.
Be like a dove that makes its nest
high on the sides of a ravine. 1
Jeremiah 16:11
Context16:11 Then tell them that the Lord says, 2 ‘It is because your ancestors 3 rejected me and paid allegiance to 4 other gods. They have served them and worshiped them. But they have rejected me and not obeyed my law. 5
Jeremiah 17:13
Context17:13 You are the one in whom Israel may find hope. 6
All who leave you will suffer shame.
Those who turn away from you 7 will be consigned to the nether world. 8
For they have rejected you, the Lord, the fountain of life. 9
Jeremiah 2:13
Context2:13 “Do so because my people have committed a double wrong:
they have rejected me,
the fountain of life-giving water, 10
and they have dug cisterns for themselves,
cracked cisterns which cannot even hold water.”


[48:28] 1 tn Heb “in the sides of the mouth of a pit/chasm.” The translation follows the suggestion of J. Bright, Jeremiah (AB), 321. The point of the simile is inaccessibility.
[16:11] 1 tn These two sentences have been recast in English to break up a long Hebrew sentence and incorporate the oracular formula “says the
[16:11] 2 tn Heb “fathers” (also in vv. 12, 13, 15, 19).
[16:11] 3 tn Heb “followed after.” See the translator’s note at 2:5 for the explanation of the idiom.
[16:11] 4 tn Heb “But me they have abandoned and my law they have not kept.” The objects are thrown forward to bring out the contrast which has rhetorical force. However, such a sentence in English would be highly unnatural.
[17:13] 1 tn Heb “O glorious throne, O high place from the beginning, O hope of Israel, O
[17:13] 2 tc The translation is based on an emendation suggested in W. L. Holladay, Jeremiah (Hermeneia), 1:500, n. b-b. The emendation involves following the reading preferred by the Masoretes (the Qere) and understanding the preposition with the following word as a corruption of the suffix on it. Thus the present translation reads וּסוּרֶיךָ אֶרֶץ (usurekha ’erets) instead of וּסוּרַי בָּאֶרֶץ (usuray ba’erets, “and those who leave me will be written in the earth”), a reading which is highly improbable since all the other pronouns are second singular.
[17:13] 3 tn Or “to the world of the dead.” An alternative interpretation is: “will be as though their names were written in the dust”; Heb “will be written in the dust.” The translation follows the nuance of “earth” listed in HALOT 88 s.v. אֶרֶץ 4 and found in Jonah 2:6 (2:7 HT); Job 10:21-22. For the nuance of “enrolling, registering among the number” for the verb translated here “consign” see BDB 507 s.v. כָּתַב Qal.3 and 508 s.v. Niph.2 and compare usage in Ezek 13:9 and Ps 69:28 (69:29 HT).
[17:13] 4 tn Heb “The fountain of living water.” For an earlier use of this metaphor and the explanation of it see Jer 2:13 and the notes there. There does not appear to be any way to retain this metaphor in the text without explaining it. In the earlier text the context would show that literal water was not involved. Here it might still be assumed that the
[2:13] 1 tn It is difficult to decide whether to translate “fresh, running water” which the Hebrew term for “living water” often refers to (e.g., Gen 26:19; Lev 14:5), or “life-giving water” which the idiom “fountain of life” as source of life and vitality often refers to (e.g., Ps 36:9; Prov 13:14; 14:27). The contrast with cisterns, which collected and held rain water, suggests “fresh, running water,” but the reality underlying the metaphor contrasts the