Jeremiah 29:12-13
Context29:12 When you call out to me and come to me in prayer, 1 I will hear your prayers. 2 29:13 When you seek me in prayer and worship, you will find me available to you. If you seek me with all your heart and soul, 3
Jeremiah 33:3
Context33:3 ‘Call on me in prayer and I will answer you. I will show you great and mysterious 4 things which you still do not know about.’
Jeremiah 50:4-5
Context50:4 “When that time comes,” says the Lord, 5
“the people of Israel and Judah will return to the land together.
They will come back with tears of repentance
as they seek the Lord their God. 6
50:5 They will ask the way to Zion;
they will turn their faces toward it.
They will come 7 and bind themselves to the Lord
in a lasting covenant that will never be forgotten. 8
[29:12] 1 tn Heb “come and pray to me.” This is an example of verbal hendiadys where two verb formally joined by “and” convey a main concept with the second verb functioning as an adverbial qualifier.
[29:12] 2 tn Or “You will call out to me and come to me in prayer and I will hear your prayers.” The verbs are vav consecutive perfects and can be taken either as unconditional futures or as contingent futures. See GKC 337 §112.kk and 494 §159.g and compare the usage in Gen 44:22 for the use of the vav consecutive perfects in contingent futures. The conditional clause in the middle of 29:13 and the deuteronomic theology reflected in both Deut 30:1-5 and 1 Kgs 8:46-48 suggest that the verbs are continent futures here. For the same demand for wholehearted seeking in these contexts which presuppose exile see especially Deut 30:2, 1 Kgs 8:48.
[29:13] 3 tn Or “If you wholeheartedly seek me”; Heb “You will seek me and find [me] because you will seek me with all your heart.” The translation attempts to reflect the theological nuances of “seeking” and “finding” and the psychological significance of “heart” which refers more to intellectual and volitional concerns in the OT than to emotional ones.
[33:3] 4 tn This passive participle or adjective is normally used to describe cities or walls as “fortified” or “inaccessible.” All the lexicons, however, agree in seeing it used here metaphorically of “secret” or “mysterious” things, things that Jeremiah could not know apart from the
[50:4] 5 tn Heb “oracle of the
[50:4] 6 tn Heb “and the children of Israel will come, they and the children of Judah together. They shall go, weeping as they go, and they will seek the
[50:5] 7 tc The translation here assumes that the Hebrew בֹּאוּ (bo’u; a Qal imperative masculine plural) should be read בָּאוּ (ba’u; a Qal perfect third plural). This reading is presupposed by the Greek version of Aquila, the Latin version, and the Targum (see BHS note a, which mistakenly assumes that the form must be imperfect).
[50:5] 8 sn See Jer 32:40 and the study note there for the nature of this lasting agreement.