l., li.
These chapters present phenomena analogous to those of Isaiah xl.-lxvi., and have been very commonly ascribed to an author writing at Babylon towards the close of the Exile, or even at some later date. The conclusion has been arrived at in both cases by the application of the same critical principles to similar data. In the present case the argument is complicated by the concluding paragraph of chapter li., which states that "Jeremiah wrote in a book all the evil that should come upon Babylon, even all these words that are written against Babylon," in the fourth year of Zedekiah, and gave the book to Seraiah ben Neriah to take to Babylon and tie a stone to it and throw it into the Euphrates. Such a statement, however, cuts both ways. On the one hand, we seem to have—what is wanting in the case of Isaiah xl.-lxvi.—a definite and circumstantial testimony as to authorship. But, on the other hand, this very testimony raises new difficulties. If l. and li. had been simply assigned to Jeremiah, without any specification of date, we might possibly have accepted the tradition according to which he spent his last years A detailed discussion of the question would be out of place here, "There shall come the Israelites, they and the Jews together: They shall ask their way to Zion, with their faces hitherward" "Remove from the midst of Babylon, and be ye as he-goats before the flock" (l. 8). These verses imply that the Jews were already in Babylon, and throughout the author assumes the circumstances of the Exile. "The vengeance of the Temple," i.e. vengeance for the destruction of the Temple at the final capture of Jerusalem, is twice threatened. "Set up a standard on the earth, Blow the trumpet among the nations, Prepare the nations against her." If these words were written by Jeremiah in the fourth year of Zedekiah, he certainly was not practising his own precept to pray for the peace of Babylon. Various theories have been advanced to meet the difficulties which are raised by the ascription of this prophecy to Jeremiah. It may have been expanded from an authentic original. Or again, li. 59-64 may not really refer to l. 1-li. 58; the two sections may once have existed separately, and may owe their connection to an editor, who met with l. 1-li. 58 as an anonymous document, and thought he recognised in it the "book" referred to in li. 59-64. Or again, l. 1-li. 58 may be a hypothetical reconstruction of a lost prophecy of Jeremiah; li. 59-64 mentioned such a prophecy and none was extant, and some student and disciple of Jeremiah's school utilised the material and In view of the great uncertainty as to the origin and history of this prophecy, we do not intend to attempt any detailed exposition. Elsewhere whatever non-Jeremianic matter occurs in the book is mostly by way of expansion and interpretation, and thus lies in the direct line of the prophet's teaching. But the section on Babylon attaches itself to the new departure in religious thought that is more fully expressed in Isaiah xl.-lxvi. Chapters l., li., may possibly be Jeremiah's swan-song, called forth by one of those Pisgah visions of a new dispensation sometimes granted to aged seers; but such visions of a new era and a new order can scarcely be combined with earlier teaching. We will therefore only briefly indicate the character and contents of this section. It is apparently a mosaic, complied from lost as well as extant sources; and dwells upon a few themes with a persistent iteration of ideas and phrases hardly to be paralleled elsewhere, even in the Book of Jeremiah. It has been reckoned The main theme is naturally that dwelt upon most "Your mother shall be sore ashamed, She that bare you shall be confounded; Behold, she shall be the hindmost of the nations, A wilderness, a parched land, and a desert. Because of the wrath of Jehovah, it shall be uninhabited; The whole land shall be a desolation. Every one that goeth by Babylon Shall hiss with astonishment because of all her plagues." The gods of Babylon, Bel and Merodach, and all her idols, are involved in her ruin, and reference is made to the vanity and folly of idolatry. "I will recompense unto Babylon And all the inhabitants of Chaldea All the evil which they wrought in Zion, And ye shall see it—it is the utterance of Jehovah" (li. 24). Though He thus avenge Judah, yet its former sins are not yet blotted out of the book of His remembrance:— "Their adversaries said, We incur no guilt, Because they have sinned against Jehovah, the Pasture of Justice, Against the Hope of their fathers, even Jehovah" (l. 7). Yet now there is forgiveness:— "The iniquity of Israel shall be sought for, and there shall be none; And the sins of Judah, and they shall not be found: For I will pardon the remnant that I preserve" (l. 20). The Jews are urged to flee from Babylon, lest they should be involved in its punishment, and are encouraged to return to Jerusalem and enter afresh into an everlasting covenant with Jehovah. As in Jeremiah xxxi., Israel is to be restored as well as Judah:— "I will bring Israel again to his Pasture: He shall feed on Carmel and Bashan; His desires shall be satisfied on the hills of Ephraim and in Gilead" (l. 19).
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