Jeremiah 27
The yoke is on Judah
Jeremiah wears wooden yoke
The yoke is on Judah
1God gave me, Jeremiah, a message for the people when Zedekiah [1] became king of Judah. He was King Josiah’s son. 2The LORD told me:Make a wooden yoke [2] with bars and straps. Then hang it around your neck. 3Ambassadors [3] from several neighboring nations have come to meet King Zedekiah. Tell the ambassadors from the following nations to give their kings the message [4] about what this yoke means to them:
- Edom
- Moab
- Ammon
- Tyre
- Sidon.
5I am the one who created the earth and every living thing on it. It was my power that created all of this, including people and animals. I’m also the one who decides who the rulers and leaders are.
6So let me tell you what I’ve decided now. I'm going give all of your lands to King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. I'm giving him everything, even the animals. 7All your nations will serve him and his successors: son and grandsons. You will do this until it comes time for other nations to enslave the king of Babylon.
Punishment for not kneeling to Babylon
8If any of you decides that your nation won’t wear Babylon’s yoke, and you refuse to serve that kingdom, I’ll punish your nation. I’ll strike you with swords, famine, and disease. And I’ll keep it up until you do what I said.9Don’t listen to any advisors who tell you to resist Babylon. It doesn’t matter if they are prophets, mediums, dream interpreters, fortune-tellers, or sorcerers. 10If they’re prophesying that it’s okay for you to resist Babylon, they’re telling you a lie. If you do what they say, I’ll deport you from your land and you’ll die there. 11But if you decide to wear Babylon’s yoke, and serve their kingdom, I’ll let you keep living and working on your land.
12I’ve told Judah’s King Zedekiah the same thing. Stick your necks out and let Babylon put their yokes on you so you can live and serve the king of Babylon. 13Why would you want to resist and end up dying in battle or through starvation or disease? That's what the LORD said would happen to you.
14Absolutely do not listen to prophets who tell you to stand your ground against Babylon and resist serving him. They are telling you a lie when they say you'll be okay. 15I haven’t given them any message to deliver to you. They’re making up fake prophecies and saying I gave it to them. If you believe what they say and act on it, I’ll drive you out of this land and you’ll die alongside those prophets.
Jeremiah’s advice for priests
16Then I turned to the priests and said, “Some of these prophets are telling you that one day soon the sacred objects that Babylonians stole from the Temple will be brought back here. Don't believe it. Those are fake prophecies.17Again, don't listen to them. Agree to serve the king of Babylon. That way you get to live. Why should this city be destroyed and left as a rock ruin? 18If they really knew what was going to happen, they would be singing a different tune. They would be asking the LORD of everyone to allow us to keep the treasures that remain in the Temple and in the king’s palace and in the homes of Jerusalem citizens.
19We still have the two huge bronze pillars [5] outside the temple sanctuary and the Sea, [6] the massive bronze bowl for the water. 20King Nebuchadnezzar left all of those with us when he exiled King Jehoiachin, [7] son of King Jehoiakim, along with all the other top leaders of our nation.
21The LORD of everyone and the God of Israel has this to say about all the treasures that remain in the Temple of the LORD and in the palace of the king and in the homes of the citizens of Jerusalem: 22They will all be going to Babylon. And they will stay there as long as I want them there. In time, I will bring them back to Jerusalem, where they will remain.
Footnotes
Zedekiah, the last king of the last surviving Israelite kingdom, reigned from 597-586 BC, when Babylonian invaders destroyed Jerusalem and exiled most survivors. Many ancient Hebrew manuscripts seem to have copied Jeremiah 26:1, with the King Jehoiakim’s name. But chapter 27 is set in the time after 597 BC, when Babylon exiled some of the leaders to Babylon, where the empire’s leaders could keep an eye on them.
People put yokes around the necks of cattle so the cattle could pull a wagon or a plow, the way farmers also used donkeys and, years later, horses.
The leaders may have been planning to form a coalition and break free from Babylon, their overlord and chief bully. A clay cylinder called the Babylonian Chronicle reports someone attacked the empire. The report doesn’t identify the attacker. But Babylon’s King Nebuchadnezzar attacked Syria over the winter of 594-93, about three or four years into Zedekiah’s reign.
It’s unclear if Jeremiah gave each ambassador a yoke or simply wore his yoke when he delivered the message verbally.
Twin bronze pillars stood on each side of the entrance into the Temple sanctuary, a place reserved for only priests. The pillars measured 27 feet tall, almost 6 feet thick, and 18 feet in circumference. In metrics, the numbers are eight meters tall, almost two meters in diameter, and more than five meters in circumference.
The bronze bowl measured 15 feet across, over 7 deep, and 45 feet around the rim’s circumference. They called this bowl the Sea. In metrics, it measured over 2 meters deep, 4.5 meters across, and 13.25 meters in circumference. This bowl was the Temple’s water tank, a reservoir that held 11,000 gallons (about 40,000 liters). That’s a little more than half the water in the typical swimming pool. Much of the water was probably used for cleaning up after a sacrifice.
Jehoiakim’s 18-year-old son, Jehoiachin, ruled three months and 10 days after him (2 Chronicles 36:9). Alternate spelling: “Jeconiah.”
Discussion Questions
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