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Daniel Dignan

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Jeremiah

July 6, 2026 by Daniel Dignan Leave a Comment

Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem, Rembrandt

Jeremiah, one of the Bible’s major prophetic works, foretells Jerusalem’s doom and destruction at the hands of Babylon, the world’s superpower. Eventually, Babylon broke through Jerusalem’s walls, captured the king, and razed the city. At the end of the book, the unthinkable happens: Babylon, the great superpower, falls. Overthrown by an alliance of kings and nations led by Cyrus the Great of Persia.

Throughout the book, God, through the prophet Jeremiah, warns Judah and Jerusalem to forsake their rebellion and idolatry, but they refuse. Instead, they continue worshipping and offering sacrifices to idols and pagan gods. Even sacrificing their children, something God said never came to his mind.

The book’s scenes do not all unfold chronologically; instead, like a Christopher Nolan film, we are made to experience different aspects of the relentless drumbeat toward Jerusalem’s fall. Pressure builds as kings come and go; Jeremiah is targeted and imprisoned, left to die, and eventually rescued; Judah’s young king secretly seeks his counsel.

One thing is sure: the Babylonians are coming. They surround and besiege Jerusalem’s wall for two years. Famine, overconfidence, and terror fill their sad days. The great Nebuchadnezzar is on the warpath.

Judah’s national nightmare grows. After Jerusalem is destroyed, those who remain are put under a Jewish governor named Gedaliah, only to be assassinated by a Jewish royal official. The people beg Jeremiah to ask God what they should do, promising to do as God commands. But when he tells them that they must not go to Egypt but remain in Judah, they refuse to listen. It gets worse. While in Egypt, Jeremiah confronts the Judeans about their idol worship, but they brazenly declare, “We will not listen to your message from the LORD! We will do whatever we want…” (Jeremiah 44:15-16, New Living Translation).

The key to the book is the LORD’s promise to restore Judah’s line of kings (which originated with the great king David) and his introduction of the new covenant (23:5-6; 31:31-34). (The old covenant is the one God made with Moses and the people of Israel at Mount Sinai (see Exodus) and reaffirmed in Deuteronomy. The people broke the terms by worshipping other gods and acting unjustly.)

The new covenant is fully revealed in the New Testament (meaning New Covenant) and established and ratified by Christ’s atoning work on the cross and resurrection from the dead. The benefits- forgiveness from sin and righteousness- are available to all who are connected to Christ by faith and are part of his church. Moreover, Jesus is revealed to be the King of kings who restores the line of King David.

The book is dark and terrorifying, but Jeremiah contains rays of hope, ones that allude to the new covenant for Israel and the nations: “They will bind themselves to the LORD with an eternal covenant that will never be forgotten.” (50:5)

A serious read, Jeremiah reveals the consequences of putting one’s trust in human beings and false gods, the blessings for those who put their trust in the LORD (Yahweh), and the deceitfulness of the human heart, which falls for idols that ultimately disappoint. (17:5-10).

Filed Under: Personal Growth Tagged With: Hebrew Bible, Jeremiah, Old Testament