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Jeremiah 36

Cambridge

Ch. Jeremiah 36:1-32. Jeremiah’s Roll written, read, burnt, and re-written This extremely interesting and important ch., in its bearing on the history of the construction of the Book as it now stands, has been already treated in the Intr. pp. xl. ff. We may summarize the contents as follows. (i) Jeremiah 36:1-8. In the fourth year of Jehoiakim Jehovah bids Jeremiah commit to writing in a Roll the substance of his prophecies since the commencement of his ministry, in case the people may thereby be moved to forsake their evil ways. Baruch accordingly takes down the words at the mouth of Jeremiah, and, as the latter is unable himself to appear at the Temple, reads it there at his direction. (ii) Jeremiah 36:9-20. In the ninth month of the next year Baruch reads the Roll publicly in the chamber of Gemariah. Micaiah, his son, reports its substance to the princes, who cause Baruch to come and repeat the reading. They declare thereupon that they will communicate the contents to the king, ascertaining by questions that Jeremiah is the sole author, and they advise that he and his amanuensis go into hiding. (iii) Jeremiah 36:21-26.

Jehoiakim sends for the Roll, and on hearing the earlier part of its contents, cuts it in pieces and burns it in the brasier before which he is sitting, in spite of the intercession of some of the princes. Moreover he bids that Jeremiah and Baruch should be seized; but they elude him. (iv) Jeremiah 36:27-32. Jehovah bids the prophet re-write the Roll, adding the punishment that shall be the lot of Jehoiakim personally for his refusal to believe in the calamities which were coming on his people. Jeremiah therefore dictates the new edition of the Roll, including further like prophecies. Here we have the detailed circumstances under which Jeremiah recorded in a permanent form the substance of those prophecies which he had been uttering against Judah and Jerusalem for twenty-three years (see on Jeremiah 25:3). This ch. like the last (see on Jeremiah 36:1 there) forms a break in the historical section (chs. 32–44), and goes back to the time of Jehoiakim.

Jeremiah 36:2

  1. Take thee a roll of a book] Several skins were stitched together and attached to a roller of wood at one or both ends. The writing was arranged in columns parallel to the rollers, so that as the parchment was gradually unrolled from one end to the other, the successive columns could be read. Our word volume (that which is rolled up) points by its derivation to this older form of book. write therein all the words] The prophet’s memory would supply him with the substance at any rate of the prophecies which he had uttered for the twenty-three years of his mission. But we may well believe, from the vivid style in which some of the earlier prophecies have come down to us, that he was able to draw upon some contemporary records of the exact language he had used, occasionally modifying it so as to adapt it to new circumstances. Israel] Jeremiah addresses the Northern kingdom with promises only (Jeremiah 3:6 ff., Jeremiah 31:2 ff.). Accordingly it is better to read, with considerable support from MSS. of LXX, Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 36:3

  1. It may be that the house of Judah, etc.] Cp. ch. Jeremiah 26:3.

Jeremiah 36:4

  1. Then Jeremiah called Baruch] mentioned already (Jeremiah 32:12 f.) as the prophet’s attendant. He was grandson of Maaseiah, “governor of the city” (2 Chronicles 34:8) and brother of Seraiah (Jeremiah 51:59).

Jeremiah 36:5

  1. I am shut up] The same verb occurs chs. Jeremiah 33:1, Jeremiah 39:15, in the sense of in confinement. Here, however, it cannot have that force (see Jeremiah 36:19), but simply means that he was hindered from addressing the people by ceremonial uncleanness (cp. 1 Samuel 21:7, where the Hebrew verb “detained” is the same) or some other cause, perhaps danger to his life arising from the extreme unpopularity of his recent utterances.

Jeremiah 36:6

  1. the fast day] mg. a fast day, probably one specially appointed on account of the critical position of affairs (Jeremiah 36:9).

Jeremiah 36:7

  1. they will present their supplication] mg. their supplication will fall. The attitude of the petitioners is transferred in thought to the petition. Cp. the phrase in several other places (Jeremiah 37:20, Jeremiah 38:26, etc.), and sometimes (Jeremiah 37:20, Jeremiah 42:2) with the further sense, which also seems to belong to it here, of acceptance.

Jeremiah 36:8

  1. And Baruch … did according to all] This summary statement of the fact that Baruch carried out Jeremiah’s commands is followed by the detailed account in Jeremiah 36:9 f.

Jeremiah 36:9-20

9–20. See introd. summary to the chapter.

Jeremiah 36:10

  1. Gemariah the son of Shaphan the scribe] Shaphan was himself scribe in the days of Josiah (2 Kings 22:3). If this Shaphan be the one mentioned in Jeremiah 26:24, Gemariah was brother of Ahikam, who was friendly to Jeremiah. He is, of course, distinct from the Gemariah mentioned Jeremiah 29:3. upper court] the same as the “inner court” of 1 Kings 6:36; 1 Kings 7:12. See on Jeremiah 20:2. new gate] See on Jeremiah 26:10.

Jeremiah 36:11

  1. when Micaiah … had heard] As it was in the chamber of Micaiah’s father that Baruch had been allowed to read the roll, Gemariah, engaged at the moment at a council of the princes in another room, would naturally be desirous of learning as soon as might be the particulars of what had occurred.

Jeremiah 36:12

  1. he went down] See on Jeremiah 22:1. Elnathan the son of Achbor] mentioned ch. Jeremiah 26:22.

Jeremiah 36:14

  1. Jehudi … the son of Cushi] Although the first of these names also means a Jew, and the second an Ethiopian, it is more probable that both are distinctly proper names here. There may, however, still be a reference to Ethiopian descent in the latter name. We may note that it is quite usual in mentioning persons of comparatively slight distinction to trace their descent back for three generations.

Jeremiah 36:15

  1. Sit down] These words taken with Jeremiah 36:19 shew that the princes were favourably disposed towards Baruch and Jeremiah. The same fact has been marked already in ch. Jeremiah 26:16. Baruch took the position ordinarily assumed by an Eastern teacher. Cp. Luke 4:20.

Jeremiah 36:16

  1. they turned in fear one toward another] lit. they trembled every one to his neighbour, i.e. they looked at each other and trembled. unto Baruch] omit with LXX.

Jeremiah 36:17

  1. How didst thou write] They desired to know how far the words might be Baruch’s own, so as to be able to state to the king to what extent, if any, the prophet’s amanuensis was responsible. at his mouth] omit with LXX, as a gloss spoiling the sense here, and introduced from Jeremiah 36:17.

Jeremiah 36:19

  1. Go, hide thee, thou and Jeremiah] See on Jeremiah 36:5. The princes doubtless had before their minds the fate of Uriah (Jeremiah 26:23). The so-called “Grotto of Jeremiah” near the “Quarries of Solomon” outside the Damascus Gate has been conjectured, owing to its traditional association with his name, to have been their hiding-place. See Pal. Explor. F. Quart. Statement, Jan. 1912, p. 27.

Jeremiah 36:20

  1. the court] This would of course be an open place. Cf. Jeremiah 36:22. Read therefore (changing one consonant in MT.) the word which occurs in MT. of 1 Kings 1:15 (“chamber”) and render cabinet. (So Gi., Du., Co.)

Jeremiah 36:21-26

21–26. See introd. summary to the ch.

Jeremiah 36:22

  1. in the winter house] See on Jeremiah 36:9. It was a cold and rainy time of the year (see Ezra 10:9). Amos (Jeremiah 3:15) mentions both winter and summer houses. “In common parlance the lower apartments are simply el beit—the house; the upper is the ullîyeh, which is the summer house. Every respectable dwelling has both.… If these are on the same storey, then the external and airy apartment is the summer house, and that for winter is the interior and more sheltered room. It is rare to meet a family which has an entirely separate dwelling for summer.”—Thomson, The Land and the Book, p. 309. in the ninth month] omit with LXX. there was a fire in the brasier] Brasiers containing charcoal are placed in a depression in the middle of a room for purposes of warming. The change of one Hebrew consonant gives us the right sense. As the MT. stands, it is defective and lacking in grammar.

Jeremiah 36:23

  1. when Jehudi had read] rather, as Dr. “as often as J. read”; for Jeremiah 36:24 implies that the king heard all the contents. leaves] mg. columns, lit. doors (see on Jeremiah 36:2). that the king cut it, etc.] In the absence of a nominative to the verb in MT., it seems at least as natural to suppose that, as often as Jehudi had read three or four leaves, the king ordered him to cut them off and burn them. Otherwise we must assume that the king himself had the knife and that he repeatedly took pieces of the Roll from the reader. penknife] lit. scribe’s knife, used for making and mending reed pens, cutting up writing materials, etc.

Jeremiah 36:24

  1. And they were not afraid … neither the king] Contrast the conduct of the king’s father (2 Kings 22:11).

Jeremiah 36:25

  1. Elnathan … had made intercession] See note on Jeremiah 26:22.

Jeremiah 36:26

  1. the king’s son] mg. (less well) the son of Hammelech. It probably means simply one of the royal house. So in Jeremiah 38:6. See A. B. Davidson on Zephaniah 1:8 (C.B.).

Jeremiah 36:27-32

27–32. See introd. summary to the chapter. Du. and Co. consider that the passage, as it stands, shews traces of a later hand, on the ground that the king is represented as addressing Jeremiah (Jeremiah 36:29), though they did not meet. This, however, seems somewhat hypercritical. It is true that Jeremiah 36:30 may seem to imply that Jehoiakim would have no son to succeed him, whereas Jehoiachin reigned, though only for three months (2 Kings 24:8). If this, however, had been the sense attached to the saying when placed here, it probably would not have been inserted, as not being in accordance with the result. “Sit” may quite naturally be taken to mean sit permanently, Jehoiachin’s short reign being ignored.

Jeremiah 36:29

  1. Why hast thou written, etc.] a quotation, though not verbatim, from Jeremiah 25:9 f.

Jeremiah 36:30

  1. He shall] See on Jeremiah 22:18 f.

Jeremiah 36:32

  1. and there were added … many like words] See Intr. ch. 4 § 5.

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