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Chapter 50

A Prophecy against Babylon.[a] This is the word which the Lord spoke against Babylon and the land of the Chaldeans, through the prophet Jeremiah:

Declare this among the nations and proclaim it;
    lift up a banner and proclaim it;
    keep nothing back, but announce,
“Babylon will be captured;
    Bel[b] will be put to shame;
    Marduk will be dismayed.
Her images are disgraced;
    her idols are shattered.”
A nation from the north is marching against her
    that will turn her land into a desolate waste,
so that no one will be able to live there anymore;
    both men and beasts have fled and are gone.
In those days and at that time,
    says the Lord,
the people of Israel and of Judah will come,
    weeping as they seek the Lord, their God.
They will ask the way to Zion
    and turn their faces toward it, saying,
“Come, let us bind ourselves to the Lord
    in an everlasting covenant
    that will never be forgotten.”
My people were lost sheep;
    their shepherds led them astray
    and caused them to roam on the mountains.
They wandered over mountains and hills
    and lost the way to their fold.
Whoever came upon them devoured them,
    and their enemies insisted,
    “We incur no guilt,
because they have sinned
    against the Lord, their true pasture,
    against the Lord, the hope of their fathers.”
Flee from Babylon and the land of the Chaldeans;
    be like male goats leading the flock.
Behold, I will stir up against Babylon
    a host of mighty nations from the land of the north.
They will advance against her,
    and there she will be conquered.
Their arrows are like those of a skilled warrior
    that are never shot unsuccessfully.
10 Chaldea will be plundered,
    and all who plunder her will be sated,
    says the Lord.

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Footnotes

  1. Jeremiah 50:1 In Jeremiah’s eyes, Babylon was only an instrument in God’s hands, and he knew that sooner or later its control of the East would be taken from it. The prophet had predicted that Israel would be reprieved. Made confident by these reflections of Jeremiah, his disciples here proclaim the judgment of the Lord against the Chaldeans, at a time when, toward the middle of the sixth century B.C., their power was beginning to decline and the deportees were hoping for deliverance. We are in the atmosphere that reigned before 538 B.C. and which we know from Second Isaiah.
  2. Jeremiah 50:2 Bel was an ancient Sumerian deity; his name was then taken over by the Babylonian national god, Marduk.