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碎瓶的比喻

19 耶和华这样说:“你去跟陶匠买一个瓦瓶,要带着几位人民的长老和年长的祭司, 出到欣嫩子谷,哈珥西(“哈珥西”意即“瓦片”)门的入口,在那里你要宣告我将对你说的话。 你要说:‘犹大列王和耶路撒冷的居民哪!你们要听耶和华的话。万军之耶和华以色列的 神这样说:看哪!我必使灾祸临到这地方;凡听见的,都必耳鸣。 因为他们离弃了我,把这地方玷污了,在这地方向列神烧香。这些神是他们和他们的列祖,以及犹大列王所不认识的;他们又使这地方洒满无辜人的血。 他们筑了巴力的邱坛,好用火焚烧自己的儿女,作燔祭献给巴力。这不是我吩咐的,我没有提说过,也没有在我心里想过。 因此,看哪!日子快到,这地方必不再称为陀斐特或欣嫩子谷,而要称为杀戮谷。’这是耶和华的宣告。 ‘我要在这地方使犹大和耶路撒冷的计谋失败,也必使他们在仇敌面前倒毙于刀下,死在寻索他们性命的人手中。我要把他们的尸体给空中的飞鸟和地上的野兽作食物。 我要使这城变为荒凉,成为被人嗤笑的对象;每一个经过这里的,都必因这城所遭受的一切创伤而惊骇,并且嗤笑她。 在他们被围困和受压迫之中,就是在仇敌和寻索他们性命的人压迫他们的时候,我必使他们吞吃自己的儿女的肉,各人也彼此吃对方的肉。’

10 “然后你要在跟你同去的人眼前,把那瓶子打碎, 11 并对他们说:‘万军之耶和华这样说:我必照样打碎这人民和这城,好象人打碎陶匠的瓦器一样,不能再修补。人必在陀斐特埋葬尸体,甚至无处可埋葬。 12 我必照样对待这地方和这地方的居民,使这城像陀斐特一样。’这是耶和华的宣告。 13 ‘耶路撒冷的房屋和犹大列王的宫殿,都要像陀斐特一样成为不洁;人曾在这一切房屋宫殿的屋顶上,向天上的万象烧香,向别神浇奠祭。’”

14 耶利米从陀斐特,就是从耶和华差遣他去说预言的地方回来,他站在耶和华殿的院中,对众民说: 15 “万军之耶和华以色列的 神这样说:‘看哪!我必使我宣告攻击这城的一切灾祸,临到这城和她附近的一切城镇,因为他们硬着颈项,不听从我的话。’”

瓦瓶的比喻

19 耶和華對我說: 「你去向陶匠買一個瓦瓶,帶著百姓和祭司中的一些首領到哈珥西[a]城門旁的欣嫩子谷,在那裡宣告我的話。 你要說,『猶大王和耶路撒冷的居民啊,你們要聽耶和華的話!以色列的上帝——萬軍之耶和華說,看啊,我要在這裡降下災禍,聽見這消息的人都必耳鳴。 因為他們背棄了我,玷污了這地方。他們向自己、自己的祖先及猶大君王都不認識的神明燒香,使這地方流滿了無辜人的血。 他們為巴力建邱壇,燒死自己的兒子作燔祭獻給巴力。我從未吩咐他們這樣做,連提都沒提過,連想都沒想過。 因此,看啊,時候將到,這地方不再叫陀斐特或欣嫩子谷,要叫殺戮谷。這是耶和華說的。 我要在這地方挫敗猶大人和耶路撒冷居民的計謀,使他們喪身在敵人刀下,死在仇敵手中,屍體成為飛鳥和野獸的食物。 我必摧毀這城,使它令人驚懼、嗤笑,它的滿目瘡痍必令路人驚懼、嗤笑。 我必使他們在敵人的圍困之下陷入絕境,吃兒女和親友的肉。』

10 「耶利米啊,你要在同去的人面前打碎瓦瓶, 11 然後告訴他們萬軍之耶和華說,『我要把這百姓和這城打得粉碎,正如人打碎瓦瓶一樣,再也不能修復。人們要在陀斐特埋死人,直到無處可埋。 12 我必這樣懲罰這城和其中的居民,使這城像陀斐特一樣。這是耶和華說的。 13 耶路撒冷的房屋和猶大君王的宮殿將被玷污,像陀斐特一樣,因為他們在房頂向天上的萬象燒香,向別的神明奠酒。』」

14 耶利米奉耶和華之命到陀斐特說預言回來後,站在耶和華殿的院子中對百姓說: 15 「以色列的上帝——萬軍之耶和華說,『看啊,我要把我說過的災禍降在這城及其周圍的村莊,因為他們頑固不化,不肯聽我的話。』」

Footnotes

  1. 19·2 哈珥西」意思是「碎陶片」。

An Object Lesson from a Broken Clay Jar

19 The Lord told Jeremiah,[a] “Go and buy a clay jar from a potter.[b] Take with you[c] some of the leaders of the people and some of the leaders[d] of the priests. Go out to the part of the Hinnom Valley that is near the entrance of the Potsherd Gate.[e] Announce there what I tell you.[f] Say, ‘Listen to the Lord’s message, you kings of Judah and citizens of Jerusalem! This is what the Lord of Heaven’s Armies,[g] the God of Israel, has said, “Look here! I am about to bring a disaster on this place[h] that will make the ears of everyone who hears about it ring.[i] I will do so because these people[j] have rejected me and have defiled[k] this place. They have offered sacrifices in it to other gods that neither they nor their ancestors[l] nor the kings of Judah knew anything about. They have filled it with the blood of innocent children.[m] They have built places here[n] for worship of the god Baal so that they could sacrifice their children as burnt offerings to him in the fire. Such sacrifices[o] are something I never commanded them to make. They are something I never told them to do! Indeed, such a thing never even entered my mind. So I, the Lord, say:[p] “The time will soon come that people will no longer call this place Topheth or the Hinnom Valley. But they will call this valley[q] the Valley of Slaughter! In this place I will thwart[r] the plans of the people of Judah and Jerusalem. I will deliver them over to the power of their enemies who are seeking to kill them. They will die by the sword[s] at the hands of their enemies.[t] I will make their dead bodies food for the birds and wild beasts to eat. I will make this city an object of horror, a thing to be hissed at. All who pass by it will be filled with horror and will hiss out their scorn[u] because of all the disasters that have happened to it.[v] I will reduce the people of this city to desperate straits during the siege imposed on it by their enemies who are seeking to kill them. I will make them so desperate that they will eat the flesh of their own sons and daughters and the flesh of one another.”’”[w]

10 The Lord continued,[x] “Now break the jar in front of those who have come here with you. 11 Tell them the Lord of Heaven’s Armies says,[y] ‘I will do just as Jeremiah has done.[z] I will smash this nation and this city as though it were a potter’s vessel that is broken beyond repair.[aa] The dead will be buried here in Topheth until there is no more room to bury them.’[ab] 12 I, the Lord, say:[ac] ‘That is how I will deal with this city and its citizens. I will make it like Topheth. 13 The houses in Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah will be defiled by dead bodies[ad] just like this place, Topheth. For they offered sacrifice to the stars[ae] and poured out drink offerings to other gods on the roofs of those houses.’”

14 Then Jeremiah left Topheth where the Lord had sent him to give that prophecy. He went to the Lord’s temple and stood[af] in its courtyard and called out to all the people. 15 “The Lord of Heaven’s Armies, the God of Israel,[ag] says, ‘I will soon bring on this city and all the towns surrounding it[ah] all the disaster I threatened to do to it. I will do so because they have stubbornly refused[ai] to pay any attention to what I have said!’”

Footnotes

  1. Jeremiah 19:1 tn The word “Jeremiah” is not in the text. Some Hebrew mss and some of the versions have “to me.” This section, 19:1-20:6, appears to be one of the biographical sections of the book of Jeremiah where incidents in his life are reported in third person. See clearly 9:14 and 20:1-3. The mss and versions do not represent a more original text but are translational or interpretive attempts to fill in a text that had no referent. They are like the translational addition, which has been supplied on the basis of contextual indicators.
  2. Jeremiah 19:1 tn Heb “an earthenware jar of the potter.”sn The word translated “clay” here refers to a clay that has been baked or fired in a kiln. In Jer 18 the clay was still soft and pliable, capable of being formed into different kinds of vessels. Here the clay is set, just as Israel is set in its ways. The word for jar probably refers to a water jug or decanter and is onomatopoeic, vaqbuq, referring to the gurgling sound made by pouring out the water.
  3. Jeremiah 19:1 tc The words “Take with you” follow the reading of the Syriac version and to a certain extent the reading of the Greek version (the latter does not have “with you”). The Hebrew text does not have these words, but they are undoubtedly implicit.
  4. Jeremiah 19:1 tn Heb “elders,” both here and before “of the people.”sn The civil and religious leaders are referred to here. They were to be witnesses of the symbolic act and of the message that Jeremiah proclaimed to the leaders of Jerusalem and to its citizens (see v. 3).
  5. Jeremiah 19:2 sn The exact location of the Potsherd Gate is unknown since it is named nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible. It is sometimes identified, on the basis of the Jerusalem Targum, with the Dung Gate mentioned in Neh 2:13; 3:13-14; and 12:31. It is probably called “Potsherd Gate” because that is where the potter threw out the broken pieces of pottery that were no longer of use to him. The Valley of Ben Hinnom has already been noted in 7:31-32 in connection with the illicit religious practices, including child sacrifice, that took place there. The Valley of Ben Hinnom (or sometimes Valley of Hinnom) runs along the west and south sides of Jerusalem.
  6. Jeremiah 19:2 tn Heb “the words that I will speak to you.”
  7. Jeremiah 19:3 sn See the study notes on 2:19 and 7:3 for explanation of this title.
  8. Jeremiah 19:3 sn Careful comparison of the use of this term throughout this passage and comparison with 7:31-33, which is parallel to several verses in this passage, will show that the reference is to the Valley of Ben Hinnom, which will become a Valley of Slaughter (see v. 6 and 7:32).
  9. Jeremiah 19:3 tn Heb “which everyone who hears it [or about it] his ears will ring.” This is proverbial for a tremendous disaster. See 1 Sam 3:11 and 2 Kgs 21:12 for similar prophecies.
  10. Jeremiah 19:4 tn The text merely has “they.” But since a reference is made later to “they” and “their ancestors,” the referent must be to the people that the leaders of the people and leaders of the priests represent.
  11. Jeremiah 19:4 sn Heb “have made this city foreign.” The verb here is one that is built off of the noun and adjective, which relate to foreign nations. Comparison may be made to Jer 2:21, where the adjective refers to the strange, wild vine as opposed to the choice vine the Lord planted, and to 5:19 and 8:19, where the noun is used of worshiping foreign gods. Israel through its false worship has “denationalized” itself in its relation to God.
  12. Jeremiah 19:4 tn Heb “fathers.”
  13. Jeremiah 19:4 tn Heb “the blood of innocent ones.” This must be a reference to child sacrifice as explained in the next verse. Some have seen a reference to the sins of social injustice alluded to in 2 Kgs 21:16 and 24:4, but those are connected with the city itself. Hence the word children is supplied in the translation to make the referent explicit.
  14. Jeremiah 19:5 tn The word “here” is not in the text. However, it is implicit from the rest of the context. It is supplied in the translation for clarity.
  15. Jeremiah 19:5 tn The words “such sacrifices” are not in the text. The text merely says, “to burn their children in the fire as burnt offerings to Baal, which I did not command.” The command obviously refers not to the qualification “to Baal” but to burning the children in the fire as burnt offerings. The words are supplied in the translation to avoid a possible confusion that the reference is to sacrifices to Baal. Likewise the words should not be translated so literally that they leave the impression that God never said anything about sacrificing their children to other gods. The fact is he did. See Lev 18:21; Deut 12:30; 18:10.
  16. Jeremiah 19:6 tn This phrase (Heb “Oracle of the Lord”) has been handled this way on several occasions when it occurs within first person addresses where the Lord is the speaker. See, e.g., 16:16; 17:24; 18:6.
  17. Jeremiah 19:6 tn Heb “it will no longer be called to this place Topheth or the Valley of Ben Hinnom but the Valley of Slaughter.”sn See Jer 7:31-32 for an almost word-for-word repetition of vv. 5-6.
  18. Jeremiah 19:7 sn There is perhaps a twofold wordplay in the use of this verb. One involves the sound play with the word for “jar,” which has been explained as a water decanter. The word here is בַקֹּתִי (vaqqoti). The word for jar in v. 1 is בַקְבֻּק (vaqbuq). There may also be a play on the literal use of this word to refer to the laying waste or destruction of a land (see Isa 24:3; Nah 2:3). Many modern commentaries think that at this point Jeremiah emptied out the contents of the jar, symbolizing the “emptying” out of their plans.
  19. Jeremiah 19:7 sn This refers to the fact that they will die in battle. The sword would be only one of the weapons that strikes them down. It is one of the trio of “sword,” “starvation,” and “disease” that were the concomitants of war referred to so often in the book of Jeremiah. Starvation is referred to in v. 9.
  20. Jeremiah 19:7 tn Heb “I will cause them to fall by the sword before their enemies and in the hand of those who seek their soul [= life].” In this context the two are meant as obvious qualifications of one entity, not two. Some rearrangement of the qualifiers had to be made in the English translation to convey this.
  21. Jeremiah 19:8 sn See 18:16 and the study note there.
  22. Jeremiah 19:8 tn Heb “all its smitings.” This word has been used several times for the metaphorical “wounds” that Israel has suffered as a result of the blows from its enemies. See, e.g., 14:17. It is used in the Hebrew Bible of scourging, both literally and metaphorically (cf. Deut 25:3; Isa 10:26), and of slaughter and defeat (1 Sam 4:10; Josh 10:20). Here it refers to the results of the crushing blows at the hands of her enemies, which have made her the object of scorn.
  23. Jeremiah 19:9 tn This verse has been restructured to try to bring out the proper thought and subordinations reflected in the verse without making the sentence too long and complex in English: Heb “I will make them eat the flesh of their sons and daughters. And they will eat one another’s flesh in the siege and in the straits to which their enemies who are seeking their lives reduce them.” This also shows the agency through which God’s causation was effected, i.e., the siege.sn Cannibalism is one of the penalties for disobedience to their covenant with the Lord effected through the Mosaic covenant. See Deut 28:53, 55, 57. For examples of this being carried out, see 2 Kgs 6:28-29 and Lam 4:10.
  24. Jeremiah 19:10 tn The words “And the Lord continued” are not in the text. However, they are necessary to take us clearly back to the flow of the narrative begun in vv. 1-2 and interrupted by the long speech in vv. 3-9.
  25. Jeremiah 19:11 tn Heb “Thus says Yahweh of Armies.” For this title see the study note on 2:19. The translation attempts to avoid the confusion of embedding quotes within quotes by reducing this one to an indirect quote.
  26. Jeremiah 19:11 tn The adverb “Thus” or “Like this” normally points back to something previously mentioned. See, e.g., Exod 29:35; Num 11:15; 15:11; Deut 25:9.
  27. Jeremiah 19:11 tn Heb “Like this I will break this people and this city, just as one breaks the vessel of a potter that is not able to be repaired.”
  28. Jeremiah 19:11 sn See Jer 7:32-33 for parallels.
  29. Jeremiah 19:12 tn This phrase (Heb “Oracle of the Lord”) has been handled this way on several occasions when it occurs within first person addresses where the Lord is the speaker. See, e.g., 16:16; 17:24; 18:6.
  30. Jeremiah 19:13 tn The phrase “by dead bodies” is not in the text but is implicit from the context. It is supplied in the translation for clarity.
  31. Jeremiah 19:13 tn Heb “the host of heaven.”
  32. Jeremiah 19:14 tn Heb “And Jeremiah entered from Topheth, where the Lord had sent him to prophesy, and he stood in the courtyard of the Lord’s temple.”
  33. Jeremiah 19:15 tn Heb “Yahweh of Armies, the God of Israel.”sn See the study notes on 2:19 and 7:3 for explanation of this title.
  34. Jeremiah 19:15 tn Heb “all its towns.”
  35. Jeremiah 19:15 tn Heb “They hardened [or made stiff] their neck so as not to.”