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Jeremiah’s Response to a Plot Against His Life
Jeremiah’s Sixth Complaint
18: 18-23

Jeremiah’s response to a plot against his life DIG: What do the people want to do with Jeremiah and why? What past deeds did Yirmeyahu remind God of? In Jeremiah’s fifth complaint, how does he come to terms with what is happening to him? Can you fault Jeremiah for wanting to dish out punishment equal to what he has had to take from his accusers?

REFLECT: Why did the people of these ancient cultures kill their children? For what reasons are children killed today? Do you suppose God saved the mold when He first created you, so that He could create more people like you? Why or why not? What have you learned to appreciate about the (chip, crack or bulge) in your life’s jar?

605 BC during the eleven-year reign of Jehoiakim

The opposition: The symbolic act of going to the potter’s house (to see link click CwAt the Potter’s House) and its interpretation did not lead to repentance on the part of the people, but to another plot against Jeremiah’s life. The Levites continued to teach to itching ears (Second Timothy 4:3) and false prophets continued to prophesy what the people wanted to hear. They said: Come, let’s make plans against Jeremiah; for the teaching of the Torah by the priest will not cease, nor will counsel from the wise, nor the word from the prophets. So come, let’s attack him with our tongues and pay no attention to anything he says (18:18).

There can be no doubt that the harsh tenor of the prophet’s message evoked hostility. Here we see how pervasive and massive the opposition was. The opposition to his fearsome word was not simply an irrational, emotional response, but it was formidable and intentional that had developed a strategy for silencing that “treasonable” voice. Later the Pharisees would do the same thing to Jesus (Mark 3:6). As Judah formulated their own plans (18:12), now we see those “plans” aimed at both YHVH (18:13) and Jeremiah (18:18). The triad of priest, wise and prophet represents the established religious system of Judah. That triad is matched by the three modes of authority that ordered the community: Torah, counsel, and word. Yirmeyahu was perceived to be the enemy of all of these modes of authority. All of these authority figures unite against this “voice of disorder.” Those public leaders were adamant to maintain the status quo, immune to the notion that it is the very arrangement they defended that would result in their exile or death.179

There are seven passages in the book of Jeremiah labeled complaints or confessions: (1) to see link click Ax Oh, Adonai ELOHIM, Surely You Have Deceived This People; (2) BjThe Plot Against Jeremiah; (3) Bk – Why Does the Way of the Wicked Prosper? Why Do All the Faithless Live at Ease?; (4) CmWoe to Me, Mother, That You Gave Me Birth; (5) CsHeal Me ADONAI, and I Will Be Healed, Save Me and I Will Be Saved; (6) CxJeremiah’s Response to a Threat Against His Life; and (7) DbYou Deceived Me, LORD, and I Have Been Deceived. In each of these Yirmeyahu speaks in the first person. He opens his heart. He reveals what is going on inside while the fireworks are going off outside. Jeremiah’s inner life is revealed in these confessions/complaints/prayers. When Jeremiah was out of the public’s eye he was passionate with God. He confessed/complained/prayed like we all do. This was his secret life. This was a man of prayer.180

The prayer: Then Jeremiah subtly complained: Listen to me ADONAI; hear what my accusers are saying. The prophet’s dilemma was agonizing. Should good be rapid with evil? Yirmeyahu had pleaded with YHVH for the good of his own people (4:19-21), yet their only response was to dig a pit to kill him. Remember that I stood before You and spoke on their behalf to turn Your wrath away from them (18:19-20). In contrast to the time when Jeremiah expressed to YHVH his horror that the punishment of Yisra’el was coming, now he prays that it come, so his standing as a true prophet might be validated.

Jeremiah’s prayer is for God to implement covenant curses against his enemies, including the standard triad of famine, sword and childlessness. So give their children over to famine; hand them over to the power of the sword. Let their wives be made childless and widows; let their men be put to death, their young men slain by the sword in battle (see AeThe Problem of Holy War in the TaNaKh). Let a cry be heard from their houses when You suddenly bring invaders against them, for they have dug a pit to capture me and have hidden snares for My feet (18:21-22).

But You, LORD, know all their plots to kill me. Do not forgive their crimes or blot out their sins from Your sight. Let them be overthrown before You; deal with them in the time of Your anger (18:23). Finally, the issue is not the well-being of the prophet, but the validity of the judgment against Jerusalem. The evil “plans” made against Jeremiah match the evil “plans” made in resistance to the LORD. When God’s “plan” is rejected, death will come. No amount of hostility against the messenger will change the message. The clay finally will have to submit to the Potter or be remolded into something different. Jeremiah made it clear that Judah had that option, and equally clear that Y’hudah had chosen infidelity.181