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Lutherbibel
Jeremia 29:1
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Concordances:
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- InternationalParallel Translations
Dies ist der Inhalt des Schreibens, das der Prophet Jeremia von Jerusalem an die vornehmsten Ältesten der Gefangenen und an die Priester und Propheten sandte und an alles Volk, welches Nebukadnezar von Jerusalem nach Babel entführt hatte,
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Cir, am 3407, bc 597
Now: This transaction is supposed to have taken place in the first or second year of Zedekiah.
of the letter: Jeremiah 29:25-29, 2 Chronicles 30:1-6, Esther 9:20, Acts 15:23, 2 Corinthians 7:8, Galatians 6:11, Hebrews 13:22, Revelation 2:1 - Revelation 3:22
the elders: Jeremiah 24:1-7, Jeremiah 28:4
Reciprocal: 2 Kings 24:12 - Jehoiachin Jeremiah 28:17 - the seventh month Jeremiah 29:28 - General Jeremiah 33:9 - before Jeremiah 51:61 - read
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Now these [are] the words of the letter that Jeremiah the prophet sent from Jerusalem,.... The argument and tenor, the sum and substance, of an epistle, which the prophet Jeremiah, being at Jerusalem, wrote, under the inspiration of God, to his countrymen abroad, afterwards described; so the prophets under the Old Testament instructed the people, sometimes by their sermons and discourses delivered by word of mouth to them, and sometimes by letters and epistles; as did the apostles of the New Testament; and they were both ways useful and profitable to men:
unto the residue of the elders which were carried away captive; some perhaps dying by the way, and others quickly after they came to Babylon; some were left, who had been rulers or civil magistrates in Judea, and perhaps of the great sanhedrim:
and to the priests, and to the prophets: false prophets, as the Syriac version; for we read only of one true prophet that was carried captive, and that was Ezekiel; but of false prophets several:
and to all the people, whom Nebuchadnezzar had carried away captive from Jerusalem to Babylon; which was eleven or twelve years before their last captivity thither. This was a catholic epistle, common to all the captives of every rank and class, age or sex.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The residue of the ciders - i. e., such of the elders as were still alive.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
CHAPTER XXIX
This chapter contains the substance of two letters sent by the
prophet to the captives in Babylon. In the first he recommends
to them patience and composure under their present
circumstances, which were to endure for seventy years, 1-14;
in which, however, they should fare better than their brethren
who remained behind, 15-19.
But, finding little credit given to this message, on account of
the suggestions of the false prophets, Ahab the son of Kolaiah,
and Zedekiah, the son of Maaseiah, who flattered them with the
hopes of a speedy end to their captivity, he sends a second, in
which he denounces heavy judgments against those false prophets
that deceived them, 20-23;
as he did afterwards against Shemaiah the Nehelamite, who had
sent a letter of complaint against Jeremiah, in consequence of
his message, 24-32.
NOTES ON CHAP. XXIX
Verse Jeremiah 29:1. Now these are the words of the letter — This transaction took place in the first or second year of Zedekiah. It appears that the prophet had been informed that the Jews who had already been carried into captivity had, through the instigations of false prophets, been led to believe that they were to be brought out of their captivity speedily. Jeremiah, fearing that this delusion might induce them to take some hasty steps, ill comporting with their present state, wrote a letter to them, which he entrusted to an embassy which Zedekiah had sent on some political concerns to Nebuchadnezzar. The letter was directed to the elders, priests, prophets, and people who had been carried away captives to Babylon.