Jeremiah
Jeremiah
Jeremiah
by JOHN BRIGHT
Introduction
Jeremiah of Anathoth, whose life and sayings this book will seek to
present, was one of the prophets of Israel. That statement, though it
may at first glance seem to be no more than a commonplace, is
actually the essential statement to be made about the man. Jeremiah
was a prophet. One could, to be sure, add to it a great many other
statements about Jeremiah, for he was both one of the great figures of
Israel’s history and a person whom one can readily admire. He was a
man of great spiritual insight and depth, a man of driving eloquence
who was possessed of unusual poetic gifts; he was, moreover, in the
profoundest sense of the word a brave man, a passionate and
exceedingly human man who captures our sympathies as few figures
from ancient times do. And one could say a great deal more. But
such statements, true though they may be, would add little to our
understanding of Jeremiah. If we would understand Jeremiah, it is not
as a great and gifted man that we must approach him, but as what he
was first and last - a prophet.
Who Were the Prophets ?
Again, because the prophets attacked abuses in the social order, and
because most of them were at loggerheads with the ruling elements
and with many of the major institutions of the society of their day, we
are tempted to think of them as rebels against the existing order,
champions of the oppressed classes, radical social reformers. Now
the prophets certainly did attack social abuses; they championed the
cause of the poor, and they called down the divine judgment upon
those responsible for their mistreatment. Yet to depict them as
revolutionaries or social reformers is both an egregious modernization
and little better than caricature. Then, too, there are those who,
moved by the ethical teachings of the prophets, impressed by the
majesty of their conception of God, and feeling that it was surely they
who imparted these insights to Israel, have been inclined to regard
them as great religious teachers, thinkers, spiritual pioneers, who
through the truths they proclaimed lifted Israel above the level of a
purely cultic and national religion to the heights of ethical
monotheism. But, again, to understand them as religious teachers is to
misunderstand them fundamentally. So we must again ask: Who
were these men? What did they believe themselves to be?
The word "prophet" probably means- though this is disputed- "one
who has been called" (i.e., by the Deity). But in attempting to say
what the prophets were, we are hampered by the fact that the term
seems to be applied to widely differing types of people. It is applied to
an Amos, and to that group from which Amos explicitly disassociated
himself (Amos 3:14); to a Jeremiah, and to those who were his
bitterest opponents. It is applied to men who danced in ecstatic frenzy
till they fell down senseless, and to men who, so far as we know, said
all that they had to say in cold possession of their faculties. It is
applied to seers who for a fee would tell a man where his lost donkeys
were (I Sam 9:7f.,20), and to men who spoke of greater things and got
no fee- save persecution. The truth seems to be that the term "prophet"
came to be used as a designation for various originally separate
functions. Certainly it could be applied to the greatest spirits that
Israel ever produced, and to men- some of them surely well-
intentioned, others just as surely frauds- who, to say the least,
reflected no credit on their office. In view of this ambiguity, it would
be well at the outset to say a few words regarding the nature and the
history of the prophetic movement in Israel.
But Israel had from very early times known another type of prophet: a
prophet who was in no proper sense an ecstatic and who did not
function as a member of a prophetic band, but who came as a lone
individual bringing a message from his God- a message, it may be
added, that the recipients often had no wish to hear. It is probable that
this type of prophecy, too, had antecedents outside of Israel. The
eighteenth-century B.C. Mari texts from Upper Mesopotamia show us
examples of men who came, unbidden and unexpected, to deliver a
message from the god; and it is significant that the population of Mari
at this period was of the same stock as Israel's own ancestors.
Nevertheless, regardless of its antecedents, the phenomenon of
prophecy as it developed in Israel was unique, without a real parallel
anywhere.
Prophets of the type just described appear again and again in biblical
records relating to the tenth and ninth centuries. The monarchy
having been established, they do not appear as a group to have been
hostile to the institution. But they reserved the right to criticize it, its
rulers and policies, in the light of an older tradition and, when they
felt it to be in error, to seek to correct it - by direct political action if
need be. One thinks of Nathan, who was a member of David's court,
yet who (II Samuel 11:1-14) did not hesitate to come to his king in
Yahweh's name and denounce him to his face for his crime against his
retainer Uriah - a clear violation of covenant law. Or one thinks of
Gad, another of David's court prophets, who when David had taken
his census (II Samuel 24) - a preparatory step toward systematic
taxation and conscription, both innovations, and abhorrent to men
nurtured in the old tradition - came to the king at Yahweh's command
to offer him his choice of punishment. Or again, one is reminded of
Ahijah of Shiloh who, outraged at Solomon's highhanded policies and
religious laxity, met Jeroboam by the road (I Kings 11:26-40) and , in
Yahweh's name announcing the disruption of Solomon's kingdom,
designated him king over northern Israel.
With Elijah and the struggle against Ahab's house the earlier prophetic
movement reached the climax of its activity. But even as it did so it
underwent a crisis, as the result of which it seems in the years that
followed progressively to have lost its way. No doubt this was in part
occasioned by Jezebel's persecution, which fell with especial fury on
the prophets. Although many of them - perhaps most of them - stood
firm, some of them, being only human, gave way. Surrendering to the
state they placed themselves at its disposal and contented themselves
thereafter with saying only what the king wished to hear. This meant
that prophets who still opposed the state and its policies were obliged
to oppose their fellow prophets as well. We have a graphic illustration
of this in I Kings 22:1-28.
In any event, whatever the contributing causes may have been, there is
evidence that by the mid-eighth century the prophetic orders had in
large measure abdicated their original function. The mid-eighth
century saw Israel and Judah in a period of great prosperity and
military strength - though one that was soon to be ended by the
westward advance of Assyria. It also saw the northern state, at least,
in an advanced state of social and moral decay. Unethical practices,
the heartless oppression of the weak, highhanded infractions of
covenant law, were common (Amos). The rich, through means both
legal and illegal, took every advantage of the poor and robbed them of
their property, and the state did nothing to prevent it; indeed, the
leaders of the state were deeply implicated.
At the same time, the national religion had been corrupted by the
infiltration of pagan practices (Hosea), particularly the practice of the
fertility cult with its immoral rites, to such a degree that, in some of its
manifestations at least, it was scarcely recognizable as Yahwism. Yet
to all this the prophets as a group seem to have uttered no effective
protest. No doubt there were sincere men among them. But if we
may trust such allusions to them as we find in the prophetic books of
the Bible (and there is no reason why we may not), we must conclude
that as a group they had become mere professionals, hangers-on at
court and shrine, many of them time-servers interested chiefly in their
fees (e.g., Micah 3:5, 11), who felt no impulse to criticize the state and
the society of which they were a part.
But it was, providentially, just at this time- in the middle and latter
part of the eighth century, thus one hundred years before Jeremiah's
day- that the prophetic movement entered a new phase. The first of the
"classical" prophets, those whose words are preserved for us in the
prophetic books of the Bible , stepped upon the stage of history: first
Amos and then Hosea in northern Israel, followed shortly by Isaiah
and Micah in Judah.
The classical prophets were both a new thing in Israel and the
continuation of an ancient tradition. That they were something new is
obvious. Certainly they were not members of the prophetic orders as
these had existed up to their time. On the contrary, disgusted with the
venality of these prophets and convinced that their pleasing oracles
were not Yahweh's word, they were at pains to dissociate themselves
from them completely (cf. Amos 7:14; Micah 3:5,11). Though they
underwent profound psychic experiences, and on occasion acted out
their prophecies mimetically as their predecessors had done, they were
not ecstatics; rather, in full possession of their faculties, they delivered
their messages in the form of polished poetic oracles, usually of the
highest literary quality.
And there we shall have to leave the matter. One simply cannot prove
the truth of the essential claim of the prophets that they spoke a word
from God, and any attempts to do so is a waste of time. Faith will
affirm that they did. But for the purposes of this book one point must
be stressed, and stressed again; it is only as men who believed, who
knew, that the word they spoke was the word of their God that the
prophets are to be understood at all. To that, one can only add that
their words have in the truest sense been vindicated by history. By this
one does not mean merely that a great number of their predictions
demonstrably came to pass, but rather that their words have stood the
test of time. Though specific words addressed to specific situations of
the ancient past, they have an eternal quality about them. To this day
men still read them and find in them worthwhile instruction, courage,
and inspiration. And still to this day they nurture the faith of those
multitudes who hear in them, no less than did ancient Israel, the word
of their God.
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From the introduction to Jeremiah, in The Anchor Bible Series (1965). John
Bright was for many years, the Cyrus McCormick Professor of Hebrew and the
Interpretation of the Old Testament, Union Theological Seminary in Richmond,
Virginia. Among his best known books is, The Kingdom of God (1953), and A
History of Israel (1959). Courtesy E4Unity Institute, Berea, Kentucky