CHAPTER 28

1And it happened in that year, at the beginning of the kingship of Zedekiah king of Judah, in the fourth year, in the fifth month, that Hananiah the prophet son of Azzur, who was from Gibeon, said to me in the house of the LORD before the eyes of the priests and all the people, saying: 2Thus said the LORD of Armies, God of Israel, saying, I have broken the yoke of the king of Babylonia. 3In another two years I will bring back to this place all the vessels of the house of the LORD that Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylonia took from this place and brought to Babylonia. 4And Jeconiah son of Johaiakim king of Judah and all the exiles of Judah who came to Babylonia I will bring back to this place, said the LORD, for I will break the yoke of the king of Babylonia.” 5And Jeremiah the prophet said to Hananiah the prophet before the eyes of the priests and before the eyes of all the people standing in the house of the LORD. 6And Jeremiah said, “In truth, thus shall the LORD do, the LORD shall fulfill your words that you prophesied, to bring back the vessels of the house of the LORD and all the exiles from Babylonia to this place. 7But listen, pray, to this word that I speak in your hearing and in the hearing of all the people. 8The prophets who were before me and before you from times of old and prophesied concerning many lands and concerning many great kingdoms for war and for evil and for pestilence. 9The prophet who prophesies peace, when the word of the prophet comes about, it will be known of the prophet that the LORD truly sent him.” 10And Hananiah the prophet took the yoke bar from the neck of Jeremiah the prophet and broke it. 11And Hananiah said before the eyes of all the people, saying, “Thus said the LORD: So will I break the yoke of Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylonia in another two years from the neck of all the nations.” And Jeremiah the prophet went on his way. 12And the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah after Hananiah the prophet had broken the yoke bar from Jeremiah’s neck, saying: 13“Go and say to Hananiah, saying, Thus said the LORD: the wooden yoke bars you have broken, and you shall make in their stead iron yoke bars. 14For thus said the LORD of Armies, God of Israel: An iron yoke I have put on the neck of all these nations to serve Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylonia, and they shall serve him. And the beasts of the field as well I have given to him.” 15And Jeremiah the prophet said to Hananiah the prophet, “Listen, pray, Hananiah. The LORD has not sent you, and, as for you, you have made this people trust in a lie. 16Therefore, thus said the LORD: I am about to send you away from upon the earth. This year you shall die, for you have spoken rebellion against the LORD.” 17And Hananiah the prophet died that year in the seventh month.


CHAPTER 28 NOTES

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1. in the house of the LORD before the eyes of the priests and all the people. This confrontation between true and false prophet is staged for maximum public exposure—in the Temple, when priests and a throng of people are assembled for worship.

2. Thus said the LORD of Armies. The false prophet uses the same messenger-formula as the true prophet, claiming to convey the words of God.

5. Jeremiah the prophet said to Hananiah the prophet. The two are given the same epithet as they vie to demonstrate which of them is the authentic prophet.

6. In truth, thus shall the LORD do. What sounds like an affirmation is actually a biting challenge, as if to say: Let us see if the LORD will really fulfill your words. Alternatively, Jeremiah may mean that at some point the sacred vessels will be returned, but not as you say, and not in two years.

8. prophesied . . . for war and for evil and for pestilence. The prophets of old invoked here go back to Amos in the eighth century B.C.E., a century and a half before Jeremiah. The claim he makes is not that the only true prophecies are prophecies of doom but rather that, given the course of historical events and the misbehavior of Israel and other nations, the doomsayers are usually the ones who prophesy truly, whereas those who predict that all will end well are likely to be merely courting the approval of their audiences.

9. when the word of the prophet comes about, it will be known of the prophet that the LORD truly sent him. Obviously, peace and good historical outcomes occasionally happen, but given the historical circumstances—a powerful empire threatening to overwhelm Judah—the positive scenario is unlikely, and only if it really happens will the prophecy be authenticated.

10. And Hananiah the prophet took the yoke bar . . . and broke it. As Hananiah now makes clear, two can play at the game of symbolic act. Jeremiah bears the yoke to demonstrate Judah’s necessary subjugation to Babylonia; Hananiah now tries to show that this political yoke is about to be broken.

11. And Jeremiah the prophet went on his way. Jeremiah’s silence and his withdrawal from the scene of confrontation are, at least for the moment, ambiguous. He may even think that Hananiah’s theatrical gesture of breaking the yoke bar could prove to have predictive force. But then the word of the LORD comes to him again (verses 12–13), giving the lie to Hananiah’s gesture and affirming that unbreakable yoke bars of iron are now to replace the wooden ones.

14. all these nations. Judah’s subjugation to Babylonia is a necessary part of Babylonia’s imperial domination of nations all around.

16. This year you shall die. Hananiah’s premature death is both punishment for his misleading the people with false prophecy and an almost immediate refutation of his prophecy—instead of the predicted liberation and restoration, the prophet himself dies.