Jeremiah in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(whom Jehovah has appointed) was "the son of Hilkiah of the
priests that were in Anathoth." Jer 1:1
1. History. --He was called very young (B.C. 626) to
the prophetic office, and prophesied forty-two years; but we
have hardly any mention of him during the eighteen years
between his call and Josiah's death, or during the short
reign of Jehoahaz. During the reigns of Jehoiakim and
Jehoiachin, B.C. 607-598, he opposed the Egyptian party,
then dominant in Jerusalem, and maintained that they only
way of safety lay in accepting the supremacy of the
Chaldeans. He was accordingly accused of treachery, and men
claiming to be prophets had the "word of Jehovah" to set
against his. Jer 14:13; 23:7 As the danger from the
Chaldeans became more threatening, the persecution against
Jeremiah grew hotter. ch. 18. The people sought his life;
then follows the scene in Jer 19:10-13 he was set, however,
"as a fenced brazen wall," ch. Jer 15:20 and went on with
his work, reproving king and nobles and people. The danger
which Jeremiah had so long foretold at last came near. First
Jehoiakim, and afterwards his successor Jehoiachin, were
carried into exile, 2Kin 24; but Zedekiah, B.C. 597-586, who
was appointed by Nebuchadnezzar, was more friendly to the
prophet, though powerless to help him. The approach of an
Egyptian army, and the consequent departure of the
Chaldeans, made the position of Jeremiah full of danger, and
he sought to effect his escape from the city; but he was
seized and finally thrown into a prison-pit to die, but was
rescued. On the return of the Chaldean army he showed his
faith in God's promises, and sought to encourage the people
by purchasing the field at Anathoth which his kinsman
Hanameel wished to get rid of. Jer 32:6-9 At last the blow
came. The city was taken, the temple burnt. The king and his
princes shared the fate of Jehoiachin. The prophet gave
utterance to his sorrow in the Lamentations. After the
capture of Jerusalem, B.C. 586, by the Chaldeans, we find
Jeremiah receiving better treatment; but after the death of
Gedaliah, the people, disregarding his warnings, took refuge
in Egypt, carrying the prophet with them. In captivity his
words were sharper and stronger than ever. He did not
shrink, even there, from speaking of the Chaldean king once
more as "the servant of Jehovah." Jer 43:10 After this all
is uncertain, but he probably died in Egypt.
2. Character. --Canon Cook says of Jeremiah, "His
character is most interesting. We find him sensitive to a
most painful degree, timid, shy, hopeless, desponding,
constantly complaining and dissatisfied with the course of
events, but never flinching from duty...Timid in resolve, he
was unflinching in execution; as fearless when he had to
face the whole world as he was dispirited and prone to
murmuring when alone with God. Judged by his own estimate of
himself, he was feeble, and his mission a failure; really,
in the hour of action and when duty called him, he was in
very truth 'a defenced city, and an iron pillar, and brazen
walls against the whole land.' ch. Jer 1:18 he was a noble
example of the triumph of the moral over the physical
nature." (It is not strange that he was desponding when we
consider his circumstances. He saw the nation going straight
to irremediable ruin, and turning a deaf ear to all
warnings. "A reign of terror had commenced (in the preceding
reign), during which not only the prophets but all who were
distinguished for religion and virtue were cruelly
murdered." "The nation tried to extirpate the religion of
Jehovah;" "Idolatry was openly established," "and such was
the universal dishonesty that no man trusted another, and
society was utterly disorganized." How could one who saw the
nation about to reap the awful harvest they had been sowing,
and yet had a vision of what they might have been and might
yet be, help indulging in "Lamentations"? --ED.)
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