Jeremiah’s sermons were not popular with the other prophets and spiritual leaders of his day. The messages recorded in chs. 26-29 were preached during the days of Jehoiakim (2 Kgs 23:34-24:5) and Zedekiah (2 Kgs 24:17-25:7), when Nebuchadnezzar King of Babylon encroached upon Jerusalem. Despite the threat Nebuchadnezzar posed, and the truthful prophecies of Jeremiah, many prophets claimed that the Lord was yet with Judah and that the people need not fear the Babylonians. Despite receiving death threats, Jeremiah continued to preach the word of the Lord, even writing to those whom Nebuchadnezzar captured in his first approach (2 Kgs 24:10-14).
When the Lord commanded Jeremiah to prophesy the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem, the prophet did so faithfully (Jeremiah 26). Once Jeremiah had finished his address, the priests, prophets and all the people who heard him exclaimed, “You must surely die! How dare you prophesy in the name of the LORD, ‘This temple will become like Shiloh and this city will become an uninhabited ruin!’” (Jer 26:8-9). Although King Jehoiakim killed the prophet Uriah for prophecies that mirrored those of Jeremiah, the latter was spared (Jer 26:16-24).
Jeremiah urged the leaders of Judah and the surrounding nations to submit to the Babylonian threat (chs. 27-28). According to Jeremiah, the LORD had elevated Nebuchadnezzar and given him authority to display His anger against Judah and the nations that surrounded her. Jeremiah thus prophesied that the only way to survive was to submit to the Babylonian king, since he was under the Lord’s dominion and would only reign supreme until the Lord arranged for other nations to enslave him (Jer 27:1-7). The Lord had placed Judah, indeed all nations, in an iron yoke under the king of Babylon. Jeremiah proclaimed that only by submitting to the Babylonian leader would any nation endure. Jeremiah’s status as a prophet of truth was confirmed when Hananiah died that very year. Hananiah’s death fulfilled a prophecy Jeremiah had made according to the word of the Lord (Jer 28:12-17).
While Jeremiah confronted the spiritual leadership that remained in Judah, he sent a letter to encourage the exiles that had been deported to Babylon (ch. 29). Jeremiah encouraged the exiles to populate the land and not decrease in stature. The prophet argued that God had plans to prosper them and restore them to the Promised Land (Jer 29:10-15). Jeremiah wrote that at the conclusion of seventy years in exile, the people would seek the Lord with all their heart and receive the future God had promised them.
Jeremiah gave his famous temple speech at the beginning of the reign of Jehoiakim, the king who had been placed on the throne of Judah by Pharaoh Neco of Egypt (2 Kgs 23:34). Jeremiah proposed that if the people did not repent and obey the law, they would be doomed; the Lord would raze the city just as He did Shiloh in the north (Jer 26:1-6). The people of Judah ignored the prophetic warning and the city was eventually destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar (2 Kings 25). While Jeremiah’s prophecy was thus fulfilled in his own day, Jesus’ use of the prophet’s theme advances the storyline of Scripture. Jesus predicted the destruction of Jerusalem and warned His disciples that God’s vengeance would come upon the city. Those in the city would need to get out and those in Judea would need to find refuge in the mountains and desolate regions (Matt 24:15-22//Mark 13:14-20//Luke 21:20-24). In Jesus’ thinking, the destruction Nebuchadnezzar brought upon Jerusalem was a foreshadowing of the annihilation that would come upon the city within a generation of the time He was crucified.

Jeremiah 30-33
These chapters portray a change of tone for the prophet. When Jeremiah was called to the ministry, the Lord said to him, “Look, I have filled your mouth with My words. See, today I have set you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and tear down, to destroy and demolish, to build and plant” (Jer 1:9-10). Throughout chs. 1-29, Jeremiah prophesied much that would fall under the headings of “to uproot and tear down…destroy and demolish,” but little of “to build and plant.” Chapters 30-33 set forth a new theme. Here the prophet enjoyed a privileged view of the sovereignty of God—the One who sent His people into exile and promised to return them to the Promised Land.
Jeremiah’s messages in chs. 30-33 provided great encouragement for the exiles. Jeremiah proposed that the new covenant would be characterized by two realities: eternal forgiveness and heart-knowledge of the law of God. Jeremiah’s prophecies in chs. 30-33 contributed to the unfolding storyline of Scripture.
(1) Through the shedding of His blood, Jesus inaugurated the new covenant and eternal forgiveness of sins that Jeremiah had predicted in Jer 31:31-34. At the Passover Meal, Jesus took the cup and told His disciples that it represented not the Passover of Exodus 12-15 but something new. Jesus redefined the meaning of the cup. It now looked forward to the cross and eternal forgiveness that would be granted to those participating in the new covenant (Matt 26:26-29//Mark 14:22-25//Luke 22:15-20).
(2) Paul wrote that the new covenant celebration of the Lord’s Supper has horizontal implications. In 1 Cor 11:17-33, Paul chastised the Corinthians when the church gathered for their weekly fellowship, some arrived early and shared a privileged meal apart from the impoverished members among them. Then, when the full church assembled, they would partake of the Lord’s Supper. A socioeconomic division thus existed in the church with the result that some were drunk, and others were hungry. This division contradicted the message of love and self-sacrifice the Lord’s Supper proclaims. Those not partaking with a view to loving other members and sharing resources with those in need among them were eating and drinking judgement upon themselves, Paul said (1 Cor 11:27-29). The judgement was real. Some died for their insensitivity to their brothers and sisters.
(3) According to the author of Hebrews, the inauguration of the new covenant renders the old covenant obsolete. After quoting Jer 31:31-34 in Heb 8:8-12, the author stated, “By saying, a new covenant, He has declared that the first is old. And what is old and aging is about to disappear” (Heb 8:13). In Hebrews, the old covenant represents distance from God and the new represents access to God—through the blood of Jesus. Imagery of new covenant forgiveness in Jesus occurs repeatedly through the remaining chapters of Hebrews. Because Jesus is the mediator of the new covenant, the author argued, those called by God can be confident that they will receive an eternal inheritance, “because a death has taken place for redemption from the transgressions committed under the first covenant” (Heb 9:15b). The superior status of Jesus’ self-offering in the new covenant is seen in that after Jesus laid down His life, no other sacrifices ever need to be offered (Heb 10:11-18). The author contrasted the old covenant given at Mount Sinai, where the people were warned to stay back lest they die, and the celebratory new covenant inaugurated by Jesus’ sprinkled blood (Heb 12:22-24). In his benediction, the author of Hebrews wrote, “Now may the God of peace, who brought up from the dead our Lord Jesus—the great Shepherd of the sheep—with the blood of the everlasting covenant, equip you with all that is good to do His will” (Heb 13:20-21a).
Commentary Jeremiah Major Prophets Old Testament