Letter to the exiles
God tells the exiles to live faithfully in Babylon for the long haul, seeking the welfare of the city where he has placed them, while rejecting prophets who promise immediate relief. Their restoration will come only after the appointed seventy years, and those who continue to speak rebellion in God'
Commentary
29:1 The prophet Jeremiah sent a letter to the exiles Nebuchadnezzar had carried off from Jerusalem to Babylon. It was addressed to the elders who were left among the exiles, to the priests, to the prophets, and to all the other people who were exiled in Babylon.
29:2 He sent it after King Jeconiah, the queen mother, the palace officials, the leaders of Judah and Jerusalem, the craftsmen, and the metal workers had been exiled from Jerusalem.
29:3 He sent it with Elasah son of Shaphan and Gemariah son of Hilkiah. King Zedekiah of Judah had sent these men to Babylon to King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. The letter said:
29:4 “The Lord God of Israel who rules over all says to all those he sent into exile to Babylon from Jerusalem,
29:5 ‘Build houses and settle down. Plant gardens and eat what they produce.
29:6 Marry and have sons and daughters. Find wives for your sons and allow your daughters get married so that they too can have sons and daughters. Grow in number; do not dwindle away.
29:7 Work to see that the city where I sent you as exiles enjoys peace and prosperity. Pray to the Lord for it. For as it prospers you will prosper.’
29:8 “For the Lord God of Israel who rules over all says, ‘Do not let the prophets or those among you who claim to be able to predict the future by divination deceive you. And do not pay any attention to the dreams that you are encouraging them to dream.
29:9 They are prophesying lies to you and claiming my authority to do so. But I did not send them. I, the Lord, affirm it!’
29:10 “For the Lord says, ‘Only when the seventy years of Babylonian rule are over will I again take up consideration for you. Then I will fulfill my gracious promise to you and restore you to your homeland.
29:11 For I know what I have planned for you,’ says the Lord. ‘I have plans to prosper you, not to harm you. I have plans to give you a future filled with hope.
29:12 When you call out to me and come to me in prayer, I will hear your prayers.
29:13 When you seek me in prayer and worship, you will find me available to you. If you seek me with all your heart and soul,
29:14 I will make myself available to you,’ says the Lord. ‘Then I will reverse your plight and will regather you from all the nations and all the places where I have exiled you,’ says the Lord. ‘I will bring you back to the place from which I exiled you.’
29:15 “You say, ‘The Lord has raised up prophets of good news for us here in Babylon.’
29:16 But just listen to what the Lord has to say about the king who occupies David’s throne and all your fellow countrymen who are still living in this city of Jerusalem and were not carried off into exile with you.
29:17 The Lord who rules over all says, ‘I will bring war, starvation, and disease on them. I will treat them like figs that are so rotten they cannot be eaten.
29:18 I will chase after them with war, starvation, and disease. I will make all the kingdoms of the earth horrified at what happens to them. I will make them examples of those who are cursed, objects of horror, hissing scorn, and ridicule among all the nations where I exile them.
29:19 For they have not paid attention to what I said to them through my servants the prophets whom I sent to them over and over again,’ says the Lord. ‘And you exiles have not paid any attention to them either,’ says the Lord.
29:20 ‘So pay attention to what I, the Lord, have said, all you exiles whom I have sent to Babylon from Jerusalem.’
29:21 “The Lord God of Israel who rules over all also has something to say about Ahab son of Kolaiah and Zedekiah son of Maaseiah, who are prophesying lies to you and claiming my authority to do so. ‘I will hand them over to King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon and he will execute them before your very eyes.
29:22 And all the exiles of Judah who are in Babylon will use them as examples when they put a curse on anyone. They will say, “May the Lord treat you like Zedekiah and Ahab whom the king of Babylon roasted to death in the fire!”
29:23 This will happen to them because they have done what is shameful in Israel. They have committed adultery with their neighbors’ wives and have spoken lies while claiming my authority. They have spoken words that I did not command them to speak. I know what they have done. I have been a witness to it,’ says the Lord.”
29:24 The Lord told Jeremiah, “Tell Shemaiah the Nehelamite
29:25 that the Lord God of Israel who rules over all has a message for him. Tell him, ‘On your own initiative you sent a letter to the priest Zephaniah son of Maaseiah and to all the other priests and to all the people in Jerusalem. In your letter you said to Zephaniah,
29:26 “The Lord has made you priest in place of Jehoiada. He has put you in charge in the Lord’s temple of controlling any lunatic who pretends to be a prophet. And it is your duty to put any such person in the stocks with an iron collar around his neck.
29:27 You should have reprimanded Jeremiah from Anathoth who is pretending to be a prophet among you!
29:28 For he has even sent a message to us here in Babylon. He wrote and told us, “You will be there a long time. Build houses and settle down. Plant gardens and eat what they produce.”’”
29:29 Zephaniah the priest read that letter to the prophet Jeremiah.
29:30 Then the Lord spoke to Jeremiah.
29:31 “Send a message to all the exiles in Babylon. Tell them, ‘The Lord has spoken about Shemaiah the Nehelamite. “Shemaiah has spoken to you as a prophet even though I did not send him. He is making you trust in a lie.
29:32 Because he has done this,” the Lord says, “I will punish Shemaiah the Nehelamite and his whole family. There will not be any of them left to experience the good things that I will do for my people. I, the Lord, affirm it! For he counseled rebellion against the Lord.”’”
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
Jeremiah writes to the first wave of Judean exiles in Babylon after Jeconiah's deportation, while Zedekiah still sits on David's throne in Jerusalem. The letter directly answers false assurances of a quick return and follows the conflict over Jeremiah's yoke message and the false prophet Hananiah in the preceding chapters.
Historical setting and dynamics
This letter belongs to the early exilic period, after the 597 BC deportation but before Jerusalem's final fall in 586 BC. The exiles in Babylon were living under imperial domination, while those left in Jerusalem still hoped for rapid reversal. Jeremiah speaks with divine authority against rival prophets who promised a short exile and against political-religious pressure to treat Babylon as merely temporary. The commands to build, plant, marry, and multiply assume a long-term displacement under God's providential rule, yet not a permanent abandonment of the covenant people. The repeated contrast between exiles and Jerusalem survivors shows that the apparently safer group in the land is in fact under severe judgment.
Central idea
God tells the exiles to live faithfully in Babylon for the long haul, seeking the welfare of the city where he has placed them, while rejecting prophets who promise immediate relief. Their restoration will come only after the appointed seventy years, and those who continue to speak rebellion in God's name will face judgment. The passage therefore binds together discipline, patience, hope, and truthfulness under the sovereign rule of the Lord.
Context and flow
Jeremiah 29 follows the sign-act conflict in Jeremiah 27-28 and prepares for the larger restoration promises that begin in chapters 30-33. The unit opens with the letter's delivery, moves through commands for settled life and warnings against false prophecy, then turns to the promise of restoration after seventy years. The latter half contrasts the fate of Jerusalem's remaining leaders and the false prophets Ahab, Zedekiah, and Shemaiah, closing with a public example of divine judgment on prophetic rebellion.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter is an inspired letter, not merely a private note: Jeremiah speaks to the exiles on the Lord's behalf, and the opening formula repeatedly stresses that the Lord is the one who sent them into exile. That divine agency matters. Babylon is not ultimate; it is the instrument of covenant discipline. The first command set is strikingly ordinary: build houses, plant gardens, marry, have children, and multiply. Jeremiah is not telling the exiles to assimilate religiously or forget Jerusalem; he is telling them to live responsibly under God's providential judgment during a long interim.
Verse 7 is central. The exiles must seek the welfare of the city where God has placed them and pray to the Lord for it. This does not mean Babylon has become righteous or covenantally privileged; it means God's people, even while under chastening, are to act as obedient pilgrims within the structures of ordinary life. The city’s welfare and the exiles’ welfare are linked because the Lord governs both. The repeated divine self-identification as the Lord God of Israel who rules over all keeps the whole unit from being read as mere survival advice.
Verses 8-9 sharply reject prophetic and divinatory deception. The issue is not simply different opinions about politics; it is false speech that claims divine authority without divine sending. Jeremiah insists that the community must test claims by whether the Lord actually sent the messenger. This is a major theme in Jeremiah: the crisis is not only external Babylonian power but also internal spiritual deceit.
Verses 10-14 provide the time frame and the hope. The seventy years are presented as a fixed period of Babylonian dominance/exile after which God will “visit” his people graciously and restore them. The promise in verse 11 must be read corporately and covenantally: it is addressed to exiles as a people, not as a detached slogan of individual success. The language of prospering and hope is real, but it is tied to restored relationship after judgment. Verses 12-13 connect restoration to prayerful seeking; the people who were resistant and inattentive before exile are now called to wholehearted return to the Lord. This is not mechanical: the Lord hears and makes himself available to those who seek him sincerely.
Verses 15-20 correct the exiles' assumptions about those left in Jerusalem. The apparently fortunate remnant in the land is actually under severe covenant judgment because they ignored the prophets repeatedly sent to them. The image of rotten figs recalls the earlier symbolic vision of chapter 24 and reinforces the same verdict: the land-based survivors are not the assured future of God's people. The exile is painful, but it is not the final word; the judgment of Jerusalem's remaining leaders shows that proximity to the temple or throne does not guarantee security when the word of the Lord has been refused.
Verses 21-23 pronounce judgment on Ahab and Zedekiah, false prophets who spoke in God's name and also lived shamefully. Their immorality and deceit belong together: false teaching and moral corruption reinforce one another. The public execution and curse formula mark them as notorious examples of covenant shame. Verses 24-32 then expose Shemaiah's attempt to use institutional pressure in Jerusalem to silence Jeremiah. The Lord answers by defending his own prophet, condemning Shemaiah for prophesying without being sent, and announcing that Shemaiah's family will miss the good the Lord will do for his people. The final line is especially severe: he has counseled rebellion against the Lord. The issue is not personality conflict but resistance to God's authoritative word.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely in the Mosaic covenant setting, where persistent disobedience has brought the curse of exile and where repentance and return remain available under God's covenant faithfulness. The seventy-year period reflects disciplined judgment rather than covenant abandonment, and the promised regathering anticipates the restoration language that will dominate Jeremiah 30-33 and the postexilic return. The Davidic line is still present in Jerusalem, but it is not the final source of hope; the Lord himself governs the times of chastening and restoration. The passage therefore preserves Israel's identity, land hope, and corporate future while pointing beyond immediate circumstances to the Lord's larger redemptive purpose.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God's sovereignty over empires, prophets, time, and exile itself. He sends into exile, sets the duration of discipline, hears prayer, and restores his people in mercy. It also reveals the seriousness of speaking in God's name without authorization: false prophecy is not a harmless error but rebellion. The text commends patient obedience under chastening, sincere seeking of the Lord, and concern for the common welfare even in an alien setting. It also shows that covenant judgment is real, but not the end of God's purposes for his people.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
This unit contains direct prophetic word rather than speculative symbolism. The seventy years should be read as a real, divinely appointed period of Babylonian supremacy/exile, not as a code for uncontrolled allegory. The rotten figs and the curse formula are symbolic only in the sense already established in Jeremiah 24 and in common prophetic rhetoric: they illustrate the judgment of the apparently secure Jerusalem remnant and the shame of false prophets. The later use of the seventy years in Daniel confirms its historical and theological weight, but the passage itself is first a promise of corporate restoration after a fixed judgment period.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The commands to marry, have children, and multiply reflect household and clan continuity in an honor-based, family-centered society. Seeking the city's welfare under foreign rule would have been counterintuitive to exiles who expected a quick return, which is why the command is so striking. The letter form, the use of official envoys, and the public reading of correspondence fit the diplomatic world of the ancient Near East. The curse language and public examples of judgment also reflect a communal social world where shame, reputation, and corporate memory mattered deeply.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this passage advances the exile-and-restoration theme that runs from Deuteronomy through the prophets and into the return from Babylon. Jeremiah's faithful word in the face of false prophecy anticipates the larger prophetic pattern of God's true messenger rejected by his own people. The promise of regathering after judgment contributes to the hope that later prophets and postexilic writers develop, and it remains part of the Bible's larger movement toward a final, lasting restoration under God's reign. In a broader canonical sense, the passage does not directly predict Christ, but it does prepare for the need of the faithful prophet, the true shepherd of the exiles, and the ultimate peace and restoration that only God can secure through his appointed king.
Practical and doctrinal implications
For the exiles in Babylon, this passage calls for patient, ordinary faithfulness in a real historical setting of chastening: work, family life, prayer, and the pursuit of the common good under God's providence. For contemporary readers, the application is analogical rather than direct; the exiles’ situation is unique, but their posture of obedient endurance, sincere seeking of the Lord, and refusal to trust false spiritual assurances remains instructive. The text warns strongly against spiritual confidence built on unverifiable claims, dreams, or messages that contradict God's word. It also teaches that discipline is meant to drive God's people back to wholehearted seeking, not to despair. Pastors and teachers should handle Jeremiah 29:11 carefully, keeping it tied to God's corporate promise of restoration to exiles rather than treating it as a generic guarantee of personal ease or success.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive crux is the scope of the promise in verses 11-14: it is a corporate restoration word to exiled Judah, not an individualized promise detached from covenant discipline. A secondary issue is the relationship between the settled-life commands and exile: the exiles are to build a durable life in Babylon without surrendering their covenant identity or trusting Babylonian voices over the Lord's word.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this passage into a universal promise of personal prosperity. Its promise belongs to exiled Judah under specific covenant conditions and must be read as corporate restoration after judgment. Likewise, the call to seek the city's welfare should not be used to erase the distinct identity of God's people or to imply endorsement of Babylon's idolatry.
Key Hebrew terms
shalom
Gloss: peace / welfare / well-being
In verse 7 the exiles are told to seek the city's shalom. The term includes more than inner peace; it refers to the ordered welfare of the community, which will in turn affect the exiles' own welfare.
darash
Gloss: seek, inquire after
In verses 12-13 the call to seek the Lord with all heart and soul is the proper covenant response to discipline. It means earnest, whole-person pursuit, not casual religious interest.
shuv
Gloss: turn back / restore / bring back
The restoration language in verses 10 and 14 frames the exile as temporary and governed by God's action. The same root often marks both physical return and covenantal reversal of fortunes.
sheqer
Gloss: lie / falsehood
The false prophets speak in God's name but deliver lies. The term underscores the moral and covenantal seriousness of counterfeit revelation.
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