Jeremiah buys a field
Jeremiah’s purchase of a field during Jerusalem’s siege is a deliberate sign that judgment is not the last word: the land will one day be restored and normal life resumed. The unit joins careful legal action, Jeremiah’s prayerful bewilderment, and God’s answer to show that the Lord is both righteous
Commentary
32:1 In the tenth year that Zedekiah was ruling over Judah the Lord spoke to Jeremiah. That was the same as the eighteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar.
32:2 Now at that time, the armies of the king of Babylon were besieging Jerusalem. The prophet Jeremiah was confined in the courtyard of the guardhouse attached to the royal palace of Judah.
32:3 For King Zedekiah had confined Jeremiah there after he had reproved him for prophesying as he did. He had asked Jeremiah, “Why do you keep prophesying these things? Why do you keep saying that the Lord says, ‘I will hand this city over to the king of Babylon? I will let him capture it.
32:4 King Zedekiah of Judah will not escape from the Babylonians. He will certainly be handed over to the king of Babylon. He must answer personally to the king of Babylon and confront him face to face.
32:5 Zedekiah will be carried off to Babylon and will remain there until I have fully dealt with him. I, the Lord, affirm it! Even if you continue to fight against the Babylonians, you cannot win.’”
32:6 So now, Jeremiah said, “The Lord told me,
32:7 ‘Hanamel, the son of your uncle Shallum, will come to you soon. He will say to you, “Buy my field at Anathoth because you are entitled as my closest relative to buy it.”’
32:8 Now it happened just as the Lord had said! My cousin Hanamel came to me in the courtyard of the guardhouse. He said to me, ‘Buy my field which is at Anathoth in the territory of the tribe of Benjamin. Buy it for yourself since you are entitled as my closest relative to take possession of it for yourself.’ When this happened, I recognized that the Lord had indeed spoken to me.
32:9 So I bought the field at Anathoth from my cousin Hanamel. I weighed out seven ounces of silver and gave it to him to pay for it.
32:10 I signed the deed of purchase, sealed it, and had some men serve as witnesses to the purchase. I weighed out the silver for him on a scale.
32:11 There were two copies of the deed of purchase. One was sealed and contained the order of transfer and the conditions of purchase. The other was left unsealed.
32:12 I took both copies of the deed of purchase and gave them to Baruch son of Neriah, the son of Mahseiah. I gave them to him in the presence of my cousin Hanamel, the witnesses who had signed the deed of purchase, and all the Judeans who were housed in the courtyard of the guardhouse.
32:13 In the presence of all these people I instructed Baruch,
32:14 ‘The Lord God of Israel who rules over all says, “Take these documents, both the sealed copy of the deed of purchase and the unsealed copy. Put them in a clay jar so that they may be preserved for a long time to come.”’
32:15 For the Lord God of Israel who rules over all says, “Houses, fields, and vineyards will again be bought in this land.”’ Jeremiah’s Prayer of Praise and Bewilderment
32:16 “After I had given the copies of the deed of purchase to Baruch son of Neriah, I prayed to the Lord,
32:17 ‘Oh, Lord God, you did indeed make heaven and earth by your mighty power and great strength. Nothing is too hard for you!
32:18 You show unfailing love to thousands. But you also punish children for the sins of their parents. You are the great and powerful God who is known as the Lord who rules over all.
32:19 You plan great things and you do mighty deeds. You see everything people do. You reward each of them for the way they live and for the things they do.
32:20 You did miracles and amazing deeds in the land of Egypt which have had lasting effect. By this means you gained both in Israel and among humankind a renown that lasts to this day.
32:21 You used your mighty power and your great strength to perform miracles and amazing deeds and to bring great terror on the Egyptians. By this means you brought your people Israel out of the land of Egypt.
32:22 You kept the promise that you swore on oath to their ancestors. You gave them a land flowing with milk and honey.
32:23 But when they came in and took possession of it, they did not obey you or live as you had instructed them. They did not do anything that you commanded them to do. So you brought all this disaster on them.
32:24 Even now siege ramps have been built up around the city in order to capture it. War, starvation, and disease are sure to make the city fall into the hands of the Babylonians who are attacking it. Lord, you threatened that this would happen. Now you can see that it is already taking place.
32:25 The city is sure to fall into the hands of the Babylonians. Yet, in spite of this, you, Lord God, have said to me, “Buy that field with silver and have the transaction legally witnessed.”’” The Lord Answers Jeremiah’s Prayer
32:26 The Lord answered Jeremiah.
32:27 “I am the Lord, the God of all humankind. There is, indeed, nothing too difficult for me.
32:28 Therefore I, the Lord, say: ‘I will indeed hand this city over to King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon and the Babylonian army. They will capture it.
32:29 The Babylonian soldiers that are attacking this city will break into it and set it on fire. They will burn it down along with the houses where people have made me angry by offering sacrifices to the god Baal and by pouring out drink offerings to other gods on their rooftops.
32:30 This will happen because the people of Israel and Judah have repeatedly done what displeases me from their earliest history until now and because they have repeatedly made me angry by the things they have done. I, the Lord, affirm it!
32:31 This will happen because the people of this city have aroused my anger and my wrath since the time they built it until now. They have made me so angry that I am determined to remove it from my sight.
32:32 I am determined to do so because the people of Israel and Judah have made me angry with all their wickedness – they, their kings, their officials, their priests, their prophets, and especially the people of Judah and the citizens of Jerusalem have done this wickedness.
32:33 They have turned away from me instead of turning to me. I tried over and over again to instruct them, but they did not listen and respond to correction.
32:34 They set up their disgusting idols in the temple which I have claimed for my own and defiled it.
32:35 They built places of worship for the god Baal in the Valley of Ben Hinnom so that they could sacrifice their sons and daughters to the god Molech. Such a disgusting practice was not something I commanded them to do! It never even entered my mind to command them to do such a thing! So Judah is certainly liable for punishment.’
32:36 “You and your people are right in saying, ‘War, starvation, and disease are sure to make this city fall into the hands of the king of Babylon.’ But now I, the Lord God of Israel, have something further to say about this city:
32:37 ‘I will certainly regather my people from all the countries where I will have exiled them in my anger, fury, and great wrath. I will bring them back to this place and allow them to live here in safety.
32:38 They will be my people, and I will be their God.
32:39 I will give them a single-minded purpose to live in a way that always shows respect for me. They will want to do that for their own good and the good of the children who descend from them.
32:40 I will make a lasting covenant with them that I will never stop doing good to them. I will fill their hearts and minds with respect for me so that they will never again turn away from me.
32:41 I will take delight in doing good to them. I will faithfully and wholeheartedly plant them firmly in the land.’
32:42 “For I, the Lord, say: ‘I will surely bring on these people all the good fortune that I am hereby promising them. I will be just as sure to do that as I have been in bringing all this great disaster on them.
32:43 You and your people are saying that this land will become desolate, uninhabited by either people or animals. You are saying that it will be handed over to the Babylonians. But fields will again be bought in this land.
32:44 Fields will again be bought with silver, and deeds of purchase signed, sealed, and witnessed. This will happen in the territory of Benjamin, the villages surrounding Jerusalem, the towns in Judah, the southern hill country, the western foothills, and southern Judah. For I will restore them to their land. I, the Lord, affirm it!’”
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.
Historical setting and dynamics
This oracle is set in the final Babylonian siege of Jerusalem in Zedekiah’s tenth year, just before the city’s fall in 586/587 B.C. Jeremiah is confined in the guard court because his message of surrender to Babylon was regarded as treasonous. The field at Anathoth lies in Jeremiah’s family territory, so the purchase fits normal Israelite inheritance and kin-redemption expectations rather than a random land deal. The legal documentation, witnesses, and storage in a clay jar reflect a durable public record intended to outlast the coming exile. The passage also reflects the moral collapse of Judah: idolatry, rooftop worship, and child sacrifice have brought covenant judgment on city and people.
Central idea
Jeremiah’s purchase of a field during Jerusalem’s siege is a deliberate sign that judgment is not the last word: the land will one day be restored and normal life resumed. The unit joins careful legal action, Jeremiah’s prayerful bewilderment, and God’s answer to show that the Lord is both righteous in bringing exile and faithful in bringing a future return.
Context and flow
This unit comes in the middle section of Jeremiah’s book, where the Babylonian crisis has become unavoidable and Jeremiah’s prophecies have landed him in prison. It begins with the command and fulfillment of the field purchase, moves to Jeremiah’s prayer of protest and praise, and ends with God’s extended reply explaining both the certainty of judgment and the certainty of restoration. The closing promise that fields will again be bought deliberately answers the opening sign-act and frames the whole chapter.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter is built around a prophetic sign-act interpreted by divine speech. Verses 1-5 establish the crisis: Babylon surrounds Jerusalem, Jeremiah is imprisoned for announcing the city’s surrender, and Zedekiah’s resistance is exposed as futile. Against that backdrop, the Lord instructs Jeremiah that Hanamel will offer him a field at Anathoth, and the prediction is fulfilled exactly, confirming that the purchase is not Jeremiah’s private idea but a commanded act of faith.
Jeremiah’s careful observance of the legal procedure matters. He pays the price, signs and seals the deed, arranges witnesses, and gives both copies to Baruch for safe storage in a clay jar. The emphasis is not on investing in real estate but on public, durable testimony. In the middle of imminent conquest, the prophet behaves as though the land’s future still matters, because God has said it does.
Jeremiah’s prayer is strikingly balanced. He begins with the Creator’s absolute power and covenant love, then recalls the exodus, the gift of the land, and the people’s longstanding disobedience. He does not deny the justice of the coming catastrophe; indeed, he confesses it. His confusion is not about whether judgment is deserved, but how the command to purchase a field fits with the announced destruction. The prayer therefore functions as a faithful wrestling with divine revelation, not as unbelieving protest.
God’s answer resolves the tension by reaffirming both sides of the covenant. He will indeed give the city to Babylon because of persistent idolatry, including temple defilement and child sacrifice in the Valley of Ben Hinnom. The indictment spreads across every level of society: kings, officials, priests, prophets, and the people. Judgment is comprehensive and morally justified.
Yet the same Lord also promises regathering, restoration, and renewed covenant life. He will bring his people back from all the nations, give them safety, and reestablish the mutual covenant formula, “They will be my people, and I will be their God.” The emphasis on one heart and one way, and on a lasting covenant that keeps them from turning away, points to a deep inward renewal rather than mere geographic relocation. The promise that he will plant them in the land ties the restoration to both land and heart. The chapter closes by returning to the original sign-act: the same land that is now doomed will again see deeds signed, sealed, and witnessed. The command to buy the field is therefore a lived prophecy of future restoration.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands at the end of the Mosaic covenant era in Judah, when covenant curses are being realized through exile. Jeremiah interprets the siege as righteous judgment for persistent covenant violation, especially idolatry and rebellion. At the same time, the restoration promises move beyond mere return from exile toward the deeper renewal later described as a lasting covenant with internalized fear of the Lord. The unit therefore belongs to the transition from judgment under the old covenant administration to the hope of restored peoplehood, land, and obedient hearts under God’s future saving work.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God as sovereign over nations, history, land, and legal outcomes; nothing is too hard for him. It shows that covenant judgment is not arbitrary but is rooted in sustained rebellion, idolatry, and refusal to listen to correction. It also displays the firmness of divine mercy: the same God who expels his people for sin promises to regather, restore, and replant them. Jeremiah’s prayer models reverent honesty before God, while the sign-act teaches that obedience may look irrational when viewed only through present circumstances.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
The field purchase is a deliberate prophetic sign-act, not a hidden allegory. The sealed deed, unsealed copy, and clay jar symbolize the preservation of the promise through the long exile. The future buying of fields in Judah is the concrete symbol of restored settlement and covenant life. This should be read as historical restoration hope, with later canonical resonance in the larger pattern of exile and return, not as a warrant for free-floating symbolism.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage assumes kinship-based land rights, where a close relative could redeem family property to keep it within the clan. It also reflects a public legal culture in which witnessed, sealed documents and durable storage safeguarded property claims. The prayer’s appeal to God’s power, fame, and acts in Egypt is typical of covenantal remembrance: past redemption establishes confidence in future action. The language of divine wrath and planting also works in concrete, covenantal terms rather than abstract philosophical categories.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In the Old Testament setting, the passage promises Judah’s real historical return to the land after deserved exile. Canonically, it echoes the Abrahamic land promise, the Mosaic blessings and curses, and the prophetic hope of a restored people with an obedient heart. The repeated language of a lasting covenant and inward fear of the Lord anticipates the new covenant hope more fully articulated in Jeremiah 31, though this chapter itself still keeps the restoration tied to Judah’s land and national life. In the wider canon, the faithful God who restores after judgment prepares the way for the Messiah’s saving work and the final fulfillment of covenant blessing.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should not measure God’s promises only by present circumstances; obedience may require acting on God’s word before visible fulfillment appears. The passage teaches that judgment for sin is real, especially where God’s people persist in idolatry and refuse correction. It also encourages prayer that is both reverent and candid, bringing confusion to God without denying his justice. For ministry, it warns against calling despairing pragmatism faith and calls leaders to embody hope grounded in God’s speech. The chapter also cautions readers not to detach restoration promises from the holiness and repentance that Scripture consistently requires.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive tension is how the promised restoration in verses 37-41 relates to the earlier new covenant promise in Jeremiah 31. The two passages are closely related but not identical in emphasis: this chapter stresses regathering, safety, and replanting in the land, while also including inward renewal and lasting covenant faithfulness. The legal details of the deed and jar are clear in their function even if every archival practice cannot be reconstructed with certainty.
Application boundary note
Application should not turn this passage into a generic guarantee that difficult investments or visible losses will always reverse quickly. The field purchase is a unique prophetic sign in a specific covenant-historical setting, not a template for naming and claiming land or prosperity. Readers should also avoid flattening Judah’s restoration into a direct one-to-one promise to the church or erasing Israel’s historical place in the text. The central application is confidence in God’s word, especially when obedience seems to contradict present appearances.
Key Hebrew terms
ga'al
Gloss: redeem, buy back, act as a close relative
The purchase rests on family redemption rights; this is not merely a commercial transaction but a kinship-based claim tied to inheritance and land within Israel.
qanah
Gloss: buy, acquire, purchase
The repeated language of buying underscores the legal reality of the act and, symbolically, the future normalcy of land ownership after exile.
sadeh
Gloss: field, cultivated land
The bought field stands for the broader promise that land in Judah will again be inhabitable, cultivable, and transferable under restored conditions.
sefer
Gloss: document, writing, deed
The written deed, sealed and unsealed, marks the transaction as legally valid and preserves it for a future beyond the siege.
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