Jeremiah imprisoned under Zedekiah
Jeremiah 37 shows that Judah’s leaders are still refusing the Lord’s word even while asking for his help. God answers by declaring that Egypt will not save Jerusalem, Babylon will return, and the city will fall. The chapter also shows the cost of faithful prophecy: Jeremiah is falsely accused, abuse
Commentary
37:1 Zedekiah son of Josiah succeeded Jeconiah son of Jehoiakim as king. He was elevated to the throne of the land of Judah by King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon.
37:2 Neither he nor the officials who served him nor the people of Judah paid any attention to what the Lord said through the prophet Jeremiah. The Lord Responds to Zedekiah’s Hope for Help
37:3 King Zedekiah sent Jehucal son of Shelemiah and the priest Zephaniah son of Maaseiah to the prophet Jeremiah. He told them to say, “Please pray to the Lord our God on our behalf.”
37:4 (Now Jeremiah had not yet been put in prison. So he was still free to come and go among the people as he pleased.
37:5 At that time the Babylonian forces had temporarily given up their siege against Jerusalem. They had had it under siege, but withdrew when they heard that the army of Pharaoh had set out from Egypt.)
37:6 The Lord gave the prophet Jeremiah a message for them. He told him to tell them,
37:7 “The Lord God of Israel says, ‘Give a message to the king of Judah who sent you to ask me to help him. Tell him, “The army of Pharaoh that was on its way to help you will go back home to Egypt.
37:8 Then the Babylonian forces will return. They will attack the city and will capture it and burn it down.
37:9 Moreover, I, the Lord, warn you not to deceive yourselves into thinking that the Babylonian forces will go away and leave you alone. For they will not go away.
37:10 For even if you were to defeat all the Babylonian forces fighting against you so badly that only wounded men were left lying in their tents, they would get up and burn this city down.”’” Jeremiah is Charged with Deserting, Arrested, and Imprisoned
37:11 The following events also occurred while the Babylonian forces had temporarily withdrawn from Jerusalem because the army of Pharaoh was coming.
37:12 Jeremiah started to leave Jerusalem to go to the territory of Benjamin. He wanted to make sure he got his share of the property that was being divided up among his family there.
37:13 But he only got as far as the Benjamin Gate. There an officer in charge of the guards named Irijah, who was the son of Shelemiah and the grandson of Hananiah, stopped him. He seized Jeremiah and said, “You are deserting to the Babylonians!”
37:14 Jeremiah answered, “That’s a lie! I am not deserting to the Babylonians.” But Irijah would not listen to him. Irijah put Jeremiah under arrest and took him to the officials.
37:15 The officials were very angry at Jeremiah. They had him flogged and put in prison in the house of Jonathan, the royal secretary, which they had converted into a place for confining prisoners.
37:16 So Jeremiah was put in prison in a cell in the dungeon in Jonathan’s house. He was kept there for a long time.
37:17 Then King Zedekiah had him brought to the palace. There he questioned him privately and asked him, “Is there any message from the Lord?” Jeremiah answered, “Yes, there is.” Then he announced, “You will be handed over to the king of Babylon.”
37:18 Then Jeremiah asked King Zedekiah, “What crime have I committed against you, or the officials who serve you, or the people of Judah? What have I done to make you people throw me into prison?
37:19 Where now are the prophets who prophesied to you that the king of Babylon would not attack you or this land?
37:20 But now please listen, your royal Majesty, and grant my plea for mercy. Do not send me back to the house of Jonathan, the royal secretary. If you do, I will die there.”
37:21 Then King Zedekiah ordered that Jeremiah be committed to the courtyard of the guardhouse. He also ordered that a loaf of bread be given to him every day from the baker’s street until all the bread in the city was gone. So Jeremiah was kept in the courtyard of the guardhouse.
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
Zedekiah reigns as a Babylonian-installed vassal king in the final years before Jerusalem’s fall. The temporary Babylonian withdrawal, prompted by news of Pharaoh’s advancing army, creates a brief political opening that tempts Judah to hope for Egyptian rescue. In that unstable setting, the court seeks Jeremiah’s prayer while still refusing his word, and political suspicion turns a prophet’s ordinary movement toward Benjamin into an accusation of treason. The officials’ violence and Zedekiah’s hesitant intervention show a collapsing regime that can neither trust God’s message nor sustain justice.
Central idea
Jeremiah 37 shows that Judah’s leaders are still refusing the Lord’s word even while asking for his help. God answers by declaring that Egypt will not save Jerusalem, Babylon will return, and the city will fall. The chapter also shows the cost of faithful prophecy: Jeremiah is falsely accused, abused, and imprisoned, yet God preserves him and keeps his message alive before the king.
Context and flow
This unit comes near the close of Jeremiah’s warnings to Judah, after the book has already shown repeated rejection of the prophet’s message. It opens with Zedekiah’s insecure reign under Babylon, moves to the Lord’s oracle that overturns Judah’s hopes of Egyptian aid, and then shifts to Jeremiah’s arrest and later private interview with the king. The chapter prepares for the following imprisonment scenes and for the final, irreversible fall of Jerusalem.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter begins by locating Zedekiah’s rule inside Babylonian control: he is king only because Nebuchadnezzar placed him there. That political fact matters, because the narrative immediately exposes the larger spiritual fact: neither king nor court nor people are listening to the Lord’s word through Jeremiah. Zedekiah nevertheless sends envoys asking, “Please pray to the Lord our God on our behalf,” which sounds pious but does not amount to repentance or submission.
The Lord’s answer is direct and unsparing. Jeremiah is to tell the king that Egypt’s military movement will fail and that Babylon will return, capture the city, and burn it. Verse 9 warns against self-deception, and verse 10 intensifies the certainty: even if Judah were to crush the Babylonian army down to wounded men, they would still rise and burn the city. The point is not mere military forecast but divine judgment. Judah’s hopes are not only politically mistaken; they are an act of self-deception in the face of God’s declared purpose.
The narrative then shows how the Lord’s word provokes human hostility. Jeremiah’s attempt to leave Jerusalem for Benjamin is explained as an ordinary family matter involving property division, not as treason. But at the Benjamin Gate he is seized and accused of defecting to the Babylonians. The text emphasizes the falsity of the charge and the refusal of the guard officer to hear Jeremiah’s defense. The officials, already angry at Jeremiah, beat him and confine him in the house of Jonathan the royal secretary, which has been repurposed as a prison. This detail shows the breakdown of ordered justice in the city: the royal household itself becomes an instrument of suppression.
Zedekiah then secretly summons Jeremiah and asks for a word from the Lord. The private setting suggests political caution rather than courage. Jeremiah answers with the same basic message already given publicly: the king will be handed over to Babylon. He then asks what crime he has committed and reminds the king that the court’s prophets were wrong when they promised safety from Babylon. The prophet’s plea is both personal and theological: if he must remain confined, at least he should not be returned to the dungeon house where he will die. Zedekiah’s final order is a limited mercy. Jeremiah is moved to the courtyard of the guardhouse and provided daily bread until the city’s bread is gone. The king cannot reverse the judgment, but he can preserve the prophet whom he continues to consult.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage belongs to the terminal phase of Judah’s covenant unfaithfulness under the Mosaic covenant. The kingdom is under judgment because the nation has refused to hear the Lord’s repeated warnings through Jeremiah. Babylon functions as the instrument of covenant discipline, while the failure of Egypt underscores the futility of trusting foreign powers instead of the Lord. The Davidic monarchy, now reduced to Zedekiah’s compromised rule, is reaching its end, and the chapter moves the storyline toward exile as the just outcome of covenant rebellion and toward the later hope of restoration beyond judgment.
Theological significance
The passage shows the sovereignty of God over nations, kings, sieges, and outcomes that look politically uncertain from a human standpoint. It also exposes the moral gravity of refusing God’s word while still seeking his help. Jeremiah embodies faithful prophetic witness: he speaks truth without softening judgment, yet he also suffers unjustly at the hands of leaders who fear reality more than they fear the Lord. The chapter therefore highlights divine truthfulness, human unbelief, covenant accountability, and God’s preserving care for his servant.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
The oracle against false hope is direct prophecy, not symbolic vision. The temporary Babylonian withdrawal and expected Egyptian help serve as concrete historical circumstances through which the Lord announces judgment. Jeremiah’s persecution contributes to the wider biblical pattern of the rejected prophet, but that pattern should be treated cautiously and not over-allegorized here. No major symbol requires special comment beyond the plain historical meaning.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects honor-shame and court politics: the king seeks divine help, but he does so privately and without public submission, likely because the officials are watching. The Benjamin Gate functions as a real boundary point on the road toward tribal territory, making Jeremiah’s travel believable in ordinary family terms. The conversion of a royal secretary’s house into a prison shows how administrative space could be repurposed in crisis. The repeated concern with family property also fits a clan-oriented social world in which inheritance and land division matter.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage is about Jeremiah’s faithful ministry under judgment, not a direct messianic oracle. Canonically, however, it strengthens the pattern of the righteous servant-prophet who is rejected by his own people while speaking God’s true word. Jeremiah’s suffering anticipates later biblical themes of the rejected messenger and prepares the way for the fuller revelation of the One who is likewise opposed, falsely accused, and yet faithful in declaring God’s word. The passage contributes to the canon’s expectation that God’s truth may be publicly resisted but will stand.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s word must be obeyed, not merely consulted in crisis. Leaders and congregations can ask for prayer while still hardening themselves against the Lord’s message. False security is dangerous, especially when it comes from flattering voices rather than from God’s revealed truth. Faithful ministry may bring misunderstanding and loss, but God remains able to preserve his servants and keep their testimony alive. Justice matters: political suspicion and expedience are no excuse for silencing truth.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten Jeremiah’s imprisonment into a generic model for all suffering or all dissent. The point is not that every hardship proves righteousness, but that this particular suffering comes from faithful witness in a covenant lawsuit context. Also avoid treating Judah’s political collapse as a simple template for modern nations; the passage is first about covenant judgment on Israel/Judah under the Mosaic arrangement.
Key Hebrew terms
shama‘
Gloss: hear; obey
The opening diagnosis is that Zedekiah, his officials, and the people did not 'listen' to the Lord’s word. In Jeremiah, failure to hear is covenant rebellion, not mere ignorance.
sheqer
Gloss: falsehood; lie
Jeremiah’s denial of desertion is framed as a false accusation. The term sharpens the contrast between the prophet’s truthfulness and the officials’ unjust suspicion.
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