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18:1–12 Jeremiah receives divine instructions for another symbolic action (compare Jer 13:1–11 and note); this time, he is to observe the local potter at work and remind Israel that Yahweh’s role is analogous to the potter, who does as he wishes with the clay.

Symbolic Actions of the Prophets Table

18:2 to the house of the potter The Hebrew word used here means “shaper” and is related to one of the terms used to describe Yahweh’s creative activity. In Genesis 2:7, Yahweh shapes Adam from the dust; this act is likely the basis for the potter metaphor for God.

Pottery was an important industry since clay vessels were the most common containers for serving, cooking, and storage. A ceramic pot could hold more weight than a woven basket and could also hold liquids. Pieces of pottery, which was cheap, are possibly the most common artifact unearthed in archaeological excavations. Archaeologists use pottery to help date their discoveries by tracking the characteristic changes over time in the form, type of clay, decorative style, and handle design of the ceramics combined with the stratigraphy of the ancient city or tell. Pottery was essential for developing an accurate chronology of ancient Palestine.

Stratigraphy ALB10000586BCE

Pottery ZEB M—P

Pottery AEHL

Pottery AYBD

18:3 was doing work at the potter’s wheels The most common method of shaping clay into pottery was to use a potter’s wheel, turned by hand or by foot.

There were two types of potter’s wheels in Jeremiah’s time. The slow wheel, or tournette, was turned by hand. The fast wheel was more common, and seventh-century examples have been uncovered at excavations at biblical Ekron. This fast wheel consisted of an upper stone wheel that held the clay and a larger stone wheel that the potter would spin with his or her feet.

18:4 he made again another vessel Jeremiah uses the potter’s ability to shape and reshape his work as an analogy for Yahweh’s care for His people. Reworking the same clay into a new vessel creates an added layer to the metaphor: Yahweh might reshape a new Israel, foreshadowing Jer 31.

18:6 Like this potter, am I not able to do to you O house of Israel? God as potter and His creation as clay is a common symbol for His sovereignty (see Isa 29:16 and note; Isa 45:9; Isa 64:8; Rom 9:20–23). The imagery is likely based on Gen 2:7. See note on Jer 18:2.

18:8 that nation The hypothetical conditions offered here are similar to Ezekiel’s discussion of moral responsibility in Ezek 18 (compare especially Ezek 18:21).

turns back from its evil A call for communal repentance using the Hebrew verb for “turn” or “repent.” Prophecies of judgment often included a call to repentance.

The Significance of “Shuv” in Jeremiah

I will relent The Hebrew verb here has a wide and nuanced range of meaning. It can be translated as “be sorry,” “show regret,” “show compassion,” or “be comforted,” and it can convey the sense of changing one’s mind based on circumstances or behavior. It is not too late for the people to repent. Yahweh chastised Jeremiah for putting words of repentance in their mouths in Jer 14:7–12. He wants the people to recognize their own sin, but they stubbornly refuse. No one else can intercede on their behalf (see 15:1).

While judgment oracles often include a call for the people to repent, the people rarely respond positively to the prophets. Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Isaiah all portray Israel as being almost beyond hope because of their rebellion and refusal to repent. They continually plead with Israel to turn back to Yahweh, knowing that if they don’t, the prophesied judgment will come. The prophet Jonah reflects this understanding that communal repentance can prevent divine judgment (see Jonah 3:9; 4:2). The positive response of Nineveh to his preaching is likely intended to shame Israel for their negative response to Yahweh in the face of similar prophetic warnings.

Nacham NIDOTTE

Jonah, Book of ZEB H—L

18:10 I will relent See note on Jer 18:8.

18:11 am preparing evil A play on words using yotser, which can be a noun (“potter”) and a verbal form (“shaping”).

18:12 we will go after our own plans The people blatantly reject Yahweh’s call to repent, ignoring the implications of Jeremiah’s analogy with the potter. Jeremiah’s sign-act in 19:1–11, where he breaks a large pot to symbolize the coming destruction of Judah, dramatically emphasizes the absurdity of their response.

18:13–17 An oracle of judgment, again focusing on Israel’s apostasy and idol worship. The poetry here is similar to ch. 2, especially in the use of rhetorical questions and geographic references (compare 2:10–11).

18:14 the snow of Lebanon Both rhetorical questions anticipate a negative answer; a positive answer would defy the natural order. A high mountain is going to have snow.

The reference here is to Mount Hermon (also called “Sirion”), which is more than 9,000 feet high. This peak in the Anti-Lebanon Mountains, north of the Sea of Galilee, marked the northern extent of tribal Israel (see Josh 11:17). Reading “Sirion” here requires a slight textual emendation of the Masoretic Text, which reads “field.” In Hebrew, the two terms could easily have been confused.

Sirion AYBD

18:15 go into bypaths, not one that is built up A metaphor for Israel wandering from the path Yahweh prepared for them. See Jer 6:16 and note.

18:17 Like the wind from the east I will scatter An east wind is often a scorching, violent windstorm (compare 4:11; Isa 27:8; Job 15:2; Gen 41:6; Jonah 4:8). Judgment by scattering is a common image based on the covenant curses. See Lev 26:33.

I will show them my back Symbolizes rejection, a removal of divine favor and presence.

18:18–23 In his fifth lament, Jeremiah describes the hostile response his prophetic ministry has received from the people of Judah, and he appeals to Yahweh to intervene and judge his persecutors. The laments reflect an individual, personal reaction to the role of a rejected prophet in ancient Israel.

18:18 plans against Jeremiah Jeremiah’s first two laments similarly focused on attempts on his life. See Jer 11:18–23 and note; 12:1–6 and note.

instruction will not be lost from the priest The people’s reaction depicts their defense of the three central and official religious offices—priest, prophet, and sage. The people believe Jeremiah is at odds with the will of Yahweh as revealed through His priests, His prophets, and the royal counselors. The people refused to believe Jeremiah was right and that their leaders were wrong (compare chs. 28; Ezek 7:26).

18:21 give their children to the famine The people for whom Jeremiah had interceded now reject him (Jer 18:20), so he asks God to bring judgment.

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