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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— <strong>The</strong> view from Jerusalem —<br />

This is the core of the matter, and even those prophecies in Jeremiah that appear<br />

to be backward glances at the events are best understood as voicing the doctrine of<br />

submission to empires. Huffmon is exceptional in his understanding of the prophet’s<br />

devotion to his people, notwithstanding his incessant diatribes. It has been an egregious<br />

misunderstanding of the classical Hebrew prophets to regard their internationalism<br />

as coming at the expense of their loyalty to their own people; not to the kings of<br />

Israel and Judah, of course, but to the kinship of the nation. Huffmon continues:<br />

“God’s people were now making their way in a new international order and needed<br />

a unifying theology not linked to political independence, a theology . . . that helped<br />

to bring together all that was left of Israel” (Huffmon 1999: 268, with deletion).<br />

Now, Huffmon associates the doctrine of political dependency specifically with<br />

Jeremiah, suggesting that it was a product of his own age, informed by Josiah’s cultic<br />

reforms, unsuccessful as they may have been. As we have argued this ideology has a<br />

history, and is best understood as an application of First Isaiah’s doctrine of a century<br />

earlier, coming in response to the Assyrian crisis. If anything, Jeremiah sharpened<br />

First Isaiah’s doctrine, so that Assyria, (or “the king of Assyria”), the rod of Yahweh’s<br />

rage, has now become “Nebuchadnezzar, my servant” (Hebrew: ‘abdî) in Jeremiah<br />

(25: 9; 27: 6; 43: 10).<br />

Jeremiah 27: Nebuchadnezzar II as Yahweh’s servant<br />

<strong>The</strong> clearest exposition of the doctrine of submission to Babylonia as part of Yahweh’s<br />

plan for the whole earth is to be found in Jeremiah 27, perhaps the most ideologically<br />

enlightening of the Zedekiah prophecies. It is likely that Jeremiah 25 represents a<br />

reworking of chapter 27, in which we find the prophecy of seventy years that explicitly<br />

predicts the downfall of Babylonia, and which morphs into a prophecy of Judean<br />

restoration. Both prophecies refer to the king of Babylonia as “my servant,” as does<br />

Jer 43: 10, in a communication to the prophet Jeremiah predicting a <strong>Babylonian</strong><br />

conquest of Egypt. Without entering into the historical setting of that prophecy, it<br />

is important ideologically because the scope of the doctrine that the king of Babylonia<br />

is Yahweh’s agent is broadened to include Egypt.<br />

<strong>The</strong> message of Jeremiah 27 is that there is still time to save the people of Judah<br />

and Jerusalem, even after the catastrophes that had occurred during the reigns of<br />

Jehoiakim and Jehoiachin, if only Zedekiah, king of Judah, “brings his neck under<br />

the yoke of the king of Babylonia” ( Jer 27: 8, 11, and following). Wearing a yoke<br />

and reins to dramatize the oracle, the prophet has this to say to Zedekiah:<br />

I have made the earth, and humans and beasts on the earth, with my great<br />

strength and with my outstretched arm, and I have granted it to whom is upright<br />

in my sight. And now, I have placed all of these lands into the power of<br />

Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylonia, my servant, and the beasts of the field, as<br />

well, have I granted to him, to serve him. All the nations will serve him until<br />

the time of his land will come for him, too, and then large nations and great<br />

kings will render him subservient (in turn). It shall occur, that the nation or the<br />

kingdom that will not serve him, namely, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylonia,<br />

and will not place his neck under the yoke of the king of Babylonia – I will visit<br />

553

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