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Bible in 90 Days

An intensive Bible reading plan that walks through the entire Bible in 90 days.
Duration: 88 days
International Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Jeremiah 10:14-23:8

14 People are so stupid and know so little.
    Goldsmiths are made ashamed by their idols.
Those statues are only false gods.
    They have no breath in them.
15 They are worth nothing.
    People make fun of them.
When they are judged, they will be destroyed.
16 But God, who is Jacob’s Portion, is not like the idols.
    God made everything.
And he made Israel to be his special people.
    The Lord of heaven’s armies is his name.

Destruction Is Coming

17 Get everything you own and prepare to leave.
    You people of Judah are trapped in the city by your enemies.
18 This is what the Lord says:
    “At this time I will throw out the people of Judah who live in this land.
I will bring pain and trouble to them.
    And they will really feel it.”

19 How terrible it will be for me because of my injury.
    I am injured and cannot be healed.
Yet I told myself,
    “This is my sickness; I must suffer through it.”
20 My tent is ruined.
    All its ropes are broken.
My children have gone away and left me.
    No one is left to put up my tent.
    No one is left to set up a shelter for me.
21 The shepherds are stupid.
    They don’t ask the Lord.
So they do not have success.
    Their flocks are scattered and lost.
22 Listen! The news is coming.
    The loud noise is coming from the north.
It will make the towns of Judah an empty desert.
    They will become a home for wild dogs!

Jeremiah’s Prayer

23 Lord, I know that a person’s life doesn’t really belong to him.
    No one can control his own life.
24 Lord, correct me, but be fair.
    Don’t punish me in anger.
    If you do, you will destroy me.
25 Pour out your anger on other nations.
    They do not know you.
    They do not pray to you.
Those nations have destroyed Jacob’s family.
    They have eaten him up.
    They destroyed his homeland.

The Agreement Is Broken

11 These are the words that the Lord spoke to Jeremiah: “Listen to the words of this agreement. Tell the people of Judah about it. Tell it to those living in Jerusalem. Tell them this is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: ‘Trouble will come to anyone who does not obey this agreement. I am talking about the agreement I made with your ancestors. I made it with them when I brought them out of Egypt. Egypt was like a furnace for melting iron!’ I told them, ‘Obey me and do everything I command you. If you do this, you will be my people. And I will be your God. Then I will keep the promise I made to your ancestors. I promised to give them a land where much food grows.’ And you are living in that country today!”

I, Jeremiah, answered, “Amen, Lord.”

The Lord said this to me: “Prophesy this message in the towns of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem: ‘Listen to the words of this agreement. Then obey them! I warned your ancestors to obey me when I brought them out of Egypt. I have warned them again and again to this very day! But your ancestors did not listen to me. They were stubborn and did what their own evil hearts wanted. The agreement says curses will come upon them if they don’t obey it. So I made all those curses come upon them! I commanded them to obey the agreement, but they did not.’”

Then the Lord said to me, “I know the people of Judah and those living in Jerusalem have made secret plans. 10 They are doing the same sins their ancestors did! Their ancestors refused to listen to my message. They followed and worshiped other gods. The families of Israel and Judah have broken the agreement I made with their ancestors. 11 So this is what the Lord says: ‘I will soon bring a disaster on the people of Judah. They will not be able to escape! And they will cry to me for help. But I will not listen to them! 12 The people living in the towns of Judah and the city of Jerusalem will pray to their idols for help. They will burn incense to their idols. But those idols will not be able to help when that terrible time comes! 13 The people of Judah have as many idols as there are towns in Judah. They have built many altars for worshiping that shameful god Baal. There are as many altars as there are streets in Jerusalem!’

14 “As for you, Jeremiah, don’t pray for these people. Don’t cry out for them or ask anything for them. I will not listen when they call to me in the time of their trouble.

15 “What is my lover, Judah, doing in my Temple?
    She makes many evil plans.
    Does she think animal sacrifices will stop her punishment?
When you do your evil, then you are happy.”
16 The Lord called you “a leafy olive tree,
    with beautiful fruit to look at.”
But with a strong storm
    the Lord will set that tree on fire.
    And its branches will be burned up.

17 The Lord of heaven’s armies planted you. And he has announced that disaster will come to you. This is because the families of Israel and Judah have done evil things. They have made him angry by offering sacrifices to Baal.

Evil Plans Against Jeremiah

18 The Lord showed me that men were making plans against me. The Lord showed me what they were doing. So I knew they were against me. 19 Before this, I was like a gentle lamb waiting to be butchered. I did not know they had made plans against me. They said:

“Let us destroy the tree and its fruit!
    Let’s kill him!
    Then people will forget him!”
20 But, Lord of heaven’s armies, you are a fair judge.
    You know how to test peoples’ hearts and minds.
I will tell you what I have against them.
    And I will let you give them the punishment they should have!

21 So the Lord speaks about the men from Anathoth who were planning to kill Jeremiah. Those men say, “Don’t prophesy in the name of the Lord. If you do, we will kill you!” 22 So this is what the Lord of heaven’s armies says: “I will soon punish the men from Anathoth. Their young men will die in war. Their sons and daughters will die from hunger. 23 No one from the city of Anathoth will be left alive. I will cause a disaster to happen to them that year.”

Jeremiah’s First Complaint

12 Lord, if I complain to you,
    you are always right.
But I want to ask you about the justice you give.
    Why are evil people successful?
    Why do dishonest people have such easy lives?
You have put the evil people here.
    They are like plants with strong roots.
    They grow and produce fruit.
With their mouths they speak well of you.
    But their hearts are really far away from you.
But you know my heart, Lord.
    You see me and test my mind.
Drag the evil people away like sheep to be butchered.
    Set them aside for the day of killing.
How much longer will the land stay dried up?
    How long will the grass in every field be dead?
The animals and birds in the land have died.
    And it is because the people are evil.
Yet, they are saying,
    “God does not see what happens to us!”

God’s Answer to Jeremiah

“If you get tired racing against men,
    how can you race against horses?
You stumble in a country that is safe.
    What will you do in the thick thornbushes along the Jordan River?
These men are your own brothers.
    Members of your own family are making plans against you.
    People from your own family are crying out against you.
Don’t trust them,
    even when they speak to you like friends!

“I have left Israel.
    I have left my people.
I have given the people I love
    to their enemies.
My people have become
    like a lion in the forest to me.
They roar at me.
    So I hate them.
My people have become to me
    like a speckled bird attacked by hawks.
Go, gather the wild animals!
    Bring them to get something to eat.
10 Many shepherds will ruin my vineyards.
    They will walk on the plants in my field.
They will turn my beautiful field
    into an empty desert.
11 They will turn my field into a desert.
    It will be wilted and dead.
The whole country is an empty desert.
    This is because no one who lives there cares.
12 Many soldiers will march over those barren hills.
    The Lord will use the armies to punish that land.
People from one end of the land to the other will be punished.
    No one will be safe.
13 The people will plant wheat.
    But they will harvest only thorns.
They will work hard until they are very tired.
    But they will get nothing for all their work.
You will be ashamed of your poor harvest.
    The Lord’s terrible anger has caused this.”

14 This is what the Lord said to me: “Here is what I will do to those wicked people who take the land I gave my people, the Israelites. I will pull them up and throw them out of their land. And I will pull up the people of Judah from among them. 15 But after I pull them up, I will feel sorry for them. I will bring each person back to his own property. And I will bring him back to his own land. 16 I want them to learn their lessons well. In the past they taught my people to use Baal’s name to make promises. Now I want them to learn to use my name! I want them to say, ‘As surely as the Lord lives . . .’ If they do, I will allow them to be successful. And I will let them live among my people. 17 But a nation might not listen to my message. If it doesn’t, I will pull it up completely and destroy it,” says the Lord.

Jeremiah’s Linen Belt

13 This is what the Lord said to me: “Go and buy a linen belt. Then put it around your waist. Don’t let the belt get wet.”

So I bought a linen belt, just as the Lord told me. And I put it around my waist. Then the Lord spoke his word to me a second time: “Take the belt you bought and are wearing. Go to Perath. Hide the belt there in a crack in the rocks.” So I went to Perath and hid the belt there, just as the Lord told me.

Many days later the Lord said to me, “Now go to Perath. Get the belt that I told you to hide there.” So I went to Perath and dug up the belt. I took it from where I had hidden it. But now it was ruined. It was good for nothing.

Then the Lord spoke his word to me. This is what the Lord said: “In the same way I will ruin the pride of the people of Judah and the great pride of Jerusalem. 10 These evil people refuse to listen to my warnings. They stubbornly do only what they want to do. They follow other gods to serve and worship them. So they will become like this linen belt. They will be good for nothing. 11 A belt is wrapped tightly around a man’s waist. In the same way I wrapped the families of Israel and Judah around me,” says the Lord. “I did that so they would be my people. Then they would bring fame, praise and honor to me. But my people would not listen to me.

Warnings About Leather Wine Bags

12 “Say to them: ‘This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: All leather bags for holding wine should be filled with wine.’ People will say to you: ‘Of course, we know all wine bags should be filled with wine.’ 13 Then you will say to them, ‘This is what the Lord says: I will make everyone in this land like a drunken man. I am talking about the kings who sit on David’s throne. I am also talking about the priests and the prophets. I am talking about all the people who live in Jerusalem. 14 I will make the people of Judah stumble and fall into one another. Fathers and sons will fall into one another, says the Lord. I will not feel sorry or have pity for them. My mercy will not stop me from destroying them!’”

Threat of Slavery

15 Listen and pay attention.
    Don’t be too proud.
    The Lord has spoken to you.
16 Honor the Lord your God.
    Give him glory before he brings darkness.
Praise him before you fall
    on the dark hills.
You hope for light.
    But the Lord will turn it into thick darkness.
    He will change it into deep gloom.
17 If you don’t listen to the Lord,
    I will cry secretly.
    Your pride will cause me to cry.
I will cry painfully.
    My eyes will overflow with tears.
    This is because the Lord’s people will be captured.

18 Tell this to the king and queen mother:
    “Come down from your thrones.
Your beautiful crowns
    have fallen from your heads.”
19 The cities in the desert of southern Judah are shut up.
    No one can open them.
All Judah will be taken as captives to a foreign land.
    They will be carried away completely.

20 Jerusalem, look up and see.
    Someone comes from the north.
Where is the flock God gave to you to care for?
    It is the flock you bragged about.
21 What will you say when they appoint as your heads
    those you had thought were your friends?
Won’t you have much pain and trouble?
    Your pain will be like that of a woman having a baby.
22 You might ask yourself,
    “Why has this happened to me?”
It happened because of your many sins.
    Because of your sins, your skirt was torn off
    and your body has been treated badly.
23 A black man from Cush cannot change the color of his skin.
    A leopard cannot change his spots.
In the same way, Jerusalem, you cannot change and do good.
    You always do evil.

24 “I will scatter you like chaff that is blown away by the desert wind.
25 This is what will happen to you.
    This is your part in my plans,” says the Lord.
“This will happen because you forgot me.
    You have trusted in false gods.
26 Jerusalem, I will pull your skirts up over your face.
    Everyone will see you, and you will be ashamed.
27 I have seen the terrible things you have done.
    I know your acts of adultery and your snorting.
    I have seen you acting like a prostitute.
I have seen your hated acts
    on the hills and in the fields.
How terrible it will be for you, Jerusalem.
    How long will you continue being unclean?”

A Time Without Rain

14 These are the words that the Lord spoke to Jeremiah about the time when there was no rain:

“The nation of Judah cries.
    Her cities are dying.
They cry out for the land.
    A cry goes up to God from Jerusalem.
The important men send their servants to get water.
    The servants go to the wells,
    but they find no water.
So they return with empty jars.
    They are ashamed and embarrassed.
    They cover their heads in shame.
The ground is dry and cracked open
    because no rain falls on the land.
The farmers are upset and sad.
    So they cover their heads in shame.
Even the mother deer in the field
    leaves her fawn.
    She does this because there is no grass.
Wild donkeys stand on the bare hills.
    They sniff the wind like wild dogs.
But their eyes are dull because
    there is no food.”

We know that we suffer because of our sins.
    Lord, do something to help us for the good of your name.
We have left you many times.
    We have sinned against you.
God, you are the Hope of Israel.
    You have saved Israel in times of trouble.
But now you are like a stranger in the land.
    You are like a traveler who only stays one night.
You seem like a man who has been attacked by surprise.
    You seem like a warrior who is not able to save anyone.
But you are among us, Lord.
    And we are called by your name.
    So don’t leave us without help!

10 This is what the Lord says about the people of Judah:

“They really love to wander from me.
    They don’t stop themselves from leaving me.
So now I, the Lord, will not accept them.
    I will now remember the evil they do.
    I will punish them for their sins.”

11 Then the Lord said this to me: “Don’t pray for good things to happen to the people of Judah. 12 Even if they give up eating, I will not listen to their prayers. Even if they offer burnt offerings and grain offerings to me, I will not accept them. I will destroy the people of Judah with war, hunger and terrible diseases.”

13 But I said, “Oh! Lord God, the false prophets keep telling the people something different! They are saying, ‘You will not suffer from an enemy’s sword. You will never suffer from hunger. The Lord will give you peace in this land.’”

14 Then the Lord said to me, “Those prophets are prophesying lies in my name. I did not send them. I did not appoint them or speak to them. They have been prophesying false visions, idolatries and worthless magic. And they have been prophesying their own wishful thinking. 15 So this is what I say about the prophets who are prophesying in my name. I did not send them. They said, ‘No enemy with swords will ever attack this country. There will never be hunger in this land.’ Those prophets will die from hunger. And an enemy’s sword will kill them. 16 And the people the prophets spoke to will be thrown into the streets of Jerusalem. They will die from hunger and from an enemy’s sword. No one will be there to bury them. And no one will bury their wives, their sons or their daughters. I will punish them.

17 “Speak this message to the people of Judah:

‘Let my eyes be filled with tears.
    I will cry night and day, without stopping.
I will cry for my people.
    They have received a terrible blow.
    They have been hurt very badly.
18 If I go into the country,
    I see people killed by swords.
If I go into the city,
    I see much sickness because the people have no food.
Both the priests and the prophets
    have been taken to a foreign land.’”

19 Lord, have you completely rejected the nation of Judah?
    Do you hate Jerusalem?
Why have you hurt us so badly
    that we cannot be made well again?
We hoped for peace,
    but nothing good has come.
We looked for a time of healing,
    but only terror came.
20 Lord, we admit that we are very wicked.
    We admit that our ancestors did evil things.
    We have sinned against you.
21 For your sake, do not hate us.
    Do not take away the honor from your glorious throne.
Remember your agreement with us.
    Do not break it.
22 Do foreign idols have the power to bring rain?
    Does the sky itself have the power to send down showers of rain?
No, it is you, Lord our God.
    You are our only hope.
    You are the one who made all these things.

15 The Lord said to me: “I would not feel sorry for the people of Judah even if Moses and Samuel prayed for them. Send the people away from me! Tell them to go! They might ask you, ‘Where will we go?’ You tell them this: ‘This is what the Lord says:

Some people are meant to die.
    And they will die.
Some are meant to die in war.
    And they will die in war.
Some are meant to die from hunger.
    And they will die from hunger.
Some are meant to be taken as slaves to a foreign country.
    And they will become slaves in that foreign country.’

“I will send four kinds of destroyers against them,” says the Lord. “I will send war to kill. I will send dogs to drag the bodies away. I will send birds of the air and wild animals. They will eat and destroy the bodies. I will make the people of Judah hated by everyone on earth. I will do this because of what Manasseh did in Jerusalem. (Manasseh son of Hezekiah was king of the nation of Judah.)

“Who will feel sorry for you, Jerusalem?
    Who will be sad and cry for you?
    Who will go out of his way to ask how you are?
Jerusalem, you have left me,” says the Lord.
    “You keep going farther and farther away.
So I will take hold of you and destroy you.
    I am tired of holding back my anger.
I will separate the people of Judah with my pitchfork.
    I will scatter them at the city gates of the land.
My people haven’t changed their ways.
    So I will destroy them.
    I will take away their children.
Many women will lose their husbands.
    There will be more widows than the sand of the sea.
I will bring a destroyer at noontime
    against the mothers of the young men of Judah.
I will suddenly bring pain and fear
    on the people of Judah.
The enemy will attack.
    I will still hand over to the killers those who are left alive from Judah.
A woman might have seven sons, but they will all die.
    She will cry until she becomes weak and unable to breathe.
She will be upset and confused.
    Her bright day will become dark from sadness!” says the Lord.

Jeremiah’s Second Complaint

10 Mother, I am sorry that you gave birth to me.
    I am the one who must accuse and criticize the whole land.
I have not loaned or borrowed anything.
    But everyone curses me.
11 The Lord said,
    “I will save you for a good reason.
I will make your enemies beg you
    in times of disaster and trouble.
12 No one can smash a piece of iron or bronze.
    I mean the kind of iron and bronze that comes from the north.
13 The people of Judah have wealth and treasures.
    But I will freely give those riches to others.
This is because the people of Judah have sinned
    throughout the country.
14 I will make you slaves to your enemies.
    You will be slaves in a land that you have never known.
My anger is like a hot fire.
    And it will burn against you.”

15 Lord, you understand.
    Remember me and take care of me.
    Punish for me the people who are hurting me.
Don’t destroy me while you remain patient with them.
    Think about the pain I suffer for you, Lord.
16 Your words came to me, and I listened carefully to them.
    Your words made me very happy.
I was happy because I am called by your name.
    Your name is the Lord God of heaven’s armies.
17 I never sat with the crowd
    as they laughed and had fun.
I sat by myself because you were there.
    You filled me with anger at the evil around me.
18 I don’t understand why my pain has no end.
    I don’t understand why my injury is not cured or healed!
Lord, will you be like a brook that goes dry?
    Will you be like a spring whose water stops flowing?

19 So this is what the Lord says:

“If you change your heart and come back to me, I will take you back.
    Then you may serve me.
You must speak things that have worth.
    You must not speak useless words.
    Then you may speak for me.
Let the people of Judah turn to you.
    But you must not change and be like them.
20 I will make you as strong as a wall to this people.
    You will be as strong as a wall of bronze.
They will fight against you.
    But they will not defeat you.
This is because I am with you.
    I will rescue you and save you,” says the Lord.
21 “I will save you from these evil people.
    I will save you from these cruel people.”

The Day of Disaster

16 Then the Lord spoke his word to me: “You must not get married. You must not have sons or daughters in this place.”

The Lord says this about the sons and daughters born in this land. And he says this about the mothers and fathers of those children: “They will die of terrible diseases. No one will cry for them. No one will bury them. Their bodies will lie on the ground like dung. They will die in war, or they will starve to death. Their dead bodies will be food for the birds of the sky. And they will be food for the wild animals.”

So this is what the Lord says: “Jeremiah, do not go into a house where there is a funeral meal. Do not go there to cry for the dead or to show your sorrow. Do not do this because I have taken back my blessing, my love and my pity from these people,” says the Lord. “Important people and common people will die in the land of Judah. No one will bury them or cry for them. No one will cut himself for them. And no one will shave his head to show sorrow for them. No one will bring food to the people who are crying for the dead. No one will comfort one whose mother or father has died. No one will offer a drink to comfort them.

“Do not go into a house where the people are having a feast. Do not go there and sit down to eat and drink. This is what the Lord of heaven’s armies, the God of Israel, says: I will soon stop the sounds of joy and gladness in this place! I will stop the happy sounds of brides and bridegrooms! This will happen during your lifetime.

10 “You will tell the people of Judah these things. And they will ask you, ‘Why has the Lord said these terrible things to us? What have we done wrong? What sin have we done against the Lord our God?’

11 “Then say to them: ‘This is because your ancestors quit following me,’ says the Lord. ‘And they began to follow other gods. They served and worshiped other gods. Your ancestors left me. And they quit obeying my teaching. 12 But you have done even more evil than your ancestors. You are very stubborn. You do only what you want to do. You have not obeyed me. 13 So I will throw you out of this country. You will go to a land that you and your ancestors never knew. There you can serve false gods day and night. I will not help you or show you any favors.’

14 “People say, ‘As surely as the Lord lives, who brought the people of Israel out of Egypt . . .’ But the time is coming,” says the Lord, “when people will not say this anymore. 15 They will say instead, ‘As surely as the Lord lives, who brought the Israelites from the northern land and from all the countries where he had sent them . . .’ And I will bring them back to the land I gave to their ancestors.

16 “I will soon send for many fishermen to come to this land,” says the Lord. “The fishermen will catch the people of Judah. After that, I will send for many hunters to come to this land. Those hunters will hunt the people of Judah on every mountain and hill. And they will hunt Judah in the cracks of the rocks. 17 I see everything they do. They cannot hide the things they do from me. Their sin is not hidden from my eyes! 18 I will pay back the people of Judah for the evil they have done. I will punish them two times for every one of their sins. I will do this because they have made my land unclean. They have done it with their hated idols. They have filled my country with them!”

19 Lord, you are my strength and my protection.
    You are a safe place for me to run to in times of trouble.
The nations will come to you from all over the world.
    They will say, “Our fathers had only false gods.
    They worshiped useless idols that didn’t help them.
20 Can people make gods for themselves?
    They will not really be gods!”

21 The Lord says, “So I will teach those who make idols.
    Right now I will teach them
    about my power and my strength.
Then they will know
    that my name is the Lord.

Judah’s Guilty Heart

17 “The sin of the people of Judah is written with an iron tool.
    Their sins were cut into stone with a hard point.
That stone is their hearts.
    Their sins were cut into the corners of their altars.
Even their children remember
    their altars to idols and their Asherah idols.
They remember the altars under the green trees
    and on the high hills.
They remember the altars on my mountain and in the open country.
I will give your wealth and treasures
    to other people.
And they will destroy the places of worship in your country.
    You sinned by worshiping at those places.
You will lose the land I gave you.
    And it is your own fault.
I will let your enemies take you as their slaves.
    You will be slaves in a land you have never known.
This is because you have made my anger burn like a hot fire.
    And it will burn forever.”

Trusting in Man or God

This is what the Lord says:

“A curse will be placed on those who trust other people.
    It will happen to those who depend on people for strength.
    Those are the ones who have stopped trusting the Lord.
They are like a bush in a desert.
    It grows in a land where no one lives.
    It is in a hot and dry land with bad soil.
They don’t know about the good things that God can give.

“But the person who trusts in the Lord will be blessed.
    The Lord will show him that he can be trusted.
He will be strong, like a tree planted near water.
    That tree has large roots that find the water.
It is not afraid when the days are hot.
    Its leaves are always green.
It does not worry in a year when no rain comes.
    That tree always produces fruit.”

“More than anything else, a person’s mind is evil.
    It cannot be healed.
    Who can understand it?
10 But I am the Lord, and I can look into a person’s heart.
    I can test a person’s mind.
So I can decide what each one deserves.
    I can give each one the right payment for what he does.”

11 Sometimes a bird will hatch an egg that it did not lay.
    That bird is like the man who gets rich by cheating.
When that man’s life is half finished, he will lose his riches.
    At the end of his life, it will be clear he was a fool.

12 From the beginning, our Temple has been honored
    as a glorious throne for God.
13 Lord, you are the hope of Israel.
    Those who leave you will be shamed.
A person who quits following the Lord will be like a name written in the dust.
    That is because he has left the Lord.
    The Lord is the spring of living water.

Jeremiah’s Third Complaint

14 Lord, heal me, and I will truly be healed.
    Save me, and I will truly be saved.
    Lord, you are the one I praise.
15 The people of Judah keep asking me,
    “Where is the word from the Lord?
    Let’s see that message come true!”

16 Lord, I didn’t run away from being the shepherd you wanted.
    I didn’t want the terrible day to come.
You know everything I have said.
    You see all that is happening.
17 Lord, don’t bring terror to me.
    I run to you for safety in times of trouble.
18 Make those who are hurting me be ashamed.
    But don’t bring shame to me.
Let them be terrified,
    but keep me from terror.
Bring the day of disaster on my enemies.
    Destroy them, and destroy them again.

Keeping the Sabbath Holy

19 This is what the Lord said to me: “Go and stand at the People’s Gate of Jerusalem. This is where the kings of Judah go in and out. And then go to all the other gates of Jerusalem. 20 Say to them there: ‘Hear the word of the Lord. Listen, kings of Judah. Listen, all you people of Judah and all who come through these gates into Jerusalem! 21 This is what the Lord says: Be careful not to carry a load on the Sabbath day. And don’t bring it through the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath. 22 Don’t take a load out of your houses on the Sabbath. Don’t do any work on that day. Keep the Sabbath as a holy day. I gave this same command to your ancestors. 23 But your ancestors did not listen. They did not pay attention to me. They were very stubborn. I punished them, but it didn’t do any good. They did not listen to me. 24 But you must be careful to obey me, says the Lord. You must not bring a load through the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath. You must keep the Sabbath as a holy day. You must not do any work on that day.

25 “‘If you obey this command, this is what will happen: Kings who sit on David’s throne will come through the gates of Jerusalem with their officers. They will come riding in chariots and on horses. The people of Judah and Jerusalem will be with them. And the city of Jerusalem will have people living in it forever! 26 People will come to Jerusalem from the villages around it and from the towns of Judah. They will come from the land of Benjamin. They will come from the western mountain slopes and from the mountains. And they will come from southern Judah. They will all bring burnt offerings, sacrifices, grain offerings, incense and offerings to show thanks to God. They will bring these to the Temple of the Lord. 27 But you must obey me and keep the Sabbath day as a holy day. You must not carry any loads into Jerusalem on the Sabbath. If you do, I will start a fire that cannot be put out. It will start at the gates of Jerusalem. And it will burn until it burns even the strong towers!’”

The Potter and the Clay

18 This is the word the Lord spoke to Jeremiah: “Go down to the potter’s house. I will give you my message there.” So I went down to the potter’s house. I saw him working at the potter’s wheel. He was making a pot from clay. But something went wrong with it. So the potter used that clay to make another pot. He used his hands to shape the pot the way that he wanted it to be.

Then the Lord spoke his word to me: “Family of Israel, can’t I do the same thing with you?” says the Lord. “You are like the clay in the potter’s hands. There may come a time when I will speak about a nation or a kingdom. I might say I will pull that nation up by its roots. Or I might say I will pull that nation down and destroy it. But if the people of that nation are sorry for the evil they have done, I would change my mind. I would not carry out my plans to bring disaster to them. There may come another time when I will speak about a nation. I might say that I will build up and plant that nation. 10 But if I see it doing evil by not obeying me, I would change my mind. I would not carry out my plans to do good for them.

11 “So, say this to the people of Judah and those who live in Jerusalem: ‘This is what the Lord says: I am preparing disaster for you right now. I am making plans against you. So stop doing the evil you are doing. Change your ways and do what is right.’ 12 But the people of Judah will answer, ‘It won’t do any good to try! We will continue to do what we want. Each of us will do what his stubborn, evil heart wants!’”

13 So this is what the Lord says:
“Ask the people in other nations this question:
    ‘Have you ever heard anything like this?’
    The people of Israel have done a horrible thing.
14 The snow on the mountains of Lebanon
    never melts from the rocks.
Its cool, flowing streams
    do not dry up.
15 But my people have forgotten me.
    They make offerings to worthless idols.
This makes them stumble in what they do.
    They stumble about in the old ways of their ancestors.
They walk along back roads
    and on poor highways.
16 So Judah’s country will become an empty desert.
    People will not stop making fun of it.
They will shake their heads as they pass by.
    They will be shocked at how the country was destroyed.
17 I will scatter them before their enemies
    as a strong east wind blows things away.
At that awful time they will not see me coming to help them.
    They will see me leaving.”

Jeremiah’s Fourth Complaint

18 Then the people said, “Come, let’s make plans against Jeremiah. Surely the teaching of the law by the priest will not be lost. And the advice from the wise men will still be with us. We will still have the words of the prophets. So let’s ruin him by telling lies about him! We won’t pay attention to anything he says.”

19 Lord, listen to me.
    Listen to what my accusers are saying!
20 Good should not be paid back with evil.
    But they have dug a pit in order to kill me.
Lord, remember that I stood before you
    and asked you to do good things for these people.
    I asked you to turn your anger away from them.
21 So now, let their children starve.
    Let their enemies defeat them with swords.
Let their wives lose their children and husbands.
    Let the men from Judah be put to death.
    Let the young men be killed in battle.
22 Let them cry out in their houses.
    Bring an enemy against them suddenly.
Let all this happen because my enemies have dug a pit to trap me.
    And they have hidden traps for me to step in.
23 Lord, you know
    about their plans to kill me.
Don’t forgive their crimes.
    Don’t erase their sins.
Make them fall from their places.
    Punish them while you are angry.

The Broken Jar

19 This is what the Lord said to me: “Go and buy a clay jar from a potter. Go out to the Valley of Ben Hinnom. Go near the front of the Potsherd Gate. Take some of the elders of the people and priests with you. There speak the words I tell you. Say, ‘King of Judah and people of Jerusalem, listen to this message from the Lord. This is what the Lord of heaven’s armies, the God of Israel, says: I will soon bring a disaster on this place! Everyone who hears about it will be amazed and full of fear. I will do this because the people of Judah have quit following me. They have made this a place for foreign gods. They have burned sacrifices to other gods. They did not worship these gods long ago! Their ancestors didn’t worship these gods. The kings of Judah filled this place with the blood of the innocent people. The kings of Judah have built places to worship Baal. There they burn their sons in the fire to Baal. I did not speak about it or tell them to do that. I never even thought of such a thing. Now people call this place the Valley of Ben Hinnom or Topheth. But watch out! The days are coming, says the Lord, when people will call this place the Valley of Killing.

“‘At this place I will ruin the plans of the people of Judah and Jerusalem. The enemy will chase them. And I will let the people of Judah be killed with swords. I will make their dead bodies food for the birds and wild animals. I will completely destroy this city. People will make fun of it and hiss at it. And they will shake their heads when they pass by Jerusalem. They will be shocked when they see how the city was destroyed. An enemy army will surround the city. They will not let anyone go out to get food. The people will become so hungry they will eat the bodies of their own sons and daughters. And then they will begin to eat each other.’”

10 The Lord said, “While the people with you are watching, break that jar. 11 Then say this: ‘The Lord of heaven’s armies says: I will break this nation and this city just as someone breaks a clay jar. It cannot be put back together again. The dead people will be buried here in Topheth. We will bury bodies until there is no more room. 12 This is what I will do to these people and to this place, says the Lord. I will make this city like Topheth. 13 The houses in Jerusalem and the king’s palaces will become as unclean as this place, Topheth. This is because the people worshiped false gods on the roofs[a] of their houses. They worshiped the stars and burned incense to honor them. They gave drink offerings to false gods.’”

14 Then Jeremiah left Topheth where the Lord had told him to prophesy. He went to the Lord’s Temple, stood in the courtyard and said to all the people: 15 “This is what the Lord of heaven’s armies, the God of Israel, says: ‘I said I would bring disaster to Jerusalem and the villages around it. I will make it happen soon! This is because the people are very stubborn. They do not listen at all to what I say.’”

Jeremiah and Pashhur

20 Pashhur son of Immer was a priest. He was the highest officer in the Temple of the Lord. He heard Jeremiah prophesying in the Temple courtyard. So he had Jeremiah the prophet beaten. And he had Jeremiah’s hands and feet locked between large blocks of wood. This was at the Upper Gate of Benjamin of the Lord’s Temple. The next day Pashhur took Jeremiah out from between the blocks of wood. Then Jeremiah said to him, “The Lord’s name for you is not Pashhur. Now the Lord’s name for you is Terror on Every Side. That is your name because this is what the Lord says: ‘I will soon make you a terror to yourself and to all your friends. You will watch enemies killing your friends with swords. And I will give all the people of Judah to the king of Babylon. He will take them away as captives to Babylon. Then his army will kill them with swords. I will give all the wealth of this city to its enemies. I will give them its goods and its valuables. I will give the treasures of the kings of Judah to their enemies. The enemies will carry Judah and all its valuables off to Babylon. And Pashhur, you and everyone in your house will be taken away. You will be forced to go as a captive to Babylon. You will die and be buried there. Your friends you have prophesied lies to will also die and be buried in Babylon!’”

Jeremiah’s Fifth Complaint

Lord, you tricked me, and I was fooled.
    You are stronger than I am. So you won.
I have become a joke.
    Everyone makes fun of me all day long.
Every time I speak, I shout.
    I am always shouting about violence and destruction.
I tell the people about the message I received from the Lord.
    But this only brings me insults. The people make fun of me all day long.
Sometimes I say to myself,
    “I will forget about the Lord.
    I will not speak anymore in his name.”
But then the Lord’s message becomes like a burning fire inside me.
    It feels like it burns deep within my bones.
I get tired of trying to hold the Lord’s message inside of me.
    And finally, I cannot hold it in.
10 I hear many people whispering about me:
    “Terror on every side!
    Let’s tell the rulers about him.”
My friends are all just waiting for me to make some mistake.
    They are saying,
“Maybe we can trick Jeremiah.
    Then we can defeat him.
    Then we can pay him back.”

11 But the Lord is with me like a strong warrior.
    So those who are chasing me will trip and fall.
    They will not defeat me.
They will be very disappointed and ashamed.
    Their shame will never be forgotten.

12 Lord of heaven’s armies, you test good people.
    You look deeply into the heart and mind of a person.
I have told you my arguments against these people.
    So let me see you give them the punishment they deserve.

13 Sing to the Lord!
    Praise the Lord!
He saves the life of the poor.
    He saves them from the power of wicked people.

Jeremiah’s Sixth Complaint

14 Let there be a curse on the day I was born.
    Let there be no blessing on the day when my mother gave birth to me.
15 Let there be a curse on the man
    who brought my father the news:
“You have a son!”
    This made my father glad.
16 Let that man be like the towns
    the Lord destroyed without pity.
Let that man hear loud crying in the morning.
    And let him hear battle cries at noon.
17 This is because he did not kill me before I was born.
    Then my mother would have been my grave.
    I would never have been born.
18 Why did I have to come out of my mother’s body?
    All I have known is trouble and sorrow.
    And my life will end in shame.

God Rejects King Zedekiah’s Request

21 This is the word that the Lord spoke to Jeremiah. It came when Zedekiah king of Judah sent Pashhur son of Malkijah to Jeremiah. He also sent the priest Zephaniah son of Maaseiah. They said, “Ask the Lord for us what will happen. We want to know because Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon is attacking us. Maybe the Lord will do miracles for us as he did in the past. Maybe he will make Nebuchadnezzar stop attacking us and leave.”

But Jeremiah answered them, “Tell King Zedekiah this: ‘Here is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: You have weapons of war in your hands. You are using them to defend yourselves against the king of Babylon and the Babylonians. But I will make those weapons useless. The army from Babylon is all around the outside of the city wall. Soon I will bring that army into the center of the city. I myself will fight against you with my great power and strength. I am very angry with you. So I will fight against you with my own powerful arm. I will fight very hard against you in my very great anger. I will kill everything living in Jerusalem—both people and animals. They will die from terrible diseases. Then, says the Lord, I’ll give Zedekiah king of Judah to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon. I will also give Zedekiah’s officers to Nebuchadnezzar. Some of the people in Jerusalem will not die from the terrible diseases. Some will not die in battle or from hunger. I will give them also to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon. I will let those win who want to kill the people of Judah. So the people of Judah and Jerusalem will be killed in war. Nebuchadnezzar will not show any mercy or pity or feel sorry for them!’

“Also tell this to the people of Jerusalem: ‘This is what the Lord says: I will let you choose to live or die. Anyone who stays in Jerusalem will die. He will die in war or from hunger or from a terrible disease. But anyone who goes out of Jerusalem and surrenders to the Babylonians who are around the city will live. Anyone who leaves the city will save his life. 10 I have decided to make trouble for this city and not to help it, says the Lord. I will give it to the king of Babylon. He will burn it with fire.’

11 “Tell these things to Judah’s royal family: ‘Hear the word of the Lord! 12 Family of David, the Lord says these things:

You must judge people fairly every day.
    Protect from criminals
    the person who has been robbed.
If you don’t do that, I will become very angry.
    My anger will be like a fire that no one can put out.
    This will happen because you have done evil things.

13 “‘Jerusalem, I am against you.
    You sit on top of the mountain.
    You sit over this valley, says the Lord.
You say, “No one can attack us.
    No one can come into our strong city.”
14 But I will give you the punishment you deserve, says the Lord.
    I will start a fire in your forests.
    It will burn up everything around you!’”

Judgment Against Evil Kings

22 This is what the Lord says: “Go down to the palace of the king of Judah. Prophesy this message there: ‘Hear the word of the Lord, king of Judah. You rule from David’s throne. You and your officers, listen well! All of your people who come through these gates, listen! This is what the Lord says: Do what is fair and right. Protect those who have been robbed from those who robbed them. Don’t do any wrong to the orphans or widows. Don’t hurt them. Don’t kill innocent people here. If you carefully obey these commands, this is what will happen: Kings who sit on David’s throne will come through the gates of this palace. They will come with their officers and people. They will all come riding in chariots and on horses. But if you don’t obey these commands, this is what the Lord says: I promise in my own name that this king’s palace will become a ruin.’”

This is what the Lord says about the palace where the king of Judah lives:

“This palace is tall like the forests of Gilead.
    It is high like the mountains of Lebanon.
But I will truly make it like a desert.
    It will be empty like towns where no one lives.
I will send men to destroy the palace.
    Each man will have his weapons with him.
They will cut up your strong, beautiful cedar beams.
    And they will throw them into the fire.

“People from many nations will pass by this city. They will ask each other, ‘Why has the Lord done such a terrible thing to Jerusalem? This was such a great city.’ And the answer will be: ‘It was because the people of Judah quit following the agreement with the Lord their God. They worshiped and served other gods.’”

Judgment Against Jehoahaz

10 Don’t cry for the king who has died. Don’t cry loudly for him.
    But cry painfully for the king who is being taken away from here.
Cry for him because he will never come back again.
    He will never see his homeland again.

11 This is what the Lord says about Jehoahaz son of Josiah. Jehoahaz became king of Judah after his father died. He has left this place. The Lord says, “He will never come back again. 12 He will die where those who captured him have taken him. He will not see this land again.”

Judgment Against Jehoiakim

13 “How terrible it will be for him who builds his palace by doing evil.
    He cheats people so he can build its upper rooms.
He is making his own people work for nothing.
    He is not paying them for their work.
14 He says, ‘I will build a great palace for myself.
    I will have large upper rooms.’
So he builds the palace with large windows.
    He uses cedar wood for the walls.
    And he paints it red.

15 “Does having a lot of cedar in your house
    make you a great king?
Your father was satisfied to have food and drink.
    He did what was right and fair.
    So everything went well for him.
16 He helped those who were poor and needy.
    So everything went well for him.
That’s what it means to know God,” says the Lord.
17 “But your eyes only look for what you can get dishonestly.
    You are always thinking about getting more for yourself.
You are even willing to kill innocent people to get it.
    You are making it hard for people.
    You even steal things from them.”

18 So this is what the Lord says to Jehoiakim son of Josiah king of Judah:

“The people of Judah will not cry loudly when Jehoiakim dies.
    They will not say, ‘Oh, my brother, I am so sad!
    Oh, my sister, I am so sad!’
The people of Judah will not cry for him, saying:
    ‘Oh, master, oh, my king.’
19 The people of Jerusalem will bury him like a donkey.
    They will just drag his body away.
    Then they will throw it outside the gates of Jerusalem.

20 “Judah, go up to Lebanon and cry out.
    Let your voice be heard in Bashan.
Cry out from Abarim.
    All your friends are destroyed!
21 Judah, when you were successful, I warned you.
    But you refused to listen.
You have acted like this since you were young.
    You have not obeyed me.
22 My punishment will come like a storm.
    And it will blow all your shepherds away.
    Your friends will be taken away as captives.
Then you will really be ashamed.
    You will be disgraced because of all the wicked things you did.
23 King, you live in your palace.
    You are cozy in your rooms of cedar.
But you will groan when your punishment comes.
    You will hurt like a woman giving birth to a baby!

Judgment upon Jehoiachin

24 “As surely as I live,” says the Lord, “I will do this to you, Jehoiachin son of Jehoiakim king of Judah: Even if you were a signet ring on my right hand, I would still pull you off. 25 Jehoiachin, I will give you to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon. And I will hand you over to the Babylonians. Those are the people you are afraid of because they want to kill you. 26 I will throw you and your mother into another country. Neither of you was born there. But both of you will die there. 27 You will want to come back. But you will never be able to return.”

28 Jehoiachin is like a broken pot someone threw away.
    He is like something no one wants.
Why will Jehoiachin and his children be thrown out?
    Why will they be thrown into a foreign land?
29 Land, land, land of Judah,
    hear the word of the Lord!
30 This is what the Lord says:
“Write this down about Jehoiachin:
    He is a man who is to have no children.
    He will not be successful in his lifetime.
And none of his children will be successful.
    None of his children will sit on the throne of David.
    They will not rule in Judah.”

The Evil Leaders

23 “How terrible it will be for the leaders of Judah. They are destroying my people. They are making them run in all directions,” says the Lord.

They are responsible for the people. And the Lord, the God of Israel, says to them: “You have made my people run away in all directions. You have forced them away. And you have not taken care of them. So I will punish you for the evil things you have done,” says the Lord. “I sent my people to other countries. But I will gather my people who are left alive. And I will bring them back to their own country. When they are back in their own land, they will have many children. And they will grow in number. I will place new leaders over my people. They will take care of my people. And my people will not be afraid or terrified. None of them will be lost,” says the Lord.

The Good Descendant

“The days are coming,” says the Lord,
    “when I will raise up a good descendant in David’s family.
This descendant will be a king who will rule in a wise way.
    And he will do what is fair and right in the land.
In his time Judah will be saved.
    Israel will live in safety.
This will be his name:
    The Lord Does What Is Right.

“So the days are coming,” says the Lord, “when people will not say: ‘As surely as the Lord lives, who brought Israel out of Egypt . . .’ But people will say something new: ‘As surely as the Lord lives, who brought Israel from the land of the north and from all the countries where he had sent them away . . .’ Then the people of Israel will live in their own land.”

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

The Holy Bible, International Children’s Bible® Copyright© 1986, 1988, 1999, 2015 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission.