Jeremiah’s yoke-sign declares that Babylon’s rule over Judah and nearby nations is assigned by God for a limited period. The chapter contrasts two responses: resisting brings devastation, while yielding permits continued life and labor in the land.
Jeremiah’s yoke-sign declares that Babylon’s rule over Judah and nearby nations is assigned by God for a limited period. The chapter contrasts two responses: resisting brings devastation, while yielding permits continued life and labor in the land.
Context Snapshot
Date
From Josiah to Jerusalem's fall, c. 627-586 BC
Genre
Prophetic oracles and narrative
Setting
Judah and Egypt exile tradition
Audience
Judah and the exiles
World Stage
c. 627-586 BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire rising over Judah
Josiah, Jehoiakim, Zedekiah, and Nebuchadnezzar II late 7th-early 6th century BC
Jeremiah stands in Judah's final decades before Jerusalem falls. Assyria collapses, Babylon rises, Egypt competes for influence, and the prophet interprets the crisis through covenant faithfulness, judgment, and promised restoration.