Structure – Sefer Yirmeyahu/0

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Structure – Sefer Yirmeyahu

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Overview

When learning Sefer Yirmeyahu one is struck by the seeming lack of order within the book. While the first 20 chapters are largely undated,1 the following ones appear to go back and forth between the reigns of Yehoyakim and Zidkeyahu,2 without any obvious explanation behind the ordering. Thematically as well, the book is not consistent, for the few prophecies of consolation are placed right in the middle of the book (chapters 30-33), breaking up the prophecies of rebuke which surround them.3  In addition, though Yirmeyahu is commanded to prophesy against the foreign nations in Chapter 25, the series of prophecies regarding them appear only at the end of the book, in chapters 46-51.4 What is the logic behind the book's structure?

Division into Units

The book can be divided into three main units and a conclusion, based on the criteria that follows:

I. Prophecies to Israel (1-36)
II. Historical Fulfillment (37-45)
III. Prophecies to the Nations (46-51)
IV. Conclusion (52)

  • Genre – Units one and three contain prophetic material, whereas the second and fourth sections are historical in nature.
  • Content – Sections one and two complement each other, with the first section devoted mostly to chastising the people and foretelling the calamities to befall Yehuda, and the second section describing the fulfillment of these prophecies, as Jerusalem is destroyed and the people exiled.
  • Characters – While the first two sections focus on Israel, the third turns to the foreign nations.
  • Literary markers – This division is supported by several literary markers:
    • Colophons – Each of the three main units ends with a discussion of the writing down of Yirmeyahu's prophecies by his scribes.5
    • Bookends – The book opens by stating that what follows are "דִּבְרֵי יִרְמְיָהוּ".  Chapter 51 closes the main body of the book with the words, "עַד הֵנָּה דִּבְרֵי יִרְמְיָהוּ", clearly setting chapter 52 as an appendix.
    • Headings – The heading of Chapter 46, "אֲשֶׁר הָיָה דְבַר יְהֹוָה אֶל יִרְמְיָהוּ הַנָּבִיא עַל הַגּוֹיִם" serves to introduce the new unit.

Subdivision of Unit I – "Prophecies to Israel"

a. Prophecies of Chastisement (1-29)
b. Prophecies of Consolation (30-35)
c. Conclusion (36)

  • Content – Almost all of the material in chapters 1-29 constitute rebuke or predictions of destruction,6 while the prophecies of chapters 30-35, in contrast, mainly portend consolation. [Chapter 34 is a notable exception, and might be placed where it is only to serve as a contrast to chapter 35.]
  • Literary Markers – Chapter 30 opens with the directive, " כְּתׇב לְךָ אֵת כׇּל הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר דִּבַּרְתִּי אֵלֶיךָ אֶל סֵפֶר", suggesting that it and the following chapters comprise their own distinct scroll of prophecies.

Subdivision of Unit Ia. – "Chastisement"

i. Pure Prophecies (1-25)
ii. Prophetic Narratives (26-29)

  • Genre - The first subsection contains mainly prophetic material, while the second unit mixes this prophetic material with narrative.  We read not just Yirmeyahu's prophecies, but about the setting in which they were given and the people's reactions to them.
  • Speakers – While in the first unit the only speakers are Hashem or the prophet speaking in His name, in the second unit there are multiple speakers including members of the nation, priests, officers, false prophets and kings.
  • First vs. Third Person – The word "אלי" appears multiple times throughout the first unit and only once in the second unit, emphasizing that in the first part Yirmeyahu often relayed his prophecies in first person.  The narrative sections, in contrast, are told mostly in third person.
  • Relationship between the two sections – It is possible that some of the prophecies mentioned in the first section are retold from the different, narrative perspective in the second unit.  Compare, for instance, chapters 7 and 26.  In both the prophet compares the destruction of the Mikdash and Yerushalayim to the destructuion of Shiloh, bu while chapter 7 elaborates on the details of the prophecy, chapter 26 shares what happened in the aftermath of Yirmeyahu relaying it.
  • Further subdivision –The pure prophecies further break down into a series of prophecies aimed at the nation (1-21:10), the kings (21:11-23:9), false prophets (23:10-24:10) and finally, foreign powers (25).
  • Chronology – 

Subdivision of Unit Ib. – "Consolation"

i. Pure Prophecies (30-31)
ii. Prophetic Narratives (32-35)

As above, this unit similarly breaks into two sections, one of pure prophecies and one in which the prophecies are mixed with historical narrative.

Subdivision of Unit II – "Historical Fulfillment"

a. Yirmeyahu and Tizidkyahu (37-38)
b. Destruction of Jerusalem (39)
c. The Assassination of Gedalya (40-41)
d. Descent to Egypt (42-44)
e. Conclusion (45)

  • Content – Each subsection speaks of a different stage in the destruction, from Yirmeyahu's final words of warning to Tzidkeyahu, to the actual destruction of the city, Gedalya's appointment and assassination, and finally the aftermath of the event, as the people descend to Egypt out of fear of retaliation.
  • Characters – Each subsection focuses on a different group of characters.The first deals mainly with the the king and prophet. The second section, instead, revolves around the Babylonians and the nation as a whole. In the third unit, Gedalya and his opponents are the main characters, while the fourth section turns back to Yirmeyahu and the people.

Subdivision of Unit III - "Prophecies to Nations"

The Writing of the Book - The Scrolls

A key to unraveling the book's structure  might lie in the mention of several distinct scrolls of prophecies that Yirmeyahu was commanded to write. 

  • Yirmeyahu 36 speaks of Baruch b. Neriya, Yirmeyahu's scribe, writing all of the prophecies given from the time of Yoshiyahu through to the fourth year of Yehoyakim, plus additional ones thereafter ("וְעוֹד נוֹסַף עֲלֵיהֶם דְּבָרִים רַבִּים כָּהֵמָּה"). As the king reacts to the prophecies by burning the scroll, it is likely that it contained mainly prophecies of rebuke. Similarly, it presumably did not include any of the narrative and historic material of our book, which would have been unnecessary to share with the king.
  •   Yirmeyahu 30:1-2 mentions a second scroll (כְּתׇב לְךָ אֵת כׇּל הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר דִּבַּרְתִּי אֵלֶיךָ אֶל סֵפֶר), which apparently contained prophecies of consolation (those prophecies which immediately follow this heading).
  • Finally, Yirmeyahu 46:1 opens, "אֲשֶׁר הָיָה דְבַר י"י אֶל יִרְמְיָהוּ הַנָּבִיא עַל הַגּוֹיִם", perhaps suggesting that these prophecies, too, were recorded in their own scroll.  [Alternatively, they were originally part of the scroll mentioned in chapter 36 which included: הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר דִּבַּרְתִּי...  עַל יִשְׂרָאֵל וְעַל יְהוּדָה וְעַל כׇּל הַגּוֹיִם, but were later separated.]

The existence of such scrolls likely helped shape the character of the book, as it alternates between the prophetic material found in the scrolls and accompanying narrative which was likely added later.  Thus, as we have seen above, the book opens with a prophetic section which contains a section of pure prophecies of rebuke (the first scroll mentioned above) followed by relevant historical narrative, then a section of prophecies of consolation (the second scroll discussed above), followed by correlating narrative. These lead into chapters which speak of the historical fulfillment of the prophecies of and then a concluding section of prophecies aimed at foreign nations. For the most part each individual section proceeds chronologically, even though the book as a whole does not.