Jeremiah 51:24-33

Jeremiah 51:24-33. Still more of the message to and about the destruction of Babylon. Remember from a couple of days ago that Babylon had been an influence on the world for many centuries, and not a good one. More recently Babylon had been the nemesis of the Jewish people. Nebuchadnezzar spent almost two decades trying to bring Judah under submission. Then for the last 50 years the Jewish people had lived in exile in Babylon, some longer. Since the beginning of chapter 50 we have seen Jeremiah’s prediction and description of the overthrow of Babylon.

It is interesting that in yesterday’s reading we saw that the Jewish people would have a part in the overthrow of Babylon. Historically the nation was conquered by Cyrus king of the Medes and the Persians. The takeover of the actual city was relatively peaceful. Often taking a city involved setting it on fire but that did not happen in Babylon. Most of the people were fed up with the government and welcomed the invaders, though I’m sure there was some resistance. In verses 25 and 26 the LORD (Yahweh, v. 25) tells Babylon that he will destroy them and make them like a burned out mountain that will be “desolate” forever.

The Hebrew word that is translated “desolate” in interesting it comes from a word that can mean “wasted, destroyed, or desolate”, but it can also mean, “astonished or amazed”. Sometimes when we see images of destruction on the news or Youtube we are kind of horrified; astonished. When that tsunami happened in Indonesia, or the one in Japan a couple of years ago, most of us were shocked and amazed at the destruction and loss of life.

Two more little pieces of the puzzle. In verse 26 God tells the Babylonians that not even a cornerstone will be taken from Babylon after it’s destruction. In the ancient near east (what we call the Middle East) of that time most permanent structures were built out of stone. For the best buildings stones would be cut from large masses of stones, cliffs probably, and stacked up like giant bricks. A corner stone was a stone that was carefully shaped so that it was very square (think 90 degrees not square like a cube). The edges of the stone would be used to line up two walls to the building to make sure the building was “square”. Quarried stones would be expensive and corner stones even more so. When cities were conquered, as I said, they were often burned. The wooden parts of building would be destroyed as well as much of the stuff inside. Also invading armies would push the stone off of each other literally “leveling” the city. Days, weeks, months, or years later people would come back and start rebuilding the city (probably because the location had some sort of advantage, a hill, a spring of water, or something else). They would often rebuild right on top of the rubble from the earlier city but I’m sure if quarried stones were sitting around un-burried, or even part of buildings, that the stones and parts would be reused.

Finally notice in verse 25 that God describes Babylon as the “destroying mountains that destroys the whole earth”. I think this is the key to this part of the prophecy. Remember that the city of Babylon was not destroyed when it was conquered by Cyrus. The city lost its importance at that time but sort of just fell apart over the next two hundred years. It eventually was just a heap of rubble filled with weeds and desert animals. It was never rebuilt and the stones and cornerstones were never reused. We need to keep in mind that the history in the Old Testament has a purpose (see “The Old Testament Connection”). It is God s story of how we all defected from him, how he was offended and banished us all, and how he loves us so much had a plan to bring us back home to him again. Someone once said the first step in solving a problem is recognizing that there is a problem. It is also important to know what solutions wont work. We have a problem, a broken relationship with God. And there is only one solution, Jesus. The Old Testament is God’s way of helping us see the problem, it’s consequences, and the solution as well as the things that wont work (again see “The Old Testament Connection”). Babylon had been leading mankind down a path of self reliance. “We can reach up to God” they had said (Genesis 11). That sort of attitude has kept many people from accepting the only way back to God, the Messiah (chosen one or coming one) of Israel; Jesus. Babylon was destroying people all over the world in the worst way possible, not physically (though they had done plenty of that too) but spiritually.

I explained in an earlier post that prophets in the Bible often saw things that spanned a great deal of time but would describe them in a vision that almost made it seem like it all was happening at once. Think of a photo or painting of some beautiful mountain range or a huge canyon like the Grand Canyon. You look at the picture and all of the stuff is in one “plane” the surface of the paper. Now because you live in a real 3-D world you “see” the picture in sort of a 3-D way but it is really only in that one plane, the surface of the paper. For the prophets it was sort of the opposite, often they would look at a vision of events that were spread out over centuries of even millennia but they would describe them all in one “plane” of time. It’s not that they were trying to trick us that is just the way it looked to them and they didn’t have anyway of knowing other wise. We live mostly in the here and now and are not used to seeing time all at once like God does. Even in our own manmade movies directors will use little tricks to tell us time is passing, a before and after shot of a clock or a calendar or even a shot of a clock with the hands moving really fast or pages of a calendar being ripped off as the scene change. Prophets were not seeing made up movies with convenient clocks or calendar (not that they would understand either one) they were seeing real event all piled up on each other.

Part of what Jeremiah was seeing was God dealing with the “big picture” of Babylon’s long term bad influence on the world but God is not just about the “big picture” he is concerned about the details too. The nation of Israel was a detail, you and I are details. Last week in our Sunday Jr. High class we learned that God knows all the details of each of our lives and even know how many hairs are on each of our heads. God cares about and loves each of us and all of us. In verse 24 we see God’s care for the Jewish people. Zion is another name for the mountain that Jerusalem was built on. Some times it is used in place of the name Jerusalem and it can also represent the people that lived there. The word can also be used of the larger group, the people of the who kingdom of Judah, not just the people of the capital city and can even be extended out farther to include all Israelites or Jews. Part of the point of the destruction of Babylon is what Babylon did in Jerusalem (remember the mention of the destruction of the Temple in verse 11) and to the Jewish people.

Verses 27-32 describe the downfall and destruction of Babylon, both as a city and as a nation. In verse 27 we see some of the member kings of the new Medo-Persian Empire of Cyrus. In that verse horns are blown, in that day that was how armies were assembled for battle. We also see that the army is “consecrated” for the invasion. In the ancient near east armies would often perform religious rituals before going into battle, they would ask their “gods” to be present and help them win. Of course their “gods” were false and powerless but they would go through the motions anyway. In this case the one true God is “consecrating” them. That word means to dedicate or make special, make no mistake when God makes you special for a job you will have the power to do it. Verse 29 makes this point very clear when it says that the land (of Babylon) shakes and wiggles because the purposes of Yahweh to deal with Babylon are a sure deal. In verse 30 we see that the soldiers of Babylon are paralyzed with fear and we doo see some destruction. We also see destruction in verse 32 where the tall grasses along the river are burned. Often in an invasion people and soldiers would flee, one place that a person could hide was in the tall grass along a river bank. There would be no hiding from the Medes (or God) the grass had been burned.

Remember we don’t have news video of the overthrow of Babylon or even personal cell phone videos, we have a few descriptions from history, including those in the Bible. Although Babylon itself fell in a basically peaceful way there had been plenty of fighting leading up to it’s invasion. Certainly other cities had been burned and destroyed and maybe even the grasses around Babylon itself. On the other had we certainly have some of that long range sort of look at the destruction of Babylon in these verses too. Remember that the details in the Old Testament history are included to help us understand about sin (disobedience and disrespect toward God), it’s consequences (a broke relationship with God; a separation from him (the meaning of death is “separation”)), and God’s solution (Jesus “dying” in our place opening up the possibility of getting back together with God). What is important to the story are the spiritual details not necessarily a “blow by blow” list of the physical details.

Today’s reading ends with one more description of destruction, sort of. In verse 33 Yahweh God of the armies tells us that the “daughter of Babylon is like a threshing floor that has been stamped firm.” A threshing floor was a place where wheat was threshed. Wheat is a grass (very big grass but still a grass). A stalk grows up and eventually a “head” grown out of the top. The head is filled with dozens of tiny seeds all together each of them wrapped up in a covering with more little bits of plant between them. Its sort of like corn on a cob but the cob is almost not even there. Just like you have to pull leaves off of corn on the cob in order to eat the corn wheat needs to be uncovered and the little bits of stuff around and between the seeds needs to be removed. Keep in mind that wheat seeds are a little bigger that the sprinkles on a donut. You cold probably separate them one at a time by hand but it would take forever. In olden times the wheat plants would be cut in the field and gathered together in bunches (sheaves). The bunches would be allowed to dry out for a while and then brought to a threshing floor. The plants would be spread out on the floor where they would be “beaten” with something like a leaf rake or other tool. The beating would cause the wheat seeds to come apart from each other and from the useless parts of plant around them (the chaff).   Since the seeds are heavier than the chaff the “threshers” would then toss the whole mess up in the air. They would need a little bit of wind at this time. The breeze would blow the chaff away and the seeds would fall back to the threshing floor where they could eventually be swept up and put in baskets. The threshing floor needed to be hard and smooth so the wheat could be gathered up. The down side is that a dirt floor packed this hard would not be useful for growing plants. So in a way the “daughters of Babylon” are like this hard unproductive dirt floor, you might say they were barren of desolate. But the verse ends with a wheat harvest, at that time the floor becomes pretty useful, it is valuable.

The key here is the word “daughter”. This verse is about the “daughter” or “offspring” (think “descendant”, great-grandchildren or great great-grandchildred).   In other words people born in Babylon, individuals. At the actual time of the destruction of Babylon the people of Babylon both individually and as a group were pretty useless when it came to helping other understand the “sin” problem and it’s solution. But eventually their would be a time when something good would happen in relationship to these people. Of course the helping the world wee the consequences of walking away from God for ever could be the good that came out of the destruction of Babylon. Babylon is no more and that is what happens when you insist on rejecting God. But there are probably descendants of those people who had been a part of that nation living on the earth today and each and every one of them as an individual has the opportunity to turn to God. Back in the original conquest of the land the Israelites took over the city of Jericho. At one point they had sent spies into the city to get “intel”. The spies had been helped by a woman named Rahab. Rahab had risked a great deal to help the spies but she knew the Israelites were the people of the one true God and she wanted to be on their side. God miraculously opened the city to attack and commanded the Israelites to completely destroy the city and its inhabitants (I know it sounds so brutal and unfair but God knows the influence any given group of people can have and he decided that the people of Jericho must go). There was one inhabitant that was allowed to live along with her family, Rahab. Why? Because Rahab had responded to God, even in a city filled with people who had or would reject him. It is interesting that Rahab even winds up in the genealogy of Jesus (Matthew 1:5). Some bible experts think the reference to harvest in Jeremiah 51:33 is telling us that not only were the people of Babylon like a trampeled useless floor but that they would be harvested and all their valuable wheat would be removed leaving them with only chaff. That cold be or what we might see here is the same thing we have seen so often in Jeremiah, hope in the middle of punishment. You see the same sort of thing in the book of Revelation when God is looking for people to turn to him in the middle of the greatest punishment history has ever seen. God knows where we have been, who our ancestors were but we each stand before God accountable for our actions alone (2 Chronicles 25:4). And the only hope of each of us is Jesus. We have all sinned and fallen short of God’s perfect standard (Romans 3:23). But Jesus paid for the sins of ever human that will ever live (1 John 2:2). The question isn’t if I’m guilty but if I will turn my guilt over to Jesus and let him pay for me. I have, will you? God is the God of many chances. Give him you life today and let him turn your trampled life into something useful.

God thank you for caring about the little pieces of the picture. Thank you for caring about me. Just like a beautiful picture is made up of many beautiful colorful little pixels the beautiful eternity you have in store will be made up of many beautiful colorful individuals. Help us each find the color and beauty you have for our lives. Fit us into the beautiful picture of Heaven you are building. Thank you for loving me, for loving us. Let us show others the way and not mislead them. Let my life be productive soil, don’t let my descendants have a hard trampled great great-grandpa as in their past. Let me be a source of life and love for you to all I know and all who know me.

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