Jerusalem's stubborn corruption
Jerusalem and Judah are so thoroughly corrupt that no truthful, faithful segment can be found to avert judgment. Idolatry, adultery, injustice, and false religious leadership have provoked a severe covenant curse: God will send a foreign nation to devastate the land, though not utterly annihilate hi
Commentary
5:1 The Lord said, “Go up and down through the streets of Jerusalem. Look around and see for yourselves. Search through its public squares. See if any of you can find a single person who deals honestly and tries to be truthful. If you can, then I will not punish this city.
5:2 These people make promises in the name of the Lord. But the fact is, what they swear to is really a lie.”
5:3 Lord, I know you look for faithfulness. But even when you punish these people, they feel no remorse. Even when you nearly destroy them, they refuse to be corrected. They have become as hardheaded as a rock. They refuse to change their ways.
5:4 I thought, “Surely it is only the ignorant poor who act this way. They act like fools because they do not know what the Lord demands. They do not know what their God requires of them.
5:5 I will go to the leaders and speak with them. Surely they know what the Lord demands. Surely they know what their God requires of them.” Yet all of them, too, have rejected his authority and refuse to submit to him.
5:6 So like a lion from the thicket their enemies will kill them. Like a wolf from the desert they will destroy them. Like a leopard they will lie in wait outside their cities and totally destroy anyone who ventures out. For they have rebelled so much and done so many unfaithful things.
5:7 The Lord asked, “How can I leave you unpunished, Jerusalem? Your people have rejected me and have worshiped gods that are not gods at all. Even though I supplied all their needs, they were like an unfaithful wife to me. They went flocking to the houses of prostitutes.
5:8 They are like lusty, well-fed stallions. Each of them lusts after his neighbor’s wife.
5:9 I will surely punish them for doing such things!” says the Lord. “I will surely bring retribution on such a nation as this!”
5:10 The Lord commanded the enemy, “March through the vineyards of Israel and Judah and ruin them. But do not destroy them completely. Strip off their branches for these people do not belong to the Lord.
5:11 For the nations of Israel and Judah have been very unfaithful to me,” says the Lord.
5:12 “These people have denied what the Lord says. They have said, ‘That is not so! No harm will come to us. We will not experience war and famine.
5:13 The prophets will prove to be full of wind. The Lord has not spoken through them. So, let what they say happen to them.’”
5:14 Because of that, the Lord, the God who rules over all, said to me, “Because these people have spoken like this, I will make the words that I put in your mouth like fire. And I will make this people like wood which the fiery judgments you speak will burn up.”
5:15 The Lord says, “Listen, nation of Israel! I am about to bring a nation from far away to attack you. It will be a nation that was founded long ago and has lasted for a long time. It will be a nation whose language you will not know. Its people will speak words that you will not be able to understand.
5:16 All of its soldiers are strong and mighty. Their arrows will send you to your grave.
5:17 They will eat up your crops and your food. They will kill off your sons and your daughters. They will eat up your sheep and your cattle. They will destroy your vines and your fig trees. Their weapons will batter down the fortified cities you trust in.
5:18 Yet even then I will not completely destroy you,” says the Lord.
5:19 “So then, Jeremiah, when your people ask, ‘Why has the Lord our God done all this to us?’ tell them, ‘It is because you rejected me and served foreign gods in your own land. So you must serve foreigners in a land that does not belong to you.’
5:20 “Proclaim this message among the descendants of Jacob. Make it known throughout Judah.
5:21 Tell them: ‘Hear this, you foolish people who have no understanding, who have eyes but do not discern, who have ears but do not perceive:
5:22 “You should fear me!” says the Lord. “You should tremble in awe before me! I made the sand to be a boundary for the sea, a permanent barrier that it can never cross. Its waves may roll, but they can never prevail. They may roar, but they can never cross beyond that boundary.”
5:23 But these people have stubborn and rebellious hearts. They have turned aside and gone their own way.
5:24 They do not say to themselves, “Let us revere the Lord our God. It is he who gives us the autumn rains and the spring rains at the proper time. It is he who assures us of the regular weeks of harvest.”
5:25 Your misdeeds have stopped these things from coming. Your sins have deprived you of my bounty.’
5:26 “Indeed, there are wicked scoundrels among my people. They lie in wait like bird catchers hiding in ambush. They set deadly traps to catch people.
5:27 Like a cage filled with the birds that have been caught, their houses are filled with the gains of their fraud and deceit. That is how they have gotten so rich and powerful.
5:28 That is how they have grown fat and sleek. There is no limit to the evil things they do. They do not plead the cause of the fatherless in such a way as to win it. They do not defend the rights of the poor.
5:29 I will certainly punish them for doing such things!” says the Lord. “I will certainly bring retribution on such a nation as this!
5:30 “Something horrible and shocking is going on in the land of Judah:
5:31 The prophets prophesy lies. The priests exercise power by their own authority. And my people love to have it this way. But they will not be able to help you when the time of judgment comes!
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
Jeremiah 5 belongs to the prophet's early judgment preaching against Judah in the late monarchic period, when covenant violation, social injustice, and false assurance from prophets and priests were widespread.
Historical setting and dynamics
This oracle belongs to Judah’s late monarchic period on the eve of exile, when the temple, court, priesthood, and prophetic office still functioned but had been hollowed out by covenant unfaithfulness. Jeremiah addresses Jerusalem and Judah as a whole: public life, elite leadership, domestic morality, and agrarian security all stand under the same indictment. The unnamed invader is described as a distant, enduring, foreign power; the description fits the Babylonian crisis, though Jeremiah leaves the empire unnamed here so the focus remains on Yahweh’s sovereignty rather than geopolitics. The repeated promise that judgment will not make a full end points to preservation of a remnant within the coming devastation.
Central idea
Jerusalem and Judah are so thoroughly corrupt that no truthful, faithful segment can be found to avert judgment. Idolatry, adultery, injustice, and false religious leadership have provoked a severe covenant curse: God will send a foreign nation to devastate the land, though not utterly annihilate his people. The passage insists that the root problem is not ignorance alone but stubborn refusal to fear the Lord and receive his word.
Context and flow
The unit moves from a public search for any righteous person (vv. 1-6), to marital/idolatrous infidelity (vv. 7-13), to the announced enemy and its measured devastation (vv. 14-19), to a renewed covenant summons grounded in creation and providence (vv. 20-25), and then to the exposure of predatory elites and corrupt religious leadership (vv. 26-31). The flow is cumulative: every social layer is shown guilty, and each fresh oracle explains why judgment is both deserved and unavoidable.
Exegetical analysis
The opening 'search' is rhetorical and judicial, not informational; the Lord already knows the state of the city. The challenge exposes the absence of public covenant faithfulness. Jeremiah's own reflection in vv. 4-5 tests whether ignorance among the poor might explain the corruption, but the answer is no: the educated and governing classes are equally guilty. Thus the problem is not lack of access to revelation alone but widespread refusal to submit to what is known.
Verses 7-9 combine idolatry, adultery, and appetite-driven lust to portray covenant treachery as moral disorder, not merely ritual irregularity. The command in vv. 10-13 to strip the vineyards is severe but not final; the image means disciplined judgment with a preserved remnant, not the cancellation of God's covenant purpose. The 'nation from far away' in vv. 15-17 is unnamed, but the historical referent most naturally fits Babylon. Verse 18 repeats that the Lord will not make a complete end, preserving hope within judgment. Verse 14 makes Jeremiah's words 'fire' because divine speech itself executes the judgment it announces.
Verses 19-25 explain the exile in covenantal reciprocity: they served foreign gods in their own land and will serve foreigners in a foreign land. The sea-boundary and rain imagery argue from creation and providence to the duty of fear; Judah's failure is moral blindness, not lack of evidence. The closing section reveals that public corruption is anchored in economic fraud, neglect of the helpless, and religious offices operating autonomously from the Lord. The final line is especially severe: when the people love such leadership, they choose deception and forfeit any excuse before judgment.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This chapter sits under the Mosaic covenant and its blessings and curses. It functions as a covenant lawsuit and warning of exile, showing that land, rain, security, and public order are not autonomous gifts but are governed by Yahweh’s covenant administration. Yet the repeated restraint—'not a full end'—preserves the line of promise and keeps Jeremiah’s ministry oriented toward eventual restoration, culminating later in the new covenant. The passage therefore joins judgment to mercy without weakening either.
Theological significance
The passage reveals a God who sees through public religion to the truth of the heart and who demands faithfulness, not mere verbal allegiance. It exposes sin as comprehensive: lying, idolatry, sexual lust, greed, oppression, and false prophecy all belong together. It also shows that divine judgment is morally proportionate and covenantal rather than arbitrary. At the same time, God's preservation of a remnant and his continued sending of a speaking prophet display mercy within judgment. The fear of the Lord appears as the proper foundation for wisdom, gratitude, and social righteousness.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
This is a direct prophetic judgment oracle. The far nation, predatory beasts, fire and wood, the sea boundary, and the rains are not puzzles to allegorize but vivid covenantal images that portray real judgment, restraint, sovereignty, and provision. The marriage/adultery language is a strong prophetic metaphor for idolatry and covenant infidelity. No major typology requires speculation beyond the passage's plain prophetic force.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage uses covenant lawsuit logic, public-search language, and honor/shame dynamics familiar in the ancient world. Streets and squares are public places where truth should be visible; the search for a faithful person is a communal, not merely private, test. Marriage as a covenant image makes idolatry a form of betrayal, and the appeal to rain and harvest reflects an agrarian world in which God's provision was experienced through seasonal gift. The concern for the fatherless and poor reflects the legal and moral duty of a kingless covenant community to protect those without social power.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its immediate setting the passage is not a direct messianic prophecy. Canonically, it participates in the broader biblical pattern of rejected prophetic word, failed shepherds, and the need for a faithful covenant mediator. The chapter heightens the expectation for a righteous ruler and a people whose obedience comes from within, realities that are developed further in the new covenant and find their fullest expression in Christ's truthfulness, obedience, and shepherding.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God cares about truthfulness in speech, not only outward religion. Leaders are more accountable, not less, because they should know the Lord's demands. Persistent sin can harden people against correction, making judgment more severe. Social injustice toward the vulnerable is not a minor issue but a covenant offense. Believers should interpret providence with reverent fear of God rather than self-satisfied denial, and they should be wary of leaders who speak reassurance without submission to God's word.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main crux is whether the search for a righteous person in vv. 1-3 should be read literally or rhetorically; the context favors a rhetorical test exposing total public corruption rather than a search for one isolated individual. A second issue is vv. 10 and 18's 'not make a full end': the phrase means severe but measured judgment, not the cancellation of all covenant purpose. A third question is the 'nation from far away,' which the text does not name but which historically fits Babylon.
Application boundary note
Read this passage first as a covenant lawsuit against Judah, not as a generic template for any modern nation. Its social, political, and redemptive setting is Israel-specific, though its moral principles about truth, justice, and fear of the Lord remain instructive. The imagery should not be over-allegorized, and the prophetic warning should not be detached from the historical judgment it announces.
Key Hebrew terms
ʾemunah
Gloss: steadfast reliability, trustworthiness
This term in v. 3 and the surrounding context identifies what the Lord seeks but does not find in Jerusalem: covenant reliability expressed in truthful conduct and responsive obedience.
sheqer
Gloss: deceit, falsehood
The people's oaths in God's name are exposed as falsehood; the indictment is not merely mistaken speech but covenant-breaking deception.
zanah
Gloss: sexual unfaithfulness, idolatrous infidelity
The marriage/adultery image in vv. 7-8 links idolatry and sexual sin as parallel forms of covenant treachery against the Lord.
naval
Gloss: morally senseless, heedless
In vv. 21-24, foolishness is not low intelligence but moral and spiritual blindness that refuses to fear God or recognize his provision.
yare
Gloss: revere, tremble before
The passage presents the fear of the Lord as the proper covenant posture that should govern interpretation of providence, harvest, and judgment.
yoreh / malqosh
Gloss: early rain / latter rain
These seasonal rains symbolize Yahweh's faithful provision; their withholding in v. 25 is read as covenant discipline for persistent sin.
Interpretive cautions
The oracle is now ready for use; keep the historical identification of the invading nation and the imagery of rain, beasts, and fire within the text’s covenantal frame.
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