Jeremiah 29

Jeremiah 29

Jeremiah sends a crucial letter to the exiles in Babylon (including the priests and prophets). God commands the exiles to settle down and seek the welfare of the city where they have been exiled. He tells them not to believe the false prophets who say the captivity will be short. God gives them the famous promise: "For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope." God promises to restore them after seventy years in Babylon.

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Jeremiah 32

Jeremiah is commanded to wear a wooden yoke as a sign that God has placed King Nebuchadnezzar in charge of all the nations, warning them not to resist Babylonian rule.

Jeremiah 33

The false prophet Hananiah publicly breaks Jeremiah’s wooden yoke, prophesying that the exile will end in two years. Jeremiah rebukes him, and Hananiah dies two months later, confirming Jeremiah's truth.

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