- Letter of Jeremiah
The Letter of Jeremiah, also known as the Epistle of Jeremy, is a
deuterocanonical (or apocryphal) book of theOld Testament ; this letter purports to have been written byJeremiah ("Jeremy") to the exiles who were to be taken captive into Babylon.Author
Most scholars argue that the author was not Jeremiah, but a
Hellenistic Jew who lived inAlexandria . Whoever the author, the work was written with a serious practical purpose: to instruct the Jews not to worship the gods of theBabylonia ns, but to worship only the Lord.Date
The date of this work is uncertain. It is interesting to note that
2 Maccabees may be referring to this letter in chapter 2 verses 1-3. However, the reference in 2 Maccabees is disputed by Fritzsche, Gifford, Shrer, and others.Canonicity
The letter (epistle) is included as a discrete unit in the
Septuagint . There is no evidence of it ever having been canonical in the Jewish tradition.The earliest evidence we have of the question of its canonicity arising in Christian tradition is in the work of
Origen of Alexandria , as reported by Eusebius in his Church History. Origen listed Lamentations and the Letter of Jeremiah as one unit with the Book of Jeremiah proper, among "the canonical books as the Hebrews have handed them down". [ [http://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Nicene_and_Post-Nicene_Fathers:_Series_II/Volume_I/Church_History_of_Eusebius/Book_VI/Chapter_25&oldid=571245] Eusebius, "Church History", vi.25.2]Jerome provided the majority of the translation work for the vulgar (popular) Latin translation of the Bible, called theVulgate Bible. In view of the fact that no Hebrew text was available, Jerome refused to consider the Epistle of Jeremiah, as the other books he called apocryphal, canonical.Despite Jerome's reservations, the epistle is included as chapter 6 of the
book of Baruch in theOld Testament of the Vulgate. TheAuthorized King James Version follows the same practice, while placing Baruch in the Apocrypha section. In theEthiopian Orthodox canon, it forms part of the "Rest of Jeremiah", along with4 Baruch (also known as the "Paraleipomena of Jeremiah").The epistle is one of three
deuterocanonical books found among theDead Sea scrolls (seeTanakh at Qumran ). (The other two areBen Sira and Tobit.) The portion of the epistle discovered atQumran was written in Greek. This does not preclude the possibility of the text being based on a prior Hebrew or Aramaic text. However, the only text available to us has dozens of linguistic features available in Greek, but not in Hebrew, hence introductions of a Greek editor, not required for minimalist translation. [Benjamin G Wright, [http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/nets/edition/letier.pdf 'To the Reader of the Epistle of Ieremeias',] in "New English Translation of the Septuagint".]Contents
The author warned the Hebrew exiles that they were to remain in captivity for seven generations, and that during that time they would see the worship paid to idols. Readers were extolled not to participate, because the idols were created by men, without the powers of speech, hearing, or self-preservation.
In verse 70, with rare irony, the author compares an idol to a scarecrow—impotent to protect, but deluding to the imagination. Babylonians are believed to have carried their idols around on their shoulders (Letter of Jeremiah) in the
NAB
* [http://encyclopedia.jrank.org/JEE_JUN/JEREMY_EPISTLE_OF.html Encyclopedia Britannica: Epistle of Jeremy]
* [http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/nets/edition/letier.pdf Introduction and Text of the Letter of Ieremias] from the New English Translation of the Septuagint
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