The
Letter of Jeremiah


Baruch
Chapter
6
-
A
copy of the letter which Jeremiah sent to those who were being led
captive to Babylon by the king of the Babylonians, to
convey to them what God had commanded him:
For the sins you
committed before God, you are being led captive to Babylon by
Nebuchadnezzar, king of the Babylonians. -
2When
you reach Babylon you will be there many years, a period seven
generations long; after which I will bring you back from there in
peace.
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3And
now in Babylon you will see borne upon men's shoulders gods of
silver and gold and wood, which cast fear upon the pagans.
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4Take
care that you yourselves do not imitate their alien example and
stand in fear of them,
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5when
you see the crowd before them and behind worshiping them. Rather,
say in your hearts, "You, O LORD, are to be worshiped!";
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6for
my angel is with you, and he is the custodian of your lives.
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7Their
tongues are smoothed by woodworkers; they are covered with gold and
silver-but they are a fraud, and cannot speak.
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8People
bring gold, as to a maiden in love with ornament,
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9and
furnish crowns for the heads of their gods. Then sometimes the
priests take the silver and gold from their gods and spend it on
themselves,
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10or
give part of it to the harlots on the terrace. They trick them out
in garments like men, these gods of silver and gold and wood;
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11but
though they are wrapped in purple clothing, they are not safe from
corrosion or insects.
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12They
wipe their faces clean of the house dust which is thick upon them.
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13Each
has a scepter, like the human ruler of a district; but none does
away with those that offend against it.
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14Each
has in its right hand an axe or dagger, but it cannot save itself
from war or pillage. Thus it is known they are not gods; do not fear
them.
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15As
useless as one's broken tools
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16are
their gods, set up in their houses; their eyes are full of dust from
the feet of those who enter.
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17Their
courtyards are walled in like those of a man brought to execution
for a crime against the king; the priests reinforce their houses
with gates and bars and bolts, lest they be carried off by robbers.
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18They
light more lamps for them than for themselves, yet not one of these
can they see.
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19They
are like any beam in the house; it is said their hearts are eaten
away. Though the insects out of the ground consume them and their
garments, they do not feel it.
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20Their
faces are blackened by the smoke of the house.
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21Bats
and swallows alight on their bodies and on their heads; and cats as
well as birds.
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22Know,
therefore, that they are not gods, and do not fear them.
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23Despite
the gold that covers them for adornment, unless someone wipes away
the corrosion, they do not shine; nor did they feel anything when
they were molded.
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24They
are bought at any price, and there is no spirit in them.
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25Having
no feet, they are carried on men's shoulders, displaying their shame
to all; and those who worship them are put to confusion
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26because,
if they fall to the ground, the worshipers must raise them up. They
neither move of themselves if one sets them upright, nor come
upright if they fall; but one puts gifts beside them as beside the
dead.
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27Their
priests resell their sacrifices for their own advantage. Even their
wives cure parts of the meat, but do not share it with the poor and
the weak;
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28the
menstruous and women in childbed handle their sacrifices. Knowing
from this that they are not gods, do not fear them.
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29How
can they be called gods? For women bring the offerings to these gods
of silver and gold and wood;
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30and
in their temples the priests squat with torn tunic and with shaven
hair and beard, and with their heads uncovered.
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31They
shout and wail before their gods as others do at a funeral banquet.
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32The
priests take some of their clothing and put it on their wives and
children.
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33Whether
they are treated well or ill by anyone, they cannot requite it; they
can neither set up a king nor remove him.
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34Similarly,
they cannot give anyone riches or coppers; if one fails to fulfill a
vow to them, they cannot exact it of him.
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35They
neither save a man from death, nor deliver the weak from the strong.
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36To
no blind man do they restore his sight, nor do they save any man in
an emergency.
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37They
neither pity the widow nor benefit the orphan.
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38These
gilded and silvered wooden statues are like stones from the
mountains; and their worshipers will be put to shame.
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39How
then can it be thought or claimed that they are gods?
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40Even
the Chaldeans themselves have no respect for them; for when they see
a deaf mute, incapable of speech, they bring forward Bel and ask the
god to make noise, as though the man could understand;
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41and
they are themselves unable to reflect and abandon these gods, for
they have no sense.
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42And
their women, girt with cords, sit by the roads, burning chaff for
incense;
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43and
whenever one of them is drawn aside by some passer-by who lies with
her, she mocks her neighbor who has not been dignified as she has,
and has not had her cord broken.
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44All
that takes place around these gods is a fraud: how then can it be
thought or claimed that they are gods?
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45They
are produced by woodworkers and goldsmiths, and they are nothing
else than what these craftsmen wish them to be.
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46Even
those who produce them are not long-lived;
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47how
then can what they have produced be gods? They have left frauds and
opprobrium to their successors.
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48For
when war or disaster comes upon them, the priests deliberate among
themselves where they can hide with them.
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49How
then can one not know that these are no-gods, which do not save
themselves either from war or from disaster?
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50They
are wooden, gilded and silvered; they will later be known for
frauds. To all peoples and kings it will be clear that they are not
gods, but human handiwork; and that God's work is not in them.
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51Who
does not know that they are not gods?
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52They
set no king over the land, nor do they give men rain.
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53They
neither vindicate their own rights, nor do they recover what is
unjustly taken, for they are unable;
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54they
are like crows between heaven and earth. For when fire breaks out in
the temple of these wooden or gilded or silvered gods, though the
priests flee and are safe, they themselves are burnt up in the fire
like beams.
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55They
cannot resist a king, or enemy forces.
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56How
then can it be admitted or thought that they are gods? are safe from
neither thieves nor bandits, these wooden and silvered and gilded
gods;
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57those
who seize them strip off the gold and the silver, and go away with
the clothing that was on them, and they cannot help themselves.
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58How
much better to be a king displaying his valor, or a handy tool in a
house, the joy of its owner, than these false gods; or the door of a
house, that keeps safe those who are within, rather than these false
gods; or a wooden post in a palace, rather than these false gods!
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59The
sun and moon and stars are bright, and obedient in the service for
which they are sent.
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60Likewise
the lightning, when it flashes, is a goodly sight; and the same wind
blows over all the land.
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61The
clouds, too, when commanded by God to proceed across the whole
world, fulfill the order;
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62and
fire, sent from on high to burn up the mountains and the forests,
does what has been commanded. But these false gods are not their
equal, whether in beauty or in power;
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63so
that it is unthinkable, and cannot be claimed, that they are gods.
They can neither execute judgment, nor benefit man.
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64Know,
therefore, that they are not gods, and do not fear them.
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65Kings
they neither curse nor bless.
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66They
show the nations no signs in the heavens, nor are they brilliant
like the sun, nor shining like the moon.
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67The
beasts which can help themselves by fleeing to shelter are better
than they are.
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68Thus
in no way is it clear to us that they are gods; so do not fear them.
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69For
like a scarecrow in a cucumber patch, that is no protection, are
their wooden, gilded, silvered gods.
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70Just
like a thornbush in a garden on which perches every kind of bird, or
like a corpse hurled into darkness, are their silvered and gilded
wooden gods.
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71From
the rotting of the purple and the linen upon them, it can be known
that they are not gods; they themselves will in the end be comsumed,
and be a disgrace in the land.
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72The
better for the just man who has no idols: he shall be far from
disgrace!
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Chapter
The
Book of Ezekiel
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December
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