2018, July 22 ~ Jeremiah 23:1-6 and Ephesians 2:11-22
Jeremiah 23:1-6
After the good King Josiah was killed in battle in 609 BCE at Megiddo (the Greek name for which is Armageddon), the fortunes of Judea took a sharp downward turn. Babylon threatened Judea’s existence, and Judea had a series of hapless kings from 609 BCE until Jerusalem was conquered by the Babylonians in 597 BCE and destroyed by them in 586 BCE. The Babylonian Exile occurred in two phases, one in 597 and the second in 587 BCE.
Jeremiah’s prophesy (i.e. speaking for YHWH) began around 609 and continued until 586 BCE when he died in Egypt.
In today’s passage, Jeremiah criticized the current kings (“shepherds”) for destroying and scattering the people (“the sheep of my pasture”) and said that a “remnant” will come back to Judea. In the Hebrew Bible, “remnant” is a “code word” that referred to the Judeans who would return to Jerusalem from Babylon after the Exile ended in 539 BCE. Jeremiah, speaking for YHWH, said when they return, they will follow the commandment in Genesis 1:22 to be “fruitful and multiply” (v.3). He said the line of David would be restored, and Judeans would live safely in their own land.
These prophesies by Jeremiah remained an important part of the 1st Century CE understanding (and expectation) of what the Messiah would be and do.
Ephesians 2:11-22
Ephesus was a large and prosperous city in what is now western Turkey. In the Acts of the Apostles and 1 Corinthians, Paul is said to have visited there. In Ephesus, there were Jesus Followers who were Jews and Jesus Followers who were Gentiles, and they didn’t always agree on what it meant to be a Jesus Follower.
Because the letter contains a number of terms not used in Paul’s other letters and gives new meanings to some of Paul’s characteristic terms, most scholars believe that this letter was written by one of Paul’s disciples late in the First Century. The letter was intended to unify the Jesus Follower community in Ephesus. The first three chapters are theological teachings and the last three chapters consist of ethical exhortations.
Today, the author speaks mostly to the Gentile (“uncircumcised”) Jesus Followers, and reminds them that through Jesus the Christ they have been brought into the Covenants of promise that formerly were only for the Jews.
By his life, death and resurrection, Jesus created a New Covenant open to both Jews and Gentiles. Gentile and Jewish Jesus Followers are now “one new humanity in place of the two” and “members of the household of God.”
Historical note: The question “Does a Gentile have to become a Jew (be circumcised and follow Kosher dietary rules) in order to become a Jesus Follower?” was supposedly “answered” in the negative at Jerusalem in 49 CE (recounted in Acts 15). Many scholars, however, see Acts 15 as a “compression” of events that continued well past 49 CE until Acts of the Apostles was written around 85 CE by the same person who wrote the Gospel According to Luke.