Jeremiah 21-36
Jack R. Lundom

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Jeremiah 21-36
Jack R. Lundom
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Professor Jack R. Lundbom's second volume covering Jeremiah 21-36 continues his magisterial three-volume Anchor Bible treatment with scholarly excellence that has established this work as the definitive commentary on Jeremiah for contemporary biblical studies. As an internationally recognized authority on Jeremiah with extensive expertise in Hebrew rhetoric and ancient Near Eastern studies, Lundbom brings unparalleled qualifications to these crucial middle chapters that contain some of the prophet's most significant oracles about royal responsibility, religious corruption, and the hope of a new covenant. His comprehensive approach addresses the complex literary and theological issues surrounding these chapters while maintaining clear focus on their enduring significance for understanding divine justice, human leadership, and covenant renewal.
Lundbom's distinctive contribution to this central section of Jeremiah lies in his detailed analysis of key themes including injustice within Judah's royal house, sexual immorality among the clergy, and the crucial distinction between true and false prophecy. His treatment reveals how the prophet who thundered divine judgment was simultaneously the one who offered the remnant people both oracular promise and symbolic hope, expressed most climactically in the vision of a new and eternal covenant for future generations. His work on this section also provides the Bible's only detailed report of an accredited scribe writing up a scroll of oracles for public reading at the Temple, offering invaluable insights into ancient prophetic literature and its transmission.
This substantial 960-page scholarly achievement serves as an indispensable resource for pastors seeking to understand the theological foundations underlying Jeremiah's message about leadership, covenant faithfulness, and divine restoration, seminary students pursuing advanced study of prophetic literature and biblical theology, and scholars working in Hebrew Bible and ancient Near Eastern studies. Reviewers have consistently praised Lundbom's three-volume work as a treasure trove of valuable information that combines exhaustive technical detail with remarkable readability and clear exegesis. His magisterial scholarship demonstrates why these middle chapters of Jeremiah remain essential for understanding how prophetic literature addresses perennial questions about religious authority, social justice, and the hope for covenant renewal that transcends even the most dire circumstances of judgment and loss.