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Home  >  Biblica  >  Vol 85 (2004)  > 

    Mark Leuchter, «Jeremiah’s 70-Year Prophecy and the ymq bl/K##Atbash Codes», Vol. 85 (2004) 503-522

    Jeremiah’s famous 70-year prophecy (Jer 25,11-12; 29,10) and the atbash codes (Jer 25,26; 51,1.41) have been the subject of much scholarly discussion, with no consensus as to their provenance or meaning. An important inscription from the reign of Esarhaddon suggests that they be viewed as inter-related rhetorical devices. The Esarhaddon inscription, written in relation to that king’s extensive building program in Babylon, contains both a 70-year decree and the Akkadian Cuneiform parallel to the Hebrew Alphabetic atbash codes, claiming that the god Marduk had inverted the 70-year decree, thus allowing Esarhaddon to rebuild the city. This inscription was likely well known to the members of the Josianic court and the elite of Judean society who were carried off to Babylon in 597 B.C.E. This suggests that Jeremiah’s 70-Year prophecy and the atbash codes were employed to direct the prophet’s audience to the Esarhaddon inscription and its implications with respect to Babylonian hegemony as a matter of divine will.

    See more by the same author
    «Tyre’s “70 Years” in Isaiah 23,15-18» 2006 412-417
    «'Why Tarry The Wheels of his Chariot?' (Judg 5,28): Canaanite Chariots and Echoes of Egypt in the Song of Deborah.» 2010 256-268
    «Eisodus as Exodus: The Song of the Sea (Exod 15) Reconsidered.» 2011 321-346
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    Jeremiah’s 70-Year Prophecy and the ymq bl/˚çç Atbash Codes 1. Current scholarly positions on the 70-year prophecy Scholars have long been divided on the nature of Jeremiah’s famous 70-year prophecy (Jer 25,11-12; 29,10) concerning what is tradi- tionally understood to refer to the duration of the Babylonian exile. The dominant theories concerning this prophecy have suggested that it is a retrospective composition postdating the prophet’s own lifetime. Here scholars are divided. Some have argued that the author was a scribe writing in the early period of Cyrus’s rise over Babylon (539 B.C.E.) — 70 years after the death of Josiah (609) — thus creating messianic associations with Cyrus that would take shape more directly in the work of Deutero-Isaiah (Isa 45,1) and the Chronistic literature (2 Chr 36,20-23, esp. v. 21); similar theories apply the dating scheme from the fall of Nineveh to the fall of Babylon, with the same ideological implications (1). Others have suggested that the Jeremianic passages apply the prophecy to a later period, i.e., the construction/ completion of the 2nd Temple ca. 515, roughly 70 years after the exile of 587 (2). In this case, the prophetic corpus is brought in line with what was fast becoming a predominantly Zadokite voice in the liturgical consciousness of the second commonwealth, with the intention of curbing the harshness of earlier Jeremianic passages that muted hope for the future (3). An alternate theory has been suggested by B. D. Sommer, who (1) See J. BRIGHT, Jeremiah (AB; New York 1965) 209; R.K. HARRISON, Jeremiah and Lamentations (Winona Lake 1973) 126. (2) See A. AEJMELAEUS, “Jeremiah at the Turning-Point of History: The Function of Jer. XXV 1-14 in the Book of Jeremiah”, VT 52 (2002) 475-476; W.M. MCKANE, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Jeremiah (ICC; Edinburgh 1996) II, 737-738; C.F. WHITLEY, “The seventy years desolation – a rejoinder”, VT 7 (1957) 416-418; ID., “The term seventy years captivity”, VT 4 (1954) 60-72. (3) For a comprehensive analysis of the Zadokite influence over 2nd Temple society, see G. BOCCACCINI, The Roots of Rabbinic Judaism (Grand Rapids 2002) 52-81. For the 70-year reference as a later scribal softening of earlier oracles, see E.W. NICHOLSON, The Book of the Prophet Jeremiah 1-25 (Cambridge 1975) 211; J.M. BRACKE, Jeremiah 1-29 (Philadelphia 2000) 198.

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