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20 The anger of the Lord will not turn back
until he has fully carried out his intended purposes.[a]
In future days[b]
you people will come to understand this clearly.[c]
21 I did not send those prophets,
yet they were in a hurry to give their message.[d]
I did not tell them anything,
yet they prophesied anyway.
22 But if they had stood in my inner circle,[e]
they would have proclaimed my message to my people.
They would have caused my people to turn from their wicked ways
and stop doing the evil things they are doing.

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Footnotes

  1. Jeremiah 23:20 tn Heb “until he has acted and until he has carried out the purposes of his heart.”
  2. Jeremiah 23:20 sn Sometimes the phrase “in future days” may have a remote, even eschatological, reference. At other times it has more immediate reference as it does here and in the nearly identical 30:24, where it refers to the coming days of Babylonian conquest and exile. See also the note at Gen 49:1.
  3. Jeremiah 23:20 tn The translation is intended to reflect a Hebrew construction where a noun functions as the object of a verb from the same root word (the Hebrew cognate accusative).
  4. Jeremiah 23:21 tn Heb “Yet they ran.”sn The image is that of a messenger bearing news from the king. See 2 Sam 18:19-24; Jer 51:31; Isa 40:9; 52:7; and Hab 2:2 (the tablet/scroll bore the message the runner was to read to the intended recipients of his message). Their message has been given in v. 17 (see notes there for cross references).
  5. Jeremiah 23:22 tn Or “had been my confidant.” See the note on v. 18.