Here's Jeremiah 49 and the one part in there, about Kedar and Hazor was specifically fulfilled in the past with Nebuchadnezzar. As it states. The rest some Bible teachers say was all in the past, others think there are future fulfillments yet to come. Bill Salus pulls this passage in to give another look at this prediction for Elam in his book on the subject.
As always this is just me speculating, thinking over these scriptures and giving my opinion. I am a retired RN not a theologian. But I get excited when I see something in there that I haven't noticed before. Like with the timing of Isaiah 17. That bit about the foreign plants might NOT be the covenant with the AC- I'm speculating that it is because it fits. However it wouldn't be the first time I've leapt to a conclusion and was wrong and had to change my mind.
Bible study in prophecy is very like a giant jig saw puzzle. You see something, it might fit, you get excited, it sort of fits, and then you find out later, you have to go back, pull that almost fitting piece out, and try something else. I'm sharing my excitement with the study of the Word, but I don't want anybody thinking I actually know what I'm doing here. I'm an enthusiastic amateur. So take me with a LARGE GRAIN OF SALT HERE!
Ok here's the chapter: NKJV And as above I will bold some parts for discussion below. Also Amman the capital of Jordan is in the north where the Ammonites lived. Moab is in the centre and Edom is in the south of Jordan. Think M for MOAB and MIDDLE.
Against the Ammonites.
Thus says the Lord:
“Has Israel no sons?
Has he no heir?
Why then does Milcom inherit Gad,
And his people dwell in its cities?
2 Therefore behold, the days are coming,” says the Lord,
“That
I will cause to be heard an alarm of war
In Rabbah of the Ammonites;
It shall be a desolate mound,
And her villages shall be burned with fire.
Then Israel shall take possession of his inheritance,” says the Lord.
3 “Wail, O Heshbon, for Ai is plundered!
Cry, you daughters of Rabbah,
Gird yourselves with sackcloth!
Lament and run to and fro by the walls;
For Milcom shall go into captivity
With his priests and his princes together.
4 Why do you boast in the valleys,
Your flowing valley, O backsliding daughter?
Who trusted in her treasures,
saying,
‘Who will come against me?’
5 Behold, I will bring fear upon you,”
Says the Lord God of hosts,
“From all those who are around you;
You shall be driven out, everyone headlong,
And no one will gather those who wander off.
6 But afterward I will bring back
The captives of the people of Ammon,” says the Lord.
Judgment on Edom
7 Against Edom.
Thus says the Lord of hosts:
“
Is wisdom no more in Teman?
Has counsel perished from the prudent?
Has their wisdom vanished?
8 Flee, turn back, dwell in the depths, O inhabitants of Dedan!
For I will bring the calamity of Esau upon him,
The time
that I will punish him.
9
If grape-gatherers came to you,
Would they not leave some gleaning grapes?
If thieves by night,
Would they not destroy until they have enough?
10 But I have made Esau bare;
I have uncovered his secret places,
And he shall not be able to hide himself.
His descendants are plundered,
His brethren and his neighbors,
And he
is no more.
11 Leave your fatherless children,
I will preserve them alive;
And let your widows trust in Me.”
12 For thus says the Lord: “Behold, those whose judgment
was not to drink of the cup have assuredly drunk. And
are you the one who will altogether go unpunished? You shall not go unpunished, but you shall surely drink
of it. 13 For I have sworn by Myself,” says the Lord, “that Bozrah shall become a desolation, a reproach, a waste, and a curse. And all its cities shall be perpetual wastes.”
14 I have heard a message from the Lord,
And an ambassador has been sent to the nations:
“Gather together, come against her,
And rise up to battle!
15 “For indeed, I will make you small among nations,
Despised among men.
16 Your fierceness has deceived you,
The pride of your heart,
O you who dwell in the clefts of the rock,
Who hold the height of the hill!
Though you make your nest as high as the eagle,
I will bring you down from there,” says the Lord.
17 “Edom also shall be an astonishment;
Everyone who goes by it will be astonished
And will hiss at all its plagues.
18 As in the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah
And their neighbors,” says the Lord,
“No one shall remain there,
Nor shall a son of man dwell in it.
19 “Behold, he shall come up like a lion from the floodplain of the Jordan
Against the dwelling place of the strong;
But I will suddenly make him run away from her.
And who is a chosen man that I may appoint over her?
For who is like Me?
Who will arraign Me?
And who is that shepherd
Who will withstand Me?”
20 Therefore hear the counsel of the Lord that He has taken against Edom,
And His purposes that He has proposed against the inhabitants of Teman:
Surely the least of the flock shall draw them out;
Surely He shall make their dwelling places desolate with them.
21 The earth shakes at the noise of their fall;
At the cry its noise is heard at the Red Sea.
22 Behold, He shall come up and fly like the eagle,
And spread His wings over Bozrah;
The heart of the mighty men of Edom in that day shall be
Like the heart of a woman in birth pangs.
Judgment on Damascus
23 Against Damascus.
“
Hamath and
Arpad are shamed,
For they have heard bad news.
They are fainthearted;
There is trouble on the sea;
It cannot be quiet.
24
Damascus has grown feeble;
She turns to flee,
And fear has seized
her.
Anguish and sorrows have taken her like a woman in labor.
25 Why is the city of praise not deserted, the city of My joy?
26 Therefore her young men shall fall in her streets,
And
all the men of war shall be cut off in that day,” says the Lord of hosts.
27 “I will kindle a fire
in the wall of Damascus,
And it shall consume the palaces of Ben-Hadad.”
Judgment on Kedar and Hazor
28 Against Kedar and against the kingdoms of Hazor, which Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon shall strike.
Thus says the Lord:
“Arise, go up to Kedar,
And devastate the men of the East!
29 Their tents and their flocks they shall take away.
They shall take for themselves their curtains,
All their vessels and their camels;
And they shall cry out to them,
‘Fear
is on every side!’
30 “Flee, get far away! Dwell in the depths,
O inhabitants of Hazor!” says the Lord.
“For Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon has taken counsel against you,
And has conceived a plan against you.
31 “Arise, go up to the wealthy nation that dwells securely,” says the Lord,
“Which has neither gates nor bars,
Dwelling alone.
32 Their camels shall be for booty,
And the multitude of their cattle for plunder.
I will scatter to all winds those in the farthest corners,
And I will bring their calamity from all its sides,” says the Lord.
33 “Hazor shall be a dwelling for jackals, a desolation forever;
No one shall reside there,
Nor son of man dwell in it.”
Judgment on Elam
34 The word of the Lord that came to Jeremiah the prophet against Elam, in the beginning of the reign of Zedekiah king of Judah, saying, 35 “Thus says the Lord of hosts:
‘Behold, I will break
the bow of Elam,
The
foremost of their might.
36 Against Elam I will bring the
four winds
From the
four quarters of heaven,
And
scatter them toward all those winds;
There
shall be no nations where the outcasts of Elam will not go.
37 For
I will cause Elam to be dismayed before their enemies
And
before those who seek their life.
I will bring disaster upon them,
My fierce anger,’ says the Lord;
‘And
I will send the sword after them
Until I have consumed them.
38
I will set My throne in Elam,
And will destroy from there the king and the princes,’ says the Lord.
39 ‘But it shall come to pass
in the latter days:
I will bring back the captives of Elam,’ says the Lord.”
comments:
V 1 Milcom is one of the gods of the Ammonites, a form of Baal, and may be the same as Molech.
v 2 Rabbah is now called AMMAN Jordan, it's the capital of Jordan!
TIME STAMP ALERT in V 2: When did Israel possess almost all of modern northern Jordan EAST of the Jordan River? That is the land of Gad. It includes Amman to the south and extends north to the southern shore of the sea of Galilee. Here's where I see this as a yet future prophecy.
V3 Ai is in the "West Bank" area west of Jericho while Heshbon is 20 miles east of the Jordan river as it enters the Dead Sea or in Jordan itself. The so called "West Bank" was named because when Jordan invaded Israel in 1948 they took that territory and renamed it the West Bank. It is in the heartland of Israel, the ancient territory of Judea and Samaria. So here we see something devastates Jordan because an area of the West Bank is plundered.
V 6 sounds like it's referring to the Millennial Reign when the believers from Ammon will be brought back to their place, something the Lord says to Elam as well in v 39.
The Judgment of Edom v 7-22 I'm leaving alone for now (I need to study further). It seems like part is in the past, part may be future. Verse 9 has echoes of Isaiah 17 with the grapes and gleanings. Verse 11 looks to a day when the widows and orphans of Edom believe in Christ, I think in the Millennium.
Verse 19-22 may fit the end of the Tribulation with God acting as the Shepherd. The area of Petra is known as the Sheepfold, and it's Bosrah. Petra is it's Greek name, Bosrah means Sheepfold. Teman is modern day Ma'an which is the city nearest Petra. It was the capital of Edom. I'll give the passages I'm looking at to compare with so you can see where I'm headed.
It's prophesied in
Micah 2:12 here as one of several indicators that God will protect his people during the last half of the Trib in Bosrah.
12 “I will surely gather all of you, Jacob;
I will surely bring together the remnant of Israel.
I will bring them together like sheep in a pen,
like a flock in its pasture;
the place will throng with people.
13 The One who breaks open the way will go up before them;
they will break through the gate and go out.
Their King will pass through before them,
the Lord at their head.”
Isaiah 63:1 says this and it's decidedly our Lord coming to rescue His people at the end of the Trib
Who is this coming from Edom,
from Bozrah, with his garments stained crimson?
Who is this, robed in splendor,
striding forward in the greatness of his strength?
“It is I, proclaiming victory,
mighty to save.”
2 Why are your garments red,
like those of one treading the winepress?
3 “I have trodden the winepress alone;
from the nations no one was with me.
I trampled them in my anger
and trod them down in my wrath;
their blood spattered my garments,
and I stained all my clothing.
4 It was for me the day of vengeance;
the year for me to redeem had come.
5 I looked, but there was no one to help,
I was appalled that no one gave support;
so my own arm achieved salvation for me,
and my own wrath sustained me.
6 I trampled the nations in my anger;
in my wrath I made them drunk
and poured their blood on the ground.”
Back to Jeremiah, skipping Kedar and Hazor verses 28-33 because they were fulfilled in the past by Nebuchadnezzar as the text states.
V 23-27 The Judgment of Damascus which seems like a companion to Isaiah 17 and possibly also Amos 1.
v 23 Hamath and Arpad. Hamath is Hama and is a large city north of Damascus. Arpad is on the outskirts of Aleppo which is north again of Hama and Damascus. They run in a straightish line on the main highway going North to Turkey from Damacus. Arpad/Aleppo is just south of the border with Turkey.
IF (it's a big if, because I'm speculating here) that this passage in Jeremiah is the same event as Isaiah 17 then we could be looking at some very good details.
This is why I think that if these 2 passages, Isaiah 17 and Ezekiel 32 are related, then this could be why Turkey is caught unprepared in Ezek 32 when the Damascus event destroys Damascus. I think it comes from the sea (Israeli submarine launch of something???) maybe.
V 23 says there is trouble on the sea. Damascus isn't on the sea coast by the way, Lebanon is between Damascus and the sea.
BUT Hama/Hamath is where Syria starts to have a sea coast, just north and east of Tripoli in Lebanon actually. In between Hamath/Hama and Arpad/Aleppo to their west is the port of Latakia, a MAJOR RUSSIAN STRONGHOLD.
V 24 Damascus turns to flee and here's another mention of birth pains. She's caught like a woman in labour.
V 25 IS SUPER IMPORTANT. The verses above and below refer to Damascus. The city of praise, not deserted, the city of God's joy is JERUSALEM. This is the heart of the issue, the reason for what's happening. God uses contrast here between Damascus and Jerusalem.
V 26 is the THEREFORE. Meaning what is happening to Damascus is happening because of something Damascus was trying to do to Jerusalem.
v 26 continues ALL the men of war shall be cut off in that day says the Lord of hosts. God is cutting them all off. Sure sounds like Isaiah 17 to me. And there's that phrase "in that day" which so often refers to the Tribulation - Jacob's Trouble, the Day of the Lord, the Day of Vengeance of our God.
V 27 I take to mean the wall of Damascus and it's palaces - the Govt systems and buildings and or the homes of the leader/s.
Moving on to Elam again- the ancient area that is now south western Iran on the sea coast, and stretching up along the mountain range in the border region of Iraq.
V 35 Bill Salus points out that a bow launches weapons, and this is described as the foremost of their might. I think he's right in drawing a connection to their missile launchers and the missiles aimed at Israel. Bill also points out that God is extremely angry with Elam for something they are doing, and now that they can reach Israel with their missiles (and drones for that matter) flying objects of destruction -- that this is what would make God angry enough to deal out this kind of punishment. They've threatened Israel's life.
v 36 Bill looks at nuclear fallout that scatters the outcasts of Elam, the refugees fleeing for their lives. They go to the 4 corners of the earth in our idiomatic expression, here the 4 quarters of heaven, 4 winds. 4 is a biblical number of completion, this is a complete scattering.
V 37 Ask if this was today, WHO are the enemies of Elam (Iran)? Who would be so angry as to want to end their lives? Not America. Not Europe. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, even Turkey maybe, but Iran doesn't fear them. Who does Iran fear enough to continually try to eradicate? Israel. And who alone among the nations of the world if attacked would the Lord respond with FIERCE ANGER? again, Israel. So I think Bill is right, this conflict that so enrages God is something that Iran plans to eradicate the nation of Israel.
He God sends the sword after them (not the innocent Iranians, but those whose hearts are filled with antisemitic hatred) and He consumes them. This doesn't refer to the whole nation of Iran, but only one portion of Iran, the south western part.
V 38 is an idiom that was used in that area. When a king conquered, he would set up his throne in the middle of the conquered nation, in the capitol, often bringing the kings and princes before him to be slaughtered. That is the picture here. I know I used to think that meant that Jesus would have an alternate throne in Iran and that was like a comfort to Iran. A lot of Bible teachers teach that. But I was listening to Michael Heiser one day (I think it was him anyway) and he explained the habit of the kings in that day and in that region.
It was the way those conquering kings put an end to all hopes of a future revival of the kingdom that just got smashed. The Lord putting an end to the Shia plans to slaughter His people Israel. For once and for all.
V 39 however IS hope for Iran and the captives of Elam- those from that area who trust in Him. In this case I think it's referring to Jesus in the Millennial kingdom restoring the believers from that area into their former homeland.
Overall this chapter is dealing with the current enemies of Israel, those who have tried to take her land and her life in the past like Jordan who may yet turn on Israel again, Damascus who is actively involved against Israel, and Elam, part of Iran, and Iran is very involved against Israel.
There are too many references inside this chapter with all but the Kedar Hazor bit, that put these in the yet future category.
I think it's interesting that Jeremiah 49 and Ezekiel 32 both mention Elam, - a distinct area of Iran but Ezekiel 38 mentions Persia which is all of Iran in Ezekiel 38. So when Ezekiel is in chapter 32 it's Elam he's aiming at, while chapter 38 is Persia or Iran as it's now called, which is the whole nation.
Persia as a nation is still around for Ezekiel 38, but her genocidal hopes to destroy Israel are dashed, at least using her bow, the foremost of her might out of Elam her southwestern area
Ezek 38 mentions the motive of plunder or spoil, which means theft. At least as far as the other nations who question the leader of the alliance, Gog of Magog. Have you come to seek plunder?? they ask.
Revenge, more attempts at genocide may be on the minds and hearts but as far as the world is concerned they think Russia, Turkey, Iran and the others are after spoil, plunder and booty.
A nice puzzle.