Page 64 - Biblical Backgrounds student textbook
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Section 10: The Babylonian captivity as background to the Bible
                                         (2 Kings 24-25; Jeremiah; Ezekiel; Daniel)



               10.1 Connect

                        The Jews in the southern kingdom (Judah) understood what it is like for their entire nation to
                        be enslaved and cities of the land destroyed. They surely didn’t forget nor were uninformed of
                        what happened to their brother-nation of Israel over a century ago. In 722 BCE, the Assyrians
                        invaded the northern Kingdom, ravaging its cities and taking its inhabitants to captivity.
                        God warned leaders of the southern Kingdom through His prophets, among them Jeremiah
               (3:22–4:2), of a similar outcome if they did not reform their spiritual and political status. Given the
               outcome, it is safe to conclude that Judah did not listen.

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                       “Therefore thus says the LORD of hosts: Because you have not obeyed my words,  behold, I will
                       send for all the tribes of the north, declares the LORD, and for Nebuchadnezzar the king of
                       Babylon, my servant, and I will bring them against this land and its inhabitants, and against all
                       these surrounding nations. I will devote them to destruction, and make them a horror, a hissing,
                       and an everlasting desolation” (Jer. 25:8-9).

               According to Scripture (2 Kings 25:8–21), Nebuchadnezzar’s army then encircled Jerusalem and settled
               in for a multi-year siege, eventually breaking through Jerusalem’s wall in 586 BCE “They removed
               everything valuable and leveled the city in a burst of savage destruction. As the army retreated, it took
               with it the remnants of Judah’s army and anyone who might lead another uprising.”  Because of the
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               tremendous damage Nebuchadnezzar’s army left on Jerusalem, and the significant number of their
               captives, 586 BCE is treated as the official year of Jewish deportation to the kingdom of Babylonia
               (2Kings 25). However, there were two deportations prior, namely in 605 and 597 BCE According to Jer.
               52:30, there might have been subsequent ones following the mass relocation into captivity.

               What was life like for the Jews in Babylonia? What kind of land and occupations did the Jews find for
               themselves? As a people who were raised to interact based on God’s Word, how did the Jews find their
               cultural and social life in a paganistic Babylonia? The Temple was central to their worship of Jehovah,
               and it was now destroyed. How did the Jews carry on their spiritual life and heritage in a foreign land?
               This chapter will take a closer look at these and other interesting questions.
                     10.2 Objectives.

                     1. The student should be able to describe the Babylonian political, economic, social, religious and
                     cultural environment at the time of the capture and enslavement of the Jews.

               2. The student should be able to describe how the Babylonian environment affected the Jewish nation in
               exile.






               83  Vos, H. F. (1999). Nelson’s new illustrated Bible manners & customs: how the people of the Bible really lived (p.
               301). Nashville, TN: T. Nelson Publishers.


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