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Jeremiah 50:6

Posted on 18 May at 13:59
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My people hath bene lost sheepe: their shepheards haue caused them to goe astray, they haue turned them away on the mountaines: they haue gone from mountaine to hill, they haue forgotten their resting place. Jeremiah 50:6 (KJV)

My people hath been lost sheep: their shepherds have caused them to go astray, they have turned them away on the mountains: they have gone from mountain to hill, they have forgotten their restingplace.

Jeremiah was a prophet who delivered God’s messages to the people of Judah before and during their exile to Babylon. In this chapter he pronounces judgment on Babylon, the nation that had conquered and oppressed Judah.

The verse uses the metaphor of lost sheep to describe Israel’s vulnerability and aimlessness. Sheep are prone to wander, and the people had strayed from the path of righteousness. The shepherds mentioned are the leaders and spiritual guides of Israel. Instead of leading the flock toward God, they caused the people to go astray, turning them away on the mountains and sending them from hill to hill. This imagery points to the false gods and idolatrous practices that the Israelites embraced, seeking security in worldly pleasures rather than in the covenant relationship with the Lord.

Because there was no faithful shepherd, the people turned to their own ways, becoming morally confused and, as the drafts note, “every man hath become a robber.” The loss of a proper guide led to spiritual deception and a forgetting of their true resting place—the refuge and peace promised by God.

From this passage we learn several lessons. First, the importance of faithful, god‑centered leadership: leaders must guide and protect the flock according to God’s Word. Second, the danger of spiritual waywardness and deception when the community lacks proper guidance. Third, the need to seek true rest in God, not in fleeting worldly pursuits; the ultimate rest is found in Jesus Christ. Finally, despite the people’s waywardness, the broader context of Jeremiah assures God’s willingness to restore and redeem His people when they repent and return to Him.

In conclusion, Jeremiah 50:6 underscores the consequences of leaderlessness, the resulting moral confusion, and the enduring promise of restoration for a people who turn back to the Shepherd.

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