Jeremías 39:3

3 Todos los oficiales del ejército babilónico entraron y, en señal de su triunfo, se sentaron en la puerta Central: Nergal-sarezer de Samgar y Nebo-sarsequim,
un oficial principal, Nergal-sarezer, consejero del rey, y todos los demás oficiales.

Jeremías 39:3 Meaning and Commentary

Jeremiah 39:3

And all the princes of the king of Babylon came in
Into the city: a breach being made in the walls to take possession of it: and sat in the middle gate;
according to Jarchi, this was a gate of the temple; the gate Nicanor, the eastern gate, which was between the gate of the court of the women and the gate of the temple; who observes, that their Rabbins say, the middle gate was the gate in which the wise men made their decrees and constitutions: so that, in "the place of judgment, wickedness was there"; as in ( Ecclesiastes 3:16 ) ; and Josephus F7 says, that the city was taken in the middle of the night, when the enemies' generals went into the temple; but rather, according to Kimchi, it was one of the gates of the city of Jerusalem; according to Abarbinel, Jerusalem had three walls, and this was the gate of the middle wall; but others take it to be the gate in the middle wall, between the upper and lower city; perhaps it is the same called the second gate, ( Zephaniah 1:10 ) ; and might be the chief and principal gate where these princes placed their seats in triumph as victors, and so fulfilled the prophecy of Jeremiah, ( Jeremiah 1:15 ) ; though they might have another reason for it, their own safety; here they sat till the city was well searched and cleared, lest there should be any ambush laid for them, and cut them off as they entered. The names of some of them were as follow: [even] Nergalsharezer:
according to Kimchi, these are two names of two distinct persons; but generally thought to be one name of the same person; so Josephus, who calls him Nergelearus. The first part of the name "Nergal" was the name of an idol with the Cushites, ( 2 Kings 17:30 ) ; and it was usual with the Heathens to give the names of their idols to their kings, princes, and great men. The other part, "Sharezer", is a name of one of Sennacherib's sons; and seems to be an Assyrian name, ( Isaiah 37:38 ) . The next is called Samgarnebo;
though, according to Hillerus F8, this is a surname of the former, to distinguish him from another Nergalsharezer after mentioned, taken from his office: this name signifying the "strict keeper of Nebo", the temple of the idol Nebo; see ( Isaiah 46:1 ) . The next is Sarsechim Rabsaris;
for these are not two names of different persons, but of the same person. The first is his proper name, which signifies the "prince of the Scythians"; the other his name of office, and signifies the "chief eunuch", or the "chief of the eunuchs". The last name is Nergalsharezer Rabmag;
these names belong to the same person, who is called from his office "Rabmag", the "chief magician", or the "chief of the magicians", to distinguish him from the other Nergalsharezer before mentioned: these, with all the residue of the princes of the king of Babylon,
entered the city and took it.


FOOTNOTES:

F7 Antiqu. l. 10. c. 8. sect. 2.
F8 Onomastic. Sacr. p. 608.

Jeremías 39:3 In-Context

1 Caída de Jerusalén
En enero
del noveno año del reinado de Sedequías, el rey Nabucodonosor
llegó con su ejército para sitiar Jerusalén.
2 Dos años y medio más tarde, el 18 de julio
del año once del reinado de Sedequías, los babilonios abrieron una brecha en la muralla y la ciudad cayó.
3 Todos los oficiales del ejército babilónico entraron y, en señal de su triunfo, se sentaron en la puerta Central: Nergal-sarezer de Samgar y Nebo-sarsequim,
un oficial principal, Nergal-sarezer, consejero del rey, y todos los demás oficiales.
4 Cuando el rey Sedequías y todos los soldados vieron que los babilonios habían invadido la ciudad, huyeron. Esperaron hasta la caída del sol y entonces se deslizaron por la puerta que está entre las dos murallas, detrás del jardín real, y se dirigieron al valle del Jordán.
5 Sin embargo, las tropas babilónicas
persiguieron al rey y lo capturaron en las llanuras de Jericó. Entonces lo llevaron ante el rey Nabucodonosor de Babilonia, que se encontraba en Ribla, en la tierra de Hamat. Allí el rey de Babilonia dictó sentencia contra Sedequías.
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