Jeremiah 34 confronts oath-breaking under siege: a public release of Hebrew slaves is revoked, and God answers with a mirror verdict. The chapter ties worship to justice and shows mercy’s thread in Zedekiah’s promised end.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Jeremiah 34 confronts oath-breaking under siege: a public release of Hebrew slaves is revoked, and God answers with a mirror verdict. The chapter ties worship to justice and shows mercy’s thread in Zedekiah’s promised end.
Nehemiah 10 turns confession into a written covenant that shapes marriages, markets, fields, and storerooms. The chapter’s refrain—“We will not neglect the house of our God”—gathers every pledge into sustained worship.
This study of 2 Samuel 21 follows famine to its moral cause, traces costly repair with the Gibeonites, honors Rizpah’s vigil and David’s burial of the fallen, and shows how God preserves the royal line against giant threats so the land can live again.
Gibeon survives by a ruse, Israel errs by not inquiring, and an oath in God’s name must stand. Joshua 9 shows how discernment and fidelity honor the Lord while He redeems imperfect beginnings.
God tests Abraham on Moriah and then provides a ram in Isaac’s place, naming the mountain for His provision. By sworn oath He promises multiplied descendants, victory, and blessing for all nations through the promised offspring.
Hebrews 7 unveils Jesus as priest forever by God’s oath and indestructible life. He guarantees a better covenant, offered Himself once for all, and always intercedes for His people.