Jeremiah 51 concentrates the Lord’s verdict on Babylon and his care for Zion. This study follows the chapter’s images and promises to show justice and mercy in God’s plan.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Jeremiah 51 concentrates the Lord’s verdict on Babylon and his care for Zion. This study follows the chapter’s images and promises to show justice and mercy in God’s plan.
Jeremiah 40 unfolds the sober work of rebuilding after judgment. A freed prophet, a careful governor, and a remnant at harvest show how God preserves seeds for future mercy.
Jeremiah 29 meets God’s people in exile and calls them to patient, prayerful presence under his hand. Seventy years of waiting end in promised restoration and renewed fellowship with the God who listens.
Jeremiah 15 closes the door on easy intercession and opens one for a weary prophet. The Lord judges a stubborn people, then restores his servant with “worthy words” and a wall of bronze, teaching endurance and hope in the heat of crisis.
Jeremiah 11 reads like a courtroom summons: covenant terms are rehearsed, conspiracy is exposed, and the thriving olive burns. The prophet answers “Amen” and entrusts his cause to the righteous Judge, calling readers to integrity and hope after pruning.
Jeremiah 10 contrasts man-made idols with the living, eternal King whose wisdom founded the world. It urges right fear, humble repentance, and prayer for measured discipline and justice.
Isaiah 53 reveals a Servant who bears guilt for the many, turning shame into peace and death into life. This study follows the poem’s movement from rejection to vindication and invites trust in the God who rescues through a righteous representative.
Isaiah 49 lets the Servant speak and stretches hope to the ends of the earth. The chapter comforts Zion with engraved hands and promises roads through mountains as God gathers children from afar and contends for his people.
Isaiah 48 confronts stubborn hearts and announces new things created now by the Redeemer. It calls hearers to leave Babylon, learn his ways, and find peace like a river under his faithful instruction.
Isaiah 5 sings a vineyard love song that becomes a lawsuit, exposing sour fruit where justice and righteousness should grow. Its six woes warn and its hope points to renewal under God’s faithful care.
Joash rebuilds the temple under Jehoiada, but after his mentor’s death he abandons the center he restored. Zechariah’s martyrdom and Aram’s win show how quickly borrowed conviction collapses when hearts stop listening to God.
Rehoboam spurns seasoned counsel, answers harshly, and the kingdom fractures as Israel rejects David’s house—fulfilling the Lord’s word to Jeroboam. The chapter warns that power without humility breeds rebellion, even as God’s sovereign hand works through painful divides to advance His purposes.
Manasseh rebuilds what Hezekiah tore down, placing an idol in the temple and filling Jerusalem with blood until prophets announce measured judgment. Amon prolongs the slide, yet God preserves a remnant and keeps the line moving toward hope.
In 2 Kings 4 the Lord meets families and communities in ordinary rooms. Empty jars fill, a child is raised, poison is healed, and a hundred are fed with leftovers—tastes now of the future fullness God has promised.
Elijah’s departure and Elisha’s inheritance show how God sustains his work across generations. Parted waters, a healed spring, and a sobering warning reveal the Lord’s present help and holy care.