Baruch (Apocrypha),
chapter 1
1: And these
are the words of the book, which Baruch the son of Nerias, the
son of Maasias, the son of Sedecias, the son of Asadias, the son
of Chelcias, wrote in Babylon,
2: In the fifth year, and in the seventh day of the
month, what time as the Chaldeans took Jerusalem, and burnt it
with fire.
3: And Baruch did read the words of this book in the
hearing of Jechonias the son of Joachim king of Juda, and in the
ears of all the people that came to hear the book,
4: And in the hearing of the nobles, and of the king's
sons, and in the hearing of the elders, and of all the people,
from the lowest unto the highest, even of all them that dwelt at
Babylon by the river Sud.
5: Whereupon they wept, fasted, and prayed before the
Lord.
6: They made also a collection of money according to
every man's power:
7: And they sent it to Jerusalem unto Joachim the high
priest, the son of Chelcias, son of Salom, and to the priests,
and to all the people which were found with him at Jerusalem,
8: At the same time when he received the vessels of the
house of the Lord, that were carried out of the temple, to
return them into the land of Juda, the tenth day of the month
Sivan, namely, silver vessels, which Sedecias the son of Josias
king of Jada had made,
9: After that Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon had carried
away Jechonias, and the princes, and the captives, and the
mighty men, and the people of the land, from Jerusalem, and
brought them unto Babylon.
10: And they said, Behold, we have sent you money to buy
you burnt offerings, and sin offerings, and incense, and prepare
ye manna, and offer upon the altar of the Lord our God;
11: And pray for the life of Nabuchodonosor king of
Babylon, and for the life of Balthasar his son, that their days
may be upon earth as the days of heaven:
12: And the Lord will give us strength, and lighten our
eyes, and we shall live under the shadow of Nabuchodonosor king
of Babylon, and under the shadow of Balthasar his son, and we
shall serve them many days, and find favour in their sight.
13: Pray for us also unto the Lord our God, for we have
sinned against the Lord our God; and unto this day the fury of
the Lord and his wrath is not turned from us.
14: And ye shall read this book which we have sent unto
you, to make confession in the house of the Lord, upon the
feasts and solemn days.
15: And ye shall say, To the Lord our God belongeth
righteousness, but unto us the confusion of faces, as it is come
to pass this day, unto them of Juda, and to the inhabitants of
Jerusalem,
16: And to our kings, and to our princes, and to our
priests, and to our prophets, and to our fathers:
17: For we have sinned before the Lord,
18: And disobeyed him, and have not hearkened unto the
voice of the Lord our God, to walk in the commandments that he
gave us openly:
19: Since the day that the Lord brought our forefathers
out of the land of Egypt, unto this present day, we have been
disobedient unto the Lord our God, and we have been negligent in
not hearing his voice.
20: Wherefore the evils cleaved unto us, and the curse,
which the Lord appointed by Moses his servant at the time that
he brought our fathers out of the land of Egypt, to give us a
land that floweth with milk and honey, like as it is to see this
day.
21: Nevertheless we have not hearkened unto the voice of
the Lord our God, according unto all the words of the prophets,
whom he sent unto us:
22: But every man followed the imagination of his own
wicked heart, to serve strange gods, and to do evil in the sight
of the Lord our God.
Baruch (Apocrypha),
chapter 2
1: Therefore
the Lord hath made good his word, which he pronounced against
us, and against our judges that judged Israel, and against our
kings, and against our princes, and against the men of Israel
and Juda,
2: To bring upon us great plagues, such as never happened
under the whole heaven, as it came to pass in Jerusalem,
according to the things that were written in the law of Moses;
3: That a man should eat the flesh of his own son, and
the flesh of his own daughter.
4: Moreover he hath delivered them to be in subjection to
all the kingdoms that are round about us, to be as a reproach
and desolation among all the people round about, where the Lord
hath scattered them.
5: Thus we were cast down, and not exalted, because we
have sinned against the Lord our God, and have not been obedient
unto his voice.
6: To the Lord our God appertaineth righteousness: but
unto us and to our fathers open shame, as appeareth this day.
7: For all these plagues are come upon us, which the Lord
hath pronounced against us
8: Yet have we not prayed before the Lord, that we might
turn every one from the imaginations of his wicked heart.
9: Wherefore the Lord watched over us for evil, and the
Lord hath brought it upon us: for the Lord is righteous in all
his works which he hath commanded us.
10: Yet we have not hearkened unto his voice, to walk in
the commandments of the Lord, that he hath set before us.
11: And now, O Lord God of Israel, that hast brought thy
people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand, and high
arm, and with signs, and with wonders, and with great power, and
hast gotten thyself a name, as appeareth this day:
12: O Lord our God, we have sinned, we have done ungodly,
we have dealt unrighteously in all thine ordinances.
13: Let thy wrath turn from us: for we are but a few left
among the heathen, where thou hast scattered us.
14: Hear our prayers, O Lord, and our petitions, and
deliver us for thine own sake, and give us favour in the sight
of them which have led us away:
15: That all the earth may know that thou art the Lord
our God, because Israel and his posterity is called by thy name.
16: O Lord, look down from thine holy house, and consider
us: bow down thine ear, O Lord, to hear us.
17: Open thine eyes, and behold; for the dead that are in
the graves, whose souls are taken from their bodies, will give
unto the Lord neither praise nor righteousness:
18: But the soul that is greatly vexed, which goeth
stooping and feeble, and the eyes that fail, and the hungry
soul, will give thee praise and righteousness, O Lord.
19: Therefore we do not make our humble supplication
before thee, O Lord our God, for the righteousness of our
fathers, and of our kings.
20: For thou hast sent out thy wrath and indignation upon
us, as thou hast spoken by thy servants the prophets, saying,
21: Thus saith the Lord, Bow down your shoulders to serve
the king of Babylon: so shall ye remain in the land that I gave
unto your fathers.
22: But if ye will not hear the voice of the Lord, to
serve the king of Babylon,
23: I will cause to cease out of the cites of Judah, and
from without Jerusalem, the voice of mirth, and the voice of
joy, the voice of the bridegroom, and the voice of the bride:
and the whole land shall be desolate of inhabitants.
24: But we would not hearken unto thy voice, to serve the
king of Babylon: therefore hast thou made good the words that
thou spakest by thy servants the prophets, namely, that the
bones of our kings, and the bones of our fathers, should be
taken out of their place.
25: And, lo, they are cast out to the heat of the day,
and to the frost of the night, and they died in great miseries
by famine, by sword, and by pestilence.
26: And the house which is called by thy name hast thou
laid waste, as it is to be seen this day, for the wickedness of
the house of Israel and the house of Juda.
27: O Lord our God, thou hast dealt with us after all thy
goodness, and according to all that great mercy of thine,
28: As thou spakest by thy servant Moses in the day when
thou didst command him to write the law before the children of
Israel, saying,
29: If ye will not hear my voice, surely this very great
multitude shall be turned into a small number among the nations,
where I will scatter them.
30: For I knew that they would not hear me, because it is
a stiffnecked people: but in the land of their captivities they
shall remember themselves.
31: And shall know that I am the Lord their God: for I
will give them an heart, and ears to hear:
32: And they shall praise me in the land of their
captivity, and think upon my name,
33: And return from their stiff neck, and from their
wicked deeds: for they shall remember the way of their fathers,
which sinned before the Lord.
34: And I will bring them again into the land which I
promised with an oath unto their fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, and they shall be lords of it: and I will increase them,
and they shall not be diminished.
35: And I will make an everlasting covenant with them to
be their God, and they shall be my people: and I will no more
drive my people of Israel out of the land that I have given
them.
Baruch (Apocrypha),
chapter 3
1: O Lord
Almighty, God of Israel, the soul in anguish the troubled
spirit, crieth unto thee.
2: Hear, O Lord, and have mercy; for thou art merciful:
and have pity upon us, because we have sinned before thee.
3: For thou endurest for ever, and we perish utterly.
4: O Lord Almighty, thou God of Israel, hear now the
prayers of the dead Israelites, and of their children, which
have sinned before thee, and not hearkened unto the voice of
thee their God: for the which cause these plagues cleave unto
us.
5: Remember not the iniquities of our forefathers: but
think upon thy power and thy name now at this time.
6: For thou art the Lord our God, and thee, O Lord, will
we praise.
7: And for this cause thou hast put thy fear in our
hearts, to the intent that we should call upon thy name, and
praise thee in our captivity: for we have called to mind all the
iniquity of our forefathers, that sinned before thee.
8: Behold, we are yet this day in our captivity, where
thou hast scattered us, for a reproach and a curse, and to be
subject to payments, according to all the iniquities of our
fathers, which departed from the Lord our God.
9: Hear, Israel, the commandments of life: give ear to
understand wisdom.
10: How happeneth it Israel, that thou art in thine
enemies' land, that thou art waxen old in a strange country,
that thou art defiled with the dead,
11: That thou art counted with them that go down into the
grave?
12: Thou hast forsaken the fountain of wisdom.
13: For if thou hadst walked in the way of God, thou
shouldest have dwelled in peace for ever.
14: Learn where is wisdom, where is strength, where is
understanding; that thou mayest know also where is length of
days, and life, where is the light of the eyes, and peace.
15: Who hath found out her place? or who hath come into
her treasures ?
16: Where are the princes of the heathen become, and such
as ruled the beasts upon the earth;
17: They that had their pastime with the fowls of the
air, and they that hoarded up silver and gold, wherein men
trust, and made no end of their getting?
18: For they that wrought in silver, and were so careful,
and whose works are unsearchable,
19: They are vanished and gone down to the grave, and
others are come up in their steads.
20: Young men have seen light, and dwelt upon the earth:
but the way of knowledge have they not known,
21: Nor understood the paths thereof, nor laid hold of
it: their children were far off from that way.
22: It hath not been heard of in Chanaan, neither hath it
been seen in Theman.
23: The Agarenes that seek wisdom upon earth, the
merchants of Meran and of Theman, the authors of fables, and
searchers out of understanding; none of these have known the way
of wisdom, or remember her paths.
24: O Israel, how great is the house of God! and how
large is the place of his possession!
25: Great, and hath none end; high, and unmeasurable.
26: There were the giants famous from the beginning, that
were of so great stature, and so expert in war.
27: Those did not the Lord choose, neither gave he the
way of knowledge unto them:
28: But they were destroyed, because they had no wisdom,
and perished through their own foolishness.
29: Who hath gone up into heaven, and taken her, and
brought her down from the clouds?
30: Who hath gone over the sea, and found her, and will
bring her for pure gold?
31: No man knoweth her way, nor thinketh of her path.
32: But he that knoweth all things knoweth her, and hath
found her out with his understanding: he that prepared the earth
for evermore hath filled it with fourfooted beasts:
33: He that sendeth forth light, and it goeth, calleth it
again, and it obeyeth him with fear.
34: The stars shined in their watches, and rejoiced: when
he calleth them, they say, Here we be; and so with cheerfulness
they shewed light unto him that made them.
35: This is our God, and there shall none other be
accounted of in comparison of him
36: He hath found out all the way of knowledge, and hath
given it unto Jacob his servant, and to Israel his beloved.
37: Afterward did he shew himself upon earth, and
conversed with men.
Baruch (Apocrypha),
chapter 4
1: This is the
book of the commandments of God, and the law that endureth for
ever: all they that keep it shall come to life; but such as
leave it shall die.
2: Turn thee, O Jacob, and take hold of it: walk in the
presence of the light thereof, that thou mayest be illuminated.
3: Give not thine honour to another, nor the things that
are profitable unto thee to a strange nation.
4: O Israel, happy are we: for things that are pleasing
to God are made known unto us.
5: Be of good cheer, my people, the memorial of Israel.
6: Ye were sold to the nations, not for [your]
destruction: but because ye moved God to wrath, ye were
delivered unto the enemies.
7: For ye provoked him that made you by sacrificing unto
devils, and not to God.
8: Ye have forgotten the everlasting God, that brought
you up; and ye have grieved Jerusalem, that nursed you.
9: For when she saw the wrath of God coming upon you, she
said, Hearken, O ye that dwell about Sion: God hath brought upon
me great mourning;
10: For I saw the captivity of my sons and daughters,
which the Everlasting brought upon them.
11: With joy did I nourish them; but sent them away with
weeping and mourning.
12: Let no man rejoice over me, a widow, and forsaken of
many, who for the sins of my children am left desolate; because
they departed from the law of God.
13: They knew not his statutes, nor walked in the ways of
his commandments, nor trod in the paths of discipline in his
righteousness.
14: Let them that dwell about Sion come, and remember ye
the captivity of my sons and daughters, which the Everlasting
hath brought upon them.
15: For he hath brought a nation upon them from far, a
shameless nation, and of a strange language, who neither
reverenced old man, nor pitied child.
16: These have carried away the dear beloved children of
the widow, and left her that was alone desolate without
daughters.
17: But what can I help you?
18: For he that brought these plagues upon you will
deliver you from the hands of your enemies.
19: Go your way, O my children, go your way: for I am
left desolate.
20: I have put off the clothing of peace, and put upon me
the sackcloth of my prayer: I will cry unto the Everlasting in
my days.
21: Be of good cheer, O my children, cry unto the Lord,
and he will deliver you from the power and hand of the enemies.
22: For my hope is in the Everlasting, that he will save
you; and joy is come unto me from the Holy One, because of the
mercy which shall soon come unto you from the Everlasting our
Saviour.
23: For I sent you out with mourning and weeping: but God
will give you to me again with joy and gladness for ever.
24: Like as now the neighbours of Sion have seen your
captivity: so shall they see shortly your salvation from our God
which shall come upon you with great glory, and brightness of
the Everlasting.
25: My children, suffer patiently the wrath that is come
upon you from God: for thine enemy hath persecuted thee; but
shortly thou shalt see his destruction, and shalt tread upon his
neck.
26: My delicate ones have gone rough ways, and were taken
away as a flock caught of the enemies.
27: Be of good comfort, O my children, and cry unto God:
for ye shall be remembered of him that brought these things upon
you.
28: For as it was your mind to go astray from God: so,
being returned, seek him ten times more.
29: For he that hath brought these plagues upon you shall
bring you everlasting joy with your salvation.
30: Take a good heart, O Jerusalem: for he that gave thee
that name will comfort thee.
31: Miserable are they that afflicted thee, and rejoiced
at thy fall.
32: Miserable are the cities which thy children served:
miserable is she that received thy sons.
33: For as she rejoiced at thy ruin, and was glad of thy
fall: so shall she be grieved for her own desolation.
34: For I will take away the rejoicing of her great
multitude, and her pride shall be turned into mourning.
35: For fire shall come upon her from the Everlasting,
long to endure; and she shall be inhabited of devils for a great
time.
36: O Jerusalem, look about thee toward the east, and
behold the joy that cometh unto thee from God.
37: Lo, thy sons come, whom thou sentest away, they come
gathered together from the east to the west by the word of the
Holy One, rejoicing in the glory of God.
Baruch (Apocrypha),
chapter 5
1: Put off, O
Jerusalem, the garment of mourning and affliction, and put on
the comeliness of the glory that cometh from God for ever.
2: Cast about thee a double garment of the righteousness
which cometh from God; and set a diadem on thine head of the
glory of the Everlasting.
3: For God will shew thy brightness unto every country
under heaven.
4: For thy name shall be called of God for ever The peace
of righteousness, and The glory of God's worship.
5: Arise, O Jerusalem, and stand on high, and look about
toward the east, and behold thy children gathered from the west
unto the east by the word of the Holy One, rejoicing in the
remembrance of God.
6: For they departed from thee on foot, and were led away
of their enemies: but God bringeth them unto thee exalted with
glory, as children of the kingdom.
7: For God hath appointed that every high hill, and banks
of long continuance, should be cast down, and valleys filled up,
to make even the ground, that Israel may go safely in the glory
of God,
8: Moreover even the woods and every sweetsmelling tree
shall overshadow Israel by the commandment of God.
9: For God shall lead Israel with joy in the light of his
glory with the mercy and righteousness that cometh from him.
Epistle of Jeremiah
A copy of an
epistle, which Jeremy sent unto them which were to be led
captives into Babylon by the king of the Babylonians, to certify
them, as it was commanded him of God.
1: Because of
the sins which ye have committed before God, ye shall be led
away captives into Babylon by Nabuchodonosor king of the
Babylonians.
2: So when ye be come unto Babylon, ye shall remain there
many years, and for a long season, namely, seven generations:
and after that I will bring you away peaceably from thence.
3: Now shall ye see in Babylon gods of silver, and of
gold, and of wood, borne upon shoulders, which cause the nations
to fear.
4: Beware therefore that ye in no wise be like to
strangers, neither be ye and of them, when ye see the multitude
before them and behind them, worshipping them.
5: But say ye in your hearts, O Lord, we must worship
thee.
6: For mine angel is with you, and I myself caring for
your souls.
7: As for their tongue, it is polished by the workman,
and they themselves are gilded and laid over with silver; yet
are they but false, and cannot speak.
8: And taking gold, as it were for a virgin that loveth
to go gay, they make crowns for the heads of their gods.
9: Sometimes also the priests convey from their gods gold
and silver, and bestow it upon themselves.
10: Yea, they will give thereof to the common harlots,
and deck them as men with garments, [being] gods of silver, and
gods of gold, and wood.
11: Yet cannot these gods save themselves from rust and
moth, though they be covered with purple raiment.
12: They wipe their faces because of the dust of the
temple, when there is much upon them.
13: And he that cannot put to death one that offendeth
him holdeth a sceptre, as though he were a judge of the country.
14: He hath also in his right hand a dagger and an ax:
but cannot deliver himself from war and thieves.
15: Whereby they are known not to be gods: therefore fear
them not.
16: For like as a vessel that a man useth is nothing
worth when it is broken; even so it is with their gods: when
they be set up in the temple, their eyes be full of dust through
the feet of them that come in.
17: And as the doors are made sure on every side upon him
that offendeth the king, as being committed to suffer death:
even so the priests make fast their temples with doors, with
locks, and bars, lest their gods be spoiled with robbers.
18: They light them candles, yea, more than for
themselves, whereof they cannot see one.
19: They are as one of the beams of the temple, yet they
say their hearts are gnawed upon by things creeping out of the
earth; and when they eat them and their clothes, they feel it
not.
20: Their faces are blacked through the smoke that cometh
out of the temple.
21: Upon their bodies and heads sit bats, swallows, and
birds, and the cats also.
22: By this ye may know that they are no gods: therefore
fear them not.
23: Notwithstanding the gold that is about them to make
them beautiful, except they wipe off the rust, they will not
shine: for neither when they were molten did they feel it.
24: The things wherein there is no breath are bought for
a most high price.
25: They are borne upon shoulders, having no feet whereby
they declare unto men that they be nothing worth.
26: They also that serve them are ashamed: for if they
fall to the ground at any time, they cannot rise up again of
themselves: neither, if one set them upright, can they move of
themselves: neither, if they be bowed down, can they make
themselves straight: but they set gifts before them as unto dead
men.
27: As for the things that are sacrificed unto them,
their priests sell and abuse; in like manner their wives lay up
part thereof in salt; but unto the poor and impotent they give
nothing of it.
28: Menstruous women and women in childbed eat their
sacrifices: by these things ye may know that they are no gods:
fear them not.
29: For how can they be called gods? because women set
meat before the gods of silver, gold, and wood.
30: And the priests sit in their temples, having their
clothes rent, and their heads and beards shaven, and nothing
upon their heads.
31: They roar and cry before their gods, as men do at the
feast when one is dead.
32: The priests also take off their garments, and clothe
their wives and children.
33: Whether it be evil that one doeth unto them, or good,
they are not able to recompense it: they can neither set up a
king, nor put him down.
34: In like manner, they can neither give riches nor
money: though a man make a vow unto them, and keep it not, they
will not require it.
35: They can save no man from death, neither deliver the
weak from the mighty.
36: They cannot restore a blind man to his sight, nor
help any man in his distress.
37: They can shew no mercy to the widow, nor do good to
the fatherless.
38: Their gods of wood, and which are overlaid with gold
and silver, are like the stones that be hewn out of the
mountain: they that worship them shall be confounded.
39: How should a man then think and say that they are
gods, when even the Chaldeans themselves dishonour them?
40: Who if they shall see one dumb that cannot speak,
they bring him, and intreat Bel that he may speak, as though he
were able to understand.
41: Yet they cannot understand this themselves, and leave
them: for they have no knowledge.
42: The women also with cords about them, sitting in the
ways, burn bran for perfume: but if any of them, drawn by some
that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her fellow, that
she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor her cord broken.
43: Whatsoever is done among them is false: how may it
then be thought or said that they are gods?
44: They are made of carpenters and goldsmiths: they can
be nothing else than the workmen will have them to be.
45: And they themselves that made them can never continue
long; how should then the things that are made of them be gods?
46: For they left lies and reproaches to them that come
after.
47: For when there cometh any war or plague upon them,
the priests consult with themselves, where they may be hidden
with them.
48: How then cannot men perceive that they be no gods,
which can neither save themselves from war, nor from plague?
49: For seeing they be but of wood, and overlaid with
silver and gold, it shall be known hereafter that they are
false:
50: And it shall manifestly appear to all nations and
kings that they are no gods, but the works of men's hands, and
that there is no work of God in them.
51: Who then may not know that they are no gods?
52: For neither can they set up a king in the land, nor
give rain unto men.
53: Neither can they judge their own cause, nor redress a
wrong, being unable: for they are as crows between heaven and
earth.
54: Whereupon when fire falleth upon the house of gods of
wood, or laid over with gold or silver, their priests will flee
away, and escape; but they themselves shall be burned asunder
like beams.
55: Moreover they cannot withstand any king or enemies:
how can it then be thought or said that they be gods?
56: Neither are those gods of wood, and laid over with
silver or gold, able to escape either from thieves or robbers.
57: Whose gold, and silver, and garments wherewith they
are clothed, they that are strong take, and go away withal:
neither are they able to help themselves.
58: Therefore it is better to be a king that sheweth his
power, or else a profitable vessel in an house, which the owner
shall have use of, than such false gods; or to be a door in an
house, to keep such things therein, than such false gods. or a
pillar of wood in a a palace, than such false gods.
59: For sun, moon, and stars, being bright and sent to do
their offices, are obedient.
60: In like manner the lightning when it breaketh forth
is easy to be seen; and after the same manner the wind bloweth
in every country.
61: And when God commandeth the clouds to go over the
whole world, they do as they are bidden.
62: And the fire sent from above to consume hills and
woods doeth as it is commanded: but these are like unto them
neither in shew nor power.
63: Wherefore it is neither to be supposed nor said that
they are gods, seeing, they are able neither to judge causes,
nor to do good unto men.
64: Knowing therefore that they are no gods, fear them
not,
65: For they can neither curse nor bless kings:
66: Neither can they shew signs in the heavens among the
heathen, nor shine as the sun, nor give light as the moon.
67: The beasts are better than they: for they can get
under a cover and help themselves.
68: It is then by no means manifest unto us that they are
gods: therefore fear them not.
69: For as a scarecrow in a garden of cucumbers keepeth
nothing: so are their gods of wood, and laid over with silver
and gold.
70: And likewise their gods of wood, and laid over with
silver and gold, are like to a white thorn in an orchard, that
every bird sitteth upon; as also to a dead body, that is east
into the dark.
71: And ye shall know them to be no gods by the bright
purple that rotteth upon them: and they themselves afterward
shall be eaten, and shall be a reproach in the country.
72: Better therefore is the just man that hath none
idols: for he shall be far from reproach. |