ALTER2EGO -to- DANIEL TWO TWENTY:Danieltwotwenty wrote:I have read Jeremiah in it's entirety many times and I find it rather insulting that you say I haven't even bothered to read it. I do agree however with the context you have laid out, Jeremiah was written because the Israelites had turned their back on God. Jeremiah does use figurative speech and hyperbolic language to convey his message to the people.Alter2Ego wrote:If you had bothered to read the context (the surrounding words, verses, and chapters that are related to Jeremiah 23:24), you would have realized that the verse is with reference to God turning attention specifically to the ancient Israelites who were rebelling against him. Not only that, the context to Jeremiah 23:24 is overrun with figurative speech. For instance, part of the context states:
Let me rephrase my above statement: If you had bothered to read and pay attention to the context, you would have realized that Jeremiah 23:24 is with reference to God turning his attention specifically to the ancient Israelites who were rebelling against him and that it is not saying that God is "omnipresent."
Sheep and shepherd is figurative speech whenever those words are applied to humans. Those two words are never literal when applied to human beings. The fact that you are arguing that it is literal proves my point, that you are applying literal meaning to words that are symbolic rather than literal in meaning.Danieltwotwenty wrote:So here you are interpreting the text and I have no issues with this as it seems correct. The dictionary say that sheep can mean people who follow and shepherd can also be religious leaders of a flock (which can mean a group of people)and the pastures are obviously the land they live in. So really most of these words here can be interpreted as literal because that is what the words mean, the only word here that really needs interpretation would be pastures.Alter2Ego wrote:"'Woe to the shepherds who are destroying and scattering the sheep of my pasturage!' is the utterance of Jehovah." (Jeremiah 23:1)
Are we to understand that God is referring to literal shepherds and literal sheep in a literal pasturage? Of course not. The context explains that the "shepherds" are the religious leaders and the "sheep" are the ordinary Israelites who are being misguided by the false religious leaders, as follows: