EpJer.1
[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