For Abraham and his descendants Egypt could be both a place of refuge and a place of bondage. Abram and Sarai sojourned there during a time of famine (Ge 12:10-20). Isaac was instructed not to go there in a similar situation (Ge 26:2). Jacob and his family were honored guests there during the time when Joseph was viceroy of Egypt, then later were enslaved by the Egyptians before God rescued them in the days of Moses.
The question of whether to seek refuge in Egypt arose again hundreds of years later.
When the Babylonians conquered the kingdom of Judah in 586 BC, they took King Zedekiah captive and installed Gedaliah as governor at Mizpah (2 Ki 25; Jer 40). Although Jerusalem and the Temple were destroyed, those remaining in Judea would have an opportunity to live in peace under Gedaliah's governorship.
That peaceful existence was over almost before it started. Ishmael the son of Nethaniah, a member of the royal line of Judah acting on behalf of the king of Ammon, assembled a group of ten men that assassinated Gedaliah and killed those around him (Jer 40-41). Taking some capitives from Mizpah, they started toward Ammon (41:10).
Ishmael was stopped by a Judean military man, Johanon son of Kareah. Johanon forced Ishmael to flee, to the gratitude of the captives (vv 11-15). But Johanon and these people from Mizpah then began to worry about how the Babylonians might respmd to the assassination of Gedaliah. Would the safest thing to do be to seek refuge in Egypt? They headed in that direction.
Hoping to confirm their decision, they asked Jeremiah to pray for them and find out God's will. They promised to do whatever God indicated (42:1-6). The group had apparently picked up Jeremiah at Geruth Chimham near Bethlehem (41:17).
Jeremiah received an answer from God ten days later, but it was not what Johanon and his followers wanted to hear. God made clear that the group should stay in Judea, where he promised to protect them. But if they went on to Egypt, they would die there (vv 7-22).
Sadly, they refused to heed Jeremiah and accused the prophet of lying (43:1-7), and they went on to Egypt. Even worse, many Jews in Egypt turned to other gods. Jeremiah called them to repentance, warning that few of them would survive (Jer 44).
The book of Jeremiah does not tell us what eventually happened to Jeremiah. Commentator Michael Brown (REBC commentary on Jeremiah) explains that according to some traditions (see e.g., Seder Olam Rabbah 26), Jeremiah and Baruch later were taken from Egypt to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar. On the other hand, there is another tradition that Jeremiah was stoned to death in Egypt.
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