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38 These gilded and silvered wooden statues are no better than stones from the mountains; their worshipers will be put to shame. 39 How then can it be thought or claimed that they are gods?

40 Even the Chaldeans themselves have no respect for them; for when they see a deaf mute, unable to speak, they bring forward Bel[a] and expect him to make a sound, as though he could hear. 41 They themselves are unable to reflect and abandon these gods, for they have no sense. 42 [b]And the women, with cords around them, sit by the roads, burning chaff for incense;(A) 43 and whenever one of them is taken aside by some passerby who lies with her, she mocks her neighbor who has not been thought thus worthy, and has not had her cord broken. 44 All that is done for these gods is a fraud; how then can it be thought or claimed that they are gods?

45 They are produced by woodworkers and goldsmiths; they are nothing other than what these artisans wish them to be. 46 Even those who produce them are not long-lived; 47 how then can the things they have produced be gods? They have left frauds and disgrace to their successors. 48 For when war or disaster comes upon them, the priests deliberate among themselves where they can hide with them. 49 How then can one not understand that these are not gods, who save themselves neither from war nor from disaster? 50 Beings that are wooden, gilded and silvered, they will later be known for frauds. To all nations and kings it will be clear that they are not gods, but human handiwork; and that God’s work is not in them. 51 Is it not obvious that they are not gods?

52 [c]They set no king over the land, nor do they give rain. 53 They neither vindicate their own rights, nor do they rescue anyone wronged, for they are powerless. 54 They are like crows in midair. For when fire breaks out in the temple of these wooden or gilded or silvered gods, though the priests flee and are safe, they themselves are burned up in the fire like timbers. 55 They cannot resist a king or enemy forces. 56 How then can it be admitted or thought that they are gods?

They are safe from neither thieves nor bandits, these wooden and silvered and gilded gods. 57 Anyone who can will strip off the gold and the silver, and go away with the clothing that was on them; they cannot help themselves. 58 How much better to be a king displaying his valor, or a handy tool in a house, the joy of its owner, than these false gods; better the door of a house, protecting whatever is within, than these false gods; better a wooden post in a palace, than these false gods!(B) 59 [d]The sun and moon and stars are bright, obedient in the task for which they are sent. 60 Likewise the lightning, when it flashes, is a great sight; and the one wind blows over every land. 61 The clouds, too, when commanded by God to proceed across the whole world, fulfill the command; 62 and fire, sent from on high to burn up the mountains and the forests, carries out its command. But these false gods are not their equal, whether in appearance or in power. 63 So it is unthinkable, and cannot be claimed that they are gods. They can neither execute judgment, nor benefit anyone. 64 Know, therefore, that they are not gods; do not fear them.

65 Kings they can neither curse nor bless. 66 They show the nations no signs in the heavens, nor do they shine like the sun, nor give light like the moon. 67 The beasts are better than they—beasts can help themselves by fleeing to shelter. 68 Thus is it in no way apparent to us that they are gods; so do not fear them.

69 For like a scarecrow in a cucumber patch,(C) providing no protection, are their wooden, gilded, silvered gods. 70 Just like a thornbush in a garden on which perches every kind of bird, or like a corpse hurled into darkness, are their wooden, gilded, silvered gods. 71 From the rotting of the purple and the linen upon them, you can know that they are not gods; they themselves will in the end be consumed, and be a disgrace in the land. 72 Better the just who has no idols; such shall be far from disgrace!

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Footnotes

  1. 6:40 Bel: cf. note on Jer 50:2.
  2. 6:42–43 Perhaps a reference to the Babylonian practice of cultic prostitution mentioned by Herodotus, the fifth-century Greek historian. The unbroken cord was a sign that this service had not yet been rendered.
  3. 6:52–53 Unlike the God of Israel, the Babylonian gods are unable to set up and depose kings, or to provide life-giving rain.
  4. 6:59–62 The elements of nature, obedient to God’s orders and accomplishing the divine purpose, are better than the Babylonian gods.