Jeremiah 28
The prophet Hananiah directly contradicts Jeremiah's yoke prophecy by breaking the wooden yoke and announcing that YHWH will break the Babylonian yoke within two years, promising restoration that Jeremiah's words of judgment denied, leading to a direct confrontation between true and false prophecy within Jerusalem. Jeremiah responds by stating that Hananiah's words are false because they promise peace when YHWH has announced judgment, establishing that true prophecy is authenticated by its announcement of judgment and covenant consequences, while false prophecy offers comfort without confronting sin. Yet YHWH instructs Jeremiah to make an iron yoke (replacing the broken wooden yoke) and announce that Hananiah will die that very year for prophesying falsely, a prediction fulfilled when Hananiah dies two months later, providing dramatic vindication of Jeremiah's authenticity. This chapter demonstrates that the conflict between true and false prophecy is not abstract theological debate but is fought in the public sphere with political and spiritual consequences for the entire nation: the people's acceptance of Hananiah's false optimism prevents the repentance necessary for covenant restoration and ensures that judgment continues escalating.