Jeremiah 45
Jeremiah addresses Baruch, his faithful scribe, who grieves at the calamities that judgment has brought upon the land and mourns his personal suffering and losses, and YHWH directs the prophet to tell Baruch that his seeking of great things for himself must cease, that his life will be given to him as a prize in all the places to which he goes, establishing that faithfulness to prophetic witness requires renouncing personal ambitions and accepting the suffering that witnessing judgment entails. The brief oracle to Baruch concludes the biographical narrative section (chapters 26-45) by acknowledging the cost of faithful witnessing: Baruch, like Jeremiah, must accept loss of personal security and normal existence in service to the prophetic calling, yet the promise of his life being spared provides assurance that faithfulness receives divine protection and validation. Baruch's role as scribe becomes significant in the text's own preservation: through his faithfulness in recording Jeremiah's oracles despite personal loss, the prophetic word is preserved for future generations, establishing that the book of Jeremiah itself exists as fruit of Baruch's faithful witness.