Catholic Public Domain Version
"And Jeremiah wrote in one book all the evil that was to overwhelm Babylon; all these words were written against Babylon. "
— Jeremiah 51:60, Catholic Public Domain Version
“So Jeremiah wrote in a book all the evil that should come upon Babylon, even all these words that are written against Babylon.”
“And Jeremiah wrote in a book all the evil that should come upon Babylon, even all these words that are written concerning Babylon. ”
“Jeremiah wrote in a book all the evil that should come on Babylon, even all these words that are written concerning Babylon.”
“Jeremiah recorded on one scroll all the judgments that would come upon Babylon– all these prophecies written about Babylon.”
“And Jeremiah wrote in one book all the evil that was to come upon Babylon: all these words that are written against Babylon.”
“And Jeremiah put in a book all the evil which was to come on Babylon.”
“So Jeremiah wrote in a book all the evil that should come upon Babylon, even all these words that are written against Babylon.”
“And I will inebriate her leaders, and her wise ones, and her military rulers, and her civil rulers, and her strong ones. And they will sleep an everlasting sleep, and they will not awaken,” says the King: the Lord of hosts is his name.
Thus says the Lord of hosts: “That very wide wall of Babylon will be utterly overturned, and her exalted gates will be burned with fire, and the labors of the people will be as nothing, and the labors of the nations will be sent into the fire and will perish.”
The word that Jeremiah, the prophet, instructed to Seraiah, the son of Neriah, the son of Mahseiah, when he traveled with king Zedekiah into Babylon, in the fourth year of his reign. Now Seraiah was the leader of the prophets.
And Jeremiah wrote in one book all the evil that was to overwhelm Babylon; all these words were written against Babylon.
And Jeremiah said to Seraiah: “When you will enter into Babylon, and you will see and read all these words,
you will say: ‘O Lord, you have spoken against this place so that you may destroy it, so that there would not be anyone, from man even to beast, who may live in it, and so that it may be desolate forever.’
And when you will have completed reading this book, you will tie a stone to it, and you will cast it into the midst of the Euphrates.