Deuterocanon / Baruch / 3
- Baruch 3:8 / Jeremiah 29:22
- Baruch 3:9 / Clement of Alexandria The Instructor 1.10
- Baruch 3:9 / Deuteronomy 30:15
- Baruch 3:12 / Athanasius Discourse Against the Arians 18
- Baruch 3:12 / Jeremiah 2:13
- Baruch 3:13 / Clement of Alexandria The Instructor 1.10
- Baruch 3:16 / Clement of Alexandria The Instructor 2.3
- Baruch 3:16 / Jeremiah 27:6
- Baruch 3:23 / 1 Chronicles 5:10
- Baruch 3:26 / Sirach 16:7
- Baruch 3:26 / Wisdom of Solomon 14:6
- Baruch 3:26 / Genesis 6:4 / 1 Enoch 7:2
- Baruch 3:29 / Romans 10:6
- Baruch 3:29 / Romans 10:6
- Baruch 3:34 / Job 38:7
- Baruch 3:35 / Hilary of Poitiers On the Trinity 4.42
- Baruch 3:35 / Athanasius Discourse Against the Arians 19
- Baruch 3:37 / John 1:14
Summary
Date: 150-100 B.C.E.
Baruch is named after Baruch ben Neriah, Jeremiah's scribe who is mentioned at Baruch 1:1 and has been presumed to be the author of the whole work. It is a reflection of a late Jewish writer on the circumstances of Jewish exiles from Babylon. The language of Baruch and Letter of Jeremiah might suggest that they should be classified as prophecy, but the frame is a literary device. The content sometimes speaks of prophecy, but at other times it relates more to wisdom, and this is how the two books are categorized. Since Baruch and Letter of Jeremiah circulated together in ancient Bibles, the Letter of Jeremiah was often numbered as Baruch 6.