The starting point for this article is the very text itself which, in its content, leads us to see and hear other voices different from the prophet’s voice. We invite you to hear the voice of Ebedmelek, a Kushite, who acts precisely to save Jeremiah. At the same time that we pay attention to this Kushite as an individual in his full action, we invite you from a process of interculturality to consider other centers from which we can do the reading of the biblical text. To break away from the monoculturalism, or better still, from the ethnocentrism is a permanent challenge for those of us who are becoming aware that there are no pure processes within or outside the biblical texts. There are rather processes that interact in the permanent task to emphasize your own interests. In this sense, interculturality emerge as key of non-linear reading.