Tag Archives: Jeremiah 13-15

August 11, 2024 Bible Study — Terrible Times Are Coming, So We Must Speak Words Worthy of God’s Servants

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 13-15.

In some ways the prophecies with which today’s passage begins are deeply depressing.  In them Jeremiah prophesies that terrible times are coming upon Judah and its people and it is too late for them to avoid them.  God tells Jeremiah, and others who still faithfully served God, to no longer pray for the wellbeing of the people of Judah.  God would not listen to such prayers and even if the people themselves would fast and pray He would not change His judgement, not even if Moses and Samuel were to stand before Him and ask Him to do so.  In years past I was convinced that our society today had not yet reached the point where these prophecies applied to us.  I am no longer sure that such is the case.  However, the passage ends with words of hope.  There God tells us through Jeremiah that if we repent, He will restore us.  We must not speak worthless words, the words which those around us wish to hear, but we must be God’s spokespeople and speak words of worth.  We must strive to get people to turn to us, but we must never turn from God to them.  Let us strive to influence the people around us without being influenced by them.  If we allow God to make us a wall to those who sin against Him, He will save us from the hands of the wicked.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 11, 2023 Bible Study –Speak Worthwhile Words

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 13-15.

I struggle with today’s passage.  For most of this passage, Jeremiah prophesies destruction upon the people for their sins.  He reports that God has told him not to pray for the people because He (God) is going to destroy them with famine, plague, and the sword.  Jeremiah defended the people by saying that the prophets were telling them that they would not see the sword or suffer famine.  God responded that those prophets were lying because He (God) had not sent them.  Further God told Jeremiah that those prophets would perish by famine and the sword, as would the people who listened to them.  The point here being that we should be very careful about listening to people who claim to speak on behalf of God, especially when they tell us that our sins will not lead to our destruction.  Then God tells Jeremiah that even if Moses and Samuel were to stand before Him, He would not relent on the suffering and destruction which was coming to this people.  I believe we are fast approaching a time, if we are not already there, when Jeremiah’s prophecy here will apply to our society today.

So far, the passage is clear, if very scary; people have been so sinful for so long that the suffering which God warned would result from such sinfulness cannot be turned aside.  However, after having told Jeremiah that such is the case, God tells him

If you repent, I will restore you
that you may serve me;

Which tells us that Jeremiah, at least, can avoid the coming suffering (avoid is probably not quite the right word, but I am going to go with it for today).  I believe that God’s message here was not just for Jeremiah, but for anyone who would listen to it, but God knew that few would actually do so.  And that is where we stand today, our society is going headlong  down the road towards suffering and destruction and time to turn aside is running out, if it has not already run out.  However, God will use and protect those who repent and speak worthwhile words, instead of the worthless words so many today speak.  If we wish to serve God, we must speak His words so that people are drawn towards us (insomuch as that draws them to God), but we must be careful not to be drawn towards the sins of our society.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 11, 2022 Bible Study — Pray That Sinners Turn From Their Sins

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 13-15.

This is a troubling passage.  In it Jeremiah prophesies that God told him not to pray for the people of Judah.  Yet, I firmly believe that we should always pray for those around us.  This led me to read, and re-read, this passage, seeking understanding.  Before mentioning that God had told him not to pray for these people, Jeremiah warned them to listen and give glory to God.  If they would not turn to God and renounce their sins and their idols, God would bring destruction upon them.  Then, after making that prophecy, Jeremiah gave a prophecy concerning a drought in the land.  It was in the context of that drought that God told Jeremiah not to pray for the people and then I understood the message.  God had sent the drought to cause the people to turn to Him for salvation.  God told Jeremiah not to pray for Him to relieve the people from the drought because they had worse problems than those caused by a lack of water.  So, I learn from this that I should not pray that sinners, even those most dear to me, be relieved of the suffering which comes from their sin, at least not as my primary prayer.  No, my first, most heartfelt prayer should be that they turn from their sin before they suffer even worse.

Throughout today’s passage Jeremiah records God promising to destroy the people of Jerusalem, to destroy the people to whom Jeremiah was prophesying.  All in all, it seems very depressing because Jeremiah seems to be saying that it is too late for the people of Jerusalem to escape God’s wrath.  Yet, also throughout the passage are little statements which suggest otherwise: “If you repent, I will restore you that you may serve Me.”  Let us stand firm in our loyalty to God, so that if the sinners we know turn to us they will be turning to God.  But under no circumstances should we allow them to influence us so that we turn to them, and thus away from God.  If we pray that people be relieved of their suffering, God may hear our prayers and they will not turn from their sins, leading them into even greater suffering.  On the other hand, if we call for people to turn from their sins, and pray to God that they do so, perhaps they will turn from their sins, and be relieved of their suffering.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 11, 2021 Bible Study — God Does Not Seek To Transform Society, He Seeks To Transform Individuals

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 13-15.

I have just returned from vacation and am attempting to get back into my normal routine.

During the time of Jeremiah the people of Judah had reached the point where God declared that He would no longer listen to prayers requesting Him to relieve the suffering of the people of Judah in general.  In many ways, Jeremiah’s prophecies are scary and depressing, because they seem to offer no hope.  Reading these prophecies leads me to wander if our society has reached a similar point.  However, scattered through these prophecies one finds little gems of hope. Jeremiah tells us that our focus should be on our own behavior, and on calling individuals to follow God’s commands, not on changing society.  God told Jeremiah, and us, to pay attention to the words He has spoken to us and not be arrogant.

Just as in Jeremiah’s time, our society is full of prophets telling the people lies in God’s name, things which God has never said.  They tell us things like, “If it feels good, it can’t be wrong.”  But that is not God’s message.  God calls us to repent, if we do He will restore us so that we can serve Him.  He calls us to utter worthy words, if we do He will make us His spokesperson.  Let us stand so that people can turn to us, and therefore to God, but we must not allow our desire to reach them cause us to turn to their ways.

 

 

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 11, 2020 Bible Study Doom Awaits Those Unwilling To Change Their Ways

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

There are two elements in today’s passage.  First, God tells Jeremiah to not even pray for the people of Judah any longer.  The time has past when God will listen to any prayers asking Him to turn aside His wrath against them.  However, God also tells Jeremiah that He will take care of him; that there are still a few among the people who have been faithful whom God will protect.  If we go back and look at what God tells Jeremiah concerning those against whom He will not relent, we discover that they all have a key thing in common.  They may cry out to God for salvation, but they will refuse to change their evil ways.  We must be willing to change our ways when God shows us how we are sinning, or He will not listen to our cries for aid.

August 11, 2019 Bible Study — Influence Them, But Do Not Let Them Influence You

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.  I just got back from a ten day vacation and prepared this before I left.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

God told Jeremiah to stop praying for the people of Judah, that they were too far gone in their sin to return to God before they suffered His judgement.  Yet, Jeremiah still cried out for them and prayed to God.  He did so because their prophets were telling them that they were doing nothing wrong, that if they continued to follow the path which they were following God would send them peace.  Today we often see the same thing, false teachers proclaiming that God will send peace and prosperity to those who are sinning.  There are two types of such prophets: those who preach “prosperity gospel” and those who preach acceptance of self-destructive behavior.  The former teach that God will grant us material wealth.  The latter teach that we can do whatever we like as long as we are “loving”.  Neither group preaches God’s actual word.  Some know they are lying and some of them failed to heed what God told Jeremiah later on in this passage.

Jeremiah complains to God about the persecution he is suffering and begs God for deliverance.  God promises Jeremiah that He will indeed keep him safe.  God told Jeremiah to speak God’s good words rather than worthless ones of those around him.  In like manner we should seek to influence those who do not worship God (yet), but not allow them to influence us.  As Paul says in Romans 12, let us not copy the behaviors of this world but let us be transformed by the Holy Spirit into the likeness of God.

August 11, 2018 Bible Study — Influence the World, But Do Not Allow the World To Influence You

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

    Every day since I began reading Jeremiah this year I have struggled while reading the passage to see what I would write about. And every day as I was reading I saw an isolated verse or phrase which spoke to me. The same thing has happened again today. Having found that one passage (some days there were two or three, but not today) I went back and read the passage again and found something else I wanted to comment on.

    Jeremiah’s story about the loincloth and its message is as relevant today as it was when he first told it. We, every last one of us, was made to cling to God, to obey and serve Him. Our pride leads us to reject our role with God, seeking instead a role of greater prominence with other gods. However, rather than gaining greater value, we become something which must be discarded. We cannot change ourselves. Only by humbly accepting the role which God created us for can we attain any value. We must allow Him to change us into what He desires us to be.

    Now I come to the phrase which struck me and I see that it connects, to a degree, with what I just wrote. If we return to God, He will restore us. As rotten and worthless as our sin and pride have made us, God is capable of restoring us to being a garment which serves Him. We must speak the words which God will give us, not the worthless words which those around us want to hear. We live among people who refuse to listen to God, our calling is to influence them, but we must be careful to not allow that to go the other direction. We must not allow them to influence us.

August 11, 2017 Bible Study — Using The Gifts Which God Has Given Us

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

    The prophet Isaiah spoke words of condemnation, mixed with words of hope. If the people of Jerusalem would turn back to God and obey Him, God would turn aside the coming judgment. The prophet Jeremiah spoke words of even greater condemnation, with much less hope. It was too late for the people of Jerusalem to avoid the coming disaster, but if they would turn back to God, God would provide them comfort in the coming day of judgment. As a result, I am finding it much harder to know what to write each day about the passages from Jeremiah than I did with the Book of Isaiah. I do not believe that the United States has reached the point where the Kingdom of Judah was when Jeremiah prophesied.

    Having said that, I do have something to write about today’s passage. The passage starts with Jeremiah creating a visual metaphor for the people of Jerusalem. He wore a loincloth for several days. Then, he took it and buried it. A lengthy period of time later, Jeremiah went back and dug up that loincloth, at which point, it was rotted and useless. This is what happens to us when we do not do what God instructs us to do. God has created us for a purpose. He calls us, gives us gifts and abilities to serve that purpose, and sends us to do what He tells us. If we refuse to listen to His words and do as He instructs, we will become as worthless as a loincloth which has been buried. What gifts and abilities has God given us that we are not using to their full potential? Are we allowing those gifts to rot?

August 11, 2016 Bible Study — Do Not Become Like A Rotted LoinCloth

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

    Today’s passage starts with a metaphor which compares the people of God to a loincloth. Our purpose is to cling to God, to take pride in Him, not ourselves. If we allow our pride to lead us to think that we are the important ones, that pride separates us from God and acts like rot to destroy our usefulness. If we do not listen to God and allow ourselves to become like that rotted loincloth God will destroy us just as we would destroy such a rotted piece of clothing.

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    I am struggling with how to word another thought (possibly two thoughts) which this passage generates in my mind. There will come a time when God will tell us to stop praying for those around us. Yet, in the middle of the passage where God is telling this to Jeremiah He also tells Him that He will protect those who return to Him. If we speak God’s words, those who rebel against Him will fight against us. But God will be our fortress and they will fail to conquer us. God calls us to influence those around us, but not be influenced by them. **I want to note that this assumes that those around us are in rebellion from God. It does not mean that we should not allow our fellow believers to influence us.** God will protect us and rescue us from the hands of the wicked.