Tag Archives: Jeremiah 31

August 17, 2024 Bible Study — Set Up Road Signs

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 31-32.

I was struck by something in today’s passage and am going to write from a different perspective than I am normally willing to take.  In Chapter 31 verse 21, Jeremiah writes:
Set up road signs;
    put up guideposts.
Take note of the highway,
the road that you take.
As I read this I felt like God was speaking through that to us today.  God is telling us to set up road signs and guideposts to direct people to Him.  In the past such signs had been created by those who went before us in the Lord, but our society has torn them down, or twisted them to point in the wrong direction.  It is past due time for those of us who worship the Lord to replace those signs and guideposts.  And what are those road signs and guideposts?  They are our actions and how we interact with others.  Let us be imitators of God, who forgives our wickedness and forgets our sins.  If God has done that for us, surely we can do that for our fellow Man.

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

August 17, 2023 Bible Study — God Will Put His Laws Into the Minds of Those Who Wish to Know Them

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 31-32.

Jeremiah had repeatedly prophesied that disaster would come upon Jerusalem and vehemently rejected as false prophets those who gave the people of Jerusalem cheery prophecies.  However, in today’s passage. Jeremiah does give a prophecy of hope.  He does not offer them a chance to avoid the disaster which he had previously prophesied, but he prophesies that the disaster will not be the end for the people of Israel.  God promised that He would call them back to Him.  He would establish a new covenant with His people.  Under His new covenant, people would be held accountable only for their own sins, not for the sins of their parents and other ancestors.  More importantly, God promised that He would put His law and instructions into the hearts and minds of those who turned to Him under this new covenant.  If we repent and seek God, He will directly teach us His laws and we will not need to rely on anyone else to know them, or to know Him.

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

August 17, 2020 Bible Study Faith In the Future

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 31-32.

Jeremiah tells us that God will make a new covenant with Israel because the people of Israel had demonstrated that humans were not capable of following God’s original covenant.  So, God promised through Jeremiah to create a new covenant, one which I believe was created by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  Under the new covenant, God put His Spirit within us to give us God’s instructions and write them upon our hearts.  I believe that under this new covenant we do not need teachers in order to learn what God wants us to do.  Nevertheless, God has provided us with teachers to help us master His will.  A key part of what Jeremiah says here about not needing teachers is that there are no secrets which only the “select” can know: all of God’s truth is freely available to all who wish to know.

On another lesson of importance for us, despite prophesying the fall of Jerusalem, Jeremiah also prophesied its restoration.  But Jeremiah did not just say that these future good things would happen, he acted upon them.  When given the opportunity, Jeremiah bought land outside of the city.  However, he made it clear that he did not expect to make any gain from it in the short-term by putting the deed in a clay jar to preserve it for a long time.  Jeremiah had faith that the deed would someday be worth something and acted on that faith.

 

August 17, 2019 Bible Study — God Will Write His Law On Our Hearts

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 31-32.

Through Jeremiah God promises to enter into a new covenant with the people of Israel (from other passages, both in Jeremiah and elsewhere, we learn that this covenant extends to all people).  This new covenant was necessary because the people of Israel were unable to keep the original one (no one would have been able to do so).  The new covenant which God made does not require teachers who have been extensively trained to understand what God commands and how those rules fit together.  God has provided simple and basic rules which anyone can understand for themselves if they so desire.  Further, He has placed His Spirit in those who wish to follow this new covenant to explain to them from within what He desires.  This does not mean that there is no place for teachers of God’s will.  It means that you can go to Scripture for yourself, and with the aid of the Holy Spirit, determine if what the teacher is teaching matches what God has said through Scripture.  

On a slightly different note, Jeremiah was accused of being a traitor to his people because he prophesied that Jerusalem would fall and that the people of Judah should submit to the Babylonians.  This accusation was wrong on several counts.  First, Jeremiah also prophesied that Babylon would be destroyed for what it did to the people of Israel (including Judah).  Second, we have today’s passage where Jeremiah demonstrated his belief that the nation of Israel would one day be restored.  Jeremiah purchased land from a relative and sealed the deed and other ownership documents in a clay jar to preserve them against the time when the Jewish people would once more be able to buy and sell land in the Land of Israel.  He had told the people of Jerusalem that they would go into exile, but he had also told them it would only be for 70 years.  In today’s passage, he put his money where his mouth was by buying land. 

August 17, 2018 Bible Study — God’s Instructions Are Written On Our Hearts

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 31-32.

    When I read Jeremiah’s prophecies concerning the restoration of the Children of Israel to the land God promised them I cannot help but think of the founding and establishment of the modern state of Israel. Jeremiah speaks of the people of Israel being gathered from all over the world by God, which happened in the founding of modern Israel. When I read about the deep anguish and bitter weeping in Ramah I am reminded of the Holocaust. But in the following verses I am reminded of the establishment of modern Israel in 1948 and the successes of that state following its founding. All of this strikes me as a fulfillment of Jeremiah’s prophecy. However, Jeremiah’s prophecy also foretells that the people of Israel will all turn back to God and worship Him and I do not see that happening in the modern state of Israel. So, this prophecy concerns more than just the establishment of the modern state of Israel. God promised that the people of Israel would be restored to His land, and they have indeed been restored. But there is more to this prophecy than that.

    Jeremiah tells us that God would establish a new covenant, not just with the Children of Israel but with all of the people of Earth. God will write His instructions on the hearts and deep within the minds of those who enter into His covenant. No one will need to rely on someone else to teach them God’s commands. Each and everyone of us can read and understand God’s instructions for ourselves. We do not need to rely on people of special learning to teach us the hidden secrets of God. God’s secrets are only hidden from those who refuse to see them. Do not rely on what others tell you about the Bible, read it for yourself.

August 17, 2017 Bible Study — Jeremiah Predicts A New Covenant

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 31-32.

    Jeremiah prophesied that God would make a new covenant with the people of Israel. Traditionally, Christians have interpreted this to have been fulfilled with the death and resurrection of Jesus. I tend towards this interpretation, but, if so, that means we need to give some thought to what the prophet means when he talks about aspects of this new covenant. Jeremiah says that God will put His law in our minds and write it on our hearts. That is fairly straightforward. However, then Jeremiah tells us that we will not need to teach our neighbors or call on them to know the Lord because they will already know Him. That part seems problematic. There are certainly people today who do not know the Lord and it seems like there are people who do know the Lord who need to be taught.

    Having said that, it seems to me that my understanding of how God intends for the Church to be structured fits right into that. God has provided the Bible to us in a way that each of us can read it on our own and learn His intentions and desires. It does not take special training to understand what the Bible says to us. Each and every one of us can go to the Bible and see what God has to say for ourselves. We do not need someone to interpret what it means. As for the place where Jeremiah says that everyone will know the Lord, he actually says that all of the “people of Israel” will know the Lord. In terms of the New Covenant of Christianity, “the people of Israel” are the Church, those who have accepted Christ as their Lord and Savior.

    I want to point out that this interpretation leaves something to be desired. For me, filling that hole can be dealt with by recognizing that many of the prophecies in the Bible have more than one valid interpretation. God promises that He will never abandon the descendants of Jacob, that Israel will never cease to be a nation. This is consistent with what we see in the world today. Israel was a nation without land for centuries, but once more it has land in which it exists. More importantly, in the prophecy from Jeremiah God stated that He will never reject all of the descendants of Israel. We see this fulfilled in those Messianic Jews who are followers of Christ. In every generation there have been Jews who have come to know Jesus as their Lord and Savior.