Day 224 – Reading – Jeremiah 18 – 22
Read today’s Scriptures … ANYWHERE you find yourself this summer. Stay in the WORD!
Jeremiah 18.
God gives Jeremiah another picture prophecy. (Don’t you love those?)
He is to go to a potter’s shop and watch the man work. The potter sees a dry chunk, a flaw, in the clay and has to begin again. He squashes the clay vase, picks out the hard chunk, kneads the “purified” clay, forms it into an oblong, puts it back on the wheel, and begins shaping again. His clay. His choice.
Jeremiah watches. He gets it. God is the potter, Israel/Judah the clay. There are flaws in the clay – sin. God can decide to follow through on the judgment he’s planned because the flaw is just too great (crush the clay and form another), or … if the clay is pliable enough, He can work the bad spots out as it spins and finish that flawless vase. His people. His choice.
The people were not happy when Jeremiah finished the story and he said, “Behold, God is devising a plan against you. Return, every one from his evil way, and amend your ways and deeds.“
They stubbornly replied, “We will follow our OWN plans. We will, every one of us, act according to the stubbornness of his own evil heart.” (So there! says the clay to the potter. What are you going to do about it?)
Here’s what: “Like the east wind, I will scatter them before the enemy. I will show them my back and not my face, on the day of their calamity.” (God turning his back on me would be a scary thought!)
Scolded people never like the messenger. They say, “Come, let us plot against Jeremiah. Let us strike him with the tongue. Let us not pay attention to any of his words.” That seems pretty mild, but Verse 23 reveals that they were plotting to KILL him, as well.)
Jeremiah runs to God and complains. “Listen to them! Hear how they plot evil for me. Remember when I spoke up for You?? Therefore, God, give them over to famine, sword, and pestilence… just as you said.” WHOA, Jeremiah has done an about-face. He’d prayed that God would NOT bring those things on Israel before.
(Boy, I’ve done that, haven’t you? Touch a bit of me or mine, and I turn nasty!)
Let’s see what God does.
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Jeremiah 19.
Back to the potter’s shop. Only this time, Jeremiah was to buy a finished clay flask. Then he was to take it to the Valley of Hinnom, called Topeth (where babies were burned alive to Molech), and say God’s words of disaster to the kings of Judah, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem.
“Because they have forsaken God and profaned the city and Temple, making offerings in it to other gods, and because they have filled the place “with the blood of innocent babies, to burn them as an offering to a god….. “which I did not command or decree, nor did it come into my mind!! Therefore, I will make void all the plans of Judah. I will cause the people to fall by the sword. I will give THEIR dead bodies for food to the birds and beasts. I will make them EAT the flesh of their own sons and daughters … and their neighbors…” Yikes!
Then Jeremiah was to break the clay flask against the wall and say, “Thus will I break this people and this city … as the potter’s vessel, so that it can never be mended.” (Great object lesson!)
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Jeremiah 20.
When Pashhur (meaning “ease”), the priest and chief officer of the temple police, heard Jeremiah, he grabbed him and BEAT him (the 40 lashes of Deuteronomy 25:3). Then he put the prophet into stocks – hands, feet and neck – and left him bleeding and bruised over night.
The next morning, Jeremiah gave Pashhur the “what for!!”
Your name will no longer be “Ease” but “Terror On Every Side.” You will watch all those horrific things happen to Jerusalem, the Temple, and the people. And YOU will be carried into captivity in Babylon, where you will die and be buried … you and all your friends.
Understandably, Jeremiah was in excruciating pain – back raw, blood crusted on the stripes, bruised, and maybe still bleeding. And joints aching from the stocks. He says to God,
- I have become a laughingstock all day; everyone mocks me. Whenever I speak, cry out, and shout “‘Violence and destruction!’ Well, the word of the LORD has become a reproach and derision for me….
- I say, ‘I will not mention Him, or speak His name anymore.” But there comes in my heart a burning fire, shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in. I CANNOT hold it in!
- I hear many whispering to denounce me. “Let us denounce him,” say my friends. “We can overcome him and take our revenge on him.”
- “But the LORD is with me as a dread warrior. “O LORD of hosts … to you have I committed my cause. “Sing to the LORD; praise the LORD. For He has delivered the life of the needy from the hand of the evildoers.”
(This is such an example for me. When I feel down, and people make fun of me, I should never consider stopping my testimony. I should look to God, preach his love and care to myself, sing praises to him, and say in my heart, and aloud, HE HAS DELIVERED ME!)
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Jeremiah 21.
Okay… the time is nigh. Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, is approaching to make war on them. (No surprise!)
King Zedekiah (the very last king of Judah) tries to do what his ancestor King Hezekiah did when Sennacherib, king of Assyria, surrounded Jerusalem. He had sent for Isaiah to pray and seek the LORD.
Zedekiah sent a priest (another Pashhur, not the one who beat Jeremiah) to the prophet to “Inquire of the LORD,” for him, thinking that maybe God would do one of His “wonderful deeds” for them and make the Babylonians withdraw. But this was a different king, a different situation. Zedekiah was not the righteous Hezekiah.
Jeremiah spoke. It was NOT what King Zedekiah wanted to hear. God was NOT going to kill 185,000 of the enemy in a night.
No, the Babylonians were going to attack and prevail against Zedekiah’s weak weapons. God Himself was also going to fight against Zedekiah and Jerusalem with a strong arm, in anger and in fury and in great wrath. He was going to give King Zedekiah and the people over to Nebuchadnezzar, who would strike them with the sword … without pity or compassion. And then he would loot and burn Jerusalem.
Yikes!
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Jeremiah 22.
Wow!! Surprise, surprise! See what God – O, the merciful and forgiving, LORD God of Israel – does!
He tells Jeremiah to go to the King of Judah and tell him this:
- “Hear the word of the LORD< O king of Judah, who sits on the throne of David, you, and your servants, and your people who enter these gates. THUS says the LORD,
- “Do justice and righteousness, and deliver from the hand of the oppressor him who has been robbed. And do no wrong or violence to the resident alien, the fatherless, and the widow, nor shed innocent blood in this place!
- For… IF you will indeed obey this word, THEN there shall enter the gates of this house kings who sit on the throne of David, riding in chariots and on horses, they and their servants and their people. (Posterity and Success offered.)
- But IF NOT …. the house of the kings of Judah shall become a desolation. (No continuing posterity.)
And then, the LORD gives a word – the end of each of the following kings, sons of Josiah.
SHALLUM (or Jehoahaz) – carried captive to Babylon, where he will die. “Your father (Josiah) did justice and righteousness, and it went well with him. But YOU have eyes and heart only for dishonest gain, shedding innocent blood, and practicing oppression and violence.”
JEHOIAKIM – They shall not lament for him. “With the burial of a donkey, he shall be buried, dragged, and dumped beyond the gates of Jerusalem.”
CONIAH (or Jehoiachin) – I will give you into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and into the hands of the Chaldeans (of whom you are afraid). I will hurl you and the mother who bore you into another country where you were not born, and there you shall die. “You are a despised, broken pot, a vessel no one cares for.”
(These were the last kings of Judah, all despised. Israel/Judah would have NO MORE KINGS until that last Glorious One.)
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Wow. Not the epitaphs I’d want!
(But take heart. The next chapter (tomorrow) reveals the “Greater Son of David, the King of Kings, holy and righteous, who will sit on his throne forever!”)
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