Daily Bread for Aug 19, Jer 23-25
Today’s readings are Jer 23-25.
Jer 23 begins
with a woe. God warns the leaders (shepherds) of Israel that if they don't
properly tend to His people, He will. This warning bears echoes
of Ezek 34,
showing that there is accountability for leaders who are given spiritual
responsibility for those they lead. God will care for His children by
raising up a "righteous branch," a wise king who will be a righteous
judge (Jer 23:5-6).
God will ultimately take care of his sheep but will hold
the shepherds responsible for how they tend to them in the meantime. This
is emphasized by the revelation that there is a particularly harsh judgment in
store for those prophets and leaders that lead the people in an ungodly
direction (Jer 23:9-40). Even today, these are sobering words for anyone called
into a leadership position in the church.
Jer 24 can
be challenging. 2 Kings 20 told us of good king Hezekiah's invitation for
envoys from the king of Babylon to come and see the riches of the temple and
the king’s storehouses after the miraculous defeat of the Assyrians outside of
Jerusalem. That prideful invitation comes home to roost as the new king of
Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar, envious of the riches of Judah, takes Judah and
Jerusalem captive. As Jer 24 describes
this invasion and its consequences by drawing a contrast between good fruit and
bad. God describes some of the exiles taken away by Nebuchadnezzar as good
fruit that will be returned to Jerusalem. God will do this in a
spectacular display of His sovereign power shown in Jer 24-25. As
for the good fruit, God says
Jeremiah 24:7 I will give them a heart to know that I am the Lord, and they shall be my people and I will be their God, for they shall return to me with their whole heart.
As for the bad fruit,
Jeremiah 24:10 And I will send sword, famine, and pestilence upon them, until they shall be utterly destroyed from the land that I gave to them and their fathers.”
The methods God uses to accomplish His purposes in the
lives of His people can be startling. We hear the king of Babylon,
Nebuchadnezzar, as evil a king as there ever was, is really serving God (Jer
25:9). He is being used by Him to refine His people. Even more surprising is
that Nebuchadnezzar does not operate independently of God, God is the one who
sends Babylon and other warring nations against Judah (Jer 25:8-9).
Furthermore, the nations who come against Judah will be judged thoroughly and
harshly (Jer 25:10-29), showing that they are not unwilling pawns being
manipulated by God, but unrepentant, rebellious people who are acting according
to their own evil natures and desires.
The surprising element of all this is that God uses the
wicked hearts and intentions of the ungodly to accomplish His purposes in the
hearts of the godly. It is no wonder that one of the most frequently repeated
phrases in the Bible is "fear not," appearing in some form over 200
times. God is always in control, always moving toward His goal for his people
and always drawing them closer to Himself regardless of how we may feel about
our situations.

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