Jeremiah, the Wailing Prophet
The year was
approximately 626 B.C. and the Jewish people in Judah had become so corrupt
that unless they turned from their evil ways, God would bring an end to their
nation. God called Jeremiah to be His messenger or prophet during this
difficult time. Jeremiah would deliver
God’s messages to the Jewish people begging them to return to God and warning
the people of God’s severe punishment if they didn’t.
Jeremiah was
not popular with this rebellious Jewish generation. They tried to kill him and did not want to
hear what he had to say. They had turned
away from worshipping the God of their fathers and they had hardened their
hearts against God. So, they took out
their anger on Jeremiah as he traveled from town to town crying and begging his
fellow Jews to come back to their God before it would be too late.
Jeremiah
said that God’s message was like a burning fire inside his body and he couldn’t
keep it in. (Jeremiah 20:9) He was called “the wailing prophet” because
he spent sixty years traveling from town to town crying, begging and wailing as
he cried out God’s message to the stubborn people of Judah.
God tells
the Jewish people what they have done wrong. Jeremiah delivers His message:
“Everyone is given to covetousness: from
the prophet even to the priest. Everyone
deals falsely, for they have healed the hurt of the daughter of My people
slightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace!’ When
there is no peace. (Jeremiah 8:10a-11) Bible scholars say that the religious leaders
superficially tended to the wounds of the people. They told the people not to be concerned
about their sinful lifestyle when they should have been telling them to be concerned
and to come back to their God.
God goes on recounting
the many sins of His people through His prophet, Jeremiah. “For they are all adulterers. And an assembly of treacherous people. Like their bow they have bent their tongues
for lies. They are not valiant for the
truth on the earth. For they proceed
from evil to evil. And ‘they do not know
Me’, says the Lord. Everyone needs to
watch out for his neighbor, and do not trust any brother: for every brother will utterly supplant, and
every neighbor will walk with slanderers.
Everyone will deceive his neighbor and will not speak the truth. “
(Jeremiah 9:2b-5) The Jewish people’s many
sins have caused a breakdown of families and personal relationships. God begs them to return to Him.
God is
crying out for His people: “They have walked according to the dictates of their
own hearts and after the Baal gods…”
Therefore, says the Lord God of Israel: …” I will scatter them also
among the Gentiles whom neither they nor their fathers have known…” (Jeremiah 9:14 and Jeremiah 15a-16) The people
of Judah were burning or sacrificing their little children to the heathen god,
Baal. It seems that when gross sins are allowed
to flourish in a country, it is the little children that suffer the most!
God, the
Father, continues grieving for His lost children, the people of Judah. “Woe is Me for My hurt! My wound is severe. Truly this is an illness that I must
bear. My tent is plundered, and all my
cords are broken. My children have all
gone away from Me. And they are no more.” (Jeremiah 10:19-20) The deeply distraught heavenly
Father has lost everything.
God, the
Father continues spilling out His deep grief over His lost children. How He misses them and the fellowship they
had. How He longs for their return to
Him. Is their any grief worse than the grief of a parent who has lost a child?
God, the
Father, cries out in His overwhelming sorrow that He must punish His beloved children. A desperate Father who must use tough love as
a last resort! Tough love, because real
love is always forgiving but also always just. With a breaking heart the heavenly Father calls
His lost children “the dearly beloved of My soul”. But then He compares His beloved children to
a lion in the forest coming out against Him.
And, He compares them to a vulture.
Have human
parents ever felt like their beloved children are attacking them as a lion in
the forest attacks its’ prey? Have human
mothers and fathers ever felt like their precious child – their dearly beloved
- has become like a vulture to them – waiting to pick them over when they die?
God, the Father cries out through His messenger
Jeremiah: “I have forsaken My house; I have left My heritage: I have given the dearly beloved of My soul
into the hand of her enemies. My
heritage (My children) is to Me like a lion, in the forest. It cries out against Me: Therefore, I have hated it. My heritage is to Me like a speckled vulture:”
(Jeremiah 12:7-9a)
His
heritage, (His children) were also compared to a pleasant vineyard that has now
become a desolate wilderness because no one follows the Lord. Scripture says: “The whole land is made
desolate, because no one takes it to heart.”
(Jeremiah 12:11b) The heavenly Father had had so much joy with His
children. Israel was symbolized as a holy people, “a kingdom of priests”
(Exodus 19:6) They had enjoyed an intimate relationship with God as His
covenant people. But now a rebellious generation has thrown it
all away.
All of the Bible
teaches us that God is a God of love but also a God of justice. Love and justice cannot be separated. A God of
forgiveness when we repent and a God of judgment when we don’t. And some Christians have a difficult time with
that. They try to make God into what
they want instead of who He is in our Bible.
A parent who
loves her child is a parent who steps in and corrects or disciplines the child
when the child does something wrong. A
good parent loves their child too much to let him grow into a selfish hateful
person. And our Father God loves us too
much to let us remain in our sin. He
calls us to Himself, to follow His laws, to accept His Son as our Savior and to
trust His goodness.
The book of Jeremiah
was written approximately 2,600 years ago.
But we can learn from Jeremiah that our heavenly Father was broken
hearted when His people turned away from Him so long ago. And He finally had to
punish them. God, our Father is the same
yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8) and He is heartbroken today when we
turn away from Him just as He was back then.
Over and over God warned the Jewish people what
they were doing was wrong. He said: “Each
one of you follows the dictates of your own heart so that no one listens to Me.” (Jeremiah 16:12b) They “followed their own
heart” or did their own thing back then. And we can “follow our own heart” now and do
our own thing. It is only too easy to do
whatever we want to do or what is popular to do, even when we know that God has
called what we are doing wrong. God
gives us laws to follow. He will put His law in our hearts, and He forgives us
when we go astray. But we have to want
to follow Him.
.
No comments:
Post a Comment