The Bible Recap - Day 224 (Jeremiah 18-22) - Year 6
Episode Date: August 11, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Genesis 2:7 - Isaiah 45:9 - Jeremiah 14:11-12 ...- John 8:31-47 - Matthew 7:21-23 - John 14:15 BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today God sends Jeremiah on a little field trip.
He has him stop in where a potter is making jars.
As the potter is shaping one of them, things get a little wonky with it and he reshapes
it into something new. Same lump of clay, different outcome.
Then God tells Jeremiah, here's the message I want you to take away from this. I'm the
potter. The people are clay. I can do whatever I want with them. Let Jerusalem know that
because of their evil, my plan for them involves disaster. Then call them to repent. But just
a reminder before you do all this, they're not going to repent. Then call them to repent. But just a reminder, before
you do all this, they are not going to repent. They're going to keep doing whatever they
want, making their own plans and following their own hearts. They've forgotten me.
I can almost hear the heartache in God's voice when he says the last part. My people have
forgotten me. What's also interesting about this metaphor is how obviously engaged the potter is with the
clay. This isn't a computerized assembly line. This is hands-on creative work. It's fitting because,
according to Genesis 2, 7, God formed man out of the dust of the earth, then breathed life into him.
God has always been uniquely involved with humanity in ways that are different from everything else He made.
We are made with His hands, not His commands.
We are made in His likeness, unlike His other creations.
We are indeed the clay to His potter.
And in fact, this is a common biblical metaphor.
We saw it three times in the book of Isaiah alone.
And the common theme is that the clay doesn't get to argue with the potter.
Isaiah 45.9 puts it this way,
Woe to him who strives with him who formed him,
A pot among earthen pots!
Does the clay say to him who forms it,
What are you making?
Or, Your work has no handles!
After this, the people start to plot against Jeremiah again,
and he's finally had enough. He's been so compassionate toward the people start to plot against Jeremiah again, and he's finally had enough.
He's been so compassionate toward the people up to this point, pleading their case even when God told him to be quiet.
But he's reached his breaking point.
One of the things that makes Jeremiah so relatable to me in this moment is that it takes things getting personal for him before he can understand God's point of view.
He doesn't get on board with God's plan of destruction based on the people's opposition to God
until they oppose Him.
He's an imperfect prophet, as they all are.
He prays and asks God to deliver them up
to the things God said away to them back in chapter 14,
famine, sword, and pestilence.
In chapter 19, God sends him to perform a bit of theater
in front of the people in order to present a message.
God wants him to buy a clay flask and smash it in front of the elders and the priests,
then tell them that it's symbolic of how God is going to break this people in a way that they can't be mended.
We've encountered some ideas here that have the potential to be confusing, so I want to try to clarify in case they aren't obvious. God has called Israel and Judah His people, but Scripture has also shown us
repeatedly that God's people are made up of people from among every nation, anyone
whose heart turns to follow Yahweh, including foreigners like Rahab and
Ruth. And as far as natural-born Israelites, God has said that being born
into the lineage of Abraham doesn't mean they're his children,
because his family is comprised of people with new hearts, not just circumcised flesh.
So technically at this point, God's people, whom he calls Israel, includes some people
who aren't genetically Israelites, and also doesn't include some people who genetically
are.
It all comes down to their hearts.
Here's a modern parallel in case it's helpful.
We probably all know people who go to church either routinely or regularly, but who don't love God.
They're in the church, but they're not in the kingdom. Or as I've heard it described,
they're in the church visible, but not the church invisible. Jesus even addressed this directly in
John 8 and generally in Matthew 7.
So what we're starting to see here, especially through God's words in this book,
is that some people who are called His people aren't really His people at all.
They don't love Him or obey Him.
It seems that His plan is to preserve the ones among Judah who do love Him, the remnant,
and judge those who don't.
And truly, only God those who don't.
And truly, only God knows people's hearts.
So God can be trusted to make this kind of delineation among the people of Judah when
His judgment comes to them via Babylon.
After Jeremiah destroys the flask, one of the wicked priests beats him and puts him
in stocks overnight.
Can you imagine how Jeremiah felt when this was happening?
He's being obedient to God and he's getting tortured for it.
The next day when the priest releases him,
Jeremiah laments to God again.
He says, oh Lord, you have deceived me.
This is just another example
of why we can't take scripture out of context.
We know God didn't deceive Jeremiah.
Jeremiah is devastated by how things are going,
but God has told him all along that this would not be easy and people would reject his message.
As much as Jeremiah hates his calling, he feels a fire in his bones and can't keep his mouth shut.
He's lost his reputation and his friends, but God is with him. He hates his life, but he persists in
God's calling. He's not the first to feel this way. This reminds me of Job and Moses
and Elijah. Jeremiah wishes he'd never been born, but of course, we know God had a plan
for his life because we're reading his book.
In chapter 21, King Zedekiah, who was Judah's very last king, sends messengers to Jeremiah
to ask him if they're going to be spared when Babylon's king Nebuchadnezzar invades.
Just so you have an idea of where we're at in the timeline, the Babylonian captivity
happens in 586 BC, so most commentators place this conversation one to two years earlier,
around 587 or 588 BC, after Babylon had already started invading.
Jeremiah tells them,
not only will God not stop Babylon,
but he himself will fight against Jerusalem.
Ouch.
And God says the only way to survive is to surrender.
Then in chapter 22,
God sends Jeremiah with a follow-up message for King Zedekiah.
Stop oppressing the poor and the orphans and the widows.
Do justice and righteousness.
That's your job.
If you do this, I'll let your kingdom survive.
But if not, that will be the end of this kingdom.
Then God recounts some of the sins of the final kings of Judah.
They were wicked leaders, murdering and oppressing the weak.
They've done nothing to prompt God to extend their kingdom.
They've all disobeyed His rules.
And this final chapter is where my God shot came from today.
Verse 3 says,
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."
Then verses 15 through 16 echo these ideas
and end with a bold statement.
They say,
Did not your father eat and drink and do justice and righteousness?
Then it was well with him.
He judged the cause of the poor and the needy.
Then it was well.
Is not this to know me, declares the Lord?
God says to know him is to do what he says.
Jesus reiterates this in John 14.
Our deepest intimacy with God is found in obedience.
Obeying God is where the joy is,
because obeying God is where we connect with God
on the deepest level,
and we know for sure that He's where the joy is.
Hey Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in. How are you feeling today? Did you have a rough start to the morning or maybe a rough week in general and you're not where you want to be in
our reading? Or maybe you're right where you want to be. Either way, here's what I know.
God knows exactly where you are and He's with you in that space, on those exact pages,
in that exact timeline.
So you are right on time.
What you're reading today is what you were supposed to read.
He has a plan for you even on the rough days, even on the days when you feel like you're
behind.
You are not.
I'm cheering you on, and we're in this together.