The Bible Recap - Day 227 (Jeremiah 30-31) - Year 6
Episode Date: August 14, 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: - Isaiah 55:3 - The Bible Recap - Day 211 - Revel...ation 3:12 - Revelation 21:2 - Rate and Review! - Sign up for Dwell Differently - use code “TBR”! 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.
After all the tough times Jeremiah and the people had been through, today's reading
was a breath of fresh air.
It was filled with reminders of God's plan.
I'm a planner, so I appreciate a good plan.
And one of the most important aspects of planning
is establishing a process.
It's great to know you want to visit Europe,
but you can't just book a hotel there.
You have to book a flight,
figure out how to get to the airport,
figure out how to get from the airport to your hotel,
make sure you're checking in
after the last person has checked out,
all kinds of details.
Fortunately, nothing slips through the cracks with God.
He's got his process all planned
out and it's seamless. I wanted to get a good overview of his plan, so I underlined all the
things he says he will do for Judah and Israel in chapter 30. Here they are. I will restore the
fortunes of my people. I will bring them back to the land. I will break his yoke from off your neck.
I will burst your bonds. I will raise up a king. I will save you. I am with you. I will break his yoke from off your neck. I will burst your bonds. I will raise up a king.
I will save you.
I am with you.
I will make a full end of all the opposing nations.
I will discipline you in just measure.
I will not leave you unpunished.
I have dealt you the blow of an enemy.
I have done these things to you.
I will make your predators into prey.
I will restore health to you. I will heal your wounds into prey. I will restore health to you. I will heal
your wounds. I will restore Jacob's fortunes. I will have compassion. I will multiply them.
I will make them honored. I will punish their oppressors. I will make them draw near. I will
be your God." That's a lot for Israel and Judah to go through. And on the surface,
some of it may sound cruel, but this process is necessary in getting the scales to fall from
their eyes and in softening their hearts. Yes, God is wounding them, but all his wounds are ways to
heal. He can be trusted. He's taking us through the process. And if you've lived through anything challenging, you know that the processes we go through
have a formative effect on us.
They build character.
They teach us what's important.
They shape us into people who are hopefully more humble, less entitled, more compassionate,
less impatient, and ultimately more like God, who has repeatedly described himself as merciful,
gracious, slow to anger,
abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness,
a God of forgiveness and justice.
In verses eight through nine,
God talks about the captivity they're in,
bound to Babylon,
and he says he'll break their yokes eventually,
and when they're set free at that point,
they'll turn to serve God instead.
True freedom isn't just doing whatever we want.
That's what got them in this place to begin with.
Here's the paradox.
We will always be serving someone or something,
and true freedom is when we serve God instead of our oppressors or ourselves.
Chapter 31 opens with the promise that God is going to restore people from among all the tribes of Israel and Judah,
not just people from the kingdom of Judah.
Sometimes God states this outright, and sometimes he hints at it when he refers to them as Jacob.
You may recall that the tribes are named after the sons of Jacob,
so Jacob is sometimes used as a collective term for all of them.
All along this journey, God is protecting His people.
Even as He drives them out of their land, they not only survive the sword, but He says,
they found grace in the wilderness.
He gave them rest.
He appeared to them, and He reminded them of His everlasting love for them, as well
as His promise of restoration.
And when the time comes for them to return to the land,
He really wants them to do it.
Because if they refuse and stay in the place of their exile,
it reveals that they don't believe His promises of restoration.
So He reiterates this promise over and over in case they're tempted to doubt Him.
God also talks to them about the new covenant He's making with them, the everlasting covenant.
We first read about this in Isaiah 55 on day 211.
He says this new covenant will happen when He writes the law on their heart.
Since their hearts have been the problem all along, God's plan involves getting to the
root and addressing the real issue. Then they will know Him, and He will forgive their iniquity and forget their sins.
All of this is pointing to the payment of Christ on the cross and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
That's where heart change happens, when God gives us a new heart and His Spirit comes to live in us forever.
Without that, we'd just be trying to modify our behavior, which has a way of making people exhausted
and disappointing and arrogant and fearful all at once.
But the work of his spirit in us
is a different thing altogether.
It brings peace.
It's hard to know for sure,
but it seems like chapter 31 is intentionally giving us
an order of prophecy.
There's the promise that God will be with them in exile, the promise that He'll bring
them back to the land and restore their fortunes after exile.
Then there's the promise of a new covenant, i.e. Jesus and the Holy Spirit.
And finally, it seems like the chapter wraps up with promises related to the end times.
Here's why these are probably end times prophecies.
Not only does the order seem to be chronological, but 3140 says Jerusalem will never be uprooted
again.
And we know they were uprooted again.
In fact, Jesus even prophesied about that uprooting.
It happened in 70 AD, when the Romans destroyed the city and the second temple and all the
Jews fled the city again. So there's reason to believe that the last few verses
of what we read today are pointing
to a future Jerusalem as well, a final Jerusalem.
Remember how we've talked about God
recreating heaven and earth, wiping them both clean
of the effects of sin and giving them a massive upgrade?
It seems like part of the plan
is focused on a new Jerusalem as well. This new Jerusalem is referenced in Revelation 312 and 21 too.
Those verses make it sound like a place where the new heaven and the new earth are finally
joined together. Like heaven and earth fuse to create it.
Like the new Jerusalem is literally heaven on earth.
It bears repeating, I hold all my opinions and understandings of end times prophecies
with an open hand.
And your understanding may vary from mine and that's okay, we're all still friends.
But based on my current understanding, this is what it seems to me that scripture indicates.
New heaven plus new earth equals new Jerusalem.
And according to 3140, it shall be sacred to the Lord. It
shall not be uprooted or overthrown anymore forever. Today my God shot was in
3112 through 14. There are two lines in that section that just reminded me of
God's abundant goodness. Verse 12 says, they shall be radiant over the goodness
of the Lord. This doesn't just say they'll be radiant over the goodness of the Lord.
This doesn't just say they'll be radiant.
The point of this isn't that the people will look beautiful or be happy.
The point of this is why are they radiant?
Because of God's goodness.
He's the source of their radiance.
And verse 14 says, my people shall be satisfied with my goodness, declares the Lord.
His goodness, apart from any gift, is all satisfying, just Him.
May we be radiant and satisfied because we have Him, and He's where the joy is.
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