The Bible Recap - Day 220 (Jeremiah 4-6) - Year 4

Episode Date: August 8, 2022

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap. Today we open with Jeremiah continuing the plea for Judah to repent. Throughout this section, we see God repeating the theme that he doesn't just want them to change their actions or offer up empty sacrifices like vain apologies, they faked repentance before and he didn't buy it then either. He's after their hearts. We see it in verse 4 where he's comparing this change of heart to the way he marked them with circumcision. He says, remove the foreskin of your hearts. And in verse 14, he says, OhO Jerusalem, wash your heart from evil. How long shall your wicked thoughts lodge within you?"
Starting point is 00:00:51 And in verse 19, your ways and your deeds have brought this upon you. This is your doom, and it is bitter. It has reached your very heart. Their sin yielded this consequence, and God's problem with their sin goes far beyond their actions. It goes to their very heart, so his consequence is due to. Then, in verse 10, Jeremiah seems to be accusing God of lying. It's a confusing time to be alive because up until this point, all the so-called profits of the land have been telling all the people of Judah,
Starting point is 00:01:25 may don't sweat it, things are gonna be fine. They keep proclaiming peace and safety when things are actually speeding toward a cliff at a hundred miles an hour. And this is the first time Jeremiah is actually hearing the truth, and it's coming directly from God himself. He seems to feel kind of disoriented by it all,
Starting point is 00:01:44 but he eventually comes to realize that those prophets weren't speaking the words of God. They were just saying what they thought the people wanted to hear. I've had many a well-meaning prophecy spoken to me, and almost all of them have been wrong. It took me a long time to come to terms with the fact that God hadn't lied to me. Those people had good desires for me, but they were speaking out of their own hopes and hearts, not his. That's just a fraction of what Jeremiah was probably going through here.
Starting point is 00:02:15 As Jeremiah is giving these warnings to the people, he's also getting pretty intense visions of the destruction Jerusalem will encounter. Or at least, it seems to be Jeremiah in verses 19-21, and he's disturbed by it all. He can hardly sleep at night because it's so disheartening. And this hit home for me too. I love Jerusalem, it's one of my favorite cities. If I had to put myself in Jeremiah's shoes and imagine it being destroyed like that, I'd need some Nike will too, and I don't even live there. Next, God has some pretty harsh words for his people. He says they are fools, and that they use the little wisdom they have to be crafty in sinning. Then Jeremiah has a vision in verses 23-28 that describe an undoing of creation,
Starting point is 00:03:02 reversing all God's work in the Genesis 1 account. That has to be pretty terrifying, but God promises not to annihilate the earth. It will still be there just emptied. And Jerusalem, who is portrayed as a desperate woman, tries in vain to save herself. But God says it won't be possible. In chapter 5, the struggle continues. The people of Jerusalem are pros at offering up religious phrases and actions, taking oath in God's name and whatnot, but they don't keep any of their promises. Religious language can come from a corrupt heart. Jeremiah thinks, hey,
Starting point is 00:03:41 maybe this is because they're poor and they can't afford to keep their oaths, or maybe they just weren't educated enough to know better. But then he finds that the same problem exists with the rich people. They're all rebelling. God says nothing they have will be safe from his destruction, not their income, food, drink, family, or sense of security. Nothing is untouchable. Everything can be shaken or taken. But again, this is all the consequence of their sin. In verse 25, he says, your sins have kept good from you. The first time I read that I thought it said,
Starting point is 00:04:17 your sins have kept you from good. And that's true too, but it's far more potent the way it's really written, which basically says sin is a thief. It steals good things from you. Wow, sin is a thief. And not only does their sin keep good things from them, but it keeps good things from the poor too. That's because the rich have gotten rich off their selfishness, and it turns into a total lack of concern for the poor. They lead and govern with injustice, but God will punish this too, because a righteous judge has to punish sin. In Chapter 6 we see some of the prior themes repeated. Jerusalem will be destroyed,
Starting point is 00:04:59 the prophets will offer false comfort, the people will refuse to repent, and will have a complete lack of understanding that what they're doing is totally wrong. God pleads with them to remember the ancient paths of their forefathers, to turn back to the ways he has already marked out for them, but they refuse to listen. My God shot today came from just thinking about how this book came together. God picked this man, Jeremiah, to beg his people to repent, knowing full well that they wouldn't. Jeremiah endured sleepless nights and anguish
Starting point is 00:05:33 and deep mourning to communicate this message to God's people, and he wasn't the only one. We've already read a few other prophets so far who were sent to the same people with the same message. What does it reveal about God's heart that he keeps sending this message, decade after decade, begging them to repent? I see his patience in this. I see his persistence in this.
Starting point is 00:05:57 And not to get too illiterative here, but I also see his planning in this. He knew they wouldn't repent. He knew the day was coming when he'd exiled him, and he also knew the day was coming when Jesus would claim victory over all the sins of his people, past, present, and future. God the Father and God the Son both endured a lot to bring us into a peaceful relationship with God himself.
Starting point is 00:06:24 He's where the joy is. We don't want to just help you read the Bible. We want to help you study the Bible. And we want to help you engage with others about what you're reading. So we've built out two tools that we hope will help you, and they work together perfectly. The first tool is a daily study guide. This is designed for you to do on your own. There are roughly five questions a day to help you dig into the text and learn more on your own while you're reading. These questions tend to focus more on research and study and we've left a space for you to write in the guide itself. The second
Starting point is 00:06:55 tool is the weekly discussion guide. It has about 10 questions per week and they're totally different questions from the daily study guide, but again, they work together perfectly. The weekly discussion questions are more reflective, and they'll help guide your group through a conversation that will build relationships as you work through Scripture together. To get your copies of these or see sample pages of each, check out the store link at thebibelrecap.com or click the link in the show notes.
Starting point is 00:07:19 you

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