The Bible Recap - Day 221 (Jeremiah 7-9) - Year 5
Episode Date: August 9, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Click Here to watch the One... Hit Wonders Song Battle! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Matthew 21:13 - TBR in Spanish SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: 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 opens with Jeremiah Prophecy to the people of Judah while standing outside the entrance
of the temple, which is why chapter 7 is referred to as his temple sermon.
The people have come to worship the God who lives inside the temple,
but outside the temple walls,
they're sacrificing to idols and false gods,
as though God isn't also outside the temple
or can't see through walls.
Apparently, the people were treating the temple
like it was some kind of protective icon.
Verse four shows them repeating a phrase like an incantation.
It almost seems like temple worship
instead of worshiping the God in the temple.
And God rebukes them for it.
They seem to think that because the temple
is there with them in the south,
that's why they were protected against the Assyrian attack
that the Israelites in the North experienced.
They've turned the temple into an idol.
And in addition to that, God says
they're pretty much breaking
all the other commandments. Deft, murder, adultery, lies, worship of other gods. He says they're
making his house into a house of robbers. You might recognize that passage because Jesus
quotes it in Matthew 21 when the people of his day are doing similar things to oppress
the poor and steal from the people. God drills down to the heart of things.
He calls them to change the way they treat others and the way they treat him, and promises to
bless them if they do. He promises to cast them out if they don't. What will they do?
We get a hint based on what God tells Jeremiah after that. He tells him not to pray for the people.
Prophets often intercede on behalf of the people, but here God tells him,
don't waste your breath, it's too late. Talk to them about me,
but don't talk to me about them. God's assignment to Jeremiah to
review the people is one that will fail to produce that result,
but that will still achieve God's plans. We've seen this before with
other prophets. The people have trusted in their own minds,
walked in their own counsel,
did what their stubborn hearts wanted
instead of surrendering to God and His Word.
And as a result, they've moved backward in their walks with Him,
not forward.
In chapter 8, God continues to speak out against their autonomy.
Verse 6 says,
Everyone turns to his own course.
Autonomy is idolatry.
It's looking to ourselves for guidance
instead of to God and his word,
but true isdom and humility come from receiving the word.
And verse 9 points to this.
It says,
behold, they have rejected the word of the Lord.
So what wisdom is in them?
Even the scribes and the wise men of that day behold, they have rejected the Word of the Lord, so what wisdom is in them?
Even the scribes and the wise men of that day will be exposed as fools and liars.
They had access to the Word and disregarded it.
The consequences of their sins are so harsh that some will prefer to die instead of live.
And while God's methods may seem extreme, they're always righteous.
Jeremiah is so heartbroken over all of this.
I've heard that when it comes to sin, we should be angry at our own and heartbroken over
others.
That's not to say we shouldn't be heartbroken over our own sin.
It's more to say we should stay humble.
How easy is it to look at the sins others commit and feel disgusted as though we're not
sinners too? It's arrogant. So Jeremiah's response is fitting. He stays humble. He aches over
Judas actions. And God makes it clear that he's heartbroken too, because he continues
to point out that he wants their hearts, not their begrudging obedience. Besides, the
only kind of obedience that is complete and true
is obedience that flows from a heart of love.
God says, if all they are is circumcised in the flesh,
they're no better than the pagan nations who don't even know him.
He wants transformation at a heart level.
What was your God shot today?
I loved that moment at the end of chapter nine
where he tells us about himself directly.
We saw a lot of judgment in these three chapters
and it's easy to just skim over it
and determine that he's harsh and unforgiving.
But here's what he says about himself in verse 24.
Let him who boasts, boasts in this,
that he understands and knows me,
that I am the Lord who practices steadfast love,
justice and righteousness in the earth,
for in these things I delight. God leads with love, and he delights in love, justice, and righteousness.
He's always acting out of his motives to display love, justice, and righteousness on the earth.
God not only does what he loves, but he is what he loves.
And I can't think of anything better to be or do.
He's where the joy is.
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