The Bible Recap - Day 226 (Jeremiah 26-29) - Year 5
Episode Date: August 14, 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 Any...thing But Quiet Time video! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Jeremiah 7 - Deuteronomy 18:15-22 - Image: Yoke - Check out The Bible Recap’s FAQ page! 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's reading covers three separate instances where Jeremiah has run ends with local leadership.
The first story may have felt familiar to you.
God sends Jeremiah to prophesy to the people entering the temple.
This fills a lot like what happened back in Chapter 7, and no one really knows if it's happened
again, or if it's just being repeated here in this trio of examples of Jeremiah's struggle
with the authorities. I'm inclined to think that it's the same story we read in chapter
7, mostly because God indicates that the people might repent, which sounds pretty different
than what he's been saying lately. If it is the same incident, we get a few more details during this version of events.
After Jeremiah's message, the priests and the prophets and all the people arrest him,
in his trial they accuse him of treason and false prophecy, offenses against both the
political and religious groups.
According to Deuteronomy 18, the penalty for a false prophet is death. They want him dead.
One thing worth noting is that when they're making their charge against him,
they conveniently leave out the part where God says he will relint of the destruction if they
repent. But the people either hadn't listened closely to what Jeremiah said, or they tweaked it so
they could accuse him. When Jeremiah is confronted with their false accusations,
he clarifies the rebuke they've misquoted,
but he does it with humble confidence,
submitted to their authority.
And he can do that only because he knows
the greater authority they will answer to
in regard to whatever they decide to do with him.
He trusts God, regardless of the outcome.
After hearing Jeremiah's side of the story,
they acquit him. The people still want to kill him and his life is still in danger,
but his life is spared by a hikeum, the son of Shafen. Shafen, by the way,
was the scribe who found the scroll in the temple during Hezekiah's renovations.
We may never remember the names of a hikeum or Shafen, but God is using their family behind
the scenes in pretty significant ways.
Just a reminder before we move on to chapter 27, Jeremiah's scribe Baruch had collected
a bunch of stories to put into this book, but he hasn't necessarily laid them out according
to a perfect timeline, so as far as we can tell, the rest of today's reading happens after
Babylon has invaded.
In chapter 27, Jeremiah's next confrontation with leaders happens.
This time, it's with the kings of five other nations.
God has him dress himself up in straps and a yoke.
In case you've never seen a yoke, we'll link to an image in the show notes.
Basically, it's a long piece of wood that goes on the back of an animal or two animals,
then a strap or another piece of wood gives around their necks. It's attached to a plow which the animals pull when they walk.
The animals aren't in charge because they're bound up in the yoke and the straps. They go where
the farmer directs them to go. The point of this image is that God is going to make the nation
submit to Babylon and King Nebi, like the animal submits to the yoke guided by the farmer.
Around this time, some of the nations are plotting our revolt, and the animal, submits to the yoke, guided by the farmer.
Around this time, some of the nations are plotting our revolt, and the false prophets of the
day are, of course, rallying behind their revolt.
But God wants the nations to know it's not going to happen.
God also calls Nebi his servant, and we've talked about this before, but at bears repeating,
Nebuchadnezzar is not a follower of Yahweh, but he's still a servant of Yahweh, because God is making him
serve his purposes. Jeremiah repeats this message to the king of Judah and the priests and the people.
He says, Judah has to submit to Babylon too, and by the way, they're going to take all the temple
furniture. Don't worry about it. God will bring it back to Jerusalem when he's ready.
So far today, Jeremiah has confronted political officials and kings among others, and
chapter 28 brings us his confrontation with another prophet who also claims to be a prophet
of Yahweh.
His name is Hananiah.
The two of them meet up in front of everybody, and Hananiah contradicts some of Jeremiah's
previous prophecies.
He says, remember that yoke we're supposed to be wearing? God has broken it. Babylon's not in charge of us
anymore. And within two years, God is going to bring back the temple furniture and the exiles
and the captives. Then Jeremiah says, that sounds awesome. Since we know that all prophecies that are
truly from God come true, then let's wait and see what happens in the next two years.
This might just be humble hopefulness on Jeremiah's part, but it could also be a subtle
rebuke.
He knows time will tell the truth and will expose any false prophets and prophecies.
Han and I probably feels rebukeed because he walks over to Jeremiah and breaks the
yoked Jeremiah as wearing.
Did you guys expect him to still be wearing it?
I didn't.
Apparently it wasn't just for a one-time show.
It's a constant reminder everywhere he goes.
I'm telling you, being a prophet was not a phone calling.
So Hennonaya does this dramatic gesture,
and Jeremiah lets him have the last word.
But deep down, he's probably slightly relieved
to have the yoke off his neck and his probably wishing
counter-practors existed.
Not long after that, God gives Jeremiah a two
fold message for Hennoniah. First, that metaphorical yoke of wood on the next of the nations has been
replaced with a yoke of iron. Yikes. Hennoniah's lies led to greater oppression for the people.
And second, as a false prophet, the consequences for Hanaya is that God will enact the death penalty himself.
Not long after that, he dies.
Chapter 29 recounts Jeremiah's words to the exiles who are being carried away into captivity and
Babylon. And by the way, one of the pony express riders who delivers this letter to the exiles
is another son of Shafen the scribe. Jeremiah's letter tells them, look, you're going to be an exile for a while,
70 years, remember? So here's what God says to do in that time. Make the most of where he's put you.
Build houses, plant gardens, grow your families, try to improve the lives of the people around you.
Try to bless the very city that has taken you captive. It won't just be good for them,
it will be good for you too.
And PS, don't listen to any of the prophets around you.
They're liars.
You're not coming home early.
God has a plan and it's a good one,
but it's going to take 70 years.
Then he'll bring you back and restore
what he's taken from you.
God also reminds them that anyone who didn't listen
to his warnings, those who didn't go into exile with them,
they'll be punished with sword, famine, and pestilence.
But the exiles are the remnant.
They're the ones he's preserving.
Finally, God directly addresses a false prophet
named Shemaya, who had contradicted and shamed Jeremiah
to the exiles, then God punishes Shemaya and his family.
Today, my God shot showed up in every story.
It was the theme of God's protection over Jeremiah in the midst of all his accusers.
From the people in the priests who try to kill him, to Hanna Naya, the Yokebreaker, to
Shemaah the Shamer, God kept proving himself.
All Jeremiah had to do with stand firm in what God had said.
He didn't have to have a clever argument.
He didn't have to miraculously fuse the broken yolk
back together.
He just had to trust God and where God had placed him,
which is what Jeremiah told the exiles to do too.
And that's so much easier to do
when we know the God who knows.
That's what God calls himself in 29.23.
I am the one who knows.
He knows.
He knows.
And he's where the joy is.
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