corrected vision

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corrected vision

Jeremiah 14:19-22 (JDV)

Jeremiah 14:19 Have you completely rejected Judah? Do you detest Zion? Why do you strike us with no hope of healing for us? We hoped for peace, but there was nothing good; for a time of healing, but there was only terror.

Jeremiah 14:20 We acknowledge our wickedness, Lord, the violation of our fathers; indeed, we have failed you.

Jeremiah 14:21 For your name’s sake, don’t despise it. Don’t treat your glorious throne with contempt. Remember your covenant with us; do not break it.

Jeremiah 14:22 Can any of the temporary idols of the nations bring rain? Or can the skies alone give showers? Are you not Yahveh our God? We therefore put our hope in you, because you have done all these things.

corrected vision

Jeremiah condemned the other prophets because they were just passing along the party line – insisting that God would not allow the drought to decimate Jerusalem and the coming invasion to destroy its people. God would certainly intervene because he is always good.

Jeremiah wanted the same thing. He wanted God to intervene, and he knew in his heart that God is always good. But he also knew that his people had broken covenant with God, and that all these bad things they were experiencing were part of God’s plan to restore them to him.

Lord, correct our vision. Restore our relationship with you.

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a false vision

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a false vision

Jeremiah 14:11-18 (JDV)

Jeremiah 14:11 Then Yahveh said to me, “Do not pray for the well-being of these people.

Jeremiah 14:12 If they fast, I will not hear their cry of despair. If they offer burnt offering and grain offering, I will not accept them. Instead, I will finish them off by sword, famine, and plague.”

Jeremiah 14:13 And I replied, “Oh no, Lord Yahveh! The prophets are telling them, ‘You won’t see sword or suffer famine. I will certainly give you lasting peace in this place.'”

Jeremiah 14:14 But Yahveh said to me, “These prophets are prophesying a lie in my name. I did not send them, nor did I command them or speak to them. They are prophesying to you a false vision, worthless divination, the deceit of their own minds.

Jeremiah 14:15 “Therefore, this is what Yahveh says concerning the prophets who prophesy in my name, though I did not send them, and who say, ‘There will never be sword or famine in this land.’ By sword and famine these prophets will meet their end.

Jeremiah 14:16 The people they are prophesying to will be thrown into the streets of Jerusalem because of the famine and the sword. There will be no one to bury them – they, their wives, their sons, and their daughters. I will pour out their own evil on them.”

Jeremiah 14:17 You are to speak this word to them: Let my eyes overflow with tears; day and night may they not stop, because the virgin daughter of my people has been destroyed by a crushing blow, an extremely harsh wound.

Jeremiah 14:18 If I go out to the field, notice – those victims of the sword! If I enter the city, notice – those sick from famine! Because both prophet and priest travel to a land they do not know.

a false vision

In Jeremiah’s day, most of the prophets and priests were just trying to give people hope. They only had one song to sing, so they sang it all the time. It was a song about how God is good all the time, and he would never let his people suffer.

God is good – all the time. And sometimes his people suffer. If we don’t tell the whole story, we are telling a lie in God’s name. We are passing along a false vision.

What God wanted his prophets to do was call their people to see the devastation that the nation was facing, to cry over the loss that was coming. God wanted his people to mourn over their fate, and return to him in repentance. There is a time for a positive and encouraging message, but this was not such a time.

Jeremiah stood alone as the only prophet to give the minority report that God wanted his people to hear.

Lord, give us the courage to say what you want your people to hear – even if they do not want to hear it.

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like a traveler

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like a traveler

Jeremiah 14:1-10 (JDV)

Jeremiah 14:1 This is the word of Yahveh that came to Jeremiah concerning the drought:

Jeremiah 14:2 Judah mourns; her city gates languish. Her people are on the ground in mourning; Jerusalem’s cry rises up.

Jeremiah 14:3 Their nobles send their servants for water. They go to the cisterns; they find no water; their containers return empty. They are ashamed and humiliated; they cover their heads.

Jeremiah 14:4 The ground is cracked since no rain has fallen on the land. The farmers are ashamed; they cover their heads.

Jeremiah 14:5 Even the doe in the field gives birth and abandons her fawn since there is no grass.

Jeremiah 14:6 Wild donkeys stand on the barren heights panting for breath like jackals. Their eyes fail because there are no green plants.

Jeremiah 14:7 Though our violations testify against us, Lord, act for your name’s sake. Indeed, our rebellions are many; we have failed you.

Jeremiah 14:8 Hope of Israel, its Savior in time of distress, why are you like a resident alien in the land, like a traveler stopping only for the night?

Jeremiah 14:9 Why are you like a helpless man, like a warrior unable to save? Yet you are among us, Lord, and we bear your name. Don’t leave us!

Jeremiah 14:10 This is what Yahveh says concerning these people: Truly they love to wander; they never rest their feet. So Yahveh does not accept them. Now he will remember their violation and punish their failures.

like a traveler

I have traveled to many parts of the world, and had many adventures. I always liked traveling, but I have to admit, it wears thin after a while. When you travel, you sometimes see old friends and make new ones, but it is always temporary. Even if you are fortunate enough to actually live on assignment for several years in a place, you are always a traveler – a resident alien, never really putting down roots.

The inhabitants of Jerusalem had started to think of God that way. He felt like someone who comes and goes – and who has decided to flow out of the city with the last stream of water. They knew that God was still among them, but they did not feel like he was committed enough to help. Yet they also knew he was the only one who could.

Jeremiah’s job was to correct the people’s understanding about God, and about themselves. It was actually the people who love to wander and never rest their feet. They are the ones who were abandoning him.

Lord, we are prone to wander. Bring your prodigals home, and meet us on the way!

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a humble seat

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a humble seat

Jeremiah 13:15-27 (JDV)

Jeremiah 13:15 Listen and pay attention. Do not be proud, because Yahveh has spoken.

Jeremiah 13:16 Give glory to Yahveh your God before he brings darkness, before your feet stumble on the mountains at dusk. You wait for light, but he brings darkest gloom and makes total darkness.

Jeremiah 13:17 But if you will not listen, my throat will weep in secret because of your pride. My eyes will overflow with tears, because Yahveh’s flock has been taken captive.

Jeremiah 13:18 Say to the king and the queen mother: Take a humble seat, because your glorious crowns have fallen from your heads.

Jeremiah 13:19 The cities of the Negev are under siege; no one can help them. All of Judah has been taken into exile, taken completely into exile.

Jeremiah 13:20 Look up and see those coming from the north. Where is the flock entrusted to you, the sheep that were your pride?

Jeremiah 13:21 What will you say when he appoints close friends as leaders over you, ones you yourself trained? Won’t labor pains seize you, as they do a woman in labor?

Jeremiah 13:22 And when you ask yourself, “Why have these things happened to me?” it is because of your great violation that your skirts have been stripped off, your body exposed.

Jeremiah 13:23 Can the Cushite change his skin, or a leopard his spots? If so, you might be able to do what is good, you who are instructed in evil.

Jeremiah 13:24 I will scatter you like drifting chaff before the open country wind.

Jeremiah 13:25 This is your lot, what I have decreed for you – this is what Yahveh declares – because you have forgotten me and trusted in lies.

Jeremiah 13:26 I will pull your skirts up over your face so that your shame might be seen.

Jeremiah 13:27 Your adulteries and your lustful neighing, your depraved prostitution on the hills, in the fields – I have seen your disgusting acts. Tragedy has come to you, Jerusalem! You are unclean – how long will this continue?

a humble seat

Jeremiah’s message to the king and queen mother was to take a humble seat, because their authority would be taken away and given to someone else. They proved unfaithful to God, and so would lose their job. Their nation would suffer, and so would their pride.

God in his justice still removes some people from power and influence because they refuse to correct evil. It is a serious thing to be given authority – whether it is political, ecclesiastical or social. If we do not wear the seat of power well, we are in danger of being demoted to the humble seat.

Lord, should you bless us with influence, may we use that influence to build your kingdom, and glorify your name.

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underwear and wine

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underwear and wine

Jeremiah 13:1-14 (JDV)

Jeremiah 13:1 This is what Yahveh said to me: “Go and buy yourself a linen undergarment and put it on. But do not put it in water.”

Jeremiah 13:2 So I bought underwear as Yahveh instructed me and put it on.

Jeremiah 13:3 Then the word of Yahveh came to me a second time:

Jeremiah 13:4 “Take the underwear that you bought and are wearing, and go at once to the Euphrates and hide it in a rocky crevice.”

Jeremiah 13:5 So I went and hid it by the Euphrates, as Yahveh commanded me.

Jeremiah 13:6 A long time later Yahveh said to me, “Go at once to the Euphrates and get the underwear that I commanded you to hide there.”

Jeremiah 13:7 So I went to the Euphrates and dug up the underwear and got it from the place where I had hidden it, but I noticed it was spoiled – of no use at all.

Jeremiah 13:8 Then the word of Yahveh came to me:

Jeremiah 13:9 “This is what Yahveh says: Just like this I will spoil the great pride of both Judah and Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 13:10 These evil people, who refuse to listen to me, who follow the stubbornness of their own hearts, and who have followed other gods to serve and bow in worship – they will be like this underwear, of no use at all.

Jeremiah 13:11 Just as underwear clings to one’s waist, so I fastened the whole house of Israel and of Judah to me” – this is what Yahveh declares – “so that they might be my people for my fame, praise, and glory, but they would not obey.

Jeremiah 13:12 “Say this to them: ‘This is what Yahveh, the God of Israel, says: Every jar should be filled with wine.’ Then they will respond to you, ‘Don’t we know that every jar should be filled with wine?’

Jeremiah 13:13 And you will say to them, ‘This is what Yahveh says: I am about to fill all who live in this land– the kings who reign for David on his throne, the priests, the prophets, and all the residents of Jerusalem – with drunkenness.

Jeremiah 13:14 I will smash them against each other, fathers and sons alike – this is what Yahveh declares. I will allow no mercy, pity, or compassion to keep me from destroying them.'”

underwear and wine

Jeremiah was given a message to his people with two very interesting illustrations. The first was a new pair of underwear, which he purposeless allowed to be ruined. God wanted his people to know that they were for him to wear – they became ruined and useless because they had stopped giving glory to him.

The second illustration was the wine. The point was that every jar – that is, every Israelite – was to be filled with the wine of his presence and influence. But since they chose not to be filled with the Sacred Breath, the Lord would fill them with drunkenness.

Both of these illustrations involve something which has a legitimate purpose, but if abused, lead to embarrassment and dishonor.

Lord, we surrender to your purpose for our lives. We are tired of living in shame due to our own choices.

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evil neighbors

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evil neighbors

Jeremiah 12:14-17 (JDV)

Jeremiah 12:14 This is what Yahveh says: “Concerning all my evil neighbors who attack the inheritance that I bequeathed to my people, Israel, I am about to uproot them from their land, and I will uproot the house of Judah from them.

Jeremiah 12:15 After I have uprooted them, I will once again have compassion on them and return each one to his inheritance and to his land.

Jeremiah 12:16 If they will diligently learn the ways of my people – to swear by my name, ‘As Yahveh lives,’ just as they taught my people to swear by Baal – they will be built up among my people.

Jeremiah 12:17 However, if they will not obey, then I will uproot and destroy that nation.” This is what Yahveh declares.

evil neighbors

Here Jeremiah indicates that God has a purpose for the evil neighbors – the Gentile nations that he will use to uproot and exile Israel. They too, will have a second chance. If they “will diligently learn the ways of my people – to swear by my name, ‘As Yahveh lives,’ – then they “will be built up among my people.”

God has a purpose for all of us. he wants all of us to come to the knowledge of his truth and be saved. He cares about us, and he cares about our evil neighbors.

Note that there is no universalism here. God has a purpose for all, but not all will submit to that purpose. Note the conditional statements in verses 16-17. The evil neighbors who repent are compared with those who do not. Only the repentant will be restored. The former will be built up. The latter will be destroyed.

Lord, today we choose to diligently learn the ways of your people. Build us up Lord!

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thorn harvest

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thorn harvest

Jeremiah 12:5-13 (JDV)

Jeremiah 12:5 If you have raced with runners and they have worn you out, how can you compete with horses? If you stumble in a tranquil land, what will you do in the thickets of the Jordan?

Jeremiah 12:6 Even your brothers – your own father’s family – even they were treacherous to you; even they have cried out loudly after you. Do not have confidence in them, even if they speak good things about you.

Jeremiah 12:7 I have abandoned my house; I have deserted my inheritance. I have handed the love of my throat over to her enemies.

Jeremiah 12:8 My inheritance has become like a lion in the forest. She has roared against me with her voice. That is why I hate her.

Jeremiah 12:9 Is my inheritance like a hyena to me? Are birds of prey circling her? Go, gather all the wild animals; bring them to devour her.

Jeremiah 12:10 Many shepherds have destroyed my vineyard; they have trampled my plot of land. They have turned my desirable plot into a desolate open country.

Jeremiah 12:11 They have made it a desolation. It mourns, desolate, before me. All the land is desolate, but no one takes it to heart.

Jeremiah 12:12 Over all the barren heights in the wilderness the destroyers have come, because Yahveh has a sword that devours from one end of the land to the other. No one has peace.

Jeremiah 12:13 They have sown wheat but harvested thorns. They have exhausted themselves but have no profit. Be put to shame by your harvests because of Yahveh’s burning anger.

thorn harvest

The Lord expresses his grief over the betrayal he has experienced. His own people cannot be trusted, so he warns Jeremiah not to expect safety and security from his family. The nation expects a good harvest of wheat, but only thorns will be left because judgment is coming. An enemy will attack, and God will not be there to rescue them, because God himself sent the destroyer.

“In the time of Jeremiah, Judah did not follow after God and were carried away into captivity rather than being allowed to live in the land God promised them. If we concentrate on worldly wealth we run the risk of not inheriting the kingdom of God that we have been promised.” [1]

Lord, show us how to plant righteousness, so that we reap your kingdom.

________________________

[1] Randy and Lois Rutan, Berkeley Springs, W.Va. Maranatha Daily Devotional. “Why Do the Wicked Prosper?” Sunday, November 8, 2015.

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religious mask

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religious mask

Jeremiah 12:1-4 (JDV)

Jeremiah 12:1 You will be righteous, Lord, even if I bring a case against you. Yet, I wish to contend with you: Why does the way of the wicked prosper? Why are all the treacherous living at ease?

Jeremiah 12:2 You planted them, and they have taken root. They have grown and produced fruit. You are ever on their lips, but far from their conscience.

Jeremiah 12:3 As for you, Lord, you know me; you see me. You test whether my heart is with you. Drag the wicked away like sheep to slaughter and commit them for the day of killing.

Jeremiah 12:4 How long will the land mourn and the grass of every field wither? Because of the evil of its residents, animals and birds have been swept away, because the people have said, “He cannot see what is happening among us.”

religious mask

What Jeremiah could not understand was why all these good churchgoing people kept prospering when he knew their religion was a mask. They had all the outward signs of prosperity and fruitfulness, but he knew they were wicked murderers inside. God was always on their lips but far from their conscience. They claimed to believe in God, but did not really think he could see them.

If you struggle to make your relationship with God a reality, perhaps you wonder sometimes if you are one of them, instead of a true believer. The struggle is a good thing. You should never presume that everything is fine between you and God. Keep fighting for the prize every day. Do not give up. He does see you, and he wants you to live for him, and seek his character. He does not like the mask.

Lord, we want to be real, to remove our mask, and seek you in truth.

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after the backlash

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after the backlash

Jeremiah 11:18-23 (JDV)

Jeremiah 11:18 Yahveh caused me to know, so I knew. Then you helped me to see their deeds,

Jeremiah 11:19 because I was like a docile lamb led to slaughter. I didn’t know that they had devised plots against me: “Let’s destroy the tree with its fruit; let’s cut him off from the land of the living so that his name will no longer be remembered.”

Jeremiah 11:20 But, Lord of Armies, who judges righteously, who tests heart and mind, let me see your vengeance on them, because I have presented my case to you.

Jeremiah 11:21 Therefore, here is what Yahveh says about the people of Anathoth who intend to take your life. They warn, “Do not prophesy in the name of Yahveh, or you will certainly die at our hand.”

Jeremiah 11:22 Therefore, this is what Yahveh of Armies says: “I am about to punish them. The young men will die by the sword; their sons and daughters will die by famine.

Jeremiah 11:23 They will have no remainder, because I will bring disaster on the people of Anathoth in the year of their punishment.”

after the backlash

Jeremiah had been doing a good thing. He had been proclaiming the truth to a nation that had turned its back on the truth. He stared popular opinion in the face and dared to call a spade a spade. He was being fruitful for the kingdom of God.

The result? There was a price on his head. He did the right thing and it only cost him trouble and misery. His fruitfulness had a backlash.

But God opened the door to the future to him. He could see that these very people who were plotting his death would pay for their rejection of him, his God, and his message. There would be justice after the backlash.

Lord, we choose to trust you and do the right thing, even if there is a backlash.

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as numerous as the streets

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as numerous as the streets

Jeremiah 11:1-17 (JDV)

Jeremiah 11:1 This is the word that came to Jeremiah from Yahveh:

Jeremiah 11:2 “Listen to the words of this covenant and tell them to the men of Judah and the residents of Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 11:3 Tell them, ‘This is what Yahveh, the God of Israel, says: “Let a curse be on the man who does not obey the words of this covenant,

Jeremiah 11:4 which I commanded your fathers when I brought them out of the land of Egypt, out of the iron furnace.” I declared, “Obey me, and do everything that I command you, and you will be my people, and I will be your God,”

Jeremiah 11:5 in order to establish the oath I swore to your fathers, to give them a land flowing with milk and honey, like it is today.'” I answered, “Amen, Lord.”

Jeremiah 11:6 Yahveh said to me, “Proclaim all these words in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem: ‘Obey the words of this covenant and carry them out.’

Jeremiah 11:7 You see, I strongly warned your fathers when I brought them out of the land of Egypt until today, warning them time and time again, ‘Obey me.’

Jeremiah 11:8 Yet they would not obey or pay attention; each one followed the stubbornness of his evil heart. So I brought on them all the curses of this covenant, because they had not done what I commanded them to do.”

Jeremiah 11:9 Yahveh said to me, “A conspiracy has been discovered among the men of Judah and the residents of Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 11:10 They have returned to the violations of their fathers who refused to obey my words and have followed other gods to worship them. The house of Israel and the house of Judah broke my covenant I made with their fathers.

Jeremiah 11:11 “Therefore, this is what Yahveh says: I am about to bring on them disaster that they cannot escape. They will cry out to me, but I will not hear them.

Jeremiah 11:12 Then the cities of Judah and the residents of Jerusalem will go and cry out to the gods they have been burning incense to, but they certainly will not save them in their time of disaster.

Jeremiah 11:13 Your gods are indeed as numerous as your cities, Judah, and the altars you have set up to Shame – altars to burn incense to Baal – as numerous as the streets of Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 11:14 “As for you, do not pray for these people. Do not raise up a cry or a prayer on their behalf, because I will not be listening when they call out to me at the time of their disaster.

Jeremiah 11:15 What right does my beloved have to be in my house, having carried out so many evil schemes? Can sacred meat prevent your disaster so you can celebrate?

Jeremiah 11:16 Yahveh named you a flourishing olive tree, beautiful with well-formed fruit. He has set fire to it, and its branches are consumed with the sound of a mighty tumult.

Jeremiah 11:17 “Yahveh of Armies who planted you has decreed disaster against you, because of the disaster the house of Israel and the house of Judah brought on themselves when they angered me by burning incense to Baal.”

as numerous as the streets

When I lived in Asia, there was nowhere I could go that I did not find a shrine to some saint or image, god or goddess. Like Jerusalem in the time of Jeremiah, the signs of idolatry were “as numerous as the streets” of my city.

God had specifically covenanted with his people to be free of idolatry – to worship and serve him alone. All of the empowerments of the covenant were now in jeopardy because the people had broken that covenant. They had failed to live up to its commands, and had forsaken its commission – to represent him by living devoted lives.

Lord, lead us to a place of restoration, where we once again can know your empowerment, and represent you among the nations.

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