Jeremiah, the
reluctant prophet
#1
Who, When, Where...
God's Call to Jeremiah; Historical Context.
Rev. Ron Friedrich
July 2, 2006
Jeremiah 1:1-5 (New
Century Version)
1
These
are the words of Jeremiah son of Hilkiah. He belonged to the family of
priests who lived in the town of Anathoth in the land of Benjamin. 2
The
LORD
spoke his word to Jeremiah during the thirteenth year that Josiah son
of Amon was king of Judah. 3
The
LORD
also spoke to Jeremiah while Jehoiakim son of Josiah was king of Judah
and during the eleven years that Zedekiah son of Josiah was king of
Judah. In the fifth month of his last year, the people of Jerusalem
were taken away as captives.
4
The
LORD
spoke
his word to me, saying:
5
"Before
I made you in your mother’s womb, I chose you.
Before
you were born, I set you apart for a special work.
I
appointed you as a prophet to the nations."
Jeremiah's story actually begins 800 years before he was born.
God led the people of Israel out of slavery in Egypt. He
established His covenant relationship with Israel at Mount Sinai.
There He gave them His law and His promise. He said, "I will be
your God, and you will be My people."
There on that mountain the people promised, "Everything the Lord has
said, we will do." Forty years later, their children repeated
that promise before they entered the Promised Land. But for the
next 800 years the nation of Israel failed to keep that promise.
Some people were faithful to worship only the true Creator God, but
most ignored His Law. Many became attracted to idol worship,
especially to the false god Baal, and the goddess Asherah.
Together, those demon spirits formed a religion that had worship
practices that included temple prostitution and child
sacrifice. Most of Israel's kings encouraged idol worship
among the people. God had appointed the descendants of Aaron
(Moses' brother) to be priests, who were responsible to lead the people
in worshipping the only true God. But the priests also gave into
idol worship. The priests belonged to the tribe of Levi, and the
Levites were responsible for teaching the people of Israel God's
Word. But they failed to fulfill that responsibility.
For 800 years God sent prophets to the people of Israel, urging them to
turn back to God. But the people ignored the prophets… or worse,
they persecuted and killed the Lord's prophets. The people kept a
false "show" of religion by offering sacrifices to the Lord in His
temple. But they thought that they could worship both the Lord
God of Israel, and Baal at the same time. God said that was like
having an affair. The nation of Israel was "married" to God, but
in their idol worship, they were "committing adultery" against Him.
For 800 years God warned them that if they would not turn back to Him,
He would have to seriously punish them. Now God decided that the
time had come to stop warning, and do as He had promised. The
person God chose to bring this sad message was Jeremiah.
Jeremiah was a descendent of Aaron, so he was able to be a
priest. But God had different work for Jeremiah to
do. God said to Jeremiah:
"Before
I made you in your mother’s womb, I chose you.
Before
you were born, I set you apart for a special work.
I
appointed you as a prophet to the nations." (Jer.
1:5)
God had planned Jeremiah's life long before Jeremiah was born. We
will learn more in the coming weeks about what was God's plan for him.
Today we learn two important lessons about Jeremiah that also apply to
us.
First, we see that for everyone who sins -- that means all of us --
time for repentance will one day come to an end. God gave Israel
800 years to turn back to Him. None of us have that much
time. Each one of us has only the time that we live on
earth. Then when we die, that is our "Judgment Day." And
Jesus promises that one day there will come a Judgment Day for planet
earth, and the whole universe. Just as for Israel, so it will be for
us. There will come a day when it will be too late.
A prophet who lived 100 years before Jeremiah, the prophet Isaiah, said:
So
you should look for the LORD
before it is too late;
you
should call to him while he is near.
The
wicked should stop doing wrong,
and
they should stop their evil thoughts.
They
should return to the LORD
so he may have mercy on them.
They
should come to our God, because he will freely forgive them. (Isaiah
55:6,7)
God certainly punishes sin. God already punished the sin of all
sinners in His own holy sinless Son, Jesus Christ. He promises
that everyone who receives that gift in faith, their judgment is
finished. But He also warns that everyone who rejects His
gift and chooses to hold on to his sin will also experience the eternal
consequence of sin -- eternal separation from God in hell. As
long as our bodies are living and breathing, God is giving us time to
repent and to receive complete forgiveness. We cannot know when
our end will come, so the Bible urges us to trust Jesus now, before it
is too late. "Now is the
time! Now is the day for salvation!" (2 Corinthians 6:2)
The second thing we learn about Jeremiah is that God had a plan for his
life even before he was born. In the same way, God has a special
plan and calling for your life. You are not here by
accident. God knows you and loves you.
He chose you to be in His Family through faith in His Son Jesus.
He chose you to forgive all of your sins.
He chose you to be in heaven forever with Him.
He chose you to live His life on earth in your through His Holy Spirit.
God chose Jeremiah to tell people about Him.
God chooses each one of us to do the same -- let people know about
Jesus, so they also can know His love and forgiveness and live forever
with Him.
It does not matter who you are, where you are, how old you are, or what
you have done. God still has a plan for your life.
You may have made bad mistakes that really messed up your life.
God's love and mercy can forgive and heal all that mess. God can
turn around the bad things you have done and He will use you to do good
that will help other people understand that they also can experience
His love, mercy, and forgiveness. Through you, people will meet
Jesus.