At the Potter's House
Opening Prayer
Lord, I want to know You, love You and walk in fellowship with You. I draw near to You now.
Read JEREMIAH 18:1-23
[1]
Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society. All rights reserved throughout the world. Used by permission of International Bible Society.
Meditate
“Flourishing is God’s gift and plan. When you flourish you are in harmony with God, other people, creation and yourself. Flourishing is becoming the person he had in mind in creating you” (John Ortberg).
Think Further
This chapter falls into two sections. The first is the lesson from the visit to the potter’s house (1-17), and the second provides more information about plots against Jeremiah and his outburst against the plotters (18-23).
Underlying a potter’s work is the presupposition that every potter has a plan, a purpose. If things go awry, they reshape what they are making. Accordingly, the Lord invites Judah to repent; but they are incorrigible—it is unnatural! The virgin becomes a prostitute (cf 2:20). The snow leaves Lebanon’s mountains—so of course it melts! People stumble off the highway on to byroads. Resistance to God practiced so long eventually nullifies the capacity to choose life. Is there someone (yourself?), or perhaps a whole society, over whom you shake your head in disbelief, shock and horror? I ask the Lord not to turn his back on me, not to hide his face (17).
Verse 18 provides a cameo of united opposition to Jeremiah. Priests were to give torah (instruction); the wise were to give counsel; the prophet was to give a word from God. All were opposed to Jeremiah, determined to attack him and pay no attention to his words. Jeremiah bursts out to the Lord (“Listen to me, Lord … You, Lord, know…”) with his imprecations, which are half lament, half lawsuit (19 is law-court language again). The shocking thing about this language is that Jeremiah is actually using language which God himself has used repeatedly (e.g. 14:12; 15:2,8). I pray for those who, in situations of great extremity, wonder if justice will ever be done; if truth will ever be heard; if salvation will ever come. Thank God for the uncomplaining Lamb who took my sin and guilt away.
Apply
Ponder the words of this beautiful old hymn: “Have thine own way, Lord! Have thine own way! / Thou art the Potter, I am the clay. / Mold me and make me after thy will” (A.A. Pollard).
Closing prayer
For stooping so low and coming so close and washing me clean, heart, soul and mind, I love You, Lord. May my life reflect my love!
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