The End, But Not the End
Opening Prayer
Life-giving God, You speak and act. I know You are more ready to answer than I am to pray. I seek Your will today.
Read JEREMIAH 52:1-34
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Meditate
As we come to the end of the book of Jeremiah, we need to see not only the ongoing warnings but also the ongoing promises God still offers his people.
Think Further
Not with a bang but a whimper, Jeremiah seems to fizzle out. This, after “the words of Jeremiah end here” concluded chapter 51. This actual last chapter is a historical appendix that retells history, placed by the editor after Jeremiah’s prophetic record ceased. We learn little new from it that we did not already read in Jeremiah. It is a slightly enlarged rewriting of the end of 2 Kings, which the writer must surely have had (2 Kings 24:18–25:30).
And so at last, we reach the end of this difficult, complicated, frustrating, terrifying, wonderful book. It is a pity that “Jeremiah” entered the English language as a byword for a doleful person because, severe as many of Jeremiah’s prophesies are, his book holds out surprising hope to all who have taken a wrong turn and are walking the wrong path.
Here we have met the stern God of the Mount Sinai Covenant, the God who created a community, a nation obligated to him. Late in their sad history, we have heard through Jeremiah the thoughts and feelings of this same God who countenanced no disloyalty and vowed to punish sin. We have also glimpsed another side to this God, the One more ready to forgive than to punish; the God who, even in punishing his people, constantly offered them hope; the God who always left the door open a crack; the God whose deepest yearning was for his people to come back to him. There is a seemingly impossible paradox that God was, and is, immovably determined both to punish sin and to forgive the sinners. We, today, know what Jeremiah did not: that this paradox could only be resolved in Jesus Christ, who bore the sins of the whole world so that we all could be forgiven. God’s love has always been greater than his anger.
Apply
What life lessons are you taking away from these readings in Jeremiah? How will they impact your life?
Closing prayer
Lord, Jeremiah has made me more aware of my sin and Your amazing love and forgiveness through Jesus Christ. Hallelujah, what a Savior!
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