In Jeremiah 41, Jerusalem had fallen, and the governor that king Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon had appointed over it was murdered by one of the remnant Jews. They feared for their lives (vs.18), and also believed that they were right in wanting to have a prince of the house of David, and Ishmael was of the royal family (vs. 1). How often do we think our position protects us from having to go through judgment, or trials, and how often are we deceived into believing we are actually fighting for a just and holy cause when we are really just blinded by our own esteem for ourselves?
In Jeremiah 42, the people wanted to hear God’s Word from God’s prophet, but not so as to actually obey, but rather, that God might sanction what they had already determined to do. Of course, something like that has never happened to us, we would never think of such a thing, would we? Jeremiah didn’t receive the Word for 10 days (vs. 7). The delay was designed to test the sincerity of their professed willingness to obey (vs. 5-6), and that they should have time to commit their wills to obedience. God told them through Jeremiah that He would protect, preserve, and eventually promote them through the trial (vs.10-12). God made it perfectly clear that they were not to go to Egypt (vs.14-19), but He knew that their hearts were hypocritical (vs.20-21) and declared their doomed destiny (vs.22).
In Jeremiah 43, the people were falling fast into apostasy. They turned on the Word of God through the prophet (vs. 2). They didn’t obey and went into Egypt (vs.7), and took Jeremiah with them. It reminds us of how they probably thought that having God’s prophet with them would be like having God’s blessing with them. This is using God’s tools like a magic weapon of sorts, like the Israelites did with the Ark of the Covenant (1 Samuel 4).
In Jeremiah 44, what happened to these people that went into Egypt is that they fell into total apostasy, they began blatant idolatry, and became deceived in so many ways that they were completely blinded to the truth of God’s Word (vs.17-19). The people were so blind and hardhearted that they actually believed that serving other gods was their ticket to prosperity, and that disobedience was the way to safety and security. Jeremiah let them know that God in His longsuffering had let them go until their iniquity was fully ripe, and that it was their disobedience that lead to their lack, not leaving off the service to other gods (vs.21-23).
This is what happens when we fail to go to the Cross. We fail to suffer the death of the flesh, and our worship becomes as it did for these that went to Egypt, it becomes vain and idolatrous, without our even realizing it. This is what happened to others whose pride eventually lead to their downfall, those who thought that they could worship God “any old way they felt like”. Results and relationships cloud their judgment and discernment.
Adam saw Eve eat the apple, but he still had a choice. He could have chosen not to eat of the apple himself. Instead, he chose his relationship with his wife over his relationship with God and His Word. This is why Jesus told us that if someone wouldn’t hate their family compared to Him, they couldn’t be His disciple (Luke 14:26).
Think about Nadab and Abihu in Leviticus 10. They relied on their relationship to their father Aaron and as priests to protect them from having to worship in the way God intended for the “others”.
How about Jeroboam (1 Kings 11:31 / 12:20, 25-33 / 13:34)? God gave him the 10 northern tribes, yet he thought that he could establish a different place and different methods of worship. They didn’t start out thinking those idols were other gods, they worshipped them as Jehovah, just as Aaron and the Israelites did while Moses was on Sinai.
King Uzziah was a great and godly king, but his results lifted up his heart, and he thought his relationship with the Lord meant that he could act as priest as well as king (2 Chronicles 26:3-5, 15-16). He paid dearly.
A lesson is this: we must stay in a repentant attitude, and if God says that we are to do something in a certain way, then we are unwise, unrepentant, and rebellious to do otherwise. It will lead to deception and idolatry, where we will think we are doing right but we are sincerely wrong. Sincerity is no substitute for truth, and without truth, we are headed straight down Apostasy Avenue.
7 comments:
JD, I am certainly aware (as you have stated many times) how important fellowship and being obedient to be at church is, But I thank God that when I can't get there I know I have my Bible and I know that you are faithful to continue your posts. I am fed beyond fed. Bless you JD.
This particular post has remined me to be careful not to allow my heart to convince me that God would be ok with things my knowledge of God's Words states otherwise. What passage is this, " The heart is evil,wicked and deceitful"?
Then it has done its work, thanks Paul...let me know how things are going...
Jeremiah 17:9 is the passage you want...
Great post! We must always remember that God cares about how He is worshiped. The guidelines for worship in the Bible are not there to fill space. Yet while we are careful to implement scriptural principles in our services we must be sure that in our heart of hearts, we are truly worshiping Him and not just His rules for worship.
12/12/06
The truth is we usually don't want the truth. We want comfort. You have often said that doing the right thing can make you feel uneasy. We don't like feeling uneasy. Uneasy is not comfort. Emotions can't be trusted. Emotional comfort doesn't mean it is of God. We must continually remind ourselves of the counterfeit. If the counterfeit isn't seemingly good then how could it possibly nearly deceive even the elect? (Mat 24:24 For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if [it were] possible, they shall deceive the very elect.)
I think we all need to really study God's Word and allow Him to teach us what true worship is. Not what we think it is.
Father, forgive us for asking you to put your stamp of approval on what we've already made our mind up to do. Be glorified. Amen
hmmmmm, I had forgotten...
I like John's words on 2 John something like grace and mercy from the Father and from Jesus Christ the Son of the Father will be with us in truth and love."
We can only find this in Jesus. It's in terms of truth and love, this grace. As you say we have to find it at the Cross.
Otherwise there's no hope for us, because only by grace will we have the faith to worship God, know God and follow God, in Jesus.
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