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Devotional thoughts (Monday through Thursday mornings) from the pastor of Exeter Presbyterian Church in Exeter, NH // Sunday Worship 10:30am // 73 Winter Street

Wednesday, October 05, 2016

Jeremiah 15


If you wanted someone to plead your case before God, to whom would you turn? From an Old Testament perspective, you could not do better than Moses or Samuel. Moses was the Mediator of the Sinai Covenant. On many occasions he was brought to plead before God for the life of God’s people. The Lord suggested at one point that Moses should get out of the way and God would destroy the people in the wilderness and start all over again with Moses as the beginning of a new nation. Yet Moses interceded on behalf of Israel. Samuel warned the people about the dangers of turning away from God as King, and was distraught as the people insisted that they would have a king like the other nations. God comforted him by saying that the people had not rejected Samuel. They had rejected the Lord.
These two men were highly favored by God and were examples of unusual integrity. Yet here in speaking through Jeremiah at this late stage in the Lord’s dealings with Judah, God indicated that He would not listen to even Moses or Samuel if they asked Him to turn His heart again toward Judah and rescue them from the coming disaster. His message was simple: “Send them out of my sight.”
These were devastating words. Judah would face disease, warfare, hunger, and slavery. Wild animals would be appointed to tear them apart, and the name of one king was cited as the reason: Manasseh, the son of Hezekiah. Hezekiah was a great king of Judah during the time when the Assyrians had conquered the northern kingdom and were threatening the destruction of Jerusalem. God heard the petition of the king and the prophet Isaiah, and He gave Judah a reprieve from exile until the days of Jeremiah. Hezekiah’s son Manasseh, who reigned for fifty-five years in Jerusalem, did great evil in the eyes of the Lord. He went about reversing the good spiritual faithfulness of his father, rebuilding places of idolatrous worship that his father had destroyed. Even though he repented at the end of his life, it would be based on the evidence of the reign of Manasseh that the mind of the Lord would be settled upon the exile of His people.
It was not as if God had been a weak Father. He had disciplined His chosen ones over and over again. God had sent Judah times of great affliction, but they would not listen. The day had finally come for their removal to Babylon. Perhaps there they would learn the lessons that they seemed so unwilling to hear while in their Father’s land.
Jeremiah had reached a point of despair in this hard ministry. Speaking as if to his mother, he wondered why he was ever born. He was considered a man of strife and contention by everyone, and for what reason? Because he was the one who had brought the true Word of God to the people.
God heard the cry of His prophet and called him to renewed faithfulness. He promised to make him like a “wall of bronze” to his enemies, provided that he would not try to be a popular preacher in the eyes of an utterly unfaithful people.
When Jesus came, He endured disrespect at every turn. He was completely faithful in speaking the message of His Father, and it cost Him everything in terms of the applause of men. It is this divine Messiah who now intercedes for us before the same Father who said He would not listen to even Moses and Samuel if they pleaded for Judah in the days of Jeremiah. But we have One who is better than Moses and Samuel pleading for us on high. Our Father always hears His Son's voice, and He will surely grant Him His every request.

Prayer from A Book of Prayers

Lord God, we have a better Mediator than even Moses or Samuel. There is One who now pleads for transgressors. Surely there is no peace for Your people through the Law, but in Christ there is abundant and eternal peace. We have great trouble among us, O Lord. We acknowledge our shameful behavior. We deserve every frightening discipline that could come upon us now. Though we serve as slaves for our enemies, Your Son came from above not to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many. We are part of the many that He has saved from worthlessness and destruction. Do not let the wicked prevail over us forever, O Lord.

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