JEREMIAH 13
In this chapter, God gives two object lessons to teach
Jeremiah what he will do to Judah and why.
The first is a linen loincloth and the second is a jar of wine.
13:1-11 Object lesson 1: The Linen Loincloth
The Lord told Jeremiah to buy a linen loincloth and put
it around his waist. There is some
debate about that this is. Some think it is a type of underwear. Others think it is a sash or belt. Linen was a fine fabric.
So Jeremiah bought the loincloth and wore it.
But then, the Lord spoke to Jeremiah again and told him
to take the loincloth to the Euphrates River and hide it in the cleft of a
rock. The Euphrates is the river that ran through Babylon. So, we have to think
God is making a point about Babylon as well as Judah.
After a long while, the Lord sent Jeremiah back to get
the loin cloth. (6). He dug it up and, no surprise, found it ruined and rotten.
(7)
So Jeremiah is standing there at the river and looking at
this piece of rotten linen and the Lord explains his purpose. He said, as the
dirt spoiled this piece of linen, so will I spoil the pride of Judah and
Jerusalem. (8-9) The Judahites had become proud and arrogant. They refused to
obey the Lord. They had become evil. The Bible tells us repeatedly that the
Lord does not like pride in his people. He values obedience and love. He also promised to break their pride: I will break
your proud glory (Leviticus 26:19).
Here is how the Lord described them:
1. they refused to hear his words,
2. they were stubborn,
3. they followed their own hearts,
4. they worshipped other gods, and
5. because of these things, they were good for nothing.
What does this tell us?
First of all, those who stubbornly do what they want and do not worship
and obey God are worthless to him. I
would hate for God to tell me “you are useless to me, you are good for
nothing”.
The other thing that stands out to me is that God was
unhappy that his people “followed their own hearts”. I found that telling, for
that is a thing we are encouraged to do by many. It is a thing I object to in
Disney movies. The theme is often
“children must be free to follow their hearts and parents should not get in
their way”. This was the primary theme of Little Mermaid. At the end of the movie,
a character sees the happy ending and says this to us. This happy ending only
came about after the Little Mermaid’s father sacrificed himself to free her
from the consequences of her mistakes. But the ending does not glorify the
sacrifice, only the rebellion.
It will not turn out that way for us. Disney does not get to remake the message of
the Bible. The Bible glorifies obedience to God as a measure of our love for
him. In the New Covenant, it is a matter of gladly living to glorify God who
sacrificed himself to free us from our slavery to sin and its consequences.
Obedience is valued over rebellion. Sacrifice is valued over self
centeredness.
One reason we follow the Word of God rather than our
feelings is that our hearts cannot be trusted. In chapter 17, the Lord will say
this plainly. You cannot trust your feelings because they are an expression of
your desire. But the Word of God tells us the will of God. We seek that rather
than ourselves.
Notice in verse 11 what God offered the people of Israel.
They could be for God a people, a name, a raise and a glory. If they had lived
in obedience and love, they would have brought glory to the name of the Lord
and enjoyed the blessing of his favor.
The Father offers that today to those who believe in and
obey his Son. He called them “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation,
a people for his own possession, that we may proclaim the excellencies of him
who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light”. 1 Peter 2:9.
13:12-14 Object Lesson 2: Jars filled with Wine
In this passage, the Lord says he will fill all the
leaders with drunkenness so that they will turn on each other. Then he says he
will destroy them without pity.
While I can see a Baptist preacher taking off on a
drinking sermon here, I do not think this is about drinking and
drunkenness. Rather, there is a play on
words within the object lesson. There
was a saying “every jar will be filled with wine”, meaning we expect great
prosperity. It is the equivalent of the French king saying he would make France
so prosperous, every peasant would have a chicken in his pot on Sunday. The
American Democrats later adopted the saying.
So the Lord plays off this saying and contradicts it,
saying you will not be prosperous, in fact it will get bad and everyone will
turn on each other to survive. This will be part of the destruction I will pour
out on you.
The additional image is likely the use of wine for wrath,
the pouring out of wrath. For example, Revelation 14:9-10 says “if anyone
worships the beast and its image and receives a mark on his forehead or on his
hand, he also will drink the wine of God’s wrath, poured full strength into the
cup of his anger and he will be tormented with fire and sulfur…”
13:15-17 Jeremiah Calls Judah To Repentance
After hearing these terrible words of warning from the
Lord, Jeremiah calls the people to repent of their pride and to bring glory to
God. (15) Yet, he knows they will not
listen. So he wept because of their pride that kept them captive to sin. This
is why Jeremiah is often referred to as the weeping prophet.
13:18-27 Jeremiah Speaks to Royalty
In this section, Jeremiah addressed the king and the
queen mother (the mother of the king). Jeremiah may have delivered this message
to Jeconiah, the son and successor of Jehoiachin and his mother, Nehushta, when
the Babylonian generals had camped out near Jerusalem, but did not besiege it until
Nebuchadnezzar arrived with the great body of the army. (2 Kings 24:8-16)
He told them they were really not ruling anymore because
the cities of the Negeb were shut up and the country taken into exile. This
seems to be looking forward to the exile as a forgone conclusion. The Negeb is
in the south, so Jeremiah was saying that the Babylonians did not just get the
people of the north, as the Assyrians did, but all the way through the country.
Notice in verse 20, Jeremiah refers to the flock. The
king was supposed to be a shepherd for the people, leading them to obey God and
keep the covenant. Long before Israel had a king, the Lord gave instructions
that the king was to copy the book of the law for himself, read it every day
and obey it. (Deuteronomy 17:18-20) He would lead the people in knowledge and
obedience. And in fact we see that Israel prospered under Godly kings and
suffered under evil kings.
The final part of this chapter deals with the Lord’s
intent to shame or humiliate Judah. “lifting up your skirts” speaks to great
humiliation. These people wore long robes.
The exposure of their bodies was intensely humiliating. So, not only
will Judah suffer defeat and desolation and exile, it will suffer humiliation
at the hands of the Babylonians.
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