Showing posts with label Jeremiah 42. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeremiah 42. Show all posts

August 24, 2018


The Choice is Yours

Whether it is favorable or unfavorable, we will obey the LORD our God, to whom we are sending you, so that it will go well with us, for we will obey the LORD our God.”
– Jeremiah 42:6
I have told you today, but you still have not obeyed the LORD your God in all he sent me to tell you. – Jeremiah 42:21

We tell ourselves and others that we’ll do whatever it is God calls us to do. We mean it. Sort of. We’ll gladly step out in faith on a journey of our choosing. But when God calls us to a place we’d rather not go, well, thanks but no thanks.

Faith isn’t for wimps, that’s for sure! God rarely calls us to go someplace nice and safe. He doesn’t usually ask us to do something that is so routine we can do it without even trying. God is all about growth and change and bringing us closer to the imagine of His Son. He can’t do that when our feet are stuck in the sameness of today.

We like our routines, don’t we? We like our days to go smoothly. If we crave excitement, it’s of our choosing. We love vacations, maybe a game or motorcycle ride. We want to be in control. We want to do what we want to do when we want to do it.

But God knows we’d never grow without change. How can unchallenged faith ever grow deep roots? How can we learn compassion if we never experience heartache? How can we learn to trust Him when we only stay where we can take care of ourselves?

It was a bad time for God’s people. They had disobeyed and God had allowed Babylon to take most of them. There was a remnant left. They sought out Jeremiah, the prophet who’d warned them about God’s anger. This was the same prophet they’d imprisoned, the same prophet they’d ignored.

This time they were determined to heed whatever God told Jeremiah. They promised. Until Jeremiah told them what God said. They had a choice. They could do as God commanded and remain where they were or they could head toward what they saw as safety in Egypt. They chose Egypt – and death.

We make choices every day as to whether we will follow God or our own wisdom. For example: You feel the Holy Spirit telling you to leave your secure job and move to another. You think about it. You pray about it. But you just can’t trust God enough to take that leap. Several months later your company downsizes and you’re laid off. If you’d followed the Holy Spirit’s promptings, you’d still have a good job. It’s a missed opportunity and heartache you needlessly suffer because of your disobedience.

Maybe it’s something totally different. You’re hanging out with people who sometimes skirt God’s laws. They gossip. Maybe they go out drinking every now and then, then leave the restaurant a little bit tipsy. Maybe they fudge on their expense reports. Maybe they flirt with strangers even though they’re married. Maybe they tell little “white” lies. Nothing big. None of it is big. You are confident you won’t become like them. You’re confident you’ll stay righteous. Until the day you don’t.

We have an uncanny ability to become like the people we hang around with. While we may want to be a positive influence on them, oftentimes it doesn’t work that way. The gossip is too juicy. The crowd is too influential. Before we know it, we’ve become one of them.

It’s not like God didn’t warn us. We just didn’t want to listen. We head down a path toward a place we never expected to go. We’ve pulled away from God. We want Him – but we also want to be part of this world. We can’t have both. Trying to walk that line of obedience when surrounded by the pull of sin, well, we’re bound to fall.

God’s people had to make a choice: follow God or follow their own wisdom. They chose what they believed was the “safe” choice and paid for it with their lives. In a very real sense, we do the same thing when we do what we know we shouldn’t do, hang out with people who are bad influences or we stay where we are when we know God is calling us to something different.

Every day you have a choice to follow God or the world. Choose wisely.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Trust God To Guide Your Path
“Whether we like it or not, we will obey the LORD our God to whom we send you with our plea. For if we obey him, everything will turn out well for us.” -- Jeremiah 42:6

We want to do God’s will. We want to hear His voice and follow Him wherever He might lead us. We do. Really. Until He tells us to do something we’d rather not do.

Fear has a way of bringing out the biggest doubts in us. We can’t believe that God would call us to do something that doesn’t make sense to us. We can’t understand how what God says could possibly be right.

Maybe we heard Him wrong. Maybe we were so busy talking that we didn’t hear Him at all. Or maybe we just didn’t like the answer.

The army officers who asked Jeremiah to inquire of God didn’t like the answer. God told them not to go to Egypt. God told them He would protect them and not to fear the Babylonians. They didn’t believe Jeremiah.

“You lie! The LORD our God hasn’t forbidden us to go to Egypt!” -- Jeremiah 43:2b

Yeah. They really didn’t like it when Jeremiah told them what God said. We’re that way with God sometimes. We pretend we misunderstood. We know He couldn’t possibly be calling us to do something so out of our comfort zone, so far from our level of expertise, so downright scary.

But He does. On a regular basis. Because it is in those moments when we are afraid and uncertain and don’t know which way to turn, that we turn to God. And He is there, helping and guiding us. God never calls us to do something without providing a way for us to do it.

The army officers couldn’t see beyond their fear and the size and might of the Babylonian army. They were certain they would die unless they went to Egypt. They trusted what they thought they knew rather than what God told them was the truth.

Their punishment for disobeying?

“So you can be sure that you will die from war, famine, and disease in Egypt, where you insist on going.” -- Jeremiah 42:22

How many times do we fail because we were too afraid to try? How many times do we turn away rather than trust God? How many times do we fail to reach our full potential, to reap all the blessings God prepared for us, because we never believed what He said?