Thursday, January
17, 2019
“Look at the shrines on every hilltop. Is there any place you have not been defiled by your adultery with other gods? You sit like a prostitute beside the road waiting for a customer. You sit alone like a nomad in the desert. You have polluted the land with your prostitution and your wickedness. That’s why even the spring rains have failed. For you are a brazen prostitute and completely shameless. Yet you say to me, ‘Father, you have been my guide since my youth. Surely you won’t be angry forever! Surely you can forget about it!’ So you talk, but you keep on doing all the evil you can.” Jeremiah 3:2-5(NLT)
Prophets aren’t just weird-looking
old guys with beards, talking funny, like Yoda.
They have a way of getting under your skin with the most annoying,
uncomfortable (but true) in-your-face kind of soul-blistering
challenges. Jeremiah was that, and more,
to the Judean family of God. He likened the
dark days of the southern kingdom to the cloud that comes over a land when that
nation leaves God in the rear-view mirror.
The land was a gift to them by God, and they prostituted their heritage
to fit in with the rest of the world.
God was not pleased in the least!
Sound familiar?
The United States of America was
born in a time when religious freedom was at stake; the price was blood,
sacrificed on revolutionary fields. This
land yielded more than could have been imagined in riches, respect and
power. Following in Israel’s footsteps, acquiring
and pandering to those riches has been our national obsession, as the image of
God’s holiness fades in our national rear-view mirror.
Somehow this land, blessed in its
early years with the holiness of the Great Awakenings, and movements such as Wesley
led, has become a secular culture, in many ways hostile to Christian thought or
lifestyle.
Washington still writes In
God we Trust[2] on
our money, the Congress still has a chaplain, churches dot the landscape like
bugs at a picnic; we have the words right, but the music is not at all
heavenly.
Simply expressed, Jeremiah was
lambasting Judah for talking the talk, but forgetting to walk the walk. They had discarded the covenant, and they
thought a simple, can’t we just forget about it this time, please, was not going
to stave-off God’s judgment. And
Jeremiah was right; the enemy came, conquered, carried-off all the best of men,
money and museum articles; they destroyed the temple, and God let it happen.
I do not claim to be a prophet
after the manner of Jeremiah; I’m simply an observer of who Israel was, and
what happened to them. And for even
someone of moderate intelligence, it’s not hard to see this country headed for
the same ditch!
So…what’s it going to take to get God
to look the other way? That’s the wrong
question. More appropriately, we must
ask, is it too late to turn back! If
there is still hope…and I believe there is…the right question is: How shall we turn? Jeremiah gave us the answer:
If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me. Jeremiah 29:13(NLT)
Wholeheartedly is how we come to
Christ, serve Christ, and live in Him.
Anything less is a futile request to ask God to look the other way. In the interests of common sense, even an
earthly parent wouldn’t buy that.
For You Today
It’s a good day for all of us to
do a wholeheartedness
checkup.
Go to VIDEO
[2] Currency In God We Trust image: Pixabay.com
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