Prophets
and priests alike, all practice deceit. They dress the wounds of my people as
though it were not serious. "Peace, peace," they say, when there is no peace (Jeremiah 6:13,14).
A hundred years earlier the grandparents of these same people were convinced the Assyrian army was going to overrun the city. Panic was running rampant, but Isaiah told them to hold fast – that God would deliver them. And God came through. Isaiah’s reassurance and the eventual outcome of those events were congruent with the prevailing Zion theology. Yahweh is the greatest God; he lives in the temple; the temple is in Jerusalem. Therefore, Jerusalem is invincible.
Now it was
Jeremiah’s unenviable task to convince the people that Jerusalem would in fact
be destroyed by the Babylonians – the new superpower on the block. He was
speaking in opposition not only to Zion theology, but also to the established
priesthood and the politically correct temple prophets who said, Don’t worry; be happy.
At the root
of Jerusalem’s troubles was a very real problem – its rejection of the first
commandment and its treatment of the poor. Religious leaders refused to
acknowledge the gravity of the nation’s sinfulness. While they were saying, "These societal wounds aren’t serious; let’s
apply a clean Band-aid and cover up the ugliness," Jeremiah was warning that
Judah needed surgery… and that surgery was going to be performed by the
Babylonian military.
Denial never healed anything, but can be used by Satan to lull us to sleep while the very real wound turns grangrenous. Are you ready to rip off the Band-aid and receive real healing?
Denial never healed anything, but can be used by Satan to lull us to sleep while the very real wound turns grangrenous. Are you ready to rip off the Band-aid and receive real healing?
No comments:
Post a Comment