The message
delivered to Judah is an indictment of its arrogance and stubbornness. Even
animals know to whom they are accountable for the seasons and their sustenance,
and obey that inner voice that prompts them when it’s time to migrate (8:7).
But of Judah it is said the people are too stiffnecked to know when they are
beaten. They did not listen to me or pay attention (7:26); they insisted on following the stubborn
inclinations of their evil hearts (7:24).
According to Rabbi
Abraham Heschel, God’s anger is always measured and for a purpose. “There
is no divine anger for anger’s sake. Its meaning is . . . instrumental: to
bring about repentance; its purpose and consummation is its own disappearance” [10].
The point is that
people should have the good sense when confronted by God’s anger or discipline
to change their ways. But a lesson we can take from Jeremiah is that too often
we doggedly march on to our own destruction when a simple change of course
would make all the difference. We may be lost but we’re making good
time.
Physical
circumcision was supposed to be a symbol of the inward circumcision of the
heart – resulting in submission of the whole person to the sovereignty of God.
TODAY’S MEDITATION
Submission can be one of
the hardest things we’re asked to do. When you try to be the boss, how’s that
work out for you? Meditate on how things would be if you tried God’s way.
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