It doesn’t always have to be a good day.

It doesn’t always have to be a good day.

JEREMIAH 27

With a very clear illustrated prophecy, Jeremiah counters the prophets who say that the exile under Nebuchadnezzar will be short-lived. It won’t be.
God called Jeremiah to wear the yoke that oxen would wear. He told the Kings to come under Babylon for the people will remain controlled for the allotted time.
There are always prophets prophesying that life is going to get better. That a believer will not go through difficulty. They can be in fear of saying the truth.
Why do we think that God would make sure we did not have tough times and face the challenge of our enemy? It is wrong. It is not God. We need to speak truth. Life is tough.
Maybe staying in a difficult situation with no change is actually God.
Come under the yoke, submit and learn how to live with patience.

Everyone has mates JEREMIAH 26 Baruch wa

Everyone has mates
JEREMIAH 26

Baruch was the scribe for Jeremiah. We will see this stated in chapter 36. As secretary and friend he wrote down all of Jeremiah’s prophecies. We are reading Jeremiah today because of Baruch. We can see Baruch in today’s chapter in v20-23. Read it again, see the brackets? This is Baruch, adding his own insight into the situation where Jeremiah’s life is on the line as he faces his attackers. He mentions Uriah, another prophet like Jeremiah, but who in similar situations fled to Egypt but who then was killed.
The point is this: Baruch tells us that just like Jeremiah did, we must face up to that which opposes us and not run from it. Do not flee in fear, stand in faith. The Apostle Paul wrote “we face death all day long” (Rom 8:36); Isaiah prophesied the Messiah would set his face like flint (50:7) and Luke records how Jesus “resolutely set out to Jerusalem” (9:51). I used to sing as a child: “Because He lives I can face tomorrow …” So face it, don’t run from it.

Thanks to Baruch we are introduced to another friend of Jeremiah early on, Elnathan. He was an accomplice to the murder of the prophet Uriah. However by chapter 36 he has become one of a group of godly leaders who defended Jeremiah and Baruch.
The point is this: How you start, what has happened is one thing but how you turn out, what you will become, is another.

The third friend of Jeremiah is Ahikam, v24. As one of King Josiah’s counsellors he had been sent to seek God over what the finding of the book of the Law meant in 2 Kings 22. His past work meant he had authority, power and influence in the present and he used it to support Jeremiah.
The point is this: Use your influence to help those who are doing God’s work. Use your skills, your status, the people you know to do all you can to give support and the hand of friendship.

The cup Want to read what must be one of

The cup

Want to read what must be one of the most frightening chapters in the Bible?
Then read Jeremiah 25.
There is a cup filled with the wine of God’s wrath.
It is for those who have not listened to God even though He has spoken many times to them.
It is for those who have committed sinful ways.
It is for those who worship idols.
It is filled, a full measure of His wrath, “complete destruction … everlasting ruin” v9
It is banishment, v10.
It is disaster, v32.
There will be weeping and wailing, v34.
Can you drink from this cup? (Matthew 20:22)
The disciples of Jesus did drink from the cup of suffering, many of them dying as martyrs. The disciples of Jesus still drink from the cup of Jesus. As they do they mirror Jesus who drank the full measure. But the cup Jesus drank was not only that of suffering, the pain of torture, of being crucified and it was not only mental distress of the rejection from His own people.
The cup Jesus drank was this cup of Jeremiah 25. He endured spiritual suffering for coming under the wrath of God for the sins of the whole world.
Because of Jesus we will not drink the cup filled with the wine of God’s wrath. Jesus drank it for us. Instead He offers a new cup; a cup of a new covenant, a cup of forgiveness and grace.
Let us drink.

FIGS At long last! Jeremiah is hopeful!

FIGS
At long last! Jeremiah is hopeful!

JEREMIAH 24

He is hopeful after judgment has come.
But where does his hope lie?
It is not with those who have survived the exile and have remained in the land. Though the human mind may look at these and think they are the ones where the future looks better than the ones who have been taken away. They still have their king and they still have their temple to worship. They still have their lives and their freedom.
These people think they are better than the others who are now in exile. They have false security based on a fake righteousness.
God calls them the bad figs!
Where is God?
He is with those who have no hope.
He is with those who have no earthly trappings of success, they have no future.
He is with those who are robbed and who have become the outcast.
He is with those who cannot control their lives.
He is with those who need a miracle every day.
He is with the vulnerable, with those who have nothing left to give.
He is with those who having no hope, have hope because He gives it to them.
God calls these the good figs!
Let’s go where He is.

JEREMIAH 23 I had just finished preachin

JEREMIAH 23

I had just finished preaching and was standing at the door of the church shaking hands with the people, giving and receiving pleasantries. The tired old man on walking sticks shuffled towards me with his tears in his eyes. “I believe today is my new day”. He told me his story how many years ago as a policeman he had committed a crime and went to prison. On release from prison he had become a businessman but had embezzled the money and went back inside. A womaniser, a sinner and a Christian throughout all this. Today, because of Jesus, he could begin again. With tears in my own eyes I agreed with him that he could.
I believe when I stand before Jesus I will be standing with this old man. But also with the prostitute who from an early age never knew any other way; the vicar who through burn-out and loneliness sold his integrity; I could make a list of all the people who never really made it in this life who not only did not look good but who also knew they were not good, I will be standing with them.
I am confident because of Jehovah Tsidkenu: The Lord Our Righteousness.
1. No man can do this …. (the shepherds and prophets of this chapter)
2. He enters a broken family line and makes it right …. (of David’s line, v5)
3. He is able to fulfil the Creation mandate: to rule and take dominion, as a King, v5.
4. It is Him who is wise, v5.
5. It is Him who does what is just, v5.
6. It is Him who does what is right, v5.
7. I cannot save myself, v6.
8. I cannot create the peace I need, v6.
9. I cannot find the way out of my own Egypt or exile, v7-8.
10. What makes me right is all of Him and nothing of me.

The Lord Our Righteousness

Suffering, failure, loneliness, sorrow, discouragement, and death are part of my journey, but the vehicle and the destination is Jesus!

HOW TO KNOW GOD. If the world had 1,000

HOW TO KNOW GOD.

If the world had 1,000 people, the number who would live in a slum: 600.
Yet most of the Church’s pursuit in knowing God is centred around the activity of the 400.

JEREMIAH 22

What is the evidence of knowing God?
How can we verify a person’s relationship with God? Is it how much ‘stuff’ he has been blessed with?
Is a Church to be praised for its building and its large staff? Is God there?
Maybe.
But God is not in what we think is so important.
Jeremiah says He is to be known in the place of the poor and needy.
To best illustrate this, please go to youtube and search for the landfill orchestra and be amazed.
A poor community in Paraguay has formed an amazing orchestra that plays instruments created from recycled trash. The young musicians come from the city of Cateura, a slum that’s built on a landfill. They form a small orchestra of miraculously redeemed instruments. a cello made out of an oil can, a flute made from tin cans, a violin made from a battered aluminum salad bowl.
Basil the Great (theologian and bishop in modern-day Turkey, 4th century) wrote, “The bread you do not use is the bread of the hungry. The garment hanging in your wardrobe is the garment of the person who is naked. The shoes you do not wear are the shoes of the one who is barefoot. The money you keep locked away is the money of the poor.”
Beauty in and from the ashes. Who would have thought you could get such beautiful music from a slum.
So how do we know God?
Jeremiah says to know God is to defend the cause of the poor and the needy.
It is in this mission when we know Him. It is when we pray this mission that we speak His language. It is when we give money to this mission that we bring offerings to Him.
God is in the slum. Let’s go there.

INVISIBLE I’m more than you know I’m mor

INVISIBLE
I’m more than you know
I’m more than you see here
More than you let me be
I’m more than you know
A body in a soul
You don’t see me but you will
I am not invisible

There is no them
There is no them
There’s only us
From ‘Invisible’ by U2.

JEREMIAH 21

Each day, 8,000 girls are robbed of their genitals… That is one girl every eleven seconds. Throughout the world, 140 million women are affected.
An estimated 2.5 million people are in forced labour (including sexual exploitation) at any given time as a result of trafficking
There are over 9 million refugees and internally displaced people because of conflicts throughout Africa.
The number of malnourished people in the world exceeds 800 million people – more than the populations of Canada, and the European Union combined
98% of the world’s starving live in developing countries
Every year around 200,000 Christians are killed for their faith around the world
In North Korea up to 70,000 Christians suffer in labor camps because of their faith in Jesus Christ.
More than 35 million people now live with HIV/AIDS
3.3 million of them are under the age of 15.
INVISIBLE
Administer justice every morning; rescue from the hand of his oppressor the one who has been robbed …v12
The invisible are not irrelevant. Just because you cannot see them does not mean you cannot reach them.
Start today, don’t walk past the visible, don’t ignore the invisible.

THE PERFECT IMPERFECT PLACE Asian Access

THE PERFECT IMPERFECT PLACE

Asian Access (or A2), a Christian missions agency in South Asia, listed a series of questions that some church planters have been asking new believers who are considering baptism. The country is predominantly Hindu, but over the past few decades Christianity has grown in popularity—especially among poor and tribal peoples.
1. Are you willing to leave home and lose the blessing of your father?
2. Are you willing to lose your job?
3. Are you willing to go to the village and those who persecute you, forgive them, and share the love of Christ with them?
4. Are you willing to give an offering to the Lord?
5. Are you willing to be beaten rather than deny your faith?
6. Are you willing to go to prison?
7. Are you willing to die for Jesus?

JEREMIAH 20

There are times when God allows us to be where He wants us to be but it is not the place of our choosing. The perfect set in the imperfect. Are you willing?

The prophet (he was obedient, faithful, living for God, doing all he should have been doing)
At the Upper Gate of Benjamin at the temple (probably the most popular gate into the city, named after the best-loved son of Jacob at the sacred site of God’s presence)

Here we have Jeremiah centre stage, his whole world watching him at the entrance into the holy presence of his God: the ideal place and scenario for mission, except for the imperfect.

Beaten and put in the stocks (probably whipped 39 times and then the stocks, this was not a restraining implement but a torturous one. It was where the body was placed on a rack, clamping his wrists and painfully contorted his body).

The ideal place and scenario for mission was actually persecution.

We can forgive Jeremiah’s response to the dark night of his soul in blaming God and cursing his birth. Would we have done less? Do we do similar in lesser situations?

Jeremiah did this for God.
Jesus did this for us.
Perfect Imperfect.

How can I say it …? The bridge will be

How can I say it …?

The bridge will be burnt.
The end of the day will come.
It will be over because it is over.
Time will have run out.
When all is said and done will be said and done.
When the fat lady has sung.
When everything has been set in stone.
And the chickens can be counted because they have hatched.
When we have reached the end of the road
And …

JEREMIAH 19

And …
v10 When the jar is broken ….

For the wicked it will be too late.
For those in Christ it will just have begun.

Often called the shortest complete story

Often called the shortest complete story in English, supposedly written by Ernest Hemingway. It is only six words long:
“For sale: baby shoes, never worn.”

Brokenness. We all know it.

JEREMIAH 18

As a father of 2 university children living away from home I feel at times helpless as all their life I have tried to protect them from being hurt but now I am not watching them. The reality I face is that they will no doubt experience the hurt of life, they will be broken. My prayer is that when that happens they will empty their hurt into the hands of the Potter who recreates beauty from brokenness.

A soldier was wounded in a battle and ordered to the nearest military hospital. Arriving at the entrance, he saw two doors: one marked “For Minor Wounds,” the other “For Serious Wounds.”
He entered the first door and walked down a long hallway. At the end of the hall, he saw two more doors. The first read “For Officers,” the other “For Enlisted Men.” The soldier went through the second door.
Again, he found himself walking down a long hallway with two doors at the end. One read “For Party Members,” the other “For Non-Party Members.” The wounded soldier took the second door and found himself back out on the street.
When he got back to his unit, his buddies asked, “How’d your trip to the hospital go?”
“The people really didn’t help me much,” he said, “but, man, are they organised!”- (Andy Cook)

We can be in control of many things, but brokenness.
Find the Potter today. Fall into His hands, let Him recreate in you beauty.