THURSDAY, AUGUST 23,   2012
Jeremiah 30–31:26;   33:10–13
In today’s passages,   we see a hopeful Jeremiah, confident   in a coming restoration, both physically to the Promised Land and   spiritually.  As God served as   architect of the fully deserved judgment, He will also bring about the people’s   restoration in all separate forms.    This passage overflows with God’s grace, His unmerited favor.  The passage, which touches upon physical   restoration, offers a gateway to the coming prophecy about full (and necessarily   spiritual) restoration under the Messiah, which we will discover   tomorrow.
God’s judgment had   demanded the punishment that the Israelites had faced.  The language throughout the passage   reminds us that God is a loving Father and that He does not flippantly punish;   instead, as Hebrews 12, He disciplines His children for their reproof and   growth.  In Jeremiah 30:14,15, we   read:
“I have struck you as   an enemy would
                  and punished you as would the cruel,
because your guilt is   so great
                  and your sins so many.
Why do you cry out   over your wound,
                  your pain that has no cure?
Because of your great   guilt and many sins
                  I have done these things to you.”
Still, Jeremiah   foresaw a day in which the Lord would restore – in His mighty power.  The Israelites would return in joy and   prosperity and would lift up praise to God, saying:
“Give thanks to the   LORD Almighty;
                  for the LORD is good:
                  his love endures forever.”
The Lord would bring   healing to the land and return it to the state that the people had previously   known, filling it again.  Yet, these   transformations would not solely occur as physical happenings; the people would   clearly sense and appreciate God’s design and intervention.  After many years of rejecting intimacy   with the Lord, the people will no longer shun His presence, but rather embrace   Him and praise Him.
God’s loving-kindness   and compassion will again become the ruling force in Israelite   life:
                  1.  In addition to this   physical restoration, God would remove the people from their   bondage:
“‘In that day,’   declares the LORD Almighty,
                  ‘I will break the yoke off their necks
and will tear off   their bonds;
                  no longer will foreigners enslave them.
Instead, they will   serve the LORD their God
                  and David their kind,
                  whom I will raise up for them.’“
The slavery to   foreigners had broken the dignity and value of the Israelites; now, God would   help them to give their allegiance only to God.
                  2.  He would slake their   thirst and make their paths straight:
“They will come with   weeping;
                  they will pray as I bring them back.
I will lead them   beside streams of water
                  on a level path where they will not stumble, because I am 
                  and Ephraim is my firstborn son.”
                  3.  He would overturn their   previous experience:
“They will be a   well-watered garden,
                  and they will sorrow no more.
Then maidens will   dance and be glad,
                  young men and old as well.
I will turn their   mourning into gladness;
                  I will give them comfort and joy instead of sorrow.
I will satisfy the   priests with abundance,
                  and my people will be filled with my bounty,”
                                                                                                                                  declares the LORD.
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