A STRONG FAITH MAY NOT BE ENOUGH
by Doug Goins
Think about the duration of your walk of faith, the number of years that
you have enjoyed relationship with God through salvation in Jesus. For some
of you that's a long time, for others it is not. But has there been a time
in that period when you have struggled with doubt? Have you ever found yourself
second guessing God's sovereignty over your life, over your circumstances?
Do you sometimes fear, in your relationship with the Lord, that your faith
may not be strong enough to withstand the difficulty or the struggle or
even the disappointment that you're experiencing in your life? Have you
ever questioned God's goodness or his fairness or his justice in your life?
This week, as I reflected on my own thirty-five or so years of relationship
with the Lord, I had to admit that I had felt those things more often than
I care to remember. I remember my first struggle with faith when I was in
my early teens. My younger brother Mike, who is two years younger than I
am, was diagnosed with a severely damaged heart, and he needed open heart
surgery. In the 1950's open heart surgery was fairly primitive compared
to the hi-tech advances we have today in medicine. The procedure was complicated,
and there was a long period of recovery; it was touch and go. That was the
first time that I remember fighting with God---challenging his goodness
and his involvement in our family---because I didn't want to lose my little
brother. Mike did survive the operation and is doing well today. I remember
later when I was in college, working in a church with a junior high youth
group and directing a junior high choir. It was a spectacular failure. I
got fired by the church for not being a very good junior high minister.
I remember the disappointment and embarrassment that I felt. I said, "Lord,
I gave it my best shot; my heart was pure. They didn't appreciate what I
was doing." I even asked, "Are you in the middle of all this failure?"
Eight years ago as a pastor in this congregation, I watched my father-in-law
waste away from cancer. I watched his struggles to accept his disease. He
was a pastor who loved the Lord, yet giving up his life and accepting God's
sovereignty were painful for him. What affected me even more profoundly
was my wife's struggle. For a year and a half after the death of her dad
she grieved, and there was nothing I could do. I couldn't say the right
thing. I remember my struggles with the Lord, "How long is this going
to go on, Father? How long will she live in the depths of despair?"
Probably my most vivid and painful memories of feelings of doubt and struggle
come from seventeen years ago when I was going through my divorce. I was
left with a five-year-old boy, and I went through about six months of being
overwhelmed by grief, anger, confusion, and guilt. There were times when
I accused God of abandoning me. I remember nights in my apartment, after
my son was in bed asleep, when I would walk around in the apartment and
talk out loud to God. More accurately, I would yell at him and accuse him.
I remember one night telling him that I'd had it. I wasn't going to believe
in him anymore, and I was abandoning him. Think of the silliness of that---I'm
talking out loud to somebody in whom I don't believe anymore. I was going
to seminary at the time which makes it even more amazing. I've struggled
with doubt and disappointment with God. I've questioned his goodness and
fairness.
The prophet Jeremiah wrestled with all the same issues of faith and doubt.
Chapters 18-20 of Jeremiah deal with the same theme---God's absolute, unconditional
sovereignty over both the life of the nation Judah and the life of the prophet
Jeremiah. We're going to look at chapter 19 and 20 this morning. The setting
is about ten years after the agonizing prayer of despair that we looked
at last week in chapter 15. He prayed that prayer to God in response to
the drought that was causing great suffering in Judah, in response to King
Jehoiakim's attack on his ministry. He struggled over the rejection of his
own family, the assassination attempts on his life.
In these chapters the king on the throne is probably Zedekiah, who was the
third and final ruler of Judah during the ministry of Jeremiah. He ruled
over Judah for the last eleven years of the nation before the final Babylonian
invasion. In reality, Zedekiah was a puppet king. He was a vassal of Nebuchadnezzar
of Babylon. There had been an invasion prior to his rule. King Jehoiakim
had been executed as a traitor to Babylon---the people didn't like him anyway---and
Zedekiah was put on the throne. Jehoiakim had been a violent, evil man,
much like Manasseh had been. And he declared Jeremiah an outlaw. Zedekiah
was very ambivalent toward Jeremiah. He was drawn to his message of truth,
and yet the counselors around Zedekiah would sway him away from the message
of the prophet. So Zedekiah was a weak, ambivalent king, and in that ambivalence,
Jeremiah had much more freedom to preach and to travel about without fear
of his life. But it's under this leniency that he's going to experience
the first physical suffering of his ministry. In this morning's passage
he's going to be beaten. He's going to be imprisoned in the stocks for a
day and a night. And all this is going to come not at the instigation of
the king but at the instigation of the temple priesthood. The religious
establishment is going to oppose Jeremiah and punish him physically.
The narrative begins at the end of chapter 19 and continues through chapter
20. It is a roller coaster ride of boldness and cowardice, of great confidence
in the Lord and crippling fear that God won't come through on his promises.
There's peace, but there's also bitterness. There's even a song of praise
and worship that's contrasted with the doubt that gnaws away at Jeremiah.
The narrative portion of the passage is written in the third person. It
was probably written by his scribe Barach to show Jeremiah's struggles with
physical suffering. Also, the section that we're going to examine records
a first-person account of another one of Jeremiah's private struggles with
God, one of his confessions. His conflict is one of faith: Can he trust
the sovereignty of God in the face of affliction, of physical and emotional
suffering? We're going to see his faith in its strength and its weakness.
We're going to find out that his struggle is really ours.
In the section of chapter 19 just prior to this, Jeremiah has called a number
of priests and elders of the nation to go with him outside the city gate
to the Valley of Hinnom to a place called Topheth. It had been the place
of child sacrifice under king Manasseh. He delivers a powerful sermon against
the nation, speaking of God's coming judgment as he's been doing for twenty-five
years.
Dramatically, he holds up a clay pot and says in effect, "The nation
is like a hardened clay pot that's resisted God's truth." Then Jeremiah
throws the pot and smashes it and says, "God will destroy this nation
as this pot has been destroyed." We'll pick up the story with verses
19:14-20:2:
Then Jeremiah came from Topheth, where the Lord had sent him
to prophesy, and he stood in the court of the Lord's house, and said to
all the people: "Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, Behold,
I am bringing upon this city and upon all its towns all the evil that I
have pronounced against it, because they have stiffened their neck, refusing
to hear my words." Now Pashhur the priest, the son of Immer, who was
chief officer in the house of the Lord, heard Jeremiah prophesying these
things. Then Pashhur beat Jeremiah the prophet, and put him in the stocks
that were in the upper Benjamin Gate of the house of the Lord.
They return from the Valley of Hinnom, this select group of priests and
elders. He strides purposefully into the temple court which was the place
where he had stood twenty years before when he preached the Temple Gate
sermon. Two weeks ago you heard that powerful statement of God's coming
judgment but also of the hope of forgiveness and renewal and restoration.
Jeremiah says to the people that their necks are just as hardened as the
clay pot that he has broken out in the Valley. He had been preaching this
same message for twenty-five years. And he tells the people that the coming
judgment is their own fault. They have nobody else to blame but themselves,
and God is going to punish them.
The temple priest, Pashhur, responds immediately; it was his job. He was
second in authority only to the high priest. As the chief officer or overseer,
he was responsible for maintaining order. As a matter of fact, part of his
job is described in chapter 29, verse 26. It says that the chief officer
is "to have charge in the house of the Lord over every madman who prophesies,
to put him in the stocks and collar." Pashhur was doing his job because
Jeremiah was a disruptive influence. He has Jeremiah immediately arrested
and flogged publicly. Apparently truth did not prevail in the marketplace.
He was probably beaten with the forty lashes prescribed in the law of Deuteronomy.
Then he was placed in the stocks and the collar which immobilized his neck,
both of his hands, and his feet. They weren't stocks as we see in Puritan
New England, where you sit comfortably and put your hands and feet out.
This was an instrument of torture, an instrument to twist the body in a
painfully awkward position---total limitation physically. The muscles would
begin to tense up and ache. And he spends the rest of the day there. The
temple gate, the Benjamin Gate, is a public gate of entry into the temple
precinct itself. So for the rest of the day, in addition to the physical
suffering, he was subjected to the scorn and ridicule of the citizens of
Jerusalem as they came and went from the temple. He's made a public symbol
of how dangerous, how costly it is to oppose institutional religion.
Another irony is what Pashhur did here. He had a job description given to
him by the religious authorities---overseer of the temple. That was a man-made
position. In the call of Jeremiah in chapter 1, twenty-five years earlier,
God had said to him, "I will make you an overseer [identical word to
Pashhur's title] of the nations," as it were. God says he will give
him spiritual oversight to communicate his word to all the nations around
Judah. So Jeremiah is being persecuted by this human overseer, this religious
bureaucrat. God had called Jeremiah sovereignly, and Pashhur was completely
unaware of what Jeremiah had been called to. Verse 3 tells us that the next
morning Pashhur released Jeremiah. So after the public humiliation of the
day in the stocks, he also has to spend an entire night there in the cold,
wracked with the pain of being in that awkward position, burning from the
lashes on his back without medical care.
Verses 7-18 of chapter 20 record the thoughts of Jeremiah while he was in
the stocks that night. He faces difficult circumstances in a lot of the
same ways that we do. Let's examine what he went through during that night
of agony, cold and lonely in the stocks. We'll see that he's overwhelmed
by fear. In the opening stanzas, verses 7-10, he sees God not as his protector
or defender, but as his antagonist and enemy. That's the accusation that
he's going to make against God. Verses 7-10:
O Lord, thou hast deceived me,
and I was deceived;
thou art stronger than I,
and thou hast prevailed.
I have become a laughingstock all the day;
every one mocks me.
For whenever I speak, I cry out,
I shout, "Violence and destruction!"
For the word of the Lord has become
for me a reproach and derision all day long.
If I say, "I will not mention him,
or speak any more in his name,"
there is in my heart as it were a burning fire
shut up in my bones,
and I am weary with holding it in, and I cannot.
For I hear many whispering [hissing, literally].
Terror is on every side!
"Denounce him! Let us denounce him!"
say all my familiar friends, watching for my fall.
"Perhaps he will be deceived,
then we can overcome him,
and take our revenge on him."
Jeremiah tells God that he feels deceived and taken advantage of. The word
deceived is translated from the word meaning sexual seduction. This is a
blasphemous thing to charge against God. God was so powerful, he was overwhelmed.
He could not resist the sovereign God. If we put ourself in his position---the
suffering he endured and the place he ended up in the middle of the night---his
perspective is somewhat understandable. We can refer to his original call
in the first chapter of Jeremiah to see what God really said to him twenty-five
or thirty years earlier. Jeremiah writes in chapter 1, verses 4-10:
Now the word of the Lord came to me saying,
"Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
and before you were born I consecrated you;
I appointed you a prophet to the
nations."
[And he protests at this point]
Then I said, "Ah, Lord God!
Behold, I do not know how to speak,
for I am only a youth."
But the Lord said to me,
"Do not say, 'I am a youth';
for to all to whom I send you you shall go,
and whatever I command you you shall speak.
Be not afraid of them,
for I am with you to deliver you,
says the Lord."
[that rings in his memory as he sits in the stocks alone in terrible pain
that night.]
Then the Lord put forth his hand and touched my mouth; and the
Lord said to me,
"Behold, I have put my words in your mouth.
See, I have set you this day over nations and over kingdoms [an overseer],
to pluck up and to break down,
to destroy and to overthrow,
to build and to plant."
Can you understand Jeremiah's struggle that night in the stocks? God had
promised to be a deliverer, but he was hurting tremendously. God had promised
to protect him, but he'd been the subject of ridicule for the entire day
prior. Maybe he took these promises superficially. Maybe he made certain
assumptions about physical protection---that it would be literal protection---that
he should not have made. Perhaps he pictured himself in more heroic terms
when he responded to this call. He implies, "Lord, where is the protection
from the pain and suffering I'm enduring right now." There's no protection
right now, and he charges God with being a liar, a deceiver, and a seducer.
It says in the second half of verse 7 in chapter 20 that he's been personally
ridiculed and rejected. For twenty-five years the people have made fun of
him, but especially in the last twenty-four-hour period when they stood
around him in the stocks. They are probably charging him that his prophecies
are not very trustworthy: "You've been saying judgment is coming. Where
is it? Yeah, there was the Babylonian invasion a few years ago. They took
Jehoiakim off and executed him, but he deserved it. We didn't like him anyway.
Life is not all that bad in Judah. Where do you get off prophesying all
this fire and brimstone, death and destruction? We don't see it anywhere."
In verse 8 Jeremiah feels an unbearable tension within himself towards the
message that God has given him. It's in direct contrast to what he said
in chapter 15, as we saw last week. In chapter 15 as he's in prayer with
the Lord, he says, "Thy words were found, and I ate them, and thy words
became to me a joy and the delight of my heart." That joy and delight
are not there anymore. Now it's derision. Now it's a reproach. He says in
effect, "This message, you can sum it up in two words, violence and
destruction. I've been saying that for twenty-five years, and I'm sick and
tired of it. I hate it as much as all the people do that have to listen
to it." His words are emotionally charged; the word of God has become
repugnant to him. He's tired of standing up for the truth. And he tries
to quit preaching as we see in verse 9: "I tried to stop preaching.
I wanted to quit," he says as it were, "but I can't." He's
compelled to speak. He says the word of God is like a burning in his bones,
and whenever he's faced with injustice, the loveless hypocrisy of the priesthood
that surrounded him, the moral perversity of the land, scandalous conduct,
he cannot keep quiet.
Do you know why he couldn't stop telling the truth? Because the word of
God was not an external body of information; it had been internalized, and
it controlled him. He was captivated by God's truth, the Torah. In verse
10 he hears voices all around him, whisperings on every side. He's totally
insecure at this point. It's as if he were paranoid, even delusional. He
probably has memories of people hissing at him the day prior. The nickname
they give him in verse 10, "terror on every side," is a phrase
that he used in his prophetic preaching four different times previously.
He says that the judgment coming from Babylon will be like terror on every
side. Every place you look, there the enemy will be. You will not be able
to escape it. It became a byword with him, and as a result, the people began
to use it to make fun of him: "There goes Jeremiah, old 'terror on
every side.' You can't get away from it. Do you see any terror? I don't
see any terror? The man's a fool for preaching this." So he's alone
in the middle of the night, and it's as if the voices are still there, hissing
at him, whispering, "Terror on every side." Even his best friends,
it says, his "familiar friends," are accusing him of the same
things. He can't trust anyone anymore. It's like the man who told his psychiatrist,
"Just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean they're not following me."
That's Jeremiah.
This confession in verse 7 opens with an accusation against God, that God
is a seducer and that he overpowered him. Now in the last three lines of
verse 10, the people say in effect, "He'll be deceived; we can overcome
him." Everybody around him is hoping for his downfall. Do you ever
get overwhelmed by that kind of doubt and fear? Do you ever admit it to
yourself if you do feel this way? Do you ever view God as not being faithful
to his word in your life? Our challenges to God's faithfulness, like Jeremiah's,
call God a liar. I've heard people say numerous times in pastoral counselling
in recent years, when I've tried to help them with the word of God, "Well,
I know what it says, but it doesn't work for me." Or else they say,
"I know you have faith to believe that, but I don't." Or else
they say, "I don't see that in the word at all. It's a matter of how
you interpret it." Each of those responses to truth is merely a way
of saying that God is a deceiver, a seducer, a liar. It's a way of saying,
"I don't believe that he's going to do what he says he will do."
Again, we're no different than Jeremiah in our accusations against God.
In verse 11 the first word is very significant; it is the word "but."
That's an important conjunction because it signals that a contrast is coming.
There's going to be a shift in focus, and the shift is going to be from
Jeremiah's feelings, from the circumstances that overwhelm him, to the objective
reality of what God actually has said. The word of God is going to come
to his rescue, faith is going to counterattack. And it's going to begin
to strengthen him with spiritual reality. He begins to count as truth what
God has already made known to him. Look at verses 11-14:
But the Lord is with me as a dread warrior;
therefore my persecutors will stumble,
they will not overcome me.
They will be greatly shamed,
for they will not succeed.
Their eternal dishonor will never
be forgotten.
O Lord of hosts, who triest the righteous,
who seest the heart and the mind,
let me see thy vengeance upon them,
for to thee have I committed my cause.
Sing to the Lord; praise the Lord!
For he has delivered the life of the needy
from the hand of evildoers.
He starts with what he knows to be true about God, the unchangeable one.
Then he realizes that God is not his enemy but his defender. By faith he
chooses to see things not the way they look and feel to him physically and
emotionally, but the way that God says they're going to be. And it reassures
him of what will happen in the future. Faith believes what will happen before
it happens. Jeremiah is still in the stocks, hurting tremendously, but singing
a song of deliverance by faith. This reminded me of Acts 16 when Paul and
Silas end up in the Philippian jail. They make the same choice by faith
to sing a hymn in the middle of the night to a God of deliverance, even
when there is no deliverance humanly possible.
Now we could wish that this great confession ended with verse 13, but it
does not. There's another drastic shift in focus in verse 14. It's jarring.
And we find ourselves saying, "How could he say this after his great
confession of faith in verses 11-13?" But he sinks back into even greater
doubt and despondency. Listen to the depths of despair in verses 14-18.
He wishes he'd never been born:
Cursed be the day on which I was born!
The day when my mother bore me,
let it not be blessed!
Cursed be the man who brought the news to my father,
"A son is born to you,"
making him very glad.
Let that man be like the cities
which the Lord overthrew without pity;
let him hear a cry in the morning
and an alarm at noon,
because he did not kill me in the womb;
so my mother would have been my grave,
and her womb for ever great.
[These are horrible things to say about your parents and the God of the
universe who gives physical, human life.]
Why did I come forth from the womb
to see toil and sorrow,
and I spend my days in shame?
He's saying as it were, "I can't bear the shame anymore. I wish I'd
never seen the light of day." This is the worst cry of agony, bitterness,
and misery in all the seven confessionals of Jeremiah. It's an amazingly
close parallel to the agony of Job in chapter 3 when he asked God the same
kind of questions about why he was born as he is enduring such suffering
and misery. It's really a cry of dereliction---abandonment by God. He implies,
"I can't live with the sorrow and the shame of my life anymore."
I'm convinced that in this instance Jeremiah is controlled by the pain of
physical suffering.
When I was studying this a few months ago for our Sunday school class, I
bumped into a retired elder from our congregation on a Friday morning here
at the church. I was working on Jeremiah 20, and I took it to this dear
friend and said, "What do you think about this? What do you think it's
rooted in?" This man is struggling with congestive heart failure, and
he said that most every night he wakes up at two or three in the morning
overcome with terrible, terrible chest pain. He talked about the loneliness
that he feels; there is nothing medically that can be done to make him feel
better. He said, "I understand perfectly how Jeremiah feels. I understand
why you could be driven to this kind of agony, questioning the value of
your life as a human being. The pain is like a haze, a blur which prevents
you from seeing things clearly anymore." My friend understood how Jeremiah
could express himself with so much rage and how he could question God's
sovereignty.
A few years ago I watched a young man in our church die of cancer, having
been married only two or three years. He was a godly, wise, thoughtful man
in his early thirties. I struggled early in that illness with God's sovereignty.
But he had incredible strength---faith in God---until the end when the pain
just about overwhelmed him. I remember being with him several times, at
home and then in the hospital, when the same sort of anger and confrontation
with the Lord seemed to come out of the depths of his being. He eventually
died at peace, resting in the Lord, but there were periods of awful struggle
which matched this one of Jeremiah.
Jeremiah's cry ends with verse 18. Note that God doesn't talk back to Jeremiah.
Earlier in chapter 15 he did. They had a wonderful, powerful conversation.
This is a monologue, not a dialogue. I don't think you could even call it
prayer in that sense. He's venting his emotions towards God. I think God
doesn't say anything because he realizes that Jeremiah's had thirty years
of experiencing his faithfulness. He's had thirty years of absorbing the
living word of God, and God trusts that resource. He's saying in effect,
"You don't need any more miracles; you don't need any more bright lights
or angelic appearances, voices from heaven."
At some point before dawn Jeremiah turned a corner between his doubt and
faith. When we return to verse 3, we're going to see that when Pashhur finally
releases him, Jeremiah is going to emerge strong and confident. There's
no more doubt, discouragement, or despair in this man at all. I think he
must have prayed the prayer of a father in Mark 9. A man comes up to Jesus
in Mark's gospel and asks him to come to his home to heal his little boy
who is seriously ill. Jesus says to the man, "All things are possible
to him who believes." Jesus' action will be in accordance with the
man's faith. The father responds to Jesus, "I believe; help my unbelief."
He admits that both of those elements are at work in him. Jeremiah had the
same understanding. Verses 11-13 are a powerful confession of faith, of
his belief in what God can do. But it's bracketed by verses 7-10 and verses
14-18. Those are statements of unbelief, of doubt, of faithlessness. God
responds to Jeremiah and gives him incredible faith. When he comes out in
the light of day, he has regained confidence, boldness, and outspokenness.
It's almost as if he had been energized with righteous indignation. Verses
3-6 of our text:
On the morrow, when Pashhur released Jeremiah from the stocks,
Jeremiah said to him, "The Lord does not call your name Pashhur, but
Terror on every side [we've heard that name before]. For thus says the Lord:
Behold, I will make you a terror to yourself and to all your friends. They
shall fall by the sword of their enemies while you look on. And I will give
all Judah into the hand of the king of Babylon; he shall carry them captive
to Babylon, and shall slay them with the sword. Moreover, I will give all
the wealth of the city, all its gains, all its prized belongings, and all
the treasures of the kings of Judah into the hand of their enemies, who
shall plunder them, and seize them, and carry them to Babylon. And you,
Pashhur, and all who dwell in your house, shall go into captivity; to Babylon
you shall go; and there you shall die, and there you shall be buried, you
and all your friends, to whom you have prophesied falsely."
This is the climax, the thing that Pashhur was most guilty of. There's a
whole list of accusations against this man, but the outstanding one is that
he didn't tell the truth. He was one of those false prophets who said, "It's
not so bad; there's no judgment coming." In the words of Jeremiah,
he said, "Peace," when there wasn't peace. He said, "Don't
worry about things; it's all going to be fine." The passage also tells
us that he misuses spiritual authority. Jeremiah said in effect, "You'll
be stripped of that. Even your own friends will find you terrifying, the
friends you have a lot of influence over."
This passage displays Jeremiah's striking confidence and boldness, and it
also teaches us parenthetically about what God is going to do with corrupt
religious leadership, whether it's the corrupt television evangelists who
were profiled last Thursday night on Prime Time, or whether it's chickenhearted,
wimpy ministers that don't tell the truth anymore in terms of the cutting
edge of the gospel. Just as God dealt with Pashhur, he will deal with the
false prophets among us that we hear on the airwaves or the pulpits of the
land. In verse 5, he focuses on the thing that meant more than anything
else to Pashhur---material things. He's going to be stripped of wealth,
gain, prized belongings, and all the treasures of the kings. There are three
verbs that say these material things are going to be plundered, seized,
and carried off. Whenever you see repetition or intensification, a special
point is being made. Pashhur cared a lot about his material things. He liked
the perks of the ministry. Jeremiah warned as it were, "You won't get
away with it." It's incredible to me that this man, who at three in
the morning is so overwhelmed with doubt and pain, has gone through this
drastic change. In the light of the next morning, he stands strong in faith.
The word of God has penetrated the struggle and has triumphed over his feelings.
I think Jeremiah experienced the spiritual reality that was taught by the
apostle John in his first letter. I John 4 says, "For he who is in
you is greater than he who is in the world." It's true whether it feels
like it or not, or whether it looks like it or not. Jeremiah remembered
the power of God's word at work in his own life, everything it had accomplished
and all the promises that had come true. And God responds to his cry and
replaces doubt with confidence, unbelief with the certainty of faith. So
the next morning Jeremiah is able to look Pashhur straight in the eye and
tell him the truth without an inkling of fear.
The scripture that was read this morning from Paul's second letter to Timothy
captures this spiritual truth beautifully. Paul is writing from prison,
facing a death sentence. In all probability he was executed very soon after
he wrote this letter. He knows that his time is coming. Timothy is a young
pastor in Ephesus who struggles with faith, struggles to believe that God
uses him in ministry, struggles with ill health, struggles to believe that
the leadership in Ephesus really trusts him. So Paul writes to Timothy in
a time of crisis in his own life. In 2 Timothy chapter 2, he says,
"You then, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ
Jesus [not strong in yourself, not strong in your own faith, but strong
in the resources of Jesus that are offered to you], and what you have heard
from me before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to
teach others also. [There's the word. You've heard it and know it's true.
You've seen it in other people's lives; you've experienced it in your own
life.] Take your share of suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus...Remember
Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, descended from David, as preached in
my gospel, the gospel for which I am suffering and wearing fetters like
a criminal. But the word of God is not fettered [Paul is confident of that.
Finally, the ringing climax of this section]...If we are faithless, he [God]
remains faithful---for he cannot deny himself."
God must be true to his own character. The good news for us is that God's
faithfulness is more powerful than our doubt. He is just as faithful to
his promises today as he was with Jeremiah and Timothy in the first century.
He can protect us from weak, trembling faith. He can deliver us from the
evil of charging him, accusing him of unfairness or even falsehood. He can
save us from fear and disappointment.
As we gather around the table of the Lord, we are reminded of the triumph
of the cross. Jesus went through his own night of agony in the Garden of
Gethsemane. Remember when he sweat drops of blood because the agony was
so great physically. He said in effect, "Lord, if there's any way I
can get out of this, please let me. I don't want to go to the cross."
But then he said in obedience, in faith, "Not my will, but yours be
done." The apostle Peter, in his first letter, tells us how Jesus was
able to do that. Peter says, "When he was reviled, he did not revile
in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he trusted to him
who judges justly."
Our time around the table this morning can be a time of ministry to each
of us. It's a time when we can bring our doubt, both self-doubt and doubt
in the Lord, our weak faith, and our struggles to him. And he promises to
meet us. We can be spiritually strengthened as we symbolically take the
bread that represents the broken body and as we drink the wine that reminds
us of his shed blood. The hymn that we sang this morning, "My Faith
Has Found a Resting Place," says that our faith rests "not in
device," that is not in the strength of my faith, "nor creed,"
that is not in any theological system, but "we trust the ever-living
One." His wounds and his brokenness on the cross remind us of the healing
that is available. The hymn says that it's enough that Jesus continues to
save. You can experience salvation this morning in the area of doubt and
faithlessness. It can be healed. The hymn writer says his heart is leaning
on the word of God, the written word of God. We come to a great physician
who heals the sick. His precious blood was shed for us. We can experience
that salvation this morning as we come to the table of the Lord.
Catalog No. 4312
Jeremiah 19:14-20:18
Third message
Doug Goins
November 24, 1991
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