Read Jeremiah 13.
Many times the LORD instructed one of the prophets to do something unusual.
These served as visual aids to gain attention and gather a curious crowd
who would listen to the message. In this chapter, Jeremiah has two such
assignments.
1. The Linen Belt (vv.1-11)
The LORD told Jeremiah to wear a linen belt. This would have been what
the priests wore in that day. After sometime, God told him to bury the
belt. Then later, He told Jeremiah to dig up the belt and take a good
look. The belt, of course, was dirty, falling apart, and no longer of any
use. It was an illustration for God's message to Judah. He chose
them and made them cling to Himself. But the people had buried themselves
in the surrounding pagan culture. They refused to listen to the word of
God and live for Him. Spiritually, they were dirty, falling apart, and no
longer could they be used by God.
2. The Wine Jars (vv.12-14)
The message began with the statement to fill every jar with wine. Immediately,
the people derisively questioned the instruction. It was a picture of
Judah's spiritual condition. Their intoxication with false teaching and
pagan practices caused them to reel here and there through life with a loss of
direction and sense. As a result, God's judgment would smash their wrong
beliefs and the nation like broken jars.
The judgment will come with Judah being taken captive (v.17) and forced into
exile (v.19) by an invader from the north (v.20).
Three times Jeremiah exposed the root problem as that of pride (vv.9, 15, 17).
He called for them to humble themselves and give God His rightful glory
before it would be too late.
God loves it when we humble ourselves in worship and cast our dependence upon
Him. It is the very thing that triggers His grace to us.
"Clothe yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another,
for 'God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble." (1 Peter 5:5)
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