Jeremiah does not soften the message when he speaks to Israel. Just as the blessings of the covenant had been theirs for many years, so too would the curses for breaking that covenant follow. It is a difficult truth, yet even in the middle of that warning, God leaves a promise of hope. Jeremiah 5:18 says, “But even in those days, declares the LORD, I will not make a full end of you.” Hall captures it well: “it is the one ray of hope in an ominous sky.” God would preserve a remnant. Jeremiah, with clear vision, had his eyes on Bethlehem and Calvary, even before those places became central to the story. This promise begins to unfold more fully in Jeremiah 31 with the New Covenant, the arrangement God would establish not based on human faithfulness, but on His own. Even in judgment, God refuses to abandon His people completely.
That promise of “not a full end” speaks quietly into our daily lives. We all experience loss, disappointment, and moments that feel final. Plans fall apart, relationships strain, and bodies do not cooperate the way they once did. There are days when hope feels like it took a wrong turn and forgot to leave a forwarding address. Yet something in us keeps listening for good news. I have noticed that even when we say we expect the worst, we still peek around the corner hoping for something better. The phrase “I will not make a full end of you” reminds us that endings in this life are rarely as complete as they seem. There is often more to the story than what we can see in the moment. Even in difficult seasons, there remains a thread of mercy that has not been cut.
The New Testament reveals that this thread of hope finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ. His life consistently intersected with people who had run out of options. The blind man, the suffering woman, the lepers, the crippled man at the pool, and even grieving sisters at a tomb all discovered that their final chapter was not as final as they thought. Jesus did not simply bring comfort; He brought life. Peter writes, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Peter 1:3). This is not a fragile hope but a living one, anchored in His resurrection. In Christ, God’s promise stands clear: there is no full end, only a future held securely in Him.
