According to the prophet Jeremiah, the wicked deny the reality of sowing and reaping. They live as though God is not watching, does not care, or perhaps does not exist at all. Life becomes a matter of chance, a roll of the dice rather than a moral order. In that sense, there are really two kinds of people. The first believes there is a sovereign Creator who oversees human life and holds each person accountable. In this view, good and evil are not forgotten but are ultimately addressed with justice. The second sees only randomness. There is no guiding hand, no final accountability, only the here and now. People take what they can, do what they wish, and hope for the best. It is a simple philosophy, though it often becomes complicated when consequences begin to appear.
The children of Israel, despite their history with God, drifted into that second way of thinking. They had seen His works, yet chose to treat Him as irrelevant. Jeremiah confronts this mindset directly in 5:12: “They have spoken falsely of the LORD and have said, ‘He will do nothing; no disaster will come upon us.’” They believed they were exempt. That idea still finds a comfortable place in modern thinking. It is easy to assume that consequences apply in general but not necessarily in our particular situation. A radio commentator once described three common excuses: denial, shifting blame, and the familiar “I did it, but…” approach. I recognize those patterns more quickly than I would prefer. There is a quiet confidence that suggests the rules might bend just a little in our favor. The life of Chris Farley offers a sobering illustration. Despite success and awareness of his struggles, he admitted, “I used to think that you could get to a level of success where the laws of the universe did not apply…But they do.” His conclusion was clear: “I am not exempt.” It is a difficult lesson, and it often arrives later than we would like.
The New Testament brings this truth into sharper focus while also offering something more. Paul writes, “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap” (Galatians 6:7). The principle remains unchanged. Yet alongside that reality stands the grace found in Jesus Christ. He does not dismiss justice, but He steps into our situation with mercy. Paul explains, “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23). In Christ, we are reminded that while no one is exempt from truth, no one is beyond the reach of grace.
