In Jeremiah 4:30, Judah is pictured as a rebellious woman dressing herself to attract the very enemies who will destroy her. She puts on her red dress, applies her makeup, and adorns herself with jewelry, believing she can secure favor through appearance. Yet the outcome is painfully clear. As Ryken notes, “You adorn yourself in vain. Your lovers despise you; they seek your life.” What she hopes will save her becomes the means of her downfall. Jeremiah continues in verse 31 with the image of a woman in labor, gasping for breath, crying out in anguish. It is a striking progression. What began as seduction ends in suffering. The very desires she pursued conceived something that ultimately consumed her. The message is not subtle. Turning from God to seek satisfaction elsewhere does not lead to life. It leads to loss.
That pattern is not limited to ancient Judah. It appears in quieter, more familiar ways. We still dress things up, hoping they will deliver more than they can. We pursue what promises satisfaction, thinking it will add something meaningful to life. I have noticed how easily appearances can persuade me. Something can look convincing at first glance, only to reveal its emptiness later. It is a bit like buying something because it looked impressive in the store, only to discover at home that it does not quite work as expected. The deeper issue, however, is not the object itself but the hope we place in it. When we look for fulfillment outside of what God has designed, we often find that the result does not match the promise. As James writes, “Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when it is fully grown brings forth death” (James 1:15). The imagery echoes Jeremiah’s words. What begins with attraction can end with consequences we did not anticipate.
The New Testament points us to a different source of satisfaction in Jesus Christ. Piper describes faith as something that not only justifies but also satisfies, freeing the heart from lesser attachments. Jesus Himself said, “Whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again” (John 4:14). In Him, the search for fulfillment finds a steady answer. Paul writes, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17). This new life does not eliminate every struggle, but it reorients the heart. What once seemed necessary begins to lose its hold. In Christ, the attraction shifts from what ultimately harms to what truly gives life.
