God is always calling His wayward children home. Even though His bride, Israel, had forsaken her vows and prostituted herself, His everlasting love continued to pursue her. No matter how long she had wandered or how far she had fallen, God’s love had not diminished. His words and actions were designed to bring her back. Yet, like Israel, people often move further away instead of being drawn near. In Jeremiah 2:33, God indicts His bride with sobering honesty: “How well you direct your course to seek love! So that even to wicked women, you have taught your ways.” Willis explains this verse candidly: “She has failed miserably as a wife, but she has excelled as a prostitute. How skilled you are at pursuing love! She is the expert; she has ‘written the book’ on how to be promiscuous. She is the one who will be interviewed on the television talk shows to give the most sought-after advice regarding this topic because even the worst of women can learn from your ways.” Israel had become tragically proficient in chasing false love while forgetting the One who had first loved her.
The imagery is painfully relevant. Like Gomer in the book of Hosea, Israel had become an expert at wandering. Hosea 2:13 declares that she “adorned herself with her ring and jewelry, and went after her lovers and forgot me, declares the Lord.” Guenther notes that the unfaithful wife decorated herself for adultery, possibly wearing jewelry associated with prostitution or pagan worship. It is easy to smile at such descriptions and assume distance from them, yet the human heart can be remarkably creative in its distractions. We polish our pursuits, chase approval, and sometimes display impressive energy in seeking everything except the One who gives life. We may not bow to carved idols, yet we can become quite skilled at managing our own little kingdoms. If spiritual wandering earned college credits, many of us would have honorary degrees hanging on the wall.
Still, God’s love continues to pursue. Even in the painful narrative of Hosea and Gomer, the goal was restoration rather than rejection. Hosea 2:14 records God’s promise: “Therefore, behold, I will allure her, and bring her into the wilderness, and speak tenderly to her.” This tender pursuit finds its fullest expression in Jesus Christ. The New Testament declares, “But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Jesus described Himself as the shepherd who seeks the wandering sheep “until he finds it” (Luke 15:4). His mission was clear: “The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10). God’s everlasting love, celebrated throughout the Psalms, reaches its clearest expression in the One who continues to call His people home.
