The idols that captured God’s children’s attention proved useless in their greatest moments of need. That has always been the case. God confronted His children in their sin and drew them back with patient love. He strove with the wandering out of unfailing concern, yet they often found fault with His program rather than with their own choices. Sometimes even His loving discipline seemed to have no effect. They insisted on persevering in sin and went so far as to attack God’s messengers. Jeremiah 2:30 records the Lord’s lament: “In vain have I struck your children; they took no correction; your own sword devoured your prophets like a ravening lion.” The image is stark. Instead of receiving correction, they resisted it. Instead of welcoming truth, they silenced it. The situation reads like a tragic family scene in which loving warnings are met with slammed doors and folded arms. God’s love remained steady, even when His children treated His care like an unwanted Valentine left unopened on the table.
Constance observes, “Sin can so sear our conscience that all sense of right and wrong is totally distorted.” That condition was evident in Israel and feels strangely familiar today. Behaviors once recognized as contrary to God’s Word are often rebranded as admirable. The moral compass spins like a grocery cart wheel with a mind of its own, and many simply shrug and keep pushing. Discipline and correction did little to change Israel. Their hearts hardened as Pharaoh’s heart hardened against the plagues. There comes a sobering point where repeated resistance dulls the voice of conscience. As Valentine’s Day approaches, shelves fill with symbols of affection, yet genuine devotion to God often receives far less attention. The “ravening lion” described in Jeremiah paints a picture of destructive persistence, a force that devours without hesitation. History and imagination offer vivid parallels, from relentless fictional creatures to very real examples of hardened hearts. The result is confusion that breeds insecurity and a growing inability to recognize what truly gives life.
The New Testament reveals both the seriousness of hardened hearts and the hope that still remains. Jesus wept over Jerusalem, lamenting its resistance to God’s care, yet He continued His mission of redemption. He declared, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick” (Matthew 9:12). His words acknowledge the illness while offering healing. Hebrews 12:6 reminds us, “For the Lord disciplines the one he loves,” revealing that correction is an expression of divine care, not rejection. Valentine’s Day celebrates love with cards and flowers, but Christ demonstrated love in a way that cannot be packaged or purchased. As Romans 5:8 reminds us, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” Where idols fail and hearts grow stubborn, His enduring love continues to call, confront, and restore.
