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Jeremiah 2:28

Zero + or x 0 always equals Zero!

Idols always prove useless in the day of calamity. Jeremiah pointed that out to the Israelites with a tone that carried both warning and a touch of sharp wit. He knew a day of reckoning was coming and that their gods of wood and stone would be helpless. In Jeremiah 2:28, he writes, “But where are the gods that you made for yourself? Let them arise if they can save you in your time of trouble, for as many as your cities are your gods, O Judah.” Jeremiah is mocking them not only for the emptiness of their deities but also for their impotence. They cannot do anything. It was not unusual for each town or village to have its own gods. They were everywhere. But it did not matter how many there were. As Mackay points out, “But surely because there are so many of them, their numbers will make up for any lack of power on the part of one. However, no matter how long the string of zeros you add or multiply together, the result never changes from zero.” The math of idolatry never improves, no matter how enthusiastically it is practiced.

Even so, the Israelites continued to multiply gods in the land. They became less trusting and more trying. They were people of many religious expressions but with no focus on the one true God. They certainly were a nation with attention deficit disorder, unable to focus attention on the important issue at hand. Unfortunately, our nation has its own version of this spiritual distraction. We collect substitutes for God with the enthusiasm of hobbyists collecting baseball cards. Yet in spite of the many deities Americans might serve, they all prove to be as worthless as zero. No matter how many there are or what is done with them, they always result in the same answer: zero. Dearman says, “What makes idols worthless? The short answer is that they are not divine, and they cannot save! Idols are a substitute for the real thing; they may be attractive and appealing to people with heightened religious longings. Idols offer theological rewards, but they cannot save.” More activity and more devotion to more things do not create security. Such confusion often produces the opposite.

Into this landscape of spiritual arithmetic steps Jesus. He spoke to the woman at the well about the futility of drawing water from empty sources, offering instead “living water” that truly satisfies (John 4:10). To reject that living water is to reject the offer of life that only God can grant. The New Testament reminds us, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols” (1 John 5:21), and also declares, “Salvation is found in no one else” (Acts 4:12). Where idols add up to nothing, Christ brings fullness. Where lifeless gods remain silent, He speaks words that endure beyond calamity and beyond the limits of human arithmetic.

Jeremiah 2:27, Romans 1:23

Everybody serves somebody

The woman in John chapter eight was caught in a tangled web of unfaithfulness, a moment of exposure that left her standing without excuse. Her sin was personal and public, yet it mirrored a larger story that Jeremiah told about Israel. Jeremiah often described the nation as adulterers who had abandoned their vows and turned toward other lovers. Their unfaithfulness was spiritual, though it often carried physical expressions in idolatrous practices. Idols always fail their worshipers, and that was certainly true for Israel. Jeremiah wrote, “…who say to a tree, ‘You are my father,’ and to a stone, ‘You gave me birth.’ For they have turned their back to me and not their face. But in the time of their trouble, they say, ‘Arise and save us!’” The prophet’s words carried a sharp edge. People were placing their trust in carved wood and shaped stone, then expecting rescue when trouble arrived. It is difficult not to smile gently at the absurdity, yet the smile fades when we recognize familiar patterns in our own hearts.

It was not that Israel had become irreligious. When people turn away from God, they rarely stop believing in something. They simply change the object of their devotion. Like Israel, our culture is not secular in the sense of being empty of worship. Everybody serves somebody or something. Bob Dylan captured that truth in his song when he wrote, “You may be an ambassador to England or France, you may like to gamble, you might like to dance… But you are going to have to serve somebody.” We serve success, comfort, reputation, and sometimes the opinions of people we do not even like. When the pressure rises, we often discover that these modern idols have the strength of a cardboard umbrella in a thunderstorm. As Paul observed in Romans 1:23, humanity has “…exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.” We laugh softly at ancient stone idols while polishing our own.

Into this confused devotion steps Jesus. In John chapter eight, He faced the woman and her accusers with quiet authority and unexpected mercy. Instead of condemnation, He offered restoration and truth. His presence revealed both the seriousness of sin and the depth of divine compassion. The New Testament reminds us, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Where lifeless idols fail, Christ speaks and acts. Where false gods remain silent, He forgives and renews. The contrast is striking: stone cannot answer, wood cannot save, but the living Son of God still bends down to write in the dust and lift the fallen.

Jeremiah 2:26, John 8, Jeremiah 8:12

Caught Red Handed

In John chapter 8 we read about a woman caught “red-handed” in the act of adultery. She is taken by the religious leaders into the public square and placed before Jesus for sentencing. After writing in the sand, all of her accusers quietly slip away. We can assume that whatever Jesus wrote reminded each accuser of personal sin in a way that brought shame to them, and they realized they too had been caught red-handed. Instead of condemning the woman to be stoned to death according to the law, Jesus forgave her, encouraged her to leave her sinful life, and set her free to return to her friends and family. Shame for sin should drive us to Christ, not cause us to run from Him. He forgives, heals, and restores. Had the religious leaders felt the same exposure as the woman, they too could have found forgiveness and restoration, but they rejected Jesus and slipped away.

Jeremiah places all Israel in the position of that woman caught red-handed. In Jeremiah he writes, “As a thief is shamed when caught, so the house of Israel shall be shamed: they, their kings, their officials, their priests, and their prophets.” As Mackay points out, “The Hebrew concept of ‘disgrace and shame’ focuses more on the outward loss of status and reputation than on inward feelings.” A thief caught with stolen goods may feel nothing at all, yet his standing is still damaged. We manage appearances, polish reputations, and learn the art of looking innocent while hoping nobody checks the receipts. Even so, exposure has a way of arriving. When truth steps into the square, excuses often leave, like the accusers in John chapter 8.

No one felt the weight of exposure more graciously than Jesus. He declared, “Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more.” The New Testament reminds us that “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,” and yet also proclaims that “there is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” In a world that has nearly forgotten how to blush, Christ still reveals sin without crushing the sinner. He meets disgrace with mercy and replaces accusation with restoration. When shame leads us toward Him instead of away, we discover that the One who stooped to write in the dust also rises to lift us back to our feet.

Jeremiah 2:25

A Hopeless Case

Jeremiah asserted that the Israelites had become like wild animals. They had lost their ability to reason and to control themselves. They gave themselves over to the naked lusts of the flesh and were simply slaves to their appetites. As Davidson says, “The people are hooked, like a drug addict, aware of the possible dangers in the situation, yet unable to stifle the craving for another shot.” God had cared for them when He delivered them from slavery in Egypt. He fed them, gave them water, and even preserved their clothing and shoes for forty years. Yet Jeremiah calls them back to God’s care in Jeremiah 2:25: “Keep your feet from going unshod and your throat from thirst. But you said, ‘It is hopeless, for I have loved foreigners, and after them I will go.’” I recently watched a documentary about the painkiller Oxycontin. Those who became addicted often suffered this same fate. They knew it would ruin their lives but could not stop. During our time, many city streets are filled with people who cannot abandon their addictions, even when their shoes are quite literally worn out.

Jeremiah, speaking for God, explains that running after the pleasures of the flesh results in nothing but worn-out shoes. Solomon made this case clear in Ecclesiastes. He had everything and found it meaningless, a “vanity of vanities,” like trying to catch the wind. When it is all over, you have little to show for it except “wasted days and wasted nights.” We are all born with fleshly passions and desires, and giving ourselves to them without restraint results in slavery, not freedom. They will not let us go. As Mackay observed, “Judah is seen to be willfully intent on pursuing its own perception of what is for its good, having rejected the service of the Lord. But it was not freedom they had achieved; rather, they were trapped in an even greater slavery.” Even those of us who pride ourselves on self-control sometimes discover that our appetites are stronger than our good intentions. A man may swear off sweets in the morning and befriend a donut by noon.

Yes, like a modern addict, many felt their situation was hopeless. Wiersbe writes, “… they despaired of being saved. ‘It’s no use!’ (2:25, NIV) was their excuse. ‘It’s hopeless!’ They sounded like confirmed alcoholics or compulsive gamblers who cannot break the habit, or like the invalid at the Pool of Bethesda” who had given up hope (John 5:1–9). I have agreed with such gloomy self-assessments at times, yet the New Testament presents another view. Jesus approached the man at Bethesda and restored him. He also declared, “So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed” (John 8:36). Christ remains the God of hopeless cases. As Wesley wrote, “He breaks the power of canceled sin / He sets the prisoner free.”

Jeremiah 2:24

Chasing the wrong things

My uncle Johnny was an authority on Manfred von Richthofen, better known as the Red Baron. He loved to tell how the famous pilot shot down eighty enemy aircraft during the First World War and how he built a working model of the red Fokker triplane to fly at airshows across Florida. On April 12, 1918, Richthofen was pursuing a Canadian pilot with such intensity that he flew too far into enemy territory. Eyewitnesses said he was flying dangerously low, completely absorbed in the chase, and never realized where he was until he was shot down. Focused desire clouded his awareness, and it cost him his life. Jeremiah describes a similar tragedy in the life of faith. People chase what they want with such concentration that they lose track of where they are. Possessions, pleasures, and positions become the horizon, and the warning signs slip quietly past.

That blindness is exactly what Jeremiah confronts in Israel. After likening them to an adulteress, a corrupt branch, and an irremovable stain, he challenges their denial: “How can you say, ‘I am not unclean, I have not gone after the Baals’? Look at your way in the valley; know what you have done” (Jeremiah 2:23). Their behavior told the story plainly enough. Jeremiah goes further, comparing them to animals driven by instinct rather than reflection. “A restless young camel running here and there, a wild donkey used to the wilderness, in her heat sniffing the wind” (Jeremiah 2:24). Gingrich notes that Judah did not need to be wooed by false gods; she pursued them eagerly. The picture is embarrassing, intentionally so. Desire unrestrained becomes self-parody, and sin advertises itself long before it admits its name.

The New Testament speaks with the same clarity about misplaced pursuit. Paul warns that “those who live according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh” (Romans 8:5), and such focus narrows vision until nothing else registers. Jesus describes it more sharply: “Everyone who commits sin is a slave to sin” (John 8:34). Slaves do not choose their direction; they follow their impulses wherever they lead. Israel ran after idols the way the Red Baron chased his target, unaware of the danger until the fall came. Christ enters that story as the one who restores sight and altitude. Paul writes, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has passed away” (Second Corinthians 5:17). In Him, the chase is broken, awareness returns, and the soul is lifted out of reckless pursuit into a truer sense of where it belongs.

Jeremiah 2:23

Thy Word is Truth

Sin is not shallow. It runs to the bone and settles into the assumptions we carry without noticing. Its danger lies in its invisibility; it hides under the skin and rarely announces itself with a warning label. Over time it also bends our vision, so even honest self-examination feels like looking through fog. Paul told the Corinthians that “the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers” so that truth could stand plainly before them and still not be grasped (Second Corinthians 4:4). Jeremiah faced that same blindness in Israel. After comparing them to an adulterer, a corrupt branch, and an unremovable stain, he exposes their denial: “How can you say, ‘I am not unclean, I have not gone after the Baals’? Look at your way in the valley; know what you have done” (Jeremiah 2:23). The problem was not a lack of evidence but a lack of sight.

Commentators help us see how deep the blindness ran. Dearman locates the “valley” as Hinnom, infamous for idolatry and child sacrifice. Davidson observes that addiction to evil reshapes values until nothing seems wrong. Mackay adds that the people defended themselves with appeals to orthodoxy, the temple, and functioning religious systems. In other words, the checklist looked impressive while the heart wandered freely. That feels uncomfortably familiar. It is easy to confuse activity with faithfulness and to assume that correct forms guarantee a clean conscience. Jeremiah insists otherwise. Their practices differed little from the pagans around them, even though they wore better vocabulary and stood closer to holy furniture.

Jeremiah presses them to “know” what they had done, not as new information but as honest assessment under the covenant. Mackay notes that facts were available; discernment was missing. I remember my wife’s years at Assure Women’s Center and a young woman convinced she needed an abortion to fit into a prom dress. She spoke confidently about unborn souls floating in never-never land, waiting for assignment. The logic was creative, if nothing else. Jeremiah had already answered such thinking: God says, “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you” (Jeremiah 1:5). The New Testament sharpens the light. Jesus declares, “Everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin” (John 8:34), and Paul reminds us that self-deception is a skill easily learned (Galatians 6:3). Christ does not merely expose blindness; He heals it. As Paul writes, “God… has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (Second Corinthians 4:6). That light is steady, revealing what we might otherwise rationalize away.

Jeremiah 2:22, 1 John 1:7

What Can Wash Away My Sin?

By the time Jeremiah prophesied in the sixth century before Christ, the nation of Israel had wandered far from God and from His direction for a healthy and whole life. Jeremiah reaches for vivid metaphors to describe that rupture. Israel is portrayed as an unfaithful lover, then as a hybrid plant incapable of bearing fruit, and finally as a garment so stained that no cleanser can restore it. “Though you wash yourself with lye and use much soap, the stain of your guilt is still before me, declares the Lord God” (Jeremiah 2:22). That image brings to mind an old song from the Jarmels in 1961, sung from the perspective of a wounded lover: “A little bit of soap will wash away your lipstick on my face… but a little bit of soap will never, never, never ever erase the pain in my heart.” The song ends with the line, “Like a bird, you left your robin’s nest… you flew away.” Israel had flown away from God’s love, and Scripture tells us that such turning always “fills his heart with pain” (see Genesis 6).

The root of the problem was Israel’s turn from God to religions of self-effort. The surrounding nations practiced dark rituals meant to manipulate their gods into giving them what they wanted. These acts promised spiritual connection but delivered corruption that ran far deeper than the surface. Constance observes, “Nothing they could do in trying to wash away their sin of self-effort could blot out their gross transgression.” That rings uncomfortably true. Sin is not a smudge on the cheek that disappears with a quick rinse; it settles into the fabric of who we are. We are often tempted to reach for our own forms of soap, moral effort, distraction, or even religious performance, hoping they will tidy things up. Experience suggests otherwise. We scrub, we polish, and still the stain stares back at us in the mirror.

Philip Graham Ryken presses the point with clarity: “Sin is not simply a cosmetic problem… What soap can wash away sin from the soul? There is no home remedy to take away guilt.” The New Testament answers that question with surprising grace. John writes, “The blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin” (First John 1:7). What Jeremiah saw as an incurable stain finds its remedy not in stronger soap but in a deeper cleansing. Paul echoes this hope when he says, “Such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ” (First Corinthians 6:11). The old hymn captures the truth better than any detergent advertisement ever could: “Are you washed in the blood… and are they white as snow?” The stain that no soap can reach is met by a grace that goes all the way through.

Jeremiah 2:21, John 15:1-9

Then Came Jesus!

Jeremiah piles metaphor upon metaphor to describe Israel’s rebellion, and none is particularly flattering. He begins with the image of a prostitute and then turns to agriculture, perhaps hoping the sting might land differently. In Jeremiah 2:22, God says, “I planted you a choice vine, wholly of pure seed. How, then, have you turned degenerate and become a wild vine?” As E. A. Martens notes, Israel is often compared to a vine elsewhere in Scripture, “but the point here is the detestable plant that she has become.” The image is striking. God brought His people out of Egypt, purified them in the wilderness, and cared for them patiently for forty years. He pruned, watered, and nourished them with manna from heaven, a kind of divine Miracle Grow. Having removed corrupting influences, He planted them in a land flowing with milk and honey. Everything about the setup suggested healthy fruit was on the way.

Time, however, revealed a different harvest. Surrounded by pagan cultures, the pure vine absorbed foreign influences and became a hybrid that could only produce rotten fruit. Instead of rich clusters fit for the vineyard owner, Israel produced what might be called mule branches. Like the offspring of a horse and a donkey, a mule looks sturdy enough but cannot reproduce. Jeremiah’s point is uncomfortable but clear: corruption leads to barrenness. This is not ancient history alone. We recognize the pattern easily enough in ourselves. We are carefully tended, generously provided for, and still surprised when compromise dulls what once seemed vibrant. We expect sweetness while mixing in things that guarantee bitterness. The vineyard imagery exposes how subtle drift can undo careful planting, often without dramatic rebellion, just quiet accommodation.

That long story sets the stage for a remarkable New Testament contrast. Humanity’s problem did not begin with Israel but with Adam and Eve, planted in a perfect garden yet corrupted at the root. From that seed came a race unable to produce fruit pleasing to God. Then Jesus arrived. In John 15:1, He says, “I am the true vine,” distinguishing Himself from every degenerate vine before Him. Where Adam failed, Jesus fulfilled the will of the Father. Paul calls Him the second Adam, and the comparison fits. From the Father’s love for Him and His love for the Father, Jesus produced fruit meant for all humanity. He explains, “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love” (John 15:9). Later He adds, “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you” (John 15:12). What manna was to Israel, Christ’s love is to believers, the sustaining power that makes real fruit possible at last.

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