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.”
