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Jeremiah 5:17, Zechariah 9:9-10

The Battle Bow

In Jeremiah 5:16, we encounter a striking figure of speech. It is a simile. Speaking of the invading Babylonian army, Jeremiah writes, “Their quiver is like an open tomb; they are all mighty warriors.” Martens explains that “quivers like an open grave” suggests deadly arrows, always ready to claim more victims, as a grave seems to hunger for the living. It is vivid and unsettling. History gives us similar images. When a Persian envoy warned Leonidas that their arrows would darken the sun, he replied, “So much the better…we shall fight them in the shade.” Another account tells of Darius misreading a symbolic warning from the Scythians, nearly to his destruction. These stories remind us that understanding imagery matters. Jeremiah’s image is not poetic decoration; it is a clear warning. The weapons of judgment are real, and they are not idle.

That idea presses into our daily lives in quieter ways. We may not face literal arrows, but words, decisions, and consequences can land with surprising force. It is possible to misunderstand what is right in front of us, just as Darius almost did. I have found that I can be quite confident in my interpretations, even when they are slightly off, which is a polite way of saying I occasionally miss the point entirely. The Bible’s imagery invites us to slow down and look more carefully. What appears harmless may carry weight, and what seems distant may be closer than we think. The language of Scripture is not meant to confuse but to reveal. When we ignore it or reshape it to fit our preferences, we risk walking straight into what we failed to recognize. Even in ordinary life, a poorly understood message can lead to unnecessary trouble.

The New Testament brings this imagery into a different light through Jesus Christ. While the Old Testament speaks of judgment with the language of bows and arrows, the prophets also looked forward to a day when the “battle bow shall be cut off” (Zechariah 9:10). That promise finds its fulfillment in Christ, who comes not riding in with weapons, but “humble and mounted on a donkey” (Matthew 21:5). He brings peace where conflict once ruled. Paul writes, “For he himself is our peace” (Ephesians 2:14). In Him, the imagery of war gives way to reconciliation. The bow is set aside, and peace is proclaimed to the nations. Jesus does not deny the seriousness of judgment, but He provides a path through it. In His life and work, the arrows that once threatened are replaced by a message of grace that reaches farther than any weapon ever could.

Jeremiah 5:15, Romans 8:37-39

I Understand Him

When man refused to hear and obey God’s Word in Genesis 10, they did not go forth and multiply. Instead, they stayed in one place and united to build a life without Him. God responded by confusing their languages so they could no longer understand one another. This created distance and division, sending people out across the earth just as God had originally directed. Genesis records that nations formed, each with its own language, unable to communicate with the others. That inability to understand still echoes today. Misunderstanding has a way of creating distance far faster than we can repair it. Yet right after this scattering, God “spoke” to Abraham. Abraham heard Him, understood Him, and responded in faith. In the middle of confusion, God made Himself understood to one man, beginning a story that would reach far beyond him.

That tension between hearing and not hearing plays out in daily life more than we might like to admit. We live in a world full of words, yet true understanding can still be rare. Conversations can pass back and forth without ever really connecting. I have noticed that it is possible to nod at the right time, say “I see what you mean,” and still miss the point entirely. The problem is not always the volume of communication but the depth of it. The Israelites struggled in this same way. Though God spoke clearly through Jeremiah, they stopped listening and therefore stopped trusting. Jeremiah warned them in 5:15 that a nation would come “whose language you do not know, nor can you understand what they say.” Without understanding, compassion disappears, and people begin to treat each other as less than human. It is a sobering reminder that when communication breaks down, relationships often follow.

The New Testament reveals that this long story of confusion finds its answer in Jesus Christ. After His death and resurrection, He appeared to His disciples, and soon after, they spoke to people from many nations in languages they could understand. What began in Genesis with division begins to reverse. Jesus is described as the Word, the ultimate expression of God speaking to humanity. John writes, “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14). In Him, God is no longer distant or unclear. Through Christ, the message is not lost in translation. Paul captures this beautifully in Romans 8:37-39, reminding us that nothing “will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” In Jesus, the language of love is spoken clearly, understood deeply, and shared across every boundary.

Jeremiah 5:14

Words of Love

I was probably eight years old when my neighbor and best friend, Butch, got into a fight with the two Krum brothers down the street. Their mother ran us off, and as we left, the boys called us some pretty ugly names. Together, we shouted back all the way up the block, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me!” It sounded convincing at the time. As I grew older, I learned that words can leave marks that no bandage can cover. A punch in the nose fades faster than a sentence that lingers in the mind. Words spoken by those closest to us, parents, teachers, spouses, and friends, can either steady us or quietly undo us. I still find it curious that we try to shrug off words as harmless, even while remembering things said years ago with surprising clarity.

When God speaks, His words do far more than describe reality; they create it. His voice brings order out of chaos, light into darkness, and life where there was none. Yet when His words are rejected, ignored, or dismissed, the result is not neutral. Jeremiah captures this with striking imagery in 5:14: “Because you have spoken this word, behold, I am making my words in your mouth a fire, and this people wood, and the fire shall consume them.” Words can warm or burn, depending on how they are received. That truth settles into daily life in ways we often overlook. We speak constantly, sometimes carefully, sometimes carelessly. I have noticed that it takes far less effort to say something sharp than to say something helpful. The tongue seems to have a quick reflex, and wisdom occasionally arrives a few seconds too late. Scripture reminds us, “Death and life are in the power of the tongue” (Proverbs 18:21), a truth that feels both simple and challenging.

The New Testament reveals that God’s final and clearest Word is not merely spoken but embodied in Jesus Christ. John writes, “In the beginning was the Word… and the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:1, 14). In Him, God’s voice is heard not just in sound, but in life and action. The story of Steve Henning, who heard for the first time after decades of silence, captures something of this wonder. The first words he heard from his wife were, “I love you.” That moment reflects the heart of the gospel. Paul writes, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Jesus is the Word spoken to reach us, to be understood, and to be received. In Him, words are no longer empty; they carry the fullness of God’s love into human hearts.

Jeremiah 5:13

Living in Denial

After the death of Solomon, the kingdom of Israel splintered into a shadow of what it had been. A nation once delivered from slavery and sustained by God’s provision began to drift into denial. They acted as though consequences no longer applied, as if they were free to live without accountability. When Jeremiah confronted them with the reality of sowing and reaping, they did not pause to consider his words. Instead, they pushed back. Jeremiah 5:13 records their response: “The prophets will become wind; the word is not in them. Thus shall it be done to them!” In their view, Jeremiah was just another voice in the noise, a man full of hot air announcing trouble that would never come. They dismissed both the message and the messenger, assuming that what they could not see or measure could not possibly be real.

That same instinct has a way of appearing in everyday life. A radio series on honesty once described three common excuses people use when they are confronted with wrongdoing. The first is outright denial. The second shifts blame to someone else. The third admits the action but quickly attaches a “but” to soften the responsibility. I recognize all three more easily than I would like to admit. It is remarkable how quickly the mind can assemble a defense. I have even seen how a simple question about personal responsibility can stir strong reactions. Once, while sitting at my kitchen table with a young Vietnam veteran, I asked whether his own actions might have contributed to his situation. He responded by throwing a glass of lemonade in my face. That moment stayed with me, not only because of the sticky aftermath, but because it reflected something deeper. It is not easy to face the possibility that we might bear some responsibility for where we are. Denial often feels safer than reflection.

The New Testament brings clarity to this tendency by pointing us to truth that cannot be dismissed as mere wind. Paul writes, “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap” (Galatians 6:7). The principle Jeremiah spoke of remains in place. Yet the story does not end with judgment alone. Jesus enters the picture as both truth and grace. He said, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:32). Unlike the voices that were ignored in Jeremiah’s day, Christ does not merely warn; He also restores. In Him, we see a truth that is not harsh for its own sake, but honest for the sake of healing. What we are often tempted to dismiss as uncomfortable may, in fact, be the very word that leads us back to life.

Jeremiah 5:12

What Goes Around…

According to the prophet Jeremiah, the wicked deny the reality of sowing and reaping. They live as though God is not watching, does not care, or perhaps does not exist at all. Life becomes a matter of chance, a roll of the dice rather than a moral order. In that sense, there are really two kinds of people. The first believes there is a sovereign Creator who oversees human life and holds each person accountable. In this view, good and evil are not forgotten but are ultimately addressed with justice. The second sees only randomness. There is no guiding hand, no final accountability, only the here and now. People take what they can, do what they wish, and hope for the best. It is a simple philosophy, though it often becomes complicated when consequences begin to appear.

The children of Israel, despite their history with God, drifted into that second way of thinking. They had seen His works, yet chose to treat Him as irrelevant. Jeremiah confronts this mindset directly in 5:12: “They have spoken falsely of the LORD and have said, ‘He will do nothing; no disaster will come upon us.’” They believed they were exempt. That idea still finds a comfortable place in modern thinking. It is easy to assume that consequences apply in general but not necessarily in our particular situation. A radio commentator once described three common excuses: denial, shifting blame, and the familiar “I did it, but…” approach. I recognize those patterns more quickly than I would prefer. There is a quiet confidence that suggests the rules might bend just a little in our favor. The life of Chris Farley offers a sobering illustration. Despite success and awareness of his struggles, he admitted, “I used to think that you could get to a level of success where the laws of the universe did not apply…But they do.” His conclusion was clear: “I am not exempt.” It is a difficult lesson, and it often arrives later than we would like.

The New Testament brings this truth into sharper focus while also offering something more. Paul writes, “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap” (Galatians 6:7). The principle remains unchanged. Yet alongside that reality stands the grace found in Jesus Christ. He does not dismiss justice, but He steps into our situation with mercy. Paul explains, “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23). In Christ, we are reminded that while no one is exempt from truth, no one is beyond the reach of grace.

Jeremiah 5:11, 2 Corinthians 13:4-8, 2 Timothy 2:13

God’s Love

When people use the word “utterly,” they usually mean something complete or total, carried to the highest degree. Yet when God deals with His people, He never uses “utterly” in that final sense. Even in judgment, He sets limits. In Jeremiah 5:10, when He calls Israel’s enemies to invade, He restrains the destruction. Though the house of Israel and Judah had been “utterly treacherous” (Jeremiah 5:11), God does not utterly destroy them. He remembers His promises to Abraham. He preserves a remnant. There is always a thread of hope woven into even the darkest warnings. This consistency reveals something steady about God’s character. As Paul later writes, “If we are faithless, he remains faithful—for he cannot deny himself” (2 Timothy 2:13). God’s faithfulness is not dependent on human consistency. That is both comforting and, if we are honest, a bit surprising.

That truth meets us in the middle of ordinary life, where inconsistency seems to come naturally. We start well, drift a little, and then wonder how we wandered so far from where we intended to be. I have noticed that good intentions are often easier to make than to keep. Promises can sound strong in the morning and feel less certain by the afternoon. Yet even in our unevenness, there remains a quiet evidence of God’s patience. We sing, “Oh, no, he will never let go, through the calm and through the storm,” and while the tune is easy to follow, the reality behind it is much deeper. Jeremiah reminds us that God “loves us with an everlasting love” (Jeremiah 32:3). That kind of love does not fade with our ups and downs. It remains steady, even when we are not.

The New Testament brings this into clear focus through Jesus Christ. When Paul describes love in 1 Corinthians 13, the standard feels far beyond reach. “Love is patient and kind… it does not envy or boast… it keeps no record of wrongs.” If I read that list honestly, I begin to realize how often I fall short. Max Lucado suggests placing the name of Jesus into that passage, and suddenly it fits perfectly. Jesus is patient. Jesus is kind. Jesus does not fail. John writes, “God is love” (1 John 4:8), and in Christ, that love is made visible. He is the fulfillment of the promise that God will not make a full end. Through Him, we see a love that does not give up, does not walk away, and does not forget. In Jesus, the word “utterly” is transformed from destruction into a complete and enduring expression of God’s faithful love.

Jeremiah 5:10, John 15:1-2, 2 Corinthians 4:8-10

There’s Always Hope

In the opening chapters of his prophecy, Jeremiah uses a series of vivid images to prepare Israel for the coming invasion by Babylon. He speaks of a ravenous lion from the north, a wolf from the desert, and a leopard lurking in the cities. Now he turns to a different picture, a grapevine. According to Jeremiah 2:21, God planted Israel as a choice vine, intended to bear good fruit. Yet it failed to produce what it was meant to give. In Jeremiah 5:10, God instructs the invading armies, “Go up through her vine rows and destroy, but make not a full end; strip away her branches, for they are not the LORD’s.” The image is striking. The vine is not uprooted, but its unfruitful branches are removed. As one commentator notes, this is pruning, not total destruction. The root remains because God has not forgotten His promise to Abraham.

That picture has a way of finding its place in everyday life. None of us enjoy the idea of being pruned. It sounds far too much like losing something we had grown attached to. Yet there are moments when life seems to do exactly that. Plans are trimmed, expectations are cut back, and comforts are reduced. I have noticed that I tend to ask questions in those moments that begin with “Why now?” or “Why this?” as if I had a better schedule in mind. Still, the image of pruning suggests purpose rather than randomness. A good gardener does not cut without reason. The aim is not to harm the plant but to help it grow in a healthier direction. It is not always easy to see that in the moment, especially when the shears feel sharp, but the intention behind them is not destruction.

The New Testament brings clarity to this image through the words of Jesus. In John 15:1-2, He says, “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser… every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.” The purpose of pruning is growth, not loss. Paul echoes this perspective when he writes, “We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed… struck down, but not destroyed” (2 Corinthians 4:8-9). In Christ, the process takes on deeper meaning. The pruning we experience is connected to His life being formed in us. What appears to be a setback may, in time, reveal itself as preparation. Through Him, even difficult seasons carry the promise that the root remains secure and the Gardener has not walked away.

Jeremiah 5:8-9

The Importance of Family

Yes, indeed, Jeremiah does not soften his language when he speaks about human ingratitude. Israel had received abundant blessings from God, yet turned their attention toward other gods. Jeremiah 5:8-9 is strikingly direct: “They were well-fed, lusty stallions, each neighing for his neighbor’s wife. Shall I not punish them for these things? declares the LORD.” Prosperity had led to luxury, and luxury had opened the door to indulgence. Willis outlines three clear charges. First, they swore by gods that were not gods, exposing the emptiness of their words. Second, they committed spiritual adultery, giving devotion to false gods while enjoying the provisions of the true God. Third, they behaved like well-fed animals still searching for more, never satisfied. The language may seem strong, but it reflects the depth of the problem. Ingratitude had not remained a quiet attitude; it had shaped their actions and their values.

That pattern is not confined to ancient Israel. It appears in quieter, more familiar ways in daily life. Blessings can become so common that they no longer feel like gifts. What once produced gratitude slowly turns into expectation. I have noticed that it does not take long to adjust to good things. We become accustomed to them, and then we begin to look for something more, as if what we already have has somehow lost its value. The human heart has a way of reaching beyond its provision, even when its needs are already met. Scripture speaks plainly about this tendency. “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matthew 6:21). When desires move outside the boundaries God has set, they begin to affect not only individuals but families and communities. History shows that when those foundations weaken, the larger structure begins to feel the strain.

The New Testament brings this issue into clearer focus by pointing to Jesus Christ as both the example and the answer. He did not pursue what was outside the will of the Father but lived in complete alignment with it. Paul writes, “For the grace of God has appeared… training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions” (Titus 2:11-12). In Christ, we see a life not driven by restless desire but grounded in purpose. He also restores what has been damaged. Where relationships have fractured, He brings reconciliation. Where hearts have wandered, He calls them back. John reminds us, “We love because he first loved us” (1 John 4:19). In Him, gratitude is not forced but grows naturally from recognizing what has already been given.

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