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.
