Jeremiah 8: Difference between revisions
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{{Verse|18|My joy has flown away; grief has settled on me. My heart is sick. }} | {{Verse|18|My joy has flown away; grief has settled on me. My heart is sick. }} | ||
{{Verse|19|Listen—the cry of my dear people from a far away land, “Is the Lord no longer in Zion, her King not within her?” Why have they provoked me to anger | {{Verse|19|Listen—the cry of my dear people from a far away land, “Is the Lord no longer in Zion, her King not within her?” Why have they provoked me to anger | ||
with their carved images, with their worthless foreign idols? }} | with their carved images, with their worthless foreign idols? |ref=[[Deuteronomy 32#v21|Deuteronomy 32:21]] }} | ||
{{Verse|20|Harvest has passed, summer has ended, but we have not been saved. }} | {{Verse|20|Harvest has passed, summer has ended, but we have not been saved. }} | ||
{{Verse|21|I am broken by the brokenness of my dear people. I mourn; horror has taken hold of me. }} | {{Verse|21|I am broken by the brokenness of my dear people. I mourn; horror has taken hold of me. }} | ||
{{Verse|22|Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there? So why has the healing of my dear people not come about? }} | {{Verse|22|Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there? So why has the healing of my dear people not come about? |ref=[[Genesis 37#v25|Genesis 37:25]], [[Jeremiah 46#v11|Jeremiah 46:11]]}} | ||
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Revision as of 10:57, 8 May 2026
← Jeremiah 7 | Jeremiah 8 | Jeremiah 9 →
Jeremiah 8
Study Notes
Jeremiah 8:18-19 Jeremiah was pleading with God to save his people. His grief shows his compassion for those who rejected God. Do you have the same compassion for those who have turned away from God?
Jeremiah 8:20-22 These words vividly portray Jeremiah's emotion as he watched his people reject God. He responded with anguish to a world that is dying in sin. We watch that same world still dying in sin, still rejecting God. But how often do our hearts break for our lost friends and neighbors, our lost world? Only when we have Jeremiah's kind of passionate concern will we be moved to reach out. We must begin by asking God to break our hearts for the world He loves.
Jeremiah 8:22 Gilead was famous for its healing medicine. Jeremiah asks a rhetorical question. The obvious answer is yes - God could heal them - but Israel was not applying the medicine, they were not obeying the LORD. Although the people's spiritual sickness was still very deep, it could be healed. But the people refused the medicine. God could heal their self-inflicted wounds, but He would not force His healing on them.
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