Is it Nothing to You?
How deserted lies the city, once so full of
people! How like a widow is she, who once was great among the nations!
She who was the queen among the provinces has now become a slave! (Lamentation 1:1)
This is Jeremiah, the
man known as the “weeping prophet”
. He reminds us of another who sat weeping overJerusalem .
The only difference is that Jerusalem
was in ruins and the temple already burned as Jeremiah gazed upon the debris. Jesus wept over the same city about six
centuries later because of what was going
to happen to her. To Jeremiah, the destruction of Jerusalem was a matter of history. To Jesus
the destruction of Jerusalem
was a matter of prophecy. The key verse in the Book of Lamentations explains
the reason Jerusalem
lay in ruin:
. He reminds us of another who sat weeping over
“The Lord is righteous,
yet I have rebelled against His commandment: listen, all you peoples; look upon
my suffering, my young men and maidens have gone into exile” confesses the
city. But it is too late. (Lamentation 1:18).
The great city of Jerusalem has fallen. The
famous temple was grazed to the ground. The city’s walls and gates were burnt
out, its grand buildings wantonly destroyed by the marauding Babylonians rendering
it unfit for human habitation. It would remain like that for seven decades. Its
people have been taken captive to distant lands. Jerusalem has sinned greatly, and so has
become unclean. All who honored her despise her, for they have seen her
nakedness: she herself groans and turns away. (Lamentation 1:8). All her pursuers have overtaken her in the midst
of her distress. For the LORD has brought her grief because of her many
transgressions. Jerusalem
has sinned greatly; therefore she has become an object of scorn.
Is it nothing to you,
all who pass by? Look
around and see. Is any suffering like my suffering that was inflicted on me,
that the Lord brought upon me in the day of His fierce anger? (1:12)
Day after day the
‘love’ of God has been drummed into our ears that we have forgotten His wrath. People
don’t like to hear about the fierce anger of God today. That aspect is often
left out of the gospel message, and I have observed many religious programs
that are shown on TV, to be messages of comfort and for compromise. The excuse
that is often given for such an approach with the gospel is that it is trying
to reach the man of the world. Jeremiah, too, was trying to reach a lost world,
and he wasn’t very successful; but at least he gave God’s message as God had
given it to him. God judged Judah
because of her sin, and He still will judge sin today. Jeremiah mourned the
destruction of Jerusalem
alone. He stood among the ashes weeping. Why had the city been destroyed? Was
it not because of her disobedience and rebelliousness?
The divine wrath is the natural expression
of God’s divine nature, which is absolute holiness, manifesting itself against the iniquity of mankind.
God's wrath is just, proper, and natural expression of His holiness and
righteousness which must always, under all circumstances, and at all costs be
maintained. The element of love and compassion is always closely connected
with God's anger; if we rightly estimate the divine anger we must
understand it as the expression and measure of that love; He is also
righteous; as we think of an affectionate, sentimental Fatherhood of God, we
must bear in mind of the manifestation of His just, righteous and holy anger
against sin and the sinner because of his transgression; remember that the
heavenly Father to whom you pray has no favorites. He is not some Celestial
pushover we can manipulate and get our things done. He will judge or reward you
according to what you do. So you must live in reverent fear of him during your
time here as “temporary residents.” (1Peter
1:17).
We are living in a universe where there is
a God, a living God, a God whose heart goes out in love and yearning over you.
But if you turn your back on Him, He will judge you even though He still loves
you. He is the righteous God of this universe. It is what He says in His Word. Hell is actually there because He is a God of love and a God of
righteousness and a God of holiness. God is righteous and just in all He
does.
Jesus could say to the scribes and
Pharisees, the religious leaders of His day, “Woe to you, teachers of the law
and Pharisees, you hypocrites!” Why did He call them hypocrites? Because “… you
devour widows’ houses, and for a pretense make long prayers” (Matt. 23:14). He rebuked them--"Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida ! For if the
miracles that were performed in you had been performed in Tyre
and Sidon , they
would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes (Luke 10:13). If your Christianity
does not affect your heart, your life in your home and in your business, and
your social life, then you are a hypocrite.
He is the One who wept over these men. His eyes are filled with tears
for us today.
God does what He does because He is a
righteous God. He cannot shut his eyes to evil. When His own children
disobey Him, God must discipline them, even though it breaks His heart. Jeremiah
reveals to us the heart of God: when Jeremiah weeps, God is weeping; when he
sorrows, God is sorrowing. When we don’t understand what is happening, the
important thing is to trust in knowing that God is righteous in what He does.
Although it broke His heart, He was right in letting Jerusalem be destroyed and in letting the
people go into captivity. Jeremiah cries out—he wants to know why, and God
assures him that He is righteous, right, in what He is doing to Jerusalem . As perfect is
His righteousness, so complete shall be the destruction of every form of
wickedness. Jeremiah is not unaware of what caused Jerusalem ’s catastrophe.
Another anguished question that Jeremiah
has is this: “Is it nothing to you, all
you who pass by?” (1: 12). In
other words, how much are the people involved? Do they really care? Man does
not want to accept the fact that God is angry with sin. Instead, the fact that
God is love is played for all it’s worth. I agree that God is love, and the
church certainly needs to learn to take the love of God into the marketplace of
life. We have often failed to do that and it has led to an overemphasis on the love of
God in this generation. God is righteous, and God is holy, and God is just in
what He does.
The
virgin birth, the deity of Christ, His death and resurrection are all
important, but the question is: Why did
He die? That is the question raised in Psalm
22:1, “My God, my God, why did you forsake me? …” Our Lord said that while
He was hanging on the Cross. We find the answer to that question in the same Psalm.
‘’You are enthroned as
the Holy One; you are the one Israel
praises’’ (22:3). He is holy. He is righteous. As
warm as is His love for sinners, so hot is His hatred of sin. He died on that Cross because you and I are
sinners, hopelessly doomed sinners. He became sin for us, who never knew sin.
‘Christ, the anointed one’’ became a curse for us, by hanging from a tree. Look around and see. Is any suffering like
my suffering that was inflicted on me? (Lamentation 1:12) Yet it
was the LORD’s will to crush Him and cause Him to suffer (Isaiah 53:10).
Look at the cross; where they had
crucified Him was a public intersection and passers-by stopped, looked, a few
stopped to mock Him, the others passed on. They had scourged Him to an inch of
His life, slapped on His face, spat on Him and mocked Him, crowned Him with
thorns, made Him to carry His own cross across the streets and up the hill,
nailed Him to the cross and hung Him between two notorious criminals, and
allowed Him to die a slow, excruciating death. He didn’t have to die, but He
suffered as no man has had to suffer and died. Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by?
God forsook Him, but God will never
forsake you as long as you live. He forsook Christ so that He would not have to
forsake you. Have you come to Jesus to get some education and improve the
standard of your life? To get a new personality? To find a good job and get rich? Is that the
reason He died on the Cross? Bear this in mind, He died so that you won't go to hell. He hated wickedness, so much that He bled, to
wound it to the heart; He died that it might die; He was buried that He might
bury it in His tomb, and He rose that forever He might trample it under His
feet.
The Holy Spirit has come into the world to
reveal Christ as Savior, and He has come to convict the world of sin [John 16:8]. What kind of sin?
Murder? Thievery? Adultery? Yes, but something worse than that: they sinned “The world’s sin is that it refuses to believe
in me”. (John 16:9) God has a remedy for
the thief. The thief on the cross was saved. Paul was guilty of murder,
responsible for the death of Stephen, but he got saved. Moses also was a
murderer. David was an adulterer and murderer. God has a remedy for the
murderer, the thief, and the liar, the adulterer, but God does not have a
remedy for the man who rejects Jesus Christ. That is the greatest sin you can
commit.
1John
5:16: If you see a fellow believer sinning in a way that does not lead to
death, you should pray, and God will give that person life. But there is a sin
that leads to death, and I am not saying you should pray for those who commit
it.
Rejection of Christ is a state
rather than an act. You can never commit the act of rejecting Christ, but you
can gradually come to the place where Christ and what He has done for you is absolutely
meaningless. Jerusalem
reached the place where God told Jeremiah, “Don’t be disturbed that they are
not listening to you. If Moses or Elijah or Samuel were here to pray for them,
I would not answer their prayers either. It is too late; they have crossed
over.” There are many living in our sophisticated day who have crossed over—who
have deliberately positioned themselves beyond the reach of grace, who have
become stone-deaf and cannot hear the call anymore.
Now, we cannot decide who is that who has
reached the point of no return having totally rejected Christ. People who have
committed the most heinous crimes have reformed, repented, received forgiveness, and turned into marvelous, glorious, disciples of the Lord. The message of the Gospel
has done wonders in so many lives, that it is hard to believe. Only, it bears
witness to the power of the blood of Jesus.
But in our day there is the danger of underestimating
the importance of sorrow for sin.
There is not enough manifestation of sorrow for sin, nor do preachers stress this aspect. There is an urgent need today for us to come to the Lord’s
feet in deep sorrow for sin, in self-humiliation, in self-abhorrence.
Joel 2.12-13 “Return to Me with all your heart, And with fasting, weeping and mourning; And rend your heart and not your garments.” Now return to the LORD your God, for He is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger, abounding in lovingkindness and relenting of evil.
Job
42.5-6 “I
have heard of You by the hearing of the ear; But now my eye sees You’.
Therefore I retract, and I repent in dust and ashes’’.
Is
it nothing to you, all you who pass by?
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A very neat and meaningful article about God's love vs His righteousness. But I think its a bit too long. A normal person has no time or patience to sit and read long articles.
ReplyDeleteThank you for liking my article. I have reviewed it and shortened it a bit!
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