This chapter begins with the conclusion of Jeremiah’s address to the Northern Kingdom, Israel. That’s at Jeremiah 4:1-2. Then there is a call for Judah to repent, to return to duty, this being the last hope of her destruction, Jeremiah 4:3-4.
Next, in Jeremiah 4:5-9, we read of the prophesied Babylonian invasion. Then comes the most difficult verse in this chapter, Jeremiah 4:10. In Jeremiah 4:11-18 we have a continued description of the forthcoming invasion. In Jeremiah 4:19-21 we have what you could call a ‘personified’ Judah bewailing her fate. God’s answer and the cause of their misery are related in Jeremiah 4:22, followed by a prophecy of the awful extent of the destruction in Jeremiah 4:23-26.
In Jeremiah 4:27 we have God’s promise that He will not make a ‘complete end’ of Judah. Then, from Jeremiah 4:1631, there follows the magnificent prophecy of the Judgment of Judah, which also suggests the final destruction of Adam’s rebellious race on the Day of Judgment.
We see a plan perfected. God gives a lot of repetition. If you keep on ignoring my warnings I will have to give you a good ‘hiding’. It is going to take two things, but Judah will not listen. Not only is He calling for a return, but He is asking for repentance and reformation. If you love me, you will obey my commandments. You cannot take the promises and not join the service.
This shows what marvellous things could have happened to Israel if only she had repented and turned back to God. This promise came 100 years after they went into captivity, in Assyria. But even then, God could have achieved wonders through them IF, only IF. they had repented. Of course, it was a vain hope. There is absolutely no evidence that there was any intention on their part of returning to God.
God says, live in truth. You will be guided by the truth. If you live in a truthful, just and righteous way then you will be blessed by me. If you glorify God and praise His name, then you will find glory in all things through Him.
Here God’s word is directed to Judah, the Southern kingdom, with a call for their true repentance and conversion. This is coupled with a threat of drastic punishment.
‘Circumcise yourselves to the Lord, circumcise your hearts.’ The second part of this extract explains the first part. Circumcision was observed for all Jewish males; but the kind of circumcision that they needed was spiritual, not physical. Circumcision of hearts meant removing from their thoughts, and affections, all of the sinful indulgences to which they were addicted.
Some people have difficulty here, about the part that man plays in his own conversion, repentance and regeneration. They say that this clashes with Deuteronomy 30:6 which says that God circumcises our hearts. The NIV says, ‘The Lord your God will circumcise your hearts’.
But this isn’t a contradiction. Jeremiah 4:4 stresses man’s activity, the passage in Deuteronomy stresses his passivity.
Everything had been neglected. Nothing has been done at all, God says. You do a lot of shouting. Start anew. Concentrate on the inside, not on the outside. Their hearts had to be made right. God doesn’t want mechanical service, He wants feeling behind it. If they did that God would remove His anger from them. Listen to what I say and obey Me. Jesus used to say, ‘Listen’. Have your ears circumcised! Luke 8:18 tells us, ‘therefore consider carefully how you listen. Whoever has will be given more; whoever does not have, even what he thinks he has will be taken from him.’
Regarding the heart, Paul says, ‘circumcision should be a matter of the heart, not of the flesh.’ Romans 2:28ff.
So, they are told to prepare for what is coming. Offer your offspring security. Flee to the fortified cities. Not that it will help you, but try and save yourselves. It isn’t going to do anything for you.
The destroyer will still be coming from the north. He has dealt with the other nations, you are next. The cities will be laid waste. Citizens will cry their hearts out, will be at their breasts. This is because of the fierce anger of God.
These verses are a prophecy of the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem and the captivity of Judah. The terrible judgment against Judah, like many of God’s judgments throughout history, against cities or nations, whose wickedness had reached a point of no return, is also typical of the final overthrow of man in the Final Judgment. This seems to be indicated by the words ‘In that day’ in Jeremiah 4:9.
‘Raise the signal to go to Zion’ some believe that this refers to road signs that should be set up pointing the way to the nearest fortified cities to which the people might flee to safety. We shouldn’t, however, believe that this is true safety.
This lion was no ordinary beast, but a destroyer of nations. There is nothing left for Judah, except to weep and wail. This is the penalty for their sins; the savage lions of the Babylonians will destroy them.
Kings and officials will lose heart when they see this happening. Priests will be bonafide. How can God do this to us? Is not the Holy Temple God’s? Are we not God’s? God won’t allow His holy temple to be destroyed. He says that we are His people, so He will always look after us.
The prophets were shocked, they were deceitful. They prophesied for gain. What can happen to us, the Lord is ours? But just because God has chosen you doesn’t mean that He will protect you when you turn your back on Him. Jesus himself said, ‘Not everyone who says to me. ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.’ Matthew 7:21-23
It’s an eternal message, God expected this of man from the day man was created. He will expect it of man until the day the world ends.
I said earlier that Jeremiah 4:10 was the most difficult verse in this chapter. Why? Because of the way that it is written, we find it difficult to believe or interpret. They believed that everything that happens is actually accomplished by God. Some commentators take this view. Another view is this is really the way that Jeremiah felt about it, because of his discouragement. But we cannot believe that a view like this ever belonged to Jeremiah.
Jeremiah says, ‘What a plan!’ You told me to speak to the people to save them, and you are going to destroy everything? Paul told the Thessalonians that the Israelites perished and that all people alike will perish because or ‘if they refuse to love the truth and so be saved. 2 Thessalonians 2:9-11
God doesn’t deceive anyone, we deceive ourselves. God permits some things, but He doesn’t like doing so. Back in 2 Thessalonians Paul says that ‘for this reason, God sends them a powerful delusion so that they will believe the lie.’
Don’t we do the same today? Doesn’t the majority of the world’s population today believe the lie because they have no trust in God?
These people were condemning themselves. God, time and time again, tried to warn them, but they didn’t heed the warning. Eventually, they will be destroyed from the north. Jeremiah 4:11 is another description of the coming of the Babylonians.
It’s like a bank of threatening clouds, a wind, not a helpful wind like the one used for winnowing, i.e., exposing grain to the wind by tossing it in the air so that the wind can separate the grain from the chaff, but a violent and destructive wind.
The swift chariots will descend upon the helpless people, swifter than an eagle attacks its prey. There will be no hope for Judah. She must drink the bitter cup because this came upon her because of her own terrible wickedness.
Wash your evil hearts. Get rid of your wicked thoughts. Outward things that can be seen can appear to be more detestable. But we cannot see the heart. Get rid of your evil thoughts. Sometimes we condemn young Christians because they still smoke.
We condemn them because we can see them doing something we think they shouldn’t do. Look at your own heart. And consider God. God is patient; look how patient He has been with the Israelites. We should strive to have patience like God. To help the young Christian, lift him up.
How long will these things go on? Judah can do nothing of itself. We today can do nothing without Jesus, but we still have to do our part. God is always ready to forgive and forget, but they had to do their part, repent and turn back to Him. The besieging army is coming. Man, today hasn’t changed, hasn’t learnt anything from the past.
Results. This is Jeremiah’s reaction after the warning. ‘My anguish, my anguish!’ I can’t keep silent. I hear the trumpet, the warning. Being of a priestly family he knows how God feels. The sound of war will always stir a person’s heart. He sees the shame of God’s people. No-one understands. They are all foolish. They have no knowledge of God.
The Hebrew words for the land becoming desolate are the same words as in Genesis, ‘without form’. It’s going to be as though nothing existed. True, the sick and lame were left by Nebuchadnezzar in Jerusalem, but they couldn’t do anything.
Jeremiah 4:27 is of great interest, here is the promise of God that He will NOT make a full end of Judah. This isn’t so for Nineveh. God promised to make ‘an end of Nineveh’, Nahum 1:8, and that is what He did. When Alexander the Great encamped his army near the ancient ruins of Nineveh, he didn’t even know that a city had ever been there! It was absolutely necessary that Jeremiah should have mentioned this hope in this verse, that Judah would not be completely destroyed.
As you know, Isaiah preceded Jeremiah and he had named one of his sons Shear-Jashub, which means, ‘a remnant will return’, Isaiah 7:3 and Isaiah 10:21. Why is this important? God would, at last, fulfil all of the glorious promises to the patriarchs. And it would have been criminal to have left it out of the context in which we find it.
God’s mind is made up. The people’s mind is made up. But because the mind of the people conflicts with the mind of God, someone is going to suffer. And it’s not going to be God. Only God can win. Judah is weak and sick. Things are a real mess. Through her behaviour, in courting lovers, Judah became tainted.
‘I hear a cry’. It’s a cry of agony. A tragic picture of the pitiful end of a nation. We see the sorrowful emotions of a tearful Jeremiah. This is similar to the deep emotion experienced by Jesus when He wept for His city.