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Robert Hawker

Jeremiah 8:7

Jeremiah 8:7
Robert Hawker June, 16 2016 3 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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June, 16 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 3 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about human understanding of God's judgment?

Jeremiah 8:7 highlights that God's people are often ignorant of His judgment, unlike animals that recognize their instinctual seasons.

Jeremiah 8:7 serves as a poignant reminder of humanity's spiritual blindness. The verse contrasts the instinctual knowledge of animals, such as storks and swallows, with the lack of understanding displayed by God's people regarding divine judgment. Animals instinctively flee danger or prepare for seasonal changes, yet humans, facing the spiritual peril of sin and impending judgment, often remain indifferent. This reflects the fall and its consequences, which have dulled mankind's sensitivities to the spiritual realities of life, leading them to pursue vain and unsatisfying endeavors instead of seeking God’s guidance and salvation.

Moreover, this ignorance underscores the importance of acknowledging sovereign grace, which allows believers to see their privileges and comprehend the depth of mercy offered through Jesus Christ. The contemplation of one's sinfulness and the recognition of Christ's redemptive work elicited a longing for true understanding and direction in spiritual matters, highlighting that faith and grace are necessary to grasp the weight of God’s judgment and the importance of salvation. The verse thus calls Christians to earnestly seek discernment, ensuring they do not replicate the mindlessness of the unredeemed, who lack concern for eternal matters.

Jeremiah 8:7

How do we know God's grace is sufficient for understanding His judgment?

God's grace, through the Holy Spirit, enables believers to understand His judgment and live in accordance with His will.

The assurance of God's grace is foundational for understanding His judgment. It is through sovereign grace that believers are opened to discern spiritual realities. The Holy Spirit plays a critical role in this transformation, providing insight into Scripture and allowing individuals to grasp the profound implications of God’s laws and judgments. Jeremiah 8:7 serves as a stark reminder that without divine intervention, mankind's understanding remains clouded due to the fall. However, those who are in Christ are called to acknowledge and embrace the transformative grace that enables them to value eternal truths over worldly pursuits.

In recognizing the sufficiency of God's grace, believers are encouraged to rely on the promises of Scripture, instilling confidence in their hearts regarding the nature of God's judgment. This dependence fosters a deeper relationship with Christ, who embodies grace and truth, fulfilling the longing for understanding and security in the face of sin and judgment. Thus, the pursuit of knowing God's judgment is profoundly related to the experience of His grace, leading the faithful to seek a closer walk with Him and the wisdom that comes from above.

Jeremiah 8:7

Why is it important for Christians to value the things of salvation?

Valuing salvation is crucial for Christians as it provides direction, purpose, and alignment with God's will.

For Christians, valuing the things of salvation is vital because it anchors their lives in the eternal truth of God's Word and guides their daily actions and beliefs. Jeremiah 8:7 emphasizes the folly of pursuing worldly desires while neglecting the divine judgment and salvation offered by God. This pursuit can lead to spiritual apathy and a disconnection from the very source of life, which is Christ. When believers recognize the supreme value of salvation and eternal life, they cultivate a mindset that seeks God's glory rather than temporary pleasures.

Moreover, valuing salvation aligns believers’ lives with the greater purpose of glorifying God through their thoughts, words, and deeds. It fosters a community of faith centered around Christ, where mutual encouragement and sharing of the gospel become paramount. Such a focus combats the distractions of life, allowing Christians to be witnesses of God’s transformative grace. Ultimately, valuing salvation is about acknowledging Christ as the central figure of all existence, which shapes one's identity and motivates believers to live sacrificially for the sake of the Kingdom. Recognizing this importance ensures that Christians are not sidetracked by the vanity of worldly pursuits but remain steadfast in the grace that redeems and empowers.

Jeremiah 8:7

"Yea, the stork in the heaven knoweth her appointed times; and the turtle, and the crane, and the swallow, observe the time of their coming: but my people know not the judgment of the Lord."—Jer. viii. 7.

— Jeremiah 8:7

When the Lord would expostulate with his people, what methods he graciously adopts! There are no creatures in nature so dull, so senseless, and stupid, as God's people are, by reason of the fall. Every animal hath an instinct, prompting to self-preservation. Arc they exposed to danger? how speedily do they endeavour to remove! Are they apprehensive of a storm? they flee to some covering to hide them! The birds of passage, when the first symptoms of winter appear, gather together, to depart to a warmer climate. But man, poor blind improvident man, no winter of death can admonish him; no approach of the departing day of life can prevail, to induce him to flee from the wrath to come. My soul! look round on human life, and mark this, by way of admiring, more and more, distinguishing grace, which enabled thee to estimate thy privileges, and discern that sovereign bountiful mercy, which maketh thee to differ from another. "What hast thou, which thou didst not receive?" But, dearest Lord, is it not to copy after that gracious feeling of thine, which thou hadst in the days of thy flesh, when thou hadst compassion on the multitude, in beholding them famishing, and wast moved in pity towards them; when we behold the great mass of thoughtless sinners, whose concern for self-preservation doth not come up to that of the brute which perisheth? In common life, all are interested, and earnest in the pursuit of the different objects of the world: the traveller is full of thought, in his way home, to see that his path be right; the marl-net would not run contrary to the direction of the compass; the man of trade never acts in opposition to the gain of that trade; neither does the man of pleasure lose sight of what will most likely promote that pleasure. But thy people, blessed Jesus, are everlastingly pursuing what they have proved a thousand times to be vain and unsatisfying; yet they pursue it again, and do not learn "to know the judgment of the Lord." Blessed Lord! undertake for me: pity, compassionate, direct, guide, keep me! Oh! for grace to learn, and rightly to value the things of salvation! And, convinced that Christ is all and in all, may I never seek from the creature what only can be found in the Creator! And having discovered the vanity of every thing out of Christ, may I, where Christ is not, from henceforth learn, with the church to say, "Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire in comparison of thee: my flesh and my heart faileth: but thou art the strength of my heart and my portion for ever!"

From Poor Man's Evening Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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