For Our
Benefit
Jeremiah
31:31-34[1]
31“The time
is coming,” declares the LORD, “when I will make a new covenant with the
house of Israel and with the house of Judah. 32It will not be
like the covenant I made with their forefathers when I took them by the
hand to lead them out of Egypt, because they broke my covenant, though I
was a husband to them,” declares the LORD. 33“This is the
covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time,” declares
the LORD. “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their
hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. 34No
longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying,
‘Know the LORD,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them
to the greatest,” declares the LORD. “For I will forgive their
wickedness and will remember their sins no more.”
Background[2]
Jeremiah was a Kohen (member of the priestly family) called to the
prophetical office when still young; in the thirteenth year of Josiah
(628 BC). He left his native place, Anathoth, to reside in Jerusalem,
where he assisted Josiah in his work of reformation. Jeremiah wrote a
lamentation upon the death of the king (2 Chr. 35:25).
In his various exhortations, Jeremiah made extensive use of performance
art, using props or demonstrations to illustrate points and engage the
public. He walked around wearing a wooden yoke about his neck. He served
wine to a family with a vow of temperance. He bought his family estate
in Anathoth while in prison and while the Babylonians were occupying it.
He remained in Jerusalem, uttering from time to time his words of
warning, but without much effect. He was there when Nebuchadnezzar II of
Babylon besieged the city (Jer. 37:4, 5), 588 BC, as Jeremiah had
prophesied beforehand. The rumor of the approach of the Egyptians to aid
the Jews in this crisis induced the Babylonians to withdraw, and to
return to their own land. However, this siege was raised for only a
short time. The prophet, in answer to his prayer, received a message
from God, stating that "the Babylonians would come again, and take the
city, and burn it with fire" (37:7, 8). The princes, in their anger at
such a message by Jeremiah, cast him into prison (37:15-38:13). He was
still in confinement when the city was taken (586 BC). The Babylonians
released him, and showed him great kindness, allowing Jeremiah to choose
the place of his residence, according to a Babylonian edict. Jeremiah
accordingly went to Mizpah in Benjamin with Gedaliah, who had been made
governor of Judea.
Biblical
Truths and Theology
The prophet Jeremiah speaks to the people of
Israel and Judah. By force they have become semi-free subjects of a
Persian King, and they have lost their land. God speaks to these people
through a vision that Jeremiah relays to them.
• Covenant
- People are reminded of the Old Mosaic Covenant God engineered between
them. Due to their ancestors’ inequities of disobeying God, a new
covenant will be employed. God realizes the shortcomings of passing a
covenant from generation to generation. God says he will establish a
covenant that cannot be misinterpreted or forgotten, because it shall be
written on everyone’s heart and mind. Jeremiah enacts a future covenant
that speaks of God’s mercy. The catastrophic punishment for disobeying
God will no longer exist. God promises to for iniquity and remember
their sins no more.
•
Husband - God
wishes to remain in an intimate relationship with the people. In
Biblical times, the husband was appropriated with overseeing the good
welfare and health of the family. Old covenants were broken, and a
disappointed God only says “I was their husband”.
•
Teach – Torah is the Hebrew word for
teachings. The style of teaching God’s covenant to children by their
parents has past. God intends to write this covenant so that all will
know him.
Items for
Discussion
-
What is a covenant?
What are the modern covenants of today?
-
Have
covenants of old changed in any way – do people make or honor their
promises differently?
-
Why is it
important to know what promises our God has made to us?
-
In what
way does Bible Study support our covenant with God?
-
When you
look at the promises made by God, why are they beneficial to
mankind?
-
Why is the
concept of forgiveness (God’s kind of forgiveness) important to His
covenant?
John 12:20-33
20Now there
were some Greeks among those who went up to worship at the Feast.
21They came to Philip, who was from Bethsaida in Galilee, with a
request. “Sir,” they said, “we would like to see Jesus.” 22Philip
went to tell Andrew; Andrew and Philip in turn told Jesus. 23Jesus
replied, “The hour has come
for the Son of Man to be glorified. 24I tell you the truth,
unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a
single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. 25The
man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in
this world will keep it for eternal life. 26Whoever serves me
must follow me; and where I am, my servant also will be. My Father will
honor the one who serves me. 27“Now my heart is troubled, and
what shall I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour’? No, it was for this
very reason I came to this hour. 28Father, glorify your
name!” Then a voice came from heaven, “I have glorified it, and
will glorify it again.” 29The crowd that was there and heard
it said it had thundered; others said an angel had spoken to him.
30Jesus said, “This
voice was for your benefit, not mine. 31Now is the time for
judgment on this world; now the prince of this world will be driven out.
32But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all
men to myself.” 33He said this to show the kind of
death he was going to die.
Background[3]
As a gospel, John is a story about the life of Jesus. John tells this
story in four parts: the Prologue, the Book of Signs, the Passion
narrative, and the Epilogue. The Prologue (1:1-18) is a hymn identifying
Jesus as the Logos and as God. The Book of Signs (1:19 - 12) recounts
Jesus' public ministry, and includes the signs worked by Jesus and some
of his teachings. The Passion narrative (13-20) recounts the Last Supper
(focusing on Jesus' farewell discourse), Jesus' arrest and crucifixion,
his burial, and resurrection. The Epilogue (John 21) records a
resurrection appearance of Jesus to the disciples in Galilee.
Of the four gospels, John presents the highest Christology, describing
Jesus as the Logos who was in the Arche (a Greek term for "the
beginning" or "the ultimate source of all things"), teaching at length
about his identity as savior, and declaring him to be God.
Biblical
Truths and Theology[4]
That God will renew his covenant with them, so that all these
blessings they shall have, not by providence only, but by promise, and
thereby they shall be both sweetened and secured. But this covenant
refers to gospel times, the latter days that shall come; for of
gospel grace the apostle understands it (Hebrews 8:8,9), where this
whole passage is quoted as a summary of the covenant of grace made with
believers in Jesus Christ. Observe, 1. Who the persons are with whom
this covenant is made--with the house of Israel and Judah, with
the gospel church, the Israel of God on which peace shall be
(Galatians 6:16), with the spiritual seed of believing Abraham and
praying Jacob. Judah and Israel had been two separate kingdoms, but were
united after their return, in the joint favors God bestowed upon them;
so Jews and Gentiles were in the gospel church and covenant. 2. What is
the nature of this covenant in general: it is a new covenant and
not according to the covenant made with them when they came out of
Egypt; not as if that made with them at Mount Sinai were a covenant
of nature and innocence, such as was made with Adam in the day he was
created; no, that was, for substance, a covenant of grace, but it was a
dark dispensation of that covenant in comparison with this in gospel
times. Sinners were saved by that covenant upon their repentance, and
faith in a Messiah to come, whose blood, confirming that covenant, was
typified by that of the legal sacrifices, Exodus 24:7,8. Yet this may
upon many accounts be called new, in comparison with that; the
ordinances and promises are more spiritual and heavenly, and the
discoveries much more clear. That covenant God made with them when he
took them by the hand, as they had been blind, or lame, or weak,
to lead them out of the land of Egypt, which covenant they broke.
Observe, It was God that made this covenant, but it was the people that
broke it; for our salvation is of God, but our sin and ruin are of
ourselves. It was an aggravation of their breach of it that God was a
husband to them, that he had espoused them to himself; it was a
marriage-covenant that was between him and them, which they broke by
idolatry, that spiritual adultery. It is a great aggravation of our
treacherous departures from God that he has been a husband to us, a
loving, tender, careful husband, faithful to us, and yet we false to
him. 3. What are the particular articles of his covenant. They all
contain spiritual blessings; not, "I will give them the land of Canaan
and a numerous issue," but, "I will give them pardon, and peace, and
grace, good heads and good hearts."
He promises, (1.) That he will incline them to their duty; I will
put my law in their inward part and write it in their heart; not, I
will give them a new law (as Mr. Gataker well observes), for Christ
came not to destroy the law, but to fulfil it; but the law shall be
written in their hearts by the finger of the Spirit as formerly it was
written in the tables of stone. God writes his law in the hearts of all
believers, makes it ready and familiar to them, at hand when they have
occasion to use it, as that which is written in the heart,
Proverbs 3:3. He makes them in care to observe it, for that which we are
solicitous about is said to lie near our hearts. He works in them a
disposition to obedience, a conformity of thought and affection to the
rules of the divine law, as that of the copy to the original. This is
here promised, and ought to be prayed for, that our duty may be done
conscientiously and with delight.
(2.) That he will take them into relation to himself: I will be
their God, a God all-sufficient to them, and they shall be my
people, a loyal obedient people to me. God's being to us a God is
the summary of all happiness; heaven itself is no more, Hebrews
11:16,Re+21:3. Our being to him a people may be taken either as the
condition on our part (those and those only shall have God to be to them
a God that are truly willing to engage themselves to be to him a people)
or as a further branch of the promise that God will by his grace make us
his people, a willing people, in the day of his power; and,
whoever are his people, it is his grace that makes them so.
(3.) That there shall be an abundance of the knowledge of God among
all sorts of people, and this will have an influence upon all good: for
those that rightly know God's name will seek him, and serve him, and put
their trust in him (Jeremiah 31:34): All shall know me; all shall
be welcome to the knowledge of God and shall have the means of that
knowledge; his ways shall be known upon earth, whereas, for many
ages, in Judah only was God known. Many more shall know God than
did in the Old Testament times, which among the Gentiles were times of
ignorance, the true God being to them an unknown God. The things of God
shall in gospel times be made more plain and intelligible, and level to
the capacities of the meanest, than they were while Moses had a veil
upon his face. There shall be such a general knowledge of God that
there shall not be so much need as had formerly been of teaching.
Items for
Discussion
-
Why is the
symbolism behind seeds and a single wheat seed so important to
understand?
-
Does it
matter how the seed dies or is there a good and bad way?
-
Jesus is the seed.
What is the benefit to us in this
death?
-
What other
parables can you think of that were about seeds?
-
If we are
to become the crop and then seeds ourselves, what does this story
say about our lives?
Discussion
Challenge
-
What role does a church have in providing the
necessary elements to grow “seeds?”
Think about what is water, what is
earth, who is the gardener, who is the harvester, etc.
[1] Translations: New International Version (NIV)
[4] Mathew Henry Commentaries http://www.studylight.org/com/mhc-com/view.cgi?book=jer&chapter=031
