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Anger
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Lamentations 2
Day of Reckoning-Day of Reconciliation
This last week I read that a man from California may get up to 35 years in prison for trying to join ISIS.
The day the police picked him up was a life-changer for him.
His freedom was gone.
He is 25 and in 35 years he will be 60 years old.
He might get out earlier than that for good behavior, but he will miss his 30’s, 40’s, and 50’s if he stays the whole time.
It’s amazing how decisions we make can come back to ruin our lives and our futures.
Living in a cell beside big bubba for 35 years doesn’t sound like what he might have expected when he started this quest.
According to the judge, he has shown no remorse….yet.
The day that Cain killed Abel, his life changed.
He lost a brother and, because of his actions, was driven out from his mother and father.
His life was ruined because he allowed his resentment to his brother to grow until that fateful day when he did the deed.
Chapter 1 of Jeremiah pictures Jerusalem in ruins.
The “she” of chapter 1 is Jerusalem.
Israel had broken God’s laws for 900 years.
They faced their day of reckoning.
We all have a day when our sin will find us out.
There may be some here who whose lives would be ruined if their husband or wife saw what was happening on their computer either in emails or in sites visited.
There may be some here who have lied about their spending or have not been ethical in their business practices.
Discovery would mean ruin.
And ruin would come at a great price.
For those who have already experienced ruin and for those heading in that direction, you need a new life.
Jesus provides a new life for you.
Trust him and follow him.
He: God
Chapter 2 focuses on “he.”
When people are at the bottom, they often think of God.
For many, their thoughts or ideas of God are not positive.
They will say, “God must be punishing me.” “God is out to get me.”
“I knew sometime I would cross the line and God would take action.”
Inwardly they feel condemned.
They know what they did, they see the ruin it caused, and their sin is right in front of their eyes.
As David said, “My sin is always before me…” When you go to sleep, (if you can sleep), you think about your sin.
When you wake up, you think about what you did to cause the ruin.
You meet people and you wonder if all they think about is how bad you have been.
You condemn yourself and you feel condemned by God.
Day of Reckoning
This is where Jeremiah is in Chapter 2. In Chapter 1 he saw the ruin.
In chapter 2 he comes to God on that day of reckoning.
This is where life leads many people, from ruin to reckoning.
We often talk about future judgment.
We all will have to answer to God some day for what we did with two things.
First, we will have to answer to God for how we treated his Son, Jesus.
Did we receive him, trust him and follow him?
Or did we reject him, ignore him and walk away from him?
The second question we will have to answer is what we did with the life God gave us.
Everyone will have to answer for the deeds they did in the body, whether good or bad.
For those who have faced the ruin connected to bad choices, the day of reckoning has already come.
For some it might have been jail, for others, hospitalization, for others, the end of a marriage, for others, broken relationships, and the list goes on.
You join with Jeremiah as he faces this day of reckoning by focusing on the one behind this, the “he”, who is God.
Jeremiah is certain that God is behind the ruin of Jerusalem.
Lamentations 2:1 (ESV) —1 How the Lord in his anger has set the daughter of Zion under a cloud!
He has cast down from heaven to earth the splendor of Israel; he has not remembered his footstool in the day of his anger.
Lamentations 2:2 (ESV) —2 The Lord has swallowed up without mercy all the habitations of Jacob; in his wrath he has broken down the strongholds of the daughter of Judah; he has brought down to the ground in dishonor the kingdom and its rulers.
Lamentations 2:5 (ESV) —5 The Lord has become like an enemy; he has swallowed up Israel; he has swallowed up all its palaces; he has laid in ruins its strongholds, and he has multiplied in the daughter of Judah mourning and lamentation.
In all of this, Jeremiah sees the Lord behind the ruin.
The reason is that in Deuteronomy 28, God had said that if you follow the Lord, good things will happen, if you don’t then bad things will happen.
It is human nature to scoff at these warnings.
We believe that we can handle anything that may come our way.
We minimize the impact and act tough when people tell us of the bad things in the future.
“I’ll survive,” we say.
But when the day of reckoning comes, we can be blown away.
Even though what is happening is what we know would happen, when reality sets in, we are overwhelmed.
Lamentations 2:11 (ESV) —11 My eyes are spent with weeping; my stomach churns; my bile is poured out to the ground because of the destruction of the daughter of my people, because infants and babies faint in the streets of the city.
Lamentations 2:20 (ESV) —20 Look, O Lord, and see!
With whom have you dealt thus?
Should women eat the fruit of their womb, the children of their tender care?
Should priest and prophet be killed in the sanctuary of the Lord?
And so even though we were warned, even though we sinned, we still question God when the reality of our ruin comes in.
We didn’t realize what it would do to us.
We didn’t realize the effect our actions would have on others.
When we realize it, we often turn to God and question him.
We made the choice.
We were warned.
But when the day of reckoning hit us, it seemed unfair.
It’s like a couple of people who are dating.
One says to the other after a rocky time, “I need some space.”
The other person says, “Ok, and is seen the next day is holding hands with another person.”
“Stop, I didn’t mean that much space!”
Justice
The issue of justice is core to understanding God’s role in all of this.
What Jeremiah questions is God’s justice.
“God, we were bad, but this bad?
You are going overboard.
The women and children are suffering.
This shouldn’t be!”
In other words, God is accused of being unjust.
This begs the question, who knows more?
Did you know all the ramifications and implications of the bad choices you would make?
No.
You had no idea.
You thought that you would get away with it or it wouldn’t be this bad.
So you went ahead and ignored the warnings.
Did God know all the ramifications and implications of the bad choices you would make?
Yes!
So what did he do?
He warned you before hand not to do it.
He might have used your mother, father, sister, brother, friend, pastor, Gideon Bible, TV preacher, or even a secular source that laid out what happens when you do what you did.
You might have heard others who had already faced their day of reckoning.
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