Mercy

By definition, mercy is something that is not guaranteed.  The American Heritage Dictionary explains mercy like this:

  1. Compassionate treatment, especially of those under one’s power; clemency.
  2. A disposition to be kind and forgiving: a heart full of mercy.

So when it is clearly possible to get something else, and we get mercy instead – compassionate treatment, kindness, forgiveness – we tend to breathe a huge sigh of relief. 

Such was the relief experienced by the prophet Jeremiah after the destruction of Jerusalem.  Babylon had conquered, the city was flattened, the nation was defeated, the captivity had begun – and, tragically, it might all have been avoided.  It was all their own fault and Jeremiah knew this better than anyone; he had been prophesying it all along.

But Jeremiah had also prophesied that the captivity would last seventy years.  As his nation had already been promised an eternal future, he apparently figured that seventy years was, well, doable.  Eternity was a lot longer.

When we consider our own difficulties and disasters, we are wise to listen to Jeremiah.  He knew disaster well.  This doesn’t decrease the reality of our grief.  It increases our appreciation of God.  When we desire Him more than anything else, His mercies will fill our hearts with hope.

This I recall to my mind,
     Therefore I have hope.
Through the LORD’s mercies we are not consumed,
     Because His compassions fail not.
They are new every morning;
     Great is Your faithfulness.
‘The LORD is my portion,’ says my soul,
     ‘Therefore I hope in Him!'”
                    – Lamentations 3:21-24 (NKJV)

Unprofitable Prophets

God has a lot of people who speak in His name without ever first hearing from Him what to say – and He knows it.  These false prophets lead people astray with messages that they have made up.  They say whatever they want and they serve no useful purpose. Normally, they say what people want to hear in order to gain a following.  This is no recent phenomenon, but has actually long been the case.

So it was in the days of Jeremiah.  He was a bona fide prophet – the real thing – and he was especially unpopular.  Prophets were a shekel a dozen in Jerusalem in those days and each of them had a following.  Things were beginning to go badly in Judah, so it was pretty easy to get listeners if you said something that sounded nice.  People were eager to hear pleasant-sounding messages – and to continue in their evil practices at the same time.  Jeremiah, on the other hand, with his continuously unheeded messages of repentance, found it easy to get discouraged.

So the Lord encouraged Jeremiah, His faithful messenger, by offering His personal commentary on these popular, but unprofitable, prophets.  Here’s what He had to say:

I have not sent these prophets, yet they ran.
I have not spoken to them, yet they prophesied. 
But if they had stood in My counsel,
And had caused My people to hear My words,
Then they would have turned them from their evil way
And from the evil of their doings.”
               – Jeremiah 23:21-22 (NKJV)

Every Christian should make it a point to stick to God’s counsel as found in His word.  We will be more profitable as a result, when the time comes to open our mouths.