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In seasons where escape feels like the only prayer, God’s word is often not “Get out” but “Get to work.” When the people of Judah were exiled to Babylon, disoriented, grieving, and longing for rescue, God sent a surprising message through Jeremiah: “Build houses and live in them; and plant gardens and eat their produce… and grow in numbers there and do not decrease” (Jer 29:5–6). The exile was not a pause in their calling but the location of their faithfulness.
Exile is not an excuse to withdraw. It is the assignment. The people were called to build, bless, and speak truth, not only to survive Babylon but to see it transformed. “Your circumstances don’t dictate who you are or what your call is. The Gospel does,” the message declared. The same Spirit that empowered Daniel in Babylon’s palace is active in believers today, enabling them to be ministers of reconciliation (2 Cor 5:17–20).
This calling is not fueled by strength or ideal conditions but by the presence of God. “The cross didn’t just save you from Babylon. The cross saved you for Babylon.” As Daniel sought the good of his captors and Florence Kelley fought for justice in industrial America, so also are Christians called to bring the Kingdom of God into present exile through integrity, compassion, and courage.
The call is clear: plant gardens, build homes, raise families, speak boldly, and bless faithfully because faithfulness in exile lays the foundation for God’s future.
As you reflect on this message this week, consider the following:
The post Build, Plant, Do Not Decrease: Jer 29 appeared first on Revival Life Church Boca Raton, FL.
By Revival Life Church5
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In seasons where escape feels like the only prayer, God’s word is often not “Get out” but “Get to work.” When the people of Judah were exiled to Babylon, disoriented, grieving, and longing for rescue, God sent a surprising message through Jeremiah: “Build houses and live in them; and plant gardens and eat their produce… and grow in numbers there and do not decrease” (Jer 29:5–6). The exile was not a pause in their calling but the location of their faithfulness.
Exile is not an excuse to withdraw. It is the assignment. The people were called to build, bless, and speak truth, not only to survive Babylon but to see it transformed. “Your circumstances don’t dictate who you are or what your call is. The Gospel does,” the message declared. The same Spirit that empowered Daniel in Babylon’s palace is active in believers today, enabling them to be ministers of reconciliation (2 Cor 5:17–20).
This calling is not fueled by strength or ideal conditions but by the presence of God. “The cross didn’t just save you from Babylon. The cross saved you for Babylon.” As Daniel sought the good of his captors and Florence Kelley fought for justice in industrial America, so also are Christians called to bring the Kingdom of God into present exile through integrity, compassion, and courage.
The call is clear: plant gardens, build homes, raise families, speak boldly, and bless faithfully because faithfulness in exile lays the foundation for God’s future.
As you reflect on this message this week, consider the following:
The post Build, Plant, Do Not Decrease: Jer 29 appeared first on Revival Life Church Boca Raton, FL.