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Jacob continues his exposition in Jeremiah 20:7–18, focusing on Jeremiah’s inner turmoil after persecution from the priestly establishment (context from Jeremiah 20:1–6): Jeremiah laments that the Lord “deceived/overpowered” him and that he has become a daily object of mockery (Jeremiah 20:7–8), yet he admits he cannot stop speaking because God’s word is like a “burning fire… in my bones” (Jeremiah 20:9). He describes betrayal by “trusted friends” who watch for his fall (Jeremiah 20:10) but then pivots to confidence that “the Lord is with me like a dread champion,” and that persecutors will ultimately be shamed (Jeremiah 20:11); he interprets the testing of the righteous and God’s knowledge of “mind and heart” (Jeremiah 20:12) as the Lord proving faithfulness publicly, and he links Jeremiah’s call for divine vindication to the martyrs’ plea for justice in Revelation 6:9–11. The emotional pendulum swings again: Jeremiah erupts into a birth-curse and death-wish—“cursed be the day I was born… why did I come forth… to see trouble and sorrow?” (Jeremiah 20:14–18)—which Prasch applies pastorally as a realistic pattern for faithful believers in “an age of apostasy,” arguing that perseverance comes not from triumphalism but from endurance modeled by Christ’s suffering (Matthew 26:39; Matthew 27:46) and hope set on the coming kingdom rather than present vindication. He then briefly re-anchors the theme by rereading the looming national judgment in Jeremiah 21:1–14 (Zedekiah’s inquiry, Babylon’s siege, “sword/famine/pestilence,” and the “way of life and the way of death,” Jeremiah 21:1–10), treating it as the macro-level counterpart to Jeremiah’s personal anguish, before closing with an intent to proceed to Jeremiah 22 next session.
By MorielTV4.8
4949 ratings
Jacob continues his exposition in Jeremiah 20:7–18, focusing on Jeremiah’s inner turmoil after persecution from the priestly establishment (context from Jeremiah 20:1–6): Jeremiah laments that the Lord “deceived/overpowered” him and that he has become a daily object of mockery (Jeremiah 20:7–8), yet he admits he cannot stop speaking because God’s word is like a “burning fire… in my bones” (Jeremiah 20:9). He describes betrayal by “trusted friends” who watch for his fall (Jeremiah 20:10) but then pivots to confidence that “the Lord is with me like a dread champion,” and that persecutors will ultimately be shamed (Jeremiah 20:11); he interprets the testing of the righteous and God’s knowledge of “mind and heart” (Jeremiah 20:12) as the Lord proving faithfulness publicly, and he links Jeremiah’s call for divine vindication to the martyrs’ plea for justice in Revelation 6:9–11. The emotional pendulum swings again: Jeremiah erupts into a birth-curse and death-wish—“cursed be the day I was born… why did I come forth… to see trouble and sorrow?” (Jeremiah 20:14–18)—which Prasch applies pastorally as a realistic pattern for faithful believers in “an age of apostasy,” arguing that perseverance comes not from triumphalism but from endurance modeled by Christ’s suffering (Matthew 26:39; Matthew 27:46) and hope set on the coming kingdom rather than present vindication. He then briefly re-anchors the theme by rereading the looming national judgment in Jeremiah 21:1–14 (Zedekiah’s inquiry, Babylon’s siege, “sword/famine/pestilence,” and the “way of life and the way of death,” Jeremiah 21:1–10), treating it as the macro-level counterpart to Jeremiah’s personal anguish, before closing with an intent to proceed to Jeremiah 22 next session.

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