Open the
Bible Question Form to send your own
question.
Read: Jeremiah
19:1-15
The Lord tells Jeremiah
to take of the ancients (elders) of the people to the valley of Hinnom. He
also takes “a potter’s earthen bottle” with him (v.1). There,
in the valley of Hinnom where the Jewish people have sacrificed their
sons to Baal (v.4-5), Jeremiah proclaims their sure judgment. This
valley will become the “valley of slaughter” (v.6) and their carcasses
will be made to be meat for the birds (v.7). Then Jeremiah breaks
the bottle in the sight of the men with him (v.10). The Lord
declares, “Even so will I break this people and this city, as one breaketh
a potter’s vessel, that it cannot be made whole again” (v.11). God
will surely judge this people.
This broken bottle,
much as the nursery story about Humpty Dumpty, signifies those things
that can never be put back together after they are broken. The
New Testament speaks greatly of the grace of God—so much so that we
sometimes forget that we still have bottles that can be broken. Yes,
God can heal and God can make good even out of bed, but some things
cannot be undone.
Purity can be forever
lost through fornication, adultery and other forms of uncleanness. Trust
can be forever broken through betrayal. Cruel words can never
be undone. God forgives and sometimes the wronged one forgives. But the act
can never be reversed. The purity cannot be regained; the trust
can never be the same. O, how we must strive not to break those
earthen bottles! We must teach our children. We must guard
our lives. Yea, even our very hearts and minds.