Why I Wrote a Case Study on Jeremiah
“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you; before you were born I set you apart… Then said I, Ah, Lord God! behold, I cannot speak: for I am a child.” Jeremiah 1:5-6
I was a shy teenager who stuttered when I first read those words, and they landed on me like they were written that morning. God wasn’t asking Jeremiah if he felt ready. He was telling him the truth: the call didn’t depend on his confidence.
That passage is the reason I ended up in ministry at all. It’s also the reason I spent as long as I did studying Jeremiah’s life closely enough to write a book about it.
Most people know Jeremiah as “the weeping prophet” and stop there, as if the tears were the whole story. They weren’t. Jeremiah preached faithfully for forty years to a nation that never once responded the way he hoped. He was mocked, imprisoned, and accused of betraying his own people for telling them the truth. He watched everything he warned them about happen exactly as he said it would, and it brought him no satisfaction at all.
That’s not a story about a man with unusual courage. It’s a story about a man who obeyed anyway, on a day-by-day basis, without ever getting the outcome he was praying for. I don’t know a pastor, teacher, or ministry leader who can’t relate to some version of that.
Writing this case file wasn’t really about explaining Jeremiah’s theology, though that’s in there. It was about sitting with the question his life keeps asking: what does faithfulness look like when it doesn’t work?
If that question is one you’re currently living inside of, this study was written for you.
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