Sunday, October 11, 2015

Trusting the Lord’s Plans

“ ‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord, ‘plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart. I will be found by you,’ declares the Lord, ‘and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you,’ declares the Lord, ‘and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.’” –Jeremiah 29:11-14 (ESV)

The situation for the promises found in the focal verses from Jeremiah 29:11-14 is a letter written by Jeremiah the prophet (inspired by God) to the Jewish exiles taken in 597 B. C. to Babylon. He wrote the letter to reassure the exiles that God had not abandoned nor forgotten them. The letter, in addition to being sent to the exiles in Babylon, was also circulated to the scattered and discouraged remnant remaining in Judah. 
 
He advised the exiles to make the best of the situation they were in. They were encouraged to build houses (imagine their being able to do this in exile!), plant gardens, get married, have children. The general intent was to encourage them to stay strong and look forward to being delivered, even though they would be seventy years in exile. We know from how life is that many who went into exile would meet death before freedom came and the people could return to Jerusalem. But Jeremiah wanted to infuse them with hope and to assure them that God had a future and a hope planned for them.

Jeremiah encouraged the people to remain prayerful, to seek the Lord sincerely (with all the heart) and find Him. Just because they were out of their homeland did not mean that God had abandoned them. And they were to remember with certainty that God had plans for them, “to give them a future and a hope.” When anyone loses hope he cannot hold on, cannot aspire to better prospects or to a brighter future. God who holds the future, knows what our future is.

And God declared through Jeremiah that His plans for His called-out people’s purpose was “a future and a hope.”

Maybe we have had to “go into exile,” to go away from familiar places we have loved and which have been home. It is not easy to pull up roots and relocate, to “start anew” in an unfamiliar place. Or maybe our exile is from illness or some debility that prevents our doing the work or taking on the pursuits we once enjoyed. These exiles are hard, but they are not the end of the road for us. “ ‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord” (v. 11). Isn’t it a remarkable thought to consider that God has plans for our future and these include our welfare?

Couple this wonderful promise from Jeremiah’s letter to the exiles with Jesus’ admonition in the Sermon on the Mount: “Therefore, do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient unto the day is its own trouble.” (Matthew 6:34, ESV).

Bible teacher Dr. Warren Wiersbe stated of Jeremiah 29:11: “God thinks about you personally and is planning for you. You need not fear the future.” Let us latch onto the promise in the verse and change any anxiety we have to hope and thanksgiving that even our future is secured by God Almighty. –Ethelene Dyer Jones. October 11, 2015.

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