Jeremiah 31:2 (paraphrased)
"This is the way God put it: 'They found grace out in the desert, these people who survived the [sword] killing. Israel, out looking for a place to rest, met God out looking for them!'"
Amid massacre and conquest, the God of Israel's everlasting love remains faithful. Promises made, promises kept, enduring love, restoration, and comfort for Israel after exile and hardship.
Jeremiah 31:3 (paraphrased)
"God told them, 'I’ve never quit loving you and never will. Expect love, love, and more love!'"
God’s pursuing grace shows up even (or especially) for those who’ve barely made it through. This is a message for all those who are trying to keep up under their own strength.
God is declaring to Israel (and us) that restoration isn’t based on their strength or perfection.
It’s God saying, "You didn’t find Me by accident, or by your self-help in your wildernesses; I was there seeking you all along."
It’s not us groping our way through the spiritial wildernesses, piecing together enough self-improvement, moral effort, or spiritual hacks to stumble upon Him. No...He was the One choosing, initiating, pursuing, drawing. The survivors of the sword, the remnant limping out of Babylonian exile’s carnage weren’t there because they’d finally "got it right." They were there because God’s everlasting love, His unchanging faithfulness predated their failures and outlasted their brokenness.
What does this tell me?
First, it tells me that the world knows nothing about grace. The fact that God makes his promises known to us all in His word tells me that the world doesn't know these things otherwise. Were it not for God's enduring love and faithfulness the world could NOT understand patience, comfort, contentment, loving kindness, charity, faith, justice, and humble service. God makes those things possible. The world truly knows nothing of this kind of grace apart from God’s self-revelation.
Second, God is always prescient. He's always before us, leading the way. God’s love isn’t reactive or conditional; it’s proactive and eternal. The fact that God makes these promises known in His Word (and ultimately in Christ) is itself grace. He’s not hiding; He’s revealing what the world could never discover on its own. This grace flows directly from that everlasting quality [El Olam], from everlasting to everlasting He is God. He’s not scrambling to respond to our messes; He’s already anticipated our arrival, already drawing near, already answering our prayers.
The world gropes for stability in fleeting things; temporary comforts, conditional relationships, self-made security, but apart from His self-disclosure, true patience, contentment, mercy, justice, and humble service remain earthbound and elusive, hiding in shadows.
But does "The Word" remove the problems of mankind?
No. The Word is a book of liberty. It reveals the problem and promises God will provide a way out of our wildernesses, but in and of itself it cannot free us from our enemies. It doesn’t function like a magic formula that erases suffering, sin’s consequences, or the brokenness of this fallen world on contact. Problems persist. Exile's scars and bad Babylonian habits in Jeremiah’s day, persecution in the early church, ongoing trials and idolatry for believers today. The Word diagnoses the root problem, and it promises deliverance, but it isn’t the deliverance itself in isolation. Scripture calls itself a book of liberty (or "law of liberty" ) precisely because it reveals the path to freedom without being the automatic liberator apart from our responses and relationship.
James chapter 1 verse 25 speaks of the "perfect law, the law of liberty" (or "perfect law that sets you free" ). It's the gospel that liberates from sin’s slavery when we look intently into it, continue in it, and act as doers of it, not remain forgetful hearers. Freedom comes through persevering obedience to this revealed truth, not passive possession.
You can walk around all day long carrying your Bible and even reading it as you go, and it's not going to make anything better or less difficult for you in your path. The Word isn’t a talisman or a shortcut that auto-applies relief without engagement.
The "perfect law, the law of liberty" is summarized in "love your neighbor as yourself". Carrying the Bible is a start, but it’s the intent + looking + continuing + doing that brings liberty’s blessing. The Bible isn’t a get-out-of-hardship-free card. It's a book of instructions, a guide to true freedom through active faith/obedience.
Are you treating Scripture like a lucky charm?
Are you rubbing your idols like genies in a lamp?
Do you wanna know why "love your neighbor as yourself" is the perfect "royal law"? It’s "perfect" because it’s fulfilled in Christ; complete, without flaw, and it’s a "law of liberty" because it liberates us from sin’s slavery. Not by erasing hardship, but by empowering us through the Spirit to live in genuine freedom. Freedom to love without partiality, to do justice and mercy humbly, to walk in obedience that blesses rather than binds.
Jesus said, "If anyone loves me, he will keep my word…Whoever does not love me does not keep my words." (John 14:23-24)
Jesus and the apostle John aren’t promoting legalism (earning salvation by perfect commandment-keeping, impossible apart from grace). They’re exposing our hypocrisy.
Straight up, professed love for Christ or knowledge of Him without corresponding obedience is just empty words. It's a disconnect between the lips and the life. In practical terms, this challenges the "lucky charm" mentality.
As the remnant of Israeli exiles limped through the wilderness, God declares a promise of restoration to them. Not self-help hacks, perfection programs, magic talismans, or demigods bringing intercessions; He provides a way forward into the promised future. He prepares that way for them. He draws them there with lovingkindness. Not because they’ve finally "got it right," but because His proactive, eternal love predates their failures and outlasts their brokenness. Their future crystallizes in the new covenant, in the gospel of Jesus Christ. In a heart-transformed relationship where God’s law is written within for Jew and Gentile alike.
Amen?