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4 Hear God's Message, House of Jacob! Yes, you - House of Israel! 5 God's Message: "What did your ancestors find fault with in me that they drifted so far from me, Took up with Sir Windbag and turned into windbags themselves? 6 It never occurred to them to say, 'Where's God, the God who got us out of Egypt, Who took care of us through thick and thin, those rough-and-tumble wilderness years of parched deserts and death valleys, A land that no one who enters comes out of, a cruel, inhospitable land?' 7 "I brought you to a garden land where you could eat lush fruit. But you barged in and polluted my land, trashed and defiled my dear land. 8 The priests never thought to ask, 'Where's God?' The religion experts knew nothing of me. The rulers defied me. The prophets preached god Baal And chased empty god-dreams and silly god-schemes. 9 Because of all this, I'm bringing charges against you" - God's Decree - "charging you and your children and your grandchildren. 10 Look around. Have you ever seen anything quite like this? Sail to the western islands and look. Travel to the Kedar wilderness and look. Look closely. Has this ever happened before, 11 That a nation has traded in its gods for gods that aren't even close to gods? But my people have traded my Glory for empty god-dreams and silly god-schemes. 12 "Stand in shock, heavens, at what you see! Throw up your hands in disbelief - this can't be!" God's Decree. 13 "My people have committed a compound sin: they've walked out on me, the fountain Of fresh flowing waters, and then dug cisterns - cisterns that leak, cisterns that are no better than sieves. (Jeremiah 3:4-13 The Message Bible)
Jeremiah. One of the great prophets. He had a heart for God and for God's people; so much so that he wept a lot for his people. Known as the "weeping prophet," he was always a favorite on which my Mom called when one of us cried more than we should; "Are you Jeremiah, you cryer?" (Sounds better en espaƱol). But he also suffered personally for his message as he was beat, imprisoned, and even thrown into cisterns as punishment. He also inspired someone to write a song with his name in it, albeit a bullfrog. Okay, you have to be of a certain age to remember that song. But Jeremiah wrote some incredible words including a prayer I have been sayiing daily and often from the 17th chapter, verse 14: "Heal me and I shall be healed; save me and I shall be saved, for Thou art my praise." I pray that often each day in English and Spanish believing every word and trusting God completely for my healing.
In this passage for today, we read of the heartbreak that caused the prophet to weep. God's people, as we often do, sometimes think we know more than God, and find ourselves in messes so bad we don't have anywhere to go but up! Here in this Message Bible, the language gives away his frustration as we read in verse 5, "Took up with Sir Windbag and turned into windbags themselves?" That's usually where we find ourselves when we forget to ask, "Where's God, the God who got us our of Egypt, Who took care of us through thick and thin, those rough-and-tumble wilderness years of parched deserts and death valleys, a land thta on one who enters comes out of, a cruel, inhospitable land?" And that's the key of this entire passage, "Where is God?" When we find our bearings in God, we find the bearings we need for ourselves.
God identifies exactly what went wrong: "My people have committed two sins: They have forsaken me, the spring of living water, and have dug their own cisterns, broken cisterns that cannot hold water."
First, they abandoned the source of living water—God Himself, who never runs dry, never disappoints, never fails. Second, they frantically started digging their own wells, crafting their own solutions, building their own security systems. But here's the devastating truth: everything we build apart from God is fundamentally broken. It can't hold what we desperately need it to contain.
We dig cisterns of career success that leak when the economy shifts. We build containers of relationships that crack under pressure. We construct wells of material security that run dry when circumstances change. Meanwhile, the fountain of fresh, life-giving water remains available, flowing freely, waiting for us to return.
This isn't just ancient history—it's our story too. How often do we walk away from God not because He's failed us, but because we've gotten distracted? We start believing that other things can satisfy our deepest thirsts. We replace God "as the central focus of anyone's life and thought" with substitutes like "injustice, greed, lust for power."
The heartbreak in God's voice echoes through the centuries: "You were so devoted in your youth, so eager to please. What happened? When did My love stop being enough?"
Maybe we didn't consciously decide to abandon God. Maybe we just gradually shifted our attention, slowly redirected our hope, quietly placed our trust in things that seemed more tangible, more immediately rewarding. But the result is the same: we end up thirsty, holding empty buckets, wondering why life feels so dry.
The beauty of this passage lies not just in its diagnosis but in its implicit invitation. God isn't asking these questions because He's given up on His people—He's asking because He wants them back. The fountain is still flowing. The invitation to drink deeply is still extended.
God doesn't need our cisterns to be completely destroyed before we can return to Him. He simply needs us to recognize that they're broken, that they were never meant to be our primary source of satisfaction. The living water is still available, still fresh, still able to satisfy every thirst we've been trying to quench elsewhere.
PRAYER: Lord, You are the fountain of living water, and yet we confess we've been digging our own wells. Forgive us for the times we've walked away from Your unfailing love to chase after things that promised much but delivered little. Help us see the broken cisterns in our own lives—the places where we've tried to find security, identity, and satisfaction apart from You. Show us how empty these substitutes really are, not to shame us but to draw us back to the abundance that flows from Your heart. We're thirsty, Lord. We're tired of trying to make broken things work. Draw us back to the fresh, life-giving water that only You can provide. Remind us again of Your faithfulness in our past, and help us trust You with our future. Restore the joy of our relationship with You; in Jesus' strong name we pray, amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord. OUR CALL TO ACTION: What cisterns have you been digging? What sources of satisfaction have you been relying on that might be leaking or running dry? Instead of frantically trying to repair what's broken, consider returning to the fountain of living water. Spend time in prayer and Scripture, allowing God's presence to refresh your soul in ways that your substitutes never could.
I love you and I thank God for you!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.