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The Calling Of Jeremiah
Contributed by Edward Hardee on Oct 25, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Jeremiah was called of God at a young age. This message deals with calling and how we are to step into HIs purpose.
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Title: Jeremiah's Calling
Theme: Stepping into God's call.
Text: Jeremiah 1:1 -
Have many of you have ever went swimming in a lake and found yourself walking in the mud? You could feel the mud slide between your toes. The father you walked the deeper you became entrenched. When I was young, we used to go to the Blue Hole. This was a clay pit a few blocks behind our church, on the bottom was pure mud. This is where Jeremiah finds himself in Jeremiah 38.
Thrown into a cistern, a place where water was stored after the rain, it muddy and dark. This was his punishment. What did Jeremiah do? He followed God’s will. God spoke to Jeremiah and told him what to say and without hesitation, Jeremiah did it.
This was not the only time that Jeremiah was persecuted for telling the truth. Jeremiah lived a life of persecution. Alyssa Roat reminds us, “Jeremiah’s family turned against him and even plotted to kill him (Jeremiah 1:8, 11:21-23, 12:6). Over the years, he was whipped and put in the stocks (Jeremiah 20:1-3), attacked by a mob (Jeremiah 26:1-9), threatened by the king (Jeremiah 36:26), and ridiculed (Jeremiah 28).” 1
All for preaching the word of God. The question has to be asked, what kept Jeremiah going? What was it that made him hold on to fulfilling God’s purpose? I tell you today it was more than a duty, it was a call.
You see I believe throughout Jeremiah’s forty years of prophesying and persecution he would look back on that day that God called a fifteen-year-old boy into the ministry.
Turn in your Bible to Jeremiah 1, we will begin reading with verse 4. This passage alone
shows us Jeremiah’s call into ministry. Let us examine this closely as we see hope in the call of God. Look at verse four “the word of the Lord came to me”. The call of God begins with a word from God. This maybe an audible call, as it would seem here or a call of consensus of elders as we see in Acts 13:1. Whatever way God speaks to us it is an obvious call into ministry.
Looking at verse five God reminds Jeremiah that this call was “before you were born”. David tells us in Psalms 139:13 “For You formed my inward parts; You covered me in my mother's womb.”.2 God knows us, and He calls us.
Notice also that God tells Jeremiah, “I sanctified you”. Sanctified comes from the Hebrew word qadash pronounced kaw-dash'. It means to consecrate, sanctify, prepare, dedicate, be hallowed, be holy, be sanctified, or to be separate. God tells Jeremiah not only did I “set you apart” but I also “prepared” you for the ministry.
Look with me at what this calling is about. God tells Jeremiah “I ordained you”. The word ordained is from the Hebrew word nathan pronounced naw-than'. It means to be assigned, consecrated, commissioned and appointed. God had a task for Jeremiah to fulfill. The task ahead would be to speak the words of God.
God sets Jeremiah apart for an assigned duty. This duty would take him on a journey for the next forty
years. What was Jeremiah’s reaction? Look at verse 6 Then said I: "Ah, Lord God! Behold, I cannot speak, for I am a youth." There were two objections on Jeremiah’s part that we will explore deeper.
First, Jeremiah says, “I cannot speak”. This is an interesting statement, especially considering that he could look back on the patriarch Moses and remember the same objection. Exodus 4 tells us of the call of Moses. Throughout the chapters three and four God performs miracles and promises of walking with Moses. Reading verse 10 we see Moses had the same objection as Jeremiah, “Then Moses said to the Lord, "O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither before nor since You have spoken to Your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue."
This happened to me when I preached my first sermon. I remember standing behind the pulpit attempting to deliver a message that I had found on the back of a Sunday School lesson. I remember the lesson after 30 years it was based off GROW, a growing Christian. I stood in the pulpit, knees shaking and stuttering. Thinking I cannot speak. Praying deep within myself I said, “Lord, if you will get me through this I will never preach again.” Then it happened, a little elderly lady responded to the altar call, stretched out her hand and said these words, “Preacher, will you pray for me.” That sealed my calling.
Secondly Jeremiah said, “I am a youth”. Jeremiah was believed to be between 13 and 16 years of age. This is young. We get the impression that Timothy wrestled with the same insecurity from 1 Timothy 4:12. Paul reminds him in 2 Timothy 1:6, as we must often remind ourselves to “stir up the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands. (7) For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.”