Jeremiah Ch 13- Study

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Additional notes are Black

Approaching studies within Jeremiah, instead of trying to follow chronologically, which is difficult with this book, for roughly the first half of the book, the first 29 chapters, we will instead only produce studies within their appropriate chapters, theming them as follows:

  • Jeremiah’s Calling                     Ch.1
  • Jeremiah’s Main Message        Ch.2,3,5,7,21,22
  • Jeremiah’s Action Parables      Ch.13,18,19,27
  • Jeremiah’s Opposition              Ch.11,12,14,18,20,26,28
  • Jeremiah’s Message of Hope   Ch.3,23,24,25,29

For those who may wish to ‘study’ this chapter, and the particular theme, as with studies elsewhere, each passage has a four-Part approach to help you take in and think further about what you have read on the main Bible page.

A. Find Out:
  1. What did the Lord tell him to buy? v.1
  2. What was he to do with it? v.1
  3. Then what was he to do with it? v.4
  4. What happened to it? v.7
  5. What was this to picture? v.9
  6. What were the people like? v.10
B. Think:
  1. Why do you think God wanted Jeremiah to DO something like this?
  2. How had the belt first of all been a picture of Israel?
  3. What might  Jeremiah have felt when he dug the belt up and saw it?
C. Comment:

We now come to the first of a number of “action parables” where the Lord required Jeremiah to DO something which was then going to act as a picture of what the Lord wanted to say. Note here that the Lord looks not necessarily for our understanding but for our obedience. He will bring understanding in due time.

In this action parable Jeremiah had to buy a belt and put it on – so that it was close to him.  Having had it for some time he then has to go and find a place in the ground and leave it there – where it would obviously spoil. When Jeremiah was completely obedient the Lord told him the meaning of it all.

The belt on Jeremiah was a picture of the relationship that God had designed Israel to have with Him, a picture of a close relationship.  The spoiling of the belt, taken off and ruined in the ground was a picture of what was to happen to the nation. 

This very vivid picture would not be forgotten and as Jeremiah dug it up he possibly thought, “What a waste!”. That would certainly be true of Israel as well, for they needn’t ever have let it happen. There really was no need for them to be destroyed – IF they repented!

D. Application?

Thank the Lord that He takes time to speak to us and teach us, knowing that we often need time to come to understanding.