The sermon emphasizes the importance of accepting the fact of the divine anger and turning to God in true penitence to avoid punishment.
Chuck Smith discusses the fall of Jerusalem as recorded in Jeremiah 52, emphasizing the long ministry of Jeremiah who warned the people for forty years about the impending doom due to their persistent sin and rejection of God's law. He highlights the divine vengeance that followed their refusal to heed God's warnings, illustrating how societal decay leads to judgment. Smith also addresses the concept of divine anger, asserting that it is rooted in God's love and compassion, and that true repentance is the only way to avert disaster. The sermon serves as a reminder of the consequences of ignoring God's call and the importance of turning back to Him.
Text
The Hour of Doom
Intro. Jeremiah 52 is sort of an appendix to the book in which a piece
of the recorded history is repeated. It was recorded earlier in
chapter 39, and was probably copied from II Kings 25. It is the
record of the fall of Jerusalem. "It came to pass in the eleventh
year of Zedekiah, the fourth month and the ninth day of the month
the famine was sore in the city so that there was no bread for the
people in the land, and the city was broken up." Thus is recorded
the fall of Jerusalem.
I. The ministry of Jeremiah.
A. It had commenced some 40 years earlier during the reign of
Josiah. There had been a succession of kings until finally
Zedekiah ascended to the throne and he also ignored the warning
of the prophet Jeremiah and he rebelled against Babylon. In the
11th year of his reign in the fourth month, and on the 9th day
of the month the ax fell.
1. Jeremiah had been warning for forty years of the
impending destruction of the city of Jerusalem by the
armies of Babylon unless the people turned to their
God.
2. He had used many devises to get their attention.
a. He had stood at the gate of the temple when he
was just a boy and he cried to the people who
were going into the the temple not to trust in
the ritual of temple worship to save them, they
needed to turn with their whole hearts to God.
b. He wore a beautiful expensive robe through the
city for a time, then burying it under a rock
for a period on time only to retrieve it later
when the bugs had eaten holes in it and the
colors had run together, they wearing it again
as he preached to them of how they were once a
thing of beauty to God but as a result of
their sin, they had become something to be
cast off.
3. During his early years while just a teen, they for the
most part they ignored him because the threat of a
Babylonian invasion seemed so remote. He received some
threats because he was considered a nuisance.
4. In the later years when the Babylonian armies were
approaching the city, he was placed in the dungeon and
imprisoned as being in league with the Babylonians.
There were actual plots to put him to death.
B. The people refused the message of warning from Jeremiah, and
continued in their sin. They had refused the divine call and
dared the divine wrath. And in the eleventh year, on the ninth
day of the fourth day, the city was broken up.
II. We now see the divine vengeance of God.
A. The reason for the divine vengeance was their turning from the
law of God.
1. The law of God is the expression of the highest ideals
for a society.
a. A love and the worship of God would be the
foundation of that society. It would honor
God first.
b. There would be a strong supportive family
environment in which children would be raised.
c. There would be no adultery.
d. There would be a true administration of
justice.
2. They left these ideals, they forsook God from the
national life.
a. They began to have an obsession for
pornography and sex.
b. There came a breakdown of the family
structure.
c. They began to abort unwanted children.
d. The whole judicial system became a mockery,
and as a result crime was rampant in the
street, as the streets began to be ruled by
gangs.
B. We notice however the slowness of the divine justice. Jeremiah
had been crying out his alarm for forty years.
1. The reason for the slowness was the divine compassion.
2. God is not willing that any should perish, but that
all should come to repentance.
3. Inevitably however if man will not heed the call of
God the eleventh year, the fourth month, and the ninth
day of the month will come, and God will allow that
once great society to collapse.
4. We are told in II Chronicles that they persisted in
their evil rejecting the messengers of God until
there was no remedy.
III. The story reveals the Divine anger. A. There are many people today who wish to reject the truth of the divine anger. The idea upsets them, and they wish to reject it. 1. Their God is sort of a syrupy honey on milk toast. 2. He is a poor disciplinarian, never punishing evil. 3. They are against the idea of the anger of God. 4. Is there a true basis for their antagonism, against this concept of God? 5. There are many who seek to reject the Old Testament, because it seems to speak of the justice, and judgment of God.
B. There is no revelation of God that does not include the truth of the Divine anger. 1. God has revealed Himself in nature. a. Nature tells us that if you break the laws of nature you will be hurt. b. If you jump off of a building. c. If you grab a electrical wire forming a ground you will be shocked perhaps fatally. d. There are laws that govern our Universe, and you must obey these laws or suffer the consequence. e. Obey the laws of nature and you will live, break them and you will die. d.
Those that discover the laws of nature are discovering the thoughts of God. 2. If we look for the revelation of God in human history, we find the same truth revealed. a. All history testifies to the fact of vengeance, punishment, judgment falling upon the nation that has left the high ideals. Russia being one of the most recent examples. b. When a nation leaves the high ideals of purity and morality, it has always been punished. 3. The New Testament revelation of God is not devoid of the truth of the divine anger. a.
Jesus was the epitome of love and compassion, yet we see Him angry with the Pharisees and Scribes. He denounces them with the threat of eternal punishment. b. Paul speaks of the wrath of God that is to revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men that hold the truth of God in unrighteousness. c. The book of Revelation devotes 12 chapters to the detailing the events in the day of wrath that is to come. C. All active opposition to the doctrine of Divine anger is accompanied by degeneration.
The people of Jeremiah's day had denied the idea, and they became very degenerate. 1. This is true of any person, nation, or church. 2. Deny this doctrine, and the next step is degeneration. D. The fact still remains, even if denied, and punishment comes. The eleventh year, and the fourth day and the ninth day of the month will arrive, and the breach will be made. E. The opposition of the doctrine of Divine anger often expresses itself in the persecution of the messengers. 1.
This happened in the case of Jeremiah. 2. He spoke of the Divine mercy that was available, of the Divine love, but of the inevitable Divine anger if that mercy and love were rejected. F. They tried to solve their problems with intrigues. 1. They sought to make a mutual defense pact with Egypt. 2. They thought that Egypt could save them from the coming punishment, thereby they could continue in their sin and not be forced to change their desired sexual preferences. a. Much as they are looking for science to come up with some cure for the HIV virus so that they will not have to change from their aberrant sexual practices.
G. They sought to compromise with God. 1. They were willing to give God everything but the one thing He was requiring. 2. They rebuilt the Temple, and started Temple worship again. 3. But they did not repent and turn from their sinful practices. E. There is one attitude that averts the Divine anger and that is turning to God in true penitence. The deserting of all the efforts of intrigue and compromise to get God to accept the lower standard of life style that you desire.
IV. Accepting the fact of the Divine anger a few facts that we need to
realize.
A. Remove from your mind any thought of vindictiveness.
1. God never punishes willingly.
2. He only afflicts when there is no other remedy.
B. He never rejoices over the doom.
1. See Jesus as He weeps over Jerusalem, as He could
foresee the devastation that would befall the city by
the Roman garrison.
2. There you see the heart of the Father when the day
of judgment is inevitable.
C. God's anger is always inspired by love. He is angry when loves
purposes are frustrated, or loves object is harmed.
1. Look at the things that Jesus was angry about.
a. Woe to you Pharisee's "You devour widow's
houses."
b. You lay on men heavy burdens that they cannot
bear.
2. It is of supreme necessity in the interest of the
saving of a society.
a. Prisons are to protect the free.
b. Hell is the safeguard of heaven.
c. A state that cannot punish crime is doomed.
D. The stroke of judgment is always discriminative.
1. Abraham pleading for Sodom.
E. The judgment of God is always progressive. He destroys that He
might build anew. The destruction is to prepare the way for
the construction.
1. The call of Jeremiah to tear down destroy, to build
and to plant.
F. Paul quotes the psalmist in Romans 3:10 In that same chapter
Paul asks, "Is God unrighteous that visits with wrath? God
forbid, how can God then judge the world?"
Sermon Outline
- I points: - The ministry of Jeremiah - The people refused the message of warning from Jeremiah
- II points: - The reason for the divine vengeance was their turning from the law of God - The slowness of the divine justice
- III points: - The story reveals the Divine anger - There is no revelation of God that does not include the truth of the Divine anger
- IV points: - Accepting the fact of the Divine anger - Remove from your mind any thought of vindictiveness
Key Quotes
“Thus is recorded the fall of Jerusalem.” — Chuck Smith
“God has revealed Himself in nature.” — Chuck Smith
“If we look for the revelation of God in human history, we find the same truth revealed.” — Chuck Smith
Application Points
- We must turn to God in true penitence to avoid the divine anger.
- God's judgment is always discriminative and progressive, with the purpose of bringing people to repentance and protecting society from evil.
- We must remove from our minds any thought of vindictiveness and understand that God's anger is always inspired by love.
