Language Translator

Monday, January 20, 2025

Jeremiah 50 A Message About Babylon

 

Note: It is written in 1 John 2: 16 For all that is in the world — the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life — is not from the Father but is from the world. 

 

Now think about Jeremiah 50. A Message About Babylon: 

Could it happen again? Is Babylon America Today? Does America do the will of God or do they do the opposite? You will know by their fruit. Will America turn back from its evil ways and tell their nation to repent. 

50 This is the word the Lord spoke through Jeremiah the prophet concerning Babylon and the land of the Babylonians: 

“Announce and proclaim among the nations, 
    lift up a banner and proclaim it; 
    keep nothing back, but say, 
‘Babylon will be captured; 
    Bel will be put to shame, 
    Marduk filled with terror. 
Her images will be put to shame 
    and her idols filled with terror.’ 
 A nation from the north will attack her 
    and lay waste her land. 
No one will live in it; 
    both people and animals will flee away. 

“In those days, at that time,” 
    declares the Lord, 
the people of Israel and the people of Judah together 
    will go in tears to seek the Lord their God. 
 They will ask the way to Zion 
    and turn their faces toward it. 
They will come and bind themselves to the Lord 
    in an everlasting covenant 
    that will not be forgotten. 

“My people have been lost sheep; 
    their shepherds have led them astray 
    and caused them to roam on the mountains. 
They wandered over mountain and hill 
    and forgot their own resting place. 
 Whoever found them devoured them; 
    their enemies said, ‘We are not guilty, 
for they sinned against the Lord, their verdant pasture, 
    the Lord, the hope of their ancestors.’ 

 “Flee out of Babylon; 
    leave the land of the Babylonians, 
    and be like the goats that lead the flock. 
For I will stir up and bring against Babylon 
    an alliance of great nations from the land of the north. 
They will take up their positions against her, 
    and from the north she will be captured. 
Their arrows will be like skilled warriors 
    who do not return empty-handed. 
So Babylonia will be plundered; 
    all who plunder her will have their fill,” 
declares the Lord. 

 “Because you rejoice and are glad, 
    you who pillage my inheritance, 
because you frolic like a heifer threshing grain 
    and neigh like stallions, 
 your mother will be greatly ashamed; 
    she who gave you birth will be disgraced. 
She will be the least of the nations— 
    a wilderness, a dry land, a desert. 
 Because of the Lord’s anger she will not be inhabited 
    but will be completely desolate. 
All who pass Babylon will be appalled; 
    they will scoff because of all her wounds. 

“Take up your positions around Babylon, 
    all you who draw the bow. 
Shoot at her! Spare no arrows, 
    for she has sinned against the Lord. 
 Shout against her on every side! 
    She surrenders, her towers fall, 
    her walls are torn down. 
Since this is the vengeance of the Lord, 
    take vengeance on her; 
    do to her as she has done to others. 
 Cut off from Babylon the sower, 
    and the reaper with his sickle at harvest. 
Because of the sword of the oppressor 
    let everyone return to their own people, 
    let everyone flee to their own land. 

 “Israel is a scattered flock 
    that lions have chased away. 
The first to devour them 
    was the king of Assyria; 
the last to crush their bones 
    was Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon.” 

Therefore this is what the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel, says: 

“I will punish the king of Babylon and his land 
    as I punished the king of Assyria. 
But I will bring Israel back to their own pasture, 
    and they will graze on Carmel and Bashan; 
their appetite will be satisfied 
    on the hills of Ephraim and Gilead. 
 In those days, at that time,” 
    declares the Lord, 
search will be made for Israel’s guilt, 
    but there will be none, 
and for the sins of Judah, 
    but none will be found, 
    for I will forgive the remnant I spare. 

“Attack the land of Merathaim 
    and those who live in Pekod. 
Pursue, kill and completely destroy them,” 
declares the Lord. 
    “Do everything I have commanded you. 
 The noise of battle is in the land, 
    the noise of great destruction! 
How broken and shattered 
    is the hammer of the whole earth! 
How desolate is Babylon 
    among the nations! 
I set a trap for you, Babylon, 
    and you were caught before you knew it; 
you were found and captured 
    because you opposed the Lord. 
 The Lord has opened his arsenal 
    and brought out the weapons of his wrath, 
for the Sovereign Lord Almighty has work to do 
    in the land of the Babylonians. 
 Come against her from afar. 
    Break open her granaries; 
    pile her up like heaps of grain. 
Completely destroy her 
    and leave her no remnant. 
Kill all her young bulls; 
    let them go down to the slaughter! 
Woe to them! For their day has come, 
    the time for them to be punished. 
Listen to the fugitives and refugees from Babylon 
    declaring in Zion 
how the Lord our God has taken vengeance, 
    vengeance for his temple. 

“Summon archers against Babylon, 
    all those who draw the bow. 
Encamp all around her; 
    let no one escape. 
Repay her for her deeds; 
    do to her as she has done. 
For she has defied the Lord, 
    the Holy One of Israel. 
 Therefore, her young men will fall in the streets; 
    all her soldiers will be silenced in that day,” 
declares the Lord. 
 “See, I am against you, you arrogant one,” 
    declares the Lord, the Lord Almighty, 
for your day has come, 
    the time for you to be punished. 
The arrogant one will stumble and fall 
    and no one will help her up; 
I will kindle a fire in her towns 
    that will consume all who are around her.” 

This is what the Lord Almighty says: 

“The people of Israel are oppressed, 
    and the people of Judah as well. 
All their captors hold them fast, 
    refusing to let them go. 
Yet their Redeemer is strong; 
    the Lord Almighty is his name. 
He will vigorously defend their cause 
    so that he may bring rest to their land, 
    but unrest to those who live in Babylon. 

 “A sword against the Babylonians!” 
    declares the Lord 
against those who live in Babylon 
    and against her officials and wise men! 
A sword against her false prophets! 
    They will become fools. 
A sword against her warriors! 
    They will be filled with terror. 
A sword against her horses and chariots 
    and all the foreigners in her ranks! 
    They will become weaklings. 
A sword against her treasures! 
    They will be plundered. 
A drought on her waters! 
    They will dry up. 
For it is a land of idols, 
    idols that will go mad with terror. 

So desert creatures and hyenas will live there, 
    and there the owl will dwell. 
It will never again be inhabited 
    or lived in from generation to generation. 
As I overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah 
    along with their neighboring towns,” 
declares the Lord, 
so no one will live there; 
    no people will dwell in it. 

“Look! An army is coming from the north; 
    a great nation and many kings 
    are being stirred up from the ends of the earth. 
 They are armed with bows and spears; 
    they are cruel and without mercy. 
They sound like the roaring sea 
    as they ride on their horses; 
they come like men in battle formation 
    to attack you, Daughter Babylon. 
The king of Babylon has heard reports about them, 
    and his hands hang limp. 
Anguish has gripped him, 
    pain like that of a woman in labor. 
Like a lion coming up from Jordan’s thickets 
    to a rich pastureland, 
I will chase Babylon from its land in an instant. 
    Who is the chosen one I will appoint for this? 
Who is like me and who can challenge me? 
    And what shepherd can stand against me?” 

Therefore, hear what the Lord has planned against Babylon, 
    what he has purposed against the land of the Babylonians: 
The young of the flock will be dragged away; 
    their pasture will be appalled at their fate. 
At the sound of Babylon’s capture the earth will tremble; 
    its cry will resound among the nations. 

 

 

Note: America Pride of Life. How long will the Lord will put up with this. 

The phrase “pride of life” is found only once in the Bible, in 1 John 2:16, but the concept of the pride of life, especially as it is linked with the “lust of the eyes” and the “lust of the flesh,” appears in two more significant passages of Scripture—the temptation of Eve in the Garden and the temptation of Christ in the wilderness (Matthew 4:8-10). The pride of life can be defined as anything that is “of the world,” meaning anything that leads to arrogance, ostentation, pride in self, presumption, and boasting. John makes it clear that anything that produces the pride of life comes from a love of the world and “if anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him” (1 John 2:15). 
 
The first example of the temptation of the pride of life occurs in the Garden of Eden, where Eve was tempted by the serpent to disobey God and eat the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Eve perceived that the fruit was “good for food,” “pleasing to the eye,” and “desirable for gaining wisdom” (Genesis 3:6). She coveted the fruit in three ways. First, it was appealing to her appetite. This John refers to as the “lust of the flesh,” the desire for that which satisfies any of the physical needs. The fruit was also pleasing or delightful to the eye, that which we see and desire to own or possess. Here is the “lust of the eyes” John refers to. Finally, Eve somehow perceived that the fruit would make her wise, giving her a wisdom beyond her own. Part of Satan’s lie was that eating the fruit would make her “like God, knowing good and evil” (Genesis 3:5). 
 
Here is the essence of the pride of life—anything that exalts us above our station and offers the illusion of God-like qualities, wherein we boast in arrogance and worldly wisdom. Eve wanted to be like God in her knowledge, not content to live in a perfect world under His perfect grace and care for her. Satan tried these same three temptations on Christ during His 40 days in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1-11). He tempted Jesus with the lust of the flesh, bread for His hunger, the lust of the eyes, “all the kingdoms of the world with their splendor”, and the pride of life, daring Him to cast Himself from the roof of the Temple in order to prove that He was the Messiah by an ostentatious display of power that was not in the will of God or His plan for the redemption of mankind. But Jesus, though He was “tempted in every way, just as we are” (Hebrews 4:15), resisted the devil and used the Word of God to ensure victory over him. 
 
Christians have always been, and will always be, lured by the same three temptations Eve and Jesus experienced. Satan doesn’t change his methods; he doesn’t have to because they continue to be successful. He tempts us with the lust of the flesh—sexual gratification, gluttony, excessive alcohol consumption, and drugs, both legal and illegal, as well as the “deeds of the flesh” about which Paul warned the Galatians, “sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these” (Galatians 5:19-21). He tempts us with the lust of the eyes—the endless accumulation of “stuff” with which we fill our homes and garages and the insatiable desire for more, better, and newer possessions, which ensnares us and hardens our hearts to the things of God. 
 
But perhaps his most evil temptation is the pride of life, the very sin that resulted in Satan’s expulsion from heaven. He desired to be God, not to be a servant of God (Isaiah 14:12-15). The arrogant boasting which constitutes the pride of life motivates the other two lusts as it seeks to elevate itself above all others and fulfill all personal desires. It is the root cause of strife in families, churches, and nations. It exalts the self in direct contradiction to Jesus’ statement that those who would follow Him must take up their cross (an instrument of death) and deny themselves. The pride of life stands in our way if we truly seek to be servants of God. It is the arrogance that separates us from others and limits our effectiveness in the kingdom. The pride of life “comes not from the Father, but from the world.” And, as such, it is passing away with the world, but those who resist and overcome the temptation of the pride of life do the will of God, and “the man who does the will of God lives forever” (1 John 2:17).