God gave the Israelites a land flowing with milk and honey. He gave them wells they did not dig, houses they did not build, and crops they did not plant. They were to be His people, and He was to be their God. Yet they turned from the great Giver of good things to pursue the favor of other gods. They wanted success in this world, or the power of money, or pleasure, instead of the blessings already placed in their hands. Jeremiah explains that God’s judgment is perfectly just because they are without excuse. God even prepares Jeremiah for the inevitable question. In Jeremiah 5:19, He says, “And when your people say, ‘Why has the LORD our God done all these things to us?’ you shall say to them, ‘As you have forsaken me and served foreign gods in your land, so you shall serve foreigners in a land that is not yours.’” It is a sobering reminder that misplaced devotion carries consequences, even when it hides beneath a familiar religious routine.
It seems Israel had learned to live with a divided heart. They maintained rituals and traditions, but their lives were drawn toward other interests. That pattern feels uncomfortably familiar. It is possible to say the right things and still live in a different direction. I have noticed that it is easier to attend to outward habits than to examine inward motives. The schedule may look respectable, while the heart quietly wanders. The story behind Harry Chapin’s song “Cats in the Cradle” captures this tension. “When you comin’ home, dad? I don’t know when, but we’ll get together then.” According to Ravi Zacharias, Chapin himself intended to slow down and invest more in his family, but never found the time. His life ended before that intention became reality. It is a difficult illustration to ignore. Something can be known, believed, and even spoken about, yet never truly lived. Scripture echoes this concern: “This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me” (Matthew 15:8). Words and actions do not always travel together.
The New Testament brings clarity by pointing to Jesus Christ as the answer to this divided life. He did not merely speak truth; He lived it perfectly. In Him, there was no gap between word and action. Paul writes, “Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith” (2 Corinthians 13:5), not as a harsh demand, but as an honest invitation to alignment. Jesus also said, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (John 14:15), linking love with lived obedience. In Christ, we see what it means to have a whole heart, not divided between competing desires. He reveals that true devotion is not a performance but a relationship grounded in love. Through Him, the distance between what we say and how we live begins to close, not by effort alone, but by a life reshaped from within.
