Jeremiah 2:19 revisits a theme already sounded in the book, but this time with a sharpness that is hard to ignore: “Your evil will chastise you, and your apostasy will reprove you. Know and see that it is evil and bitter for you to forsake the LORD your God; the fear of me is not in you, declares the Lord GOD of hosts.” The prophet does not merely announce judgment; he explains it. In his characteristically practical way, Warren Wiersbe observes, “A basic principle is enunciated in verse 19: God punishes us by allowing our own sins to bring pain and discipline to our lives. ‘Your own conduct and actions have brought this upon you. This is your punishment. How bitter it is!’ (Jeremiah 4:18, New International Version).” He goes on to note that “the greatest judgment God can send to disobedient people is to let them have their own way and reap the sad, painful consequences of their sins.” It is an uncomfortable thought, but Jeremiah insists that it is also an honest one.
That principle translates easily into daily life. We tend to imagine consequences as lightning bolts from the sky, when often they arrive quietly, like unpaid bills finally due. God is known for sending quail and taking away the pleasure of eating it, and He is also known for turning the plainest meal into a feast. Yet Jeremiah’s point seems simpler: some choices are built with consequences already inside them. As John Mackay explains, there are “inner connections between Judah’s actions and their consequences which will make themselves evident over time and serve to chastise and correct her.” This does not remove God from the picture; it recognizes Him as the One who established the link between act and outcome. Life has a way of becoming its own commentary. We sometimes call this bad luck, but Jeremiah would call it education, the sort that stings just enough to be remembered.
The New Testament brings this sober insight into sharper focus. Timothy Willis notes that Judah’s suffering came from turning to other nations and their gods, only to be betrayed by them. Scripture tells us plainly that “the wages of sin is death,” a line the apostle Paul delivers without ornament. He does not stop there, however: “but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23). Here is where Jeremiah’s bitterness meets grace. Max Lucado captures it vividly when he invites us to see the soldiers’ spit as the filth of our hearts and then to watch what Jesus does with it. “He carries it to the cross,” fulfilling the words, “I did not hide my face from mocking and spitting” (Isaiah 50:6, New International Version). The consequences we earned did not vanish; they were gathered up, borne by Christ, and answered with life instead of death.
