By the time Jeremiah prophesied in the sixth century before Christ, the nation of Israel had wandered far from God and from His direction for a healthy and whole life. Jeremiah reaches for vivid metaphors to describe that rupture. Israel is portrayed as an unfaithful lover, then as a hybrid plant incapable of bearing fruit, and finally as a garment so stained that no cleanser can restore it. “Though you wash yourself with lye and use much soap, the stain of your guilt is still before me, declares the Lord God” (Jeremiah 2:22). That image brings to mind an old song from the Jarmels in 1961, sung from the perspective of a wounded lover: “A little bit of soap will wash away your lipstick on my face… but a little bit of soap will never, never, never ever erase the pain in my heart.” The song ends with the line, “Like a bird, you left your robin’s nest… you flew away.” Israel had flown away from God’s love, and Scripture tells us that such turning always “fills his heart with pain” (see Genesis 6).
The root of the problem was Israel’s turn from God to religions of self-effort. The surrounding nations practiced dark rituals meant to manipulate their gods into giving them what they wanted. These acts promised spiritual connection but delivered corruption that ran far deeper than the surface. Constance observes, “Nothing they could do in trying to wash away their sin of self-effort could blot out their gross transgression.” That rings uncomfortably true. Sin is not a smudge on the cheek that disappears with a quick rinse; it settles into the fabric of who we are. We are often tempted to reach for our own forms of soap, moral effort, distraction, or even religious performance, hoping they will tidy things up. Experience suggests otherwise. We scrub, we polish, and still the stain stares back at us in the mirror.
Philip Graham Ryken presses the point with clarity: “Sin is not simply a cosmetic problem… What soap can wash away sin from the soul? There is no home remedy to take away guilt.” The New Testament answers that question with surprising grace. John writes, “The blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin” (First John 1:7). What Jeremiah saw as an incurable stain finds its remedy not in stronger soap but in a deeper cleansing. Paul echoes this hope when he says, “Such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ” (First Corinthians 6:11). The old hymn captures the truth better than any detergent advertisement ever could: “Are you washed in the blood… and are they white as snow?” The stain that no soap can reach is met by a grace that goes all the way through.
