I know without a doubt that God takes sin seriously. After all, He sent His Son to die because of our sin. But God’s passion is redemption, When we think of “passion” we usually think of Jesus’s great love for us and His death on the cross. We should also be thinking of the Father’s great love and absolute determination to redeem us. Jeremiah 29:11 is one of my favorite verses, not because I think that it applies to me or to our world today, because it was actually written to the Israelites in exile as a promise of hope for the future. But in this verse, I see that God is still working out His plan for all people everywhere. Sin is still around, but so is redemption and that is God’s ultimate purpose for our lives. God desires our best, and that is eternity with Him, not a relatively short life on a planet corrupted by sin. Redemption has always been and always will be God’s goal for each of us. I cling to that when times are hard…I am passing through this world for a brief time but it is not my final destination.
The Best Plans
Jeremiah 29:11 is a popular verse that’s often slapped onto journals, etched into coffee mugs, and printed on t-shirts.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Jeremiah 29:11 NIVAnd God does have a plan for you.
God does want to bless you.
God does want to give you hope and a future.But—we should also pay attention to the original context …
In this case, God was speaking through the prophet Jeremiah to the people of Judah—people who’d recently been exiled to Babylon for 70 years.
The Jewish people were banished to a foreign land because of their insatiable appetite for sin. In fact, for 23 years Jeremiah had been warning them to stop rebelling against God or prepare to face the consequences.
God is patient, but He is also just. In the preceding chapters, God made a case against His beloved people:
They’d exploited foreigners, orphans, and widows. They’d denied the rights of the poor. They’d refused to stand up for truth or obey God’s instructions. They’d murdered the innocent and committed adultery. They’d rejoiced in doing evil and their lives were ruled by greed. They’d even built pagan shrines, sacrificing their sons and daughters in the fires. It was a dark time. And yet, somehow, God’s mercy always extends to the darkest places on earth.
That’s why, just a few verses later, God said they could seek Him and find Him, and He’d bring them back from captivity (Jeremiah 29:13-14).
That’s why he encouraged them—while in exile—to build houses, plant gardens, get married, have children, and work for the peace and prosperity of their temporary home (Jeremiah 29:5-7).
He wanted them to know: He hadn’t forgotten them. He still wanted good for them. He still had plans to restore them.
God is serious about sin, but He’s just as passionate about redemption.
Though Jeremiah 29:11 was meant for a specific people at a specific time, God’s heart for the restoration of broken people is generationally timeless.
Even when we feel stuck in the process, God still has a plan.
We can put our trust in the God whose goal is always redemption.