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Jeremiah 3:6-7
I thought she would return but she did not
"Then the Lord said to me in the days of Josiah the king, "Have you
seen what faithless Israel did? She went up on every high hill and
under every green tree, and she was a harlot there. 7"And I thought,
‘After she has done all these things, she will return to Me’; but she
did not return, and her treacherous sister Judah saw it," (Jer.
3:6-7).
We see here an
anthropomorphic expression from God about Israel. God speaks to
Israel as a husband speaks to his wife. John Frame sums it up
beautifully:
"In Jeremiah 3, God interacts with
Israel as a husband with his unfaithful wife....this passage deals
with God's relation to Israel in history, not his eternal decrees
and eternal foreknowledge. The thrust of the passage is that
recent history should have motivated the repentance of Israel and
Judah, but in fact they continued their spiritual adultery. As
their husband, God had hoped (this hope being an expression of his
preceptive will) for something better."1
For
clarification, the term Mr. Frame used "preceptive will" is a
theological term denoting the will of God that is contrasted with His
decretive will. In God's decretive will, God ordains certain things to
occur and they will occur. In God's preceptive will, God allows
certain things to occur (like the fall, sin, rebellion, sickness, etc.)
that are not in His decretive will. Another way to look at it is
to say that it is God's "permissive" will; that is, He permits sinful
things to occur even though sin is contrary to God's perfect will.
Nevertheless, this passage demonstrates the manner in
which God relates to His people in human terms. Therefore, we
should expect human type statements.
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1. Frame, John, No Other God, a
response to Open Theism, (Phillipsburg, New Jersey: P & R
Publishing), 2001, p. 196.
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