**#ComeFollowMe nugget**
Jeremiah 1β3; 7; 16β18; 20
βπ±πππππ πΈ π΅πππππ ππππ ππ πππ π±ππππ’ πΈ πΊπππ ππππβ
At first, Jeremiah didnβt think he would make a good prophet.
βBehold, I cannot speak,β he protested when the Lord first called him (Jeremiah 1:6).
The Lord reassured him, βI have put my words in thy mouthβ (verse 9). Jeremiah felt that he was an inexperienced βchildβ (verse 6), but the Lord explained that he was actually more prepared than he realizedβhe had been ordained to this calling even before he was born (see verse 5).
So Jeremiah set aside his fears and accepted the call. He warned Jerusalemβs kings and priests that their pretended holiness would not save them from destruction. The βchildβ who thought he could not speak came to feel Godβs word βin [his] heart as a burning fireβ and could not be silent (Jeremiah 20:9).
Jeremiahβs story is also our story.
God knew us, too, before we were born and prepared us to do His work on the earth. Among other things, that work includes something Jeremiah foresaw: gathering Godβs people, one by one, to βbring [them] to Zionβ (Jeremiah 3:14). And even if we donβt know exactly what to do or say, we should βbe not afraid β¦ ; for I am with thee, saith the Lordβ (Jeremiah 1:8, 19).
: Jeremiah, by Walter Rane