Weep for the Exile

8 “‘And many nations will pass by this city, and every man will say to his neighbor, “Why has the Lord dealt thus with this great city?” 9 And they will answer, “Because they have forsaken the covenant of the Lord their God and worshiped other gods and served them.”’”
            10          Weep not for him who is dead,
nor grieve for him,
                        but weep bitterly for him who goes away,
for he shall return no more
to see his native land.

Jeremiah 22:8-10
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Weep for the Exile
Jeremiah’s words confront a misplaced grief. The people mourn the dead king, yet the Lord tells them to weep instead for the one led away into exile. Death, in a fallen world, is grievous, but exile under God’s judgment reveals something deeper: separation caused by sin. The greater tragedy is not merely dying, but being cut off from the Lord’s promised presence. So it is with us. We often lament earthly losses while ignoring the deeper condition of our hearts. Sin exiles us, from God, from life, from peace. Yet the Lord does not leave us there. He sends His Son into our exile. Christ bears our separation on the cross, enduring abandonment so that we would not. In His death, He enters our judgment; in His resurrection, He restores us. Therefore, our weeping turns to repentance, and our repentance to hope. For in Christ, the exile ends, and we are brought home to God.
 
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