Return, thou backsliding Israel, saith the Lord Turn, O backsliding children, saith the Lord Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings. Jeremiah 3:12,14, 22
There would seem to be many reasons why the Lord should not invite the backslider to return. We will follow the guidance of the chapter, which will richly repay a careful exposition.
1. The usual jealousy of love. Note the terrible imagery of verse 1. A wanton adulteress is allowed to return to her husband.
2. The abundance of the sin: "Thou hast polluted the land" (verse 2). The very earth felt the leprosy of the idolatry.
3. The obstinate continuance in evil, notwithstanding chastisements (verse 3)."Thou refusedst to be ashamed."
4. The refusal of tender persuasion. "Wilt thou not?" etc. (verse 4).
5. The perversion of mercy. God did not reserve his anger forever, and they sinned the,more because of his long-suffering (verse 5).
6. The warnings which had been despised, Judah saw Israel doomed, and yet followed her evil ways (verses 6-11). It is a great increase of iniquity when we perceive the suffering which it causes others, and yet persevere in it ourselves.
There is a play upon words, or rather upon senses, in the original,"Return, ye backsliding children;" more literally, "Turn, ye turned-away sons, and I will heal your turnings," as in Hosea 14:4.
God invites and does not drive; he here exchanges threats for promises. God will "heal;' not simply receive his children. God alone can heal their apostasies. Man repents of sin, but God cures it. It is our part to turn from evil, God's to destroy that evil. Sin is washed out, not by tears of penitence, but by the blood of Christ. The healing is of the apostasies themselves, not simply of their painful effects Christ saves from sin. The Pulpit Commentary
I was weary of a cold heart towards Christ, and his sacrifice, and the work of his Spirit of a cold heart in the pulpit, in secret prayer, and in study. For fifteen years previously I had felt my heart burning within, as if going to Emmaus with Jesus. On a day ever to be remembered by me, as I was going from Dolgelly to Machynlleth, and climbing up towards Cadair Idris, I considered it to be incumbent upon me to pray, however hard I felt my heart, and however worldly the frame of my spirit was. Having begun in the name of Jesus, I soon felt as it were the fetters loosening, and the old hardness of heart softening, and, as I thought, mountains of frost and snow dissolving, and melting within me. This engendered confidence in my soul in the promise of the Holy Ghost. I felt my mind relieved from some great bondage: tears flowed copiously, and I was constrained to cry out for the gracious visits of God, by restoring to my soul the joy of his salvation. Christmas Evans
I am sometimes downright staggered at the exceeding riches of his grace. How Christ can go on pardoning day after day, and hour after hour; sometimes I feel almost afraid to ask, for shame. A. L. Newton