How to apply Jeremiah's obedience daily?
In what ways can we apply Jeremiah's obedience to our daily lives?

Jeremiah’s Setting and the Cost of Obedience

Jeremiah 36:27–28: “After the king had burned the scroll containing the words that Baruch had written at Jeremiah’s dictation, the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah: ‘Take another scroll and once again write on it all the words that were on the first scroll…’”

• Jeremiah has just watched months of Spirit–dictated work reduced to ashes.

• Instead of quitting, he immediately listens for God’s next command.

• His obedience is active, immediate, and resilient.


Everyday Applications of Jeremiah’s Obedience

1. Persevere when our witness is rejected

Luke 9:5: shake the dust, but keep moving with the message.

– Refuse to let discouragement silence truth.

2. Repeat truth faithfully, even when it feels repetitive

2 Timothy 4:2: “Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season.”

– Family devotions, workplace integrity, social media posts—sow the same righteous seed again.

3. Obey promptly, not eventually

Psalm 119:60: “I hasten and do not delay to obey Your commands.”

– When God’s Word convicts, act the same day: apologize, tithe, forgive, serve.

4. Trust God with the results

– Jeremiah was responsible for writing, God for preserving.

1 Corinthians 3:6: plant and water; God gives the growth.

5. Value Scripture above personal comfort

Matthew 4:4: “Man shall not live on bread alone…”

– Schedule Bible intake before entertainment; guard study time like a non-negotiable appointment.

6. Stand firm against cultural pressure

Acts 5:29: “We must obey God rather than men.”

– Hold biblical convictions on sexuality, marriage, life, even if labeled outdated.

7. Partner with others in ministry

– Jeremiah dictated; Baruch wrote.

– Invite spouses, children, friends to co-labor: family prayer lists, shared outreach projects.

8. Anticipate spiritual opposition

Ephesians 6:12: our battle is spiritual, not merely human.

– Prepare with prayer, Scripture memory, mutual accountability.


Practical “Write Another Scroll” Moments Today

• Re-start a prayer journal after weeks of neglect.

• Share the gospel again with a resistant relative.

• Rebuild a broken ministry team rather than abandoning it.

• Return to a church hurt by division and serve humbly.

• Rewrite lost work—sermon notes, study plan, article—believing God still intends to use it.


Motivation for Persistent Obedience

• God sees: Hebrews 6:10.

• God rewards: Galatians 6:9.

• God completes: Philippians 1:6.


Conclusion

Jeremiah’s quiet act of taking up a fresh scroll becomes a timeless picture of steadfast, Scripture-anchored obedience. His example urges us to keep listening, keep writing, and keep trusting the Author of every new beginning.

How does Jeremiah 36:27 connect to the theme of God's enduring word?
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