Tags
bible, Biblical Truth, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, Inpirational, Narrative Poem, Poetry, theology
Based in Jeremiah 35:1-19
Devotional Note: Standing Firm in a Faithless Land
In the days of Jeremiah, when Judah’s people had grown deaf to God’s repeated calls through His prophets, the Lord pointed to an unlikely example: the Rechabites. This nomadic family had kept a simple, centuries-old vow from their ancestor Jonadab—not to drink wine, not to build houses, not to plant vineyards, but to live as sojourners in tents. For generations, they obeyed without wavering.
The climax came in the temple courts. Even when the prophet Jeremiah himself—God’s own messenger—set wine before them and said, “Drink wine,” they refused. With calm resolve, they declared their commitment: “We will drink no wine, for Jonadab… commanded us” (Jeremiah 35:6). They would not compromise, even under pressure from a man of God.
God honored their integrity. While Judah faced judgment for disobedience to divine commands, the Rechabites received a promise: their line would never fail to stand before Him (Jeremiah 35:19). Their story stands as a rebuke and an encouragement: If mere humans can honor a forefather’s word so faithfully, how much more should we obey our Heavenly Father’s voice?
Today, amid a world that urges compromise on every side, let the Rechabites remind us: True faithfulness isn’t swayed by convenience, authority, or culture. It holds firm, generation after generation. May we, like them, stand as pillars in a faithless land—uncompromising in obedience, trusting that God sees and rewards the heart that says, “No,” to temptation and “Yes,” to His will.
In ancient days, when Judah’s heart grew cold,
And prophets cried in vain to wayward souls,
There dwelt a clan apart, the Rechabites by name,
Descended from the faithful Jonadab of old.
No vines they planted in the fertile plain,
No houses rose beneath their steady hands;
In tents they roamed, as wanderers of the waste,
True to the charge their ancestor had planned.
“Drink not the wine,” the solemn vow decreed,
“Nor strong drink touch your lips from age to age;
Build not a dwelling, sow no seed for gain,
But live as sojourners upon the stage.”
Through centuries the word was kept with care—
Fathers to sons, in unbroken chain of trust—
No compromise with ease, no bending to the crowd,
Though kingdoms rose and fell in war and dust.
Then came the hour of trial, sharp and bright:
The prophet Jeremiah, at the Lord’s command,
Brought them within the temple’s sacred courts,
And set before them cups from glowing stand.
“Drink wine,” he spoke, as heaven watched the scene,
A test to shame the stiff-necked sons of pride.
But they, with calm resolve and quiet grace,
Refused the draught, and steadfastly replied:
“We will not drink, for Jonadab our sire
Commanded us, and we have held it fast:
No wine shall pass these lips, no field be tilled,
No roof shall shelter while the ages last.”
O noble stand! Unyielding to the lure,
They stood as pillars ‘mid a faithless land.
No threat of scorn, no promise could allure—
Integrity their shield, obedience their brand.
The Lord beheld, and His voice thundered forth:
“Behold these sons who honor father’s word!
While Judah spurns My prophets day by day,
These keep their vow, though never have they heard
My thunder from the mount, nor seen My fire—
Yet they obey. Therefore I swear this day:
Because you would not compromise, but stood most firm,
Your line shall never fail to stand before My face.”
So let the tale endure through time’s long roll:
When pressure presses hard to yield and bend,
Recall the Rechabites, who would not bow,
And find in their example strength to stand.
They would not compromise! They stood most firm!
And God, who sees the heart’s unswerving aim,
Honored their integrity with endless grace—
A covenant of blessing in His name.