
Jeremiah 17:7-8 “But blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in him. He will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.”
There is more than one word for “blessed” in the Greek and the Hebrew. In many of the psalms, or Jesus’ beatitudes, the word “Blessed…” means something more like “happy.” We feel uplifted and elevated when we are enjoying God’s word and the good things that come from it.
Here we have a word for “Blessed” that describes us as people who have received a great gift. That’s what happens when we trust in the Lord. We possess good things. Those things may not make us happy in the material sense, but they are still good to have. They’re still a gift.
Some people turn this around. They make it seem as though when we trust in God, we are the givers, and he is the receiver. And we may speak of giving God our trust, or giving him our hearts. But that is no great prize, is it? I once heard a talk show host and a political guest joking about the heart of a particularly hard-edged politician. If you received his heart as a transplant, would it be a good thing, because it had never been used, or would it be a bad choice, because it didn’t work?
Spiritually, our hearts don’t work right. “The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure,” is the very next thing Jeremiah observes in verse 9. Some great gift for God that is when we offer our love and trust.
So we are the blessed ones, the receivers of God’s gifts. And the prophet describes that blessing with a picture: “He will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.”
Note that the tree in the picture doesn’t have life easy all the time. The heat comes and makes it suffer. The drought comes and dries up much of the moisture on which it depends. Life is like that for those who trust in the Lord. About now we are at the peak of the annual flu season. Millions have gotten sick. We can expect that the percentage of Christians with the flu matches the general population. When prices rise, we have to pay what everyone else does. When tornadoes come, they plow through Christian homes the same as unbelievers’. We live in the same world as everyone else.
But God has planted us by a stream of water. Under the surface, our roots tap into the streams of his promises. We know the love of a Savior who went all the way to cross and death to make us his own. Disease may make us miserable. It may even take our life. It has no effect on the streams of love and forgiveness flowing to our hearts from Jesus’ cross.
Our earthly fortunes will almost certainly swing wildly between plenty and scarcity, if they don’t just hover between “can’t quite make ends meet” and “can’t get the bill collectors off my back.” But God’s grace is always free, and no one can come and repossess the kingdom that he has already given us.
As people who trust in the Lord, we are always cleansed, always safe, always rich, always free, always treasured, always prospering, always at peace with God, always filled with his presence, always destined for glory, and no one can ever take these gifts away.







