Read Jeremiah 7:1–15
ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“You rulers make decisions based on bribes; you priests teach God’s laws only for a price; you prophets won’t prophesy unless you are paid. Yet all of you claim to depend on the Lord. ‘No harm can come to us,’ you say, ‘for the Lord is here among us.’” (Micah 3:11 NLT)
Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Part 5: The Altar of Safety. Jeremiah stands at the gate of the temple and delivers one of the most unsettling sermons in Scripture. The people passing through the gates believe they are safe. After all, the temple stands in their city. God’s name dwells there. Worship continues. Sacrifices are offered. Surely the presence of the temple proves that everything is ultimately fine.
Their confidence sounds almost like a chant: “This is the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord!”
The logic is simple and seductive: if God’s house is here, then God must be with us. If God is with us, then we must be right. And if we are right, we must also be safe.
Jeremiah shatters that illusion.
The prophet does not condemn the temple itself. The temple was meant to be a sign of God’s presence—a sacred reminder that the people belonged to the Lord. But over time the sign became something else. Instead of pointing people toward God, the temple became proof—at least in their minds—that God would never judge them.
The building meant to call them to faithfulness had become an altar of safety.
Jeremiah exposes the contradiction. The people stand in the temple while practicing injustice outside its walls. They oppress the foreigner. They exploit the vulnerable. They twist narratives. They bear false witness. They shed innocent blood. Yet they still assume that the presence of the temple guarantees protection.
So Jeremiah points them to history.
“Go now to Shiloh,” God says through the prophet.
Shiloh had once been the center of Israel’s worship. The tabernacle stood there. The presence of God had rested there. If sacred geography alone guaranteed protection, Shiloh would still stand.
But it does not.
The ruins of Shiloh testify to a hard truth: proximity to the holy is not the same as faithfulness to the Holy One.
The altar of safety appears whenever people begin to trust systems more than God. It emerges when sacred institutions become shields against accountability rather than instruments of transformation. It whispers a comforting lie: because God’s name is here, nothing can truly threaten us.
But the prophets consistently dismantle that illusion. The presence of worship does not excuse injustice. Religious identity does not replace repentance. Sacred structures cannot protect a people who refuse to live in the ways of the God they claim to worship.
The temple itself was not the problem. Treating it like a divine insurance policy was.
Every generation faces the temptation to construct its own altar of safety. We look for signs that reassure us everything is fine: traditions preserved, institutions standing, familiar patterns continuing. These things can be gifts—but they become idols the moment we trust them more than we trust God.
Jeremiah’s warning echoes across the centuries: the real question is not whether God’s name is spoken in our spaces. The real question is whether our lives reflect the justice, mercy, and humility that God requires.
Sacred places matter. Worship matters. Community matters.
But none of them exist to guarantee our safety. They exist to call us back to God.
THOUGHT OF THE DAY
The presence of religion does not guarantee the presence of faithfulness.PRAYER
Holy One, search our hearts and examine what we trust. Where we have mistaken systems for security or institutions for righteousness, lead us back to the deeper path of faithfulness. Teach us to worship not for comfort but for transformation, and to follow You wherever truth leads. Amen.
Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).








