Today's Scripture Reading (July 16, 2026): Jeremiah 19
One of our most-loved Nursery Rhymes was penned in the late 18th
century. The rhyme in question is "Humpty, Dumpty," the famous egg
who sat on the wall. One problem with our understanding of Humpty Dumpty is
that the poem nowhere suggests that Humpty Dumpty was an egg. It is thought
that the original intention of the rhyme was that it was supposed to be a
riddle, a statement in which people would be invited to guess the identity of
Humpty Dumpty. But the riddle long ago turned into a children's rhyme, and the
mystery found at the core of the rhyme has long since been forgotten.
But that has not stopped some from trying to guess the riddle's answer. Suggested
answers include King Richard III, the last king of the House of York, whom the
upstart House of Tudor toppled. Two other possible answers to the riddle emerge
from the Siege of Colchester in 1648, a battle from the middle of the English
Civil War. During the war, the Royalist army found itself hemmed in at the
walled city of Colchester. Outside the walls were the
Parliamentarians. The rhyme, some assert, is about either a sniper, a man known
as One-Eyed Thompson, or a cannon, appropriately known as Humpty Dumpty, that
sat on the walls of a church called Mary-at-the-Walls. The story tells of the
Parliamentarians outside the city who weakened the wall beneath either the
sniper or the cannon, causing the fall of "Humpty Dumpty." As a
result of this fall, the city of Colchester was lost, and all the king's horses
and all the king's men, referring of course to the Royalist Army trapped inside
the city, couldn't save either the town or Humpty Dumpty.
God seems to have a similar illustration and story for Jeremiah to tell.
Again, the weeping prophet is given an illustration of what is about to happen
in Jerusalem. He is to go and take a jar and break it. The imagery here is not
that Jeremiah would gently break the jar, leaving large pieces that might be
put back together. The imagery is of a smashed jar that has been broken into so
many pieces that it is impossible to reassemble, even with all of the king's
horses and all the king's men at the ready to do the task.
But maybe the one thing we miss when we read this prophecy is that,
while in the short term the prophecy was fulfilled and Jerusalem was left in
ruins, God is still the God of the impossible, and in the long term it seems
that God himself would put the city back together again. Jerusalem still stands
today, although, admittedly, once again, it would seem that the Holy City is
broken, divided among the People of Israel, the Followers of Jesus Christ, and
the Followers of Islam. But no matter how broken the city might seem, God
remains the God who can still put the pieces back together.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: Jeremiah 20