Did this message, about the ungodly man (Sennacherib), ever get to him? Did this pointed and precise message get to him? Was the word intended to reach him, in his rebellion, before he answered the call to meet God, face to face, through death?
When God tells you the fate of the faithless and the fury of God, a fury and fate they're about to face.
This is a far reaching word — that has far reaching implications — that includes a world that eats, breaths, walks, and plays, with no regard to living for God and His glory.
God sent a word — about an individual — that would never get that word — about himself — because he didn't prepare his heart to seek God.
King Manasseh is no doubt a warning. But he's also a wonder of grace — all wrapped up in one. For those of you reading with us through Jeremiah 15, I want to draw your attention to three things:
(1) His drifting. (2) His deliverance. (3) His damage.
To get the best picture of these three things I need to point you 2 Chronicles 33 and Jeremiah 15. This passages will help you see the consequences that fell upon the nation, years later, as a direct result to the damage he caused. 
 Manasseh reigned for 55 years... and for the most part, the majority of those 55 years, he DRIFTED and seduced and deceived the people to follow his crooked ways. Even though he had a living example and legacy of a father, king Hezekiah, that brought great reformation and revival to the land, he rebelled and overthrew everything his father did. (I may share about rebellious children later today.) The description of his life was one of utter wickedness...
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