We Are Forgiven
March 22, 2015
Jeremiah 31:
31-34
“Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant
with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not
like the covenant that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by
the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant that they broke,
though I was their husband, declares the Lord.
For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those
days, declares the Lord: I will put my law within
them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they
shall be my people. And no longer shall each
one teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of
them to the greatest, declares the Lord. For I
will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”
We
find this passage quoted on the fifth Sunday of Lent. Traditionally, Lent is a
season of confession and penance and a time to empty ourselves so we can be
ready for the good news of Easter. This text invites us to confess and repent
heartily, with the assurance of God’s promise to forgive our faults and speak
no more of them.
Verses
31–34 are the pinnacle of Jeremiah’s message. Beyond hardship, he preaches
about hope: God forgives and makes things new. The new covenant designates the
promise that God commits to save and keep his people for himself. Even amid
chaos and desolation for the people, Jeremiah upholds that the faithfulness of
God’s covenant is unbroken, like in a marriage covenant. Despite the people
being unfaithful, despite injustice and exploitation, corrupt kings and
priests, idolatry, and the many ways people broke their faith in God, God does
not break faith in them.
Instead
of judgment, people hear from Jeremiah a splendid promise, and unexpected good
news. God will bring life where there is death. God will build a path where
there is none.
The
law written on stone—that no one diligently follows—will not exist anymore. The
days will come when the law will be engraved in the hearts of people and
applied in their daily lives.
The
days will come when people, from the least to the greatest, will intimately
know God. God will shape individuals and their hearts, from the inside out, so
they can respond to the demands of God’s law. This change will occur with a
complete and definitive resolution of the problem of sin. Contrary to the
ritual prescriptions of the Mosaic covenant that constantly reminded
individuals of their faults, this new covenant—divine intervention—will wash
away forgiven sin.
This
prophetic promise keeps ringing true in the advent of Christ. Jesus is the
Christ, he truly is the Messiah, the one the Israelites were expecting, the one
the prophets proclaimed. Jesus is Christ because in him, by him, God makes a
new covenant with his people; a new covenant open to all who turn to him.
Christ is the one who introduces this new covenant.
Too
many times we continue to beat ourselves up about our shortcomings and sins
long after God has long forgiven us. God’s love strengthens and gives hope to
people in times of rejoicing and celebration and also in times of suffering and
doubt. God’s covenant extends to us all.
We too are God’s people. All have value in the eyes of God.
Let
us ask ourselves, “What are the things that are consciously or unconsciously
are the symbols of our faith? “ What vision do we have of our daily lives when
our life is moved and transformed by God’s forgiveness? Does being forgiven
make any difference?”
I
saw a television program a couple of weeks ago about Vietnam veterans who
wanted to make a difference to the people of Vietnam they had injured when
dropping Agent Orange during the war. Sometimes down
three generations, the birth defects continued to show up from their actions.
After retiring, these veterans moved back to Vietnam and opened facilities to
teach these disabled children. For $65 a
month, they learned that could provide special services for the disabled
children. That is the peak of
repentance. Not only were they sorry for their actions against civilians in that war, but they
wanted to do something positive to help. That is true repentance.
The
themes of a new (or renewed) covenant and of God's overwhelming grace are, of
course, fitting for a celebration of Reformation Day. Martin Luther did not
believe that he had discovered something radically new in Scripture when he
found there the doctrine of salvation by grace through faith. He rediscovered a
treasure that the church of his day had largely lost. The movement he began was
as much a restoration as a reformation -- the rediscovery of God's abundant
grace in the new covenant established in and through Jesus. Luther felt he was
restoring the church of his day to a right understanding of that covenant. Each
subsequent generation has that same opportunity.
As we recognize God’s
forgiveness, we are inspired by his Holy Spirit to in turn forgive others who
may have offended us.
There is,
then, in our theology a deep continuity with what had come before. We know that
God's nature does not change. God was, is, and will continue to be a God of
great mercy, forgiveness, and love for a wayward people. It is that people's
(the church's) understanding of God's nature that had become clouded in the
past. Like Jeremiah, then, we call the people of ours day to a new
understanding of God and a renewed emphasis on God's grace and God's abiding
love even for a sinful people.
So let us
accept the gift of being forgiven. Let us live as forgiven people…renewed and
eager to make our life one of service to others.
And this
is all God's doing. In and through Jesus, the God of Jeremiah continues to
forgive, renew, reform, and call God's people into right relationship with him
and with one another. God is faithful, even when we are not. That is the good
news that both Jeremiah and that we proclaim, and it is news that can and
should be celebrated on this Sunday, preferably with trumpets and always with
great joy.
(When I preach or even prepare a sermon, I always ask the congregation to recall the "context" of the scripture. To establish context, I refer to Bart Ehrman, who is an outstanding Bible historian...to whom "context" is very important. I have all his books..even one of his textbooks. When we are examining ancient documents, context is everything. The scriptures were not written for us....they were written for those ancients. They did not live in the 21st century...they lived in their century.....in a completely different culture.)
(When I preach or even prepare a sermon, I always ask the congregation to recall the "context" of the scripture. To establish context, I refer to Bart Ehrman, who is an outstanding Bible historian...to whom "context" is very important. I have all his books..even one of his textbooks. When we are examining ancient documents, context is everything. The scriptures were not written for us....they were written for those ancients. They did not live in the 21st century...they lived in their century.....in a completely different culture.)
3 comments:
I enjoyed the sermon. Thank you for sharing it.
I guess I double clicked as the comment was there twice. I deleted one.
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