Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
A Holy Hunger
Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
by Carl Hoefler
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Tonight we come to the altar-table to celebrate Holy Communion. Why do we say, "Holy Communion"? Is there such a thing as "unholy communion"? Yes, there is. When one comes to the Lord's table with a hardened heart and with a life that is turned in upon itself; when one comes with a proud and an arrogant attitude; and when one comes thinking that he or she is worthy of what is about to be received; then, that person will receive communion, but it will not be holy.

Jeremiah, who speaks to us in our First Lesson this evening, knew firsthand the difference between holy and unholy communion with God. His total prophecy is dominated by a tormenting tension between a covenant made by a faithful and holy God, versus a covenant broken by an unfaithful and a disobedient people. They had broken the covenant at its most vital point - at its heart. They were worshiping a plurality of gods instead of the one true God. They were baking cakes for Ishtar, Queen of Heaven - the pagan mother-goddess who was worshiped by the Assyrians and the Babylonians. They were practicing the barbarious rite of child sacrifice. Pagan abominations desecrated the temple. Worst of all, the people thought that they were getting away with worshiping many gods as long as they fumbled through the formalities of the ritual and the sacrifices of the temple.

All of these betrayals of the covenant tore at Jeremiah's heart. He stood in the temple courtyard watching the people as they wandered thoughtlessly through the massive bronze gates of the temple. Suddenly, Jeremiah mounted the steps of the temple, and he began to preach. It was more than just a sermon. It was a sharp and a harsh summons. It was a prophetic condemnation. He shouted forth, "Amend your ways and your doings." His voice echoed and re-echoed throughout the halls of the temple. The people possessed no true hunger for righteousness. They desired no warm covenant communion with their God. The people chanted glib words about the temple being the "Holy Place of God." The truth was that they had made of the temple - as Jesus was to say many years later - "a den to harbor thieves and robbers." Even though the voice of Jeremiah penetrated every corner of the temple, his words failed to break open the sin-deafened ears of the people.

Jeremiah agonized, even wept, over the incurable spiritual sickness of the people. They were a people with "a stubborn and rebellious heart." They had broken the covenant with their God, not only by their outward actions; but, much more seriously, they had broken the covenant within their hearts. The abominations of idolatry practiced, not only in the temple, but also on every high hill and under every green tree, were only outward symptoms of a deadly disease of disobedience which festered like a malignant cancer in their hearts. Through this painfully accurate diagnosis of the fatal illness of the chosen people of God, Jeremiah was led by God to discover the cure. When Jerusalem fell to its enemies, when the temple was destroyed, and when the people were captured and driven into exile, the words of Jeremiah turned from the prediction of wrath, judgment, and doom to a prophecy of promise, forgiveness, and grace.

God revealed to Jeremiah that the wrack and ruin that had fallen on Judah were only acts of preparation that would enable God to rebuild a new people on the ruins and to renew a holy relationship with his people. God's purpose was not merely revenge and punishment. His intent was not to destroy the people with a mighty flood, as he had done in the days of Noah. God's purpose and intent were to sweep clean the false foundations of an unholy faithlessness in order that he could build and plant anew.

God loved his people, and that love was so great that he could not let his people go. God's love, working by means of judgment and its resulting destruction, would create a new people, a new covenant, and a new kingdom. The vision of this new beginning is profoundly expressed in the prophecy of the new covenant which is presented in our text for today. Like the old covenant, it will rest alone on the divine initiative of God's authority; however, unlike the old covenant, the new covenant will be an inner covenant. It will not be chisled into tablets of stone; it will be indelibly written on the hearts of the chosen people of God.

This prophecy of a new covenant is appropriate for us to hear this evening. Especially, it is appropriate as we gather to celebrate the birth-event of the sacrament of communion. In the reading of the Gospel, we hear once again the familiar words that our Lord spoke to his disciples and to us: "This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood."

Even more important for an understanding of what we are about to do, when we come to the altar-table to partake of communion, is Jeremiah's prophetic insight that what makes communion with God holy is a "clean heart." Now, the word "clean," used here, does not mean morally spotless or ethically hygienic; rather, it means what is intended when we say that we have "swept something clean." It means "empty." It means that all the trash that has accumulated in our hearts has been eliminated, thrown out, disposed of, and swept away. A clean heart is an empty heart; and, like an empty stomach, it spontaneously cries out to be fed and filled. With a clean heart, the whole person hungers and thirsts for righteousness - a right relationship with the Lord and a holy communion with our God.

Those of you who cook know that there is nothing worse than, after having spent long hours preparing a meal, seeing people come to the table and fuss over the food. They push the results of your hard labor around on their plates to create the impression that they have eaten something, when in truth, they have eaten nothing. The main reason that we do not eat is the simple and the obvious fact that we are not hungry. If "Junior" or "Sister" devours two candy bars, downs a milk shake, and finishes off a twelve ounce Pepsi before coming home to dinner, of course neither one of them is going to want to eat dinner! Even the most favorite food will not be enticing to a body that is already stuffed full of junk-food.

What makes Holy Communion "holy" is hunger. If we come to the Lord's table full of hatred, or greed, or jealousy, or envy, or just full of our own self-centered pride - if we come to the Lord's table after having served the false gods of material wealth and earthly power all week long; then, no amount of rightly performed ritual is going to make communion "holy." The hungry heart is what makes communion holy.

Hunger of the stomach or of the heart is not a matter of the will. Sometimes, we can entice people to want to eat by the way in which we prepare and serve food. All of us have experienced not being aware that we were hungry until we came to the table. After surveying all the appetizing dishes of food, or after inhaling the tantalizing aromas drifting from the kitchen, hunger becomes obvious. An elegant restaurant which is tastefully decorated, enhanced by candlelight and "singing violins" can contribute to our enjoyment of dining. However, all of this does not create hunger as an act of will; rather, it only makes us aware of our hunger by appealing to the senses.

God prepares a dinner for us - communion. The one basic requirement for this communion to be holy for us is hunger - not the hunger of the stomach, but the hunger of our total being - the hunger of our hearts. It may be the hunger for the assurance of forgiveness, or it may be a hunger forexperiencing the presence of Christ, or it may be the hunger for fellowship with God and with each other. No matter what basic desire or need causes us to be hungry, the experience of true preparation to receive the Lord's Supper is an inner emptiness that cries out to be filled.

That is why the warnings of Jeremiah fell on deafened ears; the people of Judah were not hungry. They had stuffed their lives full with spiritual junk-food - narrow nationalism, the teaching of false prophets, the following after of pagan idols, shallow ritualism, and immoral self-indulgences. That is why Judas left the table before the meal was over. He was not hungry for the words of the Lord. His mind and his heart were full of self-devised schemes to take the destiny of the Lord into his own hands and to change the world; therefore, he failed to be present when our Lord declared that God was establishing a new covenant - a new relationship with his people - that would change the direction of the present world and the outcome of the future world as well.

For Judas, two thousand years ago, the meal that he ate with his Lord was the last supper he was to eat this side of hell. Because, after his act of betrayal, when he realized the irrevocable mistake that he had made, Judas truly hungered for God's forgiveness. He was driven not to the cross of our Lord, but to an empty tree where he hanged himself, to be left forever hungry for the forgiving words of God.

This term "The Last Supper" as a designation for communion is interesting. It appears nowhere in Scripture. For Judas, it is appropriate. In a sense, it is appropriate for all the disciples because it was the last meal that they would share with Jesus while he was in the flesh. However, in a far more profound sense, that communion which we remember this night, when the disciples broke bread with their Lord, would better be entitled "The First Supper." It was, and it is, the first supper of the new covenant. God was establishing a new world, and he began it with a fellowship meal. Our Lord sat at the table with a lingering look of love as he picked up thecup that was before him. He blessed it. Then he handed it to his friends saying, "This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood." God was moving from an outward relationship with his people to a new inner relationship. The revelation of redemption was rotated to a new focal point. The God, who had become flesh and had entered into the world, was now about to become spirit and to enter into our very hearts.

In our Second Lesson, the author of Hebrews places the new covenant in the comprehensive context of the Holy Trinity when he writes, "The Holy Spirit also bears witness to us ... I will make with them a new covenant ... I will put my laws on their hearts and write them on their minds." The Father establishes a new covenant with us by the blood of his Son. The Holy Spirit dwells within us, creating a holy hunger in our hearts for a continual communion with our God.

Rejoice. A new and living relationship with our God is now possible. It is a new covenant of love. It is not a new "rule" embedded in the law. It is an inner obedience rather than an outward observance. It is an act of forgiveness, rather, than an act of judgment. It is a gift of life, rather, than the wages of sin. It is grace - pure undeserved grace! Therefore, let us rejoice as we come to this table, eat this bread, and drink this wine. It is the body of the living Lord. It is the life-giving blood of a new covenant. It shall never be broken because it possesses the sin-crushing strength of the cross - the life-giving power of an open tomb - and the live-preserving presence of the Holy Spirit. The cross, the empty tomb, and the Holy Spirit will come together and focus on your inner being, like a laser light, and will create within you - "A Holy Hunger!"

C.S.S. Publishing Company, Mysterious Joy, by Carl Hoefler