Jeremiah 32:1-44 · Jeremiah Buys a Field
Even Our Business Belongs to God!
Jeremiah 32:1-44
Sermon
by Mark Ellingsen
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The weekend is shot (almost). Tomorrow it is back to the “real” world, back to the grind, at least for most of us. Where will God be in all that?

Be honest with me: Do you feel God’s Presence on the job, as you go through the usual Monday routine? Is God directing you as you attend to your e-mail, run through your voice mail, review the reports, or check your assignment? Let us be frank with each other. The businesses which employ most of us are part of the “secular” realm, not of the “sacred” realm that concerns God. That is the way most Americans see it. Religion is one thing; business is another. Our commitment to the principle of separating church and state has led to a “culture of disbelief,” one in which it is all right to be religious in private, but not publicly when we are on the job.1 But that is not the way that the Bible views the world of business! This morning’s First Lesson makes that clear.

Our text, Jeremiah 32, is the most detailed account of a business transaction recorded in the Bible. It is all about Jeremiah’s purchase of land in Anathoth (a town just three miles north of Jerusalem) from his cousin Hanamel. What follows are all the details of the purchase regarding the cost, the signing of the deed, and the witnesses. What are details like that doing in the Bible, and what do they have to do with us?

It was a tense, really almost hopeless time. The Southern Kingdom of Judah (ruled by David’s heirs and possessing the great capital of Jerusalem and its Temple) had been in decline for some time. The Babylonian Empire had set its sights on the Kingdom. In fact Jerusalem was under attack (Jeremiah 32:2). Life as the Hebrews had known it, was not the same. They felt themselves to be witnessing the decline of their civilization, almost the end of the world. And we sometimes lament about the state of American society — its moral compass, declining standards, and selfishness. We “ain’t seen nothing” compared to what the Hebrews in Jeremiah’s day were experiencing.

It was hardly a time to trust the market or to make investments. Judah was a sinking ship. Our Bible lesson tells us that Jeremiah himself was in even more dire circumstances. He had been imprisoned by Judah’s King Zedekiah for prophesying (correctly) that Jerusalem would be conquered by the Babylonians, that Judah’s alliance with Egypt would not do it any good (Jeremiah 32:1, 3a; 37-38). And yet the Lord God came to the Prophet and told him to redeem land that was owned by his extended family, to buy that land (Jeremiah 32:6). (In ancient Hebrew culture when your extended family incurred debts and needed to sell land, the first right of purchase was given to next-of-kin to hold the property on the kin’s behalf [Leviticus 25:25-28].) It was not smart business. But it seems that God has his own business strategies. He is going to turn a profit, even if it defies our economic theories. All our Bible lessons for today make that point. What we think is our business, ultimately belongs to God.

No, it did not seem to be a very good investment for Jeremiah to buy that land, what with the Babylonian conquest of the region on the horizon. The point that God seemed to want to make was that although appearances and ordinary perceptions appeared to render it a bad deal, in the divine plan, in the long run, it would work out for good. It was a good deal for Jeremiah to hold that land for his relatives, because someday the Hebrews would hold their land again in peace, even if in the short term the Babylonians would conquer. History has shown that Jeremiah and God were correct. The Hebrews did return from Babylon and the land surrounding Jerusalem (in Jeremiah’s hometown of Anathoth) became their own again. After centuries of exile, that land is again in the hands of the Jews. When God gets into our business, he eventually produces results.

We get more of those unusual divine business strategies in our other assigned Bible lessons. In our Second Lesson from 1 Timothy 6 we hear that “the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil” (v. 10) and that those who are rich are not to be haughty or set their hopes on their riches, but are to be generous (vv. 17-18). The Gospel Lesson from Luke 16:19-31 echoes these themes with the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus. The rich man ignored the needs of the poor man Lazarus, and we learn that that was not God’s way. His way is that you do not get hung up on wealth, and that if you have it, you use it generously for the sake of the poor.

These are nice ideals, but they will not work on the job tomorrow, will they? The boss expects you to make money for the company. The entrepreneurs among us know that you have to keep expanding the company, you have to increase its wealth, in order to “grow” the business. This brings us back to the concerns I raised at the beginning of this sermon. Where will God be when you get back to work tomorrow? Are the teachings of Jesus and the ideals of the Bible really applicable to the everyday business world, to the work-a-day world? At first glance they do not seem to be, and so on Monday we push our Christianity aside. Maybe that is why work is so unfulfilling for so many people. God does not seem to be present, and so work seems pointless, just a way to make a living.

This is precisely the point of our assigned Bible lessons and of this sermon. At first glance, it seems that God’s ways cannot be related to what we do on the job. But it is God’s style to surprise us with his ways. That is precisely what he did on the Cross. What to the world appeared to be the end of Jesus and his apparently insignificant and failed mission became God’s way of giving life to all.

The sixteenth-century reformer, Martin Luther, called this manner of God’s behavior the Theology of the Cross. God’s style of working on the Cross, Luther claimed, continues to the present time. Just as God confronted the world and its wisdom on the Cross, so today we must learn to distrust our own wisdom and not rely on our own insight.2 Why? Because “the works of God are always unattractive and appear evil....”3 God works in this hidden way to humble us by confounding our wisdom. Then we will see how foolish and sinful we are and become totally dependent on him (1 Corinthians 1:20-29). Commenting on Psalm 30, Luther claimed:

We must not judge by what we feel or by what we see before us. The Word must be followed, and we must firmly hold that these truths are to be believed, not experienced; for to believe is not to experience. Not indeed that what we believe is never to be experienced but that faith is to precede experience. And the Word must be believed even when we feel and experience what differs from the Word.4

Luther has helped us to understand why the Bible’s business strategies seem so much in tension with our usual everyday business sensibilities. It has to do with God’s style of confounding our worldly wisdom in order to make us recognize our total dependence on him.

But again we must consider how all this can be of any use to your tomorrow on the job. Recall Luther’s comments that the Word of God will be experienced sometimes. It connects with our daily lives. That is the point of our First Lesson when it accounts in full detail the exact nature of the business transaction in which Jeremiah engaged. To paraphrase Luther: Your faith can connect with your daily business dealings, with your everyday life. But faith in that Word must precede your everyday experience. Interpret your job and its responsibilities in light of the Word of God.

What happens when you do that? What happens when you see your job in light of the Good News of God’s forgiving love for you and me? That’s when you truly can begin to feel that your business is really God’s business.

Let’s consider first the state of business in America. How do you feel about your job? Social analysts tell us that there is a great deal of anxiety out there about our jobs. The new economy values flexibility and openness to risk. But those dynamics create personal anxiety and apprehension. They also undermine a sense of mutuality, trust, and community. My primary agenda needs to be openness to new opportunities that can open doors for me, not to what is best for the company or my colleagues.5 In these circumstances it becomes natural to feel that what you do on the job does not have much lasting spiritual significance. Is that the way work feels for you?

I hope it is not that way for you. Unfortunately, that futility is the way work feels for many of us. But even if you love your job, do you really see it as a ministry, like mine, one with lasting spiritual significance? I hope you do, but in case you do not, this sermon is for you.

Our First Lesson from Jeremiah about the Prophet’s business transaction witnesses to the spiritual significance of business, of your job. By buying that land Jeremiah became God’s vehicle for proclaiming that the Hebrew people would maintain the land of Judah, at least be returned to the land God promised (Jeremiah 32:26-44). Of course that was not obvious; God’s ways are never obvious to common sense. (That is the essence of the Theology of the Cross.) Even Jeremiah had his doubts (Jeremiah 32:24-25).

Another Old Testament book praises the virtues of work, even though it does not seem very virtuous. The book of Ecclesiastes, probably composed at another time in Jewish history when the Hebrew people were enduring foreign domination, laments about the meaninglessness of life (1:1-11; 2:12ff.). Yet in the midst of this sense of chaos and meaninglessness, the sort of meaninglessness you may feel sometimes with your work, the Preacher who authored Ecclesiastes writes: “There is nothing better for mortals than to eat and drink, and find enjoyment in their toil. This also, I saw, is from the hand of God; for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment?” (2:24-25). Work is one of the good things in life. Of course it is only enjoyable because it belongs to God, is one of God’s good gifts.

Do you see your job that way, as a gift from God? The book of Ecclesiastes urges you to see it that way. “Not my job,” you say. “It’s a rat-race; it’s dog-eat-dog. God can’t be in that.” Don’t forget how God works in surprising ways, often confounding what we take to be common sense (the Theology of the Cross).

Work, your job, is a wonderful gift of God (even if it does not always seem to be). Believe it! As Martin Luther has put it:

Your work is a very sacred matter. God delights in it, and through it he wants to bestow his blessing on you. This praise of work should be inscribed on all tools, on the forehead and the face that sweat from toiling. For the world does not consider labor a blessing. Therefore it flees and hates it ... But the pious, who fear the Lord, labor with a ready and cheerful heart; for they know God’s Command and Will.6

Our work, Luther says, is a mask that God uses to give us his blessing. If we have earned any wealth by our work, if you are “comfortable,” it is not you who earned it. Not really. God gave us these successes and the ability to achieve them as unmerited gifts.7

Do you get the implications of this for the importance of your work? If God uses your work as a “mask” for giving you the goods of life, then God uses your work and the work of others to give other people the necessities of life too. Sometimes, quite often, you can be God’s means of working good for others. As much as my work brings God’s love to people, your job provides these opportunities too. Your job is a spiritual vocation filled with ultimate meaning!

This is how the references in our other assigned Bible lessons to not flaunting wealth and to generosity to the poor become pertinent (1 Timothy 6:17-18; Luke 16:19-31). See your job as an opportunity to share God’s love with your fellow human being. The greatest Reformed theologian of the past century, Karl Barth, put it this way: “Fundamentally, we can work aright only when we work hand in hand. The nourishing bread to be gained from work can only be bread broken and shared with the fellow-worker.”8 Work is not meant solely for profit, but for the service of the whole human community, so says the Catechism of the Catholic Church.9

Of course this idea that work should be for the sake of the community seems to go against the grain of the new dynamics of our economy, which, as we have noted, demand risk and flexibility, not loyalty and concern about community. But recall that it is God’s style to defy the business conventions of corporate culture as we presently experience them. That is what he did in Jeremiah’s day and with long-term success. (Again we are reminded of the Theology of the Cross.) That God would still succeed when he goes against the grain is of course to be expected. After all, he owns the business, your business. And the sooner you get in line with the Boss (with God), the happier, the more fulfilling, your job will be.

No, tomorrow will not be just another Monday at your workplace. It can be a wonderful day for serving God. As you interact with your clients or co-workers, surf the Net, make your product, or clean the room, remember that you are God’s mask for bringing good to the human community. You are a vehicle that God plans to use to express his love. Isn’t your job a great one? It is filled with ultimate meaning and significance. Open your eyes, and you will see that (sometimes in a hidden way) you are doing God’s work!

The founder of Methodism, John Wesley, put it so well once in a sermon:

3. Yet again: In what spirit do you go through your business? In the spirit of the world, or in the spirit of Christ? I am afraid thousands of those who are called good Christians do not understand the question. If you act in the spirit of Christ, you carry the end you at first proposed through all your work from the first to last. You do everything in the spirit of sacrifice, giving up your will to the will of God; and continually aiming, not at ease, pleasure, or riches, not of anything “this short-enduring world can give,” but merely at the glory of God. Now, can any one deny, that this is the most excellent way of pursuing worldly business?10

Wesley says that you are to give God the glory by giving everything you have on your job back to him and his people. Christian workers are people who finish what they start, who think of the customer, their co-workers, and God ahead of their needs. What a great way to do business! When you go against the grain of our current business ethos, and believe that God owns your business, it sets you free really to enjoy your job.


1. For these insights I am indebted to Stephen L. Carter, The Culture of Disbelief (New York: Basic Books, 1993), esp. pp. 3, 8-9.

2. Martin Luther, Heidelberg Disputation (1518), in Luther’s Works, eds. Jaroslav Pelikan and Helmut T. Lehmann (55 vols.; Philadelphia and St. Louis: Fortress Press and Concordia Publishing House, 1955-1986), Vol. 31, p. 39.

3. Ibid., p. 44.

4. Martin Luther, Commentary on Psalms, in D. Martin Luthers Werke (Weimarer Ausgabe) (56 vols.; Weimar: Hermann Böhlaus Nachfolger, 1883ff.), Vol. 40III, pp. 370f.

5. See Richard Sennett, The Corrosion of Character: The Personal Consequences of Work in the New Capitalism (New York and London: W. W. Norton & Co., 1998), esp. pp. 96-97, 136-141.

6. Luther, “Commentary on Psalms,” Vol. 40III, p. 280.

7. Martin Luther, Lectures on Deuteronomy (1525/1526), in Luther’s Works, Vol. 9, p. 96.

8. Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, ed. G. W. Bromiley and T. F. Torrance (4 vols.: Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1936-1962), Vol. III/4, p. 537.

9. Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994), p. 2426.

10. John Wesley, The More Excellent Way (n.d.), in The Works of John Wesley (14 vols.; 3rd ed.; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1872), Vol. 7, p. 31.

CSS Publishing Company, A Word That Sets Free, by Mark Ellingsen