Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
Hearts on Fire
Jeremiah 31:31-34
Sermon
by Timothy J. Smith
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Writer, Anne Lamott, tells of her struggle in getting her teenage son, Sam, to go to church with her. "Why do I make him go?" she reflects and then writes, "We live in bewildering, drastic times, and a little spiritual guidance never killed anyone. I think it's a fair compromise that every other week he has to come to the place that has been the tap for me: I want him to see the people who loved me when I felt most unlovable, who have loved him since I first told them that I was pregnant, even though he might not want to be with them. I want him to see their faces."1 The church is the place where we feel loved and accepted as God in Christ loves each one of us. The church is where we are held accountable for our actions in love. And the church is the place where we experience a new sense of community.

The church continues to evolve to reach new generations of believers. What is burning in your hearts this Reformation Sunday? William Sloane Coffin once suggested that the problem plaguing the modern church is our sense of complacency. We come to church not expecting anything out of the ordinary to happen to us, let alone change us. We go with the flow, not wanting to upset anyone. We in the church lose focus on important issues and instead disagree over lesser matters. Instead of devising a plan to take the gospel to our community, we fight over what color to paint the fellowship hall. There might be some that do not even think it should be painted in the first place. Instead of taking a stand on peace and justice issues, we simply take a seat questioning whether the church should involve itself in such matters.

From time to time, God places a fire in someone's heart. The fire burns so brightly that they are compelled to act and are not able to stay quiet any longer. Martin Luther was one such individual. Luther challenged the church with what he believed was wrong. In a moving scene from the movie, Martin Luther, someone exclaims, "You are tearing the world apart!" Luther replies, "Did you really think there wouldn't be a cost?" Luther turned the world upside down setting the world on fire — a fire that is still burning over 500 years later. Among his bold steps, Luther translated the New Testament into the language of the people — German. Luther placed his own life at risk on several occasions. However, it was time for the world to hear what Luther had to say. What we sometimes overlook is that the Reformation that Luther began led to great revival and renewal both within Protestant and Catholic churches.

What is burning in your hearts this morning? When we step out in faith and take a stand, God will bless our effort. We discover this principle throughout the pages of the Bible as well in the lives of the reformers and millions of Christians.

It was often dangerous for the prophets of old to speak the word of God. No one wants to be told they are doing something wrong in the sight of God and must change their ways. As a result, prophets were not always popular. Jeremiah was a case in point.

Jeremiah criticized just about everyone including the king and the priests. At the gates of the temple, Jeremiah said that if the priests thought God was impressed by their words, they were wrong. He condemned the rich for exploiting the poor and the poor for deserving no better. The people grew tired of his messages of doom and gloom.

When he predicted that the Babylonians were about to attack and the people deserved it, the people beat him up and threw him in jail. On more than one occasion, Jeremiah complained to God about his role and the people's lack of response. The people had grown complacent, no longer placing their trust in God. As a result, life was going from bad to worse. The people were living in exile in incredible pain and despair. Almost in the middle of the book of Jeremiah, the prophet offered words of comfort and hope to the people who had suffered so much. The people were in need of a word of hope and chance for a new beginning.

The prophet Jeremiah was convinced that God was about to do something radical in order to effect the redemption and restoration of God's own people. The day was coming, Jeremiah told them, when God would again establish a new covenant. God would place the Torah within them and write it on their hearts. Previously, God had established covenants with Abraham and later with Moses, but the people had difficulty keeping those covenants, frequently straying from God's path. The old covenants had been broken so decisively as to nullify them. The message that God was about to establish a new covenant in the midst of incredible pain gave the people a fresh sense of hope.

"The days are surely coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah." Like all covenants, this one is initiated by God. God wills an enduring relationship among the people. With this new covenant the people will not stray.

The new covenant will not resemble the ones the people had previously broken. God would forgive the people for their prior shortcomings as well as the times when they had broken preceding covenants. This covenant would be between God and the people.

What would make this covenant unique, God claims, "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." This covenant could not be broken; it would become an integral part of their identity, written on their hearts. The new covenant will affect both the minds and hearts of the people. This new covenant will bring forth a newfound sense of wholeness and joy. This was clearly good news for the people.

When we are forced to do something, often we feel some resentment. At the least, our hearts are not interested in whatever we are asked to do. While we might think we are fooling others with our half-hearted effort, we are not. Certainly, God is not fooled. The situation is a familiar one. A church that was once vital had fallen onto hard times. There were reasons for the decline in membership. Unable to accept the diminished position the members of the congregation began fighting with each other as well as the pastor. They purchased several growth producing programs but were disappointed with the poor results. People serving on committees began complaining about having to do anything.

The culture of that church began to change, starting with one person's vision of what the church could become in the future. Gradually, sometimes painfully, the culture of the church began to change. And when it did, they discovered that they found meaning in what they were doing. It was their own program utilizing the people's spiritual gifts and not something passed down from on high. "Reformations always start with the peasants; they don't start with the elites" states Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church in California and author of the best-selling, The Purpose-Driven Life.2

A layperson describes the transformation that both their church and individuals experienced: "People were giving four or five hours a week to the church and complaining that it was way too much. After we expanded our program, there were some people spending twenty hours at the church and loving every minute of it. When we were trying to be something we weren't, everyone was exhausted, but when we began living out of our gifts it was like we had energy to burn. You have never seen such passion."3

God was about to do a new thing, giving the people a new covenant, one written upon their hearts. The people will "know the Lord" acknowledging a deep trust. The new covenant will be one of radical obedience to God's commands written on the people's hearts.

People will no longer have to look up paragraphs in books of rules and regulations but will instinctively know what God requires of them. When laws are external we obey because we are told we must. However, the new covenant, written on our hearts will be different. The old ways, like scolding and lecturing, even fire and brimstone preaching, will no longer be necessary. The new covenant will be written on our hearts, it will be a part of us.

We cannot read this passage without thinking of Jesus. This passage helps us in our understanding of what God has done for us in Jesus Christ. Jesus is the new covenant who by his life, death, and resurrection models for us what it means to belong to God.

What is burning in your heart today? What new thing is God calling you to do in our church or community? You may be the only person who is able to win others over and complete the task. God continues to do new things in our lives, in our church, and in our world. Today, we remember the sixteenth-century Reformation, thankful for the faithful witness of Martin Luther ... and others through the centuries. Yet we also realize that the work of God continues to evolve in our day as well through us.

May we go forth believing that God has touched our lives, has written God's law on our hearts, living out our faith. As we leave this place of worship may we do so knowing we can make a difference and cannot remain silent any longer. May we take our stand and speak out against injustices knowing that Jesus is with us always. The church remains the world's great hope! Amen.


1.  Anne Lamott, Plan B: Further Thoughts of Faith (New York: Riverhead Books, 2005), p. 195.

2. Lisa Miller, "The Innovator," Newsweek magazine, July 3/July 10, 2006, p. 66.

3. Dan R. Dick and Barbara Miller, Equipped for Every Good Work: Building a Gifts-Based Church (Nashville: Discipleship Resources, 2001), p. 96.

CSS Publishing, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): Forward March, by Timothy J. Smith