Jeremiah 23:1-8 · The Righteous Branch
Home Improvement
Jeremiah 23:1-6
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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God has given us a spiritual home in which to live. When will we move in? When will we appreciate the home we've been given?

A recently spotted bumper sticker made the following poignant plea: "You are a child of God. Please call home."

Remember the blockbuster hit movie of the early '80s, "E.T."? The strange little space alien dubbed "E.T." is accidentally left behind by his companions. Through his friendship with a human boy, the creature learns to speak the English language. The first full phrase the stranded visitor communicates to his new friends is "E.T. phone home." It was a phrase that conveyed a whole range of emotions, of heartfelt longings, to everyone who watched the movie.

Who among us hasn't felt the need to "phone home" at different points in our lives? Phoning home puts us in touch with that place where we feel the safest, the most loved, the most familiar.

In the Old Testament text for today, Jeremiah addresses a nation that, like E.T., finds itself in alien territory. The prophet's words offer comfort by proclaiming Yahweh's promise to return them safely to their "fold." The "flock," that is, Judah and Israel, will once again be made whole, and they will find safety and new life once again in their beloved homeland. Jeremiah offers the vision of a restored home to a wandering homeless people.

At Thanksgiving, perhaps more than during any other holiday, our thoughts turn toward home. More people travel during this four-day weekend than during any other time of the year - and the destination for the majority of them is ... home. Our homing instincts seem to come alive at this celebration of thanksgiving - but each year, it seems there is more to remind us of just how fragile homes are becoming today.

Many of you volunteered to help serve Thanksgiving meals at the various homeless shelters around the area this week. Every Thanksgiving, the number increases of people who find such shelters the only "homes" they have to go to. The soup kitchens, food banks and missions around this country are beginning to sound more and more like McDonald's: "Millions served."

This increase in homelessness is not just a human problem. Just as there are skyrocketing numbers of homeless men and women and children, so there are more and more homeless birds and animals. The human homeless are found in shelters; the others are found in zoos. Both groups share the same problem - they have no place to go, for we have destroyed their habitats and built over their homes.

Guam rails and Guam kingfishers: They can't go back to Guam because the brown tree snake, accidentally released from New Guinea, took over the island, reaching densities of up to 30,000 snakes per square mile.

Masked bobwhites: They can't go back to Arizona because their arid grassland habitat has been destroyed by cattle.

California condors: They can't go back to Southern California because alien invaders are marching across the landscape and gobbling them up, aliens called electricity pylons. (David Wilcove, "Helping the Homeless," Living Lord 13 [Autumn 1994], 8-9.)

And the people? Why can't they go to someplace called "home." For some, it is because economic hardship has made any home out of their price range. For others, it is because the habitat of their lives has been ravaged by addictions to drugs and alcohol. For still others, mental illness has made any habitat appear strange and foreign to them - keeping them constantly on the move.

But there is another group of people who feel "homeless" as well. They may not appear to be in need of a home - they have the house, the family, the neighbors. But there is a hollow feeling of homesickness that follows them wherever they go.

Shrinking habitats and deepening despair mean that now, more than ever, we need to build strong homes, forge unshakable ties and even put additions on the structures we already have in our lives.

It is time for some desperately needed "home improvement."

One of the reasons the TV sitcom "Home Improvement" is so popular is that besides all the goofiness and sight gags provided by comedian Tim Allen, we appreciate its realistic yet loving portrayal of a family. Consider how some of these "improvements" might add new dimensions of warmth and security to your own "home."

1. A need for an infrastructure of rituals. The drawing of rituals has once again been proven by this Thanksgiving just past. But rituals do more for us than simply give us a good excuse to over-eat and take a day off from work. The greatest rituals are those capable of propping us up when we cannot stand on our own.

New Testament scholar John Knox once called the church "the (family) people who remember Jesus." You and I have a family of people who remember Jesus even when we can't.

Bishop Kenneth Carder recently told of some friends losing their 22-year-old son in a tragic automobile accident. "When we gathered in the sanctuary for the funeral service," the bishop said, "we sang some of the great hymns of the church. We affirmed our faith by saying the Apostles' Creed. The choir offered a choral arrangement of Psalm 23. We prayed prayers from our liturgy. Some weeks following the service, the grieving mother said something like this:

I was too hurt to sing the hymns, and I couldn't say the creed with confidence. But when I couldn't sing or affirm my faith, the church did it for me. When it seemed that life had fallen apart, the church reminded me that the foundation stands firm."

2. A need for greater loyalties. Within the safe haven of a home, you should never have to question the support of others. Husbands and wives, parents and children, parishioners and pastors, lay leaders and choir members, should never feel as if their "home" is booby-trapped - where one misstep may bring a rainfall of ridicule down on their heads. Within our homes, there must be the highest level of commitment. Not a commitment to excellence or superiority or perfection - but a commitment to each other.

One day, a little boy was trying to lift a heavy stone, but he couldn't budge it.

His father, passing by, stopped to watch his efforts, and finally, he said to his son, "Are you using all your strength?"

"Yes, I am!" the boy cried in exasperation.

"No," the father said calmly, "you're not. You have not asked me to help you."

3. A need for forgiveness. Every home - family or church - must be capable of extending the "Titus Touch." When Paul felt spiritually bereft, depressed and alone, he rejoiced that "God, who consoles the downcast, consoled us by the arrival of Titus" (2 Corinthians 7:6). (See Kent and Barbara Hughes, Liberating Ministry From the Success Syndrome, [Wheaton, Ill.: Tyndale House Publishers, 1987], 147.) The healing power of friendship is only beginning to be understood. God's plan for healing often comes by "the coming of Titus." You and I need Tituses. You and I need to be Tituses. Will you let someone "Titus Touch" you?

4. A need for the presence of many generations. One of the things lacking in most American homes today is a range of generations living under one roof. A longer, healthier life span, increased mobility and an underlying feeling that we must somehow all be "on our own" has led to the creation of long-distance families. But even if geography separates biological families, the multitude of generations that stand together as God's family must still be welcomed into our homes.

Jesus gives us a long and deep tradition, a home with stories and ancestors and rituals and saints and martyrs. We have taken this much too much for granted. We have been dulled and desensitized to the splendor of the Christian story. When you live in the Christian home, you become part of a tradition which has a priceless galleria of images, stories, metaphors, rituals, hymns, as well as historians, philosophers, playwrights, novelists, fantasy writers, poets, scientists and prophets.

When you live in the Christian home, you live out of one of the most amazing and dramatic narratives in all of recorded history - the story of the children of Israel making their way from slavery to the Promised Land.

God has put in us a homing instinct; our hearts are homesick until they find their home in God. The psalmist says this better than anyone: "As a deer longs for flowing streams, so my soul longs for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God" (Psalm 42:1-2).

Then again in Psalm 63:1 "O God, you are my God, I seek you, my soul thirsts for you; my flesh faints for you, as in a dry and weary land where there is no water."

I will remove disaster from you....
I will save the lame
and gather the outcast ....
At that time I will bring you home.
Zephaniah 3:18-20

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet