Jeremiah 8:4--9:26 · Sin and Punishment
Is There No Balm in Gilead?
Jeremiah 8:4--9:26
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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Let me say upfront that the two men I am about to discuss with you, are, in my opinion, good Christian men who do a lot of valuable work for the Church and God's kingdom in this world. It just so happens they are both in the middle of a controversy because of a position they took with regard to our nation's tragedy. I am talking about Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. On Thursday the 13th, two days after the attack, Pat Robertson said that because of America's pursuit of financial gain, health, wealth, material pleasures, sexuality, rampant pornography on the Internet, secularism and the occult, 35-40 million abortions, and a few other things, God Almighty is lifting His protection from us. Once that protection is gone, he said, we are vulnerable.

A little later in his broadcast he recognized that there are evil people in this world who do evil things but went on to say, and I quote, "It happened because God is lifting His protection from this nation and we must pray and ask Him for revival so that once again we will be His people, the planting of His righteousness, so that He will come to our defense and protect us as a nation."

That's what Pat Robertson said. Jerry Falwell, that same night, jumped in a little deeper blaming the devastation on pagans, abortionists, feminists, homosexuals, the American Civil Liberties Union and the People for the American Way.

Now, let me give you a little piece of advice. If you think this, don't announce it on national TV for all to hear two days after a national tragedy. You won't like the response. The next morning a White House representative called Falwell as he was driving to the National Cathedral memorial service in Washington, and told him the President disapproved. I never want to say something so egregious that I get a call from the office of the president. Falwell has since apologized. He even posted his apology on his Liberty University web site, "In the midst of the shock and mourning of a dark week for America, I made," he confessed, "a statement that I should not have made and which I sincerely regret. I want to apologize to every American, including those I named."

I think Falwell did the right thing in apologizing and I accept it as sincere. But, he and Robertson raise an important question. It is a question all of us have struggled with from time-to-time at the death of a loved one or during a particular life crisis. We second guess ourselves and wonder if our sins have brought upon us God's judgment and life's misfortunes. Abraham Lincoln said that the Civil War came because of slavery and because America had “forgotten God” and was “intoxicated with unbroken success…too proud to pray to the God who made us.” Alexander Solzhenitsyn said communism strangled the Soviet Union for seven decades because his people had “forgotten God.”

I suppose it is only natural then for us to wonder, bewildered by the scope of this catastrophe: Was Tuesday Sept 11th God's judgment upon this nation for her sins? To answer that question let's look at Jeremiah.

I

The Prophet we call Jeremiah lived 600 years before the birth of Christ and was called by God to bring a harsh word to his nation. He told Israel that the destruction of Jerusalem, the capitol city, and the rest of the nation would soon occur, ad that it was the judgment of God. Israel had strayed and they were to be punished. And what’s more, to add insult to injury, God would use the wicked nation of Babylon to bring the great city of Jerusalem to its knees. When the dreaded day came the city was crushed and most of the inhabitants were deported to Babylon in exile. It would be 70 years, time enough for the whole generation to pass away and a new generation to be born, before they were allowed to return.

You can hear the anguish of soul in the heart of the prophet: “Since my people are crushed, I am crushed; I mourn, and horror grips me.” I suppose that for the first time many of us are able to understand what Jeremiah must have seen and felt. We have seen it with our own eyes. To watch the onslaught of the enemy, the fire, smoke, and collapse of great buildings, and then in the end to have nothing but a mountain of rubble and the vanquishing of human life. That was Jeremiah’s experience and it is ours.

At the beginning of his ministry, Jeremiah hoped that the destruction would not come. But alas, he knew it could not be stopped. Israel had gone too far and God’s decision had now been made. In his grief Jeremiah remembered Gilead—a region to the east where great spices grow, which physicians use to heal wounds. Is there no balm in Gilead? He asked. Is there no physician, no healer, no prophet, no priest, no teacher that can cure Israel’s wound? The answer is “No.” Israel will not know healing until she has paid for her sins.

Jeremiah stood at the crossroads of history. His great nation came face to face with an angry God and with good reason. They had forgotten God and worshiped idols. They stopped defending the fatherless and protecting the poor. They had become violent and sexually promiscuous. For these reasons and more God judged his people. But it is not the end of the story. There was a promise that God would one day forgive the people and heal the land if they would repent while in exile.

II

That is the picture of a nation judged by God and exiled for her sins. Now, it would be very easy for us to assume that what happened to Israel is happening to the United States. It is at this point that I want to throw a strong word of caution in to the debate.

It is true that America has many sins that it must atone for. I do not debate that. There is sexually promiscuity in our land and violence is dispensed as entertainment. Idols? We may not be bowing down to any stone gods that we have hewn from the rocks but we’ve got idols. Fathers abandon family responsibilities and mothers terminate pregnancies. Our riches are not properly used and the poor are certainly still among us. Has America sinned? It most certainly has.

The problem is this: The United States is not Israel. God did not call us as he called them. America does not have a covenant with God. The Hebrews did. We do not have Abraham as our father. We have Washington. Moses did not lead us out of Egypt; the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock. We were not given the Law of Moses. We drafted a Bill of Rights.

This past week Cal Thomas wrote an excellent article entitled “The judgment of God.” In it he said the following: “There are people who believe that America is a special nation, chosen by God above all others for unique blessing. That is idolatry. There is only one nation with which God ever had a special relationship and that is ancient Israel. In Isaiah 40, God says he views all nations as “a drop in a bucket,” “less than nothing” and “dust on the scales,” a statement that is cause for humility.”

You see God no longer works through a nation. He works through his people--the church. Paul understood that God’s Kingdom was no longer confined to the borders of Israel, that God’s Kingdom is a Holy Nation, a Royal Priesthood, inaugurated by the Holy Spirit and founded upon a hill we call Calgary. The Kingdom has no borders but Heaven and no king other than Jesus Christ.

The African-American’s understood this years ago when, without their own nation and enslaved in this land, they sang, “There is a balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole; there is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin sick soul.” They understood that God’s role in this world had changed and so they made Jeremiah’s lament a song of hope and healing. Jeremiah ask, is there no balm in Gilead? The church sings that there most certainly is.

III

So you see God’s relationship is no longer to a nation but to a people—his church. Does that mean that God is not somehow involved in the affairs of nations? We cannot say for sure. What we can say is that God has called the church to be an influence in this world. You, and the body of Christ have a moral obligation to pray for those who govern this nation. Listen to the Apostle Paul in his letter to Timothy, “I urge, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone—for kings and all those in authority that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness” (1 Timothy 2:1-4).

Paul’s admonition to pray for the king comes as something of a surprise. For you see, at that time it was the notorious Roman emperor Nero who was king. It is interesting to note that Paul is not calling for God’s judgment on this man who persecuted the church and imprisoned Paul himself; rather, Paul urges that prayers be made so that the king might be saved and peace might abound. This is good, Paul says, and pleasing to God.

Let me ask you. What else could Paul do but be patient and pray for this persecutor of Christians, for he himself once persecuted the church. I am convinced that in the same way God is patient with us and patient with nations wishing that everyone be saved.

So why is there so much evil in this world? Why do we face such tremendous tragedies? For Jeremiah it was clear. God had spoken to him directly. It was God’s judgment. For us it not so clear and Jesus never really answered why unsolicited suffering occurs. He did say that it was not because of sin. In John 9 the disciples ask Jesus why a man was born blind. “Who sinned,” they ask, “this man or his parents?” Neither, was Jesus’ answer. On another occasion in Luke 13 Jesus said that the collapse of a large building in Jerusalem, which killed 18 people, did not happen because they were more guilty sinners than any others living in the city. He said that all of us have a need to repent. What is true for individual suffering is also true for group suffering and the suffering of nations. Evil, and hardship, and pain are mysteries.

Last Friday, I was moved by Billy Graham’s sermon at the National Cathedral in Washington, D. C. He has been called The Nations Pastor. Presidents look to him for guidance and wisdom. And yet, even Graham struggles with the problem of evil in our world. Let me leave you with his thoughts, “I have been asked hundreds of times in my life why God allows tragedy and suffering. I have to confess that I really do not know the answer totally, even to my own satisfaction. I have to accept, by faith, that God is sovereign, and He’s a God of love and mercy and compassion in the midst of suffering. The Bible says that God is not the author of evil. It speaks of evil as a "mystery." In 2 Thessalonians 2:7 it talks about the mystery of iniquity. The Old Testament prophet Jeremiah said, "The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?" He asked that question, "Who can understand it?" And that’s one reason we each need God in our lives.”

Though it is hard for us to see, especially during our sorrow, there is hope. There is a balm in Gilead. A physician whose hand can heal. A teacher whose words are sure. A healer who will make us whole. A savior to save our soul. He is Christ Jesus our Lord.

Amen.

www.Sermons.com, Collected Sermons, by Brett Blair