Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
New Covenant, New Testament
Jeremiah 31:27-34
Sermon
by John Wayne Clarke
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Our reading today from the prophet Jeremiah is one in which the Hebrew people, not knowing what else to do in terms of addressing their predicament, decide to blame it all on God. They believed their problems to be the result of their sins and the sins of their fathers. Of course, one person's sin does indeed affect other people, but all people are still held personally accountable for the sin in their own lives (Deuteronomy 24:16; Ezekiel 18:2).

This theme would later be taken up in the New Testament as the writers of the gospels brought forth a new idea that a person's sin, whatever that sin may have been, could and would be forgiven in and through Jesus Christ, who became the ultimate expression of a new covenant for us all.

The Hebrew people found themselves, once again, in an untenable situation. They cannot see how their negative situation can be turned into a positive one. The realization, however, hits them, as it does us all, that at some point, we are no longer able to fix the things we have broken. At some point, our frail nature as mere Homo sapiens, mere human beings stares at us from our mirror. What can we do? How can we ever rectify the things that we have done and make them right? No person, then or now, goes through all of life without knowing that they need intervention in some part of their life. Sometimes that has to be thrust upon us, and at other times we realize that we need to do something before we self-destruct and destroy those we love along with ourselves.

It is in the midst of this situation that we are shown a new vision of the ultimate restoration of the nation Israel. This section of Jeremiah has been labeled by many as the most important part of the entire book of Jeremiah. It is easy to understand why, when one reads and reflects on the words from our reading today. These words are no mere expression of the reclaiming of some lost people and land. It is, rather, a new covenant between God and the people. It was, and is, so dramatic an idea that later writers would use it to name what has come to be called the New Testament, or New Covenant, in the Christian canon.

Jeremiah 31 anticipates the time when God will write the law on the hearts of the people, and reminds readers that at the core of the law is the covenant relation God establishes. The God who initiates this covenant is a God who comes to the people with a personal covenant, unlike any before.

Like most prophets, Jeremiah had to depend on God's love as he developed endurance. It was a lonely life being a prophet. Every time you opened your mouth, you were very likely going to say something that no one wanted to hear! At best, the audience would be apathetic, or at worst, antagonistic to what he had to say. Prophets were ignored; their lives often threatened. Jeremiah saw in his lifetime both the excitement of a spiritual awakening for the Hebrew people and the sorrow of their national return to sin. With the exception of the good King Josiah, Jeremiah watched king after king ignore his warnings and lead the people away from God. He saw his fellow prophets murdered. He himself was severely persecuted.

It is into this difficult setting that Jeremiah had listened and watched the people turn against God. Then, like now, people will do most anything to discover how they can live the good life (good=sinful) and still be on God's side. It is almost a daily dance throughout the world today, as well as in the time of Jeremiah, for God's people to step around the reality of sin. It is worse when we know that we are sinning. How can we deprive people of the basic necessities of life so we can have more stuff and still be God's people? Of course, we cannot live in sin and still be in covenant with God, because God is without sin. How dare we be so arrogant as to assume that we are somehow on an equal sphere with God, that we can simply do what we want when we want.

How gracious of God to see our weakness and absolute inability to fix our world.

The greatest prophecy in Jeremiah is the new covenant passage that we read a few moments ago. And to build on the good news of this new covenant is the fact that this covenant will not be like the Mosaic covenant. History has a way of repeating itself and the people had not done a great job of keeping the Mosaic covenant. Therefore, a new one is given here. The collapse of the old covenant that resulted in the destruction of the nation, created a very important question.

"How can a holy God maintain a relationship with a sinful people?" The answer is in this new covenant.

The new covenant involves both continuity and discontinuity. There will be continuity. Like the old, the new covenant will be rooted in, and rest upon, the divine initiative. In other words, God will act in sovereign grace. Also, it will have as its intent the full realization of a dynamic relationship between God and humankind.

For us as New Testament people, it is easy to forget how important a dynamic relationship with God is. This is a sign that God is not going to stay up on the mountain. God is not going to be a distant, scary, menacing, thunder-clapping God, in the fog and mist of the early morning. No, God is going to mix it up with us. We who are on this side of the New Testament might ask what all the fuss is. Jesus has come to us and lives with us and walks with us. But, we must put all of that into proper perspective when looking at today's text. For one thing, the new covenant is incorporated in the promise. Earlier, covenants were made, not promised. The taking up of the covenant into the promise marks the end of the history of God's previous dealings with God's people and a new history will begin.

In point of fact, the new covenant that is promised in these historic verses is only new in the sense that it will fulfill the original intention of the Sinai covenant. Maybe the best way to understand the difference between the Sinai Covenant and this new covenant as described in Jeremiah is to say that words must be lived, not only spoken. In the book of Exodus we hear "I am the Lord your God." It is the opening line of the preamble. This covenant was original with God. God initiated it. It was not a joint "arrangement" between Israel and the Lord, as between equals in a marriage. God is God and God's sovereignty was the ground and source of this covenant.

The command stresses the positive aspect of worship, insisting that Israel worship the Lord God and not any other. This made Judaism a distinctive monotheistic religion. It can be argued that the greatest contribution of the Jews to history and civilization was its ethical monotheism.

The Ten Commandments that make up this new covenant put God at the top of the mountain.

This is a God that will give the laws that the Hebrew people will live by. These laws will be written in stone. The people are to stand away at a distance from God. Moses, as mediator, drew near to the thick cloud where God was, but not the people. God gave Moses the laws of the Sinai Code. Moses then delivered them to the people. The mood and impression of this revelation and experience is one of awe and mystery and the holy. God's transcendence and utter "otherness" is dominant. This God is separate and holy, and must be worshiped and respected as such.

But changes are coming as evidenced in our reading when we hear that the new covenant, "... will not be like the covenant that I made with their ancestors when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt — a covenant that they broke, though I was their husband says the Lord" (31:32). You see, do you not, that the people broke the covenant, not God? And one of the main reasons the covenant was constantly broken was because the covenant was not personal, it was quite literally written in stone. It was the cold, hard facts. Those of you who remember the television series, Dragnet, will remember that Sergeant Friday always prefaced his remarks by asking for "just the facts, ma'am, just the facts." He was always stone-faced, cold, and professional. Just so with the laws on stone. They were accurate and true, but they were not a part of the lives of those who heard them. They were laws to be obeyed, but not laws that the people had lived with.

In our reading we hear, "But this is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: 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" (31:33).

What a dramatic and powerful difference. The covenant will be inside the people. They will know this covenant because it will be a part of their daily life. You see the covenant involves the creation of new people through the action of a divine deed. God will put God's will straight into the heart of humankind so that the necessity of communication through external methods will be circumvented. This is Jeremiah's way of speaking of what we would call the work of the Holy Spirit in the making of a new person, who will light up God's Word by living a life that honors that Word.

It is the picture of a new creation. New women and new men forgiven and in fellowship with God in a new community, with the ability to discern and do God's will, is a new thing in the Hebrew Scripture.

But, it is not a new thing for those of us who name ourselves as Christians. Jeremiah lived and spoke in a time far removed from our Lord Jesus Christ, but the message remains much the same. Our salvation is personal, it is heartfelt, and has come to us in the carpenter from Nazareth.

The foundation of this new covenant for the Christian community is Christ (Hebrews 8:6). It is revolutionary, involving not only Israel and Judah, but even the Gentiles. It offers a unique, personal relationship with God, with God's Laws written on individual's hearts instead of stone.

Jeremiah looked forward to the day of the fulfillment of his prophecy, the day of the Messiah. We who call ourselves Christian, already live within that fulfillment. The covenant is here in Jesus Christ. We have the wonderful opportunity to make a fresh start and establish a permanent, personal relationship with God. Praise be to God! Are you a part of the covenant? If not — why not? Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): Profiting from the Prophets, by John Wayne Clarke