Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
Not Another Rerun!
Jeremiah 31:27-34
Sermon
by R. Kevin Mohr
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Not another rerun!

Many of us probably expressed that sentiment at some point during the past summer when we sat down in front of the televi­sion for an hour or so of relaxation after a hard day's work. Disap­pointment then set in as we surfed our favorite channels only to discover that overly hyped unreal "reality" shows and reruns of programs we had already seen were all that was being shown. By the time fall came around we were eager for something new.

Our desire for something new extends to more significant ar­eas of life as well. For example, politics. There is little doubt that the possibility of something new fueled a great part of the interest in the 2008 presidential campaign with our first African-American candidate in one of the major parties and one of the first female vice-presidential candidates in the other. The desire for something new, especially in the political arena, is first of all a recognition that things are not going well and that a change needs to be made.

The exiles in Babylon and the remnant left behind to eke out an existence in the devastated land of Judah were certainly looking and hoping for a change in their social, political, and economic situation. They were bitter and searching for someone — the pre­vious generations or even God — to blame for their misfortune, as evidenced by the proverb referred to in verses 29 and 30. The people knew from hard personal and communal experience that the origi­nal covenant had not worked out too well — the Babylonian exile was all the proof anyone needed. They were tasting the bitter fruit of poor choices made by earlier generations, and it just didn't seem to be fair! Something obviously needed to change.

Chapters 30 and 31 in the book of Jeremiah (often given the title of "the book of consolation") address that hope for change in the form of the promise of a new covenant between God and his people. Before the message moves directly to talk of the new cov­enant, there is a mini-rerun of or, perhaps, more correctly speak­ing, a flashback to Jeremiah's call in chapter 1:10. In a direct echo of Jeremiah's commissioning as a prophet to the people and the nations, God uses essentially the same verbs of activity to preview the new thing God is about to do: to pluck up and break down, to overthrow, destroy, and bring evil, and to build and to plant.

Now, even though verses 38 and following will later speak of rebuilding the walls and the buildings of the city, the metaphor here seems to be more pastoral or agricultural. The imagery is one of God as a concerned and involved farmer who has watched over the land. The language used here reminds me of my best friend, Maurice.

Maurice is a third generation wheat and barley farmer from Australia, and while I was attending boarding school in Adelaide, South Australia, during my high school years, I would often go home with Maurice to his family's farm on weekends. As a person with no farmers in my own family tree, it was quite amazing for me to see how close he and his father were to the land. They didn't just work the land, but they had a relationship to it. Even when they were physically off of their property for an extended length of time (which rarely happened), they were thinking about the land and worrying about the weather, or actually talking about what they needed to do for the next crop. They were watching over and working the land all the time so that it could be fruitful. That is how God's concern for and involvement with his people is pre­sented by Jeremiah.

God, the prophet says, is planning to re-sow the land and make it alive and fruitful again. That necessarily involves clearing and preparing the land for planting. While the clearing of the land is by nature destructive of what was there before, the real goal is some­thing constructive, positive, and life-giving. The punishment of defeat and exile, therefore, was not really proof of God's departure or absence, but of his tending of his people. Continuing the agri­cultural metaphor, partially cleared land is useless, so God through Jeremiah is trying to help the exiles and the remnant see that the punishment for the people's unfaithfulness in the past must run its full course because it is an integral part of God's restoration.[1]

As caring as the image of the concerned farmer is, when the new covenant is actually spoken of directly in verse 31 and follow­ing, the metaphor changes again. It becomes even more intimate. Now, God's self-presentation is as a suitor/parent/husband who, in the past tenderly led the people by hand out of the land of Egypt. Even though treated unfaithfully throughout the history of his people since then, God comes back again, but not just with a rerun of what didn't work before. God comes back with a new covenant.

What is it, though, that makes this covenant in some way new?

The newness does not consist in a radical discontinuity with the content and structure of the old covenants. The covenant at Sinai in particular also emphasized the initiative of God and an intimate relationship between God and his people (Exodus 19:1-6). The point is that God's character remains constant and trust­worthy; what changes is humanity and its desire to keep the law and the covenant. That change is represented in the words, "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" (Jeremiah 31:33).

The covenant at Sinai had been written on tablets of stone. The stipulations of that covenant were quite literally spelled out and were to be memorized and studied. However, what was meant to be a living relationship all too easily became a "head thing" with external criteria and a checklist of what to do or not do. The temp­tation for people is always to try to turn the living reality of faith into an object that we think can be controlled or managed. By the time of Jesus, for example, the covenant at Sinai had been so ob­jectified that the scribes and the Pharisees had constructed a huge "hedge" of lesser laws as a protection around the centerpiece of the Ten Commandments. For Protestant Christians especially, the temptation is to insist on doctrinal purity to the point that even people from the same faith tradition sometimes cannot pray to­gether! The relationship to God and to God's people becomes pri­marily a matter of the head and not of the heart.

But let's not jump to a hasty conclusion! When we borrow the phrase, "written on the heart" from Jeremiah, we often misunder­stand what God, through the prophet, was saying. Upon hearing that phrase we immediately think in terms of emotions because, for us, the heart is used as a metaphor for the seat of our emotions. However, in the Hebraic thought system the bowels or the stom­ach were considered the center of human emotions, not the heart. The heart was the center of intellect and will and for making deci­sions. So, to say that the law would be written on people's hearts means that the new covenant would not be based on something as transitory and volatile as our emotions. Instead, God declares, it would be "put within" us. To use computer language, it would be embedded in us where it most matters, in the same way that an embedded computer system is not just an added-on peripheral, but is something that has become integral to how the computer func­tions and makes decisions.

The new covenant, similarly, is no longer something external to us, but functions within us. God gives us "the capacity to be faithful and obedient."[2]As a result, the covenant relationship to God can become all that it was originally intended to be: "a warm delight to the people, not a cold prescription."[3]

The foundation for the newness of the covenant is introduced by the preposition "for" in verse 34: "for I will forgive their iniq­uity, and remember their sin no more." God's selective memory loss is the key to God's most important communication with us, as the following story illustrates:

A bishop went to visit with a woman of his diocese who claimed to have direct verbal communication with the Lord. After meeting with her, the bishop was still skeptical of her claims. In order to put them to the test, he asked the woman to find out from God what sins the bishop would confess in the next week. Later, the woman came to the bishop to make her report. The bishop inquired, "So, what did God say were the sins I confessed this past week?" "Well," the woman replied, "the Lord said, ‘I don't remember anymore.' "

The fresh start the new covenant promises is possible because while we may hold grudges against earlier generations and even against our creator, God does not. In fact, for our sake God suffers from intentional selective memory loss when it comes to our sins and unfaithfulness. The knowledge of God's merciful and forgiv­ing character works an internal change in us and engraves God's law, that is God's will and character, on our hearts and embeds it deep within our core. God's selective memory loss means that God doesn't give up on us. The people in exile were tempted to believe that God had given up on them. The prophet tried to help them see the big picture, one that even had room for the hardships of life in exile as being part of God's plan for restoration and renewal, in the same way that a farmer must first do the hard work of clearing the land before it can become fruitful.

The land cannot prepare itself for planting; the farmer has to do it. Similarly, the future of God's people did not hang on Judah's self-restoration, but on a new act by God. Our fate does not hang on our self-restoration but on the new covenant that finds its ulti­mate fulfillment in what God has done in Christ Jesus. That means we do not have to keep reliving the same old reruns of our lives. God is not a cold-hearted judge, keeping score, but is like an atten­tive spouse who leads us into a deeper relationship or like a watch­ful farmer who plants something new and living deep within us so that we can become all that God wants us to be. Amen.


1. D. A. Carson, R. T. France, J. A. Motyer, G. J. Wenham, editors, New Bible Commentary: 21st Century Edition, 4th Edition (Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1994), p. 694.

2. Gene M. Tucker, Preaching the New Common Lectionary: Year C Lent, Holy Week, Easter (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1985), p. 106.

3. Op cit, Carson, et al, p. 696.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons on the First Readings, by R. Kevin Mohr