Jeremiah 33:1-26 · Promise of Restoration
Promises, Promises
Jeremiah 33:1-26
Sermon
by Elizabeth Achtemeier
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Promises are so important! We know, for example, that when we make a child a promise, we must keep it at all costs, or the child will lose all trust in us and our word. We also know that if we do not keep a promise to a friend, we may lose that friendship. 

Certainly we make promises through all our life. One of the most important ones is made when we stand before a minister to be married. There we promise to love and comfort, to honor and keep our spouse, in sickness and in health. And we promise that we will forsake all others and be faithful to that marital partner as long as we both shall live. 

We even have the organization of "Promise Keepers" these days -- thousands of men who meet together in conferences, and who promise to be good and faithful husbands, and to instill in their home life piety and trustworthiness and love.

Sometimes we keep our promises, but sometimes we do not. Sometimes our words are just empty pledges, having no influence on our life and actions. And often times, we live in regret and guilt that we have not kept some spoken word. We think a person who keeps his or her word is a person to be honored and trusted, and we deplore and rue the times when we fail to be thus trustworthy. 

We even might say that there is only One who perfectly keeps his promises, and if we study the scriptures, we find that One is God. Throughout the Bible, God is a promise-keeping God. "The Word of our God will stand forever," Second Isaiah proclaims (Isaiah 40:8). My word "shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose," God vows (Isaiah 55:11). And the whole record of the scriptures tells us that is true. 

So it is too with the promise to which the Lord refers here in Jeremiah 33:14-15. Over 400 years before the time of Jeremiah, God promised King David that he would establish the Davidic reign forever (2 Samuel 7:13). "Your house and your kingdom shall be made sure for ever before me," God vowed. "Your throne shall be established forever" (v. 16). And then a hundred years before the time of Jeremiah, God renewed that promise: "There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots" (Isaiah 11:1). In like fashion here in our Jeremiah text, God makes the promise once again: "In those days and at that time I will cause a righteous Branch to spring forth for David" (Jeremiah 33:15). A Davidic king to sit upon the throne! God guaranteed it by his word!  What God guarantees Israel and Judah in this text, however, is not just a Davidic king. It is a righteous descendant of David. For it was very important that the king whom God raised up should be a righteous ruler. 

There is no doubt that rulers, presidents, and leaders of nations and societies often determine the quality of life for those over whom they rule. A despot in Africa, who is interested only in gaining wealth for himself, can ruin the economy of his nation and plunge his people into poverty. An immoral president in a democracy can undermine the morality of a society and make it think that any style of life is acceptable, because even its president is abandoning ethical rules. A thieving and lying political or religious leader can lead his or her followers into equal deception that mimics the leader's perfidy.  The same was true in the life of biblical Israel. Repeatedly we find in the history of Israel's kings the phrase that says some king "made Israel to sin" (e.g. 1 Kings 15:34; 1 Kings 16:26, et al). Thus, when the king was unrighteous, Israel too was unrighteous in the eyes of God. Israel's life was bound up with the life of its king. The king was Israel. Israel was the king. And that people's whole fate from the hands of God depended on whether or not a righteous king ruled on the throne. 

Israel did have a couple of decent and good kings, such as Josiah and Hezekiah, both of whom carried out sweeping religious reforms. But most of Israel's kings were not righteous, and that was especially true in the time of Jeremiah. Jehoiakim was a despot, introducing all sorts of syncretistic worship into Judah, oppressing the poor, and persecuting the prophets. Judah's final king before the Babylonian exile, Zedekiah, was nothing more than a puppet of the Babylonian empire. Thus, through the ages before that and even after, when it seemed that the throne would never be occupied again, Israel looked for a righteous and just ruler. Of every king who ascended the Davidic throne or who claimed it, the question was asked, "Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another?" Are you the long-awaited Branch of the Davidic house, whom God promised us so long ago? 

God is a promise-keeper, whose word is good forever. Therefore on this first Sunday of Advent, we eagerly await the day when we may celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, who is the fulfillment of this age-old promise of a Davidic ruler. Certainly Christ is a righteous Branch of David, fulfilling perfectly the will of God. Bound up with his person and sharing by trust in his righteousness, we are counted pure in the eyes of God. This is a righteous King who makes us righteous as well. And certainly too, Jesus Christ is just, in his life on this earth, bringing God's justice and order to the poor and oppressed, condemning the wicked, and setting right the relationships among human beings. Still today the risen Christ by his Spirit guides us in justice for all, and gives us the power to love one another. 

But has this ancient promise been fully fulfilled? Do Judah and Jerusalem and, indeed, all the nations of the earth including ours, live in safety and security? Are our streets so safe now that we walk them at night? Are our children surrounded by a society of decency and peace? Can all of us enjoy an abundant life, free of violence and wrong, fear and upheaval? Or do the wicked still prowl through our society and world, and are countless millions still faced with the threat of death? Obviously, this promise in our text of safety and security has not yet fully been realized.  The fulfillment of the total promise still awaits its time "in the days that are coming," when God brings it all to pass. 

But remember! God is a promise-keeper. He began to fulfill this promise by sending us his own Son in the birth of that babe of Bethlehem. He has always kept his word in the past; the whole history of Israel testifies to that faithfulness. So we now know that God will also keep his word -- his full word -- in the future. 

The evil and violence, the sin and suffering that surround us on every side are not the last word. On this first Sunday of Advent, the church not only looks back to the birth of Christ, but it also looks forward to Christ's Second Coming, when he will come to set up his kingdom. Then in fact, safety and security and blessed life will be present for all people, and God will rule over all. God is a promise-keeper whose word will come to pass.    

CSS Publishing, Preaching and Reading from the Old Testament: With an Eye to the New, by Elizabeth Achtemeier