Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
Renewal of the New
Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
by John R. Brokhoff
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“What’s new?” is the question we often ask of a person whom we haven’t seen for some time. We seem to have an obsession with the new. We’ll try anything new. We want to be the first to wear new fashions. To sell their wares, merchants advertize the new: a new book, a new look, a new model, a new taste. If it is “new,” we reason, it must also be “improved.” The preacher of Ecclesiastes does not agree. He wrote, “There is nothing new under the sun.” There is an old saying, “The more things change, the more they remain the same.”

On the other hand, Jeremiah in our text claims there is something new. Speaking for God, he promised a new covenant. The old covenant made at the time of Moses was broken by Israel. God’s promise of a new covenant was fulfilled by Jesus, who was the mediator of the new covenant. Accordingly, the Old Testament deals with the old covenant, and the New Testament with the new covenant. Christians are people of the new covenant because they have entered a new relationship with God by faith in Christ.

Christians, therefore, do not need another new covenant, but we may need a renewal of the new covenant. On this Reformation Sunday we need to ask, do we need a new or a renewed church? For twenty centuries we have not had a new church, but the church from time to time has had to be renewed. One of these times resulted in the sixteenth-century Reformation led by Martin Luther. Luther did not found a new church, nor did the Wesleys in the eighteenth century. Luther simply reformed, repaired and re-shaped the old Roman Church. The old church was renewed when ultimate authority in matters of faith and life was returned to the Bible, when salvation became once again a matter of faith rather than works, when the priesthood was restored to believers, and when worship was given back to the people and no longer monopolized by the clergy. The Protestant Reformation, which we are observing today, did not result in a new, but in a renewed church.

Today we sometimes talk about a new church. A few years ago three Lutheran bodies merged to form a "new” church. But was it really a new church? It may have had a new name, new leaders and a new structure. But it was the same old church with the same sinners. Our culture has changed. Imagine first-century Christians encountering an automatic teller machine. Would Luther even recognize a Big Mac as dinner? Possibly not, but he would recognize the same old sinners walking down the streets of our towns. Nothing is new! Today’s church is plagued with apathy and worldliness. The crying need is not for a new, but for a renewed, church. Will this Reformation Sunday be the beginning of a renewed church for a new century? What would it take to renew the new covenant? A renewed new covenant would result in a renewed church.

A Renewed Faith

For the church to be renewed today, it needs to be renewed in faith. It is a faith in the new covenant and in the Christ who made the covenant with us. Facts prove that today’s church is anemic in faith. On an average Sunday, two-thirds of the members of the Protestant church are not present for worship. Yet worship is the most we can do for God and calls for the least effort on our part. Worship is a matter of obedience to one of the Ten Commandments: “Remember the sabbath day to keep it holy.” Luther explained the meaning: “We should so fear and love God as not to despise his Word nor the preaching of the Gospel, but deem it holy and willingly hear and learn it.” God deserves our praise and thanks for his daily blessings of creation, redemption and providence.

Another disturbing fact that reveals our lack of faith is in our reception of the Lord’s Supper. In the average Protestant church only a little over a half of the members take Holy Communion at least once a year. Yet the epitome of Christian devotion is the reception of Holy Communion, for it, too, is commanded: “This do in remembrance of me.” This sacrament constitutes a Christian’s highest privilege on earth, because it is the means of a mystical union with Christ, and renewal of our baptismal covenant through the remission of sins. Our neglect of the Lord’s Supper is proof that our faith in Christ is poverty-stricken.

The faith we need for our day is a faith similar to Luther’s. It is a faith that takes a stand against God’s enemies, just as Luther defied church and state at the Diet of Worms, where he exclaimed, “Here I stand.” It is a faith that puts trust in God’s protection and providence. At the Diet of Worms a Cardinal said to Luther, “The Pope’s little finger is stronger than all Germany. Do you expect your princes to take up arms to defend you? No! And where will you be then?” “Then as now,” replied Luther, “in the hands of almighty God.”

Where can we get a faith like that? It is not a human achievement but a divine work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit creates faith. But where does one get the Spirit? He is identified with the Word as it is preached, taught, read and administered in the Sacraments. And where is the Word proclaimed and administered except primarily in worship services? If we have little faith, something must be wrong with our worship. In recent years we have modified and chanted the liturgy with little or no effect on faith. We have exchanged cassock and surplice for the alb and chasuble, lengthened our stoles, increased the size of our pectoral crosses, introduced the sign of the cross, abbreviated our sermons to eight minutes, multiplied our Communion services to each Sunday, resulting not in more communicants but only more communions, and interrupted the service with the passing of the peace to those whose names we do not even know. And with all of this, what has it done to our faith to increased it?

Luther considered all these as aids to worship. They were non-essential, could be used or not. The essential factors of worship are the pure Word preached and properly administered. In today’s worship, we have been dealing with symptoms rather than with sources. Lawrence of Arabia once brought Arab chieftains to the Paris Peace Conference. Of all the wonders of the West, the one with which they were most impressed was the running water in their hotel rooms. When the time came for returning home, he found them trying to remove the faucets. Lawrence tried to explain to them that behind the spigots must be a reservoir of water. Our current high-church niceties are only symptoms. Behind the ceremonial faucets we must go to the reservoir of Spirit who alone can renew our faith.

A Renewed Passion

It’s not a new, but a renewed church that we need on this Reformation Sunday. A renewed church follows a renewed faith, and a renewed faith leads to renewed passion for souls. An outstanding scholar of yesteryear, Otto Piper, one day said to his class at Princeton Seminary, “When Luther read Galatians, he listened, and when he listened, it exploded inside him; and when the truth of Galatians exploded inside him, he didn’t have any better sense than to go tell it to other people. This produced the Reformation.” When the Word explodes in us, our faith automatically is shared with others. Like a fire within, it cannot long be hidden nor contained.

Faith calls for a passion for lost souls. Today’s Protestant mainline churches are in need of a renewed passion for souls. This need is shown by the declining membership of our churches. In the past ten years Protestant churches in the United States lost 9.5 percent (4,826,707) of their membership while the population grew 11.4 percent (24,153,000). In the last twenty-five years one denomination, for example, had a fifty percent decline in Sunday school attendance, a 1.7 million loss in members, an eleven percent decline in church attendance, the closing of 4000 churches, and a reduction of missionaries from 1600 to 600. At the same time 96,400,000 Americans are unchurched and 73,000,000 church members are inactive. Today the church has a mission field of 169,400,000 people in America alone!

This is cause for alarm. Declining membership year after year tells us something is “rotten in Denmark.” It is a sign of a weak and sick church. The church was meant to grow until “every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.” Within weeks the early church grew from 11 to 150 to 3000 to 5000, until, by the end of the first century, there were a half million Christians in the Roman Empire. Then the church had vitality, passion and zeal. Why are so few of us concerned about the loss of church members? If we were business people and saw our customers dropping off and our productivity declining, we would ask the reason for it and get busy correcting it. Like everything else, a church that does not grow, dies. There can be no status quo. Why isn’t the church concerned about this unusual loss? Does it have anything to do with finances? A strange fact is that even with a declining membership, there is an increase in giving. Maybe we are not concerned about numerical strength so long as funds are available to meet our budget needs. Are dollars more important than souls?

What can be done about this situation? Can our passion for souls be renewed? In recent years we have heard much of “church growth.” Books have been written on it, sermons preached, rallies held, programs and pamphlets of all kinds on evangelism have been prepared and distributed. But to what avail? In spite of all these efforts, our numbers are not increasing.

For the solution we must go more deeply than external techniques and programs. It is a spiritual matter, a passion for lost souls. This is expressed in a corporate way through the congregation. How attractive is our church to prospective members? Would a stranger be made to feel at home? What does our church have to offer to non-members? In other words, if I did not come, would I miss anything? Suppose I went to the golf course, or stayed at home to mow the lawn, or took a trip to the beach. Would I be any worse off for not going to church? Was there a fellowship so fine and warm that I am the loser? Would the sermon give me an uplift and something to think about? If I came to our church, would I leave saying, “Today I have been with the Lord”?

The passion for souls is also an individual matter. For most church members it is not a personal issue, because in the average Protestant church ninety-five percent make no attempt to witness for Jesus. Apparently Jesus does not mean so much that we want to talk about him. Moreover, we don’t really care enough whether the non-Christian becomes a Christian. Yet studies show that seventy percent of new members joined a church because of the invitation of a friend or relative. Personal witnessing can be very natural and normal. For instance, the other day I was looking for someone who could repair my garbage disposal. I happened to mention my need to a small gathering. In the group was a man who recommended a certain repairperson to me. I contacted him, and I was very pleased with his work. If we can witness in secular matters, why can’t we tell others about Jesus? True Christians have a passion for souls because they believe and know that abundant life here and eternal life hereafter come only in having Jesus as Lord and Savior.

A Renewed Compassion

A renewed passion is concerned about another’s spiritual status, but a true Christian does not stop there. There is also a concern for the material and social welfare of others. It was compassion that caused Jesus to raise the dead son of a widow and to feed a multitude of hungry people.

It is time for the church on this Reformation Sunday to find a renewed compassion for people in need and trouble. Our compassion needs renewal, for many churches are oblivious to the world and its needs around them. We have a tendency to be a sanctified ghetto hiding behind stained glass windows. Often we give the impression that we do not know there is a world outside the church. Often no mention is made in sermon or pastoral prayers of a special day in society or a tragedy like an earthquake, tornado, hurricane, or radiation leak.

How can we as a church live with our heads in the sand? We live in a world where nuclear war could exterminate all life in minutes. The nuclear accident in Chernobyl, Russia, may be a warning of what is to come. The Bikini Island, where nuclear tests were made forty years ago, is still uninhabitable.

Outside the church there is a world of physical deprivation. In America twenty million people go hungry and two million homeless sleep on the streets. What we need is 250 million people holding hands across America and using those hands to help.

The church is in a world afflicted with drugs. A high government official declared that the drug traffic is America’s number one problem and out of control. It is alarming to learn that two out of three of today’s kids use drugs which ruin health, cause sterility and twist minds.

How can the church be at ease at a time of sexual breakdown? Three of every ten teenage girls become pregnant. According to a recent survey, fifty percent of American women and seventy percent of men are disloyal to their spouses.

In the face of these gargantuan problems and needs, what is the average church doing in expressing compassion for the victims? Are we playing a game of trivia, dealing with trivialities and adiaphora? As Jesus said, we may be straining at gnats and swallowing camels. While the world is burning up, we are raising cane over a proposed deletion of a hymn from a new hymnal. We are more concerned about whether or not a whale swallowed Jonah than about human misery among the little fish of society. In a world threatened with external destruction and internal collapse, the biggest and best thing some churches do is to play bingo, or conduct a bazaar, or arrange for a fish fry! Lord, have mercy on us!

Now, if we would add up a renewed faith, a renewed passion, and a renewed compassion, it would amount to a renewed church. That is the crying need of our time, not a new, but a renewed church. The new covenant promised by Jeremiah and fulfilled in Jesus is in need of renewal. When the new is renewed, we will have another Reformation for the coming century.

The C.S.S. Publishing Compa, RENEWAL OF THE NEW, by John R. Brokhoff