Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
The God of Second Chances
Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
by King Duncan
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A national magazine for pastors once carried a rating system for sermons similar to the rating system we’re all familiar with for movies. It went something like this. The person who designed it was a little bit cynical. Here is the rating he gave to various kinds of sermons:   

“G” - Generally acceptable to everyone. Full of inoffensive, childlike platitudes; usually described as “wonderful” or “marvelous” by those who leave church to shake the hands of the pastor.       

“MC” - For more mature congregations. At times this sermon makes the gospel relevant to today’s issues; it may even contain mild suggestions for change. Often de­scribed as “challenging” or “thought provoking,” though no one intends to take any action or change any atti­tudes.    

“R” - Definitely restricted to those not upset by truth. This sermon “tells it like it is” and threatens the comfortable; most often described as “disturbing” or “controversial;” usually indicates that the preacher has an outside source of income (since his job security is definitely suspect).

“X” - Positively limited to those who can handle explosive ideas. This sermon really “socks it to ’em.” It is the kind of sermon that landed Jeremiah in the well, got Amos run out of town, set things up for the stoning of Stephen; always described as “shocking” or even in “poor taste.” The pastor who preaches this sermon had better have his or her suitcases packed and life insurance paid for. (1)

According to this rating system the prophet Jeremiah was definitely an X-rated preacher. More than any other prophet Jeremiah suffered as a result of his preaching. People rarely wanted to listen to his pronouncements. And no wonder. It seemed, even to Jeremiah, that all he ever talked about was bad news. At one point Jeremiah cried out: “Whenever I speak, I cry out proclaiming violence and destruction . . .” (Jeremiah 20:8). 

Jeremiah came from a family of priests. God called him to become a prophet at a very young age, and he served God for more than 40 years. He spoke God’s words during the reigns of three kings and witnessed the nation’s destruction by the Babylonians. He is called the Weeping Prophet because he also wrote the book of Lamentations after Jerusalem was destroyed including the Temple and its people carried off into captivity.

Jeremiah was also a suffering prophet who was persecuted by kings and rejected by his own people because of his forceful condemnation of idolatry and social injustice. Eventually, according to Jewish and Christian tradition, Jeremiah was killed in Egypt by his countrymen who had fled there. (2) 

God had called Jeremiah to “tell it like it is” to a people who had disregarded God’s law. They rejected his teachings and they suffered for it. And he suffered as well because of their rejection. So it is quite refreshing to come to today’s reading from Jeremiah. No fireworks. No scolding of the people of Israel. Jeremiah changes his tone altogether.

This passage was written during Israel’s exile. It was a dark time in Israel’s history. It’s been said that the task of the prophet is to comfort the afflicted and to afflict the comfortable. Jeremiah had done his job superbly of afflicting Israel when it was in the comfort of its sin; now it is time for him to be a comforter during their time of exile. In fact, this section of Jeremiah is often called the “Book of Consolation.” The words are so beautiful and so profound that they are welcome to our ears just as they were to the ears of Jeremiah’s audience:

“The days are coming,” declares the Lord, “when I will make a new covenant with the people of Israel and with the people of Judah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their ancestors when I took them by the hand to lead them out of Egypt, because they broke my covenant, though I was a husband to them,” declares the Lord.

 “This is the covenant I will make with the people of Israel after that time,” declares the Lord. “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, ‘Know the Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest,” declares the Lord. “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.”

Let’s think about those moving and hopeful words for a few moments. God is making a new covenant with Israel. Pastor Jeff Strite compares Israel’s situation to a situation in our own land just a few years ago. Some of you’ll remember when mortgage rates stood at 9 to 10%. But then interest rates went down to about half that. What did people do? That’s right. Many people marched down to the bank and refinanced their homes. They asked the banks to make out “new contracts” with lower monthly payments. (3)

Jeremiah is saying that God is unilaterally making a new contract or covenant with the people of Israel.

God is giving the people of Israel the chance to begin again. That’s the wonderful thing about God, isn’t it? God is a God of second and third and even fourth chances.

One night in a church service a young woman felt the tug of the Holy Spirit in her heart. She responded to God’s call and accepted Jesus as her Lord and Savior. The young woman had a very rough past, involving alcohol, drugs and prostitution. But, the change in her was evident. As time went on she became a faithful member of the church. She eventually became involved in the ministry teaching young children. It was not very long until this thoroughly converted young woman had caught the eye and the heart of the pastor’s son. The relationship grew and they began to make wedding plans. This is when the problems began.

You see, about one half of the church did not think that a woman with a past such as hers was suitable for a pastor’s son. The church began to argue and fight about the matter. So they decided to have a meeting. As the people made their arguments and tensions increased, the meeting got completely out of hand. The young woman became very upset about all the things being brought up about her past. As she began to cry, the pastor’s son stood to speak. He could not bear the pain all this was causing his wife-to-be. He began to speak and his statement was this: “My fiancé’s past is not what is on trial here. What you are questioning is the ability of Christ to wash away our sin and make us new persons. So, does he wash away sin or not?” (4)

Powerful question: Does Christ wash away sin or not? If he does not, we are all in trouble.

Pastor Dennis Becker uses the analogy of a trick bar of soap. The trick soap looks like a real bar of soap, but when you wash with it, you get dirty instead of clean. The more you wash, the dirtier you get. He recalls watch­ing an episode of the old television program Candid Camera when Allen Funt was the host. Funt had planted a fake bar of soap in a washroom and re­corded the reactions of those who washed their hands with it. It was funny to watch them scrub and scrub and never get clean. It was comical. (5)

It would be comical if soap did not get our hands clean. If Christ does not wash away our sins, it would be more than comical; it would be tragic. In Jeremiah, God says to us, “I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.”

God is the God of second chances. God had a contentious relationship with Israel and indeed with all humanity. But Israel was God’s chosen people. They were to be a light unto the world in God’s behalf. In this passage from Jeremiah, God calls Himself a husband to Israel. But Israel continually wanders from the relationship. And God has to keep tugging her back. But each time He does bring her back. God loves Israel too much to leave her in her sin.

A few years ago, best-selling author John Grisham wrote a book titled The Testament. The key figure in the novel is a disgraced corporate attorney named Nate O’Reilly. Nate is plagued by alcoholism and drug abuse. After two marriages, four detox programs, and a serious bout with dengue fever, Nate acknowledges his need for God. Listen to how John Grisham describes the transformation:

“With both hands, he clenched the back of the pew in front of him. He repeated the list [of his sins], mumbling softly every weakness and flaw and affliction and evil that plagued him. He confessed them all. In one long glorious acknowledgment of failure, he laid himself bare before God. He held nothing back. He unloaded enough burdens to crush any three men, and when he finally finished Nate had tears in his eyes. ‘I’m sorry,’ he whispered to God. ‘Please, help me.’

“As quickly as the fever had left his body, he felt the baggage leave his soul. With one gentle brush of the hand, his slate had been wiped clean. He breathed a massive sigh of relief, but his pulse was racing.” (6)

That is a fictionalized account of a real life experience that countless people have experienced over the centuries since Christ came into the world. They have known their sins forgiven. They have found themselves made clean.

And they have been able to make a new beginning. Here is the really good news for the day. We have a chance to start over. The past is blotted out. A new covenant with God is possible for us.

Pastor James Moore’s father died in a car wreck when James was only thirteen years old. Tragically, young Jim read it in the newspaper before anyone could reach him to tell him about it. When he saw the picture of their smashed-up car on the front page of the newspaper, and read that his dad had died in that accident, he was thrust immediately and painfully into the shocked numbness of deep grief.

Strangely, one of his very first thoughts was covered with guilt. He remembered that, some months before at a family picnic, he had been showing off with a baseball. He threw it wildly, and it hit his dad and broke his thumb. Jim felt so bad about that. In his mind he thought, “What a terrible son I am!” He had caused his dad great pain. And he lived with that guilt for several months. Finally, he went to his pastor and admitted these deep feelings of guilt about breaking his dad’s thumb.

He says he’ll never forget how his pastor handled that. His pastor was so great, he says. His pastor came around the desk with tears in his eyes.

He sat down across from him and said, “Now, Jim, you listen to me. If your dad could come back to life for five minutes and be right here with us, and if he knew you were worried about that, what would he say to you?”

Jim Moore answered, “He would tell me to quit worrying about that.”

“Well, all right,” the pastor said. “Then you quit worrying about that right now. Do you understand me?”

“Yes, sir,” Jim said, and he did. He knew the minister was saying to him, you are forgiven. Accept that forgiveness, and make a new start with your life. (6)

Those, of course, are exactly the words James Moore needed to hear. He could make a new beginning without all that guilt he was carrying around.

Here’s what we need to understand: Christ has made a new covenant with us. I said a moment ago that a new covenant with God is possible for us. It’s not really a new covenant. It’s a covenant that Jeremiah foretold and Christ made possible 2,000 years ago. Do you remember that on the night Jesus was betrayed, he took the cup, and said, “This is my blood of the new covenant which is poured out for you for the forgiveness of sins”? The covenant has already been made, but many of us have not appropriated that covenant in our own lives. God said through Jeremiah, “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people . . .” That happens as soon as we welcome Christ into our lives. It is why we speak of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the part of the Godhead that bears witness to God’s word. It is the Spirit that puts God’s law in our minds and writes it on our hearts.” And it happens to us the moment we confess of our sins, repent of those sins, and invite Christ to make a home in our hearts.

Bishop William Willimon visited his mother in California and attended church with her. That Sunday the pastor was away so a guest speaker was invited to deliver the message Chuck Colson. Some of you may not be old enough to remember Colson’s involvement in the Watergate scandal and President Nixon’s reelection campaign. For his illegal transgressions, one of the most trusted Presidential advisors and ex-Marine officer was convicted of several counts of felony, stripped of his license to practice law, and served time in a federal prison.

Willimon’s mother leaned over to her son and whispered rather loudly, “I haven’t come here to church to listen to some jailbird preach.”

Willimon responded, “But he has had a conversion experience, he has given his life to Christ.”

“That’s what they all do when they come before the Parole Board,” she said.

Colson began his sermon by telling the congregation about how different it was for him to be preaching before such a magnificent congregation knowing that millions were also watching on TV. The congregation he typically preached to consisted of murderers, rapists, and thieves. Then he shocked them by asking, “Do you know with which group Jesus was more at home?” He went on to attack the congregation for their materialism, greed, and insensitivity to the poor.

William Willimon’s mother turned to her son at the conclusion of the sermon and said, “I hope that he is having a good time preaching here because he will never be invited back.” (7)

I don’t know if Colson was ever invited back, but I do know that Chuck Colson is living proof that a person’s life can be changed by the power of Christ.

“This is the covenant I will make with the people of Israel after that time,” declares the Lord. “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, ‘Know the Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest,” declares the Lord. “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.” God is the God of second chances. Why don’t you take the opportunity to make a new start today?


1. Franklin Ishida, “Preaching on the Lessons,” The Clergy Journal, Oct 2001, p.  38.

2. http://www.scribd.com/doc/58499038/Overcoming-Low-Self-Esteem-Jeremiah-1-4-10-Sermon.

3. http://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/a-new-hope-jeff-strite-sermon-on-kingdom-of-god-70969.asp?Page=2.

4. Adapted from Andrew H. Rogers, https://sermons.logos.com/submissions/11254-The-Blood#content=/submissions/11254.

5. Emphasis, Mar/Apr 2001, p. 37.6. (Random House, 1999), p. 374; submitted by Greg Asimakoupoulos, Naperville, IL. Cited at http://www.preachingtoday.com/illustrations/article_print.html?id=25164. 

6. James W. Moore, Standing on the Promises or Sitting on the Premises (Nashville: Dimensions for Living, 1995), pp. 88-89.

7. The Rev. John H. Pavelko, http://crossroadspc.org/thebarrel/20030706.htm.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons First Quarter 2015, by King Duncan