Jeremiah 30:1--31:40 · Restoration of Israel
The Right Spirit Within Us ...
Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
by Durwood L. Buchheim
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Today, in our Old Testament journey to Easter, we make a significant adjustment both in time, geography, and attitude. We are at that momentous year of 587 B.C. (or slightly beyond) when the country of Judah is no more. The beautiful temple, built in the great days of King Solomon is no more. This holy, awesome temple has been sacked and its priceless art treasures carried off to the wicked country of Babylon. The monarchy, reaching back to the golden days of King David is no more. The holy city of Jerusalem is in ruins. God’s people have become God’s refugees.

Jeremiah was prophet before, during and after these dreadful and unbelievable events. He was the pastor/preacher/prophet during this twilight time of his people. One hundred or so years earlier, the Northern Kingdom of Israel had fallen and was no more. Now the Southern Kingdom of Judah was on the verge of collapse. Jeremiah was called a traitor because he preached this bad news. His government, like most governments, wanted a more positive message. News of "doom and gloom" was bad for the economy and for re-election. This was true because most people didn’t want to hear such messages either. The people of God had grown so used to "God talk" that there was no question that God was on their side.

The uncomfortable insights of Old Testament scholar, Walter Brueggemann, are helpful at this point:

"They are fascinated with statistics. They are skilled at press conferences. They believe their own propaganda. They imagine that God loves rather than judges, that the Babylonian threat will soon disappear, (cf. Jeremiah 28:2-4) that the economy is almost back to normal, that Judean values will somehow survive, that religion needs to be affirmative, that things will hold together if we all hug each other."

Dr. Brueggeman concludes, "In a word, they believe that grief is treason.... They are into happiness, optimism and well-being."

With that optimistic mind-set, there is little "covenant" concern for the poor and defenseless victims of their time. Covenant living is living with concern and compassion for the community. But God’s people were becoming more "individualistic" - more focused on self and personal needs. About the country’s growing greedy, selfish spirit, hear Jeremiah’s strong words to King Jehoikim, son of the good King Josiah:

"Do you think you are a king because you compete in cedar? Did not your father eat and drink
and do justice and righteousness? Then it was well with him. He judged the cause of the poor and needy; then it was well. Is not this to know me? says the Lord. But you have eyes and heart only for dishonest gain, for shedding innocent blood, and for practicing oppression and violence." (22:15-17)

This is what Jeremiah saw as he watched his country die. By this kind of behavior Israel had defiled and polluted the promised land, turning it into a wilderness where God’s name was profaned. By disrespect for God, Israel had made holy land unholy. In Israel’s failure to honor God, the covenant God had made with them was broken.

Remember? The covenant business began with Noah and God’s promise never again to send judgment via the flood, and the rainbow was the sign. Again, God called Abraham and Sarah to be the father and mother of a people through whom all people would be blessed. This covenant relationship was confirmed and renewed with Moses at Mount Sinai where God gave the ten commandments.

Jeremiah compares the covenant relationship between God and the people to a marriage relationship between a man and a woman. But Israel was the unfaithful spouse in this relationship. So Jeremiah preached:

"They have turned back to the iniquities of their forefathers, who refused to hear my words; they have gone after other gods to serve them; the house of Judah have broken my covenant which I made with their fathers." (11:10)

These iniquities brought an end to a way of life that would never return.

Jeremiah’s life and message raises the uncomfortable question: When is treason patriotism, and when is patriotism treason? We seem to live in a time when any criticism of our country is regarded as unpatriotic. Yet, the sermons of the Old Testament prophets were directed primarily toward the sins of their own country. They seemed to be much more suspicious of patriotic fervor than we are inclined to be. I think about Jeremiah and the flag controversy in our country. I also think about how popular and important the swastika flag was for Germany fifty years ago. In any public event, church or secular, this national symbol was in prominent display. Does not history tell us that flag worship and idolatry are much more dangerous than flag desecration? Jeremiah’s example is a useful one when we make judgments about loyalty and patriotism. By many of his people, he was looked upon as a traitor and a failure. But history judges him differently.

Jeremiah was a prophet called by God to preach an unpopular but realistic word to a people who did not want to hear it. Yet his word was not only one of warning, but also one of hope, for into this somber picture of hopelessness came these now familiar comforting words of hope, "Behold, the days are coming."

Many biblical scholars believe that in this prophecy, Jeremiah’s thinking and preaching reaches its climax. It is regarded by many as one of the mountain peaks of the Old Testament. It is quoted extensively in the book of Hebrews and we recall its use in the memorable words by Jesus in the institution of the holy supper - "This cup is the new covenant in my blood" (Luke 22:20). Little wonder that this memorable text is described as "the gospel before the gospel."

Jeremiah looked to a new future and to a new time beyond the lost world. This prophet, who had such true, but tough words about judgment, could also speak true and loving words of hope, "Behold, the days are coming ..."

But what is coming? What is this word of hope?

It is the hope of a "right spirit within us." This is the new word that Jeremiah brought the despondent exiles. He did not call for renewed repentance. Instead, he spoke a word of radical grace, from the heart of God:

Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel: "The days are surely coming ... 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." (31:31ff)

The preacher Ezekiel, a younger contemporary of Jeremiah, preached the same promise of hope in these words:

"A new heart I will give you, and a new spirit I will put within you; and I will take out of your flesh the heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh." (36:2)

"Circumcision of the heart" is what is needed. The spiritual life must be from the inside out. Jeremiah was on the threshold of seeing the need for inward conversion and being born anew. This was God’s promise to the people of God. No longer was the law to be just a code regulating outward behavior. Under the new covenant (agreement) God’s spirit was to be working inside of us.

One cannot presume that Jeremiah knew how God was going to create this "right spirit within us." But Christians looking back, see the cross of Christ as the fulfillment of God’s promise. In today’s gospel we hear the Son of God say, "My hour has come ... and when I am lifted up from the earth (that is crucified), I will draw all people to myself" (John 12:32).

Jesus sees his death, for all people - for you and me. Here is the new day, the new hope God promised and Jeremiah looked forward to. Here is power for this new spirit within us. It is created not by rules but by love that has died for me. The new covenant is not another law to be obeyed to make one’s self righteous and often times self-righteous. Instead, sinners will be filled from within to do what is right, filled with desire to do God’s will.

This transformation comes about in grateful response to what a forgiving God has done for us. This is the drawing power of the cross. Because of this event, we can change, we don’t have to stay the way we are. The love of God revealed on the cross empowers us to respond in love. In this relationship there is true desire to do that which is pleasing to God.

"Behold, the days are coming ... when the law will be written in the heart." Christians see this promise of hope being fulfilled through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

But one is fearful that this good news produces just a big yawn! After all, what else is new? We are not living in exile. We are not homesick for home.

Or are we? Or should we be?

Maybe our "way of living" is located in a "foreign land" and we know it not. Who are the "Jewish prophets" of our time - the prophets who are unpatriotic, rejected and very unpopular? Do we pay any attention to them? Is Jesus a threat to us? To our way of living? He was a threat in his day and was crucified because of it.

If life "can’t get no better than this" what’s the point of a hope-filled promise? Unless, we too, like Israelites of old have put on the rose-colored glasses and have become willing victims of deception.

Again, the helpful insights of Brueggemann, whom I believe is one of the prophets of our time:

"I believe that we are in a season of transition, when we are watching the collapse of the world as we have known it.... The news is that God enters the broken ... In God’s attentive pain, healing happens. Newness comes. Possibilities are presented ..."2

I agree with Brueggemann’s diagnosis. I think this country is in a transition time. "Behold, the days are coming ..." In store for us could be "days" of hurting and homesickness. But the promise of newness and hope is also there. One of the important lessons through our Lenten journey is that God remains faithful to the covenant made with us.

In the New Covenant, the dying-rising-life power of God’s Son is shared with the followers of God. Jesus tells us, "Where I am, there shall my servant be also" (John 12:26). Here is the answer to a life homesick for home. Here is the answer to wilderness living. Here is the answer to a life that has become an existence. Here is the key that opens the door to purposeful and meaningful living. It is not where I breathe that I live, but where I love that I really live. Selfishness is the end of life while sacrifice is the salvation of life. The new heart, the new creation brought into fulfillment by our Lord’s dying and rising provides the motivation for a dying life - a life that is hope-filled life. That is life with the right spirit within us. That is life with true joy because it is a life that is being used up for others.

No, our lives are not there, but God’s promise is and remains - "Behold the day is coming ..." We continue to pray with the psalmist:

"O God close your eyes to my sins
and wipe out all my evil.
Create a pure heart in me, O God
and put a new and right spirit in me." (Psalm 51)


1. Walter Brueggemann, Hopeful Imagination, Fortress, 1986, p. 42. This is an excellent book. I am indebted to Dr. Brueggemann for some of the thoughts and ideas for these sermons dealing with God’s people in exile.

2. Ibid, pp. 46-74.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Power To Change, The, by Durwood L. Buchheim