Jeremiah 1:1-19 · The Call of Jeremiah
What's The Point?
Jeremiah 1:1-19
Sermon
by Richard L. Sheffield
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In the church we used to teach the Christian Faith in the form of a catechism. That's a question and answer format which when learned gives basic answers to basic questions about Christian belief and living a Christian life. The catechism was meant to be memorized like the multiplication table, so that at least some of life's questions might have answers as quickly as we know 2x2=4. Interestingly, the latest General Assembly has proposed writing a new Catechism to help us to ask the right questions and find the right answers to living life as God intends it to be lived.

The larger Catechism, found in the Book of Confessions of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), has as its first question, the first thing to learn about how to live, this question: "What is the chief and highest end of man?" Modern Version: What's the point of my life. Answer: "Man's chief and highest end is to glorify God, and fully to enjoy him forever."1 Before all else in life, what life is all about, now and forever, for you and for me is glorifying and enjoying the God who made us.

We used to assume that every Presbyterian learned that along the way. Perhaps we need to learn it again.

The 19th century hymn writer Fanny Crosby put it this way: "To God be the Glory, great things He hath done! ... Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord, Let the People Rejoice!"2 Give Glory to God and be joyful; that's what life is all about. And as Saint Irenaeus put it in the 2nd century: "The Glory of God is a human being who is fully alive."3 Simply put, the purpose of life is living -- joyfully!

So why don't we just say that?

Perhaps because we find it so hard to do that.

For whatever reason, the Bible calls whatever reason it is sin. Human beings have a heck of a time being happy beings. And that's a sin! That may be the sin!

Someone once observed that when our living this life is done, the one thing God will hold us most accountable for is our having failed to enjoy all the good things he made for us. Having failed to live life glorifying him by the way we live, and enjoying it.

Jeremiah, a preacher's kid who grew up to be a prophet, tells us in the passage I read from his writings how we might learn to do better; and not just for God -- for ourselves. In those opening lines from his book Jeremiah had condensed into a brief dialogue between himself and God the spiritual struggles and spiritual insights of a lifetime. It didn't happen one morning over breakfast, but over many years. And so, I suspect, it will be for us.

In summary the passage comes to this: what God said. What Jeremiah said. What God said. All the rest of Jeremiah's book is about what happened.

It starts with God. It always does. As an unknown poet put it: "I sought the Lord, and afterward I knew he moved my soul to seek him, seeking me; it was not I that found, O Saviour true, no I was found of Thee."4

When God had found Jeremiah what he had to say is recorded in some of the most beautiful language in all scripture: "Now the word of the Lord came to me (said Jeremiah) saying, 'Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations' " (Jeremiah 1:4-5). Think about that, Jeremiah! Jeremiah did. His response is my second point.

But first, you and I need to think about that. Think about it! The God of all creation knew you and me before we were created. He had intimate knowledge (that's what it means "to know") and intimate understanding of you and me before there was a you and me. And he has big plans, big ideas, big hopes and big dreams, for you and me. There is meaning and purpose in life. And God has something in mind for each of us.

I know it doesn't always seem like it. And sometimes it may seem that what God has in mind, you'd rather forget. But let me suggest that sin and the pain it brings, in our lives, be it personal or international, is what happens to us when God's purpose is not what's happening in our lives; when life is not as God intends it to be.

I've often sat in my study listening to someone in physical pain or in a painful situation ask, "Why is God doing this to me?" The simplest answer: He isn't! "Is this what God has in mind for me?" Answer: No! The God who knew you before he made you, whose concern and relationship with you is such that Jesus would later teach that "... even the hairs of your head are all counted" by him (Matthew 10:30). This God is not out to do you in. He's out to do big things in your life. He knew you before you were born.

He knows you now. He knows your need. He knows the possibilities in your life. And he wants you to see them, too.

He knew Jeremiah: "I appointed you a prophet to the nations" (Jeremiah 1:5). God didn't ask Jeremiah to consider the position and get back to him; he said, you had the job before you were born.

That may make you and me a bit uncomfortable. Shouldn't God ask me? He does. And very often we turn him down. But he keeps the job open while you and I look around and look for the meaning of our lives.

Sometime after we're born we begin to ask, "What is the meaning in my life." As Rabbi Kushner puts it, there comes a point in life where we ask: "Was there something I was supposed to do with my life?"5 Kushner writes: "The need for meaning is not a biological need like the need for food and air. Neither is it a psychological need, like the need for acceptance and self esteem. It is a religious need, an ultimate thirst of our souls."6 You and I need to know more than how to make a living. We need to know the meaning of our living, if we're to truly live. We need to know what God has in mind for our lives. Not how God is manipulating me to get what he wants; but what does God have in mind for me that will give me what I want, which is to live a life full of joy.

The search for meaning is a search for the mind of God. God spoke his mind to Jeremiah: I know you better than you know yourself, and "I appointed you a prophet to the nations."

Jeremiah said, "Ah, Lord God! Truly I do not know how to speak, for I am only a boy" (Jeremiah 1:6). I know I need to do something but that's not what I know how to do. Don't want to learn either!

The unnerving thing about seeking the mind of God is that when we find it, it isn't necessarily what we had in mind. God has big plans; we make little plans. God speaks to us, as he spoke to the prophet Elijah, in, "... a still small voice" (1 Kings 19:12, RSV), and we sit still and think small. And wonder why our life is like that.

But, God doesn't yell at us. He just keeps whispering in our ear what he has in mind.

In fairness to Jeremiah and to us, our reticence is understandable. The theologian Paul Tillich wrote that "It is safe to say that a man who has never tried to flee God has never experienced the God who is really God."7 Jeremiah heard God. He just didn't believe in God, so he didn't believe in Jeremiah. "... I am only a boy. " I can't do that, he said.

What we have here is life from two points of view: God's and ours. God sees who we are, who he made us to be, and all the possibilities in that. We see ourselves for who we are, what we've made of our lives, and all the limitations in that.

Jeremiah was well aware of his limitations. He wasn't making excuses. He was being honest about himself! He couldn't do what he felt called to do alone. What he was missing, what we too often miss, is that we're not alone. The God who calls us is also the God who goes with us.

So God said to Jeremiah: "Do not say, 'I am only a boy' ..." (Jeremiah 1:7). Don't sell yourself short, Jeremiah!

That's a term from the stock broker. "Selling short" means that you don't believe in the stock you are buying and the company it represents. You sell it at today's price on the assumption that you can buy it at a lower price tomorrow. If the company fails, you succeed! If the company loses money, you make money! If the company cuts its dividend, you reap big dividends. That's sometimes a good way to invest in stocks, but it's never a good way to live. If I sell myself short in life that means that I'm betting against myself. The only way to be right about myself is to be less than I could be.

Psychologists tell us that one of the biggest barriers to getting well is getting used to being sick: used to being less than we could be. It not only seems normal; it feels secure. The primary job of the therapist is to help us realize our mistake.

Kushner says: "There is an old Yiddish saying, 'to a worm in horseradish, the whole world is horseradish.' That is, if we have never known an alternative, then we assume that the way we are living, with all of its frustrations, is the only way to live."8 God says there's a better way! Maybe you are only a boy but I am God! The God who made you. The God who wants to make you what you could be, what you were made to be.

What he made Jeremiah was a prophet.

The question is what does God want to make of you and me?

One thing's for sure. He wants to make you and me people for whom life is worth living forever to the Glory of God, and for the joy of it!


1. The Book of Confessions, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).

2. Presbyterian Hymnal 485 (Westminster/John Knox Press, 1990).

3. Quoted by John Powell, S.J. Fully Human Fully Alive (Argus Communications, 1976) p. 7.

4. Donald T. Kauffman. The Treasury of Religious Verse (Fleming H. Revell, 1962).

5. Harold Kushner. When All You've Ever Wanted Isn't Enough (Summit Books, 1986) p. 28.

6. Ibid., p. 29.

7. The Shaking of the Foundations. New York: Charles T. Scribner's Sons, 1948, p. 42.

8. Kushner, op. cit., p. 22.

The CSS Publishing Company, Summer Fruit, by Richard L. Sheffield