24. Jeremiah

"The LORD Reforms Us" (Sermon on Jeremiah 31:31-34) | October 26, 2025

Sermon Text: Jeremiah 31:31-34
Date: October 26, 2025
Event: Reformation Day, Year C

 

Jeremiah 31:31-34 (EHV)

Yes, the days are coming, declares the LORD,
when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel
and with the house of Judah.
32It will not be like the covenant I made with their fathers,
when I took them by the hand
and led them out of the land of Egypt.
They broke that covenant of mine,
although I was a husband to them, declares the LORD.
33But this is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after those days,
declares the LORD.
I will put my law in their minds,
and I will write it on their hearts.
I will be their God,
and they will be my people.
34No longer will each one teach his neighbor,
or each one teach his brother, saying, “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 guilt,
and I will remember their sins no more.

 

The LORD Reforms Us

 

When do you need reform? Activist groups may call for reform in some area of leadership or government when they sense that the plans and actions of those in charge are not in line with the leadership’s stated goals—or the desires of the people involved. You may sense a need for reform in your own life when bad habits start pushing out good habits, and you find yourself not dedicated to your priorities and values like you want to be. Reform may be called for when a group’s actions or policies reflect a different era. These ways of doing things may have made sense in the past, but perhaps that reasoning no longer applies today.

A commonality among all of these different types of reform is that it’s going to be work. It’s going to be uncomfortable. It’s going to be difficult. Trying to steer the ship of an organization from the bottom up when those from the top disagree is a gargantuan task. Implementing new plans and goals that are different from the standard, traditional path someone has been following for a long time can be incredibly taxing. And I don’t need to tell you how tough it is to fight against your own ingrained habits to make long-lasting, meaningful changes in your day-to-day life.

All reform is uncomfortable because it’s tackling the status quo and trying to change it; it’s a fight against inertia, and sometimes it feels like trying to roll a boulder up a steep hill.

As we observe and celebrate the 508th anniversary of the beginning of the Lutheran Reformation this morning, we thank God for all the blessings he brought to the church through Martin Luther and the other reformers many years ago that we still benefit from today. But we also do well to recognize that this reformation work in the 1500s was not unique to that time; this is work that God had been doing and will continue to do among his people as long as this world endures.

There are many periods of reformation within Bible history that we could point to, but our focus this morning is the work of the prophet Jeremiah. Jeremiah’s ministry was often pretty bleak. He ministered among an unfaithful nation-church as he served as a prophet to the nation of Judah. The leaders and the people of Judah were often unfaithful to God’s direction and teaching. In fact, Judah was already a splinter nation from the formerly great nation of Israel. After the days of King Solomon, that nation broke into two pieces. The northern piece was also unfaithful (perhaps even more thoroughly than Judah) and met their end through sweeping exile by the nation of Assyria some 150 years before the days of Jeremiah.

But Judah’s unfaithfulness was very real, and though the nation was rescued from the consequences of their unfaithfulness at the hands of Assyria, it ended up just being a delay rather than a complete rescue. Eventually, God had to step in to force a true reform that the people were not doing themselves. He did this, in part, through the exile of the people of Judah by the nation of Babylon.

It's at this time of unfaithfulness and consequences to that unfaithfulness that Jeremiah served. He had the unenviable task of warning the people that the nation’s destruction and people’s exile were coming. There would be no miraculous rescue from Babylon had there been from Assyria 150 years earlier.

God describes his people’s unfaithfulness to him here in Jeremiah and elsewhere using the terms of a marriage that has fallen to pieces. The people’s unfaithfulness was spiritual adultery against their loving husband. When God says, “They broke that covenant of mine,” he uses the terms of annulment and divorce. The people’s unfaithfulness to God’s covenant sought to end the spiritual, eternal marriage of God to his people.

It would be easy to imagine that the Babylonian captivity would be God’s version of giving his wife a certificate of divorce and sending her away. But this is reform, not abandonment. Yes, Jerusalem would be pulverized by Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian king. Yes, God’s people would be ripped out of their homeland and sent marching across the Fertile Crescent to Babylon. But this was not God divorcing his adulterous wife and sending her away; this was part of God’s reform of his Old Testament church.

God promised that seventy years after the exile, they would return. And in many ways, this reform “worked.” After the Babylonian exile, we don’t really see God’s people struggling with the worship of false gods like Baal, Asherah, and Molech. Instead, there is a newfound commitment to the truth of God’s Word and prioritizing it in the lives of God’s people.

But this reform is not just a story of getting a people group to straighten up and fly right. That would ignore the reality of sin and imply that God was having the people fend for themselves and even save themselves. Instead, ahead of the exile, God promises something different, something new, through Jeremiah: Yes, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their fathers.

The “old” covenant that God made with the nation of Israel when he brought them out of Egypt was an earthly-blessing-focused covenant. God would be their God and bless them. He would give them the Promised Land as an enduring gift on the condition that they were faithful to him. Their job was to obey God; God’s job was to provide for them.

Obviously, we know how that went. But here God is promising something new and different. Instead of the old covenant promised and given primarily through Moses, this new covenant would be entirely God’s doing. It would be radically different in that it wouldn’t involve any work from the people at all. God was making and keeping this promise completely independent of anyone else. But this is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the LORD. I will put my law in their minds, and I will write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.

The word translated “law” here in v. 33 is probably best understood as the whole of God’s Word. God is not simply promising to put his commands into the people’s hearts. In many ways, that was already true as all people are born with a natural knowledge of God and with that have a conscience that testifies to God’s will—what things are right and what things are wrong. No, this is something bigger, broader, something God will have to inscribe on the hearts of his people. This heart-writing will include the gospel; it will include God’s grace—his undeserved love—for his people. This reform would be centered not on God’s justice, but on his mercy, his forgiveness. No longer will each one teach his neighbor, or each one teach his brother, saying, “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 guilt, and I will remember their sins no more.

This forgiveness—so potent that it makes the all-knowing God forget!—would be carried out by a descendant of the people facing exile. Almost 600 years after Jeremiah, the time will fully come, and God will send his Son, Jesus, into this world. God himself would take on our human nature, our flesh and blood, to live and die as our substitute. In the blood of Jesus shed at the cross, atonement—payment for sin—would be made to cover our sins and reunite us with our God.

God would reform the Israelites to be faithful, but more than that, they would be reformed to be forgiven. The faithful among this nation would put their trust in God as their eternal Savior and giver of eternal life. The forgiveness and even the faith to trust it would be a one-sided action on God’s part. Our obedience—a life of sanctification, of good works—is purely a thankful response to God’s freely-given grace and forgiveness.

The church of Martin Luther’s day was unfaithful to God’s covenant in a similar way to Old Testament Judah. The papacy and the church in Rome at large had distorted God’s Word to such a point as to rob all the comfort God intended the people to have. The message of sins fully and freely forgiven in Jesus’ death was absent, replaced with a message of works. If you wanted to receive actual forgiveness for your sins, the church said, you needed to do something to compensate for it. Maybe that was prayers, maybe that was some works of service. Perhaps that was paying the church money so they would tell you you were forgiven.

None of this is what God said, so through Luther and others, God restored the true teaching of his Word. While reform never really came for the Roman church (as it still holds to this works-righteousness teaching even today), it did come for Christendom at large. All over the western world, God worked a change so that the people would hear and know what he had done, the new covenant he had established, a covenant that did not call for works from us, but is a one-sided covenant that depends entirely on God’s undeserved love for us.  

We need God’s reform. We need him to correct our hearts and actions. We need him to redirect our gaze away from ourselves and back to him. We need him to show us our great need for rescue and that we have that rescue freely given in Jesus’ work for us.

Thanks be to God! He has written these truths on your heart and mine through his Word and sacraments. By God’s grace, we don’t have to encourage each other to learn about—to know—the God of free and faithful grace. He has made himself known to us and even dwells within us. And the promise made through Jeremiah, the promise reinforced at the time of the reformation, is the promise that rings true for you and me today: I will forgive their guilt, and I will remember their sins no more.

My brothers and sisters, so complete is your forgiveness that God can’t even remember that you’ve ever been unfaithful to him or sinned against him. Our sins are gone, completely wiped out in the blood of Jesus shed for us. So let us live our lives in a way that reflects the reformation that God has worked in each of us. Let us give thanks to God our Savior in everything we say, think, and do—now and forever! Amen.

 Soli Deo Gloria

Sermon prepared for Gloria Dei Lutheran Church (WELS), Belmont, CA (www.gdluth.org) by Pastor Timothy Shrimpton. All rights reserved. Contact pastor@gdluth.org for usage information.

"The Days Are Coming!" (Sermon on Jeremiah 33:14-16) | December 1, 2024

Sermon Text: Jeremiah 33:14-16
Date: December 1, 2024
Event: The First Sunday in Advent, Year C

 

Jeremiah 33:14–16 (EHV)

Listen, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will fulfill the good promises that I have spoken to the house of Israel and concerning the house of Judah.

15In those days and at that time,
I will cause a righteous Branch to grow up from David’s line.
He will establish justice and righteousness on earth.
16In those days Judah will be saved,
and Jerusalem will dwell securely.
This is what she will be called:
The Lord Our Righteousness.

 

The Days Are Coming

 

The days are coming! How many until Christmas? I’m sure you could ask most of the children and they could give you an exact number. The rest of us could probably do the math, but perhaps we don’t want to think about that just yet. There’s so much to do to prepare—planning, decorating, cooking, emotionally centering ourselves. It’s a lot. But unless the Lord returns before December 25, it will be here. That day is, in fact, coming!

This morning in worship, we are not yet getting into the Christmas season itself, but we are beginning a new church year, and we begin that year in the season of Advent. Advent is a season all about preparation which fits in more ways than one at this time of year. Amid all the preparations that happen for us to celebrate Christmas, spiritually, we are preparing our hearts for a dual purpose. We are, in part, preparing our hearts to hear that glorious Christmas gospel that the angels and shepherds will share that night in Bethlehem. But we also continue to prepare for his second coming, ensuring our hearts are ready to receive him not just as the baby in the manger but also as the returning King of kings and Lord of lords.

In some ways, we begin the new church year in a very similar way to how we ended the last church year this past Sunday. In our Gospel, we saw Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, and while there is humility as he rides on a lowly colt of a donkey, it’s still a greatly different picture than what we saw in last week’s Gospel when Jesus was on trial before Pontius Pilate. Shouts of praise from the Psalms, and specifically praise to the promised Messiah, filled the air!

Our focus this morning takes us back, though, some 600 years before that first Palm Sunday. In our First Reading, we spend time with the prophet Jeremiah, who lived and worked in a dreadful time in the history of God’s people.

The Israelites had lived in the Promised Land for over 800 years, and during that period, there was a constant struggle to keep God's commands and directions. Not only did they struggle with the normal sinful natures that would lead them astray from God’s will anyway, but they also allowed people who worshiped false gods to continue to live among them and influence them. So the pull to fictional deities like Baal, Asherah, Molech, and others constantly distracted from the true God and while also incorporating pure sin in their worship practices.

God sent his prophets to them repeatedly, warning them that he would step in with chastisement using the sword of foreign powers if things did not change. That happened to the northern part of Israel before Jeremiah’s time when the nation of Assyria came and exiled most of the people and mixed in people from other nations with the Israelites who remained.

The southern part of Israel had some brighter spots. A few kings like Hezekiah and Josiah would come in and try to clean up the worship life of the nation. They would clean up and repair the temple. They would reinstitute festivals and sacrifices God had commanded, which the people had long forgotten. But things never fully turned around; the people never devoted themselves back to God reliably.

The real issue was not the faithfulness of one nation or several tribes but God’s global promise of a Savior. Just like when God intervened with the flood of Noah’s day because the promise of the Savior was on the verge of being extinguished, so God intervened here. While his actions were not as dramatic and did not require an ark, it was no less critical. The promise had to be preserved, and it wouldn’t be a pleasant road ahead for the Israelites.

At the beginning of Jeremiah 33, before our First Reading for this morning starts, God outlined what this was going to be like: The Lord, the God of Israel, says this concerning the houses of this city and the palaces of the kings of Judah …  I will fill them with the corpses of men whom I have killed in my anger and my wrath. I will hide my face from this city because of all its wickedness (vv. 4-5). There’s no sugarcoating that. Things would be miserable because the people had abandoned God’s ways.

And this makes up a large percentage of the message God sent Jeremiah to share. The people responded to that message as well as you might imagine they did. They viewed Jeremiah as a liar, a blasphemer, a traitor to the nation and king. Who would say such horrible things about their own country, their own people? And yet, Jeremiah was sharing what God had told him to say. Jeremiah was just the mouthpiece; the words were God’s.

However, there is something important to remember about this downfall God promised for the nation of Judah: God set an expiration date. It wouldn’t be short—70 years—but it would end. The purpose of this was not to punish unfaithful people; the purpose was to purify, to rehabilitate an apostate nation because they had a role to carry out for the good of mankind; it was through them that the Savior of the nations would come.

So Jeremiah had the privilege of describing future days. The terrible days are coming! Babylon would come and carry the nation into exile. The difficult days are coming! A seven-decade-long exile would end all but a select few of that current generation. The trying days are coming! Even in return to their homeland, exiles would find it difficult to endure; as they took a stronger stand against the false religions around them, they would find relationships with the other nations much more difficult in the short and long term.

There’s not a ton to be excited about in these promises. These coming days sound dark and cold. But then, there are other days that Jeremiah is privileged to announce: Listen, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will fulfill the good promises that I have spoken to the house of Israel and concerning the house of Judah. God would someday keep and complete the promises he made to his people. What would that look like? In those days and at that time, I will cause a righteous Branch to grow from David’s line. He will establish justice and righteousness on earth. In those days Judah will be saved, and Jerusalem will dwell securely. This is what she will be called: The Lord Our Righteousness. The salvation days are coming! God will come and save his people, and the people, the cities, and the nations will be named to reflect the reality of their spiritual condition: The Lord Our Righteousness.

A branch would grow up from the house and line of King David—Messiah would be the descendant, the son, of David. And he would do what David and the rest of his bloodline couldn’t: bring real justice and righteousness. Justice because sins would be truly and fully paid for; righteousness, because by paying for those sins in his own body, the Messiah would put our broken relationship with God back together and make it right again.

So, this was the answer to the Israelites’ sin problem. They couldn’t make things right by suffering in exile. They couldn’t make things right by turning over a new leaf and suddenly being very faithful to God. No, they would need a Savior to rescue them from their sin, pay for their wrongdoing, and put them at peace with God. In his work, Judah would be saved, and Jerusalem would find a peaceful existence.

If we compare ourselves to the Israelites, we note there’s not much difference. Perhaps we’re not building altars to Baal and participating in pagan worship services. But aren’t we often prioritizing other things, letting matters other than God be king in our hearts? When we allow work or school, money or influence, entertainment or relaxation to become the dominant focus of our lives at the expense of God, we’re making that thing or goal our god in his place. We are no better than the Israelites visiting shrine prostitutes to worship fertility gods or sacrificing their children in the fire to Molech. It just takes different forms for us: pornography use and sex outside the bonds of marriage, neglect of family or children due to work, play, alcohol, drugs, or anything else that pulls us from our God-given responsibilities. All of these sins can become our gods.

And so, what do we do? Well, nothing. We should not be surprised if we find ourselves in a really bad situation at some point—now or later. Maybe not exile in Babylon, but perhaps something God uses to wake us up from our spiritual apathy or unfaithfulness. Why does he do that? Because the days are coming, or more to the point, the day is coming. Be it the end of our lives here through death or his return at the Last Day, there is a moment when we will have no more time left, where the clock on our time of grace here in this life will stop ticking, and then we will face judgment before our God.

Because that day is coming, Jesus rouses us from our sleepy and sinful spiritual state. He warns us that that day is coming like the day of exile was coming for Judah. But he also points us to himself and reminds us why we do not need to be afraid. All of our unfaithfulness to him, every time we have made other things our gods rather than him, all of our sins of weakness and willful sins of desire, they are all forgiven in him. The days were coming and have in fact come when the King of kings and Lord of lords took on our human flesh, lived and died in our place. By that life and death, he destroyed our sins, justified us, and made us righteous. That branch from David’s line, Jesus from Nazareth, is the long-promised Messiah, the Savior we desperately needed.

My brothers and sisters, because of Jesus, the days are coming when we won’t have to fight this battle inside of us and around us to be faithful to our God. The days are coming when he will pluck us out of this life of misery and bring us to himself in heaven. The days are coming when we will live and bask in the complete fulfillment of everything Jesus accomplished for us, when “The LORD Our Righteousness” will also be the name given to us.

Until that day when we have it in full, hold on to what we have in part. Guard the good deposit of the Holy Spirit that God placed in you. Value God’s work and promises to you above all else. Prioritize him above everything, even in (and perhaps especially in) these busy days before Christmas. The days are coming. Lift up your head! Your King will come to you! Amen.

Soli Deo Gloria

 

Sermon prepared for Gloria Dei Lutheran Church (WELS), Belmont, CA (www.gdluth.org) by Pastor Timothy Shrimpton. All rights reserved. Contact pastor@gdluth.org for usage information.