Monday 27 November 2023

A right Jeremiah!

A Sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church, 
3 December 2023
First Sunday of Advent


Jeremiah 33.10-11, 14-18

Have you ever heard the expression,
            where someone is described as being ‘a right Jeremiah’?
 
As someone who has a generally sunny and optimistic disposition,
            I don’t think it is something that’s usually said of me,
but I’ve occasionally thought it about others!
 
If you’re not familiar with the phrase,
            calling someone ‘a Jeremiah’ is saying that they’re, to put it kindly,
            a ‘glass-half-empty’ kind of person.
 
A ‘Jeremiah’ is someone who is pessimistic about the present,
            and foresees a calamitous future.
 
A bit like Eeyore, you might say,
            or Marvin the Paranoid Android,
            or Kreacher the House Elf.
 
One of the things about someone who’s a ‘Jeremiah’,
            is that they can often annoy those around them,
            often because they are right!
 
I mean, you only have to look at the way Greta Thunberg
            has been vilified in certain strands of the media
to see how little people like to be told
            that the climate crisis is real and imminent.
 
And certainly, the Jewish prophet of doom
            from the 7th Century BCE, Jeremiah himself,
made something of a career
            of annoying people with his dire predictions.
 
Like Private James Frazer in Dad’s Army,
            Jeremiah spent years telling his fellow citizens of Jerusalem
            that they were all doomed.
 
Their good life under King Zedekiah wasn’t going to last,
            because the Babylonians were coming.
 
At one level, Jeremiah’s predictions of Jerusalem’s downfall to the Babylonian army
            could have been simply a case of him reading the political landscape,
                        and seeing something in the wind
                        that was going to turn into a whirlwind of destruction.
 
And if that had been all there was to it,
            he might not have made himself quite so unpopular.
 
I mean, saying,
            ‘Look, there’s a large and powerful army getting closer,
                        I think we should be prepared for the worst’
            is not hugely controversial.
 
But what Jeremiah did that annoyed everyone so much
            was that he pointed to the large Babylonian army
                        gathering on the distant horizon,
            and then told King Zedekiah of Jerusalem
                        that it was his fault the disaster was coming.
 
Jeremiah wasn’t just a prophet of doom,
            and he wasn’t just right in his predictions,
he was also annoying
            because he firmly pointed his finger at the king as the one responsible.
By Jeremiah’s understanding, Zedekiah had led his country
            in a way that had taken it away from where God wanted it to be.
He had prioritised war over peace,
            nationalism over cooperation,
                        and he was about to reap the consequences of his actions - said Jeremiah.
 
So, by the time we get to the passage that is our reading this morning,
            Jeremiah is languishing in the palace dungeon in Jerusalem,
            where Zedekiah has dumped him in an attempt to shut him up.
 
And it’s so often the case, isn’t it,
            that those who hold political power
            will go to extraordinary lengths to silence those who critique their power.
 
And yet the prophetic voice refuses to be silenced.
 
Eventually, truth will out.
            Oppression, bigotry, and powerful vested interests
            don’t get to silence the uncomfortable voices of the prophets forever.
 
One of my favourite Paul Simon songs, and I have many,
            is called ‘The Sound of Silence’,
and I don’t know whether Paul Simon had Jeremiah in his prison cell in mind
            when he wrote this song, but he certainly could have done.
 
I’ll read the words of the last verse now,
            and my invitation is to hear this as the cry of the silenced prophet in any age:
 
"Fools" said I, "You do not know
            Silence like a cancer grows.
Hear my words that I might teach you
            Take my arms that I might reach you"
But my words like silent raindrops fell
            And echoed
            In the wells of silence.
And the people bowed and prayed
            To the neon god they made.
And the sign flashed out its warning
            In the words that it was forming,
And the sign said, "The words of the prophets
            Are written on the subway walls
            And tenement halls"
And whispered in the sounds of silence.
 
My apologies if that’s just planted an ear-worm
            that you’re going to be stuck with all day.
 
But Jeremiah, and those like him, will not be silenced,
            despite the fact that they are rejected
                        for proclaiming a message
            that is not only pessimistic,
                        but which requires a change to society’s destructive patterns of behaviour
                        if the disaster is to be averted.
 
The thing is, the masses hate a Jeremiah,
            and we all love an optimist.
 
It’s so much easier to vote for the confident sunny disposition
            of the person promising easy answers to complex questions,
than it is to admit that reducing geopolitical and economic complexities
            to binary options is dangerously simplistic.
 
And those who offer optimism in place of realism,
            denying the warnings of the prophets,
            and silencing the voices of concern,
too often resort to the easy option of placing Jeremiah back in his dungeon,
            and hoping desperately that it will all work out OK.
 
But Jeremiah and those like him will not be silenced.
            And denying the problems they proclaim
            doesn’t make them go away.
 
And so Jeremiah continues to speak,
            from his dungeon beneath the palace.
 
But what is so interesting,
            is that the words he issues from his confinement
            contain a surprising message of hope.
 
Sometimes, I find myself almost in despair at the world,
            I worry about global warming,
                        I worry about the rise of the far right in Europe,
            I worry about the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,
                        and I worry about terrorism,
                                    about mass migration,
                                                and about oppression and injustice around the world.
 
Sometimes, even sunny optimistic Simon,
            can find himself becoming a bit of a Jeremiah.
 
How about you?
 
So what does Jeremiah say next?
            Does he continue with his message that ‘we’re all doomed’?
 
Well, yes and no.
 
There’s no escape for Jerusalem from the Babylonian army on the horizon,
            the city will be besieged, overthrown, and the people taken into exile.
 
But nonetheless Jeremiah explores a sense of what hope might look like
            in the face of the depressing message of imminent destruction.
 
Jeremiah’s message is both deeply troubled,
            and deeply hopeful.
 
At the time of his imprisonment,
            where we meet him in chapter 33 of the book that bears his name,
            there are no obvious signs of hope.
 
The Babylonians are coming,
            and despair and destruction are coming to his beloved city.
 
But still he speaks of hope,
            which comes not from a denial of the realities before him,
            but from a deep grappling with despair.
 
And I find myself thinking here about a depth of spirituality
            that can embrace both hope and despair.
 
Too often my experience of church life over the years,
            has been that we are converted from despair to hope,
as if despair were some kind of sinful or shameful state,
            from which we need salvation.
 
Well, Jeremiah offers us a more integrated model here,
            as he holds hope and despair together before God.
 
The hope he proclaims from the depths of despair,
            is something that challenges the realities of the present;
something which alters the way in which one lives in the here and now,
            by articulating a new, transformative, way of being.
 
So, he says, one day… one day that is surely coming…
            God will cause a righteous branch to spring up for David.
 
Understanding quite what he means by this
            requires us to know a bit about the Jewish story.
 
For the Jews of Jeremiah’s time, their security was tied up deeply
            with their monarchy was a gift from God.
 
So the stories of David, their archetypical king of ancient times,
            defined their nation,
                        their understanding of who they were,
                        and who they were called by God to be.
 
For the Jews the time of the Babylonian invasion,
            the stories of King David functioned a bit like the way
            the stories of King Arthur functioned for Victorian England.
 
Just as the legend of Arthur, Merlin, and Uther Pendragon,
            forged the mythology that sustained the English Empire,
So the tales of Saul, David, and Solomon
            undergirded the ideology of Israel as God’s chosen people.
 
And in the face of the Babylonian invasion,
            that ideology was being shaken to its core.
 
If Zedekiah was to be killed, if Israel was to lose its king,
            then all God’s promises would be questioned.
 
This wasn’t just a political crisis that Jeremiah was living through,
            it was a crisis of faith.
 
And so, he says, just as a new branch can spring from the stump of a felled tree:
            even if Israel is toppled by the Babylonians,
                        God has not forgotten the promises made in olden days,
            and a new branch will spring up for David.
 
Jeremiah wasn’t the only prophet to use this image
            of a branch of David arising from the roots of a felled tree;
we find it in Isaiah as well,
            who uses the name of Jesse, King David’s father, and says:
 
Isaiah 11.1, 10
A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse,
            and a branch shall grow out of his roots.
On that day the root of Jesse shall stand as a signal to the peoples;
            the nations shall inquire of him, and his dwelling shall be glorious.
 
And this passage from Isaiah, together with our reading from Jeremiah,
            stayed with the people of Israel through their time of exile,
            and sustained their hope through the years of despair.
 
And then something interesting happened,
            because even though the exile eventually came to an end,
                        and the exiles were restored to Jerusalem, with their monarchy re-established,
            the hope that a better time, a better leader, was coming,
                        didn’t go away.
 
What we are seeing here, in our reading from Jeremiah,
            and it’s parallel in Isaiah,
is the birth of what became the Jewish hope for a coming messiah.
 
You see, even though the end of the exile marked a partial restoration,
            the extent of Israel’s borders never got back
                        to where the stories said they had been in the time of King David;
            their kings never had the political strength and autonomy
                        that the stories of David eulogised and lauded,
            and instead the restored Israel existed as a puppet nation,
                        ruled by puppet kings,
            controlled and at the mercy of whatever empire was dominant,
                        from the Babylonians to the Greeks to the Romans.
 
So the seed of hope for a righteous branch for David,
            planted by Jeremiah and nurtured through the despair of exile,
grew into the hope for a coming messiah
            a son of David who would restore Israel’s faith and dignity before God.
 
But I’m jumping too far….
 
Let’s stay with Jeremiah for a few moments longer,
            and re-join him in his dungeon in the palace in Jerusalem,
            with the Babylonian army on the horizon.
 
Because Jeremiah tells us, from the literal pits of despair,
            what this hope will look like.
 
For Jeremiah, hope looks like justice, and righteousness,
            which are nowhere to be seen in his world.
 
He articulates a hope that someone will come,
            who will embody justice and righteousness.
 
This is a mind-altering moment,
            and it sets the agenda for everything that follows.
 
What, he asks, would it mean
            for God’s justice and righteousness to be embodied and enacted?
What would it mean for someone to live out
            God’s eternal intent of setting things right?
What would it mean for the kingdom of Israel,
            to become the Kingdom of the Lord, who is righteousness and justice?
 
It is an astonishing articulation of hope,
            in the face of overwhelming despair.
 
In Jeremiah’s world, righteousness and justice are gone,
            and for him to assert that God is righteous, and that God is just,
            and that God has not yet finished with his people,
is a narrative of hope that has the capacity to change the world.
 
But here’s the thing,
            Jeremiah says all this, when the reality of it is nowhere to be seen.
 
And to leap forward now to the coming of Jesus,
            (we are, after all, now in Advent),
it is not immediately clear that God is putting things right by sending a child,
            who will be born in difficult circumstances and flee his home as a refugee;
it is not immediately clear that God is putting things right
            through the horror of a crucifixion and the rumour of a resurrection.
 
And yet, Jeremiah says that he is so certain of his hope,
            that Jerusalem itself will be renamed,
            and it shall be called ‘The Lord is our righteousness’.
 
The hope that Jeremiah proclaims is not dependent on any human activity,
            it is dependent on God’s action.
 
He is saying that it is always God
                        who gives new life in place of death,
            and that it is only God who brings new righteousness and justice
                        into the very heart of the place where despair is most deeply felt.
 
If Jerusalem, the city of death and destruction in Jeremiah’s time,
            can be the place where hope enters the world,
then hope can come to anywhere that despair is at its worst,
            whether that is lonely solitude of the human heart,
            the corporate victims of an act or terror,
            or the communal hell of a besieged city in Gaza.
 
And so, because it is Advent,
            we come at last to Jesus;
who asked his disciples, ‘But who do you say that I am?’
            and his friend Peter answered him, ‘You are the messiah’ (Mark 8.29)
 
Within the Christian story,
            the hope of Jeremiah and Isaiah is fulfilled in Jesus,
who embodies God’s righteousness and justice,
            bringing hope to all those whose lives are lost in despair.
 
And for those of us who find ourselves living in turbulent times,
            not knowing who to believe, or where to go for truth,
the living hope that is Jesus,
            made known to us by his Spirit,
and encountered in one another as we gather in his name,
            gives us a hope that will sustain us
 
And so we pray, again, the Advent prayer
            of longing for a world transformed.
 
“Come, Lord Jesus, Come.”

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