Jeremiah 7:1-7 The word that came to Jeremiah from the LORD

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Jeremiah 7:1-7
The word that came to Jeremiah from the LORD, saying, “Stand in the gate of the
LORD’S house and proclaim there this word, and say, ‘Hear the word of the LORD, all
you of Judah, who enter by these gates to worship the LORD!’” Thus says the LORD of
hosts, the God of Israel, “Amend your ways and your deeds, and I will let you dwell in
this place. Do not trust in deceptive words, saying, ‘This is the temple of the LORD, the
temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD.’ For if you truly amend your ways and
your deeds, if you truly practice justice between a man and his neighbor, if you do not
oppress the alien, the orphan, or the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this
place, nor walk after other gods to your own ruin, then I will let you dwell in this place,
in the land that I gave to your fathers forever and ever.”
Sermon for Tenth Sunday after Trinity
8/09/15
Empty Words
My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:
In Acts 19, Luke relates the account of some Jewish exorcists who were
jealous of the blessings which God had bestowed on Paul. Paul was working
wonderful miracles, even people who were touched by handkerchiefs Paul had
handled were being healed of their illnesses. Those who were not Christians,
but thought that they had the right to God’s power and blessings were trying to
take advantage of Paul and what He was doing – not understanding that the
power was real and that the power was not in Paul, but in God. The Bible
says, and let me read you a couple of verses:
But also some of the Jewish exorcists, who went from place to place, attempted to
name over those who had the evil spirits the name of the Lord Jesus, saying, “I adjure you
by Jesus whom Paul preaches.” And seven sons of one Sceva, a Jewish chief priest, were
doing this. And the evil spirit answered and said to them, “I recognize Jesus, and I know
about Paul, but who are you?” And the man, in whom was the evil spirit, leaped on them
and subdued all of them and overpowered them, so that they fled out of that house naked
and wounded.
I share this account with you as an example of what our text is speaking
about, this morning. Jeremiah is speaking the word of God to the people of
God, telling them that God can tell the difference between the truth and a lie,
between sincerity and hypocrisy. God warns those who would be His people
not to indulge in self deception and place their trust in anything but Him alone.
The priests in our account from Acts did not know God, and did not believe in
Jesus, but they tried to claim something there anyhow, and when they spoke
in their unbelief, they spoke words without any real authority or power. They
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spoke ‘empty words’. Our theme, this morning, is “Empty Words”.
Let me begin by reading the verse just following our text. It will save a
lot explaining. "Behold, you are trusting in deceptive words to no avail. Will you steal,
murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely, and offer sacrifices to Baal, and walk
after other gods that you have not known, then come and stand before Me in this house,
which is called by My name, and cry, 'Deliver us!'-- that you may do all these
abominations? Has this house, which is called by My name, become a den of robbers in
your sight? Behold, I, even I, have seen it," declares the LORD.
They were used to calling on God when it was convenient and when they
had a need, and ignoring God when things were good. They used His house for
whatever purpose struck their fancy -- even when it was a purpose for which
He had expressly forbidden the use of His house. They ignored Him in their
daily lives, and even in their worship, and did the very things He had
commanded them not to do. They acted as if He did not exist, or He could not
see them, until they got in over their heads, and real trouble came a-calling,
and then they were all pious and called on God. When the prophets warned
them of the dangers of what they were doing, they would hide behind who they
were - or who they were supposed to be – and the fact that they had the temple
of God among them.
God’s message to them was simple and abrupt: “Amend your ways and your
deeds, and I will let you dwell in this place. Do not trust in deceptive words, saying, ‘This
is the temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD.’”
The words of the people of God who did not live as the people of God, nor
honor His covenant, words intending to identify them as God’s people and
expressing their certainty that they were under some sort of divine protection,
were empty words. They were empty because there was nothing behind them.
Oh, God is real. His love for them was real. His power was real, and His house
was real. It was His people and their faith in Him that was not real. They were
leaning on a covenant with God which they freely ignored.
Oh, they said they were Jews. They claimed to be God’s people. But
they did not live it out. They worshiped other Gods. They did evil. They
treated one another and foreigners in ways expressly forbidden by God. They
did not live as the people of the covenant. They refused to be holy, and yet they
assumed that they God tied up and that He was going to have to take care of
them and rescue them. They were trusting in deceptive words, empty words,
because they were merely pretending to be God’s people and living something
quite different.
The Word of God, here, underscores the truth that what you believe
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determines what you do, and, on the other hand, that what you do and how
you behave, reveals what is in your heart. Holy people do holy things. God’s
people walk in the light of His will. Those who refuse to do so, demonstrate
that they are not God’s people. And anything they might say to the contrary is
just empty words.
The application of this word to our lives would seem pretty clear. We
don’t want to be the sort of people who rest their comfort and hopes on empty
words. There are a lot of those sorts of people around today. They talk about
being Christian, but they do not let God’s Word change their lives or how they
live them. They lie to one another and cheat one another, and then go to
church on Sunday and claim that they are God’s people. They gossip about
others, gamble, take advantage of others, manipulate people and then call
themselves God’s Children. But those are empty words.
Then there are those who want to call themselves Christians without
even coming to church. They miss weeks at a time, sometimes months at a
time – some just about never make it to church, and yet, heaven help you if
you criticize them or suggest that they are less than faithful. They want to
believe that they receive every blessing of being the child of God without
actually being the child of God.
It is not about behavior, or church attendance, or religion, really, it is
about reality, and about faith, and about what is in you and what is a priority
for you. Too often, people get caught up in debates about religion, and about
what they can or cannot do and still be a Christian. But that is not the point.
The real point is Jesus.
The real focus of our faith is not on what we do, or how we behave. The
real focus is on Jesus, and what He has done. He has carried our sins to the
cross. He has died an ugly death on an instrument of torture in our place. He
has borne the wrath of God against our sins, so that we might be forgiven. He
has done what needed to be done, and now He pours out forgiveness of sins
and life and salvation upon us. Those riches are received by grace through
faith. So, he that believes and is baptized shall be saved.
The question is, what do you actually believe? The children of Israel of
Jeremiah’s day knew God. They knew His name, and they knew His promises.
They had an understanding that God rescued and that God saved. They even
had some sort of expectation about God and the temple and their security in
this world. But they did not believe. They did not have trust in God in them, or a
relationship with God. They simply knew about Him, and according to legend,
God would do such-and-so for them.
They didn’t ask who God was. They thought they knew, and didn’t really
think much past that simple point. They did not ask what God expected from
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them or wanted from them. They knew what they expected from Him and they
felt a sense of entitlement. It was like God owed it to them, no matter what.
How does your life reflect your faith? Do you stop to consider who God is
and what He expects from you? Or, do you just figure that God owe something
to you because you call yourself a Lutheran, and count your blessings as
entitlements? Have you stopped to consider the seriousness of sin? Look at
the price God paid to set you free! So, do you then casually wander back into
sin, as though it really means nothing? God has to take you any way He finds
you, right? Just like it doesn’t matter which church you belong to, or how
often you worship, or whether you have any respect or regard for those God
sets among you for your teaching and encouragement.
What is it that your life says about God and His place in your life? Does
it say that you know the rich grace of God, and how little you deserve His
forgiveness and salvation? Or, does your life say that you haven’t really
thought about it? Are you a Christian, or a pretender? Are you a Lutheran, or
a spiritual epicurean at a smorgasbord of theological traditions? Are you a
member of Shaped by the Cross or are you merely a spectator? “Member”
means “body part.” You are part of it and it is part of you. We are part of you!
A lot of people call themselves “Christians”, but for many it is just an
empty word. It doesn’t shape their life. It is just another brand-name label in
their wardrobe. Christians live in connection with Christ. It means that they
cannot live or choose without taking Jesus Christ into account. Truth is what
He tells us it is, and right and wrong are determined not by public opinion or
the latest Supreme Court ruling but by God’s clearly revealed Word and will. If
these principles are yours, they show themselves in how you live.
“Lutheran” means many things - it means forgiveness from God first, and
from us to others second. It means clear doctrine, not taken for granted, but
insisted upon. It means the true body and blood of our Lord in the Sacrament.
It means the historic liturgy, and life of the congregation as fundamental to the
life of faith of the individual members. If you are a Lutheran, these truths are
precious and vital for you – and it colors how you deal with faith and church
and church fellowship with others. If your faith-life is not shaped by these
truths and values, then calling yourself a “Lutheran” is just “empty words”.
Ours is an age of sound bites and “image”. Our culture is lost in how
things appear, and what people say, without actually looking to see what the
truth is or what is real. Many people allow themselves to get caught up in
deceptive words, empty words that suggest something is real, or that they
value something when, in fact, they haven’t stopped to even think about it, or
what it means. We have become accustomed to doing things without thinking
about what doing those things says about us. Jeremiah reminds us by the
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Word of God, that what we do reveals who we are and what we believe. As
John wrote in his first epistle, “Little children, let us not love with word or with tongue,
but in deed and truth.”
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
(Let the people say Amen)
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