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A New Reason to Sing
Jeremiah 31:7-14
Rev. Randy Quinn

I almost changed my sermon title for today.  It was actually a typo that we caught before printing the bulletin.  We almost left off the “g”.

It was after the near blooper was corrected that I realized the opportunity I missed!  If we had advertised that as the sermon title, we might have had more people show up for the first Sunday of the New Year!  And then I thought, “It would be fun to preach a sermon giving people new reasons to sin!” J

In the end, however, I came back to my senses.  We already have enough excuses for our sin.  What we need is a new reason to live, a new reason to celebrate, a new reason to sing!

It makes us long to be recipients of a New Year’s blessing I came across this week[1]:

May peace break into your house and May thieves come to steal your debts.

May the pockets of your jeans become a magnet of $100 bills.

May love stick to your face like Vaseline and May laughter assault your lips!

May your clothes smell of success like smoking tires and May happiness slap you across the face and May your tears be that of joy.

May the problems you had forget your home address!

In simple words, May 2009 be the best year of your life!!!

Truthfully, though, last year we were reminded that life isn’t always what we want it to be, nor is it what we plan for it to be.  In fact, we often find ourselves disappointed.

When I went looking for a Christmas gift for my dad, I looked for a non-fiction book with a great story – because I know he buys and borrows every fiction thriller he can lay his hands on.  I came across The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson (Vintage Books, 2003).  Have any of you heard of it?  It’s the mingling of three different stories that overlap at the site of the 1894 World’s Fair in Chicago.

(I was so intrigued by it that I bought my own copy and read it.)

Before reading the book, I only knew one thing about the Chicago World’s Fair:  I knew there was a desire to create something better and more memorable than the Eiffel Tower.  (The Eiffel Tower had been designed and built for the Paris World’s Fair a few years earlier.)  What I didn’t know was that the introduction of the Ferris Wheel didn’t take place until well after the grand opening of the fair!  In fact, there were enough setbacks and delays that it almost didn’t get included in the fair at all.

Reading about it was a reminder to me that when there are setbacks, when there are disappointments, when there are difficulties, the most American of all responses is to press on.

And I am convinced that this particular aspect of the American spirit is deeply rooted in scripture.  Our text for today offers a prime example.

Jeremiah lived in one of the darkest times in the life of Israel.  He witnessed the fall of Jerusalem.  He saw the Babylonians take their leaders into bondage.  He was there when the temple was sacked and looted.  He saw the end of life as the people had known it – the end of the dream of Moses for the people to live in the Promised Land.

If ever there was a time of despair that was it.

In the midst of their despair, however, Jeremiah offers a word of hope.  Keep your heads up, he says.  Look for signs that God is with us – because God will not abandon us.

Listen now to God’s word for us today:

For thus says the LORD:  Sing aloud with gladness for Jacob, and raise shouts for the chief of the nations; proclaim, give praise, and say, "Save, O LORD, your people, the remnant of Israel."  See, I am going to bring them from the land of the north, and gather them from the farthest parts of the earth, among them the blind and the lame, those with child and those in labor, together; a great company, they shall return here.  With weeping they shall come, and with consolations I will lead them back, I will let them walk by brooks of water, in a straight path in which they shall not stumble; for I have become a father to Israel, and Ephraim is my firstborn.

Hear the word of the LORD, O nations, and declare it in the coastlands far away; say, "He who scattered Israel will gather him, and will keep him as a shepherd a flock."  For the LORD has ransomed Jacob, and has redeemed him from hands too strong for him.  They shall come and sing aloud on the height of Zion, and they shall be radiant over the goodness of the LORD, over the grain, the wine, and the oil, and over the young of the flock and the herd; their life shall become like a watered garden, and they shall never languish again.  Then shall the young women rejoice in the dance, and the young men and the old shall be merry.  I will turn their mourning into joy; I will comfort them, and give them gladness for sorrow.  I will give the priests their fill of fatness, and my people shall be satisfied with my bounty, says the LORD.

Jeremiah 31:7-14

Some scholars will argue that this was actually written while in exile rather than at its beginning, perhaps an even darker period in Israel’s history.  Either way, it was a time when doubts were cast on their status as God’s chosen people.  It was a time when people seriously questioned the very existence of God.

In the darkest of times, Jeremiah offers words of hope, words of promise.  Rather than another reason to cry, he offers them a new reason to sing.

Despite what it may appear, the truth is that God is still very much at work.  God still cares very much about the people.

During Advent, our Sunday School class read James Moore’s book, What Do You Want for Christmas? (Abingdon, 2008).  In it, he recounts the story of Tom Sutherland.  It’s not a very familiar name to many of us.  Back in the 1980’s, Dr. Sutherland was Dean of the American University in Beirut when he was taken captive by extremists.  He was held for a total of 2,354 days.  He was held alongside of and finally released with a more well-known captive, Terry Anderson.

Jim Moore, in his book, speaks about the despair Sutherland experienced, in part because his name was never mentioned in the news media.  He thought he had been forgotten.  Listen to how Moore retells it:

As they were getting off the plane back home in the United States, Tom Sutherland was amazed to see that there were lights and television cameras, reporters and people holding signs, and a huge crowd at the airport.  Tom turned to his wife and said, “Jean, look at all these people.  There must be a celebrity on the plane with us!  Look around and see if you can spot who it is.”  And Jean said, “Honey, they are all here for you!  It’s you!  This is all for you!”

When his wife told him that, Tom Sutherland started crying, and he couldn’t stop.  He sobbed like a little boy.  He couldn’t believe it.  He said, “I thought everybody had forgotten about me.  I didn’t think anybody knew I was in captivity.  I felt completely abandoned.  I didn’t think anybody cared.  Thank God I was wrong”[2]

There may be times in our lives when we feel alone or abandoned.  There may be times when our disappointments cast a shadow over our lives.  In those times, the words of Jeremiah offer a gleaming display of God’s glory.

But sometimes we need to open our eyes to see it; sometimes we need to open our ears to hear the music.

There is a story told about a Rabbi who travelled to a foreign land[3].  He took his donkey, his rooster, and a lamp.  Since he was a Jew, however, he was refused lodging in one of the villages; so he stayed in the woods.

He lit his lamp to study the Holy Books before going to sleep, but a fierce wind came up, knocking over the lamp and breaking it.  So he decided to sleep instead, saying “All that God does he does well.”

During the night some wild animals came along and drove away the rooster and thieves stole his donkey.  When the Rabbi woke up and saw his loss, he still proclaimed, “All that God does he does well.

When he went into the village that had refused him lodging, he learned that enemy troops had invaded it during the night and killed all the inhabitants.  He also learned that the soldiers had traveled through the same woods where he slept.

Had the wind not blown out his lamp, he too would have been found and killed.

Had the rooster not been driven away by wild animals it would have crowed and revealed his location.

Had thieves not taken his donkey it would have brayed.

So once more he said, “All that God does he does well.”

As we enter into a new year, we are offered a promise, the promise of God’s presence, the promise of God’s abiding love, the promise of new possibilities.  And in my mind, anyway, that gives us a new reason to sing.

Thanks be to God.

Amen. 


[1]  Found on the link to “rumors” from www.Textweek.com

[2]  Moore, p. 32

[3]  William J. Bausch, Storytelling, (Mystic:  Twenty-Third Publications, 1984), p. 72.