Sermon Tone Analysis
Overall tone of the sermon
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Grow Where You are Planted
Sometimes, the detour takes you to an unexpectedly beautiful place: I usually take Wednesday off from #crossfit .
But when the wod for today showed up online last night, I was bummed I wasn’t signed up for class.
It was #kelly which is my all time favorite.
I got on the waitlist, but it didn’t clear in time for me to make it to class.
So I decided to go for a three mile run on my regular route around the park.
But my regular route was closed.
I almost packed it up and went home.
Instead, I made myself reroute and take the trails.
After a couple miles, the beauty of #autumn hit me like a paintball.
I had to stop and just take it in.
It was totally worth it.
The journey is rarely what we expect.
So we just have to stop and take in the beauty right here and now where we are regardless of how many obstacles we had to go around to wind up where we are.
Trouble in the World
This church has been here for a long time.
I know this isn’t news to anyone.
When we did the timeline together a few weeks back, we got a great visual of how much change in the world this congregation has weathered.
Why is it, after surviving the civil war, both World Wars, inventions of cars and airplanes and space shuttles and phones, generations coming and going, that it’s now the church seems to be struggling so much?
There is one huge difference now: we no longer live in Christendom.
Chris•ten•dom \ˈkri-sən-dəm\ noun
[Middle English cristendom, from Old English cristendōm, from cristen] before 12th century
1: CHRISTIANITY 1
2: the part of the world in which Christianity prevails
Christendom
■ noun literary the worldwide body or society of Christians.
Christendom is when Christianity is assumed to be the practice for everyone.
And I say “practice” purposefully.
There are many people out there who self-identify as Christian, but are really only Christian by family affiliation or are the “spiritual but not religious” type.
Practice means that people are engaging in a local community and living out their beliefs together.
It’s not necessarily a bad thing that Christendom is over in our country.
Christendom has, historically, caused the church to become corrupt and/or lazy when it’s just assumed that everyone is going to go to church.
When the majority of the people around us aren’t actually practicing Christians, we have to be more creative and faithful in the ways we interact with the community around us.
When it’s not just assumed that everyone goes to church, we can be confident that those who are here want to be here.
It’s actually a pretty exciting time to be church because we get to be on the ground floor of the new thing that God is creating out of the ashes of the past.
But it’s also a hard, confusing, and sometimes sad time to be church.
We’re in a new place - uncharted territory - trying to keep our way of life alive in a strange new world.
Trouble in the Text
This is not a new feeling, for a community to be in exile.
In our passage from Jeremiah, we see the Judean people living in Babylon as refugees.
They had been forced from their homes and were pining for the way things used to be.
When I was in Palestine, we went to a refugee camp and at the entrance to the camp was a giant key.
We asked what it meant and were told it was a symbol representing the desire to return to their homes.
Many homes have been destroyed in war or claimed by occupiers as their own, but the owners of the homes still carry keys to the houses around their necks or keep them in a prominent place as a reminder to keep hope alive that one day they might be able to return home.
There is a haunting song from Godspell
Much like Palestinian refugees holding on to long-unusable house keys, our exiles in today’s scripture are hoping to hear from Jeremiah a word from God that tells them when they will be able to go home.
But that is not what Jeremiah brings them.
Jeremiah tells them to put down roots, get used to it, you’re going to be here a while.
When Jeremiah prophesied these words, the people of Judah had been forced to leave their homes in Jerusalem and become refugees in Babylon.
They were moving from traditions to change and from the familiar to the new.
Many longed for their former life.
They wept by the rivers of Babylon, unable to sing or play their harps.
They reflected,
By the rivers of Babylon—
there we sat down and there we wept
when we remembered Zion.
On the willows there
we hung up our harps.
For there our captors
asked us for songs,
and our tormentors asked for mirth, saying,
“Sing us one of the songs of Zion!”
How could we sing the LORD’s song
in a foreign land?
That must have felt like quite a depressing word at first.
But Jeremiah is not being morose here.
He’s issuing the people an important challenge: when you are stuck in a place you don’t want to be, you can still find God there.
Yes, we will miss much of the past, but whining and pining about it will not make it reappear.
Instead, Jeremiah challenges the Jews in captivity, and us, to embrace the place where God has us and find ways to be faithful in our living, so that others might inquire about our inspiration, our resolve, and our trust, and thereby be drawn into relationship with God.
God has promised that they will be returned to their land, so sit back and trust the promise.
“For in its welfare, you will find your welfare.”
“For in its welfare, you will find your welfare.”
No “quick fix” is appropriate, according to Jeremiah.
The exiles’ creative flourishing is possible only if they reconcile themselves to their long-term circumstances.
Even though they despise their plight, their future depends on their acceptance of it.
“For in its welfare, you will find your welfare.”
Yeah, you can’t “go home” but you can do what you did at home, just in a new place.
And by doing what you did at home in that new place, everyone will prosper.
If they are to just sit around sad and nostalgic all the time, nobody is helped.
But if they live and grow and put down roots wherever God placed them, everyone will benefit!
How do we benefit the community around us, even if it’s way different than it used to be?
We celebrate.
We live into where we are - where God placed us.
You cannot control the changing culture around us.
Man churches have tried through the years and it never succeeds.
Digging in our heels against the pull just tears our shoes.
The more we try to do that, the more we demand that culture change to make us comfortable, the more harm we do to ourselves and to those around us.
We cannot control the world around us.
We can only control our attitudes toward and behaviors in spite of the change around us.
Note that this is about attitudes and behaviors.
Attitude change is the first step, but it has to be followed up by action.
Some of us are ok changing our attitude, but have no idea how to change the ways we are acting out our calling.
Some of us are willing to grit our teeth and go along with a new way of doing, but our attitude deep down is still one of pining for the old ways and refusing to embrace new ones.
And remember that we may not always see the fruit from our perseverance while in exile.
Abraham was promised by God to be the father of multitudes, and yet Abraham never lived to see his descendants grow and prosper.
Likewise, Jeremiah tells the exiles that they will even have grandchildren born into exile.
They may never see the day when they are brought out of exile, so live today.
Own the moment you are in and be faithful in it.
Great place for an illustration here.
Shockingly, this prophet was telling those who moped that God says, “Your old life is dead.
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