The scriptures referred to are Jeremiah 20:7-13, Psalm 69: 7-18, Romans 6:1b-11 and Matthew 10:24-39.
The nation of Judah was fat and happy. The prophet Jeremiah was not. Called by God when he was quite young, Jeremiah was given the painful job of telling God's people that the judgment for their sins was inevitable. They were going to be conquered by the Babylonian empire and taken into exile, as the Assyrian empire had done to the northern kingdom of Israel nearly 150 years earlier. It was not only an unpopular message that Jeremiah was proclaiming; it was considered unpatriotic. More than that, it was seen as treason to say that God's favorite nation was going to be defeated by people who followed a different god and religion.
Jeremiah's ministry spanned the reigns of 5 kings, beginning in the middle of the reign of Josiah, Judah's last righteous king. But those who followed Josiah, including his sons, did evil. And the people imitated their leaders. They thought they were safe because they had the temple of the Lord in their midst. But they were just going through the motions in their worship. Their faith in God wasn't evident in how they acted towards their fellow human beings. Jeremiah says, “You must change the way you have been living and do what is right. You must treat one another fairly. Stop oppressing foreigners who live in your land, children who have lost their fathers, and women who have lost their husbands. Stop killing innocent people in this land. Stop paying allegiance to other gods. They will only bring you ruin. If you stop doing these things, I will allow you to continue to live in this land which I gave to your ancestors as a lasting possession. But just look at you! You are putting your confidence in a false belief that will not deliver you. You steal. You murder. You commit adultery. You lie when you swear on oath. You sacrifice to Baal. You pay allegiance to other gods whom you have not previously known. Then you come and stand in my presence in this temple I have claimed as my own and say, 'We are safe!' You think you are so safe that you go on doing all those hateful sins.” (Jeremiah 7:5-10, NET) If you disobey the commandment to love God, you will end up violating the commandment to love your neighbor, who was created in God's image. That's why Jesus connected the two. (Matthew 22:36-40; Luke 10:29-37)
The people of Judah, and especially the political and religious leaders, did not want to hear Jeremiah's criticism of them. Immediately preceding today's passage from Jeremiah, he has been beaten and put in the stocks by the priest Pashur. And when released, Jeremiah tells this false prophet of a priest that he and his wealthy friends will all be taken into exile in Babylon where they will die. Then we get to today's reading.
Jeremiah says that God has enticed him into his ministry. The Hebrew word could be translated “deceived.” He feels that way because he did not want to tell the people this message of doom and gloom. Nobody wants to hear that the way they choose to live will end up in violence and destruction. This message has cost him friends. It has made him a laughingstock. And yet he cannot be silent. He must tell the truth.
Jeremiah's only hope is in God. He will protect him. His enemies will not escape judgment and shame. Jeremiah knows who God really is. He may “test the righteous” to reveal what is in their hearts and minds but in the end he delivers “the life of the needy from the hands of evildoers.”
Our psalm echoes our passage from Jeremiah. One difference is that while the writer, possibly a king of Judah, is also harassed by enemies, he realizes that he has had a hand in his predicament. Just before our selection begins he says, “O God, you know about my foolishness, and my guilt is not hidden from you.” (Psalm 69:5) He knows he has screwed up. Possibly that is what gave his enemies their opportunity to attack him. He is also conscious of the fact that his foolishness and guilt may impact others who do not deserve it. “Do not let those who hope in you be put to shame because of me, O Lord God of hosts; do not let those who seek you be dishonored because of me, O God of Israel.” (Psalm 69:6-7) Even if we follow God, we must be honest with ourselves and with him. Our misdeeds can cause those who hope in and seek God to doubt and stumble.
So the mire that the psalmist is sinking into might be of his own making, at least in part. It has given an opening to “those who hate me without reason...my enemies without cause...” (Psalm 69:4) But all is not lost. He prays, “In your great mercy, O God, answer me with your unfailing help...Answer me, O Lord, for your love is kind; in your great compassion, turn to me.” The self-righteous think they deserve God's help. The truly righteous know that they don't. They are not perfect and so they put their hope in God's mercy, love and compassion. And, sure enough, God doesn't wait until we have achieved perfection before he responds to us. He is more interested in the direction in which we are moving. Even if we have only just turned from our sin and turned to him, he will respond. We see this when the criminal crucified next to Jesus said that while he and his fellow bandit were guilty, Jesus was innocent. Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” And Jesus said to him, “I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise.” (Luke 23:39-43) This man could not do anything to undo the wrongs he had committed. But he repented and recognized Jesus as the Messiah and king, and Jesus responded with grace and mercy.
Of course, most of us will have the opportunity to change our life to match our confession that Jesus is our king. Preceding our passage from Romans, Paul has just said, “But where sin increased, grace increased all the more.” (Romans 5:20) And Paul anticipates that some troll will say, “Then sin must be a good thing, since it means God will be even more gracious to us in response.” So Paul asks rhetorically, “Should we continue in sin in order that grace may increase?” Now the next phrase in Greek is an interesting one, so much so that our professor in Greek exegesis class let us argue about how to translate it for an entire period. It uses a verb tense we don't have in English. It means something like, “May it turn out in the future to never have happened in the past!” In other words, it is a situation that should never ever have existed. So different translations render it “By no means!” “Of course not!” “Far from it!” “Certainly not!” and in the King James, “God forbid!” Some get closer to the Greek by translating it “May it never be!” I like the version that says, “That's unthinkable!” Today I would be tempted to quote the Princess Bride and say, “Inconceivable!” Back in the 1970's our class decided on the then-current phrase “No way!”
Why did Paul essentially state that it was conceptually impossible for a Christian to continue to sin in order to to experience an increase of God's grace? Because it would be like saying, “Well, now that my doctor is treating me for cancer, I can go back to smoking.” Or “Now that I have received a donor's heart as a transplant I can go back to all the bad habits that fatally damaged my old heart.” Why would you do that? Not only did Jesus die to save us, but when we are baptized, we undergo the death of our old life. And just as Jesus was resurrected, so we receive new life in him. It's like your old sinful identity was declared dead and you have been given a new life and a new identity. Having been pardoned, why would you do something so foolish and self-destructive as repeat the mistakes that got you into the mess in the first place? Why throw away your new life?
Of course, leaving those old habits is hard. And it will especially be hard when you get persecuted for changing your ways and telling others they can too. Following on from last week, our passage from Matthew continues the instructions Jesus is giving to the twelve before sending them out to teach, preach and heal. Like Jeremiah, he knows he has stirred up opposition; in his case, because he doesn't observe all the rituals his critics do and because he prioritizes people over what the Pharisees see as the proper procedures for doing things. They think people who need healing can suffer an extra 24 hours before being cured if it is the Sabbath. (Matthew 12:9-14) And that Jesus' disciples can go hungry rather than pick a few grains of wheat on the Sabbath. (Matthew 12:1-8) For them, it is not enough to wash one's hands before a meal; you must do it in the ritual manner they practice. (Mark 7:1-8) And don't even get started on the fact that Jesus eats and drinks with tax collectors and sinners! (Matthew 9:9-13) Finally, his opponents conclude that the only way a person such as Jesus could possibly perform his healings is with the help of the devil. The fact that they can see what is so obviously God's Spirit at work and yet characterize it as demonic shows that they will never open themselves to that same Holy Spirit and seek forgiveness for not seeing God active in Jesus. The result is that they have effectively rendered themselves unforgivable. (Matthew 12:24-32)
So these rigidly legalistic religious leaders are going to be a problem, as they were for Jeremiah. Jesus says not to fear them. Their secrets will come out. Besides, the worst they can do is threaten you physically. They cannot kill you spiritually. Jesus will acknowledge those who follow him before God. He is the one who ultimately has the final word on what happens to our souls and our bodies. And, by the way, we will be resurrected, body and soul, on the last day. Like Jeremiah and the psalmist, when under assault, we must put our trust in God's mercy, love and compassion.
The things Jesus says next trouble us if we take them at face value. He says, “Do not think that I have come to bring peace to earth; I have not come to bring peace but a sword.” But wait! Didn't he just tell his disciples to let their peace come to the households who welcomed them? (Matthew 10:13) Didn't he say to his disciples before his arrest, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.” (John 14:27) Didn't he also say to Peter, when he was trying to save Jesus from arrest, “Put your sword back in its place! For all who take hold of the sword will die by the sword!”? (Matthew 26:52) How could he say he didn't come to bring peace?
Jesus is not talking about his intentions but about the effect he will have on a world that does not want peace. A lot of people, especially those with power, only want peace on their own terms, that is, the total submission of those who disagree with them. After all, Jesus was executed in order to keep the peace. Jesus' opponents said, “If we allow him to go on in this way, everyone will believe in him, and the Romans will come and take away our sanctuary and our nation.” (John 11:48) To which the high priest Caiaphas replied, “Don't you realize that it is more to your advantage to have one man die for the people than for the whole nation to perish?” (John 11:50) That same impulse drove men to assassinate proponents of peaceful change like Martin Luther King Jr. and Gandhi. Jeremiah condemned those who cried, “'Peace, peace,' when there is no peace.” (Jeremiah 6:14) Remember: the firearms maker of the Colt .45 army revolver gave it the nickname “the Peacemaker.” The only peace it offered was the peace of the grave.
Jesus then gives us a rough quote from Micah 7:6 about how his good news will even divide families and says “Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.” Does Jesus want us to stop loving our families? No, he is not saying that we should love them less, only that we should love him more. We must not subordinate his justice, truth or mercy to anything or anyone else. After all, Ma Barker loved her boys more than she did the lives of those they killed. Some parents will send their children out of the country to keep them from facing justice for rape or murder. On the other hand, when men go to war, their wives and families wish they wouldn't. But they feel their love of their country comes first. Jesus is asking for us to give him the highest priority in our life.
Jesus then says, “...and whoever does not take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Those who find their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it.” In the military they say, “Thinking you won't die is what gets you killed.” There are those who think they will save their lives by surrendering to the will of those who do evil. Many who devoted themselves to Hitler were slaughtered under his orders when he cleaned house in the “Night of the Long Knives.” Evil leaders willingly sacrifice their followers to save themselves. But only Jesus sacrificed himself to save his followers. And, carrying our cross, we may also find ourselves facing evil and possibly death. Paul says, “But if we died with Christ, we believe we will also live with him.” Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies.” (John 11:25) In that loving promise, and in the one who made it and rose again, we put our hope.