Jeremiah 36:1-8,
21-23, 27-28
“Burning Ideas”
20 November 2016 St. Andrew’s
Military Chapel Singapore
No one would ever burn books today,
right? We wouldn’t reject someone’s ideas without reflection and thought as
those ideas might actually improve our lives? We wouldn’t throw someone in jail
or ban that person from their place of worship because their words, actions, or
appearance made us uncomfortable, would we? We wouldn’t’ dismiss someone
because of their politics or theology? We wouldn’t ostracize someone because
their faith calls them to do something that seems crazy to our civilized,
Western standards? Surely this episode in Jeremiah’s life is an ancient relic
from back in the day.
If only.
Anyone can go on the Internet and
find this sort of behavior in less than 5 minutes. The recent political
campaign in the US demonstrates that when we construct our own bubbles and echo
chambers only listening to what we want to hear, our perception will be much
different than reality. When we only seek information from like-minded sources,
we skew our worldview and are worse off. It’s almost as if society is trying to
keep us from hearing dissenting viewpoints.
I’ve never personally seen a book
burning, but have you been on Twitter or Facebook in the last year? I can’t
stay on there too long because of all the vitriol aimed at and by our
“friends.” It’s hard to imagine how we’d treat enemies. Want to see how to
rapidly shut down the free exchange of ideas? Post a well-reasoned thought
about anything. Within minutes you’ll have people from all over, even the ones
you considered friends, telling you exactly why your opinion is wrong and
doesn’t matter. People burned books because they offered a different vision of
life and challenged our thinking. We’ve just modernized and burn peoples’ ideas
from the comfort of our fiber connected computer screen.
Jeremiah is one who knows what it
feels like to have his ideas burned in public. Or should I say, he knows what
it is like to watch someone try to burn God’s words.
Back in his time, Jeremiah was an
unlikely prophet. Mostly because he didn’t want to be a prophet and felt he
didn’t have the words to become God’s spokesperson here on earth. At various
times during his life he questions God’s wisdom in calling him to prophetic
words. If you read Jeremiah you find times where it feels like Jeremiah has
entered a confession booth telling God his fears and doubts.
Like most successful prophets, the
leadership of the temple and the country didn’t care too much for Jeremiah. He
stood as a threat to their carefully crafted societal pecking order and
possibly a threat to their wealth and power. So, they began to find ways to
eliminate him as a threat. Eventually, they arrest him and banish him from the
temple.
But, when has prison and persecution
halted God’s work in the world? Usually it just expands God’s work and connects
God with many more people. Faith thrives under true oppression. Look for God’s
hand in the midst of oppression and you will find God walking alongside the
outcast, the lame, the beggar, the despised, and the least among us.
Despite his banishment from God’s
house, Jeremiah still holds significant influence in Israel. All of his words
spoken for God are recorded on a scroll and read aloud in the temple on a fast
day, a day of holy contemplation. One of King Jehoiakim’s court reports the scandalous
words he had heard. The court summoned Baruch, the soul brave enough to read
Jeremiah’s prophecy, to read them again in their presence. This led the members
of the king’s court to take the scroll directly to the king. As they read the
words on the scroll, the king would cut off what was just read and burn it in
the fire. He wanted to keep God’s word from the world.
The king probably thought that if I
destroyed the medium, the message would fade. The problem is, God’s word never
fades. In Jeremiah’s case, Jeremiah wrote everything on a second scroll. When
people seek to ban or burn books in our age, the ideas that matter keep coming
back and never fade. In fact God’s word depends not on the medium of
transmission. It will find a way to shine in the darkness. In the darkest day,
Christ was preparing for a glorious resurrection. Try as you might, you just
cannot contain the Gospel.
Ideological control, whether by the
government or Internet trolls rarely succeeds. Even North Korea can’t fully
control the ideas within its own borders, much less keep ideas of justice from
finding their way into the country and marinating the minds of the oppressed.
Ideas that make us uncomfortable
tend to have an ability to teach us, to love us, to change us, to bind us
together as people. Discomfort is the furnace in which we learn and discover
God’s word. Scripture has many hard truths and passages that make the reader
squirm in their chair and many times we want to put down the Bible and ask,
“what were they thinking including that in Scripture?” If we truly believe that
God is still speaking to us, we have to sit with, not dismiss, ideas and people
that make us uncomfortable. We have to keep growing so that we can learn what
God’s justice and mercy look like in our lives.
Sometimes the noise of those attempting to drown out God’s
justice is deafening. Sometimes the darkness of hate seems to overpower the
light of those struggling to let justice roll down like an ever-flowing stream.
Sometimes the bonfire of ideas on a funeral pyre seems like it’s the last light
we may glimpse. However, the arc of the universe truly bends towards God’s
justice.
God knows this. Which is why, despite our stubbornness towards
hearing and truly living into the Gospel, God continually renews the covenant
with each and every person. Sin no longer hangs over our heads because God has
forgiven us and remembers our sin no more. It’s why God’s light will always
shine, sometimes brightly, sometimes only through a glass darkly. Despite where
we think the world is headed, God’s love and covenant are still there and God
will still be there for us tomorrow to move us and the world ever so slightly
to true understanding of his definition of justice. You just can’t contain the
freedom and justice of God.
2 comments:
Thanks for the message and reminder
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