Note: The Gospel text, chosen to support the OT reading and sermon, is John 
2:18-21


Intro
Where do you live?  But more than that, what place do you call “home”?  Today 
that may be a murky question to answer.  For we live in a mobile society.  
Almost all of you grew up somewhere else and moved here.  Most of your children 
don’t live here.  Our mobile society keeps us moving—and often unstable, 
sometimes even restless.  

Main Body
But everyone wants someplace to call home.  Perhaps, we even need that!  
Sociologists have even studied that and deduced what common sense has told us 
all along.  We need a place to call home.  We’ve even learned that a safe and 
stable home has a positive influence on child development.  Just ask any 
teacher—he or she could have told you that all along. 

I don’t know if you, during the emotional turbulence of youth, ever thought 
about running away from home.  I did.  I even sneaked out one night.  But I 
didn’t get far.  For when I thought about how I would keep warm and what I 
would eat, I sneaked back into my room.  Even in the shortsightedness and 
immaturity of youth, I valued the certainties and securities of a place called 
home.

The need for a place to call home, a place to feel safe and secure, transcends 
all culture, time, and location.  (Just consider the plight of the Syrian 
refugees.  They want to be safe, but can’t find that in Syria.)  Even in 
Old-Covenant times, family, land, home, and hearth were foundations in life, 
where being “on the road” was no less dangerous than it is today.  

Today, we heard about a “home” in our Old-Testament reading.  But the home 
Jeremiah mentioned is even larger than our family home.  Jeremiah spoke of a 
nation, a people—God’s people.  And so we tune our ears to listen and learn 
about God’s kingdom, and His king, and what it meant to be the people of God in 
His kingdom.

In the days of Old-Covenant prophets, the kingdom of God on earth was under the 
leadership of a king, a king who was from the family line of David.  The king 
had his palace in the capital city of Jerusalem.  But the Temple, God’s house, 
was also there.  The Temple was the focal point of God’s rule and reign for His 
people.  And the king, was to rule reflecting that reality.

But how God designed it to be was not always the case.  Much tension often 
existed between the king’s palace and God’s Temple.  For the king sometimes 
forgot that his place was “next door” to the Temple—not the other way around!  
In a sense, the king was an under-shepherd, who ruled on God’s terms, not his 
own.

In the time of Prophet Jeremiah, an enemy of Israel threatened both the king 
and the Temple.  The Babylonian king, Nebuchadnezzar, had laid siege to the 
city.  Even more, God was allowing Israel’s enemy to have its way with them.  
Jeremiah had made it clear to all: both the king and the people had abandoned 
their God.  They let the ways of the world and the religious practices of the 
world define who they were.  And they pushed God farther and farther into the 
corner. 

The Israelites assumed that if they did just enough to keep Temple worship 
going, God would be happy.  So they brought sacrifices and offerings, thinking 
that what they did would please God. And if what they did appeased God, He 
would protect them.  After all, He was their God, and they were His people.  Or 
so they thought.  

In the eyes of the other nations, Nebuchadnezzar’s siege of Jerusalem looked 
just like any other act of war.  But in the eyes of Prophet Jeremiah and some 
of the people, they knew better.  They knew this was God’s righteous judgment 
on the sins of His people.  But this seemed unfair for those who wanted to live 
by their ways instead of God’s ways.  Wasn’t God supposed to be saving them, 
not destroying them?  

So, the Israelites wanted to live as pagans and had abandoned God.  Unbelief 
was in the driver’s seat, bringing them to do the littlest amount they thought 
they had to do.  It was as if they thought that God couldn’t see into the 
heart.  Oh, but, of course, they still wanted God to protect them.

So, the people chose NOT to live as God’s faithful people.  Oh, they still 
wanted what God promised to His faithful in the Old Covenant—without being 
faithful!  So, they weren’t that different from us after all, were they?  And 
so, Jeremiah stood up to those who said, “Peace, peace,” when there was no 
peace (Jeremiah 6:14).  He stood up to the king, who refused to believe that 
Jerusalem would fall.  They were God’s holy people.  Because of that, Jeremiah 
must be a fraud.

And so the unfaithful scorned and hated Jeremiah.  They put him in stocks and 
then, later, in prison.  You try to be faithful and what does it get you?  
Scorn, ridicule, and attack, because the people don’t want the truth.  They 
want the convenient lie.

But, Jeremiah had the bigger picture.  He knew God’s judgment.   He also knew 
that what was happening around him was part of a larger plan—God’s plan.  And 
God’s plan was not to destroy and kill but to restore and make alive. 

Right in the middle of Jeremiah’s message of God’s judgment came a word that 
spoke of God’s love.  Amid their failure and lack of faith, God still spoke of 
everlasting love and commitment to His people.  Yes, God would punish them.  It 
was even a “tough love” that took discipline seriously.  

And so their sin had to be punished.  Jerusalem, the city of the king and the 
city of the Temple, would come to ruin.  God’s people would now live as 
refugees in exile.

But God still had a future and a hope for them.  To help show this, Jeremiah 
bought some property, even as Jerusalem was under siege.  Imagine that.  He 
invested in real estate, just to show that God had committed Himself, not only 
to the land but also to His people.  God would bring His people back from 
exile.  

Jeremiah saw a future for both the king and the city, and he described them 
both in the same way.  “In those days,” what days?  Those were the days to come 
when God would fulfill His promises, once for all.  And then Jeremiah said, “At 
that time.”  What time?   At God’s “right time,” not ours.  

And then, after that, what would happen?  God “will raise up a righteous Branch 
from David’s line, and he will do what is just and right in the land.  In those 
days, Judah will be saved, and Jerusalem will live in safety.  And this is the 
name by which it [Jerusalem] will be called: ‘The Lord is Our Righteousness.’”

Have you ever been away from home too long?  You know the feeling.  You may 
enjoy a vacation, but you’re always glad to get home.  Deep inside, we long for 
a home that is safe and secure, where others love us, and we love them back.  

Imagine how the folks from Jerusalem felt when they woke up in Babylon!  They 
weren’t on an exotic vacation to see the Hanging Gardens of that city, which 
was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.  They were in exile, far 
from home.

And yet for them, and for us, God has provided a place for His people, where He 
calls us back to where we belong.  It’s someplace more precious than any city 
in the world.  God packs more for His people there than any other place could 
ever provide.  

What is that place?  It’s a place where we find peace and justice.   For in 
that place, we find righteousness and salvation.  That place, where God calls 
us to come home, exists because of God, not because of us or our efforts.

In the time of Jeremiah, God promised a king and a city that only He could 
provide.  Yes, the Temple and city that His people had messed up would be 
destroyed.  But God found a way to punish sin, but somehow still save His 
people. 

How was God going to do this saving?  He promised a king, but a new and better 
one.  He would also be of the house and line of David.  But he wouldn’t be just 
another David.  That’s because God also promised a new and better city, whose 
name would be “righteous.”  But notice where we find that righteousness, 
justice, truth, and peace that God mentions.  Jeremiah said, “God is our 
righteousness.”

And so, centuries after Jeremiah, someone from the house and line of David was 
born.  He would be the new and better David.  Oh, He would still be David’s 
son, His descendant—but He would also be David’s Lord!  And if that weren’t 
enough, He would also come to be the new and greater Temple and city, where God 
would reveal Himself on earth among His people.  So, this “righteousness” would 
not only be God’s king; He would even be God’s Temple.  All that would be 
wrapped up in one Person!  

Right now, in these days of Advent preparation, looking forward to Christmas, 
we can celebrate that we have a home.  We have a city, a place to call home, 
where God is with us with an everlasting love.  How?  God is with us is in the 
Person of Jesus.  And so, because of that, the Church become God’s home for us. 
 

In Jesus, both the king and the city come together in one Person.  For when we 
are where Jesus physically is, we are where He comes to forgive, enliven, and 
renew us as His people.  That’s why the Lord’s Supper is such a big deal.  It’s 
because Jesus comes to us in His body and blood.  No wonder Jesus calls His 
Supper “the New Covenant,” for it’s the center of our lives as His New-Covenant 
people.   

Conclusion
So, where do you live?  But more than that, what place do you call “home”?  
Where do you find safety, security, salvation, and life?  Today, we remember 
the foundation of our lives, our home with God in Christ Jesus.  For, in this 
place, He comes to us, cares for us, and gives us forgiveness and life!  That’s 
Jesus!  Amen.


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