28 September 2025

"Irrational Hope" (sermon)

Two Rivers Pastoral Charge
Sunday September 28, 2025
Scripture:  Jeremiah 32:1-3a, 6-15


I’m probably going to break some preaching rule somewhere, but this week I want to give you a peek into how sermons are written – a bit like getting a glimpse behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz.  Though, I guess, there are many different ways to write a sermon, but I want to tell you about one method.

The Four Pages of the Sermon technique was developed by Paul Scott Wilson, a United Church preaching professor in Toronto, and this technique has been adopted across denominations and around the world.  He has the preacher start with four pieces of paper – four literal pieces of paper – on the desk in front of you.  At the top of page 1 you write “The Trouble in the Text.” At the top of page 2 you write “The Trouble in the World.” At the top of page 3 you write “The Good News in the Text.”  And then you can probably guess what you write at the top of page 4 – “The Good News in the World.”  The preacher then starts brainstorming different ideas under each of these four headings, and once the four pages are filled, you can shuffle them around to figure out what order of pages makes sense for this sermon – some weeks, it makes sense to start with page 2, then page 4, then page 3, then page 1.  Another week you might want to go page 1, page 3, page 2, page 4.  And then once you have your pages in order, the sermon has essentially written itself!

I say all this, because I think that this week’s story from Jeremiah fits really nicely into the Four Pages of the Sermon technique.

Let’s start with page 1 – the Trouble in the Text.  On the surface, this story might look like a complicated real estate transaction.  Jeremiah’s relative has a field for sale.  God tells Jeremiah to buy the field.  Jeremiah pays 17 shekels of silver for the field.  One copy of the deed is sealed up for posterity, and the other copy of the deed is left accessible for public scrutiny.  Where is the trouble in this story, other than the risk of getting bored to death by the details of property law in ancient Judah?

The trouble in the text is actually hinted at in the beginning of the story.  Verse 2 reads:  “At that time, the army of the king of Babylon was besieging Jerusalem, and the prophet Jeremiah was confined in the court of the guard that was in the palace of the king of Judah.”  So we have a double-whammy of trouble here.  Jeremiah has been imprisoned by the king, likely for speaking truth to power, for pointing out to the king all of the ways that the king has led the people away from God’s way.  But even more than that, the city is under siege.

At this point in the history of the people of ancient Israel and Judah, they had entered the Promised Land – the land promised to their ancestors – under the leadership of Moses, after spending 40 years in the wilderness, after leaving slavery in Egypt.  But as our regular bible study people will attest, things didn’t stay good for long once they were in the Promised Land.  Gradually, under poor leadership, they turned away from God, and then things really fell apart for them.  The northern kingdom of Israel had fallen to the Assyrian Empire’s army, and the people had been deported, or had fled for refuge to Jerusalem in the southern kingdom of Judah.  And now that southern kingdom of Judah was under attack by the army of the Babylonian Empire.  The city of Jerusalem was under siege with no one able to enter or leave, with the hopes of starving the people of Jerusalem into surrender.

And from our perspective almost 3000 years later, we know that the strategy succeeded.  Jerusalem did fall to the Babylonian army.  The temple, the literal home of God is going to be destroyed. The people are going to be carried off into exile.  The world as they know it is about to crumble to pieces around them.

And so I would name the trouble in the text as the existential threat to the people that the Babylonian army is posing to them. Their very existence is being threatened.

So that is page 1 of our sermon – the trouble in the text.  Moving on to page 2, titled The Trouble in the World, is there any threat in our world today that might hold some parallels to the existential threat in the story?

I don’t know about you, but for me, when I think of the things in the world that cause me to feel existential dread, the threat of climate change is pretty near the top of my list.  To me, that is the thing in the world today that has the most potential to demolish our very existence on this planet.  Rising sea levels used to be viewed as the most dangerous part of climate change, and it still is to people who live close to sea level around the world, but I see the most pressing threat these days being the shifting weather patterns.  Floods where there were never floods before.  Droughts and wildfires in places that were never threatened before.  Farmers struggling to grow food under these changed weather patterns, with the associated threat of hunger and starvation around the world.

When I think about the future of the world – the world that my niece and nephews and their children are going to inherit – these are the sorts of things that fill the pit of my stomach with dread. Our existence, just like the existence of the people of ancient Jerusalem, is being threatened by something that we don’t have control over.

So that is page 2 of our sermon.  We’ve covered the problem in the text and the problem in the world.  Let’s move on to the good news half of our sermon!

Page 3 of our sermon is titled The Good News in the Text.  In our story from Jeremiah, where is the good news?  To me, the whole story about Jeremiah buying the field, that tedious real estate transaction, is the good news.  On the surface, it makes no sense at all – after all, who in their right mind would buy a piece of land when the city is about to fall to a foreign army?  In a very short time, that land is likely going to be worthless, as the invading army is about to take over and confiscate all of the land in the region.  So why does Jeremiah buy this field?

He buys the field because God told him to do so.  Jeremiah, as a prophet, was a mouthpiece for God.  He pointed people back to God and towards God’s way of doing things.  But Jeremiah was a prophet in more than his words – when you read his story, he was a prophet in his actions too, and did a lot of crazy things to get people’s attention, and then re-direct their attention towards God.  And buying this field was a prophetic act.

Because right at the end of our story, God says, through Jeremiah, “For thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel:  Houses and fields and vineyards shall again be bought in this land.”

Jeremiah is buying this field as a sign of hope.  Yes, the disaster is going to come, but that isn’t the end of the story because God is still in charge.  Even though the field is going to fall into the hands of the invaders, a time will come when it will be valuable again, and ordinary real estate transactions will be able to happen.

And from our perspective, a couple of millennia in the future, we know that this was true.  The siege is going to end when Jerusalem falls to the Babylonian army, the temple is going to be destroyed, the people are going to be carried away into exile, but that isn’t the end of the story.  70 years are going to have to pass in exile, two full generations, but eventually the people will be allowed to return to Jerusalem, they will be able to rebuild the temple, and houses, fields, and vineyards will once again be bought and sold in the land.

Hope is a funny thing, because it makes no sense in the present moment.  Hope is the thing that kicks in when the world is falling to pieces around us, and reminds us that this isn’t the end of the story.  Hope is irrational, but hope is a tangible thing, because it lets us continue on, it frees us from the existential dread so that we can continue to be God’s agents in the world.

And hope is the pattern through the whole biblical story.  The story doesn’t end with slavery in Egypt – the story continues until the people reach freedom in the promised land.  Exile in Babylon is followed by restoration to the land.  The story doesn’t end on Good Friday with the crucifixion, but continues on to Easter and resurrection.

So what about page 4 of our sermon?  We’ve seen the problem in the text, the problem in the world, and the good news in the text.  What about the good news in the world?  Where can we find parallel good news in a world bogged down by existential dread over climate change?

I think that it is maybe up to all of us to write that page 4 in our own lives.  Jeremiah bought a field as an act of trust, as an act of hope.  Even though he wouldn’t live to see the time 70 years later when the land would be worth something again, he trusted in God when God said that this time would come. What action can we do to put our trust in God’s future?

In a moment, we’re going to be singing the hymn “This is God’s Wondrous World,” and in verse 3, we’ll be singing the very powerful line, “O let me ne’er forget, that though the wrong seems oft so strong, God is the ruler yet.”

I’m reminded of the quote attributed to Martin Luther, the 16th Century theologian who was one of the driving forces behind the Protestant Reformation.  When he was asked what he would do if he knew that the world was ending tomorrow, his answer was, “I would plant an apple tree today.”

When we trust that God has the whole world, our past, our present, and our future, in their hands, we can be freed from fear and freed to act as if that future was already here.  We can buy a field.  We can plant an apple tree.  We can drop a donation off at the food bank.  We can make tomato sauce from the tomatoes we grew in our garden this summer.  We can volunteer at the local school, knowing that these children will grow up in a world we are helping to create.

If we let ourselves fall into despair, or be trapped by the dread, we become paralyzed, unable to act because anything we do doesn’t matter anyways.  But when we have hope – remembering that hope doesn’t make any sense in the present moment – then we are freed for action.

So I’m going to leave you to ponder that question – how are you going to write page 4 of our sermon this week?  What are you going to do in the world today that signals the hope that God has given to you to carry?

And m
ay God strengthen the hope within each one of us, and empower us to act on that hope.  Amen.

 

Image:  “Regrowth” by Q Family on flickr

Used with Permission

 

No comments:

Post a Comment