| A Letter to the Exiles: Seek the City to Come (Jer.29:10-14) |
| 27 January 2008 | |
|
[To download the sermon, right-click on this link and select "Save As": A Letter to the Exiles - Seek the City to Come] REVIEW: But to faithfully live and serve in such a way that the knowledge of the glory of the Lord covers the earth as the waters cover the sea. Finally and ultimately, we’re called to seek the city TO COME Follow up: READ Jer 29:10-14 Setting our sights on the Heavenly City, Kingdom Being HERE and not HOME requires >>>>>>>>> Though the people are in exile, Jer 29 is laced with words of hope and promise “a hope and a future” really means “a hopefilled end.” Restore your fortunes Remember what had God promised the people of Israel In many ways, their identity as a people was wrapped up in Jerusalem >>>>>>>>>>> “Mockumentary” Waiting for Guffman > The city of Blaine, celebrating their 150th birthday. And the actors are portraying the settlers arriving at what would be Blaine, and their trusted explorer reporting to them that his nose was twitching with the smell of salt air. The he welcomes everyone to California, and they begin a hoe-down dance where the girls sing “take yer fella by the hand, welcome him to the Promised Land.” One problem: the city of Blaine is in Missouri…it’s not even half-way to their destination. >>>>>>>>>>> The Israelites will find much the same to be true of them They get back to Jerusalem as promised, released under Cyrus King of Persia? Ezra 3 rebuilding the temple, laying the foundation 3:12 but the old men who had seen the first temple, the temple of Solomon, (OLD, more than 70 y.o.) they wept with a loud voice, so that the people could not distinguish b/w the shouts of joy and weeping Contrast here b/w joyful shouts and weeping Many were shouting “this is IT!” They had returned to the land, but not to a Kingdom! >>>>>>>>>>>>> Prophecy: a (or many) near fulfillment and an ultimate, far fulfillment These words look to taking the people back to Jerusalem, but ALSO FAR beyond that as well. This can cause a couple of opposing reactions: Or we are at risk of being undone, despairing that the promises of God are failing A call to seek the city that is to come leaves us in this tension of what is NOW and but we don’t see a completed kingdom And so you have the Corinthians living this crazy life as if the rez HAD happened not just to Jesus but to them… everything is permissible, we’ve been freed from sin in this rez life! And you get the Thessalonians down and depressed b/c they think they’ve somehow missed out on what Jesus is doing, fearful that the rez will never happen! One (Corinthians) is living TOO MUCH in the NOT YET But we’re called to live in the NOW in anticipation of the NOT YET >>>>>>>>>>> Perhaps you’ve heard the saying that “someone is so heavenly minded that they are of no earthly good.” Can actually be the case? READ 3:1-17 selected Can you see that what starts out as heavenly mindedness, seeking the city that is to come, is of incredible worldly good? AND will radically determine how you live in the here and now!?!? your life is hidden in Christ Then you are to clothe yourself IN CHRIST Desire for holiness, not simply happiness >>>>>>>>>>> Such verses don’t just call our eyes heavenward, but our hearts to focus on God What (WHO) were the exiles suppose to SEEK with their whole heart? Jer 29:13 Jer 29 fulfillment and expansion of Dt 4:27-30 We often lose sight of the Kingdom b/c we’ve lost sight of the King! >>>>>>>>>>> We have a King! And so we have to ask ourselves about what or who we are seeking Is it God that we’re seeking? Or some benefit of him? There are many today who are so focused on getting “their best life now” So fixed on the Kingdom particulars that the King doesn’t seem to factor in John Piper et al: “if you could have heaven and all that it is, but God would not be there, would you still want it?” God is what makes heaven, heaven Remember, the Kingdom is NOTHING if the King isn’t EVERYTHING If we remember this, we’ll keep in mind that the city that we’re being called to, There are outposts, there are glimmers, there are foretastes, there are teasers >>>>>>>>>> The faithful saints of the OT were NOT looking to the earthly Jerusalem as their hope and future The NT interprets the OT READ Heb 11:8-9 READ Heb 11:13-16 Seeking the city to comes calls us to a life of faith We will NOT receive the things promised in this life and on this earth Keep 1st things 1st: we must be God-centered in our seeking of the city to come We have the fulfillment and perfection of what was promised: >>>>>>>>>>> HOPEFUL ENDURANCE: The city to come is NOT YET Jer 29 … 70 yrs: (also mentioned in 25:12) … That’s a long time Seeking the city to come is an endeavor FOR a lifetime Seeking the gospel and seeking the city can leave you tapped out Is there any change in ME?!?! You have to set your sights on the Promised END and your heart on the Promiser Swimmer (Randy Alcorn’s book “Heaven”) Florence Chadwick in 1952 If I could have only seen the shore…swimmer within ½ mile Fix the eyes of your heart on Jesus, who for the joy set before Him ENDURED >>>>>>>>>>>> We need this Hope-filled Endurance, b/c we’re called to a life of fruitful labor Our culture calls us to give up and cash in our chips Retirement communities: The Villages Talking to one man who has labored hard all of his life Our rest is NOT here b/c our home is not here! Our resting place is not here. Life is a vapor (Ps 90:9, Jm 4:14): fleeting, here and then gone >>>>>>>>>>>> Let it drive you to seek out and know the promises of God and the heart of God: How many of you have been away from a loved one, receiving letters You find yourself reading and rereading those letters with greater and greater anticipation of your reunion So too see God’s word as letters He has written to draw our eyes to heaven and hearts to Him Daniel did this (Dan 9) What did his search of the Word reveal 2. Led to Confession: OUR sin, wrong, wickedness, rebellion, turning away (9:5) 9:13 in the calamity and curse of exile, they needed to “entreat the favor of the LORD our God, turning from our iniquities and gaining insight by your truth.” As we endure in hope and labor in longing, we need to be repenting and believing: 9:18-19 “We do not present our plea b/c of our righteousness, but b/c of your great mercy. O Lord, hear and forgive, O Lord, pay attention and act. Delay not, for your own sake, O my God, b/c your city and your people are called by your name.” >>>>>>>>>>> Asked the question a while back: how strange and alien are you? While we’re in this tension of the NOW and the NOT YET READ 13:12-14 13:14 for here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come! So, with hopeful endurance and longing labor, let’s set our sights on the city to come, and our hearts on the King, Jesus. |