Keep On Keeping On
For Prospect United Church
of Christ
Seattle, Washington
October 9, 2022
Scripture: Jeremiah 29:1, 4-7
Let us pray: May the words of my mouth and the
meditations of all of our hearts be acceptable in your sight O God, our strength
and our redeemer. Amen.
We all know it. Life isn’t always easy and joyful, and
there’s no point in pretending that it is. Our whole lives long we know, for
example, that we are all mortal. We will all pass away, but sometimes it’s
harder when a loved one dies. We know that Pastor Meighan is living that very
difficult experience as we gather this morning. Let us keep her and her mother
always in our prayers for comfort and peace. Beyond that, of course, we are
still in the midst of a virus pandemic in which over 6 million people have died,
over 1 million of them in this country. That pandemic has disrupted all of our
lives and caused massive misery around the world, and (despite what President
Biden said) it isn’t over. Illness and death are just part of what it is to be
human. At times we all face hardships of one sort or another—hardships over
personal relationships, economic difficulties, and of many other types as well.
If you’re like me in this way, and I suspect that most of you are, the news has
been nearly nothing but hideously bad for the past several years. The
Trumpists, most of them true American fascists, have taken over the Republican
Party that was once one of our two great, dominant political parties. They do
not believe in democracy, they believe only in power for themselves and their
Dear Leader Donald Trump. They will destroy American democracy if they can, a
prospect that terrifies many of us. We are appalled by the continuing
prevalence of racism and other forms of hatred in our country. Perhaps it’s
because, as some of you know, I have a PhD in Russian history, have lived among
the Russians for an academic year, and have been Kyiv (which we used to call by
its Russian name Kiev), but the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the war crimes
Russian soldiers are committing there have been heavy on my heart for over 7
months now. I don’t know all the hardships each of you face or have faced in
your lives, but I know that you do or have faced them. Yes, life can be filled
with love and joy, but it also unavoidably has its numerous kinds of hardships.
We all need to discern how we are going to deal with those hardships, and doing
that is usually far from easy.
It has ever been so. This morning we heard some verses
from the book of the prophet Jeremiah. They tell of a letter Jeremiah sent to
Hebrew exiles in Babylon. The setting of that letter is that in about 597 BCE
the Babylonian Empire out of Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq) had besieged
Jerusalem, captured some of its leading citizens, and hauled them off to forced
exile in Babylon. The situation Jeremiah is addressing is not the final
Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem and the exile of that Hebrew people that
occurred in 586 BCE, but it’s plenty bad enough.A significant number of people
were taken to a very foreign place far from home. It was linguistically,
culturally, politically, and religiously radically different from the ways they
knew back home. Perhaps most significantly, they had believed that the temple
in Jerusalem was the cornerstone of their faith. It was the only place where
they could offer the animal sacrifices to God that their faith required. Now
that temple was some 600 miles across the desert away and completely
inaccessible to them. The didn’t know when or even if they would ever get to go
home. Surely they resented and hated the Babylonians, and just as surely they
never thought they were supposed to prosper in Babylon.
Then they got this weird letter from the prophet
Jeremiah, who was still back home in Jerusalem. It said that its message came
from the people’s God not just from Jeremiah himself. The letter gave the
exiles this advice:
Build
houses and live in them; plant gardens and eat what they produce. Take wives,
and have sons and daughters; take wives for your sons, and give your daughters
in marriage, that they may bear sons and daughters; multiply there, and do not
decrease. But seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile,
and pray to the Lord on its
behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare. Jeremiah 29:5-7 NRSV.
I imagine that the people who received his letter
thought Jeremiah was nuts. He wants us to do what?! Live here as though this
were home? Pray for the Babylonians? You’ve got to be kidding! We don’t
want to pray for the Babylonians, we want to pray for their destruction!
They’re all bad guys! Why should we pray for them? What do you mean in
their welfare we will find our welfare? Our welfare lies on our getting to go
home, not in planting roots in this Godforsaken place!
Pretty clearly, there are two ways we can react when
things go bad, and things go bad at times for all of us. We can react
emotionally. That is, we can be angry. We can feel overwhelmed. We can be
greatly irritated or deeply depressed. We can however also respond more
constructively. We can accept what we cannot change. We can resolve to make the
best of what we cannot change. That’s what Jeremiah told the exiles in Babylon
to do. They couldn’t end their exile. They couldn’t just leave and go home.
Their captors were far too powerful for that. So Jeremiah said, “Bloom where
you’re planted.” Yes, what happened to you is terrible; but since you can’t
change it, make the best of it. Even when you’re in captivity to a foreign
power, God wants as good a life for you as is possible. So don’t decay, live
the best you can.
Those exiles may not have wanted to hear it, but I
believe that Jeremiah actually gave them good advice. He didn’t mean don’t hope
for a restoration home. But he said live as best you can as long as that
doesn’t happen. And don’t think Jeremiah would say that in no circumstances
should we work to change our circumstances. Jeremiah isn’t saying don’t work to
make things better. He is saying exactly the opposite. Do work to make things
better, but be realistic. Discern what is possible and what isn’t. Maybe making
things better means overcoming and eliminating what’s wrong. Or maybe it means
accepting what’s wrong because you cannot end it. Knowing which of those
circumstances you face isn’t always easy, but we must always discern which of
them we’re in.
That’s true both for individuals and for institutions
like a church. Take churches like this one, for example. We all know that
small, progressive churches like Prospect are struggling more today than they
did in the past. So often the people of those churches think of no way out of
their difficulties than recreating what used to be. We used to have lots of
young families with children, they say, so let’s get lots of young families
with children. Their vision of their church is only a vision of what used to
be. But just as Jeremiah’s exiles in Babylon couldn’t go home, so can our
churches today not go back to what they once were. Jeremiah told the exiles to
understand the new though unwanted world in which they lived, then keep on
keeping on. God, he says, has given you life even though don’t like the
circumstances of that life. So live. Bloom where you’re planted. Understand
your world and get on with creating the abundant life God wants for you as best
you can.
That’s good advice for us in our personal lives too.
None of us avoids hardship forever. When we encounter hardship we face the same
choices those ancient Hebrew exiles in Babylon faced. We can let the hardship
overwhelm us. We can stay angry or resentful or depressed. Or we can say, OK,
it is what it is, and we can discern what makes the best of it for us not the
worst. Maybe that means removing the hardship. Overcome economic hardship, for
example, by getting new work even if we need to be retrained to get it. But
maybe it means accepting the illness you cannot cure, treat it medically as
best you can, and live with it as fully as you can for as long as you can. In
either case, our call is to keep on keeping on. That’s what God wants for us,
and God is always with us as a guide and source of strength as we do it.
So this morning, let us all be realistic about
whatever hardships we face as individuals and as a church. Let’s be realistic
about the hardships we face as a nation and as a world. Let us discern well
what will make the best of a bad situation for us. That is God’s way for us. So
let us discern well, and let us keep on keeping on. May it be so. Amen.
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