THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Jerusalem Rebuilt"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl
Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
Our message today is based on
Jeremiah 30:18, 19:
Thus saith the Lord; Behold,
I will bring again the captivity of Jacobs tents, and have mercy on his
dwellingplaces; and the city shall be builded upon her own heap, and the palace shall
remain after the manner thereof. And out of
them shall proceed thanksgiving and the voice of them that make merry: and I will multiply them, and they shall not be
few; I will also glorify them, and they shall not be small.
That Word of God tells us what God will do and the joy that will result from His
doing it. It is a text that speaks of the
rebuilding of the city of Jerusalem after seventy years of the Babylonian Captivity,
something that took place roughly 500 years before our Lord Jesus Christ was born. It is a figure to us of the salvation that God
will bring for His church, of how God will bring a people to Himself out of the heaps and
ruins of sin.
The Scriptures emphasize to us that this work of salvation is Gods work. We read, Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will
bring again the captivity of Jacob
I will multiply them,
I will also glorify
them. It is not only a divine work,
that is, Gods work. But it is a
glorious work. Salvation is a work that is
filled with the splendor of Gods grace. It
is something that provokes wonder and eruption of thanksgiving in our hearts.
Now, for a few moments, let us consider this glorious truth of the salvation that
God has given and will continue to work in the hearts of His children. Our theme will be:
Jerusalem Rebuilt.
The circumstances during the days of the prophet Jeremiah were difficult
circumstances. He was sent of God to be a
prophet to the people of Judah shortly before their destruction at the hands of
Nebuchadnezzar. Jeremiah, you might recall,
prophesied the Word of the Lord that Judah and Jerusalem would be overthrown for their
sins and laid waste by the kingdom of Babylon under the rule of Nebuchadnezzar. For this prophecy, Jeremiah was made to suffer
greatly at the hands of the people. He
endured reproach and contempt from a people who were hardened against their God and would
not hear the voice of Gods messenger Jeremiah.
During his own day Jerusalem was being attacked by a fierce enemy and relentless
foe. Day by day Jerusalem was becoming weaker
and weaker. And Jerusalem was, in fact,
destroyed, plundered by Babylon, and the people of Judah were carried off to captivity for
seventy years.
Yet, amazingly, before that final destruction took place, and before the captivity
began, Jeremiah (Gods prophet) foretold that after seventy years of captivity they
would be brought back again to their land and to Jerusalem and that Jerusalem would be
rebuilt. God spoke through Jeremiah before
it happened that God would bring them back. We read in verse 10 of
Jeremiah 30:
Therefore
fear thou not, O my servant Jacob, saith the Lord;
neither be dismayed, O Israel: for, lo, I
will save thee from afar, and thy seed from the land of their captivity; and Jacob shall
return, and shall be in rest, and be quiet, and none shall make him afraid. It is reiterated in verses 16 and 17 of
Jeremiah 30:
Therefore all they that devour thee
shall be devoured; and all thine adversaries, every one of them, shall go into captivity;
and they that spoil thee shall be a spoil, and all that prey upon thee will I give for a
prey. For I will restore health unto thee,
and I will heal thee of thy wounds, saith the Lord;
because they called thee an Outcast, saying, This is Zion, whom no man seeketh
after. God foretold that they would be
returned.
But not only would they come back to their land.
God says to them in verses 18 and 19, upon which we focus now, that God would
rebuild Jerusalem upon her own heaps, and that the people of Jerusalem would no longer
dwell in tents but would dwell in a city well-builded, and the palace (or the temple) of
the city would also be rebuilt.
When Jeremiah foretold all these things, he foretold, first of all, that Jerusalem
was to be in ruins and to be laid upon an heap. Now
we should imagine those pictures that distressed us so the pictures of the Twin
Towers and of the Pentagon, the World Trade Center, Ground Zero as the towers
imploded, the steel twisted, the concrete was pulverized, and all the colors of carpet and
marble and paint and tile became gray. Ruins! Jerusalem and the temple of Solomon would be
brought to that kind of ruin.
That temple, you recall, was the pride of Gods people. Jerusalem was a city, the excellences of which the psalmist could sing in
Psalm 48:
Beautiful
for situation; the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion. Again, in
Psalm 125
and 121. It was a wondrous city. It was a place where the people of God would gather
together in the worship of the living and true God. The
temple of Solomon was built there. There, at
that temple and in Jerusalem, Gods people felt the presence of the living God. There they feasted upon Gods promises that
He would send the Messiah, a Christ who would be the Savior of the church. And there they would humbly bow in thankfulness
for Gods blessing.
Jerusalem was noted for its strength and for its power. No one had ever been able to conquer it. It was a great stronghold. But owing to their own sins, as they had fallen
away from the Lord, as the people of Judah had neglected Gods commandments in their
own lives, Jerusalem would be taken by Nebuchadnezzar, the city would be made a heap of
ruin, and the temple would be destroyed. Because
they had treasured the life and the idols of the world around them, God would send
judgment and would pull down their city and temple into ruins. It would become a mass of ruins.
This is very significant. As I was
saying, this is expressive of the truth of salvation and is a picture of yourself as you
are due to your sin. The Scriptures of truth
tell us that in this arrogant age man is a ruined sinner before God. The Bible will tell you that you are not an animal
gradually stretching out and reaching for something higher through evolution. The Bible will tell you that you are not leaving
low and base animalistic urges and becoming a noble and great thing. No, the Bible will say to you that you are, as a
human being, of yourself, a ruinous heap. You
are smoldering ruins of what you were first created in Adam to be not only the
ruins of the outward, but the ruin of the soul, so that now man, born of a woman, is vile
and wretched and fallen before God as a sinner. That is the state of man. Man (
Psalm 8)
was made
excellent. He was made excellent in Adam to
glorify God. But through sin, mankind is
utterly ruined and morally corrupt. That is
true also of you personally. That is
the message of Gods Word.
Through sin, mankind is utterly ruined
and morally corrupt.
That is true also of you personally.
The message of Gods Word goes on to tell us that sin is ruinous also in the
lives of the people of God, of those who are brought to faith and repentance. We experience that sin breaks down. Sin mars and brings to ruin our life. It renders our life as a heap of ruin. We were made stewards of the Lords goods. But our hearts have become greedy and twisted and
we seek to live for and out of earthly things rather than out of God. Our hearts were made pure and holy. But that is lost, and now by sin we are filled
with lust and impurity. We were made,
originally, honest to speak the truth after God.
But now our hearts are devious in lies. We
were made to love. But instead of loving, we
are by nature cruel, and we think the worst of others.
Marriage was created as a great good from God, but in our sin it is turned into war
and hurt and fractions. Family was created as
a great and wonderful good of God, but now, due to sin, it is filled with jealousy and
anger and abuse and resentment. Ruinous
heaps. Do you see it? All that God created good and upright now,
due to the power of sin, what has come of them? All
cast down; all in a ruinous heap.
Think of the temple of your soul, your heart, your innermost sanctuary, that holy
place where the first man Adam held communion with God.
What about that holy place of your heart now, created to be an edifice of the love
of God? What dwells there? Jesus said, Out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies
(Matt. 15:19).
And Jeremiah says in chapter
17:9, The heart is deceitful above all things.
This is hopeless of ourselves. It was
a hopeless situation for the people of Judah for sure.
They had no ability to deliver themselves from Nebuchadnezzar. They had no ability to return out of their
captivity. They were in a hopeless situation. But have you reached the realization, by the grace
of God, of your helplessness and hopelessness? By
the grace of God, do you know the power of your own sin?
Obviously you do not, as a child of God, if you play with your sin. As you see your sin, do you think that the
solution is simply that you should turn over a new leaf, that you need a fresh start, a
new marriage, a new partner? Can you build up
upon the ruins of your sin? Can you create
anything good out of the ruin of your own nature? The
Bible proclaims to us, We are as a ruinous heap.
We are dead in sin.
But it is into such a situation that the message of God came through Jeremiah: Thus saith the Lord; Behold, I will bring
again the captivity of Judah,
and I will raise up her dwelling places, and the city
shall be filled again. And it
happened. God did bring the people of Judah
back as He had said: seventy years afterwards
He brought them back to the city of Jerusalem. Zerubbabel
was their leader. Later on, their prophets
were Haggai and Zechariah. And still later
on, the man Nehemiah came and the temple was rebuilt and the walls of Jerusalem once again
stood forth. On the very site of the old
city, where the ruins had been, there God, by grace, built up Jerusalem again. And all of it was from God absolutely all
of it His work.
So the gospel of Jesus Christ also comes to us that, by the grace of God, God
restores us. God brings us out of the ruin of
sin. You see, the gospel of Jesus Christ is
not a manual of instructions telling you how to build your life by your own will and
abilities. The gospel is not a
do-it-yourself list of ten ways to connect with God.
But the gospel is the proclamation of what God has done in Jesus Christ to bring
salvation to pass and of how God works in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure
(Phil. 2:13). Therefore the gospel is a
glorious thing. It is a great thing. It is a stupendous thing. God, in the gospel, does not hold out a mere
possibility that things could be a little better for us.
God does not hold out an invitation to us, dead sinners, to add something to the
mix. God has done His part (He wants to
help), and now if we add our contribution to the pile, maybe we can build together. That is not the gospel. But the gospel is the victory that is attained by
Jesus Christ on the cross. The gospel is the
promise that God will implant in the hearts of His children the life of Jesus Christ. You see, the gospel is not a veneer on life. It is the power of God unto salvation. The gospel is not a social scheme. The gospel is not a pitch to do better and to add
moralisms to your life. But the gospel is a
glorious thing. The gospel declares to us how
God will build up, out of the rubble of sin, a church, a body of Jesus Christ, fit unto
eternal glory how God is going to make a heavenly Jerusalem and a new temple out of
His people, where He will dwell among them forever and ever.
The gospel is not a do-it-yourself list
of ten ways to connect with God.
But you ask, How will God do that?
Well, God does that through the grace that is given in Jesus Christ. God does that entirely of grace. He does it.
He does it, first of all, by redeeming us from our sins, by taking us out of the
captivity and the guilt of our sin. He does
that through the work of Jesus Christ upon the cross.
That is the cross of Jesus Christ. He
was there to bear away guilt. He was there to
make a payment for the penalty that our sin deserved.
But there is more. There are some who
think that the whole gospel is simply that God forgives our sins. Although it is true that God can erase our sins
and forgive them, that is not where the gospel stops.
For after the wreckage has been removed, there must be building, there must be
restoration. If the wreckage is removed from
a site where there has been a terrible disaster, and if that site is simply left vacant,
what happens? Well, weeds grow and all types
of crime flourish. But the gospel proclaims
that not only will the ruins of sin be removed, not only will the guilt of sin be
pardoned, but God will build us up in Jesus Christ.
He will inhabit us by the Holy Spirit so that we now, created in Christ Jesus as
Christians, are able to fight against our sin, to repent, and to live to His glory. That is a Christian. A Christian is not simply someone who has had his
sin forgiven. That is true. But a Christian is so much more. A Christian is one who is made alive in Jesus
Christ. Christians no longer live their life
alienated from God, resenting God, hating God. But
they live their life, by grace, submitting to God and desiring that their whole life be
built up to the honor and to the praise of God.
The result will be thanksgiving to God in our life.
Jeremiah says that out of them (out of the people of God) shall proceed
thanksgiving and the voice of them that make merry.
The idea that is presented is that out of the rebuilt city of Jerusalem will come
an irrepressible and spontaneous eruption of thanksgiving to God. As you would draw near to this city you would hear
happy sounds, people laughing, joy in the air, merriment.
And that is the test of the gospel also. When
you have truly heard the gospel of the grace of Jesus Christ in your heart, then you will
respond with thanks. It must come out of your
heart. Yes, I know, sometimes, as children of
God, we are burdened and tried, we are weary and grieved.
But yet, when we taste the grace of God, when we have been forgiven, and when we
are made to be His children, then we will also respond in thanksgiving to God.
When you have truly heard the gospel
of the grace of Jesus Christ in your heart,
then you will respond with thanks.
And the blessings are even more. God
says, through Jeremiah, that He would multiply them.
The population of the city would spread out. Gods
city would be populated. And God also does
that among us. For the promise to believers
is that God will also be with their children and childrens children and work His
grace in the hearts of believers children. Gods
promise is that He will send forth His Word throughout the world and gather to Himself a
church so that Jerusalem shall be populated. That
is the church, Gods people and kingdom in Jesus Christ shall not be few.
That is the gospel. The gospel tells
us what God has done. He has taken us who are
on the heaps and ruins of sin and He has forgiven us and made us into a new and holy
people a temple of God, a body of Jesus Christ.
He has created the church out of the ruins of sin.
And the gospel declares that God shall further glorify us in the final kingdom of
our Lord Jesus Christ. At the end of the
world, when Christ comes yet once more and makes all things new, then the church shall be
with God in the new heavens and earth forever and ever.
We ask, but why will He do all this? The
answer is: Gods grace. This is what God purposed to do for His own
honor and for the glory of His name. When you
hear that gospel, and when it comes to you personally through the power of Gods
Word, then there shall be in your life an eruption of thanks of thanks to God for
His mercy. And then you will ask Him,
Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?
Let us pray.
Father, we thank Thee for Thy Word. And we pray that it may be written upon our hearts and expressed in lives of thankfulness and praise to Thy name. In Jesus name we pray, Amen.
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Last modified: 24-Jun-2002