The second reading today comes from the beginning of the book of Jeremiah found in the Old Testament. Now Jeremiah, as a book, is a complex read, written about and to people facing a series of military invasions, and therefore it is written to those who suffer.
The book is named for the main character, the prophet Jeremiah, who is the one who conveys God’s message for friend and enemy alike, to Jerusalem and Judah, and also to Egypt, the Philistines, Moab, Ammon, Edom, Syria, and Babylon, and it is hard work to do this ministry, to speak words of judgment and coming destruction, a message that is both difficult and unwelcome.
There are times Jeremiah wants to quit, but God’s calling upon his life is so strong that he can’t turn away from the work (Jeremiah 20:7-9). He says it is like an intense fire in his heart, trapped in his very bones.
At the beginning of the book of Jeremiah, there is the call, God’s call, to an ordinary human being, and Jeremiah’s response.
This story is a mirror for us as readers; we examine it to see reflected back the ways that we, each of us are called, not just to ordained ministry which is an important piece of our worship together today, but how we are called to live out this Christian life, this faithful life.
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