This is a passage...
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Object:
This is a passage that bears repeating. It has been used and will be used again. It certainly sounds like Jesus is the one who brings about this new covenant. Jeremiah laid the groundwork for this change centuries earlier. It makes us think that God does not just change his mind. It sounds like he has a plan that goes back -- far back to the beginning of creation. God always has a plan for "the time that is coming." The fathers looked like they needed a different covenant. When they were under that old covenant they still sinned gravely -- as a nation. Democracy failed, or we would worship a golden calf today. Aaron even helped them! He made all kinds of excuses, but Moses did not accept them and they paid a price.
It sounds like we shouldn't even need a confirmation class to know God. It can be a step, but the next one is the most important. If God's word is now in their hearts it will be revealed in their faithful attendance in church -- for the rest of their lives! It not, they have missed the message.
It sounds like one day we will all know the Lord. Only then can he forgive our wickedness and forget our sins. God searches the heart. No one had memorized scripture more than the Pharisees, yet they missed God's message sent to them in the body of a Savior. Sometimes Lutherans put too much emphasis on the learned. (I once wrote a piece asking "Can Ph.D.s be saved?") It is true that some may go too far in the other direction and look only or mainly to emotions rather than some solid scripture. We need a balance. A pastor needs to bring that balance!
It sounds like we shouldn't even need a confirmation class to know God. It can be a step, but the next one is the most important. If God's word is now in their hearts it will be revealed in their faithful attendance in church -- for the rest of their lives! It not, they have missed the message.
It sounds like one day we will all know the Lord. Only then can he forgive our wickedness and forget our sins. God searches the heart. No one had memorized scripture more than the Pharisees, yet they missed God's message sent to them in the body of a Savior. Sometimes Lutherans put too much emphasis on the learned. (I once wrote a piece asking "Can Ph.D.s be saved?") It is true that some may go too far in the other direction and look only or mainly to emotions rather than some solid scripture. We need a balance. A pastor needs to bring that balance!

