Wednesday, April 1, 2026

March 18 2026 Lenten Reflection Jeremiah 50:6-7

 

Rev. George Miller

March 18, 2026

Jeremiah 50:6-7

 

Tonight you are witnessing a message recorded the day before my surgery.  This message was created in anticipation, filmed in preparation, and now it is being viewed, while I am feeling like a healing sheep that is far from the flock, dealing with my own unique wounds and experience.

 

Tonight, we see through the lens of Jeremiah, who was known as the “Weeping Prophet.”  His sense of empathy for the people led him to have deep emotional expression.

 

Jeremiah’s emotionality caused him to speak up and to speak out, to address issues that everyone saw; to create insight into the path the people were heading.

 

Because of this, Jeremiah was not always liked, or listened to.  There were those who wanted to silence him.  In chapter 18 he feels as if a pit has been dug for him, how they laid snares at his feet, hoping to kill him and his words.

 

Jeremiah isn’t so much the sheep that has gone astray or been lost, he is more like the black sheep of the family, the one that everyone feels uncomfortable around, the one everyone would rather not discuss.

 

But this does not stop his prophetic word, nor his care for the children, the youth and men who could die in war, or the wives who could become widows.

 

So he speaks and he cries, he reveals and he encourages, all with an unshakeable trust in the future; that eventually there will be restoration and rebirth.

 

In tonight’s reading he refers to the people as lost sheep; but not just lost- they are sheep who have been led astray by their shepherds. 

 

They are sheep who have been led away from the mountains of nourishment and faithful living, into a place where the shepherds have made them forget who they are, the flock they are a part of.

 

This has made the flock vulnerable, easy targets for their enemies and outsiders to come and devour them, to hurt them.

 

This evening, let us take a moment to think of how we may feel as if we are being led astray by shepherds meant to protect us.

 

Tonight, let us pause and reflect on how there are shepherds who have tried to separate the flock and pull us away from one another.

 

Tonight, let us think of the ways in which we can become vulnerable as a people, nation, faith because of such shepherds.

 

Tonight, let us take a moment to symbolically weep just as Jeremiah would.  To weep, and to wonder- “as a people, all we like sheep that have been led astray?”

 

How do we erase the guilt of our collected sins?  How can we reclaim the true pasture of the Lord, and the hope of our ancestors?  Easter can not come too soon.                           Amen.

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