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Jeremiah's Performance Review Series
Contributed by Jim Martin on Nov 20, 2012 (message contributor)
Summary: In Jeremiah 19 there is the climactic scene where Jeremiah is instructed to smash at the gate of the city in front of the leaders of Jerusalem. The clash of worldviews and the significant emotional cargo of this passage seemed difficult to render to a mod
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Jeremiah’s Performance Review
by
Jim Martin
The River Church Community
Sunday, November 18th, 2007
The River Church Community
ACT I
Scene 1
The intro has to set up that the book of Jeremiah
and this story arc in the OT are all about God
trying to warn his people that if they don’t
change their ways, the Babylonians are coming
conquer them and that they should understand this
as God’s discipline.
NEWSCASTER #1
(spot light comes up on extreme stage
right silhouetting the figure of a
newscaster behind an anchor desk. The
following text is read just as if it is
current news.)
Here now the news for this Sunday, November 18th, 600
BC. Much of the land of Israel awoke this morning to
the sounds of saber rattling. It seems that King
Nebuchadnezzar is once again firing up his powerful
Babylonian war machine. To the North of the land there
is a growing fear that Israel may be the next in a
growing line of conquests made by that nation.
Self-styled "prophet" Jeremiah referred to the
Babylonian troop movements as a "boiling cauldron to
the north" in a fiery public address given yesterday.
When asked directly about the threat Babylon posed,
Jeremiah issued a strong warning reiterating his costly
view that God is not pleased with Israel and that the
Babylonian threat could be seen as God’s discipline of
his people coming at the end of a long, long line of
clear warnings. Priests at the Temple of the Lord did
not offer comment on the current Babylonian threat.
NEWSCASTER #2
(spot light comes up on extreme stage
left silhouetting the figure of a
newscaster behind an anchor desk. The
following text is read just as if it is
current news.)
There were several unconfirmed reports of another
ritual child sacrifice last night in Jerusalem. The
practice of child sacrifice, declared abominable,
idolatrous and illegal under the reforms of King
Josiah, was believed to have been eradicated. But a
growing number of reports have left some wondering how
much has really changed in Israel. Some have gone so
far as to suggest that the Josiahs’s well-intentioned
reforms have only penetrated to skin-deepth and that
pealing back the thin veneer of reform in Israel
reveals rampant idolatry, pagan practice, blatant
disregard for the widow, the fatherless and the alien
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
CONTINUED: 2.
NEWSCASTER #2 (cont’d)
and even the spilling of innocent blood. Others claim
that this pessimistic view is really nothing more than
the work of doomsday prophet Jeremiah.
NEWSCASTER #1
(back to stage right)
In an official press release this morning, the office
of the Temple of the Lord stated emphatically that the
claims of child sacrifice anywhere in Israel are
unsubstantiated. Priest and Chief Officer of the
Temple, Pashhur, stated that the Temple would be
conducting its own investigation, but that it did not
expect these wild accusations to hold up to scrutiny.
Pashhur went on to say that his office has been
tracking child-sacrifice statistics and is in a
position to assure the nation that there has been a
marked decrease in the abominable practice. When
pressed for more detail Pashhur was reluctant to
clarify further.
NEWSCASTER #2
(back to stage left)
In related Temple news today, Temple leadership
threatened publicly to censure the enigmatic Jeremiah -
sometimes referred to the weeping prophet. Pashhur
stated with some regret that Jeremiah had been
"unresponsive" to directives coming from the Temple.
"He’s been instructed repeatedly to tone down his
rhetoric," Pashhur commented, "He flatly refuses to do
it. I will have to warn him in no uncertain terms that
there will be consequences." Jeremiah could not be
reached for comment. Eye-witnesses last report seeing
him walking resolutely toward Jerusalem carrying a
large pot.
The secne occurs in Pashhur’s office. There is a
large desk with a comfortable office chair for
Passhur. It is a well-appointed space that speaks
of wealth and power in good taste and moderation.
Opposite the desk there is a small folding chair.
This is where Jeremiah will sit for his review.
The scene reinforces the power dynamic between the
two characters. Pashhur sees the corralling of
this loose cannon Jeremiah as beneath his dignity
as the Chief Officer of the House of the Lord.
Pashhur has the full weight and authority of the
Temple structure behind him; Jeremiah is little
more than a nuisance to him. Jeremiah, on the
other hand, has only what he has always had: the
words of God burning on his tongue and the images
of God burning in his mind.
(before the lights come up, the
following text rolls up the screen)
(CONTINUED)
CONTINUED: 3.
Jeremiah 19:1-5
Thus said the LORD: Go and buy a potter’s
earthenware jug. Take with you some of the elders
of the people and some of the senior priests, and