Intro
Jeri was breathtakingly beautiful.  All the men wanted to be with her, and all 
the women wanted to be her.  But more than that, she was intelligent and 
industrious.  She also had the best husband in the world, someone who was 
faithful, loyal, and caring, someone who sacrificed for her.   

Main Body
Jeri’s husband made sure that she had a beautiful house—a stone mansion that 
stood high on a mountain.  And there was no other place that Jeri would rather 
be.  That house’s beauty drew visitors from around the world.  And there, she 
had servants who wore distinctive and resplendent clothing, who served 
dutifully.

But above all, Jeri had a passion for God.  She delighted to be where God had 
promised to be for her.  She loved the traditions and rituals that God had 
handed down.  She knew the ways of God and taught her children God’s ways.

But the shine she had for her husband grew dim.  She began to take his grace 
and love for granted, as if it would always be there, even though her zeal for 
him was long past and gone.  He was no longer her first love; she no longer 
gave of herself to him. 

Now, her husband felt rejected.  For she treated him like the air around 
her—something you barely give a second thought to until you need to breathe.  
He said that their life together needed to change.  And Jeri saw that her 
actions would sometimes bring him to tears, but she didn’t change her ways.  
She continued living for herself, marching to her own drum.

But one day, she heard a clamor outside the house.  A large, unforgiving crowd 
had surrounded it.  Soon the walls began to shake.  It was as if an army had 
laid siege to her house and pummeled it to the ground, leaving no stone on top 
of another. 

You know Jeri.  Her full name is Jerusalem.  And her husband was God.  The name 
Jerusalem means, “City of peace.”  But, in rejecting Jesus, Jerusalem rejected 
the one who was the bringer of real peace, of eternal peace.   

And if Jerusalem spurned the peace that Jesus gives, then they would only have 
the peace that the world offers, the peace of Rome.  And the Romans knew, like 
no other, how to enforce their version of peace—even if they had to bring death 
to make it so!  

Jesus warned Jerusalem of that.  But when they rejected Him, they also rejected 
what God wanted for them.  They wanted their understanding of God’s Kingdom to 
take place, in their way and their time.  And so those in Jerusalem would twist 
events their way, rejecting the peace of Jesus, relying on themselves for what 
they thought was peace.  Jerusalem would do that by trying to overthrow their 
earthly enemies.  

In response, Rome would come and bring its version of peace to Jerusalem.  The 
“peace” of Rome would cut off Jerusalem’s food supply, so those within her 
gates would starve.  Rome would force the weak to bury the dead, so they too, 
from exhaustion, would fall into the graves.  Rome would siege Jerusalem until 
thousands of corpses would clog its alleyways.  And, then, on August 10th, 70 
AD, the Romans hammered the final nail in Jerusalem’s coffin, tearing down the 
Temple.

Jesus foretold those events 40 years earlier.  Matthew’s Gospel tells us that 
Jesus said, “Then there will be great suffering such as the world has never 
seen and never will again!” (Matthew 24:21).  That happened to Jerusalem, as 
they continued rejecting God, wanting, instead, what they wanted.  No wonder 
Jesus wept!  

That’s what happened to Jerusalem, God’s City, whom He loved like no other.  
His woman, Jerusalem, rejected Him by rejecting His Son.  What a stark lesson 
for us.  But here we are, some 2,000 years later, still not learning from the 
mistakes of God’s people in times past.  We think, “We aren’t like them!”  

And so, thinking we are different, we commit the same sins.  Like them, we 
rationalize our sins.  That’s not finding peace in Jesus.  Like them, we have 
even called evil good and good evil (Isaiah 5:20).  That’s not finding peace in 
Jesus. 

Like the Jews of yesteryear, we often want God to march to our drum.  Like 
them, we act in ways that show that we really don’t believe that “in all 
things, God works for the good of those who love Him” (Romans 8:28).  Such 
unbelief doesn’t find peace in Jesus.  Such unbelief doesn’t make for peace 
but, instead, causes God to weep.

Don’t you know that you are God’s New Jerusalem, the Bride of Christ?  And what 
a husband you have!  He’s faithful and loyal and gives of Himself for you.  But 
like Jerusalem of old, sometimes He no longer interests you.  He’s become like 
the air that you breathe, unnoticed until you need Him.  Jesus is no longer 
your first love.  

That’s why you go about your busy life as if He’s not that important.  For if 
Jesus were most important to you, then coming to receive Him, where He has 
promised to come to you, would be the most important event in your life.  But 
that’s not the case, is it?  

Oh, we’ve become masters at rationalizing away our sin.  That’s why we don’t 
take turning away from it that seriously.  We mouth our confession of sin, in a 
superficial way, but our hearts belie the truth that our mouths are speaking.  

Remember Jerusalem of old.  Remember the Temple.  Remember 70 AD.  For today is 
the Day of your Visitation, when Jesus also visits you.  Today, God calls you 
to do what Jerusalem did not do.  So, today, do not say, “God forgives me, so 
now I can lie, cheat, steal, or hate.”  Today, do not say, “Of course I’m in.”  
Today, God calls you to recognize your sin, your weakness of faith, and trust 
in Jesus, once more.  

Trust, but you need not weep.  For Jesus draws near—not just to warn you in 
love—but to bring to you His Word of Peace.  Remember, it’s His peace, not 
yours; that makes all the difference!  For like Jerusalem, it’s not our sin 
that condemns us, but our unbelief.  Remember that God shows His power, above 
all, in showing mercy and compassion.  Remember, that’s why He gathers you here 
this morning. 

God calls you here to receive what He gives you in remembrance of Jesus.  That 
means we get to remember, not just 70 AD, but also 33 AD.  That was when Jesus 
visited Jerusalem, one last time, despite knowing what would happen to Him.  
The people, even children, greeted Him with “Hosannas.”  But behind all that 
fanfare, Jesus was weeping.  He knew that most of His Old-Covenant people would 
reject Him as the Messiah and refuse to live in the New Covenant that He would 
usher in.  

But even more took place in that year, in 33 AD.  That was the year that 
another Temple was destroyed.  That Temple was Jesus, the Temple of God in the 
Flesh.  Referring to Himself, Jesus said, “Destroy this Temple, and I will 
raise it again in three days” (John 2:19).  And destroy that Temple they did!

They surrounded Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, barricading Him in, with 
Judas, the betrayer, leading the way.  But those who surrounded Jesus were not 
only Jews but also Gentiles.  Pontius Pilate, Roman soldiers, and the rule of 
Rome all had their way with Jesus, doing what was convenient, instead of what 
was right.  

Even those who killed Jesus show us whom He came to save.  He came to save both 
Jew and Gentile; that’s everyone.  That means He died, not just for those who 
committed sins of convenience, but even for those who committed sins of willful 
intent.

So, there was God’s Temple, in the flesh, being demolished and suffering on a 
cross of death.  There, Jesus, as God’s incarnate Temple, housed all of your 
unbelief and sins, so they would die in His flesh on the cross, and be brought 
low in the tomb of death.  

Jesus was God’s Temple razed and torn down to become God’s Temple raised and 
lifted up.  He was raised to lift you out of death and fill you with the Holy 
Spirit.  When it comes to Christ, this prayer of St. Patrick describes every 
Christian: 

Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me.  Christ in me, Christ 
beneath me, Christ above me.  Christ on my right, Christ on my left, Christ 
when I lie down, Christ when I sit down.

Jesus drew near and wept, for Jerusalem didn’t want the peace that He gave.  
Today, He draws near to you, His New Jerusalem.  And for the faithful, wearing 
His robes of righteousness, His eyes brighten.  For you not only know the 
Source of true peace, Jesus, but you also know where He has promised to give it 
to you.  For where you receive Jesus, you receive the peace that He gives.  
They come together.

Jesus has scrubbed away your sin, making you shine in glowing splendor.  That 
was in Holy Baptism.  Jesus comes to cleanse you, not with a whip, like He 
cleansed the Temple of old, but by the nail scars in His hands.  That happens 
in Holy Absolution.  Jesus comes to you in His body and blood, so you can taste 
and see that God is good.  That takes place in His Holy Supper.  As the book of 
Hebrews tells us:

You have come to … the heavenly Jerusalem, to countless angels in joyful 
assembly, to the Church of the Firstborn, who names are written in heaven.  You 
have come to God, the judge of all, to the spirits of the righteous made 
perfect.  You have come to Jesus, the mediator of the New Covenant, and to the 
sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel. [Hebrews 
12:22-24]

Conclusion
As Jesus draws near to you, draw near to Him, receiving the peace that only He 
can give you.  Amen.
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