The Eagle and the Courtyard — When Memory Saves the Temple cover art

The Eagle and the Courtyard — When Memory Saves the Temple

The Eagle and the Courtyard — When Memory Saves the Temple

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Sunday Study — “The Eagle in the Courtyard: When Memory Saves the Temple”

Series/Context: Jeremiah 26 • Parashat Ha’azinu (Deut 32) echoes • AME Zion cadence

Before God sends a sword, He sends a sermon. Prophetic memory—the discipline of remembering God’s word and works—preserves a people from repeating their sin.

Scriptures Featured

  • Psalm of the Day (sung): David’s Song of Praise2 Samuel 22:1–7, 17–20, 29–31
  • Prophetic Focus: Jeremiah 26:1–19, emphasis vv. 12–15 (“Do not omit a word”)
  • Torah Anchor (Song of Moses): Deuteronomy 32:7–12 (remembering; eagle imagery)
  • Cross-reference recalled by elders: Micah 3:12 (Zion plowed like a field)

Title line used in teaching: The Eagle in the Courtyard—When Memory Saves the Temple. Then & Now:

  • Then: Early reign of Jehoiakim. God sends a sermon, not a sword. Jeremiah stands in the courtyard where prayer and profit mix and warns: Temple ≠ Righteousness.
  • Now: “Courtyard age”—news trembles, wars flare, leaders wobble, shutdown threats, healthcare anxiety. God still hovers; His wings spread in warning and mercy. Will we hear the sermon before the sword?

Core Movements (PARDES + Chiastic Highlights)

P (Peshat — plain sense)

  • Jer 26: God commands Jeremiah: Stand, speak, omit not a word. If Judah repents, God relents.
  • Crisis scene: Priests/prophets demand death; elders remember Micah, de-escalate, and judgment is averted.
  • Deut 32: Command to remember days of old; God guards like an eagle, carries Israel on pinions.

R (Remez — hints)

  • Do not omit a word” (Jer 26:2) ↔ “Do not add or subtract” (Deut pattern). The song Moses sings becomes history Jeremiah lives.
  • Courtyard = place where worship and commerce mix; test of integrity.

D (Drash — homiletic)

  • Leadership burden: Be okay being the least popular when truth is required. Don’t tape over the check-engine light.
  • Prophetic memory: The miracle is not only Jeremiah speaking—it’s elders remembering Micah. Memory becomes mercy.

S (Sod — deep/mystical)

  • Wrath in Hebrew: ’af (nose/breath), ḥēmāh (heat). Wrath is refining heat, the hot breath of love that protects mercy and restores order. God’s heat = transformation, not annihilation.

Micro-Chiasm in the passage (teaching centerpiece)

A Word given → B Warning declared → C People threaten prophet → B′ Elders recall earlier warning (Micah) → A′ Word remembered preserves life

Prayer & Benediction

Seal: “May memory become our mercy, obedience our offering, and justice our song. Amen.”

Music Suggestions (from today’s flow)

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.