Advent

The Ones We're Waiting For

Luke 3:7-18

John said to the crowds who came out to be baptized by him, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee the wrath to come? Bear fruits worthy of repentance. Do not begin to say about yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our ancestor.’ For I tell you that from these stones God could raise up children to Abraham. Even now the axe is lying at the root of the tree. And every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire.”

The crowds asked him, “Then what shall we do?” In reply, John said to them, “If anyone among you has two coats, you should give one away to someone who has none. If any among you has food, you should do likewise.” Even some tax collectors came to be baptized and they said to him, “What should we do?” John said to them, “Do not collect more than has been prescribed for you.” Some soldiers also came and asked him, “And we, what should we do?” He said to them, “Do not extort money from anyone by threats for false accusation, and be satisfied with your wages.”

While the crowds were filled with expectation and wondering in their hearts if John was the Messiah, he answered them all saying, “I baptized you with water. There is one who is more powerful than I coming after me. I am not worthy to untie the thong of his sandal. He will baptize with the holy spirit and with fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his granary, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.”

With these and many other exhortations, John proclaimed the good news to all the people.


I heard from a few of you, after last week’s sermon, that I seemed angry while I was preaching. I was a little surprised and self-conscious about that … concerned about how it might come off to people who don’t know me well. So I was glad to see that we got some more from John the Baptist this week – and that he was calling people names, yelling about the wrath to come, railing about threshing floors and unquenchable fire. I feel like that makes whatever I was up to seem justified, and tame, by comparison.

And, on top of that, after calling the crowd coming to be baptized a “brood of vipers,” after threats of being cut down and burned up like trees, after talk of being baptized by the holy spirit and with fire, and after announcing that Jesus, wielding his winnowing fork, was about to “clear his threshing floor” and “separate the wheat from the chaff,” we’re supposed to believe people heard all of it as good news?!

It doesn’t sound like good news to me. John, the Baptist, seems angry. And, on the Third Sunday of Advent it certainly doesn’t feel like Christmas.

But the truth is, John didn’t have Christmas on the brain and wasn’t feeling the holiday spirit in those days by the river, when he was baptizing people and waiting for Jesus to meet him out there in the wilderness. It’s important to remember, what we just heard takes place years after Jesus was born in Bethlehem. These were days just before the beginning of Jesus’ ministry, when he was already grown, about to show the world that the kingdom of God had come near and that he was the Way and the Truth and the Life of it all.

And John the Baptist was tired of waiting. Again, not waiting for Christmas to come, like so many of us may feel right about now. And not just waiting for Jesus, really, either.

No, John seems to be tired of waiting on the people – all those people, coming to be baptized – all those men and women and children, presumably. All those tax collectors, soldiers and strangers, too, who made their way into the wilderness hungry for a different kind of teaching, longing for a deeper spirituality, searching for a new way of being in the world that John’s baptism and this Messiah they were hoping for promised them. And John seems tired of waiting for them to get it, to grasp it, and to be changed by this promise he was offering … and that Jesus came to deliver.

Have you ever waited for someone to change something in their own life, for their own good? Like an alcoholic who can’t get sober… Like a drug addict who can’t kick the habit… Like a loved-one with an eating disorder, maybe… Like a friend who won’t leave a bad or even abusive relationship… Or, like a kid who just won’t do what they could or should do to get their grades up or try something new or make better choices…

I imagine that’s how John felt, down by the river. Not as furious as he was frustrated; Not so much mad as he was discouraged; Not as angry as he was exasperated; Not so much pissed-off as he was pleading with God’s people to do something new, and better, and different for a change.

Because that’s what “repentance” means, remember: to turn, to change, to be changed. John wanted people to stop making excuses. To stop denying responsibilities. To grab hold of what a journey of faith could mean – not just for those who engaged it – but for the world they were meant to engage because of it. Which is why I think John still has something to say to you and me.

Because, what gets my attention about this passage every time is when John tells the people, “from these stones God could raise up children to Abraham.” What John knows is that some of the Jews in his day were resting on their laurels as descendants of all those Old Testament Jews we know about. They seemed to have been under the impression that, since they had Abraham in their family tree, that this faith-walking, repentance and life-changing stuff, didn’t really apply to them. That maybe they had an “in” with God because of who they were as a people.

So, when John says, “from these stones, God could raise up children to Abraham,” he’s basically saying, “get over yourselves and get busy.” “If God just wanted descendants of Abraham; if God just wanted religious people by name or ethnicity or heritage, God could bring them back from the dead or just mix up a batch of new ones from the stones at your feet.”

“From these stones God could raise up children to Abraham.”

But, just like those crowds of tax collectors and soldiers and curious souls of every stripe, being baptized by John way back when, we are descendants of Abraham, you and I. And we have work to do, you and I, not because we HAVE TO, but because WE GET TO. And like the saying goes, I think John is saying to us – just as he was saying to the crowds way back when – “we are the ones we are waiting for.”

We forget it sometimes – when we rest on our laurels or when our despair gets the best of us or when the world convinces us we can’t, or shouldn’t, or that it’s not our place – but we are the ones we are waiting for to make a change in and for the sake of this world, precisely because we are descendants of Abraham and children of God; blessed in so many ways to be a blessing in so many ways.

We are the ones we are waiting for, to do something about gun violence in this country.

We are the ones we are waiting for to do something about this pandemic, whenever and wherever and however we are able.

We are the ones we are waiting for to do something about everything I mentioned last week – racism, sexism, homophobia, and poverty, too.

We are the ones we are waiting for, you and I, to give thanks for the grace that belongs to us because we belong to God – and we’re the ones called to share that same grace with the world however we’re able.

And I think sometimes it takes a child to remind us of that – a child, in a manger, wrapped in swaddling clothes and headed for Calvary. A child who looks like the crowds gathered at the riverside with John… a child who looks like us, still waiting for so much to change… a child who looks like the “we” we’ve been waiting for.

So, let’s be changed, you and I, by the kind of repentance John calls us to and the kind of repentance God desires; the kind of repentance that matters; the kind of repentance that would make God smile.

Let’s ask different questions and seek better answers and let’s keep longing for a better way. And let’s let this child who comes, in Jesus, turn us around in real, meaningful, evident ways that haven’t happened yet – but that can and will happen, when we let the grace of God, at Christmas, have its way with us every moment of every day that we’re blessed to live and move and breathe in and for the sake of this world.

Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.

Just Keep Driving

Luke 21:25-36

“There will be signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars, and on the earth distress among nations confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves. People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken. Then they will see, ‘the Son of Man coming in a cloud’ with power and great glory. Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.”

Then he told them a parable: “Look at the fig tree and all the trees; as soon as they sprout leaves you can see for yourselves and know that summer is already near. So also, when you see these things taking place, you know that the kingdom of God is near. Truly I tell you, this generation will not pass away until all things have taken place. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.

“Be on guard so that your hearts are not weighed down by dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life, and that day does not catch you unexpectedly, like a trap. For it will come upon all who live on the face of the whole earth. Be alert at all times, praying that you may have the strength to escape all these things that will take place, and to stand before the Son of Man.”


A couple of weeks ago, on our way to Ohio for a football game and a college visit, the boys and I took a little detour. After sitting for a while in some stopped and slow-moving traffic on I-70, in the dark, close to midnight, sandwiched between semis and seeing no end in sight, I decided to get off at the next exit ramp, turn on my GPS, and hit the country roads – just to keep moving – until we could find our way back to the interstate, hopefully somewhere up beyond the traffic jam.

Thankfully, as you know, detours these days, with cell phones and Global Positioning Satellites, aren’t what they used to be. We just hopped off the east-bound interstate and kept driving – for a few minutes – until the navigator stopped trying to turn us around, to re-route us, as they are inclined to do, back to the route we were following in the first place.

In other words, we had to get far enough off-track, far enough away from our original route – lost enough, if you will – before our GPS would begin to send us in a new direction and onto a different path toward our destination.

This made me think of Jesus’s words this morning, because I think it’s more than a little bit of what the season of Advent is supposed to be for us as Children of God, waiting on the coming of our salvation, in Jesus, at Christmas.

These Advent days are meant to be a season of darkness; of searching; of lost-ness; of longing; of admitting and experiencing the fullness of our need for direction, our need for salvation, our need for redemption at the hands of God in Jesus.

This morning, we hear Jesus say some pretty ominous thing. “There will be signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars.” He says there will be “distress among confused nations.” He says there will be “fainting from fear and foreboding” about all that’s coming upon the world. And he says that the powers of the heavens will be shaken. It sounds scary…and like a mess…and about as lost or afraid as we might ever expect to be. And Jesus’ words seem particularly on point this time around, it seems to me.

I don’t know what the signs in the sun, the moon, or the stars might be trying to spell out, exactly, but I know NASA launched a rocket into outer space just this past Wednesday, to practice nudging an asteroid enough to change its trajectory in case we ever have to do that in the future to save our planet from an errant celestial body.

And when I think about “distressed nations, confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves,” I think about climate scientists warning that if we don’t do something to maintain or limit or lower the temperature of the planet that, among so many other things, there are islands and coastal cities and whole hosts of living things in danger of destruction when/if “the roaring of the sea and the waves” really does overtake them.

And, as a new COVID variant does its thing, there is fainting and fear and foreboding, for sure, about however it might threaten whatever progress we’ve made where the pandemic is concerned.

And with all of that in mind, Jesus gives us this strange little parable about the trees: “As soon as they sprout leaves,” he promises, “you can see for yourselves and know that summer is already near. So also, when you see these things taking place, you know that the kingdom of God is near.”

Another way to say it might be, “when you see these things take place…” “when you’re just about as lost as you think you could be…” “when it’s just about as bad as you imagine it could get…” “when there is distress and fear and fainting and foreboding … new leaves and new life are on the way.” Or, maybe, “You’re lost, but keep driving, because your redemption is drawing near and it might be just up around the next bend.”

See, it’s tempting to – and lots of people do – use this passage to make predictions about the end of times, but I’ve never wanted to go there. I take comfort in the other Gospels where Jesus explains that “neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son” – not even Jesus, himself – but only the Father knows if or how or when all of this “end times” stuff will come to pass. (He says as much in both Matthew’s Gospel and in Mark’s, too, along with very similar language about ‘this generation not passing away’ … ‘heaven and earth passing away,’ but not his words … and all the rest.)

Anyway, I’ve always figured that, if the angels and Jesus can’t make any guesses about all of that, then I surely don’t have to bother – and probably shouldn’t. And I’m suspicious of anyone who does.

So, when Jesus talked about the signs that would come; about the powers that would be shaken; about the fear and foreboding and distress among the nations; I don’t believe he was pretending to look into his crystal ball. Otherwise, I kind of, sort of believe the Son of God would have made a little more accurate of a prediction.

No, rather than predict the future, I believe Jesus’ words are meant to inspire the present. Jesus isn’t predicting destruction down the road, he’s promising salvation now. While it seems Jesus might be reporting the evening news for any given time and place, he’s really proclaiming hope for the ages. And he’s not one to pull punches or sugar-coat the reality of what swirls around us as his followers; as people on the planet; as children of God.

Wars rage. People starve. Children are abused. Injustice wins. There is cancer and Parkinson’s Disease and Alzheimer’s and more.

So, no matter how hard we plan, pretend, or pray, signs are everywhere of our need for grace, mercy, peace and salvation – from somewhere and someone more powerful than ourselves. This is the news we’re called to attend to on this first Sunday of Advent. It’s not meant simply to sadden us. It’s not meant to scare us. And it’s not meant to send us reeling into the darkness, either.

It’s meant to encourage us to keep driving; to acknowledge how lost we can be so much of the time but to not fear that lost-ness – to not let the darkness get the best of us.

I think we’re meant to keep driving because there is a new way coming; a different path is still waiting to be travelled; a light shines into this darkness and we won’t be able to miss it, if we’re paying attention.

I think we’re meant to keep driving – because God isn’t afraid of however broken or scared or lost or alone we might be from one moment to the next. In fact, I think God does God’s best work with what’s most broken, scared, lost or dying in our midst.

So, let’s let these Advent days be a reminder of and practice for us to hope and to wait with patience when we can find it – to stand up and raise our heads, even – to keep driving, no matter how lost we feel, and to trust that our redemption is always near, especially when we need it most.

Amen