“Vipers? Yipes! ” (Luke 3:7-18)
Intro: Our New Testament lesson comes from Luke, in it we hear more from John the Baptist who is preparing the way for Jesus. Within Israel, the voice of the prophets had long been silent. Now comes one more prophet with a word for all. Let us listen to God’s Word as it comes to us. ////
There is a cartoon I’ve enjoyed for years. Frank Ernest cartons. There is one from a while back that shows Frank carrying a sandwich sign which said on one side “repent!” in capital letters and then on the back it said “please disregard this notice if you have already repented.” Repenting has a bad name, I fear. In an earlier sermon I asked you all to imagine how fast a Christmas party would clear out if you started talking about people’s thoughts about the second advent of Jesus. Imagine doing a John the Baptist imitation and start hollering “Repent! Repenting is about changing, and John is saying we need to change if Christ is going to enter our lives.
All four gospels lead us to deal with John the Baptist—and the lectionary brings his story to us each year in December—when the rest of the world is getting ready for celebration. John comes to us to confront us, to afflict us, to discomfort us and to remind us that most of our preparations for Christmas don’t prepare us for Christ at all. Luke’s version of the John story begins by placing this moment in history
I have often thought that John the Baptist is misnamed. I think we should call him John the Wild Man, because he was well, wild. His message was one that said again and again , “Repent. “ John was a wild man and his preaching was full of challenge and confrontation. One might say that John was one of the grouchiest preachers that ever lived. I would be grouchy too if my tailor used camel’s hair-and I lunched on locusts. It would be enough to make anyone grouchy. He was on a mission and we might well wonder who would want to listen to him? But, surprisingly, the people of John’s time flocked to hear this confrontational message because they had hopes for a word that things could be different, they longed to hear a promise that things will be change.
John called people to prepare for the coming of the Messiah, the coming of the great king, the coming of the king that was to be like the king that Isaiah dreamed of. So when John the Baptist said, “Repent, “ he did not just mean for them to be sorry for the things they had done wrong. What he meant was for them to change their ways, quit doing the wrongs of the past, so that the highways could be built to welcome the Messianic king.
The general crowds ask, “If the Messiah is coming, what must we do?” John says, “If you have two coats, share with the person who has none, and do the same with your food.”
Then the tax collectors came up. They wanted to be baptized and get ready for the Messiah, so they said, “What should we do?” “Don’t collect any more than the amount prescribed for you.” That is, live modestly and don’t exploit your neighbors for financial gain.
Then some soldiers came “What must we do?” John stared them down and said, “Don’t shake down any money from these people by threat or accusation, and be satisfied with the money you have.”
What should we do? Sometimes to “repent” or go in a new direction means to stop doing one thing, and start doing another.
There is a wonderful story told of a family whose family life was disrupted
by the Second World War. A young man went off to fight in the war and a few months after he left, his wife gave birth to their son, a son who was not to see his father for nearly four years. During those years the mother taught the son to say his prayers each night and then after his prayers he would rise from the side of his bed and go over to the little table where there was a
photograph of his father. He would kiss his father’s photograph and then go to bed.
The day finally came when the war was over and the father came home. That first night mother and father went together to tuck the little boy into bed. He said his prayers and when they were done, his mother said, “Now, kiss your father goodnight and get into bed. “ The little boy jumps up from his knees and goes over to the table and kisses the picture and then goes to bed as his father waits with empty, open arms. The little boy had something to learn. The little boy had some ways that were going to have to change if he were to enjoy the new reality which was the presence of a loving parent that he had never known. Learning and repenting. Learning and being different. Learning and changing our ways. That’s what John is saying to us.
There is joy in this season—or at least the promise and possibility of joy—because, according to the Scriptures, the Christ whose compassion and justice judges us is also the Christ whose living spirit can change us and save us. “Fear not,” said the angel, “I bring we good tidings of great joy which shall be to all the people, for unto we is born this day in the city of David a Savior who is Christ the Lord.”
One thing is pretty obvious. We are not going to experience salvation if we feel no need to be saved. Another way of saying that is this: If we are not conscious of the somber side of Christmas, of the darkness in our own heart, in our own attitudes, in our own words and behavior, in our own country and in the world at large, we cannot know anything of the joyful side of Christmas, the possibility of becoming a more compassionate, more caring, more gentle, more generous, more loving people. Oh, we can have a Christmas that is more fun than the routine times of the year, that has more excitement in it because of the enjoyable family and social events and church and community things which we all enjoy; but we will not know anything about the real inward joy which this season holds within it until we confront and confess our own contribution to the darkness of life and then pray earnestly
There is great tension these days within the Christian world about many
things, but nothing is more troubling than the theological tension between grace and law, between acceptance and judgment, between God as Lover and God as Judge. How can judgment and grace co-exist in the same place? it is—a very good question. It underlines the discomfort we all have with these John the Baptist stories. If God comes freely and graciously for all of us in the full humanity of Jesus, if God is born in us whether we deserve it or not—how come we have to do something in order to receive it? How come we have to repent in order to be forgiven? How come we have to change in order to receive God? What right does John—or anyone for that matter—have to judge us, to criticize us, to assume that we aren’t okay just the way we are? Well, the answer is, John shouldn’t and he doesn’t.
The words of John the Baptist are not words of criticism. They are words of choice. John is not judging our worth; he is inviting our wholeness. He is not criticizing our past; he is offering our future. John is communicating the paradox of our faith, that the free and lavish grace of God makes no difference unless we are accountable.
The unconditional love of God cannot find fertile soil unless we first uproot
the weeds in the wilderness of our souls. God does not judge us. John does
not judge us. Nor are we to judge each other. But the truth of the gospel is
that we must judge ourselves—we must face the truth of who we are and claim the hope of who we want to become. After we judge ourselves, after we honor this call to accountability, then we can receive God, as God recreates us. This is the work of Advent. This is the work of preparation. This is the work of repentance. This is the work of turning around to face the direction of God. What is the result? We will see like never before how God is one with us. Amen.