Saturday, December 5, 2015

John the Baptist




A colleague recently concluded that most charitable donations arrive in December because charities get busier asking for money. The last month of the year is the busiest for charities and businesses. In fact, December is the busiest month for everyone. After Thanksgiving, we get busy preparing for Christmas. Before you get too busy, I ask you to take time to enjoy Advent. In order to enjoy Advent, heed three words of advice – Wait, Word and Work.
Wait. Advent marks the beginning of the church year. The word ‘advent’ is from two Latin words: ad, meaning "to" and venire meaning “come.” Advent focuses on Christ's coming to us in the flesh; however, His coming manifests itself among us in three ways – past, present and future.
In the past, Christ came to us in the flesh, an infant who grew to a man. In the present, he comes to us in Word and Sacrament. In the future, he will come again in glory.
On the first two Sundays of Advent, we focus on Christ’s Second Coming. On the third and fourth Sundays, we focus on Jesus’ birth. Advent ends when we gather for evening service on December 24. Only then does the Christmas season begin.
Christ’s coming evokes urgent excitement for the believer. We wait on tiptoe of expectation. We sense His presence is near. We sense His presence is here. Each day brings us closer to the reason for our waiting, the reason for our being.
This will help you understand what I mean about waiting. In January 2014, our daughter-in-law gave birth to our first grandchild. My wife, Cindy, and I were so excited that on the day we left to see her, we could not sleep, and left two hours ahead of schedule. Good news stimulates excitement.
As a Christian, are you excited as you wait for the liturgical celebration of Christ’s coming and the final celebration of His return? Are you excited about His presence here and now as He comforts and challenges you in Sacrament and Word?
God comforts and challenges you in Sacrament and Word. Hence, we move from Wait to Word, my second point.
In today’s reading, Luke included many pastoral preoccupations and literary themes important to Christians of the 9th decade. While chapter three introduced readers to John the Baptist, he is not Luke’s main concern. Luke’s focus is Jesus’ divine mission in relation to John’s message – the word he proclaimed. “Word” was a significant term for the proclamation of the Gospel’s events,[1] and Luke showed that the Word came to John politically, religiously, chronologically and geographically.[2] In verse 2, we read, “the word of God came to John the son of Zechariah in the wilderness.”[3] “The word of God came to John” is the main clause of the sentence.
The word of God that came to John, he proclaimed to the people who followed him into the wilderness. Geographically, the desert wilderness, far from the political and religious centers of power, recalled Israel’s formation as God’s covenant people and their return to God. As a place and a theme, the desert wilderness was an appropriate setting for repentance.
The wilderness served John well in his call as one of the old style prophets, but the content of his preaching placed him in the new.[4] For Luke, “to preach,” meant to proclaim or declare that a new era of salvation was present and active through John the Baptist or Jesus or the disciples.[5] John’s preaching extended beyond Pharisees and Sadducees to all people seeking to escape God’s wrath like snakes scurrying before a fire.
In addition to his fiery preaching, John’s baptism was a ministry of preparing the way of the Lord, making hearts ready for the one soon to come “who is mightier than I.”[6] A baptism of repentance was an abandonment of the old way of life and a conversion that included faith that the era of salvation was dawning.[7]
His ministry was a continuation of salvation history, the tradition of how God dealt with His covenant people.[8] By recalling Isaiah and Elijah, Luke showed that God’s embrace of all nations was not a new theme but one embedded in the tradition all along.[9] As the Gospel made its way in the world, it interacted within the world’s political and religious arenas. From its expansion from Jerusalem to Rome, the Gospel encountered not only the poor, lame and blind, but also high priests, imperial guards, governors and the emperor himself. In this sense, Luke’s universality is geographical, social, political and economic.[10]
People responded to John’s call to repent and prepare the way for the Christ. Unfortunately, some responded by appealing to a physical relationship to Abraham. John retorted that this was an ineffectual effort to escape God’s wrath. Every tree that did not bear good fruit, that is, the fruit of repentance, would be cut down and thrown into the fire. A true son of Abraham bore the fruit of repentance. Human origins were of no consequence. What mattered was that one respond to the life that God brought forth through the Holy Spirit.[11]
John offered practical advice to members of three groups – crowds, tax collectors and soldiers – who asked him, “What should we do?” The advice in each case is a central Lukan concern: nothing so hinders relationship to God, dehumanizes human beings and ruins life in community as attachment to wealth and possessions. To accept and live in the hospitality of God always means detachment to things.[12]
John’s answers addressed the injustices and inequities of that society. His words echoed Luke’s convictions about the social implications of the gospel.[13] The Church built these social and economic concerns into its common life. We read in the second and fourth chapters of Acts how all who believed lived together and held all things in common. John answered their question. People who had food and clothing shared with people who had none. Taxes were not to be calculated according to the greed of the people in power. The military were to cease victimizing occupied peasants with threats and intimidation.
John’s baptism turned people to the Lord and set them in motion on the way of the Lord, a journey by grace and a way of new life, so that when holiness arrived in the person of Jesus Christ, they would be prepared to meet him.
Repentance expressed itself in daily life. Each instruction from John dealt with people’s attachments to things in this world. Repentance and baptism for the forgiveness of sins is Good News. Our Gospel reminds us that not only is repentance an appropriate spirit during Advent but also that the way to Christ leads through the wilderness where John is preaching.
Now, in the spirit of Advent, I ask, “What then shall we do?” Or in the spirit of Luther, I ask “What does this mean?” What does it mean to move from the Word to Work, my final W?
One of my pleasures in ministry has been visiting the elderly and infirmed in homes, hospitals or institutions. I close my visits by reminding them that the Lord has not released of their most important ministry – the ministry of prayer.
The Christian life is prayer and action, worship of God and love of neighbor. In Matthew, Jesus repeatedly said, “Learn the meaning of this phrase, ‘It is mercy, I desire, not sacrifice.’” … I learn and live mercy through meditation, a life of prayer. A Christian without an active daily prayer life is like a candy cane without stripes.
Petitionary prayer is important, but there are other forms of prayer – thanksgiving, repentance, adoration and praise. Bible phrases tell us that praying to God can include “call upon,” “intercede with,” “meditate on,” “consult,” “cry out to,” “draw near to,” “rejoice in” and “seek the face of.”[14]
For me an active prayer life includes these forms as well as meditation and contemplation; however, the mere mention of meditation and contemplation unnerves some Christians. Some pastors rail against meditation and contemplation, while others promote them. I suggest one never engage in any prayer or practice that leads away from Christ.[15]
For me meditating on Scripture is simply having a conversation with God. Since God is wise and merciful, I sit silently and wait for God to speak. Meditation is that simple. I wait for God to speak a word.
In his Simple Way to Pray, after prescribing an organized method of meditating, Martin Luther wrote, “If in the midst of such thoughts the Holy Spirit begins to preach in your heart with rich, enlightening thoughts, honor him by letting go of this written scheme; be still and listen to him. Remember what he says. Note it well and you will behold wondrous things in the law of God.”[16]
In Meditation on Christ’s Passion, Luther wrote, “We say without hesitation that he who contemplates God’s sufferings for a day, an hour, yes, only a quarter of an hour, does better than to fast a whole year, pray a psalm daily, [or] hear a hundred masses. This meditation changes man’s being and, almost like baptism, gives him a new birth.”[17]
Meditation, almost like baptism, gives us new birth. In short, Luther encouraged meditation as a way to deepen our understanding and appreciation of God’s Word. Meditation relates well to our Gospel in that worship at the Temple was replaced by worship through the new place of God’s dwelling, the Christ.[18]
As Christians, we are not promised exemption from suffering, trial or even death for the sake of the gospel. As Christians, we live in between the time of Christ’s coming in the flesh and his glorious coming, but we do not know when he will return. The Christian, like a waiting doorkeeper, is never off duty.[19] We must live mercifully and pray actively.
I close by asking you to check your calendar. Between now and Christmas, how many parties will you attend? How many school functions and Christmas pageants? When will you find time to mail cards and wrap gifts? Will you be so busy that you sneak away from the office early?
My point is that in the busyness of the season, we are easily distracted. We lose the sense of wonder and contemplation, unable to read the signs of the times because of our distractedness. Distractedness is spiritual laziness that manifests itself as busyness. It is a way of not paying attention to oneself or the needs of others or the voice of God because we are so busy doing nothing important – shopping for bargains and checking our smartphones, catching up on small talk and on social media, attending parties and festivities.
If you do not know how to pray, use Portals of Prayer. Each day there is a Scripture passage and a meditation. As we begin our second week of Advent, I ask you to do one thing – pray daily – so that when the Day of the Lord comes, He may find you waiting, working and in the Word. And as you pray, may the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.[20]


[1] Arthur A. Just, Jr., Luke 1:1 – 9:50. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House (1996), 148.
[2] Eugene LaVerdiere, Luke. Wilmington, DE: Michael Glazier, Inc. (1986), 47.
[3] Luke 3:2
[4] Just, 148.
[5] Just, 149. See Luke 3:3
[6] Fred B. Craddock, Luke. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press (2009), 47. Luke 3:16.
[7] Just, 149.
[8] Craddock, 47.
[9] Craddock, 48.
[10] Craddock, 47.
[11] LaVerdiere, 49
[12] Brendan Byrne, The Hospitality of God: A Reading of Luke’s Gospel. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press (2000), 40.
[13] Craddock, 48.
[14] Margaret Dorgan, “Prayer,” HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism, ed. Richard McBrien. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco (1995), 1037.
[15] http://www.lcms.org/faqs/lcmsviews#yoga
[16] http://www.se.lcms.org/uploads/simple_way_pray_luther.pdf
[17] Paragraph 10 -  http://www.lutheranmissiology.org/Luther%20Meditate%20Passion%20of%20Christ.pdf
[18] LaVerdiere, 207
[19] R. T. France, The Gospel of Mark: A Commentary on the Greek Text. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company (2002), 546.

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