Showing posts with label 1 Thessalonians 3:9-13. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 Thessalonians 3:9-13. Show all posts

Sunday, November 28, 2021

The Birth of John the Baptist Foretold

 

Icon of the Deesis - St. Catherine's Monastery Sinai, 12th century


Our God reigns. Where does he reign? First of all, in the human heart. But it does not end there. It is more than that. Much more: The personal stories of the holy families of Old Testament and New begin personally, with old couples, young women, widows, children, but the implications are divine. 


Imagine Abraham and Sarah, wandering from Iraq across Syria into Palestine and down into Egypt then back into Palestine, all the time hoping the promise would be fulfilled, keeping the faith that someday she would have a child of her own, and they would settle down in the land of promise. 


Imagine their daughter-in-law Rebecca wanting a son, waiting for a child, hoping for that vindication after years of barrenness. And her daughter-in-law Rachel, in turn, in hopes of waiting. 


They each had hope fulfilled, holy promise kept. Isaac was born to Sarah, Jacob was born to Rebecca, and Rachel had her two sons, Joseph and Benjamin. They were not the last. 


Naomi returned from across the Jordan to her native village and her daughter-in-law bore a son so precious to her that people said, “Naomi had a son.” It was Jesse, whose descendant was David. (And from the house of David was to come the Messiah.)


Elkanah, a pious man, went to the temple to pray every year, and his wife Hannah went with him. But into her old age she too wanted and wept for lack of a son. In the temple she prayed and the priest discovered her. And God fulfilled her wish - her son was Samuel who became the prophet who anointed David. 


And then here at last, at the end of the old story and the beginning of the new, an elderly, pious, childless couple, faithful to the Lord, are blessed with a child. Like Hannah, Elizabeth feels vindicated: a weight has lifted. And her joy is more than personal: it is as if Israel had awaited vindication, a new hope, a promise of ages come true. 


The old stories, the old songs, the old promises: all these are brought into a new era.


They were scary times. The nation was divided into hostile camps. Compromisers, survivalists, puritanical rule-keepers, insurrectionists. Contention. Mistrust. Fear.


Sadducees were accommodationists, who cut a deal with Herod the Great, awarded rule of Palestine by Caesar Augustus the emperor across the sea. Essenes were separatists, who withdrew from society to keep themselves perfect and safe. Pharisees sought to redeem themselves through piety and purity, keeping the letter of the law and sometimes its spirit. Zealots were all for combat; they brought down the wrath of Rome on everybody’s head. 


And then there were those odd birds, the followers of -- hope. 


Hope. Built on an ancient promise. A series of minor miracles. Long stories long told. Of people who kept faith through dark times, who spoke gratitude when things changed. Whose children grew up with the knowledge of God, and found their way to faith in turn.


It was the beginning of the fulfillment of the promise of ages. It was not yet the new thing. It was at once both the last of the old and the first of the new. But it was not yet fully time. The new would come. And here was the son, and here the promise, here the proclamation. And hear the good news!


***


So we see that Zechariah and Elizabeth and John, like Abraham and Sarah and Isaac, like Rebecca and Isaac and Jacob, like Hannah and Elkanah and Samuel, saw the fulfillment of long held hopes and ancient expectations. And so the traditions and practices of Israel continued into their time. Of course there was a complication. The Romans.


Greg Woolf, historian of ancient Rome, refers to emperors as ‘embodied symbols’. Where the emperor was, the empire was too. But emperors could not be everywhere imperial presence was needed. In their stead, as Laura Hollengreen has taught me, the Romans put up, in their law courts, statues of empires, to represent the living symbol that was (as the saying goes) just a man. Statues then represented the presence of the emperor and the empire. 


We certainly did not want to see one in the Holy of Holies, or even in the sacred city. But they were there, in proxy, in the emperor’s good friend Herod, at the time of John’s birth.


The last of the prophets, the greatest of them, would herald not only the fulfillment of old promises, but the advent of a new era. And in this era the titles and claims of Messiah and of Son of David would come into clashing conflict with the “king of kings” and ‘son of God’ that the emperor styled himself to be.


We can learn from this as we reflect on our own times, when divided nations have factions that variously choose to accommodate or combat or influence or withdraw from the mixing of peoples and ideas and values that comes with a cosmopolitan society. We do not have the embodied presence of an emperor, or statues in his stead. What then do we have? What is the imperial hegemony, the dominant power structure, we swim in, like goldfish in a bowl?


Like the old fish in the joke, you may encounter young fish who do not even know they are swimming. 


But it’s there. Walter Wink wrote about the powers that be, the ‘principalities and powers’ of our time that William Stringfellow and James Wm. McClendon also warned against, who now inhabit our lives. 


We struggle against the unseen - or the unnamed - just as much as the Jews, Sadducees and Pharisees and Essenes and Zealots, did against the visible imperial foe of their time.


So John the Baptist when he came had a lot to do. He was the herald, the precursor. Prepare ye the way of the Lord! he cried. As the way through the desert welcomed their ancestors home from exile, as the dry land cleared the way on the exodus from Egypt, so now John would be the one to clear the way for the arrival of the long expected savior.


He would do it, as we know, through a symbol of his own: a cleansing immersion in the Jordan, the river that the people had crossed centuries before to reach the promised land.


Come out from the cities, into the wild country, come home to the places where God reigns. Not a threat or terror, but the place where God had led them before: as our service sometimes says, through the desert, past the parted waters, led day and night, to home.


That is what the herald of Messiah was calling them to do; he was calling the people again to be the people of God, and to get ready: the day was coming.


It will be a day of fear, of terror, and of obedience. But first and last it will be a day of joy.


The presence of the Lord! He is on the way: get ready. 


Prepare your hearts and make him room.


JRL+


The Birth of John the Baptist Foretold : Luke 1.5-25

Responsorial Canticle: Isaiah 40:1-5, 40:9; 60:1-3 (KJV)

Jeremiah 33:14-16

1 Thessalonians 3:9-13


Lutheran Church of the Foothills, Tucson. https://youtu.be/gF4Yeo-DFpQ

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Let The Day Begin

On a road in winter the sky is gray and cold. The ground is hard. Nothing seems to grow. The earth waits, for the quickening of the year, the coming of a new season.

You know when the fig tree sends out fresh young leaves that summer is near.

The signs of the times will be as sure as that when the day is near; the day of judgment, the day of the Lord, the day the kingdom of heaven comes – and the day of the deliverance of God's people.

Listen to what the Lord is saying:

"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 may think the end is coming when they feel some local disturbance. They may think their own troubles are the end of the world.

Then others may say,

“Ye think the rustic cackle of your bourg
the murmur of the world! What is it to me?”

*

And yet — the day will come. Jesus says,

"People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken" – stirred up.

"Then they will see 'the Son of Man coming in a cloud' with power and great glory."

This is just what the book of Daniel said would happen, on the day the Lord delivers Israel from its oppressors — Babylon, Rome, the empire of this world.

And Jesus says,

"Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near."

Hold your heads high — what looks like disaster to others is just a sign of the times to you. It means your deliverance, your vindication.

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."

Summer is a-coming in – you can see it, can't you, in the greening of the trees? – and so too you will see the beginning of the end foretold in these signs, and the promise of your deliverance coming into reality.

"So also," Jesus says, "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."

The generation that sees the signs of the time of the end will see it through to completion. The generation that sees the dawn approaching will see the morning light.

That's good news. And Jesus assures us,

"Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away."

Amidst all these tumults and trials, wars and persecutions, sorrows and joys, there is one thing to hold on to, there is only one thing you need: the words that will not pass away; the words of the Lord, the eternal Word.

When everything is shifting, like an earthquake,
and the pavement turns to sand, shifting beneath your feet,
turn to God – he alone is steadfast, his promise sure –
and he will guard you and see you through to the end.

Jesus warns us,

"Be on guard so that your hearts are not weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life, and that day catch you unexpectedly, like a trap."

Keep yourselves awake — live like people who know the day is approaching, not like creatures of the night.

Don't get mired down in doubletalk and dire warnings — be ready for the coming of the One who is sent to set you free.

When he comes, he calls his own. Be ready for the call.

Make sure you are sober and watchful and ready — don't get lost in the moment, in the distractions the world has to offer.

When he comes, he calls his own. Be ready for the call.

The things that bog you down, the things that bring you sorrow — these are real enough, but they will pass. Be of good courage and hold your head high.

When he comes, he calls to you. Be ready for the call.

Jesus says,

"For it will come upon all who live on the face of the whole earth."

These tidings shall be for all people. Everyone will see the coming of the glory of the Lord. And what seems like bad news, to some, will be glad tidings of peace on earth among all of good will.

The gospel warns us,

"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."

The first hearers of this gospel, the first generation of the church, knew how true its words could be.

In the year 70 the armies of Rome encircled Jerusalem and laid siege; it fell, and the Temple was destroyed. The foundation stones of the building alone were left — just one western, wailing wall.

All these things came to pass within a few years of Jesus' passing — no wonder his people expect the returning of their savior at any moment.

All these things are yet to come —
though they have happened already,
again and again in the history of the human race,
they are yet to come —

and what they mean,
what they portend —

is the necessity of the coming of the kingdom of God among us,
the kingdom that is the will of God
as it is in heaven,
to be so on earth as well,
to emerge among us.

As Christ embodied the Word of God into the world,
the love and compassion and forgiveness and mercy of the Father,

so we are to embody him,
carrying forward his work in the world,
bringing it to completion,

bringing the message of peace,
and reconciliation,

not only with our lips but in our lives,

to a hurting world,
a searching world,

a world that needs
as never before and always

the healing touch of its
Savior, its
Lord.

Holy God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy Immortal One,
Have mercy upon us.

Maranatha, come Lord Jesus!
Be among us —
and dwell within us,

that we may be your voice and your hands,
bringing your grace and glory into the world.

AMEN.



_______________
*(Tennyson, Idylls of the King, “Enid”, 1859)

Notes for a sermon to be given on
The First Sunday of Advent, 2009
St Alban's Episcopal Church, Edmonds, Wash.
JRL+