Well nothing screams Christmas cheer
like John the Baptist yelling,
"You Brood of Vipers!"
But here we are.
It is the second week of Advent
and there is a myriad of Advent voices crying out –
Isaiah’s prophesy that a branch will spring forth,
the Psalms’ rejoicing
at the coming of a defender for the earth,
the reminder from Paul
that Christ has shown us the way,
and the warning of John to bear fruit
These voices all remind us
that in this season
the church stretches back
to encompass the joy of Jesus in the manger
and stretches forward
in the anticipation of God’s return
to judge the living and the dead.
And with this stretching
there is a range of emotions.
joy and peace,
hope and love,
fear and curiosity,
all wrapped up in the few short weeks of Advent.
And the voices of those crying out will not let us forget.
In today’s gospel
John the Baptist is not only preparing the way of the Lord
by baptizing people
and calling them to know God,
but he is also calling them to attention – to focus.
As the crowds gather
to hear John’s message and be baptized,
some Pharisees and Sadducees
come to see what this wild man in fur is yelling about.
They are immediately confronted by John’s sharp words,
accusing them of fleeing judgment,
warning them of the coming reckoning
for those who do not bear fruit.
This story seems out of place
on the week of Advent known for peace.
Should I fear the coming of the Lord?
Have I been bearing enough fruit?
What does the judgment of the Lord look like,
feel like,
sound like?
Quickly
our hearts and our minds race,
filing through a rolodex
of all the times we’ve attended church,
served our neighbors,
prayed,
given out of love.
But then this inventory
of all the good we’ve done
is quickly overridden
by the times when we’ve done just the opposite ...
times we chose sitting in a bass boat
over sitting in a pew,
times when we have rolled up our window
and avoided eye contact,
pretending we didn’t read the cardboard sign
or see the child of God behind it;
times when we could have,
should have,
been more generous,
kind,
gentle,
loving,
patient,
honest,
more Christlike.
Suddenly,
John’s words
and the season of Advent
lose all sense of peace,
leaving us more with a sort of nauseous anxiety,
if not a dreadful fear,
that the coming of the Lord
will burn us up
like so much chaff.
John warns that those who do not bear fruit
will be cut down like fruitless trees,
those who do not repent
will be winnowed away
and these felled trees
and winnowed chaff
will be thrown into the flames
of an unquenchable fire.
How can the love of God
come down in the incarnation of Jesus
and the fearful expectation of judgment
co-exist in this single season of Advent?
How does one have peace
and tremble in fear at the same time?
Although these Advent voices cry out in warning,
it is in their cries
that we also hear the good news this day!
While we may fear God’s return and judgment,
it is exactly this return
that offers us real peace
in a world weary with pain and suffering,
death and destruction,
turmoil and hopelessness.
The return of God in Christ
is the very thing that will liberate us.
God’s return offers the same hope,
peace,
joy,
and love
that Jesus brought with him
in over 2,000 years ago.
These Advent voices
calling for us to straighten up,
to walk in the way of the Lord,
carry with them words of promise
that God’s love is a burning fire,
a fire that burns but does not consume.—
The same God who led the people by fire at night,
who met Moses in a burning bush,
the God Isaiah promises journeys with us through the fire,
the God that comes with wind and flame at Pentecost
is the same God whose love freed God’s people from slavery,
who called Moses to come near,
who calmed Israel’s fears and concurred their foes,
who lighted on Jesus like a dove at his own baptism
and stirred apostles and martyrs
to live in peace with one another,
sharing all things in common
and having no need among them.
And the good news of Advent
is that it is the same God
who meets our repentance
with the soft words of absolution.
It is the same God of unquenchable
and unconsuming fire
that judges us in baptism.
It is the same God of winnowing
and threshing
that is able to make peace between carnivores
and beasts of prey,
to satisfy a lion and an ox with straw.
This Advent judgment is a message of peace
because the judgment of God
comes as a reconciling mercy.
Beloved,
While the chaff of you may be burned with unquenchable fire
The kernel of you is gathered into God’s storehouse,
Stored up to feed the hungry,
To bring good news,
To offer hope, peace, joy, and love,
As we partner with God
Whose steadfast love makes all things new!
So, Come, O Come, Emmanuel!
Amen!