Earlier this year,
I arrived at the church on a Sunday morning
to find one of those yellow signs
that say,
“Jesus is coming
REPENT”
had been posted on one of the power poles
at the entrance to our parking lot.
I stopped my car to remove it
and had to find a stick to knock it down,
because it had been posted
roughly 10 feet off the ground.
I was a little annoyed,
but grateful I was able to remove it
relatively easily.
I parked,
gathered my things,
and proceeded to the office door.
A tiny replica of the sign
had been affixed to the glass of the office door,
a vinyl decal,
like a small sticker.
Removing this one
took a little more effort.
A little later,
as I passed through the Narthex,
I found two more of them
had been stuck to the glass of our front doors.
Now I knew what this was.
The power pole at the entrance to our property
was not a convenient place
for a bit of guerilla evangelism,
it was a warning to the community
about us,
and a warning to us.
God is coming back to judge the world
and these passive aggressive,
self-styled “evangelists”
wanted to call our congregation
and the community around us
to repentance
before it was too late.
Our epistle reading from 2 Peter,
at first blush,
strikes a similar tone.
The only thing keeping God from coming
with earth-melting vengeance
is God’s own patience with us
and their desire that none should perish.
We often think of the second coming
as a cataclysm,
as the end of days.
Wild-eyed street preachers
and televangelists
have been warning us for the last two centuries
that our sin
has so offended the righteousness and justice of God
that it is only by the sacrifice of Jesus
that God has made a way for us to be saved
from the coming destruction of the whole world
and everything in it.
We are,
to quote Jonathan Edwards,
sinners in the hands of an angry God.
Within our American Christian circles,
this imagery as so captured our imaginations
and terrified our hearts,
that we gloss over the words of the prophet,
“Comfort my people,
says your God.
Speak tenderly to Jerusalem
and cry to her
that she has served her term,
that her penalty is paid,
that she has received from the Lord’s hand
double for all her sins.”
We don’t hear the words of John the Baptist
crying out in the wilderness,
proclaiming a message of repentance,
as making a promise of peace,
but as a threat;
as though his message were,
“be baptized, or else!”
And in response,
many of us have gotten busy
trying to clean up our act,
trying to warn others of God’s coming wrath.
While others
have given up entirely
on a God—
supposedly of love and peace—
who is far more concerned
about avenging his wounded pride
than doing something about childhood cancer
or poverty,
or war,
or… fill in the blank!
You might have heard it said,
that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.
But I think that the maturity of wisdom
knows that God is Love,
and there is no fear in Love,
because perfect Love casts our fear.
So, if you have come here today
confident that you are a sinner
in the hands of an angry God,
hear this:
God is not mad at you.
Full stop.
The promise of peace God is making
is the result of mercy wed to justice.
It is the patience of God
forbearing the complacency of those
already comfortable.
It is the solution
of the elements
dissolved in the waters of baptism.
John appears in the wilderness baptizing,
a word that means to cover over,
to be hidden in,
to be swallowed up by.
John comes baptizing with water.
But he promises there is One coming
who will baptize,
cover us over,
hide us under,
swallow us up in
the Holy Spirit.
What Isaiah wanted the people to know,
what Peter wanted people to know,
what John wanted people to know is this:
God is not mad at you.
God tells the prophet,
“Comfort my people.
Tell them that the grass may wither
and the flower may fade,
my promise of peace will last forever.
I will lead my people like a shepherd,
I will wrap the lambs in my arms
and holding them close to my heart,
gently leading the mother sheep.”
The epistle promises
that even if the stars fall from the sky above us
and the earth dissolves beneath us,
that God’s faithfulness never waivers,
and God will wait as long as it takes
for everyone to get on board.
John cries out in the wilderness
proclaiming the invitation of God
to repentance—
that is, a change of heart and mind—
and gives John the sign of baptism.
God is coming to make peace,
not with the threat of violence,
but with the slow,
patient,
erosive power
of water,
gently sculpting and dissolving us
in the eternal flow of God’s love.
Those who came to hear John’s message
stepped into the Jordan,
wading deep into the flow of this ancient river.
And with the promise of forgiveness,
John plunged them beneath the surface,
until they were covered over,
hidden under,
swallowed up in
the eternal flow of God.
And God’s invitation to us
is to remain in that flow
until the gentle and persistent current
dissolves and washes away
or sin and shame,
until it smooths our rough edges
and saturates every part of us,
heart, mind, body, and soul.
God is ever patient with us,
waiting as long as it takes
for the truth of God’s love to really sink in.
But God is impatient for us,
not waiting until the end of days
to reveal God’s mercy and justice.
God comes down to us in the water
to embrace and envelop us as we are,
to invite us to remain in the flow
until we are changed by it.
Beloved,
God is not mad at you.
Letting this truth change our hearts and minds
is what we mean by repentance.
Step into waters,
remain in the flow of God’s very self.
This gentle and persistent current
is the embrace of a God
who loves you enough to call you to change
and too much to wait for you to change
before wrapping you up
in the arms of eternal love.
God is not mad at you.
Let this truth change your heart and mind,
Jesus is coming,
because God is impatient to be with you,
to hold you in the arms of love,
and to be held by you,
like a babe in swaddling clothes.
Amen.