This is the third Sunday of Advent,
Gaudete Sunday,
A day of rejoicing
Set inside a penitential season.
Our first reading begins
Sing aloud, O daughter Zion; shout, O Israel! Rejoice and exult with all your heart, O daughter Jerusalem!
We go from Zephaniah to Isaiah:
Sing praises to the LORD, for he has done gloriously; let this be known in all the earth. Shout aloud and sing for joy, O royal Zion, for great in your midst is the Holy One of Israel.
And Paul picks up from there
with this letter to the Philippian church:
Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.
So, by the time we have reached the Gospel
for this jubilant day of rejoicing,
we are expecting at least a similar amount of exuberance
from the Gospel text for this Sunday.
If we think back to last week’s readings,
This week’s reading picks up where that one left off.
John the Baptizer has appeared on the scene.
His father burst into song at his birth,
And Luke uses the language of Isaiah,
Both to tell us how this John
will be the forerunner of the Messiah.
So,
After all this build up,
And all this talk of rejoicing
at the coming of the Salvation of Israel,
we finally get to hear John in his own words:
"You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?”
It kind of reminds you of that old Sesame Street bit,
Which one of these is not like the others,
Which one of these just isn’t the same?
John is the voice of the one crying out in the wilderness.
John is the leveler of mountains,
And the straightener of paths.
John is the bringer of the good news.
So, why does John sound more like a crazed bible thumper
Preaching destruction and unquenchable fire?
And how are we supposed to rejoice in this dire warning?
I think we can begin to draw a closer connection
Between John’s preaching and John’s commissioning
If we look at the response to John’s preaching.
John goes into all the region around the Jordan
Preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.
John’s message is that the ax is already at the root of the tree,
Ready to fell every tree that does not bear fruit
And throw it into the fire.
The crowds ask,
What then should we do?
John tells the crowds
"Whoever has two coats must share with anyone who has none; and whoever has food must do likewise."
Tax collectors ask John,
“Teacher, what should we do?”
John tells the tax collectors,
"Collect no more than the amount prescribed for you."
Soldiers ask John,
“And we, what should we do?”
John tells the soldiers,
"Do not extort money from anyone by threats or false accusation, and be satisfied with your wages."
John imagines the community of the baptized
looks different than those who have not been baptized.
This is John’s mountain-leveling,
Valley-filling,
Way-making,
Path-straightening ministry
that will bring all flesh to see the salvation of God.
The community of the baptized
will prepare the way of the Lord
by repentance.
Now,
On the surface
this may not sound super “Lutheran.”
We don’t often talk of doing things,
And we often lean on a definition of repentance
That means more of a change of mind and heart
Than on the change of one’s behavior.
But this repentance
To which John calls the community of the baptized
Is mountain-leveling,
Valley-filling,
Way-making,
Path-straightening ministry
that will bring all flesh to see the salvation of God.
One notable Lutheran spoke of repentance in this way.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
In his book
The Cost of Discipleship
Spoke of cheap grace.
Cheap grace is an understanding of the grace of God
That leads a person to believe
that the life of discipleship
Requires nothing of them.
Back when I was a fundamentalist,
We would have called this fire insurance,
A “Get Out of Hell Free” card
That allows a person to escape eternal damnation
And then go about their merry way.
In contrast,
Bonhoeffer speaks of costly grace,
The sort of understanding of the grace of God
that elicits a grateful response.
The kind of gratitude that asks
And we, what should we do?
It was this kind of costly grace
That led Bonhoeffer in his day
To resist the Third Reich
And ultimately led to his execution
At the hand of the Nazi regime.
In John’s day
His message or repentance and forgiveness
Came to the people of Israel,
And John warns,
“Do not begin to say to yourselves, 'We have Abraham as our ancestor'; for I tell you, God is able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham.”
John warns that their access to the history,
To the covenants,
To the promises
Does not preclude them from call to repentance,
From the call to be about the
mountain-leveling,
Valley-filling,
Way-making,
Path-straightening ministry
that will bring all flesh to see the salvation of God.
John says,
God is able from these stones
to raise up children for Abraham.
John says,
Don’t fool yourself into thinking
That God’s faithfulness
Depends on you.
God’s faithfulness
Is your salvation.
The call to repentance
Is not a call for your help
But an invitation
For your cooperation.
John says,
Bear fruits worthy of repentance,
Because the ax is already at the root of those trees
That do not bear fruit.
And those fruitless trees will be cast into the fire.
This sounds like terrible news,
Until you read that Jesus
is the bringer of the fire.
John says,
"I baptize you with water; but one who is more powerful than I is coming; I am not worthy to untie the thong of his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.”
Jesus is coming,
Says John,
And he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit
And with fire.
Luke mixes his metaphors a bit here
Telling us through John,
That Jesus comes with a pitchfork
To gather the grain into the barn
And throw the chaff into an unquenchable fire.
It would be easy here
To overlook John’s warning
And presume ourselves
to be insured against the coming fire
by the waters of our baptism.
But this would be a very cheap grace.
We won’t be saved from the fire to come,
but through it.
Jesus will burn up the chaff of us
and gather up our grain.
Jesus will transform our fruitlessness
into firewood.
And,
having been saved through the fire
we,
like the crowd,
like the tax collectors,
like the soldiers,
ought to ask,
“And we, what must we do?”
The Spirit is inviting us
To be about the same,
mountain-leveling,
Valley-filling,
Way-making,
Path-straightening ministry
that will bring all flesh to see the salvation of God.
We,
like the crowd,
can give away our second coat
and share our food.
We,
Like the tax collectors,
Can refuse to consume more than we must.
We,
Like the soldier,
Must decline to abuse our privilege.
We must work for the peace that is not the absence of conflict
But the presence of justice.
We must live without covetousness.
This season of Advent,
While the rest of the world
Is overcome with consumption
And deludes itself
With a bland sentimentality
It calls the “Christmas spirit,”
We must be about the
mountain-leveling,
Valley-filling,
Way-making,
Path-straightening
work
that will bring all flesh to see the salvation of God.
This is the Christmas spirit.
In fact,
This is the Christian Spirit.
So,
Rejoice, you brood of vipers!
Shout aloud,
Sing for Joy.
One is coming
who will baptize us
with fire and the Spirit
and all flesh shall see the salvation of God!
Amen.