Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Getting ready


A Sermon preached on Advent I, December 2, at Christ the King, Frankfurt
Jeremiah 33: 14 – 16, 1 Thessalonians 3: 9 – 13, Luke 21: 25 – 36

While it is nice to be here again after my last visit in October, unlike the Apostle Paul I am afraid that I have not been praying “night and day most earnestly that I may see you face to face,” nor do I feel the need to “restore whatever is lacking in your faith.” At least no more than in my own. But, as in all things, I am sure that “our God and Father and our Lord Jesus directed our way to you!”
Our readings today, especially the Gospel, seem to have little to do with what is going on outside the church. Jesus has solemn warnings for his disciples: “People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming.” “Be on guard so that your hearts are not weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life.” (Luke 21: 26, 34) Yet outside the church we have the bright colorful lights, upbeat music, and lovely smells of gingerbread and Glühwein of the Christmas markets. There are many who would claim anyway that we have a general disconnect between scripture and reality.
In his commentary on Luke’s Gospel, the theologian Tom Wright writes of this passage “Your friends think you’re odd still going to church. Everybody knows that Christianity is outdated, disproved, boring and irrelevant. … They don’t want to know about the lives changed by the Gospel. They want to load you with the cares of this life; and, as Jesus warned, with dissipation and drunkenness, literal and metaphorical. Why study an old book, they say, that’s never done anyone any good.”[1]
It is true that our narrative differs from the most common secular narratives. Both from the myth of progress so beloved of secular humanists: That everything is getting better thanks to human ingenuity and creativity alone. And from the more recent myth of gloom. That our countries and lifestyles are threatened by migration and by mysterious forces that we have to take back control from, that we are better off alone, and that only a strong leader can make “America/Italy/Poland/Britain/Hungary …. Great again!”
No, in our narrative no human being can save us. Our Savior is Jesus Christ, the one that we believe the prophet Jeremiah is pointing to when he looks forward to the day when God will cause "a righteous Branch to spring up for David; and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land.” (Jeremiah 33: 15) In our narrative, the world is good and all that is in it because: “God saw everything that he had made, and indeed, it was very good,” (Genesis 1:31) but it is marred and threatened by human sin. In our narrative we do not fear, but welcome the stranger, which is why Paul prays that the Lord will make the Thessalonians "increase and abound in love for one another and for all, just as we abound in love for you." (1 Thessalonians 3: 12) In our narrative, we do not “faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world,” (Luke 21:26) instead we act and live in hope, because we are sure in Jesus’ promise that even when “heaven and earth pass away, my words will not pass away.” (21:33)
Scripture is closer to reality than we sometimes think. Of course, the passage from Luke’s Gospel refers to the situation in Palestine and the Roman Empire in AD 60 – 70: when Jerusalem was besieged and destroyed by the Romans, when there were 5 emperors in quick succession, each with an army to make his violent case for power. It was a time of great turmoil and trouble and Jesus’ followers needed reassuring that they would make it through and that they could rely on a message of confidence and hope even when all the signs were pointing in a different direction.
Neither scripture nor our lives as Christians are divorced from reality. Our context may be different from 1st century Palestine, but the message of confidence and hope still applies today and to us, and we need it, as the signs of these times are distressing. The dangerous effects of human sin – pride, lust for power, greed – seem ever more present and real. But the message of reassurance, then and now, is not so we just sit back and wait until Jesus comes and fixes things, until, as our Creed says, “He will come again to judge the living and the dead,” The purpose of the message is to equip us for action as we wait.
Advent is not just about getting ready for Christmas. In Advent we also look forward to the Second Coming. We find this embarrassing at times. Early Christians, including Paul, expected Jesus to return soon. He didn’t. They were wrong. Often when the Second Coming is emphasized and preached today, it is used to incite fear or to justify absurd predictions … or even to justify moving embassies to Jerusalem. They are wrong too.
In its original Greek the phrase “he will come again” is in the present tense: He is coming. This is not really about an event in the far distant future. This is about how we are to live now - as if Jesus is about to come. Not in fear of judgment, or with our “hearts weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life,” (21:34) but in anticipation and hope. Paul’s prayer for this active waiting is that we use our time and our lives to “increase and abound in love for one another” so within and for our community, “and for all,” so for those beyond our walls. (1 Thess. 3:12) I know you do this with your Heimkehrer ministry, your support of the Weser 5 Homeless Resource Center, and the Romanian ministry that both our churches share. And you have an extra opportunity to abound in love for all by giving generously during today’s collection as part of the Convocation’s Mission Sunday, which will go to support the Diocese of Puerto Rico and their ministry to those still struggling to recover from the 2017 Hurricane Maria.
Paul also prays that the Lord will “strengthen our hearts in holiness that we may be blameless before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his saints.” (3:13). This is not something we do, being blameless sounds a tall order to me, but that the Lord does. Our role is simply to live faithful, prayerful, active Christian lives. We strengthen our hearts in holiness be listening to and learning from Scripture, which as it turns out is not just “an old book that’s never done anyone any good.” We strengthen our hearts in holiness by participating in Christ at the Eucharist. We strengthen our hearts in holiness by allowing God’s Spirit to work in and through us as we serve others. These are all elements of the patient, prayerful, preparation we are called to not just in Advent. Christian living is waiting and working for the one who is always about to come.
Amen.


[1] Tom Wright, Luke for Everyone, 259-60

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