Advent

Are you the one?

John is in prison. The wilderness preacher who used to sleep out by the river, under a blanket of stars – now he is locked up behind bars. No window allows him to see sun or moon; by day and night he stares at the walls. The door is shut, and it can be opened only from the outside.

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near,” he used to proclaim, certain that the days of the old regime were counted. So convinced was he that the kingdom of justice was about to erupt like a volcano, he could feel it rumbling under the soles of his feet.

John only ate what the wilderness provided, locusts and wild honey, but there was no sweetness dripping from his lips: he spoke with fire on his breath. One stronger than himself would come after him, and he would gather the wheat and burn the chaff. John had seen Jesus. John had baptized Jesus. And when Herod shut him up in a cell he thought it wouldn’t be long before the prison doors would fly open.

First he noticed what he didn’t hear: no reports of the smiting of the wicked; no cries of terror from the threshing floor of divine justice; no shouts of happy vengeance from the streets of he city. I can see him pacing up and down his cell, four steps to the door, four steps back to the wall, tormented by questions, “What is Jesus doing? What is taking him so long? Where is the fire?”

Then John began to hear about Jesus’ work in the towns of Galilee, bits and pieces about him healing the sick, bringing hope to the oppressed, and forgiving sinners—what had happened to the ax that was lying at the foot of the trees? John was confused.

I can see him sitting in the dark, waiting for the walls to crumble and light to pour in; but the only thing crumbling is his certainty; disappointment and doubt are creeping in. Perhaps he knows that he is going to die in Herod’s prison. Perhaps he wants just some assurance that he gave his life for something real and true, and that he wouldn’t end up just another victim of Herod’s rule.

So he sent word by his disciples, asking Jesus, “Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?” For John, everything is at stake in that question – and for anyone who has asked it since. Am I entrusting my hope to the One sent by God or to a fantasy?

When you go to Bethlehem and kneel next to the crib and you look at the infant, it is easy to see a bundle of promise and possibility. The little one hasn’t done anything yet, so your heart is filled with nothing but wonder and expectation. But John didn’t come to meet Jesus in the manger. Jesus came to John at the Jordan to be baptized, and somehow John just knew that this was the One whose coming he had proclaimed. John looked at Jesus and he saw the one whose power had fired his imagination. He looked at Jesus and he saw the one carrying the ax of judgment, the one who would cut down every tree that doesn’t bear good fruit. John looked at Jesus on the river bank, and he knew that the reign of God was now but a fire away.

“Wait a minute,” John said, “I need to be baptized by you, and now you come to me?” Jesus insisted on being baptized together with all the sinners, and John was puzzled. Eventually he consented and he baptized Jesus with water, but he didn’t allow the Messiah’s solidarity with sinners to change his own blazing expectations of divine justice. He just waited for the fire to start.

Now, locked up in Herod’s prison, with little waiting time left, his certainty had changed into a mix of trust and doubt. “Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?” Asking this question is not a failure of nerve or a symptom of a lack of faith. It is part of the work of Advent, part of preparing ourselves for the coming of God’s reign. The gospel invites us to let go of our violent fantasies of divine vengeance and to take this question with us as we go to Bethlehem and to Galilee and to Jerusalem, and to ask ourselves every step of the way, Is this child the One? Is this friend of sinners the One? This strange king, crucified under the old regime, is he the One who brings the kingdom of heaven to earth? Or are we to wait for another? Are we yet to wait for the one with the ax and the fire?

The answer the gospel invites us to consider is not a simple yes or no, but it is beautifully simple. Jesus says to the disciples of the Baptist, “Go and tell John what you hear and see.” And pointing to the life erupting around him, Jesus sings a few lines from Isaiah:  The blind receive their sight and the lepers are cleansed; the lame walk, the deaf hear, and the dead are raised. Look and listen, the poor have good news brought to them. The reign of God is here, healing and cleansing, feeding and forgiving, opening eyes and ears, restoring and renewing the whole creation. Tell John what you see. Sing him a song of heaven embracing the earth with grace and compassion. Sing of showers of forgiveness on the thirsty land, and streams of mercy refreshing the parched places. The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad, the desert shall rejoice and blossom.

John knows the song and soon he’s humming along, singing behind thick prison walls about liberty to the captives and release to the prisoners. The guards are wondering if John has lost his mind, but they continue to listen as he sings like no one has ever sung in the basement of Herod’s palace. Say to those who are of a fearful heart, ‘Be strong, do not fear! Here is your God! He will come and save you.’

Behind that prison door the guards can sense a fearlessness and hope that is unheard of in the world of Caesar, who reigns with fear and force. I can see them unlocking that door and saying to John, “We have the keys to your cell, but you know more about freedom and hope than any of us. Will you teach us?” And I can hear John telling them about Israel’s hope of homecoming that will make the desert sing. I can hear him teaching them the song that has joy jumping from line to line like a dancer.

A highway shall be there, and it shall be called the Holy Way; the unclean shall not travel on it, but it shall be for God’s people; … the redeemed shall walk there. And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with singing; everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away.

“Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?”

 This question helps us clarify our expectations of who or what God’s Messiah is as we go to Bethlehem and on to Galilee and Jerusalem and wherever the way of Christ takes us.

“Go and tell what you hear and see!”

This short, exuberant sentence is an invitation to recognize the inbreaking of God’s reign in Jesus, and to become attentive to the ways in which his presence transforms the dry land of sin and fear.

We are still beginning to grasp that Jesus didn’t come to bring the fire, but to be the fire that purifies and the water that makes the desert sing. Jesus didn’t come to bulldoze a highway across the hills and valleys of our life, but to be the way that leads us from sin and judgment to righteousness and life, from lonely exile to our home in communion with God. Jesus is the Holy Way, and the unholy and the unclean are no longer excluded from God’s people but loved and called and made whole and sent.

The way of Jesus led him as a sheep among the wolves, straight into Herod’s jail, and he died, just as John did, at the hand of the old regime. The Holy Way goes straight into the prisons where the empire of sin holds God’s people captive, but grace throws the door open, the thick walls crumble under the weight of mercy, and light and life flood in.

We don’t know if John the Baptist sat in his cell and sang with Isaiah, but I like to imagine he did. John was bewildered because in the stories he heard about Jesus he didn’t recognize the Messiah he had announced. I like to imagine that before he died he was able to see the glory of God’s reign in the words and deeds of Jesus. I think of John as the embodiment and voice of our longing for the world made right. He is Advent in person: his life was shaped by his waiting. I like to imagine that the certainty of John’s expectation only for a moment got in the way of his seeing the fulfillment of his hope. I like to imagine it for John, because I have the same hope for you and me: that we may have eyes to see and ears to hear how heaven is coming to earth in Jesus, and how the kingdom of God is present when the sick are healed and the hungry are fed, when sinners are forgiven, and the poor are taught to sing with Isaiah.

Therefore, let us strengthen the weak hands, and make firm the feeble knees. Let us say to those who are of fearful heart, “Be strong, do not fear! Here is your God.”

Advent Tunes

Advent is one of the most magical words I know. It is a word that triggers images of a wreath on a table and candles, carefully lit when the darkness outside sinks early. Advent comes with the fragrance of cinnamon and ginger, nutmeg and orange, hazelnut and pine. Advent makes me want to go home early and bake.

Advent makes we want to put thick socks on my feet and honey and cream in my tea. Advent makes me want to change all the songs on my ipod to carols from every country under heaven. All it takes is a handful of longing notes – O come, o come, Emmanuel – and the gates open and my heart is ready.

Advent triggers childhood memories  of counting the days and trying to imagine the wonder of Christmas. Advent wakes in me a longing that I know all year, that I can talk about and preach with hundreds and thousands of words, but that is always, always better sung.

“Hope,” Emily Dickinson wrote many years ago, “Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul, and sings the tune without the words, and never stops at all.”

The words change, the tune remains the same – composed of the voices of Jeremiah and Isaiah, Moses and Hannah, Maria and Paul. Advent is magical in weaving together memory and hope, promise and fulfillment, and teaching us to sing along and to live to that tune.

During Advent, we go back in time – to cherished family traditions, to customs lovingly preserved year after year, to worn tree ornaments that each hold a story – we go back to the days when we first heard how God became little like us in order to free us. We go back in time, way back to the days when the prophets first spoke of God’s judgment and mercy, and God’s people first affirmed that all the paths of the Lord are steadfast love and faithfulness (Psalm 25:10).

Advent doesn’t begin with Mary weaving a blanket for the baby and Joseph building a cradle, nor does it begin with an angel’s visit – it begins with the promises of God and the courage of those who dare to live in their light.

During Advent we go back in time to remember the tune of God’s future for us.

The days are surely coming, says the Lord, when I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and house of Judah. In those days (…) I will cause a righteous Branch to spring up for David; and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land (Jeremiah 33:14-15).

Justice and righteousness in the land, and the meek shall inherit the earth.

Tom Wright woke up one early morning form a powerful and interesting dream. Unfortunately, he couldn’t remember what it was about. He had a flash of it as he woke up, enough to make him think how extraordinary and meaningful it was, but then it was gone. Tom wonders if our dreams of justice and righteousness are like that. We have a flash of a world at one,  a world where things work out, not just for some, but for all, a world where societies function fairly and effectively, a world where we not only know what we ought to do but actually do it. And then we wake up in the world as it is, and we can’t get back into the dream.

Wright wonders where that kind of dream might come from.

"What are we hearing when we’re dreaming that dream? It’s as though we can hear, not perhaps a voice itself, but the echo of a voice: a voice speaking with calm, healing authority, speaking about justice, about things being put to rights, about peace and hope and prosperity for all (Simply Christian, p. 3)."

For some, this echo of a voice is only a fantasy, a wishful projection that has nothing to do with the way things really are. They say that this is a world of naked power and grabbing what you can get, and that we must stop dreaming and toughen up to live in it.

Others say that it is a voice from a different world, a world into which we can escape in our dreams, and hope to escape one day for good. For them, this world is run by unscrupulous bullies and that’s that; all we can do is seek some consolation in the thought that there’s another world where things are better.

But there is a third possibility, and it is the one people of faith have embraced for generations. “The reason we think we have heard a voice is because we have.” The reason we have these dreams of justice and righteousness, the reason we have a sense of a memory of the echo of a voice, is that there is someone speaking to us; someone who cares very much about this world and all who live in it; someone who has made us and the world for a purpose which will indeed involve justice, and wholeness, and life in fullness (see Simply Christian, pp. 9-10).  

Advent begins with the ancient echoes of a voice in our soul, promising to heal the wounds of creation, promising to make right what has gone wrong. Advent begins with the promises of God and the songs of past fulfillments that nourish our courage to trust.

I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and house of Judah. (…) I will cause a righteous Branch to spring up for David; and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land (Jeremiah 33:14-15).

During Advent we go back in time, remembering the promises to Abraham, to Moses and the prophets, and how they have been fulfilled in ever new ways, generation after generation. We look back in time, remembering the birth of Jesus, the righteous Branch God caused to spring up for David; Jesus the King born in a manger; Jesus the ruler who overruled our concepts of power with his grace and obedience; Jesus the teacher who continues to stretch our imagination; Jesus the judge who was executed like a criminal, but who sits in glory at the right hand of God; Jesus who will return to execute justice and righteousness in the land – a land stretching from east of the sun to west of the moon, a land where nothing but the purposes of God rule all creation.

On this first Sunday of Advent, the first day of the church year, we hear the ancient promises renewed.
Jesus says, “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 will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken (Luke 21:25-26).”

What is he telling us? Sun and moon and stars are symbols of cosmic order. They represent the reliable succession of day and night, of seed time and harvest, of tides and seasons. The orderliness of the lunar cycle and the earth year represent the orderliness of natural systems and human society.

In the days of Jesus and Luke, signs in the heavens weren’t just interesting astronomical phenomena, but indicators that things on earth were out of order. Signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars reflected a disintegration of social and natural order into chaos – something like creation backwards.

We may find the “sun and moon and stars” language foreign, but we are familiar with “fear and foreboding.” We don’t look to the sky for signs, but we don’t have to search the reports of scientists and journalists for very long to read about ecosystems stressed to the point of collapse or disintegrating social structures. Movies like “2012” find deep resonance in our culture because they connect with our fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world. The fact that an international climate conference is being referred to as “Hopenhagen” speaks not only of the advertising industry’s creativity, but is a sign of deep anxiety among many about the future, a sign that for many the very powers of the heavens are shaken.

Why do we hear these words in Advent?

We can’t let Christmas get completely romanticized, dwelling on the babe in the manger, forgetting that we stand this side of that event – we know who this child is. We live with our eyes focussed not solely on the rearview mirror, but on the road ahead. We begin the season of Advent with a look forward because the babe in the manger grew up to inaugurate the reign of justice and righteousness on earth. We begin with a look forward because we celebrate the birth of the redeemer of history, and we cannot celebrate Christmas properly without looking forward to God's promised future.

This season bids us not only to celebrate the Christ who has come to us, but to look to the day when he will come and bring about the redemption of the world.

Jesus isn’t talking about signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars to scare us, but to assure us that even when the powers of the heavens are shaken, we are to stand up and raise our heads – because what is drawing near is redemption. He urges us to stay alert and faithful in prayer, to be on guard so that our hearts are not weighed down with worries but lifted up with courage. When all around us people are fainting from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, we are to stand knowing who is coming.

Then they will see ‘the Son of Man coming in a cloud’ with power and great glory. Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near (Luke 21:27-28).

How can we stand? Not because present economic, cultural, or political trends give us reason to hope, but because God is true to God’s promises.

Because generation after generation, men and women have added their voices to the choir of witnesses singing of God’s faithfulness.

Because Jesus has given fresh power to the echo of a voice we hear in our soul every time the prophets speak.

Advent bids us to stand erect, confident and hopeful, because all time, past, present and future, is entwined with the past, present and future of Christ.

Advent is magical in weaving together our best memory and our boldest hope, and teaching us to sing along with the tune God is humming, and to live to that tune.