Thomas Kleinert
There’s a reason they don’t pay prophets to design inspirational cards for the Advent season. You just can’t make embossed, heavy cardstock, color print and extra glitter work with a line like “The ax is lying at the root of the trees!” or the classic holiday greeting, “Merry Christmas, you brood of vipers!” But on the road to Christmas, there’s no good way to avoid John the Baptizer down by the Jordan, no matter how much we might prefer staying at the month-long Christmas party that started the day after Thanksgiving, just dipping gingerbread cookies into our egg nog. There’s no good way to avoid John, and he’s on fire.
“Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” he yells, sounding like one of the prophets of old: furious, single-minded, borderline obsessive. The people have come to receive his baptism in the river. It’s a powerful ritual of making a fresh start, of going back to the beginning: God’s people crossing the river to enter the promised land anew. But John won’t let them get away with thinking that a water ritual would make them presentable on the day of the Lord, or that some other symbolic action like putting on sackcloth and ashes would do, or that they could always fall back on being children of Abraham with whom God had made the covenant that included all his descendants. John slams all those exit doors shut until it is just the crowd and this ancient and urgent demand: “Bear fruits worthy of repentance.”
And amazingly, most of them don’t leave to find a more accommodating prophet. They get it. “What then are we to do?” they ask.
Repentance is one of those churchy words we may get tired of hearing. Some think it’s something like reallyfeeling really sorry, with thick layers of religious overtones and tears of contrition. Not really. What it means is both very simple and very hard: to stop doing what I’m doing and to start doing what I was made to do. The term in Hebrew literally means turning around, as in returning to the ways of God. And the Greek term literally means change of mind, indicating a complete turn-around in one’s thinking that effects a change of direction in one’s life. It doesn’t matter if you typically think your way into a new way of acting or act your way into a new way of thinking. Repentance is a fundamental reorientation of your life, a reorientation that becomes visible, tangible, and, hopefully, durable. All this is to say is that repentance may well be a churchy-sounding word, but it’s one we just can’t do without.
“What then are we to do?” folks ask. “Whoever has two coats must share with anyone who has none,” says John; “and whoever has food must do likewise.” It doesn’t get any more everyday than the clothes on your back and the food on your plate. Bearing good fruit, it turns out, is neither spectacular nor heroic; it’s rather ordinary. John reminds me that in the divine economy, if I have more than what I need to sustain my life, the neighbor who does not have such abundance has a claim on it. And I can’t even tell him how many pairs of pants are hanging in my closet.
The last time I spoke with Father Strobel before he joined the saints in heaven, I was driving the van to pick up a group of guests from the Room in the Inn campus. The line was short that night. I pulled right up and got out of the van. I saw a man who looked familiar, despite the surgical mask covering much of his face. “Charlie, is it you? I haven’t seen you in what feels like ages! It’s Thomas from Vine Street. It’s so good to see you! How are you?” Even in the dark, I could see Charlie’s eyes light up with a smile. He told me he was doing OK, mentioned his health problems, but that wasn’t what he wanted to chat about. He couldn’t stand staying at home, he told me. He needed to be where he was, at the campus, with the folks who didn’t have housing, people he knew to be his siblings and his friends.
“The real problem,” he said, and I’m paraphrasing, “the real problem is private property. There’s nothing wrong with owning things, but the way I understand Jesus, he tells us, ‘This is yours, enjoy it. It’s yours until someone else needs it.’”
I laughed and said, “That’ll preach, Charlie!” On the way back to the church, I kept thinking, who but this man would skip the chit-chat about the weather or some sports team and go right to the heart of the matter? A lifetime of prayer and loving service condensed into a simple, incredibly challenging statement, offered with humility and the warmest smile:
The way I understand Jesus, he tells us, “This is yours, enjoy it. It’s yours until someone else needs it.”
“Love your neighbor” is not a religious way to spell charity; it’s the most challenging way to spell justice. It is the challenge to take my neighbor’s need as seriously as I take my own. Moses and the prophets teach it. John declared it. Jesus lived it. And in the fourth century, Bishop Basil of Caesarea said in a homily, “When someone steals another’s clothes, we call them a thief. Should we not give the same name to one who couldclothe the naked and does not?” And the bishop continued,
The bread in your cupboard belongs to the hungry; the coat hanging unused in your closet belongs to the one who needs it; the shoes rotting in your closet belong to the one who has no shoes; the money which you hoard up belongs to the poor. You do wrong to everyone you could help, but fail to help.
Or as James put it, If a brother or sister is naked and lacks daily food, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill,” and yet you do not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that? So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead.[1] And in the First Letter of John we read, How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses help?[2] Or as Charlie paraphrased Jesus’ teaching, “This is yours, enjoy it. It’s yours until someone else needs it.” Love of neighbor is a golden thread woven into the texts of our tradition, and we need to weave it into our lives with continual repentance, continual conversion to the vision and purposes of God.
Little we do in this weekly worship gathering ever strikes us as revolutionary. Our liturgy is not designed with radical, global change in mind, but we do what we do, all that we do, in the light of God’s coming reign. We practice confession and forgiveness, we practice gratitude and praise, we practice saying our small yes to God’s great and eternal Yes, we practice saying, “Jesus Christ is Lord!”, and we trust that by letting those practices become habitual we are changed into subversive change-makers.
The tax-collectors in the crowd ask John, “What are we to do?” and John doesn’t tell them to walk away from their jobs, because the system of taxation is corrupt and unjust. He does tell them, though, not to take more than they are authorized to take.
And John doesn’t tell the soldiers in the crowd to quit service in the Roman military, because they are collaborating with an unjust and corrupt system — we all are. He does tell them, though, not to extort money from anyone through threats or false accusations. Again, nothing heroic, nothing spectacular, just a commitment to act with justice within the social structure, a commitment to let love of neighbor become visible and tangible in everyday situations.
John tells the people of the coming one who is more powerful than he, who will baptize them with the Holy Spirit and with fire. “His winnowing fork is in his hand, to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his granary; but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.” Just moments before, John talked about trees getting cut down and thrown into the fire, so it’s quite understandable when some folks wonder if wheat and chaff represent two groups of people—perhaps those who bear the fruit God expects to find and those who don’t?
No. The point is rather that until harvest time, every grain of wheat is wrapped in a husk. After threshing, all those precious wheat berries are mixed in with a dusty mess of husk parts called chaff. And to this day, farmers around the world make use of the wind to separate the chaff from the grain—a small portion of the messy mix is tossed up into the air, the chaff is blown away some distance, and the wheat kernels fall back to the ground. And the point, of course, is to save every last grain, not merely some.
The image suggests a view of judgment that is liberating rather than punishing: We experience life as a mix of good and evil impulses and actions; they are often frustratingly intermingled; combinations of good intentions and bad outcomes; poor judgments we can’t forget and compromises that haunt us; too many choices where we had to pick the lesser of two evils — and the judgment John announces as the work of the coming one is a judgment. But it’s not a judgment of division and elimination. It’s a judgment of cleansing and gathering. It’s the judgment of fiery love that burns away all the bits that keep us from being who we were made to be, all the bits that trap us in self-absorption and apathy, all the bits our practice of repentance didn’t help us shed, all that gets in the way of our life as God’s people.
So, yes, it’s good to meet John on the road to Christmas. And it’s good to make it a habit to repent and rejoice. The Lord is near! And that you can write on your Christmas card, can’t you?
[1] James 2:15-17
[2] 1 John 3:17