2 December 2020 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Advent 1 Midweek Vienna, VA
“Ageless Advent
Questions: Are You the One?”
Text:
Matthew 11:2-11; Amos 8:9-14
Are you the one who is to
come, or shall we look for another?
That is our first Ageless
Advent Question. Ageless, for it must be answered by every person. No matter when they lived, or where. Is Jesus the one? Is
Jesus my Saviour? Is Jesus really God of God,
Light of Light, very God of very God, or not? Is Jesus the one I should
believe in and entrust my eternal fate to? Or not? Or
shall I look for another?
John the Baptist asked
the question, but he asked it for us all. That we may hear
Jesus’ answer. And His answer is important, because He doesn’t talk about
John and what is going on in his life. That’s how many people judge Jesus - by
how my life is going.
So if I call myself a
Christian and things are going well, if I am succeeding, if I am getting ahead, then yes! Jesus must be the one. But if not, if I am suffering, if I am not getting what I want or
as much as others, then I’ll have to look for another. A god who will come through for me.
Well, John was in prison.
He got there by doing his job. He told the king that the Sixth Commandment
applied to him, even if no one else would say so. But if you’re going to speak
like that - as the Church must always speak, to the sin and rebellion in the
world - then don’t expect to be thanked or praised or lavished with gifts. Quite the opposite. You will suffer, be called names, and
the pressure will be applied to get you to change. And if you don’t . . . well,
the royal sword took care of that with John.
So what is going on in
your life is not an accurate gauge. For what good is a god who is only a god of
good times, when you really don’t need Him anyway? Shouldn’t God be the one you
can count on when your life is in the dumpster, when the world is dumping its
garbage on you, when sadness and tears are plentiful, when everything else in
this world is letting you down? One who is with you even then? That’s a God you
need. For if you think you’re going to be the first person in the history of
the world nothing bad will ever happen to . . .
So Jesus answers John not
by pointing to John’s life, but by pointing to His own. And specifically, what
the prophets said. What God said through the prophets.
What the prophet Isaiah had said some 700 years before this, what would happen
when the Messiah came. That’s exactly what was
happening. Creation was being restored. The effects of sin were being reversed.
Not to everyone, everywhere. That is what will happen on the Last Day, when all
sin, all death, all evil, all suffering, and all
tears are ended, and even death, the devil, and hell are cast away. But it was
beginning. The signs were happening. The Messiah had begun His work and His
reign. Not according to how we think He should, but according to
the Word of God. For that is the truth that all truth is
measured against. Not our hearts, not our minds, not our wishes and desires,
not what we want to be true. Only the infallible, inerrant Word of God.
Are you the one who is to
come, or shall we look for another?
Some just ignore the
question and go about their lives. But that, too, is an answer. A “no” to Jesus. It is looking for life in another - some thing
or some one else. And as Old Testament Israel
found out, every other thing and every other one will let you
down. When, as we heard from the prophet Amos, God turns feasting into
mourning, songs into lamentations, luxury into sackcloth, and beauty into
baldness, no other god will be able to stop it. They all will fail, for there
is no other. God causes these things to turn us back to Him, to Jesus; to look to Him for
help in time of need. To repent of our false gods - every thing
and every one we still today look to for help
and what we need - and instead rely on Him alone.
And He is the one you can
rely on, for He didn’t remain aloof from all this, from our troubles and
trials, from us - it was all poured out on Him, on the cross. On that day when
God did (as Amos said) make the sun go down at noon and darkened
the earth in broad daylight, when His Son hung there with all the sin
and rebellion of the world laid on Him. And then not a sign, but the fulfillment,
when this dead one was raised to life again. And so there is one
who can help us, even through death. There is
one - the one who came - and there is no other. And this resurrected one
is coming again, when all will be fulfilled.
So we have the answer,
and proclaim it to the world. As the Church has been
proclaiming it for some 20 centuries now. The message is the same, for
the Saviour is the same, and the question is the
same. Not all will listen, but some will. And by that Word, and the Spirit that
works through it, they will say yes. That baby in the manger, that man
in the Jordan, that man on the cross, that man laid dead in the tomb but then risen from the dead, is not just a man, but the Coming One,
the Son of God. Who came for me. The trustworthy one who fulfilled
His Word. And so we put our trust in Him. For my life
now, and my life forever.
Even if my life now is
not exactly as I thought or planned or wanted. Even if a dundgeon or prison is in my future. Even if a royal
sword comes down upon my neck. Even if the world says He and His Word and ways
are backwards and wrong - that a Messiah would not hang out with sinners and
low lifes; that a Messiah would not come from
Nazareth; that a Messiah would do, well,
more kingly things! And today, too, there are many who think they know better
what God should do and say, better what is right and wrong, and think us fools.
But as Jesus asked the
crowds that day: What did you expect? What did you go out into the
wilderness to see? Someone whose opinion changes with the wind? Someone
who looks good? Someone who says what you want him to say? Or
a prophet? Someone with a message from God?
Someone who will tell you what you need to hear and know. Yes, that’s John -
then, and still for us today. Asking the question we all need to ask, that we
hear the answer we all need to hear. That yes, Jesus is the one. The one and only. Not the only one who can give us nice
things, but the only one who can give us what we need: forgiveness for our
sins, and life from the dead. For this He was born. For this He died. And for
this He is coming again.
For the one who was to
come in John’s day, in the midst of his trouble, is the one who is coming again
in our day, in the midst of ours. Do not be offended by Him, His
words, or His ways, for He was not offended by you, but came to make you His
own. His child. With a glorious
future.
Are you the one who is to
come, or shall we look for another?
Ever
since Adam and Eve people have been looking for another.
Stop. Repent. There is no other. He has come and is here for you.
Find your rest in Him.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.