13 December 2020
Saint Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Advent 3 Vienna, VA
“The Prophet of Joy”
Text:
John 1:6-8, 19-28; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
John the Baptist, the
prophet of . . . joy!
Bet you didn’t see that
coming. Joy is not what we often associate with John. He is the fiery preacher
of repentance. Most pictures of John show him very serious and stern.
Well, I’m sticking to my
guns. John is the prophet of joy.
For even though his
father Zechariah at first doubted the message of the angel Gabriel that he and
Elizabeth were going to have a son, when John finally came, he and Elizabeth
were filled with joy.
The first time we meet
John in the Scriptures, what is he doing? He leaps for joy in his mother’s
womb at hearing the voice of the mother of his Lord.
When later John points to
Jesus and proclaims Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world (John 1:29), how do you think he
said that? All serious and somber, or with all the joy of finding something you’ve
been looking for and waiting for for a long time? Jumping up and down with
joy! Look! Everyone! There He is! The Lamb of God! He’s here! Finally!
And even when he preached
repentance, can’t that be joyful, too? We say that very thing, actually, in a
couple of our liturgies, that with repentant joy we receive the
salvation accomplished for us by Jesus (Divine Service Settings
1 and 2, LSB, p. 161, 178). Not that the repenting itself is
joyful, confessing your sin and that you’re a dirty rotten sinner. But that you
repent in order to hear the word spoken by the Lamb of God to you: I forgive
you all your sin! Words that should fill us with joy.
And they do. When spoken
by your pastor here, from one spouse to another, between a parent and child, or
between friends - I forgive you means that what was between us, what
divided us, is no longer. We’re good. Joyful words. Both to the guilty,
the one who caused the problem, and the one able to speak those words.
Gift words, really.
Because without those
words, how exhausting would life be? Always having to make up for your
mistakes. Always trying to get on someones good side. Always having to prove
yourself. And always afraid to mess up again (which we always do, right?), and
then having to start all over again! And not only with one another, but all
this also with God?
So what joy, what relief,
these words bring! I forgive you.
That is why John was
baptizing. To give this joy. We heard that last week, that his was a
baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins (Mark
1:4). That’s why the priests and Levites from Jerusalem
came out to him and confronted him, as we heard today. If he was just getting
people to confess their sins and then pouring a little water over them . . . well,
that’s no big deal. But a baptism for the forgiveness of sins? Just
who do you think you are, John?
Because you can’t just
forgive people, John! Everybody knows that! Everybody knows that sinners have
to prove themselves first, clean themselves up first, stop sinning first, and
get better. Then they can be forgiven. But for you, John, all
they do is repent? It doesn’t work that way!
Well, somebody forgot to
give God that memo, because that’s exactly how forgiveness
works! That’s exactly why it brings such great joy. Because it is
a gift. Undeserved and unearned. Because of the one - the one greater than John
- who came and earned it for us. The Lamb of God, the Son of God, who laid down
His perfect, sinless life for all of our imperfect, sinful lives, took the
punishment and wrath we deserve, and in return said: Father, forgive them
(Luke 23:34).
Now if there was any joyless
place on earth, it would be the cross, right? But forgiveness even changes the
cross, for in the book of Hebrews (12:2)
we hear that Jesus for the joy that was set before him endured the cross.
Not that hanging on the cross was a joyful thing! But why He was
there and what He was accomplishing, was. And because of that
joy, the joy of forgiving your sins, He hung there and endured that. For you.
For you to receive that gift and joy from Him.
And that that’s what
Jesus is all about is why there’s always joy around Jesus. Did you ever notice
that? Angels, shepherds, and wise men rejoice at His birth. Simeon and Anna
rejoice when He is brought to the Temple. Sinners, outcasts, lepers, tax
collectors, all rejoice in Him and His forgiveness. And so, too, John the
Baptist. His is a most joyous task. Making straight the way of the Lord.
For the way of the Lord is the joy of forgiveness.
And it’s been that way
from the very beginning. For after the very first sin, what did God do? He
promised a Saviour. And do you think there might have been just a little bit of
joy that day for Adam and Eve when God did not utterly reject them or destroy
them, but instead promised them one who would undo what they did? Now, there
were consequences for their sin, to be sure. They messed up. We mess up. But to
make it right is not on you, but on another. They’d have to wait a long time
for Him to come, trusting the promise of God that He would . . . and then they
time came. Just the right time. And the joy of announcing that, proclaiming
that, and preparing the way for Him was given to John.
So when those priests and
Levites who came to him that day, challenging him and asking him just who he
thought he was . . . well, I love John’s answer! He could have said: I
am the son of Zechariah the priest, and Elizabeth, a daughter of Aaron, and so
a priest and Levite just like you guys. But he didn’t. Instead, he said who the
Word of God said he was: the prophet of joy. The one who came to
announce that the long-awaited Saviour is here! And to prepare His way.
And what John did, you
now do, too. No, not baptize! But know that who you are is who the Word of
God says you are. Yes, when people ask you who you are you tell them your
name, and your last name tells a lot about you, and maybe your profession is
who you are too. I am a pastor, an attorney, a service member. Or maybe you
think you are who other people say you are - whether you’re worth anything or
not. But truly who you are and who you will be forever is what the Word of God
said to you when you were baptized - you are a forgiven child of God.
And that’s why Saint Paul
could advise us today, as we heard in his letter to the Thessalonian
Christians, to rejoice always. And I’m sure you’ve wondered: how
exactly does one do that? How do you rejoice when life is tough, when
difficulties seem overwhelming, when the plans you made for your life aren’t
working out, when the doctor gives you bad news, when the world seems to keep
plunging deeper and deeper into sin and against God, when the future is
uncertain, when . . . you fill in the blank. At just such times, rejoice
always seems like such a irrelevant and silly - and even maddening! -
platitude. Like someone telling you to just “Smile, be happy!” when that’s the
last thing on earth you feel like doing!
No, you cannot always
rejoice at what is happening in the world and what is happening in your life,
but you can always rejoice in who you are: a forgiven
child of God. And rejoice that that’s true in good times, bad times, and
all times. That the gifts and promises God gives He does not take back. They’re
yours. It is His joy to give them, to give you joy. A joy that can get you
through all those other times. For as Saint Paul also said there: He who calls you
is faithful; he will surely do it. And that faithfulness is
something to rejoice in.
And so we lit the
rose-colored candle on the Advent wreath today - the joy candle. Because while
Advent is a season of repentance, it is also a season of joy. The joy of the
coming Saviour. On this Third Sunday of Advent, we recognize that our
remembrance of His birth is close now. And great will be our joy on that day!
Christmas Day. But we also recognize that His second coming is also
closer - and even greater will be our joy on that day as well. When the
promises made to us in baptism are finally and fully fulfilled, when we rise to
that new life, freed from all sin, to live in holiness and righteousness
forever.
That’s why Christmas,
after all. Jesus was born into our life here, so that we might be born
again into His life there. That was John’s joy. That is our joy. And so
we rejoice, always. We rejoice when we repent, to hear of that
gift, that word of forgiveness. We rejoice when we forgive, to give the gift we
ourselves have been given. And we rejoice when we come to receive the Body and
Blood of Jesus - from the manger to the cross to your mouth and mine - and pray
that what goes in may also come out: the forgiveness and joy of the Lord.
So next time you think of
John, don’t think of him as that strict, somber, serious guy who never smiled,
who just called people out, who just made people feel bad and behave better -
but rather, John as the prophet of joy. Who brought the joy of the Lord
and His forgiveness to so many . . . even to us today, so many centuries later.
Every Advent season, announcing to us, proclaiming to us the great joy that our
Saviour is here! That His forgiveness is here, for you.
So that wherever
you are, even if it’s out in a wilderness like John - your life in a pretty
rough place or a pretty rough time right now - you remember who you are,
who your baptism made you - a forgiven child of God. And rejoice in
that. And not just one day a year, but every day. Because it’s true everyday.
The Lord’s Christmas gift to you.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.