17 December 2023 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
The Third Sunday of Advent
Vienna, VA
“Pointing to the Gift”
Text: John 1:6-8; 19-28;
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
It’s now just about a week until Christmas. I’m
sure you’ve been preparing. Perhaps making travel plans. Probably
gift shopping. Maybe baking. You might have
your tree up already, and maybe there is even a gift already under it waiting
to be opened in a week. And, of course, there are two questions about that
gift: what is it? and, who is it from?
To find out the first - what is it? - maybe you
shake it, take a guess by the size and shape; but really, you have to unwrap
it. To find out the second - who is it from? - you
look at the tag.
But what if it doesn’t have a tag? Then you have
a problem. Then you have to try to figure it out.
Investigate. Does the wrapping paper match other gifts that you unwrapped? Who
would give such a gift? Who thinks like that?
Well, I submit to you today that’s exactly what
the Pharisees were doing with John, when they sent some folks to find out: what
is it? and who is it from? For John was a very
popular gift. As we heard last week, people from Jerusalem and Judea and
the whole area were going out to him. But what we heard today is that the
Jewish leaders didn’t know much about him, so they sent some priests and
Levites to unwrap him and look at his gift tag. Find
out, and bring back an answer.
Now, maybe you’ve never thought about John as
a gift before. He’s not very Christmassy, after all. But he is very Adventy. So hold onto that
thought; I’ll get to that in a moment.
First, though, back to the men sent by the Pharisees.
Who are you? they ask. It’s like they’re
shaking the box. He’s not the Christ. Is he Elijah?
No, not Elijah either. The prophet? The
prophet Moses promised would come after him and lead the people into the
Promised Land? Nope, not him either. Well who are you, then? All
wrapped up in your camel’s hair coat, leather belt, and eating locusts and wild
honey.
Now John had bona fides. He could have said: I
am a priest! Because he was the son of the priest Zechariah, so he was a
descendant of Aaron, Moses’ brother. But though true, that’s not really who he
was. He was more than that. He had a special vocation. He was a special gift. I
am the voice, he said. The one the prophet Isaiah talked about.
Preparing the way for the one coming after me, who is greater than me, and so
much greater, so much bigger, so much more that I am not even worthy to
untie the strap of his sandal.
So here’s what’s going on: they unwrapped this
gift without a tag, but it is one of those packages that doesn’t have the gift
inside, but a clue so that you can find the gift! The
real gift, the greater gift, the bigger gift. The gift
coming next. That’s the one you want. John’s just there to
point the way to Him.
Now, John - not the Baptist, but the Apostle, who
wrote the Gospel we heard this morning - tells us the answer to what the
Pharisees were trying to figure out: who he is and where he was from.
So we know! We know who sent
that gift and put it under the tree. But at that time, the Pharisees didn’t. So
first, let me just read those words again, and then I’ll explain them. This is
what John (the apostle) said: There was a man sent from God, whose name
was John. He came as a witness, to bear witness about the light, that all might
believe through him. He was not the light, but came to bear witness about the
light.
And here’s what that means, putting it into our
context, into our story: There was a man sent from God
[so that’s what the tag said: from God], whose name was
John. He came as a witness [as a voice, the clue],
to bear witness about [to point to] the light
[the gift], that all might believe through him [that
all might receive that gift]. He was not the light [he
was not the gift], but came to bear witness about the light
[that is, be the clue that points to it]. So that the people
then, and people still today, would receive the gift - the gift not just of a
prophet (the smaller gift), but of a Saviour (the
greater gift).
Now this is a good time to circle back to what I
said before: you may never have thought about John as a gift before, because he’s
not very Christmassy. In our world today, once November comes, it’s the
holiday season and we tend to rush right to Christmas. Even Thanksgiving is
now just kind of a speed bump on that super highway! The focus is on the
lights, the presents, the music. And that’s okay. I’m
not going to stand up here and tell you to be a Scrooge or a Grinch. But the danger
is that this gift from God gets shoved under the tree, and to the back, against
the wall, and forgotten about, or overlooked. So here in the Church, John
comes. To get us to slow down a little. Tap the
brakes. To be the guy with the radar gun on that super highway to Christmas! To
be a gift we get to open before Christmas, so that when the real gift, the
big gift comes, we’re ready.
And again, we heard last week what John’s voice
says: John calls us to repent. Because if the real gift that’s
coming is the gift of a Saviour, the gift of the
forgiveness of your sins, the gift of the Spirit, the gift of life - life after
death, then how we get ready for that gift is to repent. Because if you
don’t, if you don’t know you’re a sinner who needs the gift of a Saviour and forgiveness and life, then unwrapping that gift
is a bit like unwrapping a present and finding underwear instead of the video
game you wanted! You’re disappointed, or worse - you don’t want it; you
toss it aside. You toss HIM aside. But if you know that a Saviour
is the gift you really need, then there is joy when you receive that
gift. Joy, when you look in the manger, or in the Font as we did last Sunday,
or on the altar as we do every Sunday, or what you hear from the chancel, and
you know . . . this is the gift. The gift above
all others.
Now, we didn’t hear John’s preaching this morning
like we did last week, calling us to repent. But he said he was the one spoken
of by Isaiah - and we did hear from Isaiah what this one, this voice,
would speak, and to whom. So we’ll let Isaiah do the preaching! And these were
the folks that the voice, that John, was sent to . . . John was
sent
(+) to the poor,
or those bent low under heavy burdens. And that’s you. Bent low under heavy
burdens of sin, guilt, worry, fear. For yourself, for your
families, for other loved ones. Burdens that sometimes
seem crushing.
(+) to the brokenhearted,
or those shattered. To those with shattered hopes, or dreams,
or lives. Things not working out as you hope or planned, and you’re left
in pieces.
(+) to the captives,
like when Israel was captive in Egypt, or later in Babylon. Bonds from without,
from others, holding you down, holding you back, controlling
you.
(+) to those who are bound, with bonds
from within - the bonds of sin, your sin, holding you down, holding you
back, controlling you. Sin you don’t want but sin you can’t shake! What is it
for you? Those sin you seem to always need to confess?
Of greed, of anger, of sex, of abuse, of lies, of covetousness,
of neglecting God and His Word . . .
(+) to those who mourn, and there is
plenty to mourn in our world. The death of people, the death
of civility, the death of relationships and marriages, and so much more.
So much death caused by sin. Our sin.
(+) to those with a
faint spirit, or those disheartened. Ready to give up, ready
to give in, ready to lose hope that anything’s going to change, that anything’s
going to get better. And who among us hasn’t felt that way?
So yes, to you John comes again, to,
as Isaiah says, bring good news, proclaim liberty, the opening of the prison,
the unchaining, the Lord’s favor, comfort, gladness, and praise. That God is
coming to save. That God is adventing to set
things right again. Or as I tell my catechism classes, to fulfill the promise
He made to Adam and Eve in the beginning, to make things right and good again.
To fix what they - and we - broke, and break. God made that promise and the
whole rest of the Bible is about how God kept that promise! That in a world filled
with the poor, the brokenhearted, those held captive,
those bound, those who mourn, and those with a faint
spirit - and Adam and Eve and all people since have been those things -
that there be hope. Hope that now, God is coming, adventing,
to save.
So John may not be very Christmassy, but
he is Adventy. And we need Advent to be ready
for Christmas! We need the little gift with the clue inside, with the
voice inside, so that we receive the big gift. So that
you look in the manger and see your Saviour. So that you look on the cross and see your Saviour.
So that you come to altar and say, yes, my Saviour! And that on the Last Day you
rise, and see your Saviour forever.
Until that day, Paul says to rejoice
always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus for you. Do not quench the Spirit, he says.
Do not despise prophecies, but test everything; hold fast what is good. Abstain
from every form of evil. Which, if you take these
words out of context, just sounds like a bunch of demands. But really,
these are all things that come from receiving the gift - the main gift, the big
gift, of a Saviour and His forgiveness and life. With
that, with Him, comes - to all those people Isaiah talked about - joy and
prayer and thanks; the Spirit of God, not of the world; truth and good and not
indulging, but abstaining from evil. Or in other words, a
new life.
And that’s the real gift John wants
you to have, and the gift Jesus has come to provide for you. So that when
people want to know who are you? you can
confess, I am a child of God. Which may not sound like much compared to all that people claim for themselves and claim to be in our
world today. But John would say: Oh, it is! There is no greater gift you
could receive than of a Saviour, and to be His own,
His child. And then living that new life of joy and prayer and thanks and the
Spirit and truth and good, you then get to be like John - a voice, a little
gift to others, pointing them to the big gift; pointing them to Jesus.
Not because you have to, but because that’s who you are.
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.