30 November 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Advent 1 Vienna, VA
“It’s Time!”
Text:
Romans 13:8-14; Matthew 21:1-11
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
You know the time, St. Paul said to us
today.
And that’s true, isn’t it? We know time. In fact, I
think you could say we know time more than at any other time in history. Time
that is measured by seasons and years, by days and months, by hours and
seconds. If you’re an athlete, a split second may the difference between
winning and losing. If you’re a scientist, it’s microseconds and nanoseconds.
We know time.
But what do you do with that knowledge? Some people live by the
clock and let it rule their lives. But for others, and other cultures, an hour
late may be right on time. You know when it’s time for bed, but might still
stay up. And you know when it’s time to get up but might stay in bed. We
countdown the days until Christmas break, we know how many hours of PTO we
have. Sometimes we have too much time and sometimes too little. It can be time
for action, or time to relax. Time we know! St. Paul couldn’t have imagined how
well we do.
But of course, that’s not what Paul’s
talking about here. His question really is: what time is it for us as
Christians? And if you know what time it is, what are you doing
with that knowledge?
Well, you heard what Paul said. He said: It’s
time to get up! To wake from sleep. To stop being sleepy or
sleepwalking Christians. Because salvation is nearer to us now than when
we first believed. Because with each passing day, month, season, and
year, we are one more day, month, season, and year closer to Jesus coming again
in glory. And one of these days, months, seasons, or years, He will.
For the time of that coming again has been set,
planned. God does nothing willy nilly. Just as Jesus’ first coming in the
flesh, His birth, was prophesied and carefully planned and carried out at just
the right time, and just as Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem that we heard about
today in the Gospel was prophesied and carefully planned and carried out at
just the right time, so too has His coming again been prophesied and carefully
planned and will be carried out at just the right time. The question for us
today is: What do we do with this knowledge of time? The
time of Jesus’ coming again . . . Do we hit the snooze button and sleepily roll
over? Or are we like a child on Christmas morning? Ready and eager for that day
to begin!
The temptation is the snooze button, right? Even
back in Paul’s day. That’s why he had to write to the Romans and tell them to
get up and wake up! But it’s hard. It’s hard to keep top of mind. Our lives and
minds are so filled with other stuff. So many demands on our time. So much
other stuff to do. And there’s only so much time . . .
So maybe this is a good time to stop and think
about this a little . . . this first Sunday of a new Church year . . . that
maybe we’re not doing it right . . . maybe it’s time to pay more attention . .
. maybe it is time for us to wake up . . .
So how do we do that? Some things that are
coming, we’re good at preparing for - like Christmas and Easter. Other things,
like Jesus coming again, maybe not so much. That’s what our midweek services
are about this Advent, though! So I invite you to come to those.
But we also heard some things today that can help
us. That can help us prepare. That can help us be ready and awake. Like, Hosanna!
We heard that in the Holy Gospel today. That’s what the crowds shouted when
Jesus came to Jerusalem and entered that city, humbly, on the donkey. With that
word, hosanna, they were both praising Him as Saviour
and crying out for Him to save them. They were ready, and excited.
And so that we be ready and excited, we do the
same. We take up their cry, Hosanna, as part of our Communion
liturgy, for here is Jesus entering His Church humbly in bread and wine with
that very saving the crowds cried out for. So we acknowledge that. Here is our Saviour, in His same Body and Blood, with His forgiveness
and life, His salvation for us. So every week, every time we come to the altar,
every time we sing Hosanna for Jesus coming here and now in bread
and wine, we are preparing and practicing for His coming again in glory. And
receiving the forgiveness and life we need for that day. So we’ll be ready. So
this is one way.
Another is as Paul wrote to the Romans: cast
off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light. Works of
darkness are those things we don’t want anyone else to see us doing, we
want to keep in the dark. Those things we don’t want anyone else to know about
us. Those words we would never speak, but so easily type anonymously online.
Those thoughts and desires we condemn in others, but that live rent free in our
hearts and minds. Works of darkness. Work we do in darkness. The working of the
darkness in us. Cast that off, Paul says.
And put on the armor of light.
Light seems like a funny kind of armor, but it is. It is because light works
against the works of darkness by exposing them. I’m sure you’ve heard it said:
light is the best disinfectant. Light makes the cockroaches scatter, and the
sinners, too. Shine the light of day and truth on your sins - don’t let them
live on in the darkness and secrecy of your heart and mind. So to cast
off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light is, in other
words, to repent. To confess, to expose our sin, but not just that! But to
receive the healing forgiveness of Jesus. Confession without forgiveness is
humiliation. Forgiveness without confession is approval. But confession and
forgiveness, confession and absolution, is the way of Jesus.
The way of Jesus that began with your Baptism. That’s
why I stand next to the Font for Confession and Absolution at the beginning of
the service every week. That’s where it all began. That’s where you were born
again, born from above, as a child of God. That old sinner in you who loves the
darkness is no longer who you really are. He was drowned and put to death in
those waters, so that a new child of God could emerge and arise. A child of God
clothed with Christ - or as a Paul said, who has put on Christ. And
He is armor even better than light. So this is another way we prepare
for Jesus’ coming - and not just a Sunday way, but an every
day way. To every day, repent and shed your sinful, snaky skin, and rise
up again, clothed with Christ, and armed with His forgiveness and love.
Christ’s love which, Paul also says, fulfills
the law. For as a baptized child of God, raised with Christ’s
forgiveness and clothed with Christ’s love, we live a new life. A life of love
that fulfills the law. Paul went on to list some of the ways we
do that, listing the commandments there and saying, love does no wrong to
a neighbor. Which is true. But equally true is this: love does
good to our neighbor. Love is active in doing good. For the commandments
are not only about what not to do, but teach us about what to do.
To help, encourage, serve, befriend, honor, cherish, support, and protect. And
this is good for us because if we are busy with these things, we will not
be busy with our sins and trying to gratify our sinful desires. And if we’re not
busy with these things . . . with doing good and serving our neighbor . . .
that’s when we start to wander off into the darkness . . . or as Paul put it, making
provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.
So instead, as we see the Day of Christ’s return
approaching, we prepare for His return in the future by now not
focusing on ourselves, but on the Christ in our neighbor. For as Jesus Himself
said, when we’ve done it to one of the least of these, we’ve done it unto
Him (Matthew
25:40). So we
think of His coming now, here, in our neighbor, so we’ll be ready for
His coming then.
Now what does this look like for you in
your life? Specifically. With your temptations, your
challenges, your busyness; what you do, how you live? I’m
guessing that instead of doing all these things, you’ve rolled over and hit the
snooze more than a few times. Me too. It’s easier. We’ll do it later. We do
that with Christmas shopping, with projects at work, with cramming for exams,
and have gotten away with it. And maybe you’ve gotten away with it in your
Christian life, too. So far. The Roman Christians, too.
But while we know the time, that the
signs that point to Jesus coming again are being fulfilled, at the same time we
don’t know the time. We don’t know when Jesus will
return. We don’t know when the alarm is going to go off and the snooze isn’t
going to work this time . . . when time runs out.
So this season of Advent is to help us be ready. To
prepare not just for Christmas, although we do. But so that we’ll be as excited
for the Last Day as we are for Christmas Day. That we’ll prepare for the Last
Day as much as we do for Christmas Day. That we’ll connect the dots from the
baby in the manger, to the man on the cross, to the Son coming again in glory.
So that connected to Jesus, we die with Him, we rise with Him, and we live with
Him. Not just later, but now. That His love be our love, and His forgiveness,
our forgiveness, and His eternal life our eternal life. For that’s one gift you
don’t want to miss! The gift Jesus is - literally! - dying to give you.
So get up! Paul said. Wake up from
your sleep! And that’s why we prayed earlier: Stir up Your power, O
Lord, and come - advent! . . . for that’s what the word advent
means: come, or coming. Advent and poke us! Wake us from
our sleep! Advent with Your forgiveness, advent with Your Spirit, advent with
Your life . . .
Stir up Your power, O Lord, and come. . . that by Your
protection we may be rescued from the threatening perils of our sins . . . The
protection of the armor of light, the armor of God’s Word of truth. Protected
by our Baptism as we put on Christ . . .
Stir up Your power, O Lord, and come. . . that by Your
protection we may be rescued from the threatening perils of our sins . . . and
saved - hosannaed! - by Your
mighty deliverance. Yes, hosanna us from the darkness and the
darkness of sin in us. Hosanna us from our own sleepiness. Hosanna
us with Your forgiveness and life. The forgiveness and life that was spoken to
us earlier, and will soon be fed to us here.
For blessed is He who comes in the name of the
Lord. And blessed are we He comes for. Children of our heavenly Father,
who leads us not into temptation, but delivers us from evil. Stir
up Your power, O Lord, and come for us. Savior of the Nations,
Come! (LSB
#332) It’s
time.
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.