Bishop Tom Wright: Advent Devotionals Week 4

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Rebellion and Promise

Luke 1:57-80: Zechariah’s Prophecy, The Kingdom New Testament

The time arrived for Elisabeth’s child to be born, and she gave birth to a son. Her neighbours and relatives heard that the Lord had increased his mercy to her, and they came to celebrate with her.

Now on the eighth day, when they came to circumcise the child, they were calling him by his father’s name, Zechariah. But his mother spoke up.

‘No,’ she said, ‘he is to be called John.’

‘None of your relatives’, they objected, ‘is called by that name.’

They made signs to his father, to ask what he wanted him to be called. He asked for a writing tablet, and wrote on it, ‘His name is John.’

Everyone was astonished. Immediately his mouth and his tongue were unfastened, and he spoke, praising God. Fear came over all those who lived in the neighbourhood, and all these things were spoken of throughout all the hill country of Judaea. Everyone who heard about it turned the matter over in their hearts.

‘What then will this child become?’ they said. And the Lord’s hand was with him.

John’s father Zechariah was filled with the Holy Spirit, and spoke this prophecy:

‘Blessed be the Lord, Israel’s God!

He’s come to his people and bought them their freedom.

He’s raised up a horn of salvation for us

In David’s house, the house of his servant,

Just as he promised, through the mouths of the prophets,

The holy ones, speaking from ages of old:

Salvation from our enemies, rescue from hatred,

Mercy to our ancestors, keeping his holy covenant.

He swore an oath to Abraham our father,

To give us deliverance from enemy hands,

So we might worship him, holy and righteous

Before his face to the end of our days.

You, child, will be called the prophet of the Highest One,

Go ahead of the Lord, preparing his way,

Letting his people know of salvation,

Through the forgiveness of all their sins.

The heart of our God is full of mercy,

That’s why his daylight has dawned from on high,

Bringing light to the dark, as we sat in death’s shadow,

Guiding our feet in the path of peace.’

The child grew, and became powerful in the Spirit. He lived in the wilderness until the day when he was revealed to Israel.

Luke, like Matthew, anchors the story he is going to tell in the story of the Old Testament. But Luke, unlike Matthew, broadens this story almost immediately so that we are reminded that what God does for his people is actually of world-wide relevance. Luke Chapter One is full of echoes of First Samuel, of the original birth and call of Samuel, then Samuel’s ministry of finally anointing King David. He is wanting to say that John the Baptist, whose birth is like a new Samuel, is going to anoint the new and true King, Jesus, in his baptism.

But in Chapter Two, Luke broadens that perspective because ‘in those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be enrolled, registered for taxation’. Suddenly we find ourselves not only on the map of Israel, but on the map of Rome, the greatest empire the world had ever known. And Luke wants us, I think, to relish the fact that Caesar in Rome gives a decree and at the far end of his empire, the ‘back of beyond’, as far as he was concerned, a young man and his intended bride go on a journey to Bethlehem and have a child. This is, in fact, the true King who is going to make Caesars, in the days to come, shiver in their shoes until finally they relent and acknowledge Him to be the Lord of the world.

All of that Luke is hinting in the way he sets the story up. And indeed, when we get to the genealogy of Jesus in Luke, we find that the genealogy goes back, not to Abraham, but actually to Adam. Luke is telling us the story of Jesus, as the story of the world, as the story of the whole human race, which is addressed by the God of the Old Testament, the God of Israel, who is now made known in Jesus.

Luke also indicates, right from the beginning, that this story is about the temple, about the judgment on the present temple, and about Jesus as the one who is building the new temple. The Gospel of Luke begins in the temple with Zechariah, who is given a vision, and not believing the vision, because the angel tells him that his wife is going to have a child and he doesn’t initially grasp that at all. Then, Jesus is presented in the temple, which is unique to Luke. This goes on right to the end of the Gospel of Luke. Right at the end of the Gospel of Luke, the disciples are in the temple praising God.

But the temple has been under judgment. As we find again and again in the Old Testament, the present Jerusalem temple has become the symbol of resistance to the will of God, a symbol of the fact that Israel is hard-hearted. The temple encapsulates the two stories we have seen throughout the Old Testament: the narrative of promise and of God’s presence, as well as the narrative of Israel’s rebellion.

In Luke 15 we find Jesus encapsulating the point of God’s presence and Israel’s rebellion in three parables. We find in Luke 15, ‘Now all the tax collectors and sinners were coming near to Jesus to listen to him’. Luke has many scenes where people are having parties and feasting with Jesus. And people grumble about it. ‘The Pharisees and Scribes are grumbling and saying, “This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with him”’. In other words, how could he possibly be announcing God’s kingdom? Because if he was really an agent announcing God’s kingdom, he would be respecting and favoring and spending time with the rest of us who are trying to keep the law—the rest of us who are ‘righteous’ and being faithful to Israel’s God. Jesus tells them the three parables: The Parable of the Lost Sheep, the Parable of the Lost Coin, and the Parable of the Lost Son, or the Parable of the Lost Sons (because the parable is as much about the older brother as it is about the younger). Each of these stories is about explaining why there is a party going on.

Here’s the punch: ‘Just so I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous people who need no repentance’ (Luke 15:7). Jesus is saying, ‘When I am sharing fellowship with and welcoming and forgiving sinners, then the angels are having a party upstairs’. What he is saying is that we should be having a party downstairs as well. What he is doing, therefore, is joining together heaven and earth. He is saying that what I am doing is the actual instantiation on earth as in heaven of the celebration that is going on in God’s court among the angels. The angels are having a party and so should we! Heaven and earth coming together.

Then the risen Jesus, in Luke 24, explains how the whole story of Jesus’ life and death all fits together. The two disciples on the road to Emmaus are puzzled because they thought that this Jesus whom they followed was going to redeem Israel, that he was the one who was going to do at last what they have been waiting for hundreds of years. But they crucified him so he couldn’t have been the one. Jesus says, ‘You have it entirely upside down and inside out…. was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter his glory?’.

The entire narrative is shaped by the creator God, shaped through Exodus, shaped through the story from Abraham to David, shaped by exile and the promises of restoration.

As we read Luke, we should see it as the culmination of that great scriptural story, but now being transformed into a new mode: the mode of mission, the mode of suffering, the mode of holiness, the mode of following Jesus to the ends of the earth.

N.T. Wright from a lecture in the course The Many Storied World of the Bible (not yet released).

Fr. Philip Sang—God with Us!

Sermon delivered on Sunday, Advent 4A, December 18, 2016, at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church, Westerville, OH.

If you prefer to listen to the audio podcast of today’s sermon, click here.

Lectionary texts: Isaiah 7:10-16; Psalm 80:1-8, 17-19; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-25.

Let us pray: May the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts be
acceptable to You, our Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. In the name of God the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit Amen.

Since we started Advent, in the lectionary reading texts for the season, there
seemed to be a common theme that surfaced. The theme is waiting, and of course
that is no surprise to us during this Advent season. Immediately following
Thanksgiving, we start to anticipate Christmas. The texts have us waiting for even
larger and broader ideas. Our readings in Advent have certainly built up our hopes
and expectations, with promises about war turning into peace in the text about
beating swords in plowshares; gentleness, not violence, becoming “the norm” even
in nature itself, the lion lying with the lamb; and all of us coming home at last to
the God of healing, wholeness, and reconciliation. We’ve been looking forward,
not backward, in this season of anticipation, and today’s reading brings us to the
long-awaited moment of God’s dramatic “new thing,” God’s fresh, new act in the
drama of salvation. We are waiting for what could be considered idealistic
changes in our world. And we know they can only happen when we trust and
know that God is with us. However, we know the outcome of the waiting in the
texts we read today. They were waiting for Emmanuel, and we know that Jesus
was born. So, to truly understand the waiting experienced by our brothers and
sisters in Isaiah and Matthew, we must understand waiting in today’s context.

It is my assumption that each of us here know about waiting. Many of you have
waited for different reasons. Maybe it was waiting to find out about a job; the
results of a test, medical or otherwise; waiting to hear from a family member you
have tried to reach; waiting for a return call about insurance coverage; waiting to
find someone to share your life with; waiting for children; waiting for
grandchildren; waiting to be accepted into a college or program; waiting for a grant;
waiting for financing for a house or project; waiting to find a permanent place to
worship as we do. There is really no shortage of examples of ways or things that
we wait for today. And we don’t know the end result. So, this allows us to
understand the waiting we hear in our readings today.

Honestly though, the Psalm today does not seem to fit with the season, and yet
scriptures like Psalm always appear here during Advent. If you didn’t follow the
mood of the Psalm when it was read, listen to some of these lines:

“You feed them with the bread of tears; •
you give them abundance of tears to drink

“O Lord God of hosts, •
how long will you be angry at your people’s prayer??”

Psalm 80 has been called a communal hymn of lament — a lament, as in a
depressed crying out in time of great pain. Does such a scripture seem to fit with
the seasonal cheer around us? Believe it or not, this is always case of Advent to
focus on a scripture that makes pain and lament come to life. It is about as real,
genuine, and full of raw emotion as you get in the scriptures. The community
speaking here is one that is feeling abused, depressed, and down-trodden. They
feel as though God is ignoring them and maybe even taking the side of their
enemies. They feel cast aside and forgotten. And so, they sing this lament
together. All people in touch with reality have experienced and are aware of the
pain in the world. The psalmist reminds us of human frailty. This sets an
important tone for the hope to come here at Christmas. After all, the birth of the
Christ Child was not an excuse to decorate or give gifts. The birth of Christ was an
action on God’s part to give us hope. To show humanity that there is a possibility
for love and a different kind of Kingdom. Jesus came to wipe tears away and
change our reality. That is where we are headed this Christmas.

In our Old testament and gospel lessons the prophet and angel foretell the birth of
Emmanuel, God-with-us. The name “Emmanuel” (God with us) is more than a
nice name for a sweet baby. You might say that it frames the whole Gospel of
Matthew, that it tells the story of what God is about, and for the early Jewish
Christians it was especially clear that this gift of Jesus was meant to fulfill the
longing of their ancestors for all people, not just their own, to recognize God. Both
the biblical characters and we, can understand waiting, some days better than
others. The advantage we have over the biblical characters is that we have already
been assured of the Emmanuel part, God-with-us.

As a family, we have been through hard times, however, what has allowed our
family to survive and stay focused as best as we can is that, we know God is with
us. So, you ask, how in the world do you know God is with you? The answer is so
simple. We are surrounded by people who support us. We feel strength from the
people who pray for us. We are aware that people are God’s hands and feet, and
we are in no shortage of hands, feet and prayers. Does this continue to challenge
our family, as does waiting challenge others? Of course, Like anyone, we reach
the end of our ropes, we question, we get angry, frustrated and grumpy. But then
we realize and again feel the love and support of our church family, our friends and
our family.

Here at St. Augustine’s we receive new members into our congregation every time
and we make promises to them and their families that we accept them into our
family and support them. Through our hands and feet, these members and their
families can be assured that God is with them. We have a ministry to Worthington
Christian Village that visits the elderly people. This ministry, helps with prayers an
being a supportive presence to the community. Through hands and feet of the
Christians, these members of the village can be assured that God is with them.
There are also many people in this church that volunteer outside of the church
events that we have. Through their generosity of time and care, they are assuring
people that God is available to and with them.

As we are seven days away from Christmas, what should we be focusing on in our
lives? Should we be concerned about the waiting? Waiting is an on-going part of
our lives, we will always be waiting for something. Let us not worry so much
about waiting for the birth of a baby, let us, instead, celebrate the presence of God-
with-us. Let us also celebrate the possibilities of the way we can be God-with-us
to others.

I hope you feel the presence of God through others hands, feet and prayers; and
hope that you have the opportunity to be the hands, feet and pray for others. God
IS with us!

In the name of God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit Amen.

Advent Antiphons—December 18

From The Book of Common Worship’s Times and Seasons (p.58).

These antiphons, or refrains, all beginning ‘O …’, were sung before and after the Magnificat at Vespers, according to the Roman use, on the seven days preceding Christmas Eve (17–23 December). They are addressed to God, calling for him to come as teacher and deliverer, with a tapestry of scriptural titles and pictures that describe his saving work in Christ. In the medieval rite of Salisbury Cathedral that was widely followed in England before the Reformation, the antiphons began on 16 December and there was an additional antiphon (‘O Virgin of virgins’) on 23 December; this is reflected in the Calendar of The Book of Common Prayer, where 16 December is designated O Sapientia (O Wisdom). The Common Worship Calendar has adopted the more widely used form. It is not known when and by whom the antiphons were composed, but they were already in use by the eighth century.

18 December – O Adonai

O Adonai, and leader of the House of Israel, who appeared to Moses in the fire of the burning bush and gave him the law on Sinai: Come and redeem us with an outstretched arm.

–cf Exodus 3.2; 24.12