Such a lovely room

Such a lovely room

Sunday, December 8, 2024

YEAR C 2024 advent 2

Advent 2, 2024
Malachi 3:1-4
Canticle 16
Philippians 1:3-11
Luke 3:1-6

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

I figure it never hurts to remind us all that every Advent, the Church begins a new year.  And when we begin a new year, we make the move from one gospel book to another.  And starting last week, we switched the spotlight from Mark to Luke.  Luke is my favorite of the four gospels (but please don’t tell the other gospels I said that).  And using the phrase “switch the spotlight” is perfectly appropriate for Luke’s gospel, because the first three chapters are chock full of songs, like a little musical.  And I know our Choirmaster Andrew will love to hear me admit that!

Luke’s gospel just moves along, and here comes a dramatic moment, and the characters are beside themselves with excitement, and this calls for a song!  Early on, two pregnant women, Elizabeth and Mary get together and they’re so thrilled that Mary breaks into what we now call the Magnificat, “My soul magnifies the Lord.”  And then, Elizabeth’s son, John the Baptist is born, and his father is so happy (and since he can finally speak again) he breaks into the Song of Zechariah—which today’s bulletin insert calls “Canticle 16.”  “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel.”  And then, the Spirit of God tells Simeon that he would not die before seeing the Messiah, and when he sees the baby Jesus in the Temple he breaks into Simeon’s Song, “Lord, let your servant depart in peace.”  Luke’s gospel has just got started, and we’ve already got three absolute bangers—arguably the three most popular songs in the history of the Church.

So, that’s one reason I love Luke so much: because of all the songs.  But let me interrupt myself here to complain about what the church year does to Luke’s narrative flow.  In the section of Luke that we just heard, John the Baptist is, you know, somewhere around 30 years old, and he’s out in the desert this second week of Advent.  And soon, Jesus is going to come to him to be baptized, because Jesus will also be around 30 years old.  (Six months younger than John, by tradition at least.)  But the Canticle we just heard is the song of Zechariah, which happens right after John was born.  And, since this is the Second Sunday of Advent, that means Jesus himself won’t even be born for another 17 days.  So, time is a construct in our church year, and you’ve just got to go with the lectionary flow, disjointed though it might be.

Okay, but here is what I most want to focus on: the opening sentence of today’s gospel reading.  See if you hear an active verb here:  In the fifteenth year of the reign of Emperor Tiberius, when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, and Herod was ruler of Galilee, and his brother Philip ruler of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias ruler of Abilene, during the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas . . .”  And now I’ll answer my own question: No, you did not hear an active verb.  ALL of that stuff is what we call a dependent clause.  (And by that I don’t mean Santa’s children.  Hey, Dads gotta Dad Joke.)

All of those names and places are dependent on the action part of the sentence, which is, “a word from God came to John.”  That’s the point of the sentence: a word from God came to John.  All those other names and stuff are like Luke adding the phrase, “One day,” before the action part.  The beginning of the sentence doesn’t really do anything.  Which raises the question, why is it there?  Why tell us which leaders were ruling which things, and who led the Priesthood, and all that?

Well, two things.  First, has it ever struck you as odd that the name Pontius Pilate comes up in the Nicene Creed?  Like we’re just going along with all this really ethereal language and these theological concepts and suddenly there’s this guy, whose name we only know because he put Jesus to death.  Why is he in there?  Well, one reason we say his name in the Creed is to anchor the life and death of Jesus to a specific point in human history.  Historians will always be able to tell us what years Pilate was in charge, which means we know when all this happened, like in actual human years.  When you look at Greek and Roman mythology (other than maybe the Fall of Troy) there are no anchor points tying them to real history.  And that’s why we call it mythology.  Could have happened last week, or a billion years ago, or not at all.  But Jesus was put to death on a specific day at a specific time and in a specific place.  And Pilate’s name tells us when and where.

So, one of the reasons Luke names all those people in today’s reading is to tell us when and where we are in human history.  John the Baptist was in the wilderness when Tiberius was Emperor, and etc etc.  Tiberius is in the history books, so we know John lived at a particular time and place, and later on, Jesus will come to be baptized by him.  (You know, 30 years after he’s born . . . later this month.)

But as I said earlier, all those names and titles are a dependent clause to “a word from God came to John son of Zechariah in the wilderness,” so linguistically speaking they’re not important.  And that's why I love Luke so much!  Because at that time those other guys are important . . . to the important people.  Luke turns everything upside down.  The beauty of that sentence focusing on the nobody John out in the wilderness is that those other people are important in society’s eyes.  In fact, they’re the only people who are important!  That list is a who’s who of everyone of importance that you need to know in first century Palestine.  And yet . . . a word from God came to John son of Zechariah in the wilderness.  Who is Zechariah?  Nobody.  Who is John?  Nobody.  Where is the wilderness?  Nowhere.  A word from God came to John . . . son of Zechariah . . . in the wilderness.

We would expect a word from God to come to the Emperor, the governor, the ruler of Galilee, the high priests.  All the people John mentions first.  But a word from God comes to John.  In Luke’s Gospel, God always comes to the lowly, the outcasts, the unimportant.  To Mary, to shepherds, to Bethlehem, to the wilderness.  God is at work where nobody expects to see God working.  Lifting up the lowly while casting down the proud.  Raising up the valleys and leveling the mountains.  God bypasses the rich and powerful, living in their important cities, doing their important things, getting their names listed in important history books, and God seeks out John, a nobody, in the wilderness.

And, quite frankly, that is the best news you and I are going to get.  Because in the 24th year of the 21st century, when Joe Biden was President of the United States, and Mike DeWine was Governor of Ohio, and Jamie Slutz was Mayor of Massillon, and when Sean Rowe was Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, and Anne B. Jolly was Bishop of the Diocese of Ohio, a word from God came  . . . to the people of St. Timothy’s Church, in Massillon, Ohio.

God does not need for you to be strong and good and rich and powerful in order to come to you.  God does not need you to be popular and worthy and upstanding to seek you out.  In fact—at least the way Luke tells the story—you’re better off not being any of those things!  Because a word of God came to John, son of Zechariah, in the wilderness.  And the word of God comes to you, right here, today.

And as I never tire of reminding you, we all receive the bread of heaven just as a beggar receives bread, or a child receives a gift:  with our hands stretched out in front of us, expecting nothing, but hoping for everything.  Deserving nothing, but trusting in a miracle.  And God bypasses the rich and powerful and so-called important people of this world to come directly to you, because you are loved, more than you could ever ask or imagine.

A word from God came to John, son of Zechariah, in the wilderness.  And a word from God comes to you.  To you!  Thanks be to God.

Amen.

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