Summary: Sermon for Advent 3, year C. John the Baptist sent his disciples to Jesus wanting to know why Jesus allowed him to remain in jail. Jesus quoted the prophet Isaiah back to him, and said, "rejoice."

Preparing for 2020

John, Jesus, and Joy: Listening to the right prophet.

I do not wear pink very often (unless I lose a bet, like today…). But, there is one service in the church year where the priest can wear pink vestments. Rose Sunday, or the Sunday of Joy… Today.

I didn’t want to wear pink, so I decided I needed to tactfully "inquire" and see if pink was the tradition.

I asked Kathy Lopez, “Is pink customary for Rose Sunday? I haven’t noticed rose-colored vestments.” Kathy said, “We haven’t done that before.” I smiled, nodded, and said, “That sounds great to me.” What Kathy didn't know is that it would be a joyful because I can wear blue.

No matter the color, today is when we silence the chaos of life and rejoice, be joyful, and give thanks.

Isaiah painted a picture of flowers blooming in the desert, of clear waters flowing where there once was dry sand. He even said God would open ears and eyes so people could see and hear God at work among them. As you can imagine, I was excited to preach this sermon when I read Isaiah. It’s an easy sermon: Prepare for the joy that God will send us.

That was well and good until John the Baptist came back to church. He's like the obnoxious uncle who doesn't know when it's time to leave once Christmas lunch is over and everyone else has gone home. John stays.

In the gospel lesson, he was in prison. He wanted to know if Jesus was really the Messiah. So, this Sunday the church sets aside for joy, yet we encounter John, the prophet who prepared the way for Jesus, wanting to know if Jesus…

We have two prophets; the first was in jail and almost criticized Jesus. The second was Isaiah. He comforted people instead of criticizing them. Both can teach us about joy. As I read them I see that,

1. Joy surrenders its expectations.

Speaking of expectations, I met a young man in Afghanistan that I'll never forget. He wanted to talk through some relationship issues with his father. He began with, "Padre, have you ever met someone who would sacrifice relationships on the altar of expectations?" "Unfortunately, I've met far too many." "Then you've met my father," he said. As I listened, I realized his father wanted him to follow his footsteps and be a surgeon, but his son wanted to be a soldier.

John was one of those people. He held others to his version of perfection. Why? Because John had certainty, and he knew his way was the only way. I’ve learned that joy doesn’t hang around certainty very long.

John’s certainty also spilled over into how he understood the messiah. He created a mold for the messiah.

John was a…. connoisseur of desert living. Much like Renaissance art, John would have painted Jesus in a trendy camel hair jacket, accentuated by the savory and succulent delicacy of honey-roasted grasshoppers from the northern regions of the Negev desert.

BUT, Jesus didn’t wear John’s expectations. Nor did he lead John’s beloved religious revolution. He even disappointed a whole nation when he didn’t recruit soldiers and destroy the Roman government once and for all. Jesus was a disappointment.

Let me bring this home. John sent people to Jesus who said, “Look, you’re not living up to my expectations. I declared you the son of God. I prophesied that you were the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecies. Now I’m in jail. If YOU are the Christ, get me out of here. Either you’re letting me sit here, or you’re powerless to get me out. Either way this is your fault. Do we just need to look for another Messiah?

When I hear this, I want to rebuke John for his disrespect. Then I realize I've been John before. I’ve felt like God failed me when my life fell apart. I’ve thought, “God, I told you what I wanted, yet you leave me in this confined space where life seems so constricted. I’m afraid and lonely.”

Allow me a personal moment where we can all be honest. We need the courage to name those feelings because getting them out leaves room for the Spirit to heal on the inside.

Jesus sent word back to John, “It doesn’t seem like it now, but the poor hear good news, the lepers – the ones shunned by society – are healed from the shame, even those who are dead rise. It’s happening, whether or not it meets your expectations.

2. Personal expectations can’t produce joy. It comes from purposeful imagination.

Imagination was Isaiah’s secret! He faced death, too. However, he faced more than a cell. The Assyrian army destroyed the nation above them, and they marched toward Jerusalem. Isaiah and his people faced genocide, or at best slavery. Yet he prophesied joy.

He said to rejoice in hope, expect blooms in the desert, patiently wait for eyes and ears to open. When his nation faced slavery, he had good news. His imagination had room for a future where those who sow in will see the flowers of joy rise from their deserts of sorrow.

Here’s a big take away from today’s sermon; there are two kinds of prophets, and there are two ways to approach this new decade.

John was a critical prophet. A critical prophet speaks their truth – their truth – in a direct way that tells people where, why, and how they are wrong. The bible has those kinds of prophets. I’ve even met a few clergy who take that route.

But that mindset doesn’t leave much room for holy imagination. Scolding and shaming rarely open the eyes of the blind.

There is another ministry mindset. Isaiah energized instead of criticized. He said rejoice! He told Israel that no matter their sins, and no matter what their circumstances looked like, they could rejoice!

That’s a sermon we need to hear. We need someone to tell us the good news that no matter where we find ourselves, in a jail cell of shame or the desert of grief, we don’t have to lose our faith. We are people of holy imagination.

Conclusion

Last night I watched the Heisman trophy presentation. Over the years I’ve noticed how the winners usually say things like, “I want to thank my coach, and my team, and my parents. I especially thank my 11th-grade coach who cut me from the first team. That's when I decided I'd prove that was the greatest coaching mistake he ever made.” The speeches are usually them and their accomplishments.

Last night LSU’s QB, Joe Burrow, won the Heisman. He sounded a lot like Isaiah. He stood, fought back the tears, and said, "First, I want to thank my line because without them I'm nothing." He thanked family, coaches, team members, and friends. He didn’t mention himself.

He ended with, “I’m just a kid from a rural town southeast Ohio. We face poverty at four times that of the norm. This is for the hungry kids, for the kids who can't afford to play football, and for the kids who are scared they will never have enough, I am proof that there is hope.”

Preach it, Isaiah. Flowers can bloom in the parched and barren lands.

Amen.