Summary: Can you imagine what it would be like if the Bishop instituted John the Baptist as YOUR minister

Newchurch 04-12-05

John the Baptist - Mk 6:14-29

The Second Sunday in Advent points us toward the life and ministry of John the Baptist – a man SENT by God to prepare the way for Jesus the Messiah

Our Gospel this morning focuses on the ministry of that enigmatic character -John the Baptist.

Story: I wondered what would life be like in our parish - if the Bishop had instituted John the Baptist rather than me - as your Priest in Charge

(PAUSE)

Can you imagine, for example inviting John the Baptist round for dinner.

What would you expect?

1. His clothes.

He certainly wouldn’t have turned up in an Armani suit and a Pierre Chardin shirt.

What you would have got/ was a rugged man with a slightly dishevelled look.

And if we were honest, he’d probably look more

like the local gypsy than the new vicar.

2. His diet

And if you asked him if he had any dietary

requirements - he would tell you that he’s

vegetarian.

And he would then probably add:

“Actually I only eat locusts and honey in the summer season.”

That would be enough to drive any sane hostess up the wall.

I ask you, where can you get locusts at this time of the year?

3. His diplomacy

John the Baptist would not have been a prime candidate for the Foreign Office.

He was not diplomatic enough. He called a spade a spade – or even something euphemistically equivalent.

4. His conversation

I wonder what his topic of conversation would be with you over the dinner table.

John the Baptist had few social graces.

When the Pharisees and Sadducees came out to look at his work, did he welcome them as honourable persons of the religious establishment?

Did he smile and exchange pleasantries over

breakfast?

Did he try to engage them in polite conversation about their work?

Did he ask them for their own perspective on the Messiah?

Did he meet with them at the World Council of Churches to further interfaith dialogue?

No - but he did call them a bunch of poisonous snakes that were soon to be consumed by the flames of hell?

Not the way to make friends and influence people is it?

Not only did he alienate the religious leaders but - eventually he fell out with bigwig - King Herod, himself. He told Herod that he was committing adultery by marrying his brother Philip’s wife Herodias and that he should stop. And that eventually cost him his head.

But John didn’t care for “the Good and the Great” in the land– He cared only for the things of God.

5. His first sermon at Christmas

Could you imagine his first Christmas sermon in Newchurch - with a full church?

What do you think his message would have been?

Would it have been a platitude about simply going on “being loving to one another?”

Or would he have called us to repent and confess our sins?

I tend to think the latter.

6. John the Baptist was not a conformer

John the Baptist was not a conformer. Obviously someone had forgotten to give him Dale Carnegie’s book “How to make friends and influence people” for Christmas.

The world, in which we live - demands conformity. It demands that we live, think and act just like everybody else.

Well John the Baptsist didn’t. He was more interested in WHAT GOD wanted than anything else. And as tyou all know – in the end it cost him his head

Those - who have the courage to resist - may face great opposition and ostracism in their life.

Henry David Thoreau, the great American poet once said:

“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music that he hears, however measured and far away”.

Do you hear a different drummer?

John the Baptist did. It is essential that we listen to the voice of God inside of us.

We are called - as St. Paul said –

not to be conformed to this world,

but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds,

so that we may discern what is the will of God.

7. John’s mission

What was John the Baptist’s mission? St Mark tells us that John’s mission was to preach “ a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (Mk 1:4)

And that would have been shocking to the religious Jews of the day.

The only time baptism was used was when a Gentile became a Jew. And then the proselyte would “baptise himself and all his family”.

But here we read that John the Baptist baptised them as if they were “Gentile dogs” – that’s how the Jews in Jesus’ day referred to the Gentiles or non Jews.

But wasn’t that the message?

The Gentiles, so the Jews believed were- in God’s sight beyond the pail – because God has absolute standards.

Remember what Jesus said about the absolute

standards of God: If you look at a woman lustfully – you have committed adultery with

her in your heart. (Mt 5:28)

God has high Standards. Even your thoughts count. "Die Gedanken sind nicht mehr frei!"

(trans. Our thoughts are no longer free)

4. Conclusion

The local people loved John the Baptist because “he walked the talk”. He practised what he preached.

Jesus said this about John the Baptist:

I tell you the truth: Among those born of women there has not risen anyone greater than John the Baptist. (Mt 11:11)

We might think that John the Baptist was over the top, but Jesus took John seriously and if we are Jesus’ followers we would do well to head John’s message too.

Jesus himself said that the Church’s mission is to preach repentance and forgiveness of sins in his (Jesus’) Name to all nations ….(Lk 24:45-47).

It’s the same message that John the Baptist preached.

John mission can be summed up by three R’s

1. Recognizing my own sin

2. Receiving God’s forgiveness and

3. Reforming my life

If John’s mission is going to impact us – if we are going to swim against the stream, we need to heed John’s call, and to live a life totally dedicated to God.

Jim Eliot, a missionary who lost his life in Ecuador in the late 1950’s taking the Gospel to South American Indians said this:

“ He is no fool who gives up what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose”

John was prepared to give up the nice things in this world, to gain the accolade from his heavenly Master “Well done thou good and faithful servant”

John did not conform to this world’s standards. Rather he transformed the standards of the world around him.

Story: Luciano Pavarotti tells this story: “When I was a boy, my father, a baker, introduced me to the wonders of song. He urged me to work very hard to develop my voice.

Arrigo Pola, a professional tenor in my hometown of Modena, Italy, took me as a pupil. I also enrolled in a teachers college.

On graduating, I asked my father, ‘Shall I be a teacher or a singer?’

‘Luciano,’ my father replied, ‘if you try to sit on two chairs, you will fall between them. For life, you must choose one chair.’

‘I chose one. It took seven years of study and frustration before I made my first professional appearance.

It took another seven to reach the Metropolitan Opera. And now I think whether it’s laying bricks, writing a book-whatever we choose-we should give ourselves to it.

Commitment, that’s the key. Choose one chair.”

We need to chose daily to sit in the chair that Jesus Christ sits in.

We need to share our lives with Him - to allow Him to show us how to deal with the pressures in life.

When I look at the problems facing the Church today – I wonder if part of the problem lies in the fact that we have lost that wholehearted commitment to the Will and Mission of God, which John the Baptist – and indeed the Early Church - had?