Clean and Ready

Isaiah 42:1-9; Matthew 3:13-17

    People get cleaned up and dressed up for important events.  A woman gets her hair done, picks out a new business suit, and buys a new briefcase because she has an important job interview in the morning. A young man stands in front of the mirror, clean-shaven, smelling of cologne, and tugging at the first tuxedo he’s ever worn in his life—his prom date is waiting across town and he wants everything to be right. A chief master sergeant pulls his dress uniform from the closet and carefully puts it on, adding three rows of medals, laces up the shoes that are polished like mirrors, and buckles on his ceremonial sword;  after more than 30 years he will celebrate his retirement today. For important occasions the “everyday” just won’t do—a special event requires a very special kind of preparation.

    When John the baptist appeared in the wilderness, he stepped into a long line of prophets and elders—stretching back across the span of Israel’s history—who told the people to wash and dress themselves, for the Lord God would soon be made manifest among them. Little did anyone know just how special this event would turn out to be, for God himself was washing them in order to prepare them for receiving the Holy Spirit.

Grace, Sovereignty, and the Innocents

A Covenant Prayer in the Wesleyan Tradition
a prayer of commitment for the new year

I am no longer my own, but thine.

Put me to what thou wilt, rank me with whom thou wilt.

Put me to doing, put me to suffering.

Let me be employed by thee or laid aside for thee,

exalted for thee or brought low by thee.

Let me be full, let me be empty.

Let me have all things, let me having nothing.

I freely and heartily yield all things

to thy pleasure and disposal.

And now, O glorious and blessed God,

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,

thou art mine, and I am thine. So be it.

And the covenant which I have made on earth,

let it be ratified in heaven. Amen.

A Festival of Lessons and Carols

A FESTIVAL OF LESSONS AND CAROLS

In 1880 E. W. Benson, then Anglican Bishop of Truro, England, composed a Festival of Lessons and Carols, based on ancient sources, for Christmas Eve. In 1918 it was adapted for the chapel of King’s College, Cambridge, but its Dean, Eric Milner-White, who also wrote The Bidding Prayer. The Blessing after that Lord’s Prayer, addd by Milner-White, was first included in its present form in 1930. The Lessons given here have been customarily used in recent years at King’s College. The service has been edited for United Methodist congregations.

—United Methodist Book of Worship—

Meditation on Christ the Light of the World

THE GIFT BEYOND VALUE

Christmas is the most earthy of the Christian religious observances. In Christianity, God takes on the form of a human person. This is a remarkable and outrageous assertion—foolish and scandalous, according to Paul of Tarsus.

The point of this assertion is not to suggest some magic or extra-terrestrial happening. This is not pyrotechnics. It is not like the northern lights or sunspots. It is the declaration that God enters the world in decisive ways to tell us human beings what the big picture is all about…

...The Christmas story is the claim that the world’s reason for being is love. Not the sentimental kind favored in soap operas.  But the love once described by a wise commentator as “love with its eyes wide open.” Christmas really belongs to all those people in the world who long for love and peace and hope.

—Excerpted from GOD IS WITH US, by F. Thomas Trotter—

Love is Our New Law

Matthew 1:18-25

For Matthew, the story of Jesus is a way of talking about God; in Jesus—his teaching, life, and ministry—God is with us. From the beginning, it is God, always God, who is active. God is the one who is living, and God is the one who saves…so much so that Matthew’s gospel is less a store of the amazing things done by Jesus and much more a proclamation of what God has done for humanity through the event of Jesus.

Matthew’s story of Joseph and Mary reveals that serving a God who is active and alive is both a wonderful and (occasionally) terrifying truth. Joseph was a righteous man. He kept strict adherence to the scripture and traditions of his people. He was rooted deeply in strong and steady expectation of how things “ought to be done.” Righteousness and justice before God demand that we keep the laws of God inviolate.  And yet…

God’s revelation to Joseph, and to each of us, is that a new thing is being done through Jesus.  A new work of grace, based on God’s love, is being revealed through Jesus.  Jesus will reveal a way of being “righteous” that both respects the law, and also orients the heart toward love.  It will take an entire gospel to reveal this new way—including a sermon on the mount, a whole host of miracles, a crucifixion and a resurrection.  But it begins here…when a man who was struggling with the tension between “doing what’s right” and “showing mercy” toward another was visited by an angel and shown another way.

Waiting Becomes Hearing and Seeing

Isaiah 35:1-10; Matthew 11:2-11

At the very moment Jesus’ public ministry began, the ministry of John the Baptist was brought to an abrupt halt. After spending his life helping God’s people “prepare the way” for messiah, John was arrested and sent to prison. Sitting alone in a cell, contemplating his life’s work, he began to have some second thoughts and sent his friends to ask of Jesus, “Are you the one to come, or shall we wait for another?” John was wondering if he’d spent his life in vain.

From time to time, each of us may find ourselves alone, at the end of a long stretch of hard work, and wondering “Have I done any good at all?  has this been worth it?  does my effort count for anything?” The fears, doubts, and uncertainties of such moments are as paralyzing and imprisoning as any of the stones and cell doors that held John the Baptist.

Jesus’ word for John is the word for us in such moments.  We are part of a larger work from God, and God is the one who brings good things to pass.  Hear the word of the Lord.  See the good works that are occurring.  God’s salvation is breaking forth, and the joy of the Lord is our strength!

A Most Trustworthy Guide

Matthew 3:1-12

Centuries before Jesus, prophets foretold a time when God would send Messiah, the Christ who would be our savior.  They declared that he would be hard to recognize, not much to look at, and that many would turn away from him in disgust. The prophets went on to say that although the Promised One would surprise many by his appearing, he would bring about a time of great joy and peace, a time when God's righteousness would be established throughout the earth.

The prophets also declared that God would send another messenger when it was time for God to fulfill his promises, so that people might be ready to receive their King. The task of this messenger was to prepare God's people, and show them the way in which they should go.  

And so it is, at the very start of Matthew's Gospel, that John the Baptist leaps into view with startling suddenness. He is a wildman, a latter day prophet, and aesthete; he is frightening in countenance and passionate of voice, and is somewhat terrifying to behold.  But he is a most trustworthy guide for all who meet Jesus and receive salvation, for over and over he points the way to the one tiny door through which all must enter God's Kingdom:  "Repent."

Only 28 Shopping Days Left!

Matthew 24:36-44

Today begins the new year in the Christian calendar, the first Sunday in Advent. Our culture often associates Advent with the celebration of Christ's birth at Christmas. These four weeks serve as a ramp-up to the "Holiday Season" in the secular world, and the church often gets caught up in the excitement; we can't wait to see the baby Jesus and sing the Christmas hymns. However, Advent is actually a time to prepare ourselves for the final coming of Christ in glory.

Our scriptures today speak not of mangers and wise men but of the final coming of Messiah in glory, and the judgement of the world according to God's righteousness.  When Jesus' disciples asked him about these things, when they would take place, his response was "no one knows." Jesus went on to say that the Messiah's final appearing will be sudden, and it will be surprising, and it will be difficult to tell who is ready and who is not until Messiah actually appears. 

In fact, Jesus said, much of the world will behave like people did in the time of Noah. In terms we might understand they will go shopping and attend parties and give gifts and make New Year's resolutions, as if this year will be like last year, and next year like all the years before that.  Many will not be ready, and it will take them by surprise.

The point of Christ's teaching is not to frighten his followers with images of God’s judgment. It is, rather, the call to be a people who are ready and awake – expectantly living out the hope of the coming of Messiah by fulfilling his work here and now.