Matthew 3:1-12
Sacred Remembering
James Sledge December
8, 2013 – Advent 2
“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” So says John
when he appears in the wilderness. Repent has a scary sound to it, but Jesus
says exactly the same thing. After John is arrested, Jesus moves from Nazareth
to Capernaum and begins his public ministry, repeating word for word what John
had said, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” It somehow
sounds different when John says it, less inviting in a way. He sounds too much like
street preachers and tent revivalist who use “Repent” as an accusation.
Quite
literally, the word John and Jesus use means to change one’s mind, with implications
of turning away from something that you once thought a good idea, but now see
differently. Before the word became an almost exclusively religious one, it
could be used without some of the accusatory sense we may hear. In such usage, you
could be headed out on a trip, realize you were on the wrong highway, and
repent of the directions you were following. And in fact, there a few places in
the Old Testament where God repents. In the book of Jonah, God “repents” of
plans to destroy Nineveh.
Our
gospel reading connects John’s message of repentance to his identity as one
spoken of by the prophet Isaiah. “The voice of one crying out in the
wilderness: ‘Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.’ ” According
to both Jesus and John, repenting is critical to preparing for God’s new day,
the kingdom that has drawn near.
Advent
is a season of preparation and expectation. A lot of getting ready goes on this
time of year. Choirs prepare special music. Houses and churches get decorated.
Special worship services are prepared. Presents are bought and wrapped. Travel
plans are made.
There
are some big events in our lives, things that require planning and preparation,
that point toward big changes coming. Think of all the work and planning that goes
into to a college graduation or a wedding. Or consider a couple about to have
their first child and all they must do to get ready. They need a crib, a
stroller, baby clothes, and so on. And this getting ready is only a beginning.
It starts this couple down a road that, for better or worse, will be vastly
different from one without children.
What will change as a result of your Advent
preparations? Do they start you on a new and different path? How will things be
different come January, when all the special services are over, the presents all
opened, and the decorations all put away?