Luke 1:67-79 (Isaiah 2:1-4)
Wishes, Hopes, and Dreams
James Sledge November
30, 2014 – Advent 1
When
I was a boy, way back in the 1960s, one of the things my brother and I most looked
forward to was the arrival of the Sears Christmas catalog. I’m not talking
about the regular catalog, a massive thing several inches thick. This was a
specialty catalog, though still quite large, geared toward children and
Christmas.
Now
I realize some of you have never laid eyes on a Sears catalog of any sort, but
bear with me for a moment. Way back when, before the internet, the Sears
catalog was the place you could find most anything you wanted, the Amazon.com
of its day. And the Christmas catalog was filled with toys and games and bikes
and most anything a child might want for Christmas. My brother and I would
spend hours going through it, marveling at all the wondrous things in it. Some
of this was research, looking for potential presents from Santa, or gift
suggestions for relatives. But a great deal of it was mere, wishful thinking, a
child’s version of “What I would buy if I won the lottery.”
I
assume most of you have engaged in such wishful thinking. Who hasn’t
occasionally imagined winning the lottery or wished for an impossible haul of
Christmas presents.
Speaking
of wishing, in Brian McLaren’s We Make
the Road by Walking, the chapter for the first week of Advent makes a
distinction between wishes, on the one hand, and hopes and dreams, on the
other. He writes, “Desires, hopes, and dreams inspire action, and that’s what
makes them so different from a wish. Wishing is a substitute for action.”[1]
One needn’t agree with McLaren’s exact semantics to get his point. There are different
sorts of longing. When someone dreams of running the Marine Corps Marathon she
may well start a training routine that will hopefully allow her to finish the
race. It is a dream that motivates, very different from, “Oh, I wish I could
win the lottery.”
When
Martin Luther King, Jr. proclaimed, “I have a dream…” what he was doing had
little in common with my looking at spectacular presents I would never get and
saying, “Wouldn’t that be grand.” He was speaking of something he dedicated his
life to, that he worked diligently to achieve, a real possibility. It was a
prophet’s dream.
Prophets, Dr. King, the biblical sort, are
connected to God’s dream, the future that God is working to bring. Prophets seek
to align people with that dream. When biblical prophets predicted gloom and
doom, it was never a precise “This will happen on such and such a date.” It was
a call to change, to turn from ways that will lead to destruction. And in the same
way, when prophets spoke of a day when nation shall not lift up sword against
nation, it was never a magic formula or timetable. It was an intimacy with
the hopes and dreams of God, an assurance that God would bring history into line
with those hopes and dreams. The biblical prophets knew, as the prophet Martin
Luther King said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward
justice.”