Isaiah 11:1-9
Countercultural Preparation
James Sledge December
10, 2017
How
many Christmas shows have you seen so far? Many that I grew up with have
already made their annual appearance. Rudolph
the Red-Nosed Reindeer, How the
Grinch Stole Christmas, and A Charlie
Brown Christmas have all run at least once. It’s amazing their staying
power. Rudolph first ran in 1964, and Charlie Brown the following year.
I’ve
seen these programs so many times that I can easily recall scenes from them. In
A Charlie Brown Christmas, Linus
explains the true meaning of Christmas to Charlie Brown, reciting from the
gospel of Luke. “And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all
the world should be taxed.”
The
story Linus tells is well known to many of us. Like the Christmas shows
themselves, we encounter it every season. It is warm and familiar. For me it
evokes memories of long ago Christmas pageants and my father reading it before
bed on Christmas Eve.
The
story is nostalgic for many of us, and so we may overlook how odd and
subversive it is. In the midst of imperial Roman might, in the shadow of a
Caesar called “Lord, Savior, Son of God,” a rival king is born, a different
Savior and Son of God. Amidst the pageantry and royal finery of empire, the
birth of a competing Lord is witnessed only by shepherds.
The
contrast is absurd. Caesar, with all the might a of superpower at his disposal versus
a baby, his parents, and a small entourage of dirty shepherds. What chance does
this new king have? Why tell such a ridiculous story? Why would anyone choose
to align themselves with Jesus rather than the emperor and all his vast wealth
and power?
Our
reading from Isaiah this morning has its own fanciful, absurd scenario. Wolf
and lamb, leopard and kid, lion and calf, and children playing with poisonous
snakes. It’s lovely and all. It makes for a great painting, but if anything, it
is even more ridiculous than Jesus as an alternative to Caesar. It can’t really
happen. It’s against the natural order of things.
But
there is another scene in our reading that is much less absurd. It speaks of
one from the house of David who will have God’s spirit, the spirit of wisdom and
understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the
fear of the Lord. This one will truly discern the will of God and so
bring justice for the poor and weak. Yes, the scene lapses into a bit of
hyperbole at the end, but the core of it is not at all fanciful, not at all
ridiculous. Indeed we claim these very things for those we baptize.