Luke 3:7-18
Repentance and Fruit for Christmas
James Sledge December
16, 2018
John
the Baptist shows up two weeks in a row in the Advent gospel readings, and so
at the end of a recent staff meeting, I checked with Diane about her sermon on
John’s first appearance. I did not want my sermon to duplicate hers. Could I
preach on the “brood of vipers” or might she have already touched on that?
Diane
said I could have the vipers, though she might touch a bit on John’s ministry
during the children’s time. Then the conversation lapsed into silliness. I
joked that she could greet children at the chancel steps with, “You brood of
vipers! Who told you to come up here?” Then we imagined parents yanking their
children out of the worship service, And come to think of it, maybe I shouldn’t
share what goes on in staff meetings.
But
that bit of silliness got me thinking about why those who came out to see John
didn’t head for home the moment he started yelling. All they do is show up, and
he calls them a family of snakes, a colorful way of implying that they are
children of the devil. Yet these people do not run off. They ask for
instructions. "What then should we do?" Clearly they think that something
is about to happen, and they want to be ready.
As
I thought about the crowds that gather around John despite how unpalatable he
is, I found myself thinking about the gathering
in the missional mandate the Session has discerned as our call from God.
“Gathering those who fear they are not enough so we may experience grace,
wholeness, and renewal as God’s beloved.” I thought about the strategies of Gather, Deepen, and Share that we think critical to this missional mandate, and I took
a look at this story of John the Baptist using the lens of Gather, Deepen, and Share.