Luke 21:25-36
Truth-Telling, Grief, and Hope
James Sledge December
2, 2018
There
is a social media meme that makes the rounds every so often. It has a picture
of Walter Brueggemann at some speaking engagement. Brueggemann is professor
emeritus of Old Testament at Columbia Theological Seminary, and one of the more
respected and influential Old Testament scholars of our time.
On
this picture of Dr. Brueggemann is a quote from him, the same one that is on
the front of the bulletin. It reads, “The prophetic tasks of the church are to
tell the truth in a society that lives in illusions, grieve in a society that
practices denial, and express hope in a society that lives in despair.” Perhaps
those are good words to keep in mind on the Sunday when we enter Advent, listening
to the prophetic words of Jesus.
Truth-telling,
grieving, and hope initially strike me as odd companions, perhaps even more so
in this time of year. Advent has more and more been absorbed into the
celebration of Christmas, and at Christmas many people do not want anything to
distract them from the joy and spirit of the season. People who are grieving
often find Christmas a very difficult time and church a difficult place to be.
A
few years back I preached a sermon I called “Keeping Herod in Christmas.” I borrowed
the title from a chapter in Brian McLaren’s book, We Make the Road by Walking. McLaren talks about how Matthew’s
gospel tells of the slaughter of innocent children in reaction to Jesus’ birth,
and he says that our celebration of Christmas gets off track when it forgets
that Jesus comes into a broken world that resists the newness he brings.
My
sermon shared the upset I unintentionally created in the Columbus church I
served. I leaned a cross against the manger that sat in our sanctuary chancel
during Advent and Christmas and learned that many did not want the cross to
intrude on their Christmas cheer. Perhaps that’s what Brueggemann is talking
about when he speaks of our society’s denial.
Of
perhaps he’s talking about the 85,000 children in Yemen who have starved to
death because of Saudi Arabia’s intervention there, a campaign supported by the
US. You would think that such appalling, and totally preventable, killing of
children would be front page news day after day. Surely is deserves to be told
and should wrack us with grief, yet it scarcely gets noticed. And with the
coming of Christmas, our society has even less interest in truth-telling or
grief about such things.
But
the gospel reading for the first Sunday in Advent won’t help us maintain a
façade of Christmas cheer. It features no angel choirs or heavenly visitors to
Mary or Joseph. Instead it finds Jesus in Jerusalem just days before his arrest
and execution, and he clearly understands the sort of prophetic voice Dr.
Brueggemann wishes for the church. Jesus speaks of hope, of redemption drawing
near, but it does not come in the midst of Christmas cheer. It comes amidst
warnings of Jerusalem’s eminent destruction, of wars and insurrections,
persecution of Jesus’ followers, and frightening signs in the heavens.