Luke 3:1-20 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
John Was not like Gene
Luke 3:1-20
Sermon
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As the people misunderstood the authentic John the Baptist of history ("What did you go into the forest to see?"), people may misunderstand him now. So suggests this sermon. Because John the Baptist may appear today in clothing other than that of camel’s hair, John’s message may appear in different forms.

To illuminate a common distortion of the figure of John the Baptist, the sermon uses a childhood experience, which also captures the listener’s attention. The sermon refers to this experience throughout in a most useful way. Thus step by step, by juxtaposing a child’s distorted image of John the Baptist and the biblical reality of John, the hearers are led to see what the contemporary role of John the Baptist is to be and, with that, what their role is to be.

Humor and playfulness have no little role in the process of illumination.

When I was a youngster growing up, come fall on Sunday afternoons at one o’clock you could always find me in front of the television watching the Cleveland Browns. I would never miss a game because they were "my" team. Back then I could tell you every player on the Browns’ roster, and of course I had my favorites: Vince Costello, the middle linebacker; John Brewer, the tight end; Bobby Franklin, who held the ball for Lou Groza; and of course, the greatest offensive lineman to play the game, Gene Hickerson, old number 66. Year after year I would watch Gene Hickerson pull out from his guard position and lead the famous Browns’ sweep around right end, first for Jim Brown and then for LeRoy Kelley. Gene Hickerson was a master at knocking people down and clearing a path for runners. He knew how to prepare the way for a running back.

There once was time when, hearing John the Baptist’s call to "Prepare the way of the Lord," I would think of it as a call to be like Gene Hickerson - to run out in front, running over people and knocking down anybody who wasn’t on "our team." "You’re not a Christian, you’re going to hell (pretend to lead an end sweep). Come on, Jesus!" "You don’t agree with the gospel according to Ed (lead another sweep). Then get out of my way. Follow me, Lord!" I thought I was preparing a wonderful path for Jesus to follow. It took me a long time to realize I was the one who was in the way. You see, John the Baptist was not like Gene Hickerson.

What John the Baptist was like was one of the prophets. He comes right out of the same mold as did Isaiah, Jeremiah, or Micah. In the Old Testament the hope was expressed that a mighty prophet would arise to announce the coming of God’s salvation to the world, a prophet who would call on people to turn to God and make known that God was at work. John the Baptist fits this role to a T. First of all, Luke records that John received his call from God in the same manner as the prophets had before him. God’s word came upon him and he began to proclaim it. It wasn’t something that John decided to do but rather God sent him. Secondly, the message that John proclaimed was the message of the prophets: to repent; to turn around and set one’s sights on God; to orient one’s life on him; to be faithful to him. It was a call to these things rather than chase after false gods.

Thirdly, John followed his call to repentance with an announcement of a promise from God, a promise in the style of the Old Testament prophets. The promise was that the Lord is coming:

God’s salvation is at hand.

One of the significant things about the appearance of this mighty prophet announcing the Lord’s coming is that it expresses a continuity between the Old Testament and the New; that the salvation that is coming through Jesus is the salvation that is promised in the Old Testament through the prophets; that the God who is coming is the same God of the Old Testament who delivered the Israelites out of Egyptian Slavery, who delivered them out of exile in Babylon and who will now deliver people out of their bondage to sin. This is not something new, but another occasion where God delivers, this time completely.

As the promised prophet who could announce the coming of the Lord, John’s task was to prepare the way for his coming and to call on others to do the same. And this he did as well in the style of an Old Testament prophet, not as a Cleveland Browns guard. What John did to prepare for the coming of the Lord was to point out his arrival, to proclaim the mighty deed that God was doing. Preparing the way of the Lord is not clearing out all those sinners, sweeping them away from Christ. It isn’t running roughshod over nonbelievers, to keep out those who aren’t on "my team" (that is, those who don’t think the way I do). Rather, to "Prepare the way of the Lord" is to point out where he is. It is to lead the sinners, the non-Christians, people with different insights, those in need of the salvation he brings to him. It is not to keep them away. It would be as though Gene Hickerson came charging around the end pointing to Jim Brown saying, "There he is! Go get him, guys!"

John the Baptist was a transition figure; his role of preparing the way of the Lord was to call attention to Jesus and to point out how what God had done in the past was connected with what he was doing in the present in his coming as Jesus Christ.

And, like John, we live in a transition period. We live in the time between the first coming of Christ and his second coming. And, as members of his Church, we too are called to "Prepare the way of the Lord." We’re called to point out how what God has done in the past (at the first coming) is connected with what God is doing in the present in bringing his Kingdom into being. It’s a process that will be complete at the Second Coming. And, like John, we prepare the way of the Lord by pointing out where he is coming, where we see the Kingdom of God breaking into the world now. In church circles the term we use for this is "evangelism."

To put it simply, "preparing the way of the Lord" - Evangelism - means pointing out where we see God present in the world. For example, later this month we will be celebrating Christmas Eve with a candlelight worship service. For me there is no greater sign of God’s presence than a congregation full of people singing Silent Night with lighted candles in hand. I see God present in a congregation that votes to give 20 percent of its money to benevolence in order to minister to the needs of others. I see God present in the miracle of the birth of my new son and I see him present in the eyes of my daughter when, because of the gifts of a Sunday school teacher, she tells me "I like Jesus; he’s nice." I see God present in thousands of people all over the world rising up and telling world leaders they don’t want to live with the threat of nuclear war any more, but that they want peace. I see God present in people who have faced tragedy in their lives through illness or the death of a loved one and who yet come to church to offer their praise and their worship to God. I see God present in the coming together of twelve people every Sunday morning at 8:00 to study and learn about their faith and I see God present in the bread and the wine which we receive today at Holy Communion.

Preparing the way of the Lord is sharing these things with others, pointing them out that they too may see where God is breaking into this world with his Kingdom. And it is relating and connecting what we see him doing in the present with what he has done in the past as it is recorded for us in Holy Scripture. For example, it means pointing out how a person who maintains faith in God in spite of personal tragedy is like Job in the Old Testament; or how twelve people gathering for Sunday school at 8:00 in the morning is like a crowd of people gathering on a mount in Palestine to learn more about their faith as in the Sermon on the Mount; or how a congregation giving 20 percent of its income to benevolence relates to the Philippians’ support of Paul’s ministry as described in our second lesson. Preparing the way of the Lord is not being Gene Hickerson, running over people, telling them what they have to believe or think or do. It’s not keeping people away from God until they become like us. Rather, it’s telling them what we see God doing in this world and how we experience his presence in our lives, and relating that to how God has been present in the past. Because it is as we relate where we see God at work that people can then see where God has been at work in their lives.

During this Advent season as we prepare to celebrate God’s coming into this world in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, let’s take time to notice where God is coming into this world in the present, in the world around us and in our own lives. And then let’s share that with others.

Prepare the way of the Lord! Amen

Notes from the Homiletician

Our parish is located in a section of the state that is very conservative, both politically and religiously. Both congregations which I serve are located in small towns in which the residents have a shared understanding of the Christian Faith. This shared understanding reflects the conservative values of the community and the Amish/Mennonite heritage of our county. The Christian Faith is seen as a matter of maintaining a rugged individualism and refraining from such "sins" as drinking, smoking, cussing, and the like. There is very little understanding of a gracious God who is breaking in upon the world, bringing his Kingdom. As a result, evangelism is mainly seen as enforcing the community ethic. Therefore, I tried to emphasize that we have a gracious God who does break in upon our world, and to point to places where I see that happening. I then tried to stress evangelism as the task of sharing that "good news" with others.

- F. Edward Williams

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., In Praise Of Preaching