HE WENT INTO ALL THE REGION AROUND
THE JORDAN, PROCLAIMING A BAPTISM OF REPENTANCE FOR THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS
Advent places a special emphasis on the mission of John the
Baptist. John was a prophet. He was obsessed with the truth. He lived a life of
rigorous honesty and was killed for it. In the New Testament John prepares the
way for the Christ by telling people there is a problem, there is work to be
done. What would we do with John the Baptist? Would we ignore him, or say to
him “go away, we like our lives just fine, we don’t want to change”. After all,
there are major problems in our lives
and many people would rather not hear about them…We have some very smart
men and women telling us we are, AS A CULTURE, at an impasse. We need a
miracle—only the impossible can help us now. Advent is about preparing for,
longing for, the impossible…isn’t the
coming of the Christ associated with symbols of the impossible? After all virgins can’t have babies—or can
they?
Advent is not ultimately
a time of preparation leading up to a celebration of something that happened in
the historical record 2 thousand years ago. Christmas, although it symbolizes
the birth of a kind of Independence, represents something much more profound
than the fourth of July. The fourth of July commemorates a declaration of
Independence on the historical or temporal plane of existence—Christmas is ultimately
about freedom or independence at the very center or ground of our being. And just as it was with the American independence—the
kind of freedom we are to prepare for during advent also requires radical change,
and even deliverance from the control of a king. But this is not a king ruling us from some distant
shore—this is a king we live with day in and day out. Last week I was in
Wegmans and I just stood there in the middle of the crowded store listening,
and watching. There were advertisements trying to seduce, there were celebrity
magazines, there was a child screaming and jumping up and down because she
wanted something---men and women with shopping carts so full they could feed 10
families. If consumption without
need is a hallmark of addiction then wegmans and east-view mall are
crack-houses. Consumerism is making us
all junkies. And this time of year
always reminds me of this—with its explosion of stuff, craving, and
over-indulgence. Heck, just like heroin or cocaine addicts, we even rationalize
these behaviors—I can splurge—after all it’s the holidays. In the words of one
of the leading thinkers on the subject: “addiction is rising like the world’s
oceans, and for many of the same reasons—there is a rising flood of addiction
all over the world” and another says that she believes the vast majority of
Americans bear the psychological marks of addiction. Why are
we at an impasse, why do we need the impossible to happen? Why do we need a miracle? Because as any of the top-guns in the field of addiction would tell
you—you simply cannot think your way out of an addiction—in fact the more you
try to think you’re way out, the deeper in the hole you go—so once you’re
really hooked—you’re in an impossible situation. You need an intervention. You better hope a power greater than your-self
shows up. Christmas is meant to
represent the appearance of a power greater than ourselves within creation that
brings freedom, independence, and deliverance. AND Advent is the preparation
for such an appearance. But our consumerist culture has turned this season into
a celebration of materialism,
dependence, self-centeredness, and addiction—and for those of you that read
Richard Rohr, he reminds us that self-centeredness and addiction are synonyms
for what the Bible calls sin. In Alcoholics Anonymous, members commemorate the day
they quit drinking—they call it their “sobriety date”. This is, if you will a
kind of Christmas for them—it’s the appearance in their lives of a power
greater than themselves that is also the birth of a New Way of experiencing and
living and Being in the World. This is essentially what Christmas symbolizes— and
this is what we are to prepare for during Advent. It seems to me that during the Christmas season the modern American
culture is like an alcoholic preparing for the celebration of her sobriety date
by spending a month doing shots of Jack Daniels.
Embedded in our text this morning is important information
about the spiritual practice OR PREPARATIONS of the first century
Jews we call the first Christians and this clues us into the real meaning of this season…
As I said before, Advent gives a special emphasis to the
mission of John the Baptist. In Luke 3:3 John is preaching a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins. This is a loaded line packed with a
whole culture’s way of preparing the way of the Lord—or in other words their way of preparing for an immediate experience of
a power beyond and greater than the self.
For first century apocalyptic Jews baptism was very different
than it is for the modern church-goer. Baptism in Christianity is now a rite of
initiation that often takes place once and often during infancy; but for
ancient apocalyptic Jews like John and Jesus baptism was very different---it
was a preparatory rite—a ritual that was meant to prepare them for a direct
encounter with the divine. It was part
of a whole series of rituals, part of an entire religious practice meant to
cleanse and prepare one for a meeting with God. Such practices would go on for
mystics like Jesus and John anywhere from 12 to 40 days. It is said that this
was part of the way Jewish mystics would “still their hearts”. Stilling their
hearts meant making peace within the deepest part of their being. And then they would be ready to receive a
power greater than self. How do we facilitate such an experience of peace in
our lives? How do we quiet ourselves down so that we can receive and commune
with the divine? Do we even take religious practice seriously? Peace certainly does
not come through craving and buying what a consumerist culture tries to sell
us.
A baptism of repentance—the
word we translate as repentance is the Greek word metanoia. This word means “going
beyond or changing your mind” it refers to a transformation of consciousness.
Anyone that has successfully dealt with an addiction will tell you it required
a change of mind—what Bill W. called a profound personality change. It seems to
me that our culture desperately needs a change of mind. One of the ways we know
ancient Jews and Christians transformed consciousness was through the practice
of deep forms of prayer—this is not verbal, petitionary prayer---this is the
kind of prayer Jesus described as “going into your inner room”. Through such a practice one could change his
or her mind. Modern brain science tells us that in fact, this kind of prayer
does change minds—it actually changes the physical composition of the brain and
it has been shown to improve all
kinds of conditions from cocaine and alcohol addiction to anxiety disorders and
depression. It can also facilitate spiritual experiences that include a sense
that one has encountered God. It is good for the body and the soul. John
offered a baptism of metanoia or changing one’s mind for the forgiveness of
sins. How might changing one’s mind bring about the forgiveness of sins? Well
if we look at the Greek word we translate as “forgiveness” we might get a
better sense of what Luke is talking about. Aphesin means to release, as in the
letting go of a prisoner or the release of someone from obligation or bondage. In deep forms of prayer one can experience the
release or letting go of self and the sense that one is in the presence of
God. This is surely the release or
forgiveness of sins or self-centeredness Luke is talking about.
For ancient Jews these are a few of the practices that would
have prepared the way of the Lord. What
are we doing to change or go beyond our minds, to release ourselves from the
addictive, consumerist culture on full display during this season? Do we take
such practices seriously anymore? Are we doing THIS in preparation for
Christmas? Or are we giving ourselves over to a market and dollar driven
culture that encourages the opposite—the building up of self and
self-centeredness?
Taking our spiritual growth and development seriously by
actively engaging practices similar to those of John and Jesus is something we
can do to “prepare the way of the Lord”.
In this way we can transcend self-centeredness in a world that is turning all
of us into addicts. If we prepare the way, maybe we can change our minds and be
released from the bondage of self and experience the birth of a New Way of
Being in the world. A very powerful
consumerist culture says you don’t have much of a chance. But maybe the impossible will happen; maybe a
virgin can have a baby. LET IT BE SO!
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