John's Tough Love
based on Luke 3:7-18
Rev. Karen A. Goltz
Some
children were asked to explain what love is. The responses were rather
interesting and quite instructive for us adults. One said, "Love is
when my mommy makes a cup of coffee for my daddy and takes a little
taste before she gives it to him, to make sure it tastes okay." Another
said, "Love is when your puppy licks your face even after you've left
him alone all day." Another response was, "You really shouldn't say,
'I
love you' unless you really mean it, but if you mean it you should say
it a lot, because people forget." One boy said, "When someone loves
you, the way they say your name is different. You just know that your
name is safe in their mouth." And finally seven-year-old Bobby said,
"Love is what's in the room with you at Christmas if you stop opening
presents and listen."
Yes, Christmas is the time
when we think a lot about love. And it's also what motivated John's
conversation with the crowds he encountered at the Jordan. It might not
sound much like love, but it is nonetheless, because John knew
that to announce the coming of the Savior would take a lot of pointed
confrontation about sin, repentance, and the fruit of repentance. He
knew that most people don't want to acknowledge their guilt before one
another and before God. He knew that most of us have a lot to be guilty
about, and that we all deserve condemnation for our sins. And he knew
that the only way we can receive the true Savior is to recognize our
sin, repent of that sin, and turn to a new life offered by the Lord, who
went to the cross to pay the penalty for our guilt.
Christmas, with all its
trappings of lights, bows, pretty wrappings, and decorations, seems like
a time when the evil of the world is being hidden from view. And for
some, that is exactly how they deal with Christmas. They put on their
finest clothes, they clean up their houses, they decorate their lives
with false kindness, and they act so sweetly, even towards people they
don't like. Some families spend the whole rest of the year bickering
and arguing over petty jealousies and hurts, and yet at Christmas they
hide all that under shiny wrappings and curly bows, and treat each other
with smiles and hugs and kisses, but only for a day or two. After the
Christmas presents are opened and the decorations come down, they go
back to being at each other's throats. That's not what John wanted
Christmas to become. John wanted the joy and the love of Christ to
influence the whole year, every day, every believer, and every church.
Listen to what John says
today: "You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to
come? Bear fruits worthy of repentance. Do not begin to say to
yourselves, 'We have Abraham as our ancestor;' for I tell you, God is
able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham. Even now the ax
is lying at the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not
bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire." John is speaking
to the inner man and woman within each of our hearts. John knows that
we are trying hard to hide our evil intentions and desires. John calls
his listeners vipers, because their evil hearts have made them deceivers
of the highest order. They follow their own desires easier than they
follow God, because since the first sin of Adam our own selfish will has
been our master. John is wrestling with the evil in each one of his
hearers' hearts. It's a fierce struggle he's fighting. He must speak
harshly or we will not listen. He must shake us free from the polite
and non-offensive words we are so used to hearing, so that we might hear
and respond to the tough but loving message he brings.
John's words must have had
an impact on those who were there by the Jordan on that day. The crowd
must have heard his message, because they began to ask him what his
tough love message of doom without repentance really meant. They must
have begun to worry about their eternal state of affairs. Maybe we
should worry more about that, rather than worry about what we're going
to buy for Aunt Esther, or what we're going to get from mom and dad this
Christmas. If we really hear God's Word and sincerely repent, perhaps
we would ask the same questions as the crowd. Sometimes it seems that
with our Lutheran understanding of salvation freely given by God's grace
through faith for Christ's sake, we forget to ask how we are to respond
to that grace, how we are to live out our faith, what Jesus would have
us do to show the fruit of that faith we have by God's Word and
sacraments. Christmas is a fitting time to ask these kinds of
questions, because this is the time of year when we tend to pay a little
more attention to the situations of our neighbors in need.
Hear what the people ask
and how John responds. "What then should we do?" the crowd asks. John
answers, "Whoever has two coats must share with anyone who has none; and
whoever has food must do likewise." Even tax collectors come to be
baptized. "Teacher," they ask, "What should we do?" He tells them,
"Collect no more than the amount prescribed for you." Then some
soldiers ask him, "And we, what should we do?" John replies, "Do not
extort money from anyone by threats or false accusation, and be
satisfied with your wages." The crowd wants to know what John means by
producing fruit of repentance. I wonder if they asked him thinking he
wouldn't know what to say. Kind of like a pastor who preaches a truly
effective sermon. Afterwards she is surrounded by people asking what
they can do in service to the church. Not having expected such a
response she stammers for a moment and then says, "Well, I'm not sure we
can use 150 ushers."
John wasn't like that
pastor; John had an answer to their questions. To the crowd in general
he knew no better response than for them to share what they had with
those who didn't. Giving is an especially evident fruit of repentance.
It shows that we understand who has really given to us, and what we
have been given. It shows that we know God gave his one and only son to
be born into our world of sin. It shows our understanding that the Son
of God gave his own life on the cross, so that the penalty for our sin
would be paid in exchange for our very lives. Giving is God's way, and
it is the way that our fruit of repentance can also be manifested.
John has some specific
questions from at least two groups in the crowd. Tax collectors were
especially heinous sinners according the masses of Israel. They were
hired by the Roman authorities to collect the taxes for Caesar from the
Jews, and anything they collected above what was due to the Romans, they
were allowed to keep. So they not only represented the occupying enemy
forces, they also had a tendency to grossly inflate the bills in order
to make themselves rich, and they didn't always use the most respectable
means to get what they wanted.
But John doesn't tell them
to quit their profession and become monks. He only instructs them that
they keep their profession free from greed and self-gratification. Do
the work assigned, collect the correct amount, but no more. Treat the
people with respect and don't seek to line your own pockets.
And to the soldiers who
asked him John is also realistic. He doesn't tell them to leave their
bloody work, but to do it with dignity and integrity. Soldiers were
notorious for using their brute force to advance their own salaries and
their commanders' power. But John wanted the soldiers to remember that
God was the one in charge, and that his commands are more
important than those of their own sinful hearts, or of their evil
earthly commanders.
In today's world, especially as we approach the
warm-fuzzy season of Christmas, John's message is as necessary for us as
it was for the crowds of his day. We're preparing to celebrate the
coming of God's Son, Emmanuel, God With Us, into our world, coming to
free us from our sin. We're preparing to celebrate the coming of
the one who gave us the greatest gift we could ever possibly receive,
the one who gave us the gift of life eternal, and who paid for that gift
with the giving of his own life. We have received that gift; we
have received that grace. Sure, we still have our sinful hearts,
and we are constantly tempted to obey our own wills, rather than look to
God's Word for guidance. But we no longer need to be slaves to our
own desires. Through the gift of God's grace, we can daily seek
forgiveness, and continually turn from our sin, and seek God instead.
Because that's all that repenting is: it's a turning away from sin.
It's something we can do as we relate to our families, to our friends,
to our co-workers. We don't have to quit our jobs and go to
seminary in order to live our lives as Christians called to repentance.
In all that we say and in all that we do, we can let the sovereignty of
Christ shine in our lives and rule in our hearts. In this season
of Advent, as we prepare for the coming of the Lord, I pray that we may
keep on bearing fruit worthy of our repentance from sin. By doing so,
Christmas will continue for the whole year and throughout every year,
rather than just for the next few weeks of December, 2012. Amen!