Strange
Way to Begin A Story
a sermon based on Mark 1:1-8
by Rev. Thomas Hall
Just imagine a small mountain of puzzle pieces
lying in a heap on your living room floor. Each piece of the thousands
of pieces reflects some small episode of the story about Jesus. Your
jour is to put the puzzle back together. To make matters worse, I need
to warn you that a couple of the puzzle pieces are missing, several have
been scratched beyond recognition by Fee Fee your cat and another piece
got mixed in the Kibbles and Bits for Fang. So you begin this tedious
process of piecing the puzzle together. That’s some of what the
compilers of our gospels faced when the time came to put the story of
Jesus down on parchment. But where to begin? they wondered. So they sat
on their living room floors and tried to make chronological sense of the
pieces, trying to put the puzzle of the gospel together in a way that
would inspire faith and repentance. So let’s see how they began their
stories.
Matthew begins his story about Jesus by taking us to the court house
to prove that Jesus comes from good stock. If "Abijah begat Asaph who
begat Jehosphaphat who begat Jehoram, doesn’t grab you and send you out
shouting "this is so Charles Dickins!" then you probably don’t
appreciate what was critically important to many of first century
Palestine-where you came from.
How does Luke begin the story about Jesus? Well, Luke begins the Good
News story like Matthew-literally at the beginning of Jesus’ life. But
he does it with such pizzazz! Luke’s church really knows how to
celebrate the beginning of the Good News! From his gospel come our
favorite carols like O Little Town of Bethlehem and Angels We Have Heard
on High. In Luke’s church the boy’s choir sings While Shepherds Watched
Their Flocks by Night. And we close Christmas Eve service with candles
and the quiet singing of Silent Night. Luke knows how to begin the story
of Jesus all right.
And John? How does he start out? Well he begins his story about Jesus
by bringing us up into heaven to see that Jesus was God of very God
before the foundations of the world-quite cosmic and other worldly.
And that leaves us with the last gospel writer and with the text that
we must listen to this morning. How does Mark begin this magnificent
story about Jesus? Certainly not in the manger. Not with shepherds nor
even with We Three Kings. Fact is, the way Mark tell us the story about
Jesus doesn’t even begin with a baby at all. As you approach the
beginning of the story line in the gospel the only sound you may hear is
the occasional cry of a jackal or the sharp howl of the wind sweeping
across the desert floor. And Jesus is not the focus of the beginning at
all-John the Baptist is. That, says Mark, is where the story about Jesus
Christ should begin. No wonder that the Gospel of Mark fell into
obscurity in the early centuries of the Church. Who wants to celebrate
Christmas in the desert?
Why does Mark begin the story there? Of what possible interest could
John the Baptist and the desert offer that looms so large in Mark’s mind
that it crowds out the wonderful birth narratives that he most probably
would have had access to? John stands there out in wind swept desert
with his tumbleweed hairdo, animal skins draped over his out-sized
frame, popping honey-dipped locusts like pills, and howling in his rough
baritone, "Repent! Prepare for God’s Kingdom to come among you." The old
prophet bursts in upon us without warning or preparation and tells us to
change. In some way, Mark associates repentance with the beginning of
the Good News. There’s something about spiritual preparation that is
connected with the Good News about Jesus in Mark’s book.
Repentance isn’t my idea of Good News. Or if this is good news, it’s
more like my last trip to the garage following repairs. "Good News, Mr.
Hall, we fixed your car. Of course, you’ll need to replace the wipers,
the muffler, the carburetor, the main gasket, and the engine. Otherwise,
she’s purring like a kitten." I’m still gasping for breath when the
mechanic relieves some of the pressure." Do you want to pay for those
repairs on Master Charge or can we help with a loan?" No, repentance is
not an All-American word. Yet, Mark dares to say that there is something
about repentance that is truly Good News for humanity. For us.
Repentance is a change of direction. We’re driving down the road and
we suddenly become aware that we can’t read the road signs because we’re
headed the wrong way on a one-way street. We face repentance-the
possibility of a change of direction. We may decide that traffic is
light, no police cars are in sight, or that the scene down this road is
quite to our liking. We could respond that way. But we may squeal to a
stop and whip the car around like we see in Changing Lanes and begin to
drive with the flow of traffic going the same direction.
Mark’s repentance also invites us to a reorientation of our life, to
a fresh start, to a metamorphosis of life. One scripture that I recall
says this: Don’t be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind." But I like the way Eugene Peterson translates
that verse: "Take your everyday, ordinary life-your sleeping, eating,
going-to-work, and walking-around life-and place it before God as an
offering . . . don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you
fit into it without even thinking. Instead fix your attention on God.
You’ll be changed from the inside out."
That is what Mark means by repentance-a change from the inside out.
Repentance is a reorientation, the beginning of a life long
metamorphosis into a Christ-follower. Mark is not scrooge who puts out
Christmas cheer with joy-killing repentance. Rather, he offers us the
possibility for changing our lives through confession and spiritual
cleansing. Through repentance we draw near to God and receive healing
from God’s hand. To see repentance as the starting of the gospel and the
starting point of our lives is to understand Mark’s telling of the
story.
Visit Mark’s church-where lepers are changed, nature is changed,
persons suffering from oppression are changed, the disciples are
changed, and yes, even you and I can be changed. For this is the
beginning of the Good News about Jesus the Messiah. Amen.