John is at it again. Lecturing, name calling, telling people
off. Calling them snakes! He doesn’t pull any punches. He lets them know in no uncertain terms that
God is not happy with the way humans are living their lives. They need to make some changes, he
demands. They are not living up to God’s
expectations and are letting down their part of the Covenant between the people
of Israel that came into being when Moses first showed up, that was behind the
story of why there are rainbows in the world.
God makes covenants, enters into partnership, wants to be in
relationship with troublesome humans who keep breaking their side of the
bargain. Then God connects with Isaiah
and sends a message that these broken covenants are not what God wants!
Today’s passage of Isaiah about
"the wrath of God" which results from these broken covenants, is
pointing to what all the scriptures have in common this Sunday. That many
people believe in the wrath of God. And while there are some folks who probably
should take this more seriously, like certain politicians, leaders of organized
crime syndicates, murderers, billionaires with their mega yachts who complain
of rising wages, people who start wars, scammers that phone at 6 in the morning
claiming that you need to pay a speeding ticket and the like, who could do with
a taste of God's wrath, most people are doing the best they can to get by. The
postal workers, the teachers and nurses, the cleaners and the cooks, the
typists and the professors, the car washers, the truck drivers and the grocery
clerks. How does the wrath of God help them when they are more afraid of the
wrath of their bosses? It's stunning to learn that those bosses are earning in
a single year what their average employee will earn in their lifetime. The CEO
of Tim Hortons earned $151.8 million dollars in 2022, including benefits and
other compensation. That's quite the gap between him and the donut server
earning $15.64 an hour, according to CBC reporting. So much so that when you
crunch the numbers, he is earning the same salary as about 5000 of his
employees combined. A poisonous snake who exploits humans as resources. Still
feel like having a double-double? What would John say about it? Probably what
he said to the tax collectors; stop with the greedy exploitation!
Believing in the wrath of God
is surprisingly common. Many people grew
up with the story that God has so much wrath towards us that God killed Jesus,
torturing his innocent son to death. The
idea of original sin or looking at images of Jesus bleeding on the cross, just
emphasizes this image of a wrathful God.
Too much anger though, and
people shrivel inside. Too much
negativity leads to stunted growth. Too
many put downs, accusations and guilt trips leave people stuck in apathy and anxiety. Many hurting souls give up hope. They turn to selfish ways, caring only about
themselves and their families. Or they turn to addictions to numb the pain of
never being good enough. People who are trapped in this kind of self-hatred
live in constant fear of God’s wrath.
They turn to gurus, psychics, televangelists and charlatans but they do
not find comfort.
If only someone would read the
words of Isaiah to them. Isaiah, who
heard God saying, “Comfort, oh comfort my people, speak tenderly to them, and
tell them that their day of pardon has come.”
This is not an angry God. And in
today’s reading, God is the one to turn away from wrath. God is the one that provides comfort. God is the one that saves the people, God is
the one that protects and strengthens. God
is the one who helps refugees sing a new song in a strange land, and God is the
one who brings joy.
Joy comes in surprising
ways. The amazing and prolific writer,
C. S. Lewis, talked about this surprising nature of God’s comfort and joy. In his book, “Surprised by Joy”, he wrote
about being a dyed in the wool atheist happy to focus on only the things he
could touch or taste or smell or hear or see.
And yet, when he heard music, when he recited a poem, when he saw a
sunset on a walk, when he read a fairy tale, when he saw a work of art, he
would get a joyful emotion that he couldn’t explain away. The surprises slowly and surely baptized his imagination
and seduced him into rejoining the faith of his childhood. He abandoned
religion because of the hypocrites and snakes he met in the church. Joy brought him back. And little did he know
as he was writing it, that his friend and proof reader, Joy Davidman, would a
few years later become his wife, adding to even more surprising Joy.
John knew that same surprising
joy, and he wanted his followers to know it too. And he told them simple concrete
things that we can do to live in right relationship with God and each
other. He tied it into our
livelihoods. Don’t hurt others, share
what you have and don’t get greedy.
Sounds simple, doesn’t it? And he
told them that he was not the messiah, that one was coming who makes him look
like an amateur in comparison. He was
right in that, for a very simple reason.
John was mired in the
wrath of God. Isaiah and Jesus were not; both saw God differently, acting in
love, God doing the comforting. God
doing the surprising. God bringing
Joy. Even to people like you and me,
struggling with our own moments of snake-like anger, even when we too know we
are hypocrites, preaching love one moment and raging the next, God is with us,
we are not alone. Thanks be to God for
this gift of good news of salvation and surprising joy for all of us! Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment