Sunday, December 29, 2013

Sunday After Christmas -- Isaiah Through the Lens of Christmas



First Sunday After Christmas 2013
Isaiah 61:10-62:3; Ps 147; Gal 3-4; John 1:1-18
Father Adam Trambley
December 29, 2013, St. John’s Sharon

This morning we have a beautiful reading from Isaiah.  One way that we can break into the Old Testament prophecies is by looking at them backwards through the lens of the life and work of Jesus.  Especially when the church’s lectionary gives us a passage during a great feast like Christmas, we can usually gain helpful insight by imagining putting the scripture together with Christ’s saving work. 

When we read Isaiah in this way, one of the things we can do is see Jesus as the speaker.  We know that Jesus read these readings, and one of the gospels even mentions him reading part of the same chapter of Isaiah aloud in the synagogue and referring it to himself.

We can easily imagine Jesus praying, I will greatly rejoice in the LORD, my whole being shall exult in my God.  Many psalms and prayers start with this praise of God, and we know Jesus prayed, and that when he prayed, he really put some feeling into it.  Jesus was so close to his heavenly Father that he knew just how awesome, how glorious, how loving God is, and his praise would reflect how intimately he knew and relied on him. 

Specifically this morning, though, we might think about how much Jesus praised God for the miracle of his being born of a human mother and coming to dwell among us on earth.  We often hear about how God loved us so much that he stooped down to become a human being, and those sentiments ring true.  Scripture talks to us about how much God loved the world, that he sent his Son to us so that we might have eternal life.  An important part of the story of the Son of God on earth is his passion and death.  All of these considerations, plus parts of the Bible that talk about Jesus’ obedience to the Father, even unto death, tend to make us think that the Son of God being born in Bethlehem was a great day for us, but not so pleasant for God.  As if the Incarnation were like a divine chore that the Almighty had accomplish because he loved us, akin to cleaning the metaphysical bathroom for the Christmas guests, even though he would have rather have sat in his Lazy-boy and watched the Seraphim versus Cherubim in the angelic Quidditch bowl game.     

Why would Jesus be praising God for being born a human being?  We can imagine many reasons.  Maybe he liked hummus—he was born in the Middle East, after all.  We know he loved the people he was around, and maybe he was glad to interact with them as a person.  Or maybe there really is something exhilarating about just being human that sometimes we really do experience, even if we often forget how wondrously made we truly are.  Beyond that, though, Isaiah provides two specific reasons:
For he has clothed me with the garments of salvation,
He has covered me with the robe of righteousness.

What if we think about Jesus birth in the manger as providing the garments of salvation and the robe of righteousness to him?  We know that Christ’s human nature was not just a covering over God, but an integral part of the fully-human and fully-divine natures of the Son of God who was the Second Person of the Trinity.  But keeping that truth in mind, we can imagine the Jesus’ joy at being born to bring righteousness and salvation to the world.  Jesus could praise God for the saving work of reconciling humanity back to God.  Jesus’s whole being could exult in living out an example of righteousness to all people that helped them become righteous as well.  Jesus would not have been dragged, kicking and screaming, to the incarnational moment, but rather have enthusiastically embraced the emptying of his divine entitlements to become a slave so that the earth could be saved.   Coming down on Christmas meant that the Son of God took his eternal attributes of salvation and righteousness and made them manifest as a particular mission for his time on earth, and the prophet describes this mission as the clothing God put upon him.

Two aspects of these missionary robes are revealed as we continue reading that they are worn: as a bridegroom decks himself with a garland, and as a bride adorns herself with jewels.  On the one hand, the salvation and righteousness Jesus is putting on has a deeply relational component.  Instead of coming down from on high, Jesus’ work will have the deeply personal love we find in the best of marriages.  Then, too, Jesus’ work with be beautiful, like jewels or a garland, and it is the crowning work of God in the world.  His ministry will resonate with the profound truths of creation and be recognized as compellingly attractive by men and women of good-will.   

The next lines describe how and where God’s salvation and righteousness will occur through Jesus.  For as the earth brings forth its shoots, and as a garden causes what is sown in it to spring up, so the Lord God will cause righteousness and praise to spring up before all the nations.  Here we have beautiful image of the organic growth of plants occurring amid every group of people.

If we think about how plants grow, we recognize a very similar way that God’s salvation and righteousness have spread throughout the world.  We might prefer it to happen quickly, with the master gardener coming in, pulling weeds and planting a fully mature tree.  But instead, seeds are sown, and saplings burst through the damp sod.  With protection and care the shoots continue to thrive over time, eventually ripening enough to yield seeds of their own that can create other plants.  So much of the work of the church has this slow but determined character.  Attempts at sweeping change are often ineffective, but personal one-on-one relationships are able to manifest God’s love to people and transform their lives.  Then that transformed person shares Christ’s love with someone else, and eventually the slow-starting organic growth becomes like dandelions bedazzling a green field with thousands of yellow polka-dots.  Eventually as righteous and praise spread out, they go everywhere, even into unexpected places.  God’s salvation doesn’t stop at the border, or, as scripture says, it will spring up before all nations.

Then hear Jesus reading aloud, For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest, until her vindication shines out like the dawn, and her salvation like a burning torch. 

The righteousness and salvation that Jesus is bringing to his people is supposed to shine forth like the dawn, like a blazing torch.  When people look at us as God’s Church, they should be blinded by the loving ways we treat each other, by the ways we care for those around us, and by the goodness that exudes from how we live our everyday lives.  And until we become this beacon of righteousness and praise, Jesus is not going to shut up.  He wasn’t silent while he was alive, but was constantly teaching, challenging and healing.  Now that he is risen from the dead, seated at the right hand of the Father he still does not keep silent or rest.  He is constantly prays for us, interceding on our behalf.  His Holy Spirit is also at work, guiding, directing, and emboldening.  Jesus and the Holy Spirit are fully engaged in the ongoing work of his church as we grow into mature citizens of the Kingdom of God.  Restoring us to the fullness of what we were created to be is the mission of salvation and righteousness that Jesus has put on through the incarnation, and he isn’t taking off that mission until his work is finished.

When Christ’s work is done, we are going to be changed in a noticeable way.  The nations will see your vindication, and all the kings your glory: and you shall be called by a new name that the mouth of the LORD will give.  You shall be a crown of beauty in the hand of the LORD, and a royal diadem in the hand of your God.

At Christmas Jesus became like us so that we could become like him.  At the end of our Isaiah passage this morning, he is telling us how much more we are going to become.  Every people on earth will notice how much God has transformed us, and our full radiance as men and women made in the image and likeness of God will overwhelm the most powerful people on earth.  We’ll sparkle more than the most diamond-studded, gadget-glowing, silk-surrounded sultans and CEO’s because we will be decked out in the divine bling of the Almighty and people will be noticing us in all the best ways.  God will see us as an appropriate accessory to his eternal being, so fabulous in every way will we be.  As someone once said to me, we will be beautiful on the both the outside and the inside because of what God has done for us in our creation through the Word and our redemption through Jesus Christ.  Even the names we use for ourselves today won’t be adequate to describe what we will finally be, so God will give us new ones.  This transformation of us and our communities is what Jesus was born in the world to do, and, especially since he is God, he is going to keep at it until he finally accomplishes it.

In the meantime, we do our work to live as children of God and citizens of his Kingdom.  We w ith Jesus greatly rejoice in the LORD, and our whole beings exult in our God because of his salvation and righteousness toward us. 

No comments:

Post a Comment