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Advent b December 11, 2011
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11 Psalm 126
1 Thessalonians 5:16-24 John 1:6-8,19-28
We
should not forget the roots in Judaism of Jesus of Nazareth and the Jesus
Movement. Both Jesus and St. Paul would not have
considered themselves to be members of a new religion. They saw themselves as trying to bring vision
and new understanding of the Hebrew Scriptures in a new time.
Since many of the earliest followers of Jesus
were also Jews, it is not surprising that the founders of the Christian
movement borrowed whole scale from the Hebrew tradition, including the entire
front section of the Christian Bible.
The front section of the New Testament are
the four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. So we might associate the word Gospel as being an original Christian word. The actual word
Gospel is from the Old English Word, “Godspell” meaning God news. You remember the rock musical reprising the
name “Godspell” because it also had the modern connotation of “being under the
spell of God.” From the 2nd Century, the word Gospel was used to designate
the writings that pertained to the life and words of Jesus of Nazareth. So when we use the word Gospel today, we
think of the four Gospels in the Bible, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
But like so much of Christianity, Gospel, too
was borrowed from the Hebrew Scriptures. The prophet Isaiah wrote, “The spirit
of the Lord is upon me because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to
the oppressed.” The Hebrew word for “good
news” was translated in the Greek edition of Isaiah as euangellion. That is the
same Greek word that is used for the English word Evangel and it is is
translated into English as “Gospel.”
The Lord’s anointed or Messiah, is the one
who brings “Good News.” The Messiah is
the one who brings good news. Oppressed
people do need good news. The
brokenhearted need their inner lives healed.
Captives and prisoners without just cause need release. People need to know that they are God’s
favored ones. People need to know that
justice will be accomplished upon the tyrants. People who mourn need to be comforted. They need the condition from which they can
exalt and praise rather than mourn.
People need optimism to know that they and their children have a likely
future with benefit and blessing.
When Jesus came and taught, he identified his
message with this word of Isaiah. He
told his listener that he came to bring “good news.” And that is what the early followers of Jesus
preached, Good News.
Good News has it own irresistibility. One might say that every person is made for
good news. And how do we know it? When we are experiencing bad news, it seems
so unnatural; it seems like something that should be brought to an end as soon
as possible.
One of the saddest things about bad news is
that if we get too much of it, we can begin to think that it is what we
deserve. Or even worse, if we get so
much bad news, we might become those who deliver bad news to the people in our
lives through our words and deeds.
Today, we might ask ourselves, what would be
good news for us today? And good news
might be something different for everyone here or for everyone in this
world. For some in this world, good news
might be simply the next meal, or a place to sleep. To others it might be having the right
job. To others, it might be having the
good fellowship of friends, family and a companion. To others it might be to discover purpose and
vocation in life? To others it might be
the need for a profound spiritual experience that affirms God’s loving
presence.
John the Baptist had his own brand of the
good news. He was trying to make
straight the way of the Lord. Well, how
did the way of the Lord get so crooked?
God’s way, as it often does, gets all covered up with religion. That’s why religion in the time of John and
Jesus was not good news for many, many people.
Religion was only a way of trying to promote some people as God’s
favored ones to the neglect of many who were not offered the message of God’s
favor.
John and Jesus came to those who were made to
believe that they had lost God’s favor.
John message of repentance seemed harsh, but it really was one of good
news. His message stated that one did
not automatically receive God’s favor because of being born in the right family
with the correct rabbinical upbringing; rather one found God’s favor by the
choices of one’s life. One could choose
to be in God’s favor, simply by the way that one lived one’s life. John’s great contribution was to honor the freedom
of a person’s choice to be better today than one was yesterday, and look to
improve tomorrow. If one’s standing with
God is determined by how one lives, then it diminishes the power of religious
authority to be able to judge who is right or wrong with God. And that is good news.
We are nearing Christmas time and Christmas
time is a time of giving and receiving gifts.
I invite all of us to ask God for the gift of good news. I ask that God would give each of us lots of
good news. And getting good news may
involve us to be more aware of the good news that we have always had, but have
taken for granted because it has become so commonplace. Receiving good news may be as simple as
having our eyes open to see how good we actually have it, and not focusing upon
the one dominating problem that seems to be current in our lives.
And why do we have the right to ask for good
news? I think that we are made for good
news, but to really appreciate good news, we have to learn how to be people who
deliver good news to the people of our lives through the deeds and words of our
lives.
I think that as we deliver good news, we will
receive the good news ourselves. What
good news do we have to deliver? We
deliver the good news of God’s love. We
become the hands, the feet, the voice of Christ as we let people know that they
truly matter in this life.
Receiving good news and being those who
proclaim good news goes hand in hand. As
we are filled with good news we share from that goodness to those around us.
My prayer for all of us is that we would have
the eyes to see the good news that is towards us today, but also I would hope
that each person has the faith and confidence in God to ask for some new and
current relevant event of good news that is needed even at this time.
But also as we ask for the good news that we
need for our lives and the lives of those in our world, let us also be willing
to become the good news for people who need the good news that only we can
bring through the words and deeds of our lives.
In short, let our lives become the living Gospel of Jesus Christ. Amen.