Last week we heard from Mark's “little
apocalypse” and Jesus' promise that his words will not pass away
even though heaven and earth will. Today we move from a focus on the
last days to the very beginning of Jesus' ministry according to Mark.
Mark doesn't give us any genealogies or
birth narratives. He doesn't give us any shepherds or kings. He
doesn't give us any angelic announcements or choirs from on high. If
Mark were buying Christmas gifts for Jesus, he wouldn't give him a
23-and-Me DNA kit because Mark doesn't care where Jesus came from, he
only cares where he is going. And in Mark, Jesus is going to
Golgotha – but I don't want to get ahead of myself.
So here we are on the Second Sunday of
Advent and at the beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son
of God. As I pointed out, there is no prologue to the gospel. There
is no easing into the story of Jesus with birth narratives or
genealogies. Mark immediately jumps into the story by abruptly
declaring that this is the beginning of the good news. If you read
Mark's gospel, you will notice how things move abruptly and happen
immediately. In fact, Mark uses the word “immediately” more than
Matthew and Luke combined.
But even with Mark's immediate focus,
he still must prepare his readers for what is coming. And in order
to prepare for what is coming, we must look both backward and
forward. That back-and-fore looking requires us to hear the story of
John the Baptist; and this is the only pre-Jesus story Mark gives us.
This is the beginning of the good news,
or the beginning of the gospel. In order to see the beginning of the
gospel, we look back to Isaiah: “See, I am sending my messenger
ahead of you, who will prepare your way; the voice of one crying out
in the wilderness, 'Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths
straight'.”
Mark attributes that quote to Isaiah,
but it's really a conflation from three sources: Ex. 23:20, Is.
40:3, and Malachi 3:1 This is why some other ancient sources don't
attribute the saying solely to Isaiah, but to “the prophets.”
Either way, Mark is looking back to reflect on what's coming.
We are doing the same thing – looking
back to look forward. We are preparing to look forward by looking
back.
Advent is the season of expectation and
hopeful waiting. Advent is the season of preparation. We are
expectantly and hopefully waiting for the coming of Christ, and we
are preparing for his arrival. We prepare by putting up trees and
decorations. We prepare by sending out Christmas cards and letters.
We prepare by displaying creche sets and marching Mary and Joseph and
the wise men on their respective journeys to Bethlehem. And,
hopefully, we prepare for his arrival in a way that changes us.
This was the point of John's ministry –
to urge people to prepare for the imminent coming of Christ, to make
significant and lasting changes in their lives, and to be baptized as
a symbol of that change.
So we look back to the arrival of
Christ and prepare for his coming again. We look back to his
imminent arrival that we celebrate on December 24 & 25. We hope
that our preparations today will change us and prepare us for his
next coming.
The danger we face, though, is becoming
too backward-focused. We can spend too much time focusing on the
manger and not on his arrival. We can spend too much time trying to
arrange the creche set “just so” that we don't work to properly
arrange our lives. We can spend too much time remembering the gifts
the wise men brought that we neglect to share the gift of the gospel
with those around us.
This, as you might expect, has
implications not only for Advent and Christmas, but for us as we move
forward. We can look backward to “the good old days,” while not
recognizing that these are the good old days. We can spend so much
time looking back longingly to how things used to be that we neglect
to see how things are now, or how they could become in the future.
So yes, we can look back. But let us
not look back with sentimentality about the way it used to be, but
let us look back to prepare for the future.
Look back to the prophets to see a
messenger that prepares the way of the Lord. Look forward to the
coming of the Lord by understanding that you are God's messenger.
Look back to the birth of Christ and the hope that instills. Look
forward by preparing to offer hope to the world through your actions.
Look back to the way things were. Look forward to the way things
could be by helping prepare the next generation of faithful people.
In today's gospel, Mark is looking both
forward – the beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, and
backward – as it is written in the prophets. In this season of
Advent, we are also looking both forward – as we prepare for the
coming of Christ, and backward – as we celebrate a coming that has
already taken place. But we can't look so far forward that we decide
our actions have no impact; nor can we look so far backward that we
refuse to act now.
This may be why Mark is the perfect
Advent gospel. Know where we have come from, but also be prepared to
put our faith into action right now. We can't afford to spend all
our time reminiscing about the good old days. Neither can we spend
all our time worrying about a future that seems to be in jeopardy and
who might save us.
Our time is now.
God's time is now.
This is the beginning of the good news
of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
You are part of that story; and in
understanding both what came before and what is yet to come, you are
called to act now.
Amen.
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