Sermon for the First Sunday of Advent Texts: Jeremiah 33: and Luke 21: Rev. Dr. David N. Young

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Transcription:

Sermon for the First Sunday of Advent Texts: Jeremiah 33: 14-16 and Luke 21: 25-36 Rev. Dr. David N. Young Happy New Year! Our new church year begins today with the first Sunday in Advent, and like the beginning of each new year, this is a time of anticipation and expectation And there is something energizing about anticipation and expectation isn t there? As with the beginning of each new year, we imagine how we might start anew with something we ve put off or longed to begin To be sure, anticipation and expectation can bring hope One can think of a child waiting for Christmas morning Or an engaged couple anticipating their wedding day Or perhaps a graduation, the birth of a child, a first job, or a long-awaited vacation

These times of expectation and anticipation bring with them hopes and dreams, and foster within us an energy and excitement Yet, at other times, anticipation and expectation can bring frustration, fear, and apprehension Waiting upon a medical diagnosis, or longing for that elusive new job Anticipating a tense gathering with friends or family, or wondering if you ll have enough money to make it through the month Preparing to leave for an extended deployment overseas, or walking onto the mental health floor to see a loved one These moments of anticipation and expectation foster energy, yes, but often an unsettling energy of concern Still, while the world around us has already moved into Christmas mode, we in the Church are going to wait; We do so as a Christian discipline, yes; yet we also do so as a reminder that amidst whatever apprehension we may be experience, there is always hope!

The Advent season, paradoxically, serves a dual purpose; it expects the Second Coming of Jesus, while anticipating and participating in the celebration of His birth Advent is both future expectation and present anticipation; all wrapped up nicely into one beautifully decorated seasonal bow And it is amidst this paradox that the season of Advent is its most alluring We are both end-time people, with one eye focused on the future fulfillment of Jesus return, and meantime people; with the other eye on the grocery list, the newspaper, and the pre-christmas sales If we are honest, both eyes generally move more toward meantime issues I suspect; and perhaps naturally so For most of us, the daily personal concerns and struggles of life and faith can leave little room for contemplating the second coming of Jesus, except perhaps when we roll our eyes at apocalyptic street preachers Yet, Jesus words today remind us to be alert and to be on guard so that our hearts are not weighed down And, oh, how our hearts can become weighed down

Uncertainty runs rampant these days Inside our political system, amidst world affairs, among apparent deep divisions within our society, in our personal struggles and health issues, within our churches, and our local communities Because of the gnawing anxiety that surrounds us, we may find ourselves on edge and not very concerned about being alert or keeping awake to what God is up to This, however, would be a shame; because Advent shares a message that is exactly what we need in anxious times We need look no further than our lesson from Jeremiah, to hear sustaining words of hope and promise Jeremiah reads, The days are surely coming when I will fulfill the promise I made to Israel I will cause a righteous branch to spring up from David in those days Judah will be saved and Jerusalem will live in safety. These words, as we Christians interpret them, speak of Jesus, of the line of David, as the anticipated and expected Messiah

Yet, what is so poignant and powerful about Jeremiah s words is that: 1) it was Jeremiah who was speaking them, and 2) when he spoke them to the people Jeremiah, you see, spends most of his time chastising the people for their unfaithfulness and anticipates and expects their eventual downfall And the downfall comes. The people are taken away into exile, a defeated nation. The people must wrestle with their own sin and shame. And they begin to doubt their God. Yet, instead of saying, I told you so, Jeremiah becomes an arbiter of hope Jeremiah comforts the people whom he previously condemned Amidst national and cultural calamity, Jeremiah brings a balm for their wounds He reminds the people that amidst their shame, sorrow, and suffering that YHWH will practice fidelity to them Jeremiah reminds the people that God will restore their nation and will remain their God

And what Jeremiah anticipates and expects happens The Hebrew people do return from exile as renewed and reenergized people of faith Jeremiah reminded them, and reminds us today, that ours is the God who promises reconciliation and hope always, especially when things look bleakest Because of what God has done and because of who God promises yet to be, we can dare to trust that the Kingdom of God reigns as fully in the here and now as it will in the hereafter To be sure, we trust that Christ will come again in fullness and glory And it is this end-time promise of grace, for us and for our world, that allows for a meantime response of faith We can dare to trust that Christ will and does come among us now; to bring peace amidst war, to heal brokenness, to shine light into our darkness, to foster hope when hopelessness abounds, and to reconcile shattered faith and broken lives

When Jesus says, Be alert, don t hear this as a threat Instead, hear it as a call; a life-giving and life-changing call to faithful, tenacious patience Be alert as the love reconciles and renews NOW Be alert as light shines amidst darkness NOW Be alert to where hope invades sadness NOW Be alert when peace transforms hearts and minds NOW We may not know what our future holds, but we can dare to trust who holds that future So, walk with eyes wide open into this new year And be alert! For, graciously, prayerfully, thankfully, Jesus is coming! Amen