Peace is a Verb : Isaiah 11: 1-10; Matthew 3: 1-12
Every good fairy tale starts the same way: “Once upon a time in a land far, far away…” And they all close out in the same way, “And so, they lived happily ever after.” The beginning is pastoral, and the ending is peaceful. What comes in between, however, is often filled with strife, drama, chaos, and danger. Most of us would say we want peace in our lives, our communities, and our world. But we have to remember that all stories have some level of conflict before reaching the happily ever after. In a world that often is filled with chaos and conflict, we as followers of Christ, are called to be peacemakers, for Jesus is the Prince of Peace.
This Sunday in Advent we celebrate Jesus as the Prince of Peace and we work in our own ways to make peace in this world. Sometimes, peace begins with a really heartfelt apology and endeavoring to do better. John the Baptist preached to the people, “‘Repent of your sins and turn to God, for the Kingdom of Heaven is near.’ The prophet Isaiah was speaking about John when he said, ‘He is a voice shouting in the wilderness, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord’s coming! Clear the road for him!’”
Sometimes we overthink repentance a bit. It has become quite a large and complicated theological term representing many different levels of sorrow in different churches. At the very core though, repentance is simply being remorseful for what one has done wrong and working to change or do better. Thankfully it is not as complicated as calculus. How many broken friendships, broken churches, broken relationships, and places of strife and struggle could be healed if there was a heartfelt apology and a consistent effort to do better?
It’s that latter part that often causes the problem. John the Baptist accuses the Pharisees of understanding where faults may lie but refusing to do better or make a change. He challenges them, “Prove by the way you live that you have repented of your sins and turned to God.” This translation uses the term snakes. Older translations call them a “brood of vipers,” which fits because it speaks to their poison and toxicity to be destructive and vicious.
Peace and forgiveness are not so difficult when someone is humble and apologetic and sincerely tries to do better. Peace and forgiveness are tested to the limits when someone gleefully remains a viper, never acknowledging their hurt or wrongdoing and never, ever working to do better in life or by the ones they have wronged. Those are the times peace eludes us.
John the Baptist doesn’t spare his words. Those who don’t repent and acknowledge what they have done wrong, the vipers that are happily viper-y, will meet a fiery end. Without repentance, without forgiveness, without seeking to show forth the fruits of God in one’s life, there is no pathway to grace. That person cannot receive grace, nor can they offer it. They are both ungraceful and ungrace-filled. Does this literally mean they are thrown into a fiery hell? Maybe, maybe not. But it certainly tells us that fire, destruction, and chaos will be the sum total of their lives.
What we must avoid in life is becoming the Pharisees and Sadducees. There are far too many ways the viper can creep in and take over. Bitterness that we leave unresolved, trauma that we haven’t addressed, brokenness that we don’t speak of…all of these things can lead us to a place where we are stingy with grace and are dismissive of peace. We must lean on God and continue to have faith in Jesus all throughout life, in the hurts and the happiness, if we are to remain the wheat and not end up the chaff.
Perhaps if a man in old camel hair, wildly unkempt and dirty, eating bugs and shouting were to come to us and ask, “What’s the matter with you?” with actual concern, it would startle us out of our troubles. In seeking the kingdom of God, in seeking more of Christ in our lives, we also are making peace in this world because we live in the way the Prince of Peace would have us live, doing what John the Baptist calls, “producing good fruit.”
So why is the sermon title, “Peace Is a Verb” if we’ve spent the whole time talking about fairytales and repentance? Peace isn’t something that just comes along in our lives, it’s active, seeking, living, and working. In olden time and in our modern day we look for a place and situation where all is calm and no strife exists. But that doesn’t really exist unless we make peace, does it? Every day is a choice to engage or let go, to complain or to give thanks, to throw something at another person’s head, or to just mutter, “Bless their heart.”
Isaiah prophesies about a time when all will live at peace. In that time justice will prevail. Exploitation of the vulnerable will be done and over. The very force of his word will destroy wickedness. Isaiah is talking about the work of Christ in reconciling and putting to right all the things that have become broken and off balance in the world.
We hear this wonderful discussion of the wolf and lamb living together, the lion being safe near a young calf, cows and bears, children being able to play safely in the den of a cobra. It’s hard for us to imagine this level of peace. And the truth is that God is the only one who can create such peace. God is the one who can make life so that “nothing will hurt or destroy in all [the] holy mountain.” But, this all requires us to take the first step. No peace can be made, hurting and destruction cannot be overcome unless we take that first step. Peace is a verb.
In school we learned about the structure of sentences. They all have a subject, the who is doing something, and the verb, the what being done. For peace to reign in our lives and world, we must be the subject and the doer. We must be the first to seek repentance when we have done wrong. We must be the first to forgive when we are wronged, even if, even if they aren’t the least bit sorry. Why? Because Jesus said from a cross, “Father, forgive them, they do not know what they are doing.” Jesus teaches us to take the first step. If we want to live a peaceful life, we must do as Jesus teaches.
We may not end up with a fairytale life, but we can have a peaceful life. The prophet John the Baptist said to the people, “Prepare the way for the Lord’s coming! Clear the road for him!” In quoting Isaiah, John was calling on people to ready their hearts and minds for Jesus to work in and through us.
I was visiting a friend the other day and they had the new cartoon Spiderman on for their kid. The theme of the show, which I was certainly not drawn into as an adult, was on the Hulk being able to let things go because when he got mad, he reacted. And every time, his reaction made each and every situation worse. My friends, as followers of Jesus, we must live as a people of repentance and forgiveness, of seeking to be first in our lives, families, and world to put divisions and struggles to rest, and to seek instead, reconciliation in the broken and fragmented places of life.
We may not be promised a fairytale life, and in some cases it may be more like a soap opera depending on the day. But the same Jesus who is the Savior of all, and the Prince of Peace promises to be with us in this world, and in faith, there will be a happily ever after.
Worship service Video https://www.facebook.com/fccmacon/videos/1381614237079393
