John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
A Voice Crying In The Wilderness
John 1:1-18, John 1:19-28
Sermon
by John A. Stroman
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The people wondered who John the Baptist was. He appeared as a rather strange person who came from the wilderness, preaching repentance, dressed in camel's hair, surviving on a diet of locust and wild honey. John the Baptist was the beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ. Yet his message of good news seemed as strange as his attire. It was good news involving repentance, and repentance involved change. That is good news to some people but it is bad news to others. It was good news for the oppressed. It was bad news for the oppressors. It was good news for those who suffered pain. It was bad news for those who inflicted pain. It was good news for the masses in John's day who were waiting to hear that things can change. It was bad news for those who wanted to maintain life as usual. The gospel of Jesus Christ begins with the arrival of John the Baptist, who proclaims the coming of one who will ransom captive Israel. He is the forerunner of the good news, the news of change, of a new beginning and a fresh start. John declares one is coming "who is more powerful than I."

The Wilderness Experience

As Leonard Sweet points out, the wilderness theme is extremely important in understanding this text and John's place in this new exodus. Just as the first Exodus took place in the wilderness this second mighty act of God's self-disclosure also takes place in the wilderness. Let us consider the wilderness, not as a place of testing and judgment, but rather as a place that can cleanse, purge, and renew.

The crowd asked John, "Who are you?" John confessed that he was not the Christ. They asked, "What then, are you Elijah?" He answered, "I am not." "Are you the prophet?" meaning Jeremiah. "No," John replied. "Then who are you?" the crowd demanded. John's response was, "I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness." He was clear to point out that he was not the Messiah, but rather he was only a voice, telling them to get ready for the Messiah is coming. John told them that he was nobody, but the one who is coming is somebody. John was saying, "I am the pointer, the preparer of the way, the forerunner. You need to look to the one who is coming after me. He is preferred before me. I am not even worthy to untie the thong of his sandal. Look to him!"

John Prepares The Way

Martin Luther in his exposition of John 1 points out that Jesus came in simplicity, not ostentatiously, to win the world through his life and his teachings rather than with a sword and coercion. Therefore, God sent to prepare the way for Jesus not an angel, but a man. A man who came not of his own accord but, as the text tells us, "a man who was sent by God, whose name was John."

John the Baptist was a prophet. Although the prophet's message is relevant, truthful, and urgent, it is one that the people do not easily receive. We are not particularly fond of those people who tell us what is wrong with us. The prophet's frankness, boldness, and honesty are more than the people can bear to hear. Both John's attire and his preaching of repentance embody a wilderness motif. Today, we ignore the prophets, considering them as strange people. Strange in the sense that they can't accept the status-quo like the rest of the people. Strange in that they are not willing to overlook inconsistencies and injustices as most people are willing to do. Strange in the sense that they seem overly conscientious with a keen sense of compassion and concern. There is a tendency to ignore the prophets because they make us feel uncomfortable, and by ignoring them, we hope they will go away. At times, we have taken more drastic measures, by stoning the prophets, in hopes of silencing their voices. After the deaths of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy, the folk singers sang the ballad which asked, "Where have all of the prophets gone?"

The Voice Of The Prophet

We try, but we cannot silence the voice of the prophet. When one is struck down, God raises up another. Martin Luther King's voice was silenced, but Bishop Desmond Tutu's voice became strident. Today the prophet's voice is still crying out about brutality, violence, and the lack of moral integrity. We are witnessing the disintegration of society as the prophets have warned, with the breakdown of the home, the violence in the streets, and the eroding of human values by the drug culture, resulting in human life cracking and breaking under the stress and strain of it all. The modern prophets are telling us that we must deal with drugs, violence, racism, and crime, or we will not survive as a nation or as a people. Our imagined fears and conspiracies became realities with the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.

There are other prophetic voices in our midst who are telling us that we cannot disregard creation, nature, or the environment, for to do so is to destroy human life itself. Several years ago Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring. She told us that if we continued to use pesticides and insecticides, especially DDT, that we would wake up some day to a silent spring. The birds would no longer sing, because there would be no birds. Eventually there would be no life, period. She was mocked and ridiculed. After these many years she is now held in high esteem and appreciated. Studies have now shown how devastating DDT has been on human and animal life. The world is grateful to her that DDT was finally banned before it could spread further havoc on our planet. Many people today are still suffering from the lingering effects of DDT.

Crying In The Wilderness

The prophet is the voice of one "crying in the wilderness." Because of the truthfulness of the prophet's message, which for the most part is disturbing and upsetting, we have forced him into the wilderness. But we know that many of the prophetic voices which God has raised up in our day are right. They are telling us that if we ignore the homeless, the powerless, and the marginal of our day, we do so at our own peril. They are right. But we do not want to be reminded of our moral responsibilities, failures, and shortcomings. We do not want to be reminded that we are responsible for the consequences of our behavior. Therefore, the prophet is crying in the "wilderness" because we have abandoned him to the wilderness. We have "ears to hear," yet we do not hear. We have "eyes to see," but we do not see. We have chosen not to hear or see.

Jesus Identifies With Human Need

There is a unique relationship between Jesus and John the Baptist. This is seen in the close association of their mothers prior to their births and in John's preparation for the inauguration of Jesus' ministry. But most importantly it is in Jesus' baptism by John. Why was Jesus baptized by John? There seems to be only one reason. It was not because Jesus needed to repent of his sins, but rather because Jesus wanted to identify with both John's message and the people. The only way for Jesus to minister to the masses and reveal his love for them was to enter the water and be baptized with them. Jesus felt the need to stand with them on their level. He got down in the water with John and the people. Jesus' identifying with masses of people at the level of their need is the good news of the gospel.

The good news of the gospel is that Jesus meets us at the level of our need. Think of this good news in regard to the person who is living on a $100 a year. He has no car. His home is the size of a backyard toolshed. He has no television, radio, or appliances, and is without the benefit of running water or electricity. He represents over half of the people of the world. For such people the words of Jesus are good news indeed.

The good news comes to the brokenhearted, the lonely, and the forgotten. Talk to administrators of nursing homes and let them tell you about how some of their residents have been abandoned. No one ever comes to see them. The nursing home staff is their entire family. What an important role care givers provide in today's society. What about those partners in marriage who best describe their relationship as a "cold war"? Feeling, love, and emotion have evaporated, leaving merely a skeleton of an existence. What about that sobbing suicidal teenager who is making that last desperate call on a telephone hotline to a counseling center? The message of Advent is one of hope. Hope, because it reminds us that we are not alone. We have not been left to the mercy of devastating circumstances. The word is Emmanuel, God is with us.

Jesus Comes To Put Our Lives Together

What do these words of the advent of Jesus Christ mean to the broken, forsaken, and shattered lives among us? It means that Christ has come with a glue pot to pick up the broken pieces and make life whole again. The message of Advent is that Jesus comes with a radiance and joy that penetrates such despair and heavy heartedness.

Think of those among us whose spirit has grown faint. The couple who is worried about how they are going to pay the medical expenses of a desperately sick child. That father who faces the new year with the possibility he will be unemployed. The older couple who has been informed that their son and his family are moving in with them because their son has lost his job. The single parent mother who can barely drag herself out of bed in the morning because she feels so burnt-out and so used-up. The older man who sees the younger generation undoing all the reforms it took a lifetime to achieve. The elderly woman who asks of her pastor when he comes to visit her to pray for the Lord to take her. What does the coming of Jesus mean for them? For us?

Listen to the words of the Old Testament lesson for today coming from Isaiah 40 as the prophet proclaims,

Comfort, O comfort my people, says your God. (v. 1)He gives power to the faint, and strengthens the powerless. (v. 29) But those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength .... (v. 31a)

What Isaiah prophesied Jesus came to fulfill. Amid all of our human brokenness Jesus brings to us the comfort of his healing presence. If you want to see the stars on a December night you must get away from the light of the city. You need to get out into the countryside, away from all the artificial light, to where it is very dark. There you will be able to see the fragile light of the stars. It is fragile because there are so many things, such as smog, pollution, and artificial light that can obscure and hide the stars' beauty. That light that comes into the world in Jesus is so fragile that we must get away from the humdrum, the shopping crowds, the lights and the tinsel, and the daily course of things to observe its meaning for us. We need to find that place this Advent where we can be silent, reflective, and prayerful, and wait for our eyes to behold the radiance of God's love for us in Jesus Christ. Do not allow anything this Christmas to obscure this message.

CSS Publishing Company, GOD'S DOWNWARD MOBILITY, by John A. Stroman