Matthew 3:1-12 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
Get the Garbage Out!
Matthew 3:1-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
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For those of you who are parents or grandparents, I bet you remember your baby’s first words. Were you surprised by what those first words were? You spend the first six to nine months of your baby’s life just babbling at him and making all kinds of words and sounds. And one day, he or she suddenly responds! It’s a great feeling. Unless your baby’s first words are something unexpected.

A parenting website asked parents to submit stories of the strangest first words their babies ever said. Laura Conaway from Columbus, OH, said her youngest son’s first words were, “Let go.” That was a surprise! Laura and her husband were puzzled by this, until the day they walked into a room to find the child’s older brothers playing tug-of-war with his favorite blankie, and the toddler was yelling at his older brothers, “Let go!” Having older siblings probably explains a lot of things a new child learns.

Monica Rivera from Woodland Hills, CA, and her husband were sure their infant daughter was going to say “Dada” first. But Monica kept practicing the word “Mama” with her daughter in the hopes that this would be her first word. Monica and her husband were both there to witness their precious child’s real first word, which was not “Mama” or “Dada,” but “Bob,” the name of the family’s golden retriever.

Sylvia Perantinides from Campbell, OH, had the strangest story, in my opinion. Sylvia admits that she nags her forgetful husband all the time to take the garbage out. However, Sylvia and her husband were both surprised one morning when their infant daughter banged her little fist on her high chair and yelled at her father her first words, “Garbage out!” (1)

When you think about it, that’s not too far off from how John the Baptist starts his preaching in this morning’s Bible passage--“Garbage out!” How do you prepare people for the coming Messiah? “Get the garbage out!”

That’s like a funny list I saw of the top signs that your pastor needs a vacation. The number one sign on this list of ways you know your pastor needs a vacation is that his [her] first words to the congregation on Sunday morning are, “All right, you heathen, listen up!” (2) If you hear me start off a sermon like that someday, you’ll know it’s time for me to get away. “All right, you heathen, listen up!”

I can picture that the first words that John the Baptist would use to start his preaching would be, “Get the garbage out!” All his life, John’s parents had told him the miraculous circumstances of his birth. God had chosen John to be the prophet who announces the arrival of the Messiah, God’s Anointed One. John didn’t have any excuse to be timid or unclear in his preaching. The world needed to know the Messiah was coming! God’s plan for the salvation of the world was kicking into high gear. And people needed to get ready to see the Messiah, to hear him, to follow him. So what were John’s first words to announce news this important? Are you ready? Here they are: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” In other words, John was saying, “Christ is coming. Get the garbage out!—repent!”

Matthew 3: 1-12 reads, “In those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea and saying, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.’ This is he who was spoken of through the prophet Isaiah: ‘A voice of one calling in the wilderness, Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him.’

“John’s clothes were made of camel’s hair, and he had a leather belt around his waist. His food was locusts and wild honey. People went out to him from Jerusalem and all Judea and the whole region of the Jordan. Confessing their sins, they were baptized by him in the Jordan River . . . .”

What was the first thing that people did when they heard John’s message? They confessed their sins. Why? Because John preached a message of repentance.

Pastor David Guzik, in his New Testament commentary, writes that it is entirely accurate to say that the first word of the gospel is “repent.” Search it out for yourself.

Repent was the first word of John the Baptist’s gospel (Matthew 3:1-2).

Repent was the first word of Jesus’ gospel (Matthew 4:14, Mark 1:14-15).

Repent was the first word in the preaching ministry of the twelve disciples (Mark 6:12).

Repent was the first word in the preaching instructions Jesus gave to his disciples after his resurrection (Luke 24:46-47).

Repent was the first word of exhortation in the first Christian sermon (Acts 2:38).

Repent was the first word in the mouth of the Apostle Paul through his ministry (Acts 26:19-20). (3)

“Repent” is a critical word, yet you almost never hear the word repent in our society anymore. It’s definitely a churchy word—though it probably isn’t used very much even in church. What does it mean?

“Repent” comes from two Greek words, noeo, which means “to think, perceive or understand with the mind” and meta, which means “to change.” (4)

So this is John’s challenge to his hearers: are you ready to meet God? Are you ready to get in step with God’s plan for this world? Then you’ve got to repent, to change your mind and understanding, to reflect God’s mind and purposes. “Get the garbage out!” This is the first step in beginning a new life with Christ.

A forest ranger in Wales wrote an article about the most common questions visitors ask the forest rangers in his park. Many people, he said, come to the park to hike one of the beautiful trails that wander through the forest, trails designed to display the magnificent trees and plants, to let the hikers encounter the array of wildlife in the forest, and to take hikers on to hilltops for breathtaking views of the countryside. But the most frequent question that visitors ask the forest rangers is not, “Where does this trail go?” or “How long does it take to hike it?” or “Do we need bug spray on the trail?”

Instead, they ask, “Excuse me, can you tell me where the trail starts?” (5) That’s a good question for today. If you want to know where the trail to God starts, it starts at repentance.

Repentance is about restoring our relationship with God. Some religions teach that sin comes from incorrect thinking or ignorance of what is good or true. But the Bible teaches us that sin comes from turning away from the love of and reverence for God. Sin is anything that misses the mark of God’s holiness. So the farther we move away from God, the closer we move to sin. So what we need most is to turn around.

God created this whole universe and everyone in it to know God and to reflect God’s glory. People who know each other intimately and spend much time with each other invariably start to reflect each other’s character and attitudes and priorities. John is saying, “The kingdom of heaven is near to you. God’s got a plan for restoring this world to His original design of justice and mercy and peace. And you’re going to miss it if you don’t align your thoughts with God’s thoughts. If your mind is fixed on outward shows of religion rather than filled with the spirit and thoughts and priorities of God, then you are going to miss the greatest thing you’ve ever seen, the Messiah, God in the flesh walking among you.”

I read recently about the FC Magdeburg soccer team in Magdeburg, Germany. This soccer team had a rough season in 2012. They had five consecutive matches without scoring a single goal. So the Magdeburg fans decided the team needed a little help.

The fans showed up one day at the stadium with large, brightly-colored cardboard arrows. They gathered at the end of the stadium nearest their opponents’ goal and aimed their arrows at it so the Magdeburg players would have no trouble finding the goal when they got the ball. (6)

John the Baptist’s message is like a brightly-colored cardboard arrow pointing right at God’s plan for humanity: Repent. Restore your relationship with God. It’s the only way to prepare yourself for the Messiah and the coming of the kingdom of heaven. Repentance is about restoring our relationship with God. But how do we do that?

The first sign of true repentance is acknowledging that we have a problem. Broken relationships can’t be restored until we step up and say, “I was wrong. I sinned against you. And knowing that I caused you pain breaks my heart.” That is true in any relationship. And it is true in our relationship with God.

Dean Chabot is a former neo-Nazi who has left behind his old lifestyle of hate and prejudice and violence to start a new life as a man committed to peace and reconciliation. The last step in leaving his old lifestyle behind was getting rid of the racist tattoos he had gotten in his teen years. Another former white supremacist who had left the movement paid for a plastic surgeon to remove Dean Chabot’s old tattoos.

In an interview with journalist Scott Pelley from CBS News, Chabot said, “The reason I am doing this is to end a chapter of my life, getting the hate off my skin.” (7)

Repentance acknowledges our broken relationship with God. It is not so much about getting hate off our skin but getting it out of our heart.

Let me tell you about a young woman named Tatiana Goricheva who was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, and grew up to become a leader of the Communist youth movement. She was raised an atheist, but at the age of twenty-six, she and her best friend heard the story of Jesus Christ. They became Christ-followers. As she read the Bible, Tatiana discovered what sin is, and it broke her heart to know that she had rejected God’s character and will and purposes for so many years. She felt this horrible burden, this desperation to be cleansed and restored to God, but she didn’t know how to go about it. She would later discover that her best friend was undergoing a similar spiritual journey.

One day, Tatiana walked into an Orthodox church and asked to make her confession. The priest listened to her lengthy confession and offered her prayers and advice. Through the act of confession, Tatiana and her best friend experienced the joy of restoration with God. She writes about that day, “. . . we had already had a miraculous experience: from the nothingness of a meaningless existence bordering on desperation we had come into the Father’s house, into the church, which for us was paradise. We knew that with God anything is possible.” (8)

To Tatiana Goricheva, confession opened up the door to God’s house, the church, which she described as paradise. That’s true restoration to God. Repentance is about restoring our relationship with God. The first sign of true repentance is acknowledging that we have a problem.

But listen: the fruit of repentance is joy and peace. John’s message might sound harsh and undiplomatic to us. It might sound out of keeping with the soft, warm feelings of the Christmas season, but it’s motivated entirely by love, by a desire to shake us awake and get us to turn back to God while there is still time to experience His love.   

Festo Kivengere is a former Bishop of the Anglican Church in Uganda. Festo was raised in a pagan family, but he became a follower of Jesus in early adulthood. His ministry was so influential that he is sometimes referred to as “the Billy Graham of Africa.”

Before he became a follower of Jesus, Festo describes his life as a “spinning top.” He said, “I worked, I played, I worked. . . I was just running faster and faster, thinking that the faster I ran the more lively life would become.  How wrong!” 

But a friend shared the message of Jesus with Festo, and he prayed to follow Jesus as his Lord and Savior. He says, “That day God smashed my heart open and introduced me to the living reality of Jesus Christ, who entered in. My top stopped spinning, and He gave me direction that lasts through eternity.” (9)

“God smashed my heart open”—that sounds like a country song about someone who has just fallen in love. That’s what happens, though, when we understand who God is, and how much God loves us. And that’s what repentance does for us—it smashes our heart open, and we fall in love with God all over again.  

So, that’s John the Baptist’s message to us on this Second Sunday in Advent. The kingdom of God is near. God is coming. He’s kicking off His final plan to restore the world to a relationship with Him. Don’t just go through the motions this Christmas season. Don’t just make an outward show of your religion. Turn back to God. Confess your sins. Get the garbage out . . . and bear the fruit of joy and peace that comes from knowing that you’ve been restored to God.


1. https://www.parents.com/baby/development/talking/moms-speak-out-on-babys-hilarious-first-words/. “Children’s Weirdest First Words” by Cheyenne Ellis.

2. PreachingNow. Editor: Dr. Michael Duduit. Copyright 2006 by Salem Publishing, http://www.preaching.com/newsletter/subscribe.html.

3. https://enduringword.com/bible-commentary/matthew-3/.

4. https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/thoughts-on-jesuss-demand-to-repent.

5. Steven Richards-Price, “Excuse Me, Where Does the Trail Start?” Interpretation Journal, 16/2 (Autumn, 2011), 25-26. Cited by The Rev. Dr. Thomas G. Long, http://day1.org/3823-the_start_of_the_trail.

6. “The 25 Craziest Sports Fan Stories of All Time” by Gus Turner https://www.complex.com/sports/2014/09/25-craziest-sports-fan-stories-of-all-time/.

7. “Rejecting hate, after spending nearly a decade spreading it” Scott Pelley CBS News interview. Produced by Michael Radutzky. Associate Producer, Lucy Boyd. © 2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

8. From Talking About God Is Dangerous: The Diary of a Russian Dissident by Tatiana Goricheva (1987) in “A Story of Repentance” by Friar Stephen Freeman, March 27, 2009 https://blogs.ancientfaith.com/glory2godforallthings/2009/03/27/a-story-of-repentance/.

9. Illusaurus.

Dynamic Preaching, Fourth Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan