Luke 3:1-20 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
How Shall We Prepare?
Luke 3:1-20
Sermon
by King Duncan
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(John the Baptist Announces His Coming --Third Sunday of Advent) Howard Hensley was standing in line at the post office. Standing in line is not one of his favorite things to do, especially during the busy Christmas season. This day was no exception. He waited anxiously for the postal clerk to weigh his packages and give him his stamps. His irritation quickly increased when he overheard a shabbily dressed man ask another clerk for $50 worth of Madonna stamps! "What corrupt influence is the government supplying society with now?" he thought. "Wasn't Elvis enough?" As the clerk in the next stall came to his clerk for extra stamps, Hensley leaned forward to catch a glimpse of what vile picture of Madonna the old man was buying. Surprise, embarrassment, and finally hilarity engulfed him as he realized that the picture on the stamps was not Madonna the rock star but the Madonna, Mary, the mother of Jesus! (1)

Our lesson today centers on John the Baptist. I wonder what John would think of today's Madonna? Horrified, probably. Not by her music, perhaps, but certainly by her lifestyle. John was a preacher of righteousness. He wanted Israel to repent. But his message was not the one-dimensional diatribe that we might imagine. It was a challenging message that we need today.

John the Baptist announced the coming of the Messiah. Of course, his announcement came thirty years after Christ's birth, but John's announcement is just as important as any of the others. John's role was to prepare the way for his coming. How do we prepare for the coming of Christ? We prepare in three ways according to John the Baptist. They may be summed up like this:

If you have wealth, share it. If you are in a position of trust, honor it. If you have power, don't abuse it. You didn't know John the Baptist dealt with such contemporary themes, did you? But he did. Let's look at them individually.

IF YOU HAVE WEALTH, SHARE IT. The multitudes asked John, "What should we do?" John the Baptist answered, "He who has two coats, let him share with him who has none; and he who has food, let him do likewise."

Christmas is a time of sharing. We exchange gifts with one another, but many of us will go beyond that. We will drop money into Salvation Army kettles, we will write checks to worthy community projects, some of us will make an end-of-the-year contribution to the church. There is something about this season that helps us see beyond ourselves to the needs of others.

Of course, not everyone is able to give to others this year. In a stewardship drive one of the members sent the pastor the following letter:

Dear Pastor, In reply to your request to send a check I wish to inform you that the present condition of my bank account makes it almost impossible. My shattered financial condition is due to federal laws, state laws, county laws, corporation laws, mother-in-laws, brother-in-laws, and outlaws. Through these laws I am compelled to pay a business tax, amusement tax, head tax, school tax, gas tax, light tax, water tax, sales tax, even my brains are taxed. I am required to get a business license, a dog license, not to mention a marriage license. I am also required to contribute to every organization or society which the genius of man is capable of bringing to life. Women's relief, unemployment relief, every hospital and charitable institution in the city ” including the Red Cross, the purple cross, and the double cross. For my own safety I am required to carry life insurance, property insurance, liability insurance, accident insurance, burglar insurance, business insurance, earthquake insurance, tornado insurance, unemployment insurance, fire insurance. I am inspected, expected, respected, dejected, rejected, examined, reexamined, informed, reformed, summoned, fined, commanded, and compelled until I supply an inexhaustable supply of money for every known need, desire or hope of the human race. Simply because I refuse to donate something or other, I'm boycotted, talked about, lied about, held up, held down, robbed until I am ruined! I can tell you honestly, had not the unexpected happened I could not enclose this check. The wolf that comes to so many doors now-a-days, just had pups in the kitchen, I sold them, and here's the money. (2)

I guess we all feel that way at times ” demands for money from every side ” particularly during this season of the year. And yet the gift of Christmas is a gift that must be passed on to be enjoyed. Christ comes into our lives bringing unmerited love. Only the coldest of hearts will refuse to let him in. Only the most selfish of spirits will not reach out then in generosity to others. Our enjoyment of Christmas will be proportional to the joy we bring to others. If you have wealth, share it.

Here is John's second prescription for preparing for his coming: IF YOU ARE IN A POSITION OF TRUST, HONOR IT. Even tax collectors came to John the Baptist to be baptized. They also asked, "Teacher, what shall we do?" John replied, "Collect no more than is appointed you."

You know about tax collectors in that day and time. They collected taxes on behalf of the Roman government. They were despised as collaborators. They were also infamous for their lack of ethics. They would add extra fees to the amount they collected. This generally made them quite prosperous. John does not tell them to give up their jobs. After all, somebody has got to do this dirty business. What he tells them is to exercise honesty in their work. They are in a position of trust. They need to honor that trust.

Does it appear to you that honesty is a disappearing commodity in our land? A woman reported recently about an experience she had in Japan. She was standing in line in a subway station and noticed a pile of money lying on a counter unattended. Others in the area noticed it, and she watched with mounting incredulity as each person left it right where it was. "Finally," she said, "I was glad to see one woman walk over and pick up the bills. But she just took them to someone else to ask if that person had left them there. When he said no, she put the money back." (3)

How long do you think that money would have laid unclaimed in our country? Not long. Something scary is happening to us. We have replaced absolute principles of conduct with moral relativism. As a result more students are cheating on their school work, more adults are cheating on their taxes.

Christine Hoff-Sommers published an article sometime back titled "Ethics Without Virtue." In this article she criticized the way ethics is being taught in American colleges. She pointed out that students taking college ethics classes debate abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, DNA research, and the ethics of transplant surgery, while they learn almost nothing about private decency, honesty, personal responsibility, or honor.

A colleague of hers did not like what she said in that article. The colleague told her that in her classroom, she would continue to focus on issues of social injustice--women's oppression, corruption in big business, transgressions of multinational corporations in Third World countries. The colleague explained, "You are not going to have moral people until you have moral institutions. You will not have moral citizens until you have a moral government." She made it clear that Ms. Hoff-Sommers was wasting time and even doing harm by promoting bourgeois virtues and not awakening the social conscience of her students.

At the end of the semester, that same colleague came into Ms. Hoff-Sommers' office carrying a stack of exams and looking very upset. "What's wrong?" Ms. Hoff-Sommers asked. Her colleague said, "They cheated on their social justice take-home finals. They plagiarized!" More than half of the students in her ethics class had copied from secondary sources. "What are you going to do?" Ms. Hoff-Sommers asked. Her colleague gave her a self-mocking smile and said, "I'd like to borrow a copy of that article you wrote on ethics without virtue. (4)

A hard but important lesson to learn. We simply cannot have a society that is not built on honesty and trust. If you have a position of trust--whether it is in business, or government, or church or within you own home--honor it. That is the second way we prepare for his coming: by living trustworthy lives of honesty.

Here is the final way: IF YOU HAVE POWER, DON'T ABUSE IT. Soldiers came to John the Baptist. They asked, "And what shall we do?" And John said, "Rob no one by violence or by false accusation...." In other words, "Don't abuse your power."

Power is a frequently used word in our society. White males are on the defensive. Why? They are seen as having power--power in government, power in business, power in the home. Women and minorities are seen as being powerless. It is an over-generalization, of course, but it is also historically true.

Did you know that women didn't gain the right to vote in federal elections in the U.S. until 1920? Did you know they couldn't vote in Switzerland until 1971? In the 1960s most states wouldn't let a woman sign for an apartment lease, obtain a credit rating, or apply for a loan unless her husband or a male relative agreed to share the responsibility. At that time, many people believed it was smart for women to act dumb; some parents wouldn't even send their daughters to college. According to a 1965 study, fifty-one percent of men thought women were temperamentally unfit for management positions. (5)

We're not talking ancient history here. We're talking about the past couple of decades. And women and minorities are still at a disadvantage. Power is distributed inequitably. But all of us at one time or another may be in a position of authority. A parent has power over a child, an employer has power over an employee, a teacher has power over his or her students, a pastor has the power of the pulpit. And John says to each of us, if you have power, do not abuse it.

There is no better example of the tragic abuse of power than King Herod. The young Herod had been an exceptionally able ruler. He erected palaces, fortresses, temples, aqueducts, cities, and the great new Temple in Jerusalem. He stimulated trade and commerce. He was so highly respected by Rome that he would actually go down in history as "Herod the Great."

But his life deteriorated into paranoia. He was continually writing to Rome for permission to execute one or two of his own sons for treason. Finally, even his friend Augustus admitted, "I'd rather be Herod's pig than his son." (6)

Within the Christian community Herod will always be remembered for his decree that all the male children in his kingdom should be slain. This was his plan for eliminating a potential threat to his throne. It did not work, of course. The tiny babe who would become King of Kings escaped. Herod did execute John the Baptist when John pointed out Herod's moral failures. How could a man fall so far? Power does something to people. The abuse of power is a heinous sin ” whether in the workplace or the home or anyplace else in society.

So? How do you prepare for his coming? John the Baptist tells us plainly: If you have wealth, share it. If you are in a position of trust, honor it. If you have power, don't abuse it. Follow the example of Christ. He had it all, but he gave it up because of his love for you and me.


1. Howard Hensley, Glasgow Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Glasgow, Ky.

2. John Maxwell, "He Who Laughs, Lasts and Lasts and Lasts," Injoy Life Club tape, Vol. 6, #5. Contributed by Wayne Rouse.

3. Alfie Kohn, THE BRIGHTER SIDE OF HUMAN NATURE, (New York: Basic Books, Inc., Publishers, 1990), p. 40.

4. "How to Teach Right & Wrong," by Christine Hoff-Sommers, CHRISTIANITY TODAY, Dec. 13, 1993.

5. Maura Christopher, "America's Women: Meeting the Challenges of Today," SCHOLASTIC UPDATE (May 18, 1987). Cited in Bill Hybels, HONEST TO GOD? (Grand Rapids, MI, Zondervan Publishing House, 1992).

6. Paul L. Maier, IN THE FULLNESS OF TIME, Harper, San Francisco, 1991.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan