John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
Turn on the Lights
John 1:1-18
Sermon
by Paul E. Flesner
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Many people don't realize the extent of the preparations involved when the President of the United States makes a visit to a local community. A raft of Secret Service personnel check out every building along the route he will travel and near the place he will be appearing. They go over each building with a fine tooth comb from roof to basement in their efforts to prepare for his safety. We often refer to them as "advance persons." They work invisibly behind the scenes to make sure that everything is ready for the big event that is about to take place.

In today's Gospel we encounter such an "advance man." However, he's not a member of the Secret Service. He's not preparing for a visit from a head of state. He's not checking out parade routes to assure their safety. He is telling us to get ready for a visit from the most important person in human history. His name is John the Baptist, who was introduced to us last week in Mark's Gospel, and we are told today that "he came as a witness to testify to the light."

That statement may not seem to mean as much 2,000 years later as it did back then. That's because we already know the ending to the story, which they didn't. Our world has already been visited by the Holy One from God. We don't need an "advance person" to prepare his way like they did. Or do we still need to listen to John the Baptist? Perhaps there is something in his message that we are taking for granted. That is a problem with the familiar -- we fall into a sense of complacency. As a result, Christmas can become simply a "festival of the familiar" rather than an "encounter with the Holy One."

Two words in the passage stand out: "witness" and "light." Last week we heard John call for repentance and change. Today we hear him calling us to prepare for Christmas by building a straight road in the desert for God to travel on. You'd think John had been watching them rebuild Elmhurst Road rather than quoting the prophet Isaiah. "Fill up the low spots. Knock the tops off of the high spots. Level it out. Make it straight and smooth."

What does Isaiah say is the purpose of all this construction? "So that the glory of the Lord may be revealed for all the world to see!" Folks, John's message about Christmas is that God wants every person in the entire world to know the power and glory of God. In his oratorio, Messiah, George Frederic Handel majestically captures these words of Isaiah in music. "And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it."

Getting ready for Christmas is not about decorated trees -- or office parties -- or even family gatherings. It is about a mission that God has placed upon every one of us: to open up a path to God for others who are in need of God's love and grace. If we really "hear" that, it will have an effect on both our preparation for and celebration of Christmas. John is telling us that God expects us to do something as a result of what God did at Christmas.

While that may seem like a trite statement, I have observed that there are any number of folks in our pews who have what I call an "armchair faith." To be sure, they come to church. But they seem to want to be spoon fed, and after they leave this building, it's the end of it until the next time they come.

Our relationship to God is not a "consumer faith" in which everything is neatly packaged for us and all we have to do is pick it off the shelf when we need it. Nor is faith a "let George do it" affair in which we allow a dedicated few to burn out doing the tasks which belong to all of us. John is saying that Christmas road building requires the active involvement of every one of us year around. He is saying we are to build these roads everywhere -- into our jobs, our schools, our communities, our neighborhoods -- anywhere and everywhere we go!

The second word that stands out is "light." A couple weeks ago I read about an experimental generator that runs on natural gas and that can be set up in a home to provide for almost all of its electrical needs. It made me realize that we have come a long way technologically in providing light to see by. However, as I read the same newspapers and hear about shootings in schools and messy divorces and people dying of drug overdoses, I also realized that technology cannot generate light for our hearts and souls.

If actions do speak louder than words (and they do), then at Christmas God has virtually shouted to the world that God cares enough to enter the place we live and bring light to the dark spots in our lives that we cannot seem to light on our own. Christmas light is about an end to isolation and despair that even our best efforts can't seem to fix. Christmas is about hope when the stage of life is the darkest. Christmas is about a future that God has provided for eternity when death appears to be the final word in life.

We need to hear this message again and again. Somehow the passage of time takes a subtle toll on our spirits. Because it happens little by little, even to the most dedicated people, we usually don't notice it. Then, one day it suddenly gets dark and we wonder what happened.

This morning we have heard from the "advance man." He reminds us that God has turned on the brightest light in the universe -- brighter than any sun or star or gas powered electric generator. He also reminds us that we are the advance people of this generation. We are to tell everyone who will listen that the light has already come. Once again I want to paraphrase John's Advent message, "Prepare the way of the Lord," for our times: "Turn on the lights."

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany, by Paul E. Flesner