Isaiah 62:1-12 · Zion’s New Name
What Do We Do Now That We’re Happy?
Isaiah 62:1-12
Sermon
by Thomas D. Peterson
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There are a few times in our lives when long periods of planning and expectation are fulfilled. We cram months upon months with preparation. At last the coveted day arrives and our cup runs over. Weddings are such days. Long periods of activity go into getting ready. Each activity and emotion is carefully choreographed. When the day finally comes, the anticipation is so intense and the emotions so high that we expect life to go into overdrive. We will be lifted out of ourselves. A mysterious ingredient will enter our world and will transform life forever.

In a way this is true. Life is never the same. The day is so loaded with meaning and dreaming that a new dimension is added to life. Though life settles down, it never settles down into the same routine as before. But if the marriage is to be fully consummated every day, every relationship, and every responsibility must be infused with a portion, no matter how small, of the wedding magic. Then, indeed, lives are transformed forever.

To fulfill the expectation of a wedding day, there seem to be four ingredients: long preparation, eager and believing anticipation, the moment of ecstasy, and the long and faithful work to bring daily life up to the joy of the wedding day. People who are unwilling to follow through never experience the transformation, and they do not live happily ever after.

Christmas is also a time like this. Long preparation goes into making it. Buying, baking, decorating, and busy-busy activities are invested in this one day. Add to the preparatory work the sensual thrills of colors, sounds, smells, touch, and taste. Our whole world conspires to make us believe that on Christmas day all the preparation and anticipation will come to fullness and run over. We have loaded the day with daydreaming and meaning. A new dimension is to be added to our homes and to our relationships with those we love. At last, the day arrives: many presents are at hand to give, the lights are lit, the day dawns with mystery surrounding it, and we go into over-drive with confidence that the joys of the occasion will be indelibly stamped upon us. Maybe, maybe, life will be changed and our fondest wishes consummated.

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s characters in his novels ask each other in myriad ways what they are to do with their lives seeing that they are happy, rich, and beautiful. Having arrived at a peak of eminence and ready to pick the plum, the rewards elude them, and their lives slip away into futility. Like skiers on a slope they cannot remain in place, but slide irrevocably ever beyond the happy moment. Something quite special was supposed to happen to shift life forever from the ordinary and boring. But, nothing automatic took place. The magical moment came and went, and life slipped out from under them ever so relentlessly.

Oscar Wilde, among his many marvelous insights, said, "In this world there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it."* The sentiment seems at first overly caustic and cynical. What would life be without getting what we want? Yet, having got it, how does life sustain the high expectation our wants are to fulfill. Somehow getting what we want at one grand event does not sustain the demands reality puts upon human existence to make dreams come true.

* Oscar Wilde, "Lady Windemere’s Fan" Act III, quoted in John Bartlett Familiar Quotations 18th Ed. (Boston: Little Brown & Company, 1980), p. 675.

Not to get what we want is equally as tragic. We all know people who longed for love, success, big money, and excellence in a job only never to feel the satisfaction of "Well done," "Great job," "Here is your plaque." Not to get what one wants takes away the inner satisfaction of what we do, because all our efforts and best resolves never seem to coalesce. What good is all the hard work and patient productivity when it never really works? I recall a fine television show in which an artist smashed his works because he felt he would never get the woman he loved. Romantic, yes, but not far from the destructive frustrations that are present in most of us.

To get what one wants lays a heavy challenge on the remainder of life. Somehow life has to match an emotional high, keeping faith with "now we’re happy." We all know that life does not. The day dissolves and we wake to our aches and pains, our anxieties and pettiness. Yesterday was great, but why didn’t Sam, Ed, Mary, or Sue come and share it with me? Sure, it was super, but what about...? The Master of Ceremonies didn’t look as if he really felt I was great when he handed me the award. And, so it goes, with suspicion corrupting our big event almost from the beginning.

I talk often with a minister who has worked against great odds to reach a level of achievement. To the eyes of his peers he has done this. He serves two churches. In the larger one he is generously loved and complimented. The community and his denomination hold him to be effective in personal and group relationships. In his outlying appointment, a small group manages to find fault with everything he does, because he does not handle things like the former pastor. For all the evident signs of success when we talk, my friend invariably focuses in on those few malcontents. He repeatedly interprets, analyzes, rehearses, and reviews how they speak to and about him. That which by all rights should make him "happy" is hard to accept in light of these few malcontents. He brings together in one person the true-to-life meaning of these two sayings:

what does he do now that he’s happy, and a tragedy a-building is having got what he wanted.

We all know the answer to his quandary: we could all counsel him and give him support and encouragement. Don’t let them get you down; put yourself wholeheartedly into what you know you can do and what you obviously do well. Build on the positive; invest your days in the constructive, and accept the good that is at work in your life.

Christmas often draws together our two sayings. It is often called the time for neurotics. No one day can bear such a heavy weight, reward such heavy investments, and fulfill totally unrealistic fantasies. We put away our gifts, pick up the wrappers, pack up the ornaments, and take off the pounds of holiday feasting. We heave a deep sigh, "Maybe next year I will reach the peak and sustain it long enough for it to sear into my soul." We are rehearsing in our lives the reality of our two sayings: what do we do now that we’re happy? and, the only thing worse than not getting what we want is getting it.

Now that we’re happy - Christmas builds up to such a frenzy that the crush of discarded paper, broken toys, hurt feelings, slighted hopes, and shattered expectations cause the day to slide out from under us just as the earth does to a skier on a steep slope. I remember Christmas after Christmas when I was young, the feeling of being lost when the final gift was unwrapped, and the quiet reality of the day came over me. Where was the marvel? When was it to come? The gifts looked so ordinary, so regular, so - well, somehow unable to keep me on a high. What do we do now that we’re happy? Well, I got up and got out of the house and went visiting. Mother got busy preparing dinner.

To get what we want is often just as treacherous. We wanted a super-ordinary surprise from the one we love the most, or we wanted him or her to be ecstatic at our gift. And, after the gifts are opened, we have to face the fact that no gift given or received can touch the deep needs of the soul. We are the same person. The other does not glow in a new way toward us. The special gifts have not transformed the people involved nor their relationships. It’s hard to keep up an expected miracle when we are only human. No matter the grandiose event, we get tired, feel slighted, and the glow fades as our energy lessens.

Christmas expectations are much like my minister friend. They lay a reality demand upon us. We are to look at what is actually happening and what we are really capable of doing as the days and weeks go by and the magic has dissipated. We are called to build up reality when the fantasy part of our expectation crashes to earth. Only the integrity of self will ever stand a chance of realizing the promise of happiness or sustain the prospect of life’s consummation.

Our scripture today talks about these two axioms. After all, people have had these reactions forever. The Lord is proclaiming to the end of the earth that salvation has come to his people. They are the redeemed of the Lord, and the city in which they dwell shall never be forsaken. Certainly they are happy that salvation has come to them, that they are holy unto the Lord, sought out from all the earth. But, now that they have what they wanted, what shall they do with it? The answer is simple, not at all romantic. They are to get busy, put the Lord in remembrance, and not rest until God establishes Jerusalem as a prize in the earth. All of which translates into doing the daily deeds and being the righteous people they are able to be, building in their own ways evidence of God’s presence in their lives.

Having got what they wanted, the salvation could wither away as a sense of favor had withered in other periods of Israel’s history. And, why did it wither? Because they had not kept faith with the everyday tasks demanded in a covenant relationship with God. The experience of the past makes it more compelling that the radiant joyousness of the moment must be invested in day-to-day faithfulness to the righteousness which the law sets before them and which they know how to do. The happy news they had received from the Lord they must now claim as their own by the way they give themselves to the works of God.

The very Gospel of God, the good news that God favors and will redeem his people shines through in Isaiah’s words. And, hundreds of years later, it bursts anew, with heightened meaning and clearer purpose, in the birth of Jesus, who was in himself the Good News of God. Reconciliation and redemption had come to the people. They are saved at last. They are happy. What then? The same tasks faced the followers of Jesus that faced the early Jews. They were to surrender their wills to his and follow him. The disciples had to come to terms with the real ministry of Jesus and the part they played in it by their everyday faithful obedience. The new covenant had come to be in the world, and those who knew it were to make the world new.

Today, we look around us and everywhere we find people glowing with the grace of God who comes to them especially at Christmas, causing the light of his goodness to shine into their hearts. We see this happening around us; we feel it in our own hearts. The good news of Christ is at work in the world, graciously giving us the happiness we long expected and a growing awareness that at last we are getting from God what we wanted all along. The task of retaining this sense of our salvation continues just as it always has. We are not to rest until Christ establishes his New Jerusalem and makes the earth its prize. Justice, healing, deliverance, liberation - all these are day-labor tasks which guarantee for us that we know what to do after we are happy in Christ.

The Kingdom progresses ever forward where it works in us. The light that shone upon us, shines upon us more and more until full day. The vision of the manger becomes the vision of history. All people shall in time come and worship, receive the joy of God in the Christ child; and, through the growth of the New Israel our happiness will be secured and what we wanted become a blessing. God will effect for his beloved world its salvation, and all shall live in peace and justice until at last,

... the path of the righteous is like the light of dawn, which shines brighter and brighter until full day. (Proverbs 4:18)

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Gospel Shines Through, The, by Thomas D. Peterson