Luke 3:1-20 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
Your Life as a Provenance of the Jesus Story
Luke 3:1-20
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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If you’ve ever driven across the U.S. using I-90 (the northern route), you have seen signs for “Wall Drug.” Located in Wall, South Dakota, Wall Drug is a totally smarmy, schmaltzy, middle-of-nowhere “tourist trap.” And it is THE place to stop. Why?

Because around 1936 the family running Wall Drug figured out that they were still on the road to somewhere.

Wall Drug’s “claim to fame” is that when Mount Rushmore opened, Ted and Dorothy Hustead, owners of a “mom’n’pop” pharmacy/soda fountain shop way out in the boonies of South Dakota, decided to advertise by erecting a series of “Burma Shave”-style billboards along the route to that amazing new tourist destination called Mount Rushmore. They offered “free ice water” and bathrooms to the parched and pooped summer travelers snaking their way along the hot summer plains. People came for free ice water and rest rooms in droves. But then they stayed for an ice cream cone, a postcard, a doughnut.

Eventually Wall Drug became the destination stop on the way to another destination stop. The first few billboards along I-90 grew to over 500 miles of billboards, blanketing the upper mid-west with “How many miles to Wall Drug?” signs, signs that now attract over 2 million tourists every year to a still small (by mall standards) collection of tourist shops, cowboy-themed silliness (like giant “Jackalope” statues), and still-free ice water (not to mention free coffee and a doughnut for veterans, priests, honeymooners, and truck drivers). There are “how many miles to Wall Drug,” signs that have been put up by homesick mid-westerner’s in places as distant as Afghanistan and Antarctica (where, by the way, it is 9333 miles to Wall Drug!).

Ted and Dorothy Hustead moved to Wall, South Dakota in 1931 for two reasons. They wanted to live in a small town. And they wanted that town to have a Catholic church so that they could attend mass every day. But the pharmacy foundered until Dorothy suggested the “free ice water” advertisements five years later. The Hustead’s finally figured out that they weren’t “nowhere,” but that they were “on the way” and their faith had taught them that those who were “on the way” needed to be offered “cup of cold water.” Refreshment for the journey.

We are in our second week of Advent — on the way but still a good distance from Bethlehem. It is a journey that requires spiritual sustenance along “the way.” In this weeks’ gospel text, Luke offers a very specific form of refreshment. Not some empty calorie sweet stuff. If you want that all you have to do is tune into all that fluffer-nutter “Hallmark Channel” that is on 24-7 this month.

Luke offers something much more substantial. The “water” Luke’s text offers to those on a Bethlehem pilgrimage offers thirsty travelers a deep draft of real history. First, he reminds his readers of just how politically polluted the environment was in first century Palestine. Tiberius was Emperor. At the end of his reign he went mad, terrorized the entire populace, and was responsible for exiling all Jews from Rome. Pontius Pilate, was another political hack who managed to completely alienate the Jewish citizens he governed by belittling all their religious beliefs. Oh, and don’t forget Herod Antipas, whose sordid family relationships caused John the Baptist to speak out against him, and who would ultimately arrest and behead this prophetic proclaimer of the good news.

Not only does Luke give us the line-up of roadblocks, those political figures who would oppose God’s plans for the salvation of the world. Luke also dares to mention the religious wall of resistance, sustained and maintained by no less than the dynasty of Annas and his offspring, at that moment his high-priest son-in-law Caiaphus. What a litany of those who penultimately stand against Jesus. But ultimately this lot of haters will be washed away the tides of time and providence.

All these shadowy, somber details remind us, we Bethlehem road travelers of 2012, just how rocky is the road we travel. Thankfully, Luke’s details give us more than a list of “bad guys.” Luke provides us with a “provenance” — an authenticated account of the no-accounts and high-born, high-brow, high-heels involved in all these first-century plots and proceedings.

At last count there are 19 reality tv shows about pawn shops, pickers and storage auctions. Why so many? Why their popularity? This culture is absolutely addicted to stories . . . and we are mesmerized by the stories of “stuff,” the tales of “things.”

Tune into any one of these shows about antique collectors, junk-store treasure hunters, pawn shop operators, or professional “pickers”, and you will get to witness a huge procession of cracked and broken, moldy, dog-earred, off-the-wall, and just plain bizarre “collectibles” that people believe are “worth something” to somebody. The dealers, the pawnshop owners, the savvy collectors, winnow out the junk from the jewels in large part because of the “provenance” of the item.

If you watch Antiques Roadshow, you know that word “provenance.” It’s what can turn a $50 item into a $50,000 treasure. The “provenance” is the provable, itemized, recorded history of any item that brings the story of the antique to life. Whether the item is a lovely nineteenth century desk that is accompanied by a letter written upon that desk and a photograph of an ancestor working on that desk, or a 1960’s glass bowling ball with a rose buried inside that comes with a photograph of the ball being given at a gala in Milwaukee, “provenance” changes everything.

“Provenance” tells the story behind the story. Provenance is proof that people say and heard and experienced the story that encased something. Provenance authenticates the story. In fact, every Roman Catholic church is named after a saint. At the dedication of every Roman Catholic church, there is the commissioning of a “reliquary,” a container for the relics of that saint. Those relics might be bones and/or other body parts, pieces of fabric from the clothes of the saint, or some other fragment associated with the saint. But each reliquary contains not just the relics but the “authentics,” the hand-written documentation that proves the authenticity of the relics and that establish the relic’s “provenance.”

In today’s gospel text, Luke provides yet another piece of “provenance” for the story of Jesus’ birth. He gives us details about who was who. He even “names names” about those who were in power, those who were in charge — nationally, regionally, religiously. Luke authenticates the details and displays the relationships that made up the religious and political environment into which John the Baptist came preaching, into which Jesus came to challenge and change the status quo.

It is not a pretty picture. But, thanks to Luke, it is precise.

Luke gave the Jesus story careful “provenance.” Luke took special care to detail and record the authentics that gave the mission and ministry of Jesus’ official “provenance” in the first century.

Giving Jesus’ life, death and resurrection “provenance” in the twenty-first century is OUR mission. We are the “provenance” of the Jesus story. We write the gospel in our own lives. The challenge for each of us is to have our lives — as we make our journey down the road to Bethlehem — provide an on-going “provenance” for the Jesus story.

How is Jesus present in you today? What kind of “provenance” are you giving the gospel story? How does Jesus bring peace, and joy, and love into this world this year through you? How are we “pictures” of Christ working out God’s redeeming love today?

Sigmund Freud tells the story of a three‑year‑old boy whom he heard calling out from a dark room in the night. "Auntie," the boy cried, "talk to me! I'm frightened because it is so dark." His aunt answered him from another room: "What good would that do? You can't see me." "That doesn't matter," replied the child. "When you talk, it gets light." (as referenced in David G. Benner's "Soulful Spirituality" [2011]).

When you talk, does it get light? Is your life a provenance for the Jesus story?


COMMENTARY

Luke’s presentation of the “good news” is often cited as the most literary of the four gospels. Its narrative style, scope and portrayal of Jesus’ life are presented as a great unfolding story. Luke tells the “greatest story ever told,” both by presenting the grand scheme of God’s work and witness, and by paying attention to distinctive details of the time and place and persons. It is this attention to these details that opens today’s gospel text.

For the third time now in his narrative, Luke takes the time to carefully connect the gospel story to the world in which it took place. In 1:5, 2:1, and now in 3:1-2, Luke provides names of rulers and regions, people and places, bringing to life both the geographic, political, and religious environments surrounding the gospel story.

In 3:1-2 Luke offers his longest litany yet of who was in charge, politically and religiously, when Jesus was born — the backstory to the big story. The “fifteenth year” of Tiberius would be about 28-29 C.E. Luke’s list moves from the emperor down to the more regional rulers — some of whom reappear as his narrative unfolds, namely Pontius Pilate and Herod (Antipas) of Galilee. Luke’s single mention here of Philip and Lysanias serves to highlight those regions that were heavily Gentile as part of his description of the “world” in which the gospel story was birthed and lived out.

If the political actor on the scene suggests future collisions and collusions, so too do the religious leaders Luke chooses to name. Admittedly the “priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas” is a problematic description. By long-held Jewish tradition there was only one chief priest presiding at the Temple at any given time. However, Annas’ term as high priest (6-15 CE) was then carried on by no less than his five sons and eventually his son-in-law Joseph Caiaphus (18-37 CE). It is not hard to imagine that even if Annas were no longer serving as the designated leader of the Temple during this time, the long arm of his influence and power would have shaped whomever was serving as high priest.

It is in this ominous mix of persons of power and prestige that Luke now declares “the word of God came to John, son of Zechariah.” Mention of John as Zechariah’s son immediately recalls for the reader all the miraculous portents and prophecies surrounding John’s own conception and birth.

This “word” comes to John “in the wilderness,” a detail that connects this new word of God to the first exodus and to the greater salvation-history of Israel. Yet despite all Luke’s build-up for John’s entry, the gospel writer describes his mission in one brief sentence: John was “proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (3:3). John’s mission is one of proclamation (“kerysso”). His proclamation is for the people to repent, to “turn back” (“metanoaia”) from the life they are presently living, and so to find “forgiveness of sins.” This repentance is to be physically demonstrated though a highly symbolic act of “baptism,” a cleansing, purifying water ritual that would illustrate the beginning of a new relationship with God.

Luke then emphasizes John’s role as precursor to the Messiah. He clarifies John’s prophetic roots by citing Isaiah 40:3-5. Like Isaiah, John is a “herald,” one proclaiming the imminent arrival of a new “path,” a new “way” in the worldly wilderness. By referencing Isaiah here Luke connects John’s mission of proclamation to the larger story of salvation.

But the image of a new pathway towards that end is subtly adapted by Luke’s rendering of the Isaiah text. John’s mission is to prepare the way “of the Lord.” Already, in his gospel narrative, Luke’s text has asserted that “the Lord” is the proper way to refer to Jesus (see 1:43, 76, 2:11). It is this Jesus “the Lord” for whom John prepares this new way. Luke omits the Yahweh reference found in the Isaiah text -“make straight the paths of our God” and instead edits it to simply “make his paths straight.”

The final declaration of the Isaiah text is the starting point of John’s mission. With Jesus’ arrival, “all flesh shall see the salvation of God.” Although John’s message is preached in the Jordan river wilderness area the prophetic word he proclaims has a cosmic scope. “All flesh” is invited to hear, to repent, to turn, to prepare for, the coming the Lord.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons.com, by Leonard Sweet