Preparing the Way
Luke 3:1-14 (15-20)

Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and from our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ.  Amen.


His name is John, and he is known as the Baptist.  Luke the Evangelist
gives a good deal of attention to this fascinating character.  Though
not a part of our Gospel text for this morning, Luke tells us the
exceptional circumstances of John’s conception.  He later records how
John leaped in Elizabeth’s womb to recognize the presence of his Lord
in Mary’s womb.  Luke even records that Herod has John beheaded,
though he leaves the details to Matthew and Mark.  Luke tells us all
about John.  And it’s right that he should do so.  Jesus calls John
the greatest prophet, and indeed, the greatest man, ever born.

John’s father Zechariah prophesied about him in this way: “And you,
child, will be called the prophet of the Highest; for you will go
before the Lord to prepare His ways, to give knowledge of salvation to
His people by the forgiveness of their sins.”  And it came to pass
that this John, kinsman of Jesus, was filled with the Holy Spirit and
began to preach of the coming Messiah, offering a Baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins.  This prophet was the
forerunner promised by God through Isaiah, “The voice of one crying in
the wilderness: ‘Prepare the way of the Lord.’”  And Malachi in our
Old Testament text records these words of the Lord of hosts about
John: “Behold, I send My messenger, and he will prepare the way before
Me.”

John was a Called servant of the Word, Called to preach a specific
message to God’s people.  And he took that responsibility seriously.
Every word we have recorded to us from John is meant to prepare his
audience for the coming of the Messiah.  John is, in essence, teaching
a class of confirmation students, preparing them to receive the coming
Christ.  And he doesn’t start them off easy, either.  To those who
came out to him, he said, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee
from the wrath to come?”  He then went on to teach them about
repentance and its fruits.

Can you imagine if Pastor Simoneaux were to walk into the first day of
Catechism instruction and call his students a “brood of vipers”?  Yet
this was a message the people needed to hear.  These were a people who
looked back to their father, Abraham, and saw in him the assurance of
God’s goodness to them.  What need could they have for repentance
when, time and again, God had shown the nations that the people of
Israel were under His protection?  What need could they have for a
Savior, when God had already made them His chosen people?

Are your hearts any different?  No, we don’t cling to Abraham as our
father, but we find ourselves hard-pressed to see any need for
repentance.  We’ve already been made into God’s children through Holy
Baptism.  We are the rocks that have been transformed into Abraham’s
spiritual descendants, after all.  We are now what Peter in his calls
“a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his
own possession”.  We’re satisfied with where we are as baptized
children of God.  And it’s no bad thing to be a baptized child of God.
 We are supposed to cling to our baptism.  But too often we find that
we have emerged from the waters of baptism, and we’re content to dry
ourselves off.

The faith we are given in baptism and the forgiveness we receive is
meant to produce fruits of repentance in us.  When the crowds as John
what they are to do, he reaffirms the two Tables of the Law, which
Jesus would repeat later in His ministry by saying, “Love the Lord
your God with all your heart and soul and mind and strength,” and,
“Love your neighbor as yourself.”  True repentance produces these
fruits.  True repentance—and more than that, the complete forgiveness
of sins we receive when we repent—brings us back to these fruits when
we have stopped producing them.  True repentance brings us back to the
font, where we drown the Old Adam in us every day.

Nevertheless, we find ourselves content with the status quo of our
sinful Old Adam.  We’re good enough on our own.  We are content with a
superficial repentance.  We express a fleeting regret, make a feeble
excuse for what we’ve done and perhaps ask half-heartedly for pardon.
We wish to be different, to be better.  Maybe we might even manage a
brief outward improvement.  But to admit that something is desperately
wrong with us?  To let baptism do its work in us, to let it prepare in
us the way of the Lord, to let it make straight that which is broken?
We might as well claim Abraham as our father.

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, as was the case with John, it is
my stern duty to tell you that you are, indeed, broken.  You are
steeped in sin.  You are buried in it.  You are dead in sin.  God has
Called me and sent me to tell you this.  I take no joy in this, for I
am the recipient of that same message.  We are that very brood of
vipers, fleeing from the wrath to come.  For indeed, just as Christ
came as the promised Savior, He is coming again to judge both the
living and the dead.  Who can endure the day of His coming?  And who
can stand when He appears?

This is the message to each of you: repent.  Stand before the Lord and
say: “O Almighty God merciful Father, I, a poor, miserable sinner,
confess unto You all my sins and iniquities with which I have ever
offended You and justly deserved Your temporal and eternal punishment.
But I am heartily sorry for them and sincerely repent of them, and I
pray You of Your boundless mercy and for the sake of the holy,
innocent, bitter sufferings and death of Your beloved Son, Jesus
Christ, to be gracious and merciful to me, a poor, sinful being.”
Flee the wrath that is to come.

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, it is also my vital and wonderful
duty to tell you that Christ is coming and, indeed, has come.  And
because we cannot do it ourselves, He has prepared His own way, making
straight everything which is broken in us, leveling every mountain of
our sin in the flood of baptism, filling every valley of undone good
works with His righteousness and with His body and blood.  God has
come to us, for we could not come to him.  He has come, and He
forgives you all your sins.  He has created a new heart within you,
and He lives within you.

Christ is coming, and He has come.  As Pastor Simoneaux said last
week, Advent is the time that we focus on Jesus drawing near to us.
Jesus is Immanuel, God who dwells with us.  We experience that reality
again this morning as He comes to us in the Word of Absolution and as
He comes to us in His body and blood.  You are baptized children of
God, and the waters of Holy Baptism have prepared the way of the Lord
in your heart.  Christ is here.  Come to the altar, where your flesh
shall see the salvation of God.  In the name of the Father and of the
Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.


The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts
and minds in Christ Jesus always.  Amen.

-- 
-- 
Rev. Alan Kornacki, Jr.
P.O. Box 3134
Morgan City, LA  70381
   h. (985) 384-1783
   c. (985) 518-0433
   [email protected]
   http://pastoralkorn.blogspot.com
___________________________________________________________________________

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