"The Art of Interruption"
Third Sunday in Advent
December 12, 2010
James 5:7-11

Recently Steve Martin was interviewed at a place in New York called
the 92nd Street Y. It’s known for its focus on the arts and the
tickets aren’t cheap. Steve is an avid art collector and he recently
wrote a novel called Object of Beauty. He and the interviewer were
having a grand time talking about his book, his art collection, and
his love of art and the art world. Apparently many in the audience
weren’t as thrilled with all this talk of art. They wanted to hear
about Steve. They wanted one of the most famous and funniest comedians
to talk about his career. Halfway through the show, the people in
charge of this event took matters into their own hands, as they
apparently felt the same way. They handed notes to the interviewer
with such things as, “Talk about Steve’s career.” This threw both of
them off and the evening kind of fizzled, with some forcing of letting
audience members ask questions themselves.

Afterward, the Y sent out a letter of apology as well as a full
refund. They wanted people to know that they would see to it in the
future that they could count on the quality they had come to expect in
events at the Y. Needless to say, Steve Martin wasn’t happy about how
it all transpired, including the way the Y handled things afterward.
He wrote an editorial in the New York Times called “The Art of
Interruption.” In it he expressed his frustration at being
interrupted, but because you never know how things are going to
unfold. He stated his case that here you had a consummate entertainer
being interviewed by a seasoned interviewer and that given time
something memorable could happen. When people are antsy they don’t
want that time given, they feel like their time is being wasted.

When we’re impatient we interrupt. We attempt to stop whatever it is
we’re bored with in its tracks. But there is an art to interruption.
I’m not sure if any of us are very good at it. I’m as impatient as
anyone. Every day for about a month and a half I have been thinking
about what is under the tree in my home. If I could interrupt things
and open up my presents now, I would. So during this time of Advent
when I have an opportunity to focus on the Gift God has given, wrapped
in swaddling cloths and laid in a manger, I am thinking about how
great it will be to get home from church Christmas Eve and open up
those presents! I can only imagine what kids are going through right
now.

But it’s not that there shouldn’t be interruption. That’s why I like
the title to Steve Martin’s editorial. There is an art to
interruption. Finding that art, achieving that art, that is the
challenge. In fact, I think that may actually be the brilliance of the
season of Advent. It is itself an art of interruption. What happens
during this time of year? Wherever you go, people are wishing you a
Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays. They are talking about the
Christmas season. You drive around and see lights on people’s homes
and on buildings. Offices are decorated, Christmas music is played,
some people actually are in a better mood, just because it’s the time
of the year for peace and goodwill toward men.

I don’t want in any way to imply that these things are wrong. Or even
that they shouldn’t be done. In the Willweber household we got up the
tree and the decorations right around the same time the neighbors did.
And if people wish me a Merry Christmas I don’t correct them by
telling them that it’s Advent. But when we come here we see it’s
different. When we come here we’re not saying Merry Christmas yet.
When we come here we’re doing a thing called Advent.

The reason I love Advent is not so much because I love it. It’s
because it forces me to focus. It forces me to see Christmas for what
it really is. Just as we don’t celebrate Easter without Lent and Good
Friday, we don’t celebrate Christmas without Advent. It is, in a very
practical sense, an exercise in patience, just like what Steve Martin
was talking about. Instead of interrupting the Church Year and going
right to celebrating Christmas, we patiently go through Advent. And
yes, that might even mean that we’re bored. Or we’re just going
through the motions, waiting for our celebration of Christmas on the
24th and the 25th. It might mean that others look at us as if we’ve
forgotten what this time of year is about, when everybody is
celebrating Christmas and we’re still talking about things like
repentance and the Second Coming of Christ. But there is an art to
this. Patience is hard. Sometimes we need help to be patient. Do we
even dare to say that sometimes we need to be forced into it? That’s
one of the things Advent can help us with.

It’s tough for us Lutherans to slosh through the Book of James. So
much Law. So much focus on what we are to do. And here is another
example, our Epistle reading today. Be patient. Establish your hearts
because the Coming of the Lord is at hand. Don’t grumble against one
another. And the scare tactic: the Judge is standing at the door. Try
laying those sentiments on people when they wish you a Merry
Christmas. Don’t you know the Judge is standing at the door? Be
patient. Prepare your hearts. Don’t grumble.

This is what Advent does. It forces us into a mode where we see we
need to be patient. When we want to talk about peace on earth the
Bible is telling us not to grumble against one another. When we just
can’t wait to tear open those presents under the tree the Word of God
impresses upon us the need to establish our hearts, preparing for that
Day when our Lord will return in glory. I know whatever gifts I get
under the tree won’t compare to the Day when Christ Returns to take me
to the eternal glory of heaven. So why is it I think more about what
presents I’ll get than about Christ coming again? It’s so easy for us
to think about the baby wrapped in swaddling cloths and not have to
think about what that means for us in our daily lives. That the notion
of Peace on Earth means things like repenting of our own grumbling
against one another, our impatience with one another, let alone God
bringing about His last and ultimate promise: Returning in Glory on
the Last Day.

This isn’t about us being in some private club where we know we’re
observing in a better way this time of year. Advent isn’t about
thinking higher of yourself, but rather cutting you down to size.
Patience requires humility. It requires repentance. It requires your
focus to be outside of yourself, not within yourself.

This is why James goes on to give examples. As much as we Lutherans
would love to put the Book of James into a box of Law and exhortation
to right living, we can’t do that, because he himself doesn’t do that.
He gives his exhortations in light of the Gospel, not the Law. What
are his examples? The prophets. Job. If we think patience is hard,
we’re in good company. If we’re not hot on repentance, join the club.
These things are never easy. They are hard by their very nature. Why
would there need to be exhortation of things that are easy? It is the
hard things we need to forced into.

His example of the prophets, he says, is of suffering and patience. He
then says we consider those blessed who remained steadfast. When you
walk into this church on Good Friday you expect to hear of suffering.
If you can remember a whole year from now, you should expect to hear
it also on the Third Sunday in Advent. Suffering. Patience. Remaining
steadfast. These are things we so often need to be forced into because
we want to jump right to, well, what we want. What do you think the
prophets thought when they were being persecuted? God, it would be
really nice if we could get beyond this. It would be great if this
could go a lot more smoothly. I’d really appreciate it if this weren’t
so hard. And that’s saying it in polite ways. The prophets weren’t
always so circumspect in praying to God.

But here’s what James is getting at: God got them through. Here’s how
he tells us this: you have seen the purpose of the Lord, how the Lord
is compassionate and merciful. God was patient with those prophets. He
remained steadfast to them. They weren’t strong enough on their own to
make it. They needed God. James gives another example that has become
the quintessential example of suffering: Job. How did Job make it
through? God. God got Job through the intense suffering he endured.
This is one of the greatest gifts our Lord gives to us: faith. When He
gives faith we can endure. The prophets were patient because God
granted them the faith to endure. Job was steadfast because God
imparted to him faith that relies on God alone, as the one who is more
powerful than hardships and the one who delivers us from hardships.
And we could add the one from today’s Gospel reading of John the
Baptist.

There is an art to interruption. At its simplest, it’s knowing when
not to interrupt. It is having the patience to let God carry out His
plan and will. God’s people in the Old Testament constantly tried to
interrupt the plan and will of God. If God had not had the patience to
endure His people’s obstinance, He never would have sent His Son. If
Advent shows us anything it’s that we try to interrupt His plan and
will. Thank God He is patient with us. Just as He sent His Son to take
on human flesh in His birth and carried out His eternal plan to send
Him to the cross, He has promised to send Him again. Don’t interrupt
that Plan, it’s a good one. Contemplate it. Meditate on your sins but
even more your Savior. Don’t think so much of peace on earth as you do
your patiently enduring others’ faults and even their sins against
you. Don’t grumble against them, love them as Christ has loved you!

When you look to the examples James gave, you see the purpose of the
Lord carried out. He knows what He’s doing. That’s why He went to the
cross. That’s why He was willing to endure the insults, the pain, and
patiently suffer your sins and mine, humbly submitting to the
punishment you and I deserve. That’s why He stepped forth from His
grave. If He has done that, we know He will make good on His promise
yet to be: to come again in glory on the Last Day. On that Day will be
the glorious interruption. Our Lord bringing to a screeching halt the
affairs of this world, the sin, the evil. He will raise all, some to
eternal death, some to eternal life.

What you know now is the end. Do you have to wait for it? Yeah. But
you know. You know God’s promise—you know His love for you in His Son,
you know He steadfastly keeps you in His care. It’s because of that we
interrupt our daily lives to hear His Gospel proclaimed. To take into
our mouths the body and blood of Christ. To daily meditate on His Word
and repent of our sins. This is the art. Don’t interrupt Him. But when
He interrupts you, that’s a good thing. Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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