Intro
Like all kings, our Lord Jesus does not simply show up unannounced.  A long 
line of prophets, named Moses, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and others first 
prophesied of the Messiah.  Then, the angel Gabriel spoke to the Blessed 
Virgin.  And last, the last of the Old Testament prophets, John the Baptizer, 
blazed the path of the Messiah by announcing His arrival.  John is the advent 
man, the preacher who prepares you for Christ.

All those preachers made the same announcement--that Jesus is the seed of 
Abraham, the Son of David, the Lord’s Messiah, the Anointed One, and the 
everlasting King.  And all those preachers proclaimed the same message--that 
Christ’s rule and reign will have no end.

Main Body
Since John is the last of the prophets, the Baptizer’s announcement of our God 
and King’s arrival comes in a unique way.  John is uncivilized.  He doesn’t 
live in a prestigious house.  He doesn’t buy his clothes at Kohls or Belks or 
his groceries at Harter House.

Turning his back on both city and village, John lived in the wilderness.  The 
Judean wild country was his bedroom.  John spat in the face of flattery, 
considering himself unworthy even to unstrap the Messiah’s sandals with his 
sin-laden fingers.  John is everything that today’s lukewarm and smiley 
Christians are not--and don’t want to be.

The forerunner John doesn’t simply preach.  He baptizes.  He doesn’t simply 
say, “There’s the Messiah!”  The Baptizer prepares the people by giving a 
baptism of repentance.  That is his vocation, his work, his sermon, and his 
announcement.  That’s how John the Baptizer makes the Lord’s way straight: by 
baptizing and preaching.

But what benefit is that some 2,000 years later?  It’s old news.  Let’s hear 
something I want to hear, not the same-old, same-old.  That’s boring.  What 
advantage is it to hear John assert that he isn’t the Messiah?  And what virtue 
is it to hear John say, “There is One coming after me whose sandal strap I am 
not worthy to loosen”?

For that matter, what advantage is it for you to hear all those announcements 
pointing forward to Christ?  After all, Jesus has already come.  He has already 
made real His rule and reign.  The story never changes.  It’s old news.

And that’s why we need to hear it!  For we all-too often forget.  We hear the 
story, but forget what it means.  We hear the prophets of old--and even the 
preachers today.  We hear them repeat the same message.

Yet, the preached Word goes in one ear and out the other, and it creates no joy 
within us.  It does not change the way we live, not really.  We listen, but we 
do not hear.  We forget why the preached Word matters and what difference it’s 
supposed to make.  And so, for us, One is among us whom we barely know, whom we 
only know in the most-shallow of ways.

To be sure, we know His name: it’s Jesus.  We know how His life goes.  We know 
the outline of the story.  We may even know many facts and figures.  But what 
we forget is that Jesus, the King, has arrived, His everlasting reign has come, 
His will is done, and the gates of hell will not prevail against Him.

We forget that, and so we live in fear.  Or we live as if that’s only the stuff 
of church, not the stuff of life.  And so we compartmentalize our Jesus.  We 
put Him in our own little God-box, a church-only box, a box for when life goes 
bad.  We drag Him out when we need Him.  We drag Him out when we put him in our 
cutesy-little manger and then wrap Him up again until the same time next year.

Yet, here stands John the Baptizer.  He’s unrelenting: “I am the voice of one 
crying in the wilderness.”  John tells you to throw away your little God-box, 
where you believe that your job is your life, that your family is your life, 
that your possessions are your life.  The Baptizer calls you to throw away your 
little God-box, where someone can live a “full life,” yet remain unbaptized.  
John calls you to throw away your little God-box, where your life has little to 
do with Christ but, instead, focuses on the everyday tasks of everyday living.

Oh yes, we are most-uncomfortable with this Baptizer.  The old and ugly Adam in 
us hates to be stripped naked and made to stand ashamed before the mirror of 
the Law.  We loathe John.  For John shows how cozy we’ve become with our idols 
of possessions, how adept we are at blaming others for our failings, and how 
quick we are to rationalize.

The Baptizer’s chafing words are much too abrasive for our lukewarm version of 
Christianity.  His preaching calls us to repent from compromising God’s truths 
to get along with others.  John will not relent.  He will not preach a 
Walt-Disney version of the Law.  He is calling you to repent that you may 
escape from the wrath to be revealed when Christ comes again in glory (Preface 
for Advent).

John calls you out of your pleasant Christianity into the wilderness of 
repentance to sit with him in the desert sand.  In the wilderness of 
repentance, where pride is absent, where humility is strong, there you confess 
what is real.  “I have lived as if God did not matter and as if I mattered 
most.  My Lord’s name I have honored as I should; my worship and prayers have 
faltered.  I have not let His love have its way with me, and so my love for 
others has failed.  There are those whom I have hurt, and those whom I failed 
to help.  My thoughts and desires have been soiled with sin” (Individual 
Confession and Absolution, LSB pg. 292)

John calls you out of the comfortableness of sin, into the wilderness of 
repentance, to lead you, at last, to the river of Life.  Once there, he’s done 
his job.  For there, in the life-giving water of the Font, is your Savior, 
Jesus Christ.  John points and says, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away 
the sin of the world.  Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away your sin.  
Behold, the Lamb of God, who gives you the life of absolution in the water of 
Baptism.”

Yes, you are baptized into the real Jesus, not with water, but with water and 
the Holy Spirit.  That means the forgiving, life-creating blood of Christ was 
poured over you.  There, your fears, your sins, and your death were washed off 
you.  There, you became one with Christ’s divine nature.  There, you were 
firmly united by the Spirit to the Son of God the Father.

Jesus locates Himself there for you.  Flowing through the desert of repentance 
is this Liquid of life.  In the baptismal life, your conscience, burning from 
the heat of sins committed, finds the soothing coolness of sins forgiven.  In 
the baptismal life, your heart, dried out and cracked under the blazing sun of 
the Law, finds shade and refreshment in the shadow of the cross.  In the 
baptismal life, your mouth, parched from confessing your sins, is filled with 
the sweet drink of God’s compassion.  Our Lord is found in the river of 
absolution.  Come to Him, drink of Him, bathe, swim, and soak in this fountain 
of immortality.

Conclusion
O repentant saint of God, nothing needs to alarm you.  You are baptized.  O 
repentant saint of God, nothing needs to make you so afraid that you push 
others aside to get your own way.  You are baptized.  O repentant saint of God, 
nothing needs to scare you into despair or false belief.  You are baptized.  
And nothing needs to let you believe the devilish lie that you must do for 
yourself, live your own life, fix your own messes, or make your own way.  You 
are baptized.  Live in your baptism.  You are forgiven.

Such are the words for all who turn to the Messiah.  Yes, even today, the 
rough-hewn Baptizer points us to Christ and into His care and keeping.  Today, 
the prophetic word of John still prepares us to be citizens of the heavenly 
fatherland.  Amen.


 --
 Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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