The Good News!

Welcome! I am the Rev. Ken Saunders. I serve as the rector of St. James Episcopal Church in Greeneville, Tennessee (since May 2018). These sermons here were delivered in the context of worship at the various places I have served.

[NOTE: Sermons (or Homilies) are commentaries that follow the scripture lessons, and are specifically designed to be heard. They are "written for the ear" and may contain sentence fragments and be difficult to read. They are NOT intended to be academic papers.]

Sunday, December 7, 2008

RCL Year B (Advent 2) - December 7, 2008

The Rev'd Kenneth H. Saunders III
Christ Episcopal Church
Cleveland, NC

RCL Year B – (2 Advent) - December 7, 2008

Isaiah 40:1-11
Psalm 85:1-2, 8-13
2 Peter 3:8-15a
Mark 1:1-8

If a tree falls in the woods, and no one is around to hear it… Does it still make a sound? I suspect that some of you would immediately answer… yes, of course it does! and then some of you would say… there goes Ken with those silly questions again...

And then I would say, “how do you know?” You weren't there to hear it…

Well, you say, I have been there at other times, and when I was there and the tree fell, I heard this great crashing sound as it hit the ground… so, I know for sure that this “in fact” happens.

Ok. So, you've experienced this happening first-hand, you saw and heard, you are an actual witness to this truth, so you know without a doubt that this does occur… But, what about those of you who, perhaps, have never been in the woods when a tree fell?

Some of you are saying, yes, it does make a sound, even though you have never actually been present to hear the tree for yourselves... Because you know others who have, and by faith in their testimony, you have come to believe that this is a "true" and "real" thing.

This leaves some of the rest of us… those who've neither been in the presence of a falling tree, nor can we take it on faith... from the witness of others who claim to have been present when the tree fell, and heard the noise.

So let me rephrase the question for you… If a prophet 2000 years ago cries out in the wilderness, “repent and be baptized… prepare the way of the Lord… make a straight way to God” and you weren’t there to hear him, do you still believe it? Do you still listen to his message?

I am sure that some of you, especially the ones growing up in Cleveland, have been lost in the woods before? I mean really really lost in the deep woods? I know that I have, and I also know that it can be a very scary experience.

You have heard me talk about wilderness before… The Israelites traveled in the wilderness for 40 years after they left Egypt. God used the wilderness to deliver them from slavery in Egypt and lead them to the promised land…

But the wilderness is a scary place… In the ancient world, traveling anywhere was dangerous… especially travel through in the wilderness. You only would travel to or through the wilderness places for specific reasons… The wilderness and the desert were considered those “in-between” spaces between the lush valleys and the mountains, the places of the unknown where evil dwelled.

Traveling to the wilderness as a destination was absolutely unheard of… the wild woods were considered the haunt of demons and a very unusual place for anyone to go. Now, do you think it was easy to follow a guy as different as John into the woods… That would NOT be a very comfortable feeling... And it probably shouldn’t be!

You have got to admit… John the Baptizer is a bit of a strange character, and a very unlikely messenger… I am not just talking about the way he acted… but also the way he dressed in his camels hair and leather belt not to mention his diet of locust and wild honey.

What would you think if you came up on this character today?… Would you follow him into the wilderness to hear his prophetic message? I don’t think so.

But folks paid attention to this unlikely character… they came from all over the Judean countryside and followed him to the in-between space of the wilderness... and heard his message.. “Repent, and be baptized – prepare yourself.”

What could he possibly be talking about? I am sure that they were all fascinated… John wasn’t giving them just any old message. He was telling them to get ready for something. He is there to shake them up and get them ready – and his prophetic message lingers to shake us up and get us ready.

The folks back then knew the ancient writings of Isaiah… the ones we just heard and they knew what it said about a prophetic voice crying out “in the wilderness – prepare the way of the Lord, make strait in the desert, a highway for our God.” They wanted to know more… so they followed John.

Followed John to that pace in-between the valleys and the mountains… a place, so unlikely, so riddled with mystery and the unknown… a place considered by some to be where evil dwells, a place that God will use to save us.

Last Sunday, we learned that Advent was a time of preparation and anticipation, because the Son of Man is coming in all his power and glory. Those themes continue this week with today’s text – And John is here to help us prepare the way… and shake us up a bit.

In Advent we are called to search down deep… Deep down into the wilderness places of our lives… Deep into that emptiness, where demons dwell… Places that we don’t like to go… Places that are strange and different to us… Those unlikely places that are in-between this life and our life to come…

We go to these places to prepare and examine ourselves to repent and to worship our God. John takes us on that journey, and the strange and different John gives us a message… The message of hope that something great is coming… The narrative that we are given today in the first chapter of Mark, identifies the one who is coming…. it is Jesus Christ, the Son of God…

And we are called by the text to prepare, and repent, and make our paths straight and ready for God… We all know that Christ is coming, and we don’t know the hour or even the day… But we need to be ready and God will unfold the story in due time ALL will be reviled in God’s time…

All we can do today is to sit still and be silent so we can listen carefully… listen… to listen and see if we can hear the sound of John crying out in the wilderness… listen for that prophetic voice of God that talks to us though unlikely messengers and invites us to those in-between spaces… listen and heed their warnings, so that when the time comes, we can be fully prepared!

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