+This week, at Bible study, we
focused on these words from the 40th chapter in the book of Isaiah:
A voice cries out:
“In
the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord,
make
straight in the desert a highway for our God.
Every
valley shall be lifted up,
and
every mountain and hill be made low;
the
uneven ground shall become level,
and
the rough places a plain.”
It may seem a little odd that we
focused on words written by the Isaiah since we don’t actually read from the
Isaiah this week, but both the prophet Baruch (our first reading) and the
evangelist Luke (or Gospel reading) paraphrase Isaiah this week.
Baruch says:
For
God has ordered that every high mountain and the everlasting hills be made low
and the valleys filled up, to make level ground,
so that Israel may walk safely in the glory of God.
and the valleys filled up, to make level ground,
so that Israel may walk safely in the glory of God.
Luke says:
Prepare
the way of the Lord, make his paths straight. Every valley shall be filled, and
every mountain and hill shall be made low, and the crooked shall be made
straight, and the rough ways made smooth…
Even Handel in his composition of
The Messiah paraphrases Isaiah:
Comfort
ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God…
prepare
ye the way of the Lord; make straight in the desert a
highway
for our God
Ev'ry
valley shall be exalted, and ev'ry moutain
and
hill made low; the crooked straight and the
rough
places plain.
The words of Isaiah are so much a
part of Advent and Christmas, so familiar that it’s easy to let them pass by
without notice. To ignore them.
Don’t.
At this time in
our nation with mass shootings becoming absolutely routine…
these words, penned by Isaiah,
quoted by Baruch, Luke and Handel tell us what we need to hear, loud and clear:
God does everything God can to make
the way into God’s out-stretched arms straight, smooth, and level. God does
everything God can do to make the way into God’s full presence accessible to
everyone, everywhere, always.
And yet, more than
355 mass shootings have occurred in the United States this year. And, depending
on the definition you follow over 1,000 have occurred since that dark and horrifying
day in middle December, 2012. You remember Sandy Hook, right?
On Dec 14, 2012 a gunman walked
into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown CT
killing 20 1st graders and six teachers, breaking our hearts and no
doubt, God’s.
And yet….we keep
killing each other at an unprecedented rate.
If God’s heart broke in 2012, what
in the world has happened to God’s heart since then?
One could make a case for God to be
so disgusted with us, that God would, at this point, turn God’s back on us all,
forgetting this creation and moving on to a new one.
God should be mad.
Disgusted.
Incensed.
DONE WITH US.
And yet,
Every
valley shall be lifted up,
and
every mountain and hill be made low;
the
uneven ground shall become level,
and
the rough places a plain.
Why is it that God
doesn’t/hasn’t/WON’T give up on us?
Because God is God and we are not.
Thank God for that.
Because this? This mess we’re in,
this horror we’re living, this tipping point of civilization that seems to be
this moment in time, requires all the mercy, love and grace God can muster.
You know what gets
me about this whole gun violence thing? It’s eminently fixable. This isn’t some
rare form of cancer, this isn’t some autocratic foreign ruler who wishes the
United States ill, this isn’t a pestilence of indeterminate origins wiping out
our food source. This is a matter of legislation and culture. There have to be
more people in this country who are sickened by these mass killings than not.
And yet we can’t seem to fix it. Us, the supposed greatest country in the world
cannot fix this?
But clearly, we can’t. Cleary we’ve
gotten so tied up in our crooked roads, so lost in our monstrous valleys of
worry and doubt, so discouraged by the mountain peaks of obstacles that we
simply can’t do it.
The New York Daily
News got a load of flak with their headline on Thursday that read, “God Isn’t
Fixing This.”
Well you know what? I agree with
the Daily News. God’s not fixing this. This is our mess and we have to fix it. God will help, by
giving us the strength and the courage to do what we have to do.
But we have to do it.
And
you know what? We can. We must and God-help us, we will.
How?
By refusing to be silent, by refusing
to accept the status quo, by having the courage of Mary who said yes, when common
sense dictated she say no; by having the integrity of Joseph who should have said
turned away, but instead turned toward.
We do it by gazing out at our
mountains of fear, our valleys of doubt and our roads twisted by anxiety and
realize that
Every valley has been lifted up,
and every mountain and hill has been made
low;
the uneven ground has become level,
and the rough places have been made a plain
by our God.
Our awesome and ever-loving God
whose heart has broken, but whose faith in
us remains strong.
The darkness will
not overcome us.
The evil will not
prevail.
For ‘the angel said to them,
Do not be afraid; for see—I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the
people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is the
Messiah, the Lord. This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped
in bands of cloth and lying in a manger.’ And suddenly there was with the angel
a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God and saying,
‘Glory to God in the highest
heaven,
and on earth
peace among those whom God favours!’
On this Second
Sunday of Advent 2015, when we face the encroaching darkness of this world, may
each of us remember that we are empowered to overwhelm that darkness with the
light of that Heavenly Host shining upon that one small crib, in that one
lonely barn, upon that one little
baby, Jesus Christ our Lord through
whom we can do all things. Even
this.
Amen And Alleluia.
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