“So, with many other
exhortations, he [John] proclaimed the good news to the people” (Luke 3:18). With
exhortations like "You brood of vipers!” (v. 7) and “one who is more
powerful … will baptise you with fire” (v. 16) and “His winnowing fork is in
his hand… the chaff he will burn” (v. 17), John proclaimed the good news.
Now, I don’t know about you,
but being addressed as a “brood of vipers” hardly sounds like “good news” or
does it?
John’s preaching is not the
namby-pamby platitudes of a preacher who wants only to be liked by his
audience. John’s preaching is not the preaching of a minister who thinks that
pastoral care is only about making people feel comfortable. John’s preaching is
challenging and threatening. John’s preaching makes people feel decidedly
uncomfortable; John’s preaching demands that people examine themselves; and
John’s preaching threatens the status quo. And the Gospel of Luke says, John’s
preaching was the “good news”. And maybe is the good news that we really need
in a world where being comfortable is proclaimed as value for which to aim; where
we get so caught up in examining others and finding fault, we neglect to face
up to the realities of ourselves; where those asked to monitor our laws and our
finances seem to be more concerned about making those things work just for
them.
This good news challenges
the powerful to use their power responsibly. It challenges the rich to use
their resources for the good of the community. It challenges the financial
monitors to act ethically.
And lest we think this good
news is not for us. Let’s remember the riches we have, the power we have, the
responsibility we have, in relation to many, many others—our families, our
friends, the people we work or volunteer with, the billions of people in
nations that have much less in terms of resource than we do in Australia. The
thing is that even if we think we are acting responsibility, this good news
asks us to think again, and to think harder, and to act even better. And essentially
it makes that challenge in the context of community. So you may have the power
to buy what you want and spend what you like, but is that what is the best
thing for the community not just in which you live, but the community of the
whole Creation? So you may have the power to make others acquiesce to your
opinions, but is that what is the best thing for the community not just in
which you live, but the community of the whole Creation? So, you have the power
to demand what you like of others by force of the authoritative position you
hold in a community (whether formally or informally), but is that what is the
best thing for the community not just in which you live, but the community of
the whole Creation? This good news is not news of individual rights and
freedoms. It is good news about the common good. And for those who have power
and money and position, that good news is threatening. And whether we like it
or not, that means that good news is for us. It is for us who live in a wealthy
nation. It is for us who are used to seeking our own way. It is for us who
think we know and understand; and who believe we therefore have the right to
dictate to others—not just individual others, but a whole community. This good
news is for all, because it is for us.
The Gospel of Luke says the
crowds flocked to John. For some reason, they were energised by his preaching.
Maybe they really were from the poor and the downtrodden. Certainly, they were
looking for a new freedom from the lives which were theirs. But what if they
were really the middle classes, the ones who found themselves between rocks and
hard places—neither very wealthy, nor very poor—the very place that we tend to
see ourselves occupying. What if they flocked to John because they didn’t think
the good news was them, but for others? What if they saw the good news as
another way of getting what they wanted, of having what they felt entitled to,
of telling others how manipulative and power-mongering they were? What if they
were really just humans like us?
The good news is for all,
not for them. The good news is for all, not for some. The good news is for us,
not just for others. And this good news is challenging and threatening. This
good news makes us feel decidedly uncomfortable. This good news demands that
people examine themselves. This good news threatens our status quo.
It’s easy to jump on a
bandwagon that appears to be in our interests. But we are being asked to jump
on a bandwagon that, in times of many of the values of today’s world, is not
our own interests. It will not make us rich. It will not bring other people
under our control. It will not justify lifestyles of consumption. It will not
justify claims to the rights of individuals to do what they like and to hell
with others. This good news is not in our own interests. It is in the interests
of the community of the whole Creation; and that is the reason it is for us—not
that it justifies ourselves, but that it frees us from self-preoccupation; not
that it frees us to operate as we like, but that it opens us to act for the
common good; not that it allows us to use our power as we want, but that it
asks us to use our power in the interests of others. This is the good news; and
because it is good news for us, it is good news for all—good news for the whole
of Creation.
“So, with many other
exhortations, he [John] proclaimed the good news to the people” (Luke 3:18). It’s
a funny kind of good news in the values of today’s world that demands more of
us, rather than less; that curbs our power, rather than expands it; that
challenges and questions us, rather than comforts us and leaves us complacent.
But this is the good news of a Saviour who comes with a baptism of fire. And
this is the good news that we say is for us! May it be so in this Advent
season!
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