The “word
of God came to John son of Zechariah” (Luke 3:2). John proclaimed “a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (v. 3). It was just like the prophet
Isaiah said: "The
voice of one crying out in the wilderness: '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; and all flesh shall see the salvation of God.'" (vs 4-6)
“All flesh shall see the salvation of God”—all flesh, all
humanity, all mortal beings, all material things, all physical existence, all
Creation--“All flesh shall see the salvation of God.”
This is a grand vision—a big picture: “Every valley shall be filled, and every mountain and hill shall be made low…; and all flesh shall see the salvation of
God.'" (vs 5-6)
“All flesh shall see the salvation of God”—the deliverance of God;
the redemption of God; the reconciliation of God—a process, not an event; an
activity, not a completion—a grand vision of a grand course of action—a promise,
a proclamation that everyone and everything will be involved in the very action
of God.
John is caught up into God’s word, God’s action in the world, and
John proclaims that that is the destiny for all of God’s Creation. “All flesh
shall see the salvation of God.”
This is what the prophet Isaiah proclaimed: “the glory of the Lord
shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the
mouth of the Lord has spoken.” (Isaiah 40:6) The mouth of the Lord has spoken
and God’s speech is never just words. God’s words are living and active—God says
and it happens; God speaks and it is God’s action; God expresses God’s self and
it is the very nature of God.
This is what has been happening—the salvation of God—the process
of God’s deliverance of a Creation made by God, loved by God, and in continual relationship
with God. John proclaims the living word, the living action of God. And all
flesh has been witnessing it, is witnessing it and will continue to witness it
for it is God’s intention and God’s work and God’s nature poured out in and
through Creation.
We are waiting for its completion; but, more importantly, we are
involved in the process of its happening.
This process, this action is bigger than any idea of
individualised salvation, of single creatures being brought closer to God. This
promise, this revelation, is about what God is doing with and for and in the
whole Creation. “All flesh shall see the salvation of God.”
John invites his listeners into this bigger picture, into this
broader understanding of God’s purposes for everything they are and everything
they know.
But entering the vision, entering God’s vision, the grand vision
proclaimed by God involves a profound word/action of our own—not a word/action
to ensure our salvation (salvation is of God!); but a word/action that opens
ourselves to the big picture—a word/action of humility; a word/action of responsibility;
a word/action that indicates a change in our worldview, a change in our
understanding of ourselves, of Creation and of God—an acknowledgement, a
recognition that we do not see what God sees, and we do not understand how God
acts, and we cannot determine how God works—an act of repentance, of metanoia, an act of changing our minds,
in order that we might be open to catching a glimpse, just a small glimpse, of the
mind of God—a word/action that makes it possible for us also to be witnesses to
and proclaimers of the action of God; for us also to be proclaimers of the
grand vision of John, son of Zechariah, and of Isaiah; a grand vision that is
most fully and completely revealed in the very entry of God’s Word into God’s Creation
in the person and work of Jesus. “All flesh shall see the salvation of God.”
And John is proclaiming that God is about to make it as easy as it
can be to catch that glimpse of God’s work--through the profound gift of Jesus;
God’s personal entry into the Creation itself.
Now we sit on the other side of that profound revelation and the
words of Isaiah, and of John, echo down the ages to find us still waiting,
still looking, still hoping, still expecting something grand to happen; and
still being asked to see that it is, that it is and has been happening, that it
is and will continue to happen as the work of God goes on in and through Creation,
in and for the sake of the whole Creation.
What does it take for us to see? What does it take for us to catch
a glimpse, just a small glimpse, of what God is doing?
Let’s not look for the grand cataclysms, the spectacular
apocalypses, the special effects end of the world. Let’s open our minds to a
change. Let’s open our eyes for a different revelation. Let’s at least suspect
that we may not understand it all. Let’s wait quietly and hopefully for a God
who has been and is at work in our midst—a God who comes in vulnerability, not
in triumph; a God who begs us to notice, not demands our attention; a God who
enters our world in the pain of childbirth, and the wonder of a baby’s first
cry. Let’s dare to open ourselves to the profound word/action of God--“All
flesh shall see the salvation of God.”
No comments:
Post a Comment