I
read a book a this past summer that conveyed a very simple message to the
reader – that keeping a population in a constant state of fear makes it easier
to be controlled. Reading that book,
then looking around at my world, I see how in fact we are encouraged to be in a
constant state of fear, if not despair, at all times.
Newspaper
headlines scream about the economic catastrophe. Four days – four days!! – of weather headlines proclaimed the arrival of a
snowstorm and cold snap that is really neither unexpected nor surprising for
our geographic location and climate. If
we don’t have snow tires, all wheel drive, four wheel drive, or traction
control, we’re warned that we may not even make it out of our drive way without
becoming buried in an avalanche of biblical proportions.
And
for what? Would this even have made
headlines 60 years ago? A generation
ago, winter came and went with nary a peep.
I’ve read newspaper articles from 1929 and 1930 that do more to foster
hope in these circumstances than the blithest financial commentator on CNN.
And
that’s just local news, really. Watch
the international news and…well, if you can make it through the international
news without strong medication you’re a better person than I. Even
human interest stories – the Duggar family, for example, who just welcomed
their 20th or 21st child – are tempered by editorial and
reader comments that spout off such gems as “don’t they know that many children
is too many for the environment to support,” and “don’t they know they’re
hurting their children by not allowing them the room to be individuals?”
And
don’t even ask me to comment on the health and lifestyle news.
Fear.
Fear that you’re not doing
enough. That you’re not doing something right. That the world is coming to an end as a
direct result of you and your choices. Fear
that death from dubious circumstances lurks just beyond your sofa.
Even
religion prospers from fear – throughout its history Christianity has certainly
been guilty of promulgating conversion through the threat of fiery hell while
at the same time condemning other religions that use the same tactics. In the
Small Catechism Martin Luther begins every explanation with the statement “we
are to fear and love God…”
Your
Pastor would argue that most – if not all – of the problems of the world stem
from 3 essential fears – the fear of sin (doing something wrong), the fear of
sorrow, and the fear of death. Because
people fear doing something wrong they do nothing, because they fear sorrow as
the inevitable consequence of love they seek superficiality in relationships and
use others as they themselves are used; and the fear of death that leads people
to focus solely on their own immortality – through money, wealth, fame – as the
expense of others.
St John writes in his first letter,
“there is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear, for fear has to do
with punishment.” The root problem of
fear is that it is irrevocably tied with the idea of punishment or retribution
for what we’ve done wrong. Fear
paralyzes us, leaving us unable to move outwards to engage in relationships and
it freezes our attentions onto ourselves and we need to do.
And
God comes into this world? Into this world of fear the Eternal Word
becomes flesh and comes to us? Yes! That is exactly what happens. Into this world of fear and fright and terror
comes a single solitary baby. And this
baby did not become God – indeed, God became flesh and dwelt among us so that
fear would cease. Rather than living as
humans doing all those things that
kept us from punishment we would instead become humans being in relationship with each other because that fear of
punishment is lifted.
When
the angels appeared to the shepherds who were in the fields, they brought with
them a message that contained three instructions:
1.) do not fear.
2.) Look.
3.) See.
Three
simple messages.
Do
not fear. The shepherds were terrified,
as would we be if the night sky over Spruce Grove was suddenly populated by
a celestial chorus wreathed in blinding light.
But their fear also had to do with the fact that, by and large, the
angels in Old Testament stories are not usually ‘nice’ – they wrestle with you,
or are part of a ginormous army, or are there to test you somehow – they aren’t
cute, round, cuddly cherubim that look like Morgan with fluffy wings. They big, powerful, and carry with them the
terrifying reality that God actually exists and in all probability is mad at you.
But that night, the message they brought was different. Do not fear. That’s a common message in Scripture; that combination of words – ‘do not fear’ occur some 400 times in the 66 books of our Bible. But the angels brought something different. Instead of “do not fear, because the Lord is with you,” they brought the message ‘do not fear, because to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ, the Lord.” Instead of God being with them in spirit, in the form of those militant angels striding the field of battle God was with them in their humanity; in the great colossal theological mess that we label “the Incarnation” and let it be.
Do
not fear, because you have a Saviour.
Look. Go and look at where he is. Your king is born, not in a palace or castle
but in a stable, and laid in a manger.
Look not in the things or places of power in your world – where you are
told the beautiful people are – but look in the everyday for the presence of
God. In the manger, in the pages of a
holy Book you will find the Christ, for he is present with you. You no longer need to seek out God’s face
because that tiny, chubby face is looking right back at you.
And
see. See the glory of God and the
presence of Christ in your lives. Yes,
there’s a choir of angels in the night sky forming a celestial combo that’s
rocking the world. But Christ is with
you. See him. Because in becoming human, Christ was one of
us so that we may find Christ in each of us.
One
tiny baby. “Call him Joshua,” Mary was
told. Yeshua, in Hebrew, meaning “Yahweh saves.” The Greek conquerors of a few centuries
earlier left their linguistic legacy with Jesus. We call him the Christ – the Messiah, the
saviour that was born that day – this day – in the city of David.
Not a
delivered from oppression of an occupying army or the yoke of poverty –
although these are indeed consequences when his message is taken and practiced
and lived – but delivered from fear.
From the fear of sin, sorrow, and death.
We
talk of death-defying acts in our culture as those extreme-sports junkies who
ski down mountains or parachute with a shopping bag from 60 000 feet. But those are death-inviting acts. You are participating in death-defying acts
every morning you wake up, because you wake up baptized.
To
defy death is to love Jesus Christ, and to love Christ is to bear out the
expression of that love in relationships with each other. We maybe use different language, though –
instead of death-defying, we call these things life-inviting.
I’ve
often told confirmation classes and youth that I believe there are three things
that are needed to have abundant life – God, love, and community. Those three things can exist separately,
certainly, and even any two of them can coexist – but finding all three means
finding everlasting life.
Do
not fear. For God is with you and among
you.
Look. For love is in you, and is a gift of God.
See. Because you are surrounded by community.
You
are a holy people; the redeemed of the Lord.
You have been sought out. Go out
and lift up your sign before all peoples: the message “Do not fear, for Christ
is with you.”