This is the abridged version
presented to a.m. service of Warehouse 614 at 77 River Street in Toronto on the second Sunday of Advent, December
10, 2017
Today we heard classic words of God through
Isaiah and Jesus that are quoted by John the Baptist. Last week we had the
Santa Shuffle. Heather participated and got a great metal. Since my 30s, I have
off-again and on-again done quite a bit of running. When I lived in Vancouver I
faithfully ran every second day. I lived about 5km from my office – I used to
run there and back. In Winnipeg
I lived almost 10km from the College, and a colleague and I did that run more
than once. Running can be fun – but when you get out of the habit, and have to
start again or when you start for the very first time it can be a chore. And sometimes
those hills in your first few runs can feel like mountains and those valleys,
ravines. I can remember when I was first
learning to run out west – where there are real mountains - being near the end
of my run and my energy... rounding an almost last corner and seeing... a
mountain to try to run up for my last 1/2k or so... Isaiah 40:3b-5:
“...make
straight in the desert
a
highway for our God.
Every
valley shall be raised up,
every
mountain and hill made low;
the
rough ground shall become level,
the
rugged places a plain.
And
the glory of the Lord will be revealed,
and
all people will see it together.
For
the mouth of the Lord has spoken.”
This is a great verse to ponder when you are
running up and down hills and around curves, looking towards a time when
obstacles will disappear. I also used to do a good deal of hiking and some
backpacking. After a few hours following switchbacks up and down mountains, you
can almost feel the relief of Isaiah’s valleys raised and mountains leveled.
This is part of the Good News of Isaiah 40. This is the Good News also that
John the Baptist proclaims: when Jesus’ returns with His Kingdom, obstacles
will be removed. As during Advent we mark waiting for Jesus’ birth, we also
hope for His return so that our mountains of trouble will be leveled and our
valleys of despair will be raised to abundance. The crookedness of our paths
will be straightened. That is hope.
Last week we lit the candle of hope. Today we
lit the candle of love. First one has hope and then one can dare to love. One
of the key things about hope and love in the context of Isaiah is that both are
to and from God and an humbled people, a conquered people, an exiled people.
There is no hope when you are on top of the world...only fear that you will
fall off.
In Advent we talk about the Good News of the
Salvation of the world. Do you know where in the Bible this shows up for the
first time? Genesis 12:1-3: “All the nations of the earth will be blessed” and
do you know what happens just before then... Genesis 11: the tower of Babel .
God told the people to move and fill the earth. The people said, ‘No. We are
going to stay here, build a city and a tower, and make a name for ourselves
instead.’ God leveled their tower, their city; and their pride and their fear
in order to give them the hope of salvation.
The other week, we read about how God destroyed
Nehustan that the Israelites used for centuries in worship of God, and how the
LORD had it destroyed because the people were destroying themselves by
worshiping it.
Isaiah records how God destroys His own temple,
the holy city of Jerusalem , the independent
nations of Israel and of Judah
–until the day He returns. God tears down their country, levels their city,
destroys their temple, and in so doing provides them here with the hope of
flattened mountains, raised valleys, straight paths and the joy and love that
can only come from trusting God in place of trusting nations, cities, temples,
government, prosperity, and humanity.
This is the love that God has for us today as
well. He loves us so much that if there are any valleys, mountains, crooked
paths or Babel-like buildings of traditions, pride, fears, hate, or something
else in our lives; He will flatten those mountains and tear down those
buildings, for only then can we be rebuilt on His foundations.
There is a new song by a Canadian Band, Glorious Sons, whose first two lines
have been stuck in my head for a few days now:
I spent all my money on a pack of cigarettes,
for a lady that I love with a name I forget.
The song tells a story with some troubles as it
moves to the chorus which proclaims ‘Everything will be alright.” And for those
of us who have already had the walls come tumbling down and are now in stages
of exile in our own lives, for those of us who may feel like all is lost, for
those of us who have seen our lives come crashing down around us, for those of
us who are grieving, for those of us whose life feels like it is lost. God is
here. When the people scattered from the ruins of Babel , God was there for Terah and Abraham
offering salvation for the whole world. When Israel was slave to Egypt, God was
there with Moses offering salvation; when Judah was exiled from her city, her
temple, and her life, God was there looking out for her and pointing her towards
Jesus’ Advent; whose imminent return we eagerly await today when the mountains in
our life will be leveled, the valleys raised, and the paths made straight.
When our life is in exile maybe even from our own
view of God; He will never leave us nor forsake us. Sometimes life is sad. Sometimes
life is hard but God promises that someday our valleys of despair will be
filled in, our mountains of trouble will be leveled and our crooked paths will
be straightened – and, even until then He will journey with us every step of
the way offering to bring us along in hope and in love. Today and this week let
us all walk in God’s hope and love as we look forward to the day of Christ’s
return when those valleys will be raised, those mountains will be leveled and
our paths will straightened for ever more.
Let us pray.