Every valley shall be filled,
and every mountain and hill 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.
In these middle Sundays of Advent, our gospel
lessons focus on John the Baptist; a curious figure, in many ways.
Luke tells us that Jesus and John were related to
each other through their mothers. At an
important point in the story of the preparation for Jesus’ birth, Mary received
hospitality and profound encouragement from her relative Elizabeth, herself
pregnant with John.
Throughout the gospels, there seemed to be both some
strong points of contact (as well as some areas of tension) between the
movement led by John and the movement led by Jesus. Exactly how much closeness and how much
tension there was is a matter for speculation (and many writers have added to
the speculation).
While many of John’s followers embraced
Christianity, many others did not. There
is still, in fact, a religious community in the Middle East (the Mandaeans)
which regards John as the founder of their faith.
At various points in the gospels, John was described
as maintaining a very austere lifestyle.
-
He lived in the desert.
- He survived on the Middle Eastern equivalent of “bush tucker”.
- He wore only animal skins.
- He rejected many of the comforts of life.
John baptised people as a sign of profound
repentance of sin. (The baptism
practiced now by the Christian Church is a very different baptism from that
practiced by John, in many ways, not least of which is the fact that Christian
baptism is principally an act of incorporation into a community, while John’s
baptism was a radically individual act of repentance.)
John’s was a provocative critic of many different
religious, social, and political abuses.
This criticism eventually led to his imprisonment and execution.
Every community needs its John-the-Baptist-like
characters. Every society needs its
provocative social critics, those who make themselves an absolute pain in the
anatomy most of the time while speaking words of genuine wisdom and solid (if
uncomfortable) integrity.
As Luke began to describe
John’s ministry, he used words from a prophet whom biblical scholars today call
Second Isaiah. Second Isaiah was the person
responsible for most of the last third of the book of Isaiah, proclaiming a
message of hope and renewal as the Jews returned from the Exile in
Babylon.
This part of the book of
Isaiah was from a time about one hundred and fifty years after the earlier
two-thirds of the book of Isaiah, which was written well before the Exile. (For that matter, most biblical scholars also
think there was probably a Third Isaiah.)
Luke associated the message of
renewal proclaimed by Second Isaiah with that proclaimed by John:
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 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.’
Throughout the centuries, the
image of valleys being filled and mountains being leveled has always been an
image of human liberation. Human
liberation is God’s concern, and it always has been.
-
When Second Isaiah first used these words to celebrate the return from Exile, human liberation was God’s concern.
- When Luke quoted these words to describe John’s ministry of preparing the way for Jesus, human liberation was God’s concern.
- In 1742, when George Frederick Handel set these words to sublime music, human liberation was God’s concern.
- In 1963, when Martin Luther King quoted these words in his “I have a dream” speech, human liberation was
God’s concern.
As well, we also need to note
the radical inclusivity of this image of liberation:
Every valley ... not just some
valleys ... but every valley shall be filled.
Every mountain ... not just
some mountains ... but every mountain shall be made low.
All flesh ... not just some
flesh ... not just white flesh ... not just male flesh ... not just the flesh
that surrounds minds that have got their theology right, or with whose politics
we agree, or of whose personal morals we approve ... but all
flesh shall see the salvation of God.
There is a message of radical
inclusivity here in this Advent message of renewal.
This Advent message of renewal
leads into the message we celebrate at Christmas, good news of the eternal Word
of the Living God taking tangible form,
-
not as a book, but as a person,
- not as ink on paper, but as flesh and blood.
- not as the Word becoming words and correcting our theology, but as the Word becoming Flesh and living among us
... the Word becoming Flesh and living among all flesh ... the Word becoming
Flesh and sanctifying all flesh.
Every valley shall be filled,
and every mountain and hill 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.
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