Year A, Advent 3 Matthew 11: 2-11
Jails and correctional facilities are
not pleasant places to be in any time or place, but they were particularly
horrific during the time that Jesus lived.
People were not typically in jail awaiting trial. They were usually awaiting execution. John the Baptist was a great prophet and a
holy man, but it would appear from the question that he asked in the Gospel
today that he was having some doubts.
This Jesus was not the man he expected.
Because if he was the Messiah, why would he allow his cousin (and a
prophet) to rot in jail?
Now, a lot has been said about what
the Jews expected in a Messiah. Many
will tell you that they were waiting for a military leader, which is true to
some extent. But the reality is that the
Jewish people didn’t have one defined view of what the Messiah would look
like. However in our lectionary today,
and last week we have two pretty good examples of what some people were
expecting. Last week John depicted a
Messiah who would baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire and would judge the
people. This week it says that John the
Baptist sent people to confront Jesus
after hearing about what Jesus had been doing.
What had he been doing? If you read the previous 8 chapters, you will
read about Jesus preaching, teaching, healing and feeding. He hadn’t confronted
any religious or political leaders. He
had not built an army. There was no sweeping change as a result of what he had
done. In fact, to John (who was in
prison) it probably looked like he hadn’t done much of anything. John had done all this work preparing people
for what Jesus was going to do and now he was wondering…is this really who they
were waiting for? I think John was
expecting a significant sea change and there was no evidence of that…not yet.
We see another example of what people
were expecting in the Song of Mary.
These are Mary’s words, that she expresses to her cousin Elizabeth (who
was pregnant with John the Baptist at the time) after learning that she would
give birth to the Son of God. She said,
“He has cast down the mighty from their thrones, and has lifted up the lowly.
He has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty.
He has come to the help of his servant Israel…” Mary was anticipating this baby
she would birth would be someone who would turn the world upside own. The hungry would be full and the rich would
have nothing. The mighty would be cast
down from their thrones.
Clearly, that was not what was
happening. The Romans were still in
power and corrupt leaders like Herod were in charge and imprisoning the
prophets who dared to speak truth to power.
Can we really blame John for being a little disappointed…for wondering
if this guy who seemed like a good and holy person was actually the Son of God?
I can’t tell you how often I have
heard in the last year: “What it happening? What is the world coming to? Why
isn’t God doing anything about this?” I
feel that too. I felt that profoundly
when I saw video footage of police officers kneeling on the neck of George
Floyd. I felt that after seeing children in cages in the United States,
separated from their families. I feel that when I see the utter desolation in
Gaza. I feel that whenever I see any
hungry child, or any hungry person. I
even feel that on a smaller scale when I am going through a personal ordeal
that I can’t see my way out of. I
wonder, why didn’t Jesus fix this when he came 2000 years ago? Why did he die and then come back from the
dead…just so this kind of stuff could continue to happen? I wonder that more
than I would care to admit.
But then I look at Jesus’ response to
John the Baptist. He didn’t get
defensive. Have you ever noticed that?
Jesus never got defensive. He was so
confident that he was doing God’s will.
He said to the people who were asking the question for John, “Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive
their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead
are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them.” He didn’t tell them to be patient. He didn’t say, “Look, I am laying some ground
work here, but in a 2000 years billions of people all around the world will be
worshipping me and even talking about you during Advent---but you aren’t ever
going to get decorations.”
No,
instead, he told him about the individual lives he was changing. He was helping people see, touching people no
one was willing to get close to, bringing people back from the dead, and giving
good news to the poor. He never claimed
to be bringing about systematic change or solving the world’s problems. But he was meeting people where they were and
showing love and compassion to people who had not known love and
compassion. He was transforming the
world….one person at a time.
It’s ok to be
frustrated with the way our world is right now.
In fact, I think you should be.
It’s even ok to wonder where God is in all this and to be a little
impatient. What we can’t be is hopeless. Let’s follow Jesus’ lead once again.
Do one thing. Help one person. If you
feel overwhelmed, don’t let that paralyze you.
Not one of us has the power of Jesus. But we each have gifts. We might not be able to change the world, but
we can make change and gradually….ever so gradually, we will change the world.



