When pastors get together for meetings or conferences, we always exchange jokes. They’re “pastor jokes”; in other words, jokes only fellow pastors would appreciate. I doubt you’ve ever heard one. This is precisely because they’re jokes only fellow pastors would appreciate. They’re insider jokes. No one wants to risk an insider joke on an outsider. Having said that, I am about to take the risk. I am about to tell you a joke a fellow pastor told me just last week. Feel free not to laugh. You’d merely be proving my point.
One day two old country pastors held up signs at the edge of the road. One said: "The end is near!" The other said, "Turn yourself around before it's too late!" As a car sped past them, the driver leaned out his window and yelled, "Go back to your churches where you belong!" The sound of screeching tires was followed by a big splash. One pastor looked at the other and asked, "Do you think the signs should just say 'Bridge Out'?"
The joke, as funny or as unfunny as it may be, contains a kernel of truth. Because let’s face it, no one likes to be called to repentance. No one likes to be told that they are going down the wrong road, and they need to turn around.
There are countless reasons for this. For one thing, no one likes to be accused. Even if they’re guilty. Especially if they’re guilty. No one likes to be accused. It puts you on the defensive. It makes you want to strike back. I don’t know many people who handle it well. You want to see someone fly off the handle? Accuse them. Of anything.
For another thing, no one likes to admit wrongdoing. Even if they’ve done something wrong. Especially if they’ve done something wrong. People will go to any length to deny wrongdoing. And by denying wrongdoing they dig their grave a bit deeper. They compound their problem. Now there’s both the wrongdoing and the denial.
For another thing, some people really don’t want to change. Even if they need to change. Especially if they need to change. They’ve found a crutch by which to limp through life, and they don’t want to give it up. They could care less if it’s not good for them. Yes, no one likes to be called to repentance. And there are more reasons for that than just these.
Enter John the Baptist. John the Baptist had but one thing to say to the people of his day. He called them to repentance. But here’s the weird thing. The people flocked to him. If word got out today of a pastor who week by week was calling the people to repentance, the people would hardly be flocking to him. They’d be flocking away from him. But the people flocked to John the Baptist.
This is because, in an ironic way, he was magnetic. He was a member of a rigorous religious order called the Nazirites. The Nazarites separated themselves from society to devote themselves to holiness. But John the Baptist was a Nazarite on steroids. He didn’t just live on the fringes of society, in a modest hut, say, on the outskirts of a village. He lived in the desert. That’s a pretty harsh place to live. And while the dress code of the day was soft robes and tunics, he clothed himself in the hides of camels - doubtless scavenged from some desert carrion. And in terms of his diet, no fishes and loaves for him. He did get his protein and carbs, but he got them from locusts and wild honey. That’s roughing it. He chose for himself a life of complete seclusion and utter poverty. But this gave him authenticity in the eyes of the people. He had not been compromised and corrupted by society. He was nobody’s pawn, and he was not out for his own gain. He was his own man -- driven by his singular quest for holiness. And the people could see that in him.
And so when he emerged from the desert and began to speak with the words of a prophet, when no prophetic word had been uttered for four centuries, the news spread like wildfire. Of course they flocked to him. They were burning with curiosity. Upon hearing him, though, they soon became enthralled. When they heard his call to repentance, it broke through their resistance to accusation. It broke through their denial of wrongdoing. It broke through their reluctance to change.
“My anger is out of control.” One thought. “I have an addiction.” Thought another. “I am living a lie.” Thought another. “I have cheated someone.” Thought another.” I am a betrayer.” “I am dishonest.” “I carry a horrible secret.” One by one they repented, and John the Baptist baptized them in the waters of the Jordan - washed them free of their sin.
Of course not everyone present was so moved. There were the Pharisees and the Sadducees, the religious elites of the day. I could tell you all about them, but it’s enough to say that they were the kind of people who thought it was more important to look good than to be good. John the Baptist couldn’t get through to them. Repentance didn’t look good. So he called them out. He told them they were a brood of vipers. How would you like to go down in history as being called a brood of vipers by John the Baptist? Obviously they are not the example for us to follow.
And why? Why did John the Baptist call the people to repentance? It’s because the Messiah was coming to inaugurate the Kingdom of Heaven, and he wanted the people to enter that kingdom. Maybe this is why the Messiah called John the Baptist the greatest of all the prophets. He wanted the people to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, and he discerned the means for them to do so -- repentance.
You know, my son Herry loves Christmas songs. Kids these days have access to technology, for better or for worse. Herry asks Alexa -- and if you don’t know what Alexa is ask someone under the age of 30 -- to play a Christmas song over and over again until he has it memorized and can sing it himself. He’s no Bing Crosby, but he’s becoming a decent crooner. The other day I heard him singing, “"He sees you when you’re sleeping. He knows when you’re awake. He knows if you’ve been bad or good so be good for goodness sake.” It struck me suddenly that this doesn’t just apply to Santa Claus. It applies to God as well. “He sees you when you’re sleeping. He knows when you’re awake. He knows if you’ve been bad or good so be good for goodness sake.” God already knows the fullness of our sin. As if we could hide it from it. This is why he sent his Messiah in the first place. So it’s a fool’s game not to repent, especially because through repentance God only seeks for us to enter the Kingdom of Heaven.
I close with the Messiah’s very first words as he embarked upon his public ministry. “The time is fulfilled. The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Repent! Believe in the gospel.” Amen.
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