Listening to the oracles of the prophet Amos feels a bit like staring down the barrel of a shot gun. Amos’ message is that because the people of God fail to practice social justice, fail to uphold human dignity, and fail to promote impartial equality, God’s punishment will be their destruction. Actually, listening to the oracles of the prophet Amos feels a bit worse than staring down the barrel of a shot gun. It’s feels like staring down the barrel shot gun just before the trigger is pulled.
And so, I, personally, would advise that we do what anyone would do who is staring down the barrel of a shot gun just before the trigger is pulled. I would advise that we run for our lives. Run as fast and as far away as we can – past Isaiah, past the Psalms, past Job; past Samuel, past Ruth, past Joshua, past Exodus until we finally arrive, heavily winded, at the book of Genesis – a safe distance; twenty nine books away.
But no sooner than we begin to catch our breath do we discover that we are out of the frying pan and into the fire. It’s every bit as bad as Amos. “And the Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the Lord said, “I will blot out from the earth the human beings I have created – people together with animals and creeping things and birds of the air, for I am sorry I have made them.”
The writer’s message is that because the people of God are hell bent upon rampant and escalating disunity and violence, God’s punishment will be their destruction. Again, the feeling of staring down the barrel shot gun once again just before the trigger is pulled, so I advise we once again run for our lives. The problem last time is that we ran in the wrong direction. We ran backward. We should have run forward. The only problem is that we have to get past Amos. And so we must pace ourselves so that we have the strength to sprint when we draw near him.
Best, perhaps to rest up for a bit in Deuteronomy. But no. There’s no rest in Deuteronomy. “I call heaven and earth to witness against you today that you will soon utterly perish from the land that you are crossing the Jordan to occupy; you will not live long on it, but will be utterly destroyed.” The writer’s message is that because the people of God refuse to love him, refuse to honor him, refuse to obey him; because they instead adore and glorify the profane culture that surrounds them, God’s punishment will be their destruction.
We now find ourselves at a good news and bad news juncture. The bad news is that we have to get moving again. The good news is that the New Testament is only thirty four books away. I guess in point of fact, that’s bad news too. Thirty four books, and some of those books are really long. We find ourselves then at a bad news and bad news juncture. But it’s do or die.
But arriving, near collapse, at the New Testament, who do we encounter at its gates but John the Baptist? He is clearly in league with Amos and Genesis and Deuteronomy. John’s message is that the because God’s people are sinners, they must repent, and they must acknowledge their repentance by a ritual cleansing of their sin in the waters of baptism. Because it’s judgment time. God’s messiah is coming. And their punishment will be their destruction.
Let’s face it. We can run but we can’t hide. Where ever we go we will feel like we are staring down the barrel of a shotgun just before the trigger is pulled. This is because we are attempting to flee from the central problematic of the Bible. That central problematic is this. We are God’s people, and we fall short. Whether it is as Amos has it, that our pursuit of social justice is too comfortable or exists not at all; or as Genesis has it, that we coddle our propensity for division and fan the warfare that ultimately results from it, or as Deuteronomy has it, that we place a higher value upon our nature and our culture than upon God, or as John has it, that we are all in one way or another sinners, the Bible’s central problematic is that we are God’s people, and we fall short. Per the apostle Paul, “We have all sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” We are God’s people, and we fall short, and the just verdict upon us all is punishment.
And this is precisely why John the Baptist was so utterly befuddled by Jesus. He had God’s people all prepped. God’s messiah is coming. His punishment will be their destruction. He was in line with the central problematic of the Bible. He was one of its greatest expositors.
But then, enter Jesus. The blind received their sight, the lame walked, the lepers were cleansed, the deaf heard, the dead were raised up, and the poor had good news preached to them. This couldn’t be God’s messiah. A man of mercy? A man of forgiveness? A man of compassion? A man who knew we fall short, but who understood our frailty and who loved us anyway? This couldn’t be the messiah. No wonder John the Baptist was confused. As John passed the hours in prison reflecting, he just couldn’t make any sense of it. And so he sent Jesus a message. “Are you the one to come, or should we look for another?” “Don’t look for another,” Jesus replied. “I am he.”
The central problematic of the Bible is that we are God’s people, and we fall short, and the just verdict upon us all is punishment. But the central problematic of the Bible is resolved through Jesus Christ, whose life, death, and resurrection proclaim to us that God’s mercy is greater than God’s justice, that God’s love is greater than God’s anger, that God’s victory is greater than our sin, that God is a God first and foremost a God of grace.
And so, we need not run from God. We need not run from ourselves. We need only receive the grace God so freely offers and receive with along with it the peace that passes understanding, peace that we acknowledge this second Sunday in Advent.
Grace and Peace to you all. Amen.