The Advent of God
November 30, 2003
by John
M. Buchanan, Pastor
The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago
Psalm 25:1–10
Luke 21:25–36
“When you see
these things taking place,
you know that the kingdom of God is near.”
Luke 21:31 (NRSV)
* * *
Come,
O God, into the world with healing
and peace.
Come into our lives with joy and passion.
Startle us again this year, O God,
with the truth of your Advent.
And give us quiet moments in the busy
and noisy days ahead
to hear the singing of angels. Amen.
“What shall I preach about?”
the young seminarian asked his homiletics
professor.
“Preach about God, and preach
about twenty minutes” came the
answer.
And so I shall try to do both this
morning.
The late Paul Tillich was one of the
great minds of the twentieth century.
A distinguished philosopher and theologian,
Tillich was a refugee from Nazi Germany
who came to this country to teach
at Union Theological Seminary and
Harvard Divinity School and at the
end of his career lectured at the
University of Chicago—to the
whole university community, where
it was my privilege to hear him.
Hearing Tillich was not necessarily
the same as understanding him. I am
one of a multitude, if truth were
told, who had a fair amount of difficulty
wading through Tillich. He thought
like a philosopher—in German—and
when he spoke, it was with a heavy
German accent. The story is told that
Tillich was scheduled to deliver a
lecture at a midwestern university.
A freshman arranged to see him for
a few minutes the afternoon before
the lecture.
“Professor Tillich,” he
said, “I’m sorry, but
I have a conflict and I can’t
attend your lecture. I’m sorry,
because I heard you are the greatest
theologian in the world and I have
a simple question: What is God like?
So, maybe you could just tell me:
what is God like?”
The distinguished scholar leaned back
in his chair and said,
Well—
Historically, God is the one transcendent reality beyond all transient reality.
Philosophically, God is the dialectical imperative.
Ontologically, God is the source of all being, being as such.
Eschatalogically, God is the end of the human impulse toward the apocalyptic.
He stopped and the freshman said,
“Huh?”
He asked the right question, didn’t
he? “What is God like?”
You might say it is the one universal
question human beings have asked since
the beginning of time. You might say
“Does God exist?” is the
single commanding question behind
all human history. On Friday mornings,
some of us have been reading through
Karen Armstrong’s fine book
A History of God. Her thesis
is that the three great monotheisms—Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam—have
experienced God down through the centuries
in remarkably similar ways. She writes,
My study of the history of religion has revealed that human beings are spiritual animals. Indeed there is a case for arguing that Homo sapiens is also Homo religiousus. Men and women started to worship gods as soon as they became recognizably human.
Jack Miles, whose God: A Biography was a best-seller a few years ago, says,
No character on stage, page, or screen has ever had the reception God has had. God is more than a household word in the West: he is, welcome or not, a virtual member of the Western family. Indeed, something like 95 percent of the American people say they believe in God.
The topic of the day, as it always
has been, is God. “Everyone,”
Fred Craddock says, “wants to
know about God.”
As you can imagine, over the years
a minister accumulates a lot of books
on the subject of God. In amongst
the thick, daunting texts on my shelves—Calvin,
Barth, Brunner, Küng, and Tillich—is
a little book edited by Stuart Hample
and Eric Marshall. Its cover has a
stick picture of a child and a bright
sun, a blue bird, a green tree, and
a row of colorful flowers. Children’s
Letters to God. I read it a lot.
It’s one of my favorite books
on the subject.
Here are two of my favorite little letters:
Dear God,
Is Reverend Coe a friend of yours or do you just know him through business?
Donny.
and
Dear God,
Grandpa says you were around when he was little. How far back do you go?
Love, Dennis.
Some dare to complain and remonstrate in the best biblical tradition:
Dear God:
Thank you for the baby brother but what I prayed for was a puppy.
Joyce.
and
Dear God,
Please send Dennis Clark to a different camp this year.
Peter.
And some are beautifully, profoundly human:
Dear God:
Why do people die? You wouldn’t have to keep making new people if you just kept the ones you had.
Emily
and
Dear God:
I don’t ever feel alone since I found out about you.
Nora
Experts in human culture, particularly
our post-Enlightenment, rational,
Western, consumer culture, concluded
a long time ago that the question
of God would be more and more marginalized—that
the more educated and scientific we
became, the less we’d need God,
and the more secure and comfortable
we became, the less we’d be
interested in God. We live in the
post-Christian, post-religious age,
it is said. God, some announced, was
clearly dead; the idea of God, the
need for God, the search for God,
was essentially dead, and religion
would soon follow.
It hasn’t happened, of course.
As a matter of fact, those same scholars
are now saying that we are living
in the midst of a religious boom and
that the topic of God has never been
hotter—or more relevant, for
that matter.
And so we come to Advent, which seems
somehow more precious than ever. Perhaps
it is because of the terrible things
that have happened in the name of
God. Perhaps it is because we are
here at ground zero in the culture
of consumerism, the very heart of
the retail economy’s determined
drive to end the year in the black,
here between Bloomingdale’s
and Lord and Taylor, Paul Stuart and
Escada, with our electric sheep quietly
grazing and our somber, 1600-year-old
hymns.
Let all mortal flesh keep silence
And with fear and trembling stand.
Whatever the reason, the season of
Advent seems more precious than ever
this year. Advent unapologetically
invites us to look back into time,
all the way back to the time before
Jesus, back to the time of his humble
birth, and back in our own time, back
in memory to the previous Christmases
we have experienced in our own lives:
the family traditions, the customs
lovingly preserved year after year,
the favorite recipes, the worn tree
ornaments, the star Scotch-taped together,
carefully removed from its box to
shine one more year. And Advent invites
us to look forward to the fulfillment
of human history, to the ongoing process
of redemption and salvation, and to
look forward to God’s continuing
activity in our own lives. Advent
is about God—a God who came
into human history in Jesus Christ
and a God who promises to continue
coming into your history and mine,
the history still ahead of us.
The problem is that religion itself
gives God a bad name some times.
It is not at all unusual for otherwise
thoughtful, mature adults to reject
religion and relegate the God question
to the intellectual margins because
of a bad experience with religion
as a child. Fred Craddock, one of
the best teachers of preaching around,
retired professor from Emory’s
Candler School of Theology, tells
about a woman in a little Methodist
church he was serving in Newport,
Tennessee, who used to get up and
shoot down the aisle out of the church
as soon as he was done preaching.
“Why is it that you get up and
leave after the sermon, Joanne?”
Craddock asked. “She told me
that when she was just ten or eleven
she was at a service, and after the
sermon they sang a hymn, and they
sang and sang and sang. People started
going through the congregation,”
she said. “And the minister
came down and took hold of my hand.
‘Little girl,’ he said,
‘do you want to go to hell?’
He scared me to death, and so I leave
before all that starts” (Cherry
Log Sermons, p. 51).
Karen Armstrong, a recognized scholar
of world religion and popular author,
was a nun. She recalls that her childhood
and teenage faith had more to do with
fear of judgment than gratitude to
God and love for God. She had, she
said, strong beliefs in doctrines
but little faith in God. She says
that James Joyce got it right in Portrait
of an Artist as a Young Man;
the Roman Catholicism of her childhood
was a frightening creed. In fact,
hell was a more potent reality than
God.
Roman Catholicism has no monopoly
on religion as frightening or on God
as angry judge. Fear and judgment
are still powerful motivators and,
for many modern people, the very reason
why God seems to be dead and religion
not far behind.
And yet, we can’t seem to shake
the subject. Religion keeps coming
back in new forms: in the new spirituality,
for instance; in an insatiable appetite
for books with spiritual content—The
Da Vinci Code, for instance,
an esoteric, slightly bizarre tour,
mostly fictional, through church and
Christian history. If God is gone
and institutional religion is in trouble,
spirituality is big business.
It’s almost as if there is something
about us that yearns for God, almost
in spite of the damage done to God’s
good name, almost as if we are “wired”
for religion, almost as if there is
an empty space inside each of us that
can only be filled by God. St. Augustine
was right, it seems, when he wrote
1600 years ago, “O God, thou
hast made our hearts restless until
they find their rest in thee.”
Advent is precious because it comes
at the darkest time of the year, just
when we most need it, to speak an
important and good word about God.
Advent invites us to listen carefully
for hints at that new and good word
about God in our own tradition.
In the Psalter, written at a time
when tribal people in the name of
their tribal gods were gleefully killing
one another, a new and good word about
God: “All the paths of the Lord
are steadfast love and mercy.”
The fundamental characteristic of
God is not, as everybody seems to
want to think, a righteous anger,
an exclusive love that creates an
exclusivistic religious enclave and
condemns the rest of humankind to
hell, but “steadfast love and
mercy.” In the history of religious
ideas, that is new and revolutionary:
a God whose love is most like the
selfless love of a mother for her
child, which is exactly what the ancient
Hebrew word for mercy means.
Advent invites us to listen carefully
as other voices pick up the refrain.
“As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you, says the Lord.” (Isaiah 66:13)
“As a father has compassion for his children, so the Lord has compassion.” (Psalm 103:13)
Advent invites us to be watchful and
alert for that God: the God who is
our creator and judge but supremely
our redeemer; the God who loves us
with an everlasting love from which
nothing, not even death itself, can
separate us.
Advent comes quietly to invite us—all
of us: lifelong believers, skeptics,
seekers, the curious, and unbelievers—invites
all of us to ponder for a moment a
most incredible, most improbable idea:
namely that a humble birth in Bethlehem
of Judea is the Advent of God, the
coming of God into our lives; that
behind all the religious rituals human
beings have devised to placate an
angry God, there is this—a child
in a manger; that behind all the strenuous
theologizing, all the intellectual
abstractions in all the theological
textbooks in the world, there is this—a
newborn and a mother’s and father’s
awe and love and gratitude.
After more than forty years of doing
this, standing up in a pulpit and
talking, I think I know why people
come to church. It’s not what
we think. It’s not to be seen
or to meet potential clients. It’s
not dry tradition or worn and faded
habit. All of that is gone now. No,
people come to church looking for
God. And the word today is that God
came among us in that birth, that
life lived lived so selflessly, so
kindly, so gently, that life that
was not, in fact, snuffed out by death.
The word today is that this is what
God is like. This is who God is—that
vulnerable child, that courageous
and honest and good man.
Advent is an invitation to trust that
God: to give your heart to that God,
to trust your future to the God who
promises to be with you and to come
into your life with healing and hope
and peace.
It comes soon after our Thanksgiving,
Advent does. And for me, over the
years, the two occasions have become
almost one: Thanksgiving for the goodness
of creation and for all the blessings
of life. Thanksgiving for the promise
of God’s steadfast love and
mercy. Thanksgiving for Christmas,
for Advent, the Advent of God.
Everyone wants to know about that.
Amen.