Create in us a clean heart, O God,
and put a new and steadfast spirit within us.
You, who are the master builder,
the source of all that is good and gracious,
bless us now, we pray, by your Word and Spirit,
that in your light we may see light,
in your will discover your peace.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
This letter from the Apostle Paul puts me in mind
of Christmas letters and how I like to receive them. Oh,
I know there are some that veer off to the stratosphere
of braggadocio, but they are the exception, rather than
the rule. You know how those letters go, though. They might
sound something like this:
Dear
Loved Ones,
It’s been a wonderful year for
us in every way. Our youngest grandchild
graduated magna cum laude from kindergarten.
Her teenage brother rode his bicycle
across Australia
with Lance Armstrong, leaving Lance in
the dust, of course. And you remember
our daughter, who once looked so adorable
in pigtails. One day this past year,
she received the
Nobel
Prize for Physics, won the Pillsbury
Bake-Off, and gave birth to triplets.
As for ourselves, we are blessed with
great teeth, flat abdomens, and wrinkle-free
complexions.
We very much enjoyed our private audience
with the Pope in the spring.
And
so it goes. Those occasional excesses notwithstanding,
I love the letters and the hope, love, courage, and
resilience to which they so often bear witness. I love
the reassurance
that the bonds of love hold fast across time and space.
So far this season, my favorite letter is from my husband’s
high school guidance counselor. Forty-five years ago, she
befriended Al and stays in touch with our family still,
often with good news about her nieces and nephews, whom
we do not know, but we rejoice in their lives, because
she rejoices in them. She is in her eighties and maintains
an exceptional capacity to care about and offer support
to people who come after her. This concern for the future
and for those who will inherit it is known as generativity.
With her shaky hand, Al’s former guidance counselor
wrote at the bottom of her Christmas letter, “May
the blessings of Christ bring you peace and joy.” I
could not ask for more on a cold December day than to read
that shining wish on a Christmas card. It made me think
about the generativity of this congregation and the spirit
of genuine rejoicing that has filled our community of faith
in recent weeks. As we have engaged in the wonderful planning
process for Project Light, the whole point has been sharing
peace and joy with the world. This undertaking will make
such a difference in the lives of those who will follow
us. It is no wonder that so many have seen Project Light
not as an obligation, but as the opportunity of a lifetime.
Like the Apostle Paul, John Buchanan and I give thanks
to God every time we think about you and how much you give,
how much you care, and how we are all blessed to join in
sharing the good news of Jesus Christ with this city and
with the world.
In his letter to the Philippians, Paul writes, “I
am confident of this, that the one who
began a good work among you will bring it to completion
by the day of Christ
Jesus.” Notice that Paul takes
no credit, neither does he give credit
to his friends for the progress that
has already been made. They are engaged
in a massive construction project, but
it is not a project they originated.
Rather
it is God’s idea—the renewal
and reconciliation of the world. God
started this project. God will finish
it. There will be no darkness unvanquished,
no buildings
unbuilt, no conflict unresolved, no death
unanswered by life when God gets through.(1)
No wonder our cards and letters overflow with joy,
love, and confidence at this time of year. This is
the season
when we remember that God truly is doing something
awesome and new in the world, and we have the great
privilege
of being a part of it.
News about what God was doing in the world was exactly
what the angel had to share with the shepherds one
night so long ago: “Behold, I bring you good tidings of
great joy, which will be to all people. For unto you is
born this day in the city of David, a savior, who is Christ
the Lord” (Luke 2:10–12). And what will he
bring into the world? Healing, love, and peace. God is
determined to win the world with love. And you and I, like
the members of the faith community in Philippi, make a
contribution to God’s redemption project by continuing
to wash the world with love. “This is my prayer,” Paul
writes, “that your love may overflow more and more
with the knowledge and full insight to help you determine
what is best.”
Throughout this entire passage, Paul never uses a singular
pronoun. All the yous are plural, which
means that what God has begun is, by its very nature, a
communal
project.(2) It
is tempting to take an entirely individualistic
approach to faith, isn’t it? To
decide that redemption and salvation
have to do exclusively with one’s
own relationship with God and Jesus Christ.
You remember the hymn that was
popular some years ago: “I come
to the garden alone, while the dew is
still on the roses, and he walks with
me and he talks with me and he tells
me I am his own.” That
hymn is not untrue. It simply tells half
the truth. The truth is that we are God’s
together. The good work that God has
begun cannot be reduced to the life of
one
individual.(3) That is why we gather
in community and give to mission and
build
buildings. There is great work that
God is doing in the broader realms of
culture and society. It is the world that will be redeemed. “All flesh,” the
prophet said, “shall see the salvation
of God” (Isaiah
40:5).
I am looking forward to the lighting ceremony tonight.
As we turn up the lights to illumine the exterior of
our sanctuary on Michigan and Delaware, I will be thinking
of Fourth Church as one of God’s Christmas letters
to the city. As people walk by, they will see this beautiful
sanctuary, and our friends and neighbors will remember
that “the true light that enlightens everyone is
coming into the world” (John 1:4), that God’s
grace is for all, that God has great
plans in which everyone is included.
May
peace and joy be yours, Chicago, now and always.
Sincerely,
Fourth Presbyterian Church
The
landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted
designed and produced all the outdoor elements
of the 1893 Chicago 1893 World’s
Fair, known as the Columbian Exposition,
which attracted 27.5
million visitors in six months and
which left a legacy of beauty along
the lakefront that
is unparalleled in
any of the world’s great cities. “Every
element,” Olmsted
wrote, “has to
have one supreme object,
that is the property
of becomingness;
the becomingness of
everything that may
be seen as a modestly
contributive
part of the grand whole.”(4)
Becomingness: What a wonderful prism
through which to look at what God
is doing with the world and the
modest
part
Fourth Presbyterian Church is privileged
to play in the great, unstoppable
purposes of God.
Becomingness of another sort was
what John the Baptist had in mind
when he
traveled up and down the banks
of the Jordan River, with a message
laced with vinegar and
fire.
He proclaimed “a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness
of sins, as it is written in the book of the words of Isaiah, ‘The
voice of one crying in the wilderness: Prepare the way
of the Lord. Make his path straight.’” There
was nothing modest about the man or his approach. Yes,
God is going to lift up the valleys and bring the mountains
low, but you need to do the necessary roadwork to prepare
the way. His message was piercingly personal. You have
work to do in order to receive the blessing of the new
in the world and in your life.
Not long ago, a member of this congregation
sent me a story by e-mail. It had
to do with an incident at
a city
traffic
light. The light had turned green,
and the car that was closest to the
light didn’t move. The driver in the
second car blew her horn; the man in the first car remained
oblivious to the green light. The second driver blew her
horn again; the first car didn’t move. The second
driver began pounding the steering wheel; she screamed
and cursed and, of course, the light turned yellow, and
the man finally woke up, drove off, and left the second
car to sit through still another red light. The driver
was furious. She was pounding on her steering wheel again
when she heard a tap on her window. She looked up to see
a police officer, who ordered her to get out of the car.
He handcuffed her, took her to the police station, fingerprinted
her, and put her in a cell. Hours passed. Finally she was
taken back to the booking desk, where the officer who arrested
her was waiting. “Lady,” he said, “I’m
very sorry for the mistake, but I pulled up behind you
while you were blowing your horn and cursing; and as I
was sitting there I noticed the bumper sticker on the right
side of your car: ‘What would Jesus do?’ On
the left bumper was that other bumper sticker: ‘Follow
me to Sunday school.’ And then there was the chrome-plated
Christian fish emblem on your trunk. So naturally I assumed
that you’d stolen the car!”
Sometimes there is a gap between
who we think we are and who we actually
are. Pay attention to that gap,
John the
Baptist said. You need to think about
what you can do to live a life that
is more reflective of the ways
and
purposes
and spirit of God. And how do you
do
that? John the Baptist is clear as
a bell about the methodology. Repentance
is what he said. The gospel he proclaimed
was “a message
of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (Luke
3:3).
Repentance is a word we do not hear
often today, but it is an ancient,
good word. In Greek, it means “to
change.” It indicates a change of mind, a change
of direction. As one wise person has put it, “no
amount of extra exertion will ever help a runner who is
headed in the wrong direction.” To repent is to turn
around and face the right way, to look in the direction
in which salvation is to come, and to do the work that
is necessary to receive salvation when it comes into our
lives. Redemption—that is God’s doing; but
repentance—that is to be our agenda during this season
of Advent. Our agenda is to think about how to close the
gap in our life between the person that we wish we were
and the person that we actually are. This is the time to
make the crooked places straighter; to stop doing things
that separate us from other people and from God; to clear
our consciences of old, debilitating guilt; to take inventory
of the principles by which we live out our business and
professional life; to tell the truth about the beams that
might exist in our own eye. We should try to clean up our
act a little bit, now that we know that the Lord is surely
coming.
Perhaps you remember the story that
was told about Alfred Nobel, the
inventor of dynamite, a man who spent
his
life amassing a fortune in the manufacture
and sale of weapons.
One day he woke to read his own obituary
in the newspaper. A French reporter
had made a mistake, and though it
was Alfred’s brother who had died, it was Alfred’s
obituary that appeared in the paper. The headline was “The
Dynamite King.” The entire obituary spoke of him
as a merchant of death. Nothing else he had done in his
life was mentioned.
Reading the characterization with
horror, Alfred Nobel resolved to
change his
life, to make clear to the world
what his true meaning and purpose
were. He decided his last will and
testament
would be an expression
of his
life’s
ideals. The result was, of course, the most valued of international
prizes: the Nobel prizes, one of which is given to those
who work for peace in the world.
Wake up. Pay attention. Change your
life. “Prepare
the way of the Lord!” John the Baptist cried.
I attended the mayor’s prayer breakfast this week.
Young people representing five different religions in the
world did a beautiful reading together, and in the course
of that reading, one of the young people said, “In
spite of our religion, we all want to be human together.” I
thought that was the most tragic claim I could imagine.
Religion should make us more human with one another. If
we vow nothing else this Advent, it ought to be that we,
as people of faith, will make sure that the way we live
out our Christian faith will never be through the dynamite
of unbending self-righteousness and other ways of being
religious that give birth to all manner of violence and
human hurt.
I hope we can wake up and be kinder
Christians. Martin Luther King Jr.
reminded us that “darkness will never
drive out darkness. Only light can do that. Hatred will
never drive out hatred. Only love can conquer hatred.”
What is the mission of Fourth Presbyterian
Church? To drive out hatred with
love and to drive out darkness
with light.
I can think of no better reasons
for this church to exist
for another hundred years than those.
I close with a personal word because
John the Baptist got so personal
in his Christmas message. Do you
remember
in
Charles Dickens’s A
Christmas Carol, how one day
Ebenezer Scrooge, stingy and flint-hearted Scrooge, woke
up to his future, after the visit of the third Spirit?
To his great relief, Scrooge discovered that “the
bedpost was his own, the bed was his own, and, best and
happiest of all, the Time before him was his own to make
amends in!”
This is a wonderful time of year
for all of us to think whether there
is
something in our own lives that might
be blocking progress on the construction
project that
is a whole new us. It’s never too late to begin again.
While it is unrealistic to expect perfection or completion
in our lifetimes, God the master builder really does want
to get started now, so that the blessings of Christmas
may be ours, when Jesus, child of Mary, is born in a manger—God’s
Christmas gift to you and to the world. Amen.
Notes
1. Texts for Preaching, Year C (Westminster/John
Knox Press, 1994), p. 15.
2. Ibid., page 16.
3. Ibid,
4. Erik Larson, The Devil in the
White City (Crown Publishers, 2003),
p. 55.
5. Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (Signet Classics, 1984), page 130.
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