ARE YOU HE WHO IS TO COME?
SERMON PREACHED BY FR. TONY NOBLE ON DECEMBER 12th,
2010
Matthew 11:3 "Are you he who is to come, or shall we look for
another?"
Some years ago there was a BBC television show called, People Like Us. It was a series of interviews with people in
different occupations, ranging from politicians to policemen. The interviewer
was never seen. He remained behind the camera, asking questions.
The show was intended to be a cameo of the private lives of people in
the public eye. To show that they were, in fact, people like us. But as the
interview went on it was obviously a send-up - and the characters were really
actors, playing the part.
The edition I remember was called, The Vicar. Remember this was a
British show. This young priest seemed typical of a Church of England Vicar:
inoffensive, proper, nice to everyone, "all things to all men".
As the program went on, he seemed a little naive. Well meaning, but
perhaps did not really believe in much. When he was asked what sort of priest
he was, he replied: WYSI WIG. "What You See Is What You Get!"
The humorous moment came when they were in the Vicarage, interviewing
his wife. "Do you believe in God?", she was
asked. With a straight deadpan look she replied, "No"! "Did this
cause conflict in the marriage?" "Unfortunately not"!
You get the picture.
The climax came when the Vicar was asked his views on the Resurrection,
and did he believe in miracles and the Virgin Birth? The young priest was
clever enough not to admit on camera that he didn't believe in all that - but
he was hopelessly evasive and unsure.
Eventually he had to admit that if a Virgin could give birth to a child,
it would, indeed, have to be a miracle!
John the Baptist seemed to be unsure about things; about Christ. Here he
was in jail, and he sends his disciples to ask Jesus if he is the Messiah who
is to come.
John was Jesus' cousin - conceived, like Jesus, by a miracle of God. He
had baptised Jesus in the
But now he has his doubts. We've all known that experience - felt we
made a mistake, questioned our faith, doubted what we believed.
So, in jail, facing the end of his life, John sends word to Jesus. He
wants to be convinced.
Why did John doubt? Perhaps because after Jesus'
baptism both men went their separate ways? Indeed, John had told is
followers they should now follow Jesus. John continued with his ministry - but
he didn't have much to do with Jesus.
We can understand that. When we stop keeping company with family and freinds, something of the relationship becomes distant, is
lost.
If John the Baptist had been with Jesus - if he had experienced his
ministry, and seen and heard him, as the Apostles did - he would not have asked
the question, "Are you he who is to come?"
Consider how this applies to ourselves. We have
heard and seen Jesus, and we have come to know that he is the one. And so we
keep on seeing and hearing him - in our own personal spiritual life, and here:
+ in our worship
+ in scripture
+ in the sacrament itself
For christians, the
sign that we have been with Jesus is joy. Joy - the
theme of this third Sunday of Advent.
John Baptist was a fiery preacher, warning people to repent. Perhaps joy
was something he had missed? Perhaps he was so negative, he couldn't see the
joy? Couldn't see Christ, when he was there in front of him?
Let that not be our mistake!
Isaiah 35:1-10 speaks of joy and gladness. Isaiah also talks about signs
that people will see when the Lord comes. The same signs that Jesus tells the
disciples of John to go back and tell him about:
The blind see, the lame walk, the deaf hear, lepers are cleansed - and
then this punch-line, "The poor have good news preached to them." The
gospel is good news!
For the prophet Isaiah, these same things are like springs in the
desert.
But in the Epistle of St James, the coming of the Lord evolves in a
different way.
"Establish your hearts", he says. "Do not grumble against
one another, that you may not be judged."
Yes, the first christians
had the occasional grumble, just like us! St James reminds us that our
relationships in the Church will speak to others who search.
Joy and confidence in our faith, as Isaiah presents it, must be matched
by our patience to love others.
When people come to us - having in mind this Advent question, "Are
you he who is to come, or shall we look for another?",
the only response we can hope to give is the quality of the joy and confidence
we have in our faith.
Those qualities are shown in our worship, in our life as a community,
and in our relationships with each other.
When these all line up together, those who search can say that they have
indeed, seen and heard the one who is to come.