Luke 3:1–14
“The Fruits of Repentance”
I honestly thought of introducing this sermon with the
greeting of John the Baptist this morning, “You brood of vipers!” but then I thought better of it.
I think most of you would probably know what I was doing if
I did that, but maybe it would ruffle some feathers. And maybe John’s hearers got bothered by it,
too. He said this to the crowds that
came to him – not just to the Pharisees.
He called his hearers, his congregation, if you will, a bunch of
poisonous snakes.
Maybe this is why so many of us think of John the Baptist as
a harsh preacher of the law. If you had
to put his character and person into one word, that word might be, “REPENT!”
And maybe that’s fair.
John did certainly preach repentance.
Soon, we’ll hear from him also about the fruits of repentance. But sometimes, it seems, we forget the whole
message of John as St. Luke summarizes it:
“And he went into all the region around the Jordan, proclaiming
a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”
Ah, so John proclaimed really a baptism of repentance FOR
the forgiveness of sin. John was a
preacher of both law and gospel! And why
should we expect any different?
Sure he was a prophet – sometimes called the last of the Old
Testament prophets. But the prophets,
too, were preachers of law and gospel.
That’s what God’s word is all about.
Repentance and forgiveness of sins.
That’s what John’s baptism was about – and what Christian
baptism is about – repentance and forgiveness of sins. And it’s what we are about today.
And looking at John a little more broadly, John also
preached Christ. He prepared the way for
Christ. He fulfills the prophecy of
Isaiah:
The voice of one crying in the wilderness:
‘Prepare the way of
the Lord,
make his paths
straight.
Without Jesus, there is no John. Without Jesus, there is no baptism. Without Jesus, there is no repentance for the
forgiveness of sins.
John certainly called the crowds to repentance, and he would
say the same to us. Turn from your sins,
first of all. That’s the first part of
repentance. Confessing, admitting you
are a sinner – and not just in a general sense.
It’s not just “aw shucks, everyone’s a sinner, no one’s perfect”.
The kind of repentance we want admits we are poor, miserable
sinners. It confesses we are a brood of
vipers. We are full of poison and
viciousness – in our thoughts and words and deeds. Sin isn’t a lack of knowledge, or a harmless
character flaw, an annoying but mostly benign condition that we can work around
or pretend it’s just fine. Repentance
means coming square up against the mirror of God’s law and seeing in stark and
certain terms – the rot staring back at us.
And to show how serious it is… John paints a picture.
“Even now the axe is
laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good
fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.”
The implication is clear.
God is the lumberjack and we are the trees. And he’s cutting down the bad ones – throwing
them into fire. Destruction, condemnation,
hell.
John’s cry to bear fruits in keeping with repentance is a
clarion call to avoid such a disastrous spiritual end. And we do well to listen as well.
Now. Let’s talk about
the phrase, “fruits in keeping with
repentance”. We might think that it’s
the fruits that count here. But that
would be a mistake. Let’s read John in
the wider context of his own preaching, and of the Gospels and the entire
Scriptures.
In Scripture, fruits are always the outward effects of the
inward reality. A fig tree that bears no
fruit is still a fig tree, just not a good one.
But a good tree bears good fruit.
To borrow from Jesus own fruit “tree parables”, we must
remember he’s not just the lumberjack, he’s also the farmer. He sows the seed – the seed of his word by
his Spirit. He tends the trees, waters
and prunes them, applies fertilizer. He
cares for the trees – and if they are any good at all – it is to his credit,
and not their own.
Rather, he suffered the judgment of being cut off and cut
down – at the tree of the cross. There
he bore the brunt of God’s fiery wrath for our sins. And there, he was forsaken by the Father in
our place. But the fruits of his work
there are of great benefit to you and me.
We partake of those fruits in the sacrament even today – the crucified
and now risen body and blood of Christ, for the forgiveness of sins.
So also, baptism, repentance and forgiveness are what make
Christians into good trees. The fruits
are just outward evidence of what has happened within. What he has done, really. John wants to see the effects of faith in the
lives of his people, and we want to see the effects of faith in our own
lives.
So his hearers ask the next sensible question, “now what?” And we could do the same. Now, and only now in light of faith, we talk
about the fruits in keeping with repentance.
Here a helpful theological category might be the “3rd
use of the Law”. Remember, first, the
law curbs sin – keeps sin from getting out of hand, even among
unbelievers. The threat of punishment keeps
sin in check. Secondly, as I already
mentioned earlier, the mirror function of the law always shows us our sin. It evokes in us self-reflection, a mirror to
the soul. God says, “thou shalt not” and
you must face the reality - thou does it anyway.
But the Third Use is the “now what?” function. It is where the Christian who knows his sin,
and knows his forgiveness in Christ, asks himself, “how then shall I
live?” The law, in this way, gives us
moral guidance and direction. It teaches
us how to live as Christians – especially how to love our neighbor. When John calls for “fruits in keeping with
repentance”, he wants to see the outward evidence of faith lived out in the
actions of the believers. And he gives
us a couple of clues of how to apply it.
Notice he speaks to the specific actions of both tax
collectors and soldiers. He tailors his
moral guidance to these 2 common professions of the day – 2 notorious for
corruption and extortion. But these are
only examples. The wider principle is
one we Lutherans should know well – vocation.
Exercise your faith according to your vocation. Show your good works toward your neighbor
within the vocations to which he has called you.
And so the fruits of repentance will look different
according to the vocation.
Here’s how this works:
If you are a worker, your vocation calls you to do your job well. If you’re a boss, treat your employees well. If you’re a parent, love and discipline your
children. If you’re a teacher, teach
your children faithfully. If you are a
student, study well and learn as you ought.
If you are a citizen, participate in your civic duties. If you are a friend, be a good one. If you are a child, honor your parents. If
you are rich, share with those who have less.
If you are a pastor, preach faithfully and care for the sheep. If you are a hearer of the word, receive it
with joy, and support the preaching of it.
Vocation becomes the lens through which we answer John’s
call to bear fruit in keeping with repentance.
How do I know what good works I should do? Well, where has God placed me? How has he called me? And in this or that vocation, who is my
neighbor, and what are his needs? Thus
vocation gives shape to our love, and teaches us how to love our neighbor.
Will we fail in our vocations? Certainly.
Will we still sin against our neighbor?
Without a doubt. And so the life
of baptism goes – repentance and forgives, ever again, and spinning out from
them the fruits of faith.
All this is just another way of saying – be Christians. How do we prepare, this Advent, for the
celebration of Christ’s birth? By being
Christians. By doing what Christians
do. Responding to the call of
repentance. Receiving the forgiveness
Christ continually bestows. Living in
baptism and receiving Christ’s holy meal.
And yes, being the good trees who produce the good fruit that follows it
all.
No comments:
Post a Comment