Advent 3
In last week’s gospel we heard John the Baptist’s call for repentance. We continue that story today. Last week John the Baptist was a voice crying in the wilderness. This week he is a name-calling zealot for repentance, threatening wrath, fire, and axes. “You brood of vipers, you sons of snakes. I don’t want to hear about Abraham.
I want you to do something.” He doesn’t want excuses, he wants action. “Bear fruits worthy of repentance,” he says.
“What then should we do?” That question is asked of St. John three times. The crowds ask it. The tax collectors ask it. The soldiers ask it. It’s a question many of us are asking these days. How many of you have asked that question as you look at the world today? My guess is that most of us have. How many of us have had circumstances in our personal life or relationships that left you asking that question? I suspect we all have.
We know that question all too well. It’s the question we ask when life is complicated and difficult, and the world has gone mad. So let me ask you this. What’s behind that question? What’s it really about? I believe it’s more than a request for information. I do not think people are saying, “Tell me what to do. Give me an answer.” I think that question points to and reveals our sense of powerlessness.
When I hear myself ask that question, I see we’ve come up against something bigger than ourselves. We’re scared and overwhelmed. Life is out of control. We feel helpless to fix the situation.
Here’s why I say that. Most of the time we know what to do. Every day we make hundreds of decisions, big ones, little ones, important one, unimportant ones, life changing ones, some with lasting consequences, and others with temporary effect. Think about all the decisions you have made from the time you got up this morning to this moment. You knew what to do. I’m not saying we always get it right but that we generally know what to do. But when our world gets turned upside down, when life feels like more than we can handle, when we feel powerless, that’s when we cry out, “What then should we do?”
If that question comes from a deep place within then our response must also come from that same deep place. Our response to that question must begin not with what is happening around us but with what is happening within us. It must begin with our sense of powerlessness. If we focus only on what is happening in the world around us our response is basically limited to fight or flight, neither of which are “fruits worthy of repentance.”
On the one hand our words and actions take on a violent tone. We stereotype, against all Muslims, all refugees, police officers. When we do that, we become just a bit more like the evildoers against whom we are fighting. On the other hand, we can become silent and passive. We deny any responsibility and declare it to be somebody else’s fault. When we do that, we’re standing dangerously close to the border of indifference, one step away, and the only thing worse than the evil we are fleeing is our indifference to that evil. Either way, fight or flight, nothing changes, least of all us.
Powerlessness is the middle ground between fight and flight. We are powerless to fight the world’s situations on our terms and we are powerless to get away from them. That’s a source for much of our fear, anxiety, anger, and frustration. That same powerlessness, however, is our way forward. Our powerlessness opens us to a new and different source of empowerment. Instead of limiting possibilities our powerlessness now creates new possibilities with “the one who is more powerful.” Powerlessness does not mean we have no choices; it means we must make different choices.
We may be powerless to change the world but we can choose to change ourselves. We may be powerless to escape the world but we can choose to live a different way. Isn’t that what John is telling those who come to him? He doesn’t ask them to change the world but to change themselves. He doesn’t tell them to quit their jobs but to live a different life.
The crowds who came to him could not eliminate poverty, but they could share what they have with the cold and hungry. The tax collectors who came to him could not overhaul the tax code, but they could be honest. The soldiers who came to him could not end the Roman occupation, but they could act with integrity and not abuse their power. In each of those situations John focuses on people and relationships. His answers are simple, concrete, practical.
For those who want the world fixed, John’s answers are not very satisfactory. Poverty still remains, unjust economic systems still exist, and power is still abused. But let’s be honest Jesus didn’t really fix the world either. He engaged and gave himself to the world one person, one relationship, and one moment at a time. He loved the world to death and beyond. He showed a different way of being, a different way of living and relating, he offered different priorities and values, and then invited us to participate and follow him. In doing all that he showed us what it means and looks like to be human, to be the dwelling place of God.
What then should we do? This probably won’t come as a surprise to some of you but I can’t tell you.
I cannot answer that question for you. It’s your question to ask and yours to answer. I can, however, tell you some things I’ve seen and heard while talking with people in our local community. I watched our parish engage with the plant to eat food people. They didn’t and won’t eliminate hunger in this town but here’s what they did. They engaged and refused to be indifferent. It was a way by which they realigned our lives and values with the life and values of Christ.
A woman recently told me that when she sees a Muslim or someone who looks Muslim, she is now so much more intentional about looking in the face of that person, smiling, and saying hello. That simple act will not eliminate prejudice or hatred but it is a reclaiming, recognition, and return to a shared and common humanity. Last week a teacher told me that she has begun a mantra with her students, “Let there be peace and let it begin with me.” She first had to help them understand what peace is. She is a voice turning away from violence and teaching others to do so. Those children will not end the wars in our world but that teacher has planted seeds for a new conversation in a new generation and if we don’t plant seeds, we have no harvest. Yesterday someone told me that he has drastically limited the amount of time he spends watching and reading the news. That is not about ignoring or denying the events of the world and it’s not running away. He’s turning away from that which has become toxic for him, making space, and opening his heart to hear a different voice.
Each one of those are simple, concrete, practical acts of repentance. Each one arises from powerlessness. They may not change or fix the world, but they continue to hold the door open for the coming of “the one who is more powerful.”
What then should you do?
Better yet, let me ask you this. What then will you do?