1 Peter 3: 18-22
Mark 1: 9-15
February 18, 2024
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. He was in the wilderness forty days...”
Prayer: O Holy God, please let us settle our minds and open our hearts that we may be inspired by your Spirit to follow you. We pray in Christ’s Spirit. Amen.
So, last Sunday Peter, James, and John followed Jesus up the mountain. Weird stuff happened as his clothes became dazzling white. And we found out that, as we follow Jesus, our hearts can be light, and we can shine bright. That’s good. That’s nice.
Last Wednesday in our Ash Wednesday worship service, we kicked off our Lenten season of FOLLOWING JESUS by being encouraged to follow his teaching—to first go to God in secret where only God can see us, and there in secret God can reward us with spiritual energy, with deeper faith and new insights. That’s good. That’s nice.
Today we read of Jesus’ holy moment when he was baptized by John. Because the Holy Spirit showed up! And came upon him as he came up out of the water. God spoke in that moment calling Jesus “Beloved” and said that God was pleased with him. Aw, that’s good. That’s nice. Powerful moment!
But then, the Holy Spirit, in Mark’s straight forward, no nonsense approach to telling the Jesus story, immediately drove Jesus out into the wilderness.
To be honest, that doesn’t sound so good or nice to me. So, let’s talk about wildernesses. I mean I sometimes tend to try and avoid the wilderness. Do you? The places in life where nothing’s familiar. Where there aren’t many well-traveled roads. Where figurative wild animals and angry beasts can reign and can wreak havoc and terror.
Perhaps there is nothing more wilderness-y than the early days of Covid. And wow! We were immediately driven into the wilderness of Covid where the wild animals were running amuck because we were in uncharted territory. No one had ever gone through a pandemic before. We really didn’t know quite what to make of it, honestly. The Covid virus was like a wild animal with no vaccine to stop it. It was killing people right and left, globally. Family members were outside talking to their elderly loved ones through the windows at nursing homes and retirement communities. Sadly, ome of those aged folks died alone. The sweet animal of what was familiar and comfortable and normal was now gone. And the wild animal called the “new normal” was like the plague. Wearing masks or not wearing masks became a wild beast as that question got politicized. Some got mad because wearing masks they believed was a choice. And others believed it was mandatory for the health and safety of others. And that’s just the tip of an enormous iceberg! What a wilderness we were in!
Thank God we’re past Covid’s big stuff. Thank God we are healing and in recovery. And thank God that we didn’t go through that wilderness alone. God was with us. Guiding us. Helping us use our collective wisdom and resources.
So, sometimes there are wildernesses we avoid. And sometimes there are wilderness that are thrust upon us, and we are driven into them. We have to make the best of them.
But I wondered what if there is a third option. What if there are some times when the Spirit drives us into a wilderness because that is exactly what we need? The very thing we might try to avoid or defend ourselves against might be the essential thing required for that moment?
Like maybe that is true for Jesus. What if the wilderness is the thing he needed right at that moment? Because after that powerful moment of his baptism, after being called “My son, the Beloved,” I think God knew that Jesus needed time alone in dangerous territory. Where discernment is required. Where trust in God was mandatory. Where the wild animal of temptation lived.
Jesus was tempted, the other gospels tell us, to misuse his “beloved-ness.” To make his divine “My Son” status something he could use for his own purposes. If he was hungry, he could turn stones into bread, for example. Or, if he was in danger, he could call on the angels to help him. You know, all that would do is make him more than human and less reachable to us.
In any case. the Spirit that drove him out into the wilderness because I think it was what Jesus needed. To learn the meaning of his beloved-ness. To grow through and put aside the temptations. To have his conscience quickened in response to the moral and spiritual concerns of his day. You noticed...he came back from his wilderness experience, picked up where John left off, and proclaimed the good news of God’s realm had come!
So, hold onto your hats… here we go… because if we’re following Jesus, sometimes we may need to follow him into our wildernesses. Driven by the Spirit to learn more about the beloved-ness of every person. To grow through the temptations to disregard that beloved-ness in others, which too many succumb to. To have our conscience quickened in response to the moral and spiritual concerns of our day. Our wildernesses.
I don’t know if the Spirit has led us or if we find ourselves forced here, or maybe it’s both. But, we are in the wilderness of gun violence in our nation. The Gun Violence Archive reports that in the 49 days of this year counting today, 50+ mass shootings have occurred. The math is grim… that’s more than one per day. Just look at Kansas City at the Super Bowl parade. Or, in Houston at Joel Osteen’s church. Or in Harrisburg. Gun violence is ripping our communities apart (Gun Violence Archive.)
So because we’re following Jesus, considering this wilderness, maybe it’s time for all people of faith to go to our secret places of prayer, and feel the energy of the Spirit. To have the Spirit of God push us to discern the meaning of God’s beloved-ness status given to every person. To push us to the place of this struggle, and do something about it. To push us to the place of a conscientious / moral response. Which is to say that as baptized people of faith, maybe we need to appeal to God for a good collective conscience in response to this terrible social wilderness that we are in. And responsible actions to follow.
I know some of us, myself included, feel that this is out of our control. What can I do about it? We can do some things. We can sign petitions. We can contact our legislators. We can, as a church, speak to our community of God’s steadfast love and grace with conflicts with gun violence.
And while we’re in the wilderness, maybe our collective conscience needs to be quickened as a response to injustice done, or any justice delayed, or any indignity toward another person that is practiced.
Maybe the isolating pain we experienced in the wilderness of Covid can cause us to discern and rethink how we view the pain of refugees, of exiles, or immigrants?
Maybe our quickened conscience from God should shed light on how we view and vote for Presidential candidates?
Maybe our voice needs to be lifted up when the almighty dollar has the most influence on decisions made in society or in government instead of the power of God’s steadfast love and faithfulness?
These are some of the ways I think we can make faith application in real life… in life’s real wildernesses.
But the decision to follow Jesus into the wilderness is strictly our own. I encourage you to decide to follow Jesus. Into the wilderness.
And remember, the Holy Spirit that lived in Jesus may be the One leading you into the wilderness you’re facing or you are in right now. If it is the Holy Spirit leading you into your particular wilderness at this time, trust that it is God-inspired. And maybe exactly what you need right now.
And decide to follow Jesus. For Christ is with you. Pray for discernment and the Spirit’s energy to quicken your conscience. And for God to provide you the grace and wisdom to go forward.
If you find yourself in a wilderness not of God’s origination, still trust that God is with you in it. That Jesus got into that wilderness with you before you ever got there.
So, decide to follow Jesus, no turnin’ back. Let’s sing. Amen.
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