A sermon about holy, life-giving love.

Mark 1: 1-8
Isaiah 40: 1-11
December 10, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“Get you up to a high mountain, O Zion, herald of good tidings.”
Prayer: Holy and ever-present God, may these words from scripture prepare the way for your birth in our lives once again. May we always have hope in you. In Christ we pray,
Amen.
This past Tuesday, Pastor Fa told me that there were five reviews about our Christ Church on Google. Four of them were from a long way back, all five stars and were from some of you. So, thank you for that, those of you who reviewed us. But, an anonymous one from two weeks ago made me start fussing. The person basically said that we were not a true Christian church or a Church of God because of our Open and Affirming stance. We were not biblically correct, the reviewer wrote, among other things. I was disappointed and hurt. No, I lie. I was ticked off. I was ready to write a terse rebuttal! If only I knew who to write to. And I wondered how one goes about getting a bad review expunged!
And I carried all that fussing stuff into our staff meeting. I said someone bad-mouthed us in a review, which sounded and felt like bad news to me. But, Melissa gently reminded me that this bad news review may sound like good news to the person who feels other churches have left them out. Someone out there looking for a church home that accepts people for who they are. Good point! Thank you, Melissa! Bad news is only bad news… until it isn’t, right? I mean negative publicity can be as good or better than positive publicity.
So, I have to wonder if Isaiah’s words to Israel were received as good news or bad news. Because remember, this is a people from two nations (Israel and Judah) that were held captive—70+ years! That’s practically a whole life time for us! And for them life expectancy was maybe thirty years. That means probably most if not all the people originally captured were now gone. And their descendants got settled in Babylon, raising families, establishing lives for themselves.
And, they got used to the oppression of captivity. They got adjusted to constant enslavement. So, uprooting and going back to Jerusalem, the time in the penalty box being over—that may not have sounded like good news to some of them.
But, eventually, Cyrus the Persian General and his military came, freed the Jews, and they got to go back to their homeland. So, Isaiah’s words were good news in the long run. He was a messenger of hope for the Jews. You will have a new life soon. And when it happens, you and others will be able to say, “Here is your God! This is what God can do!”
He basically tells Zion, which refers to the nation of Israel, and Jerusalem, which refers to the nation of Judah, to broadcast this good news. But, it’s not any one person. It’s all of them. It’s the whole people. And, it’s the religious leadership of both nations—they were to spread the good news about God’s love and tenderness, God’s care and reward. God making amends. God bringing them home. “Here is God!”
So, here’s the thing… spiritually speaking, Isaiah’s words ARE good news for us, too! Because when we connect Mark’s words to Isaiah’s words, and we have the benefit of knowing that Jesus, the Christ, the Messiah has already come, then we see that it’s the Church that is being asked to broadcast the news of God’s tenderness and love. It isn’t any one person, it’s all of us people of faith. The priesthood of all believers in Jesus. The Church, its people, its leaders are to be the messengers of hope for a needy world. Get up on the high mountains and be the herald of good tidings.
So all week long I’ve been thinking about what we are to broadcast that grows hope. “What shall we cry out?” I think there are at least three good news messages the Church has. The first is that God is accessible to everyone. Spiritually speaking, God is no longer aloof, or accessible only when you do the right thing. When you are God’s exhibition piece on the shelf. You don’t have to be of a certain pedigree, or lifestyle, or a any kind of religious person. No matter who you are, you can access God. God is available for you. Give you hope?
And living with God fully accessible is like living on an wide open field. There is no uphill climb that taxes your strength. There’s nodownhill trail that makes your knees ache or produces a fear of falling. There’s spiritual freedom on the wide open plain knowing that God moves with you on the journey. Wherever you may go.
Not like when Barb and I went out to find our Christmas tree at Miller’s Tree farm. I told Ryan, one of Scott’s sons-in-law that I was going to search down the hill for our tree. And he said, “That’s fine, but just remember, finding one down there also means hauling it back up.” Oh yeah, I know. Whoa! Let’s just say I was reminded of how out of shape I am! Had to stop a few times to catch my breath and settle my heart down.
So, there is no spiritual uphill climb or downhill fear with God. Because God’s power and guidance are always available for your inner spirit, no matter what you’re going through. This is a message of good news the Church has, and this message can give anyone a deeper sense of hope.
The second good news message of hope the Church has is that the word of God’s tenderness and love, God’s grace and mercy are forever! No matter what!
None of us gets to keep everything we have now or at the same level we have them. The stuff we have will all be gone someday. The people in our lives, same. Our bodies. Our energy levels. I’ve discovered that there’s a reason why parents in their twenties and thirties are best suited for raising babies and toddlers. It’s hard to keep up with those little ones. The energy level I once had? Way less.. Our able-bodiedness we take for granted is not forever. And most of us don’t get to keep the pant sizes we have now.
But what is forever is the word about God’s saving grace. About holy, life-giving love. About the promise of resurrection... that Christ opened the doorway to new life, for us today, and for new life that follows death. A promise to forgive us for the way we hurt one another. These forever words are the spiritual food that gives life meaning, which is like finding calm in the middle of the storm or a treasure of great price found in a field. This is the word of God that is timeless. The Church has this good news message to proclaim. And my hope is that this message of good news gives you hope right now, going forward.
The last hope-inspiring good news message the Church can give voice to is that God desires that justice, fairness, equality, and no foul play be a way of life for all people.
A few years ago, a decision was made to remove the stained glass windows at the Washington National Cathedral that honored Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. An artist named Kerry James Marshall was commissioned to design the replacement windows. What are called the “Now and Forever Windows” capture the resilience, faith and endurance of African Americans and our nation’s struggle with the original sins of racism, slavery, and injustice (New National Cathedral windows focus on racial justice | The Christian Century, retrieved December 9, 2023). One window says “Fairness.” The other “No Foul Play.” What a message! The church is a place to give voice that God desires fairness and no foul play for all!
I can’t read Isaiah’s words and not hear a call for justice and fairness. Make straight in the desert of Gaza or Tel Aviv a highway for God. Every valley of mass shootings needs to be lifted up and solutions found. Every mountain of Wall Street and economic injustice brought low and evened out. The uneven ground of the Rio Grande border with undocumented people, and immigration issues shall be leveled out. The rough places of political debate shall be smoothed over and what’s best for the country, not political party be brought to bear upon our nation’s direction. God is the great equalizer.
So as we anticipate a new birth in this season of watchfulness and preparation, let us, as part of the church, proclaim these messages of good news that inspires a lasting hope. May we proclaim God’s good news message that someone feeling hopeless may need to hear.
And may each of us receive Christ and know that these messages of hope are pleasing and welcome in God’s sight. Let us stand and sing, “How shall I Receive You.” Amen.


