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Why Didn't God Proclaim The Birth Of His Son Through The "good And The Great"
Contributed by Revd. Martin Dale on Dec 2, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Why did God use a rough man like John the Baptist to preach repentance to the people
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TSJ 05-12-21
Luke 3:1-20 John the Baptist
Conventional wisdom says that how you present the message is more important than the message itself
Why else do we see smartly dressed men and attractively clothed women advertising products like soap and cars
But when God announced the birth of his son Jesus, he defied conventional wisdom.
He did not use the “Good and the Great” to proclaim the birth of his Son.
Why - because they were the very folk who needed to repent.
Herod and even the High Priest wasn’t in tune with God.
Rather God used John the Baptist – John who was the complete ANTITHESIS of our marketing world today
John wasn’t into spin – rather his priority was
first God,
second God and
ultimately God.
And His message to us.
He didn’t care what men thought about him, he only thought what God thought about Him .
Have you ever stopped to think what would happen if the Bishop appointed John the Baptist as Vicar in the East Marshland Benefice
Imagine yourself asking John the Baptist round for dinner.
Give that a thought……
What would you have expected?
1. His clothes.
He wouldn’t have turned up in an Armani suit and a Pierre Chardin shirt with a Rolex watch.
He would have been even scruffier than I am!
What you would have got was a rugged man with a slightly dishevelled look.
And if we were honest, he’d probably look more like a gypsy than what you’d expect of the new vicar.
2. His diet
And if you asked him if he had any dietary requirement and he would tell you that he’s vegetarian.
And he would then probably add:
“Well actually I only eat is locusts and honey.”
That would be enough to drive any hostess up the wall. I ask you, where can you get locusts at this time of the year?
3. His conversation
I wonder what his topic of conversation would be with you over the dinner table.
John the Baptist had few social graces.
When the Pharisees and Sadducees came out to look at his work, did he welcome them as honourable persons of the religious establishment?
Did he smile and exchange pleasantries over breakfast?
Would he have tried to engage them in polite conversation about their work?
Would he have asked them for their own perspective on the Messiah?
Would he have gone to the World Council of Churches to further interfaith dialogue?
No
But what he did do - was to call them a bunch of poisonous snakes that were soon to be consumed by the flames of hell?
Obviously he hadn’t read Dale Carnegie’s book “How to make friends and influence people”
4. His first sermon at Christmas
Could you imagine what his first Christmas Eve sermon –in Terrington St John - with a full church would have been like?
What would his message have been?
Would he have told us simply to go on “being loving to one another?”
Or would he have preached a message of repentance - with fire and enthusiasm.
5. John the Baptist was not a conformer
The world, in which we live - demands conformity.
It demands that we live and think and act just like everybody else.
Those - who have the courage to resist conforming - may face great opposition in their lives.
They may well be ostracised and removed from Twitter and Facebook
Henry David Thoreau, the great American poet once said:
“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music that he hears, however measured and far away”.
The question I’d like to leave you with this morning is this.
“Do you hear the beat of that different drummer?”
For if you do, it may well be the voice of God inside of us, calling us to repentance and to live a life following Christ.
For we are called - as St. Paul said - not to be conformed to this world, but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds, so that we may discern what is the will of God.
As we consider the call of John and look forward at Christmas to the birth of Christ, let us look at the content of God’s message to us
God knew exactly what he was doing when he sent Jesus to this earth.
The Cross wasn’t a “horrible misjudgement”
Rather the reason Jesus came into this world was to bring us back into a relationship with God.
The motivation was, as John Stott puts it in his book The Cross – the HOLY LOVE OF GOD.
God himself judges us for our sin and finds us guilty.
God, in Jesus steps down from the judgement throne and pays the penalty on our behalf.