Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Everlasting Joy -- Third Sunday of Advent


Isaiah 35:1-10
December 15, 2019

            In the house where I grew up, we didn’t have what you might call an “open floor plan,” but the kitchen, the dining room, the front entry, the living room and the den ran in a straight line through a series of wide, open doorways. The only room that had a door that closed from the rest of the house was the kitchen, and that was a swinging door. The year that I was nine, I had just grown tall enough that I could jump up and smack the top of the door frame in this row of doorways.
            When I was growing up, our main family celebration of Christmas was on Christmas Eve. My parents were devout church goers, but our church didn’t do Christmas Eve services. My dad was German, but he fully embraced my mother’s Swedish heritage, so on Christmas Eve we had a very Swedish Christmas with a big meal and the exchange of presents from one another. Christmas morning Santa Claus came, and we opened our stockings and had a special breakfast, then ate a lot of delicious leftovers the rest of the day.
            Back to this Christmas when I was nine. It was Christmas Eve day, and I was nine, which meant I was excited. It was Christmas Eve! My parents were in the kitchen cooking wonderful food. There were presents under the tree. Our stockings were hung by the chimney with care. I was just so excited. And if you’ve ever known an excited nine-year-old, or if you’ve ever been an excited nine-year-old, you know that energy just courses through that little body.
            That’s what was happening to me. I was so excited for Christmas and I had all this restless energy just busting a move inside me, I had to do something. So, I ran that long line of doorways from the kitchen to the den, jumping up and touching the doorframe as I went. Then I ran back the other way, from the den to the kitchen, doing the same thing. It was run, jump, SMACK! Run, jump, SMACK! Run, jump, SMACK! Run, jump, SMACK!
            For. An. Hour.
            My parents were not drinkers. They weren’t teetotalers, but they weren’t drinkers. But upon reflecting on this memory, I can’t help but wonder if a little cooking sherry wasn’t being passed around the kitchen that day. I mean, come on. My parents loved me and they could be pretty patient, but I had to have been driving everybody a little nuts with my leaping for joy.
            That is what I was doing; I was leaping for joy. I was so filled with excitement and Christmas and joy, that I could not help but leap … and leap … and leap.
            The joy got me later that evening though, because when we finally sat down at the table to enjoy this wonderful meal my parents made, and my dad bowed to pray, I cried out, “Hold it!” and ran to the bathroom with a nosebleed. Sometimes leaping for joy does that to a person.
            Joy is apparent in these words from Isaiah. Joy is evident and visceral and bubbling up and over.
            “The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad, the desert shall rejoice and blossom; like the crocus it shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice with joy and singing.”
            “Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the speechless sing for joy. For waters shall break forth in the wilderness, and streams in the desert; the burning sand shall become a pool, and the thirst ground springs of water;”
            The joy is not for humans alone. The vision first begins with words of creation’s joyful response. The desert, which most often can be dry, brown and seemingly lifeless, will burst forth with gladness. Even the land will rejoice and blossom. Even the desert will rejoice with joy and singing.
            I read this week about the super bloom in the California desert. The super bloom is a bursting forth of brightly colored poppies and wildflowers in the desert which is normally brown and seemingly lifeless. A super bloom happens when seeds that lay dormant for a long time, receive enough rain to germinate and bloom. And when they do bloom, the colors can be seen from space. Google “super bloom” after the service, and you will be astonished at this incredible abundance of color in the California desert. I suspect that pictures do not do the colors justice.
            These words of Isaiah seem to describe a super bloom, don’t they? The desert and the wilderness and the dry land which had no color, no flowers, nothing, suddenly burst forth with blossoms and color. The land itself rejoices. Where there were no flowers, there suddenly are flowers. Where there was no water, suddenly there are streams and pools and springs of water in a normally thirsty land.
            And let’s not forget the human response of joy. Just as creation experiences a reversal from lifeless to life, from dry to gloriously wet, from colorless to super bloom, humans and our expectations are turned upside down as well.
            Those with weak hands will be strengthened. The remnant stiffness from my broken wrist many years ago will no longer bother me or be an issue.
            Feeble knees will be made firm. No more cracking and creaking when you try to stand up. No more problems with worn out knees and joints that refuse to cooperate.
            And those of us with fearful hearts – maybe this is more of us than we care to admit – Isaiah tells us to “be strong and do not fear!” Here is our God.
            Then there are these words to people we might think of as physically challenged, maybe they can be taken literally as words of hope and reversal. If you have hearing problems they will be no more, or if you have seeing issues, they will also be no more. Yet, perhaps we can also take them another way. For those of us who do see and hear and walk in what we think of as “normal,” perhaps we need to hear these words as a reminder that what we think of as a problem, might actually be an advantage, a blessing, a unique and powerful way of being in the world. This week I also read a story about a church who was holding a worship service for a homeless population in their city.
            They took church to the homeless and held a worship service in the midst of a noisy street in Atlanta. While the worship leader was trying to be heard above the din of the traffic, one homeless man who could neither hear nor speak wanted to be acknowledged. He kept waving and pointing to himself, so they beckoned to him to come forward. He stood in their circle and began to sign a hymn. The writer described it as like watching a beautiful dance. The noise that frustrated everyone else was no problem to this man. He heard beautiful music they could not hear. His literal deafness did not impede his joy.
            What is really powerful about this joyful vision of Isaiah is that it follows verses about destruction. While the earth may rejoice in these verses before us, the verses that come before them speak of creation that is not rejoicing, not even close. Scholars believe that these words were placed here out of order. They should come later, after chapter 40, which is believed to be Second or Deutero Isaiah. But for some reason, they are here; a few chapters too early.
            Perhaps it was an error of some scribe. Or perhaps this is exactly where these verses are supposed to be: an interruption, a disruption of joy. They are found here, not by mistake, but because joy, God’s joy, God’s everlasting joy, breaks into our world where we least expect it.
            It is so easy to forget that. Take a quick look at the world around us, and joy seems to be in short supply. I follow a lot of clergy and church pages on Facebook, and so many of my colleagues are asking for prayers because of sad events in their churches or their communities. But even without a traumatic event, this time of year can just be hard for folks. Advertising tells us this is a time when everyone is merry. Families gather and children sing and everybody is fa, la, la, la, la-ing it all over the place. But the truth is that many of us, including myself, are grieving. Or we’re just sad, or worried or stressed and scared. Let’s face it, depression and anxiety don’t take a vacation just because it is Advent and Christmas. In our passage from Matthew’s gospel, John is in prison. He won’t survive it. Where is the joy in that?
            But that is the thing about joy. It isn’t the same thing as happiness. Happiness is fleeting. We were never guaranteed happiness. But joy, that’s something different. We are called to rejoice. We are called to an everlasting joy. Not because the world is perfect or without sadness or pain or sorrow or grief, but because God breaks into our world, into our pain, into our sadness and brokenness. God disrupts our daily lives. God becomes like us. God becomes like us. That’s what we’re waiting for. That’s what we’re preparing for. Joy will not be delayed. Joy will not wait for the “right” moment or time. Joy bursts in when and where we least it.
Even the desert and the wilderness and the lifeless places will bloom and blossom with riotous color. Springs and pools of water will flow where there was no water. And through it all, God will make a way, a holy way, a highway of safety, where all can travel in hope and peace and where everlasting joy is as abundant as the flowers in the desert.
Let all of God’s children say, “Alleluia!”
Amen.

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