Sunday, December 18: Advent 4
Isaiah 7:10-16; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-25
I know my kids love it when I’m hip and cool. And there’s
nothing hipper or cooler than a grown adult using some “urban
slang”---especially when that term is no longer used very often. So I’m going to make my kids proud today and
be totally hip and cool.
In today’s Gospel reading, man, that
dude Joseph is totally “woke.” Yeah,
man, the dude got woke!
In the Urban dictionary, woke means: being aware.
Knowing what’s going on in the community. And even though it may seem strange that it
happened with a dream, Joseph got woke today.
The
angel in the dream woke Joseph to a spiritual reality that he is being called
to live, and this spiritual reality is at complete odds with the worldly
reality he finds himself living day to day.
Joseph and Mary have committed themselves to one another; there seems to
be a marriage contract, arranged by the parents and including a bride price, which
makes this couple legally bound to one another. All that would be left to
finalize this contract is a ceremony, after which Mary will move in with
Joseph. But now, Mary finds herself
pregnant, and Joseph is perfectly justified to dismiss her. It would even be
perfectly acceptable (and somewhat expected) to shame her, and leave her
without any further regard or concern.
After all, she’s made her bed, she should just lie in it…..right?
We
already know Joseph is a different kind of guy because he chooses not to do the
expected. He sees no other way except to
divorce Mary, but he refuses to shame or disgrace her. This will be a quiet
leaving. This simple act of compassion
tells us, tells the world, signals to the Holy Spirit----there’s a God-shaped
heart here in this Joseph.
So
God goes to work via one of his special messengers, and taps on that God-shaped
heart to a different possibility, an alternative reality---God’s vision and
dream for Joseph. And through Joseph,
for the world. And Joseph gets woke.
Woke to an entirely different path that will have a completely different
outcome.
First
of all, let’s recognize that in order for Joseph to be “woke” to this divine
reality, a predisposition is required---that God-shaped heart has had to be
formed. A predisposition means one is
susceptible to something; one has a tendency or an inclination toward
something. Joseph is susceptible to
God’s movement; Joseph has a tendency, an inclination, toward God’s
message. So when the messenger arrives
to tell God’s tale, Joseph can see God’s movement, can hear God’s message, and
is able to believe and trust—to take action and make choices---in favor of
God’s movement and message.
Beloved,
like Joseph, we need to get “woke.”
“Woke” to a whole different reality---the divine reality that we call
the Gospel, the Good News. This divine reality that God is continually inviting
us to live and reveal to the world, and beloved, it too is in utter conflict
with the world’s reality. Like Joseph,
we are faced with a choice: will we be woke to God’s vision and reality or will
we stay asleep to it by pretending it cannot happen, that it’s not our work,
that we need not bother? Which reality
will we be woke to day after day, hour after hour, minute by minute?
The
world’s reality proclaims that due to our National concerns and security, we
don’t have to worry about the human carnage happening in Aleppo and the
hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees.
That’s not our problem; we don’t owe them anything.
But
the divine reality proclaims: For the Lord your
God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great God, mighty and awesome, who is
not partial and takes no bribe, who executes justice
for the orphan and the widow, and who loves the strangers, providing them food
and clothing. You shall also love
the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt. (Deuteronomy 10)
Other translations for the word
“stranger” in this text are: alien, immigrant, refugee. Beloved, it’s about time we get “woke” to
this reality, and it is time that we commit our efforts to these our neighbors,
our brothers and sisters, God’s own children for the hour is at hand.
Our
worldly reality is doing its best to have us believe that some people, and
their human rights, are not as worthy, as important, as others. Swirling around us, fighting for our belief,
our action, our support are the ideas that:
- · our environment, this fragile earth our island home, is expendable if it means bigger corporation profits
- · not all our children are worthy of an exceptional education
- · if people can’t afford healthcare, that’s their problem
- · we are supposed to build walls instead of bridges
- · women do not deserve equal pay for equal work and
- · our national citizenship should take priority over our citizenship in God’s Kingdom
People, it’s time to be “woke,”
Woke to this Gospel we proclaim each Sunday, this Good News that we express in
our liturgy, our creeds, our Lord’s Prayer week in and week out. Time to get woke to God’s command to love
God’s people as God does---sacrificially, steadfastly, without exception, and
with a love that takes action; action that insures that all God’s people have
enough: water, food, shelter,
healthcare, clothes, security, dignity, safety, hope, and love. Because in this alternative reality, in this
Kingdom of God’s, all are worthy of having enough….all.
This means that whatever we do
(or don’t do) to the least of God’s people: near or far, stranger or refugee,
citizen or immigrant----is what we do or don’t do for God.
We proclaim: God’s Kingdom come,
God’s will be done---some of us daily---but are we “woke” to what we are
saying, what we are praying, what we are asking? If we truly desire God’s will is to be done,
then like Joseph, we require a disposition toward God’s vision. If God’s Kingdom is to come---the completely
different outcome we hear in the Christmas declaration: Let there be Peace on
Earth and good will for all humanity----then we must be susceptible, we must be
inclined to be moved into action by God’s movement, by God’s message, at God’s
command.
Joseph and Mary were just regular
folk like you and me. Maybe they weren’t the first couple God called on to do
this scandalous, remarkable thing of giving birth to God’s love into the world.
Maybe they were couple number 238. But, we
know their story, this story, our story---because they said “yes.” Through the lives they led, they were
predisposed to hear God speak and move in their lives…..and they said yes.
The day is at hand, the hour is
here: will we allow the messenger of God to wake us from the all too-often nightmare
of the world’s reality and get woke to God’s vision? Are we willing to be susceptible to God’s
movement and message? Like Joseph and Mary, are we saying yes? Wake up! God is tapping on our hearts.