Telling
It Like It Is
Matthew
3:1-12
“Telling
it like it is”—one of those expressions that we like to throw around to
describe a person who isn’t afraid to speak the truth, even when it might get
him/her in trouble, or offend other people.
In a way, we admire these people for their forthrightness. In another way they frighten us, since we
don’t know when they might call us to task for something we do that displeases
them. In still another way we resent
them when they burst one of our bubbles or execute one of our sacred cows.
John
the Baptist was such a man. He was not
beholden to anyone for anything.
Renouncing the comforts of a good home, fancy clothes, and a pleasant
diet of tasty food, John took himself out to the wilderness, wore what he could
find to cover himself with, and ate whatever came to hand. If you didn’t approve of his lifestyle, or
like what he said, or agree with his point of view, it didn’t matter to
him. He said what he had to say—the
message God had given him to deliver to the world—and let the consequences
happen.
Many
in Judea welcomed his frank approach.
They were ready for a change—ready to throw off the oppression of Roman
rule and Pharisaical dominance alike. If
following John could help, they were all for it. When the Jewish religious leaders came out to
see what was happening, and John let them have it, the people probably
cheered—at least inwardly. They might
support John for telling it like it is, but they weren’t bold enough to put
their own heads on the line.
Many
people accepted John’s message of repentance.
They felt the urgency of his words.
They knew they had to make a change, turn away from their past lives and
be baptized. Enough of them did so that
the Pharisees and Sadducees felt they had to find out what was happening. We can be sure they didn’t go to see John
because they were interested in becoming his disciples. Rather they wanted to see what the commotion
was all about and determine whether this was someone who might threaten their
privileged status.
And
threaten them he did. Calling them “a
brood of vipers” (not a way to get on their good side), he told them to “bear
fruit in keeping with repentance.” It
wasn’t enough for them to look like religious leaders, or spend time in the
temple, or preach fine sermons and pray eloquent prayers. They had to realize that their privileged
position could end. If they continued to
behave as they always had, God would cut them down and replace them with
another chosen people.
Which
is exactly what happened. In the year 70
C.E., the Romans became so incensed at a group of Jewish insurrectionists who
dared to rebel against the empire that they destroyed Jerusalem, razed the
temple (Just as Jesus said would happen), and scattered the Jewish people to
the four winds, effectively ending the privileged status the religious leaders
had enjoyed.
John’s
message is just as relevant today. God
continues to work God’s purpose out, no matter how slowly the mill seems to grind. The time is coming and now is when today’s
religious leaders—in fact, all who call themselves Christian—must be ready to
bear the kind of fruit that is pleasing to God:
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness, self-control (Galatians, 5:22-23).
Only through repentance and turning our lives around—a continual process
for us broken and sinful people—can we bear fruit worthy of our claim to be
Christians. Only by realizing God’s
claim on our lives, and fulfilling our responsibility as God’s children by
loving and serving our neighbors, can we hope to avoid having God’s axe laid to
our roots, and being replaced by
God’s new chosen people.
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