Advent 3, Year A--The Abbot with the Push-broom
A Sermon Preached at the Cathedral Church of St. Mark
3 Advent, Year A
The
Very Reverend Tyler B. Doherty, Dean & Rector
Poor
John the Baptist. When we first encountered John he was living in the
wilderness, making curious fashion choices, eating bugs dipped in honey, and
proclaiming the coming of the Lord. “The ax is at the root of the tree!” he
said, to remind us that Advent is a time when all of our accustomed ways of
seeking the happiness for which we are created in all the wrong places, need to
topple down in order that we might realize that we already are in possession of
that which we seek. That old habit of looking “out there” for fulfillment
through deeply-ingrained patterns of seeing and being in the world needs to
fall down in order that the true peace, happiness, and joy for which our hearts
are restless might sprout, and the desert bloom and blossom in the realization
that God has been with us all along, buried in the field of the heart.
Now,
however, John is having some doubts. He’s been locked up. And perhaps while
he’s in solitary confinement he starts to have second thoughts. Maybe he was
wrong about this Jesus fellow. Maybe he isn’t the Messiah after all. One thing
is for certain, Jesus isn’t behaving like the camel-hair wearing ascetic that
John expects him to be. Jesus is eating and drinking, hanging out with all
sorts of unsavory characters, healing on the wrong days, not observing the
Sabbath. John bet the house on this Jesus and now he’s wondering if he hasn’t
been entirely mistaken. It must have been a deeply painful and troubling time
in John’s life.
So much of the Gospel is about the cleansing
of our perceptions, the cleansing of our hearts, so that we might come to see
clearly, to see with the eye of love, the same eye with which God sees us.
Everything that is not love, everything that blocks, or hinders, the Divine
Light from shining in and through us, is gently, lovingly, over the course of
lifetime, purged if we consent to God’s presence and action within us, if we
consent to journeying into love, to letting love by grace open in our hearts
like Isaiah’s crocus.
And even a holy man like John is not exempt
from this process. It’s a familiar story. John is looking for one kind of
Messiah, and Jesus comes and blows that picture to smithereens. Now, John is
thrown into the furnace of doubt. Surely, that voice spoke from heaven at
Jesus’ baptism, right? Or was I just hallucinating? I was certain that Jesus
was the Messiah, but now, after hearing about all his shenanigans, I’m not so
sure.
This happens to all of us at one point or
other on the spiritual journey. Our religious, cultural, family, and ethnic conditioning
slowly starts to come undone under the gentle workings of the Holy Spirit—those
old ways of seeing and being get challenged, and the call is always to see
those old, limiting pictures for what they are—ways of boxing up the mystery in
an effort to maintain control and security—and to let them go, to surrender
them, that God as God is (not how we’d like God to be) might live God’s life in
and through us.
There’s no question that John’s a rather odd
duck. He doesn’t mince his words—“You brood of vipers!” is hardly a way to win
friends and influence people. And perhaps, just perhaps, what John is
confronted with is his over-identification with asceticism as the primary way
to holiness. Perhaps, as the person of Jesus rolls through his life up-ending all
his previous certainties, perhaps, John’s overly rigid adherence to asceticism
is what God is targeting for demolition, perhaps that’s the last tree that
needs to come down for John, so that he might welcome the Messiah however he
appears, indeed in any way all—including eating and drinking sharing boundless
compassion and indiscriminate hospitality.
I remember I went for spiritual direction for
the first time as a twenty-year old to this little priory—a nondescript little
brick building that looked more like a tenement house than a religious order.
Not to worry, I told myself, at least I had an appointment with the abbot, a
man of prayer and wisdom who would surely set my life on the right course. When
I got to the door there was a shabby-looking fellow in blue-jeans and a flannel
shirt, a ballcap slouched sloppily on his head as if to disguise his wild,
unkempt hair ineffectually prodding dust-bunnies across the tile floor.
I knocked at the door and he graciously let
me in. “I’m here to see the Abbot,” I announced triumphantly. “Yes,” the little
man replied leaning on his push broom. “My name is Tyler,” I continued. “Yes,”
he said stooping down to scoop dust into the dustpan. “Would you mind taking me
to him?” “Certainly,” the little man said. “In fact, here he is now!” as he
wiped his hands on his thighs and stretched out a calloused hand. “Welcome!”
Do you see what happened? Do you see all the
different pictures of how things should be that had to be seen through for me
to actually see things are they really were? I had to get past the building’s
shabby appearance. I had to not rush past the little man at the door in order
to recognize the true encounter. And I had to drop my automatic, unconscious,
assumption that someone dressed like custodian and pushing a broom couldn’t
possibly be a person of prayer, let alone an Abbot. Wrong on every count! Score
one for the brood of vipers, I suppose.
When Jesus asks the crowds, “What did you go
out into the wilderness to look at?” he getting at the exact same thing. Be
careful, he warns, that what you expect to see, your prejudices and
preconditions, don’t blind you to what’s actually happening right under your nose!
Soft robes and royal palaces might be what you have in mind, but be careful
that you don’t trade the Kingdom of God for nice little picture in your head!
That’s why, on this Gaudete Sunday, we hear
from the Blessed Virgin Mary as well. If John is emblematic of the ways we can
crowd God out with our fixed ideas, Mary is an icon for us of radical
receptivity, openness to possibility, willingness to consent to God’s presence
and action in her life, even if she finds it rather hard to believe at first—“How
can this be?” Mary’s “yes,” her fiat—“Let it be with me according to
your word,”—is a sign for us of a basic Advent disposition—openness,
receptivity, willingness as opposed to willfulness, consent and surrender that
Christ might be born in her.
You see John’s not just talking to the crowds
about Jesus coming. He’s talking to us. That wilderness? It’s the wilderness of
the heart into which we rush out, away from the hustle and bustle of the city,
away from all the ways we normally use to navigate and take our bearings so
that we might encounter Jesus as he actually is. And Mary’s “Yes,” is our yes,
our consent to God’s healing, transforming, and transfiguring presence in our
lives, that Christ be born in us. As Angelus Silesius, the 17th
century Catholic mystic and priest writes, “Christ could be born a thousand
times in Bethlehem – but all in vain until He is born in me.”
Listening to some of the impeachment hearings
this week I was struck by how so much of what passes for dialogue these days on
both sides of the aisle in the corridors of power is simply shouting in an echo
chamber. There is so little true encounter with the other. When we’re stuck in
our point of view, we don’t see a person; we see a party, a political
affiliation, a position on an issue, and the reality of Christ in that person,
Christ as that person, fades behind a dull, predictable scrim of prejudices and
preconceptions. The difference that Jesus makes, that John the Baptist makes,
that the ever-blessed Virgin Mary makes it that they show us how we are
trapped, and how, by grace, surrender, and a healthy dose of humility we, and
our nation might be healed, and our wilderness start to blossom.
When
we watch and pray in the season of Advent, we make a little room for our fancy
ideas to come undone. Like a stirred-up mud-puddle, we let the dirt slowly
settle, we let the busyness the planning, the flood-tide of Christmas momentum
come to stillness. And in that stillness, in that silence, once the waters get
a little more clear, we start to see. Christ the blue-jeaned, ballcapped Abbot
with the pushbroom. Christ the one who comes eating and drinking. Christ the
one who’s present when we stop telling him what to wear. Christ the one who’s
waiting to be born in the manger of each of our hearts that we might be his
hands and feet in the world.
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