Redeemer Lutheran Church
1084 W. Bullard Ave.
Fresno, CA   93711
Phone: (559) 439-8500
Fax: (559) 439-8585
office@redeemerfresno.com

The Reverend Clarence Eisberg
Phone: (209) 725-9082
Cell:  (209) 631-3108
pastor@redeemerfresno.com

Worship ~ 8:30 a.m. & 10:00 a.m.
Family Ministries ~ 10:00 a.m.
Holy Communion ~ 2nd & 4th Sundays
Connecting People to Jesus
and to One Another!
www.lcms.org









The Reverend
Clarence Eisberg

December 9, 2007

“Signs Along the Way:  An Urgent Warning”
The Advent season places our feet on a journey to the manger in Bethlehem where God
the Creator invaded our humanity.  John Gugel, in his Advent devotional “Signs Along
The Way”, writes:  “Our Advent journey is hardly a Sunday afternoon excursion in the
country, but a holy crusade in which we spend time “reflecting upon the spiritual content
of our lives.

John the Baptist was not out in the wilderness pursuing fame or fortune.  He was not
seeking public office or popularity.  He was an “equal opportunity” critic – every segment
of the Jewish population was called to repentance.  John was calling for a complete
change in life style.  In some ways John is like the modern corporate or government
whistle-blower.  Whistle-blowers are not popular as they expose corruption, unmask lies
and tell the truth.

Repentance is an about face from sinful behavior.  It is a return to imitating Jesus (Eph. 5:
1)  It is more than feeling bad about something we’ve done.  It is being different.  As we
turn around, our minds are changed, our vision corrected.  As John cries, “Repent” – he
points to the carpenter’s son, reminding us that “Jesus has come, not so you can feel
different but so you can be different.   Produce fruit in keeping with repentance!  (Matthew
3:8)

John cannot make it any clearer.  Those who have are to share with those who don’t.  If
you have two coats, most of us possess more, that is one more than you need, so share it.

As curious people arrive at the Jordan River, John directs his attention to those who felt
their religious pedigree would be sufficient on the Day of Judgment.  It is not enough to
follow in the footsteps of a long line of religious ancestors.

One translation paraphrases John’s message this way.  “Don’t think you can pull rank by
claiming Abraham as your father.  Children of Abraham are a dime a dozen … What
counts is your life behavior.  Is it green and blossoming.”  God is not interested in your
religious blood line.  What God wants are the fruits that come from repentance.

Often, here at Redeemer,  we sing a hymn during advent that describes our spiritual
journey.

“As we make or Advent journey, Let us walk as in the Lord.
Pilgrims with a holy calling, Trav’ling, strengthened by God’s word.
Toward a stable, toward a manger, toward the gift of God made flesh.
Spirit, fortify our journey; may this trek our souls refresh.”  

Some Pharisees (The Pharisees in charge of the village synagogues had produced a self
righteous  religion that told people they could earn God’s love by keeping the law) and
Sadducees (Sadducees, were in charge of the Jerusalem temple activity – they had sold
out to materialism.) both, came down to the river.  They were holy men, men of the cloth,
respected by the community.  John saw something in these men’s heart that troubled him.  
They had not come to listen … They had not come to repent.  They had come to see …
and to be seen – but they would not step into the water.

John knew they were as sinful as those standing in line.  The only difference was their fine
clothes, their leather-bound bibles.  John the Baptizer was a leading religious figure of the
day.  He was recognized by everyone at the time as a true prophet in the O.T. pattern.

The message of John is talking about our relationship with God.  If we are to have peace
with God, it must begin with repentance.  Our repentance must then result in godly
behavior. As Paul writes: “For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do
good works, which he prepared in advance for us to do.”

One of the most terrible aspects of sin is that it cuts us off from God and one another.  
Our highest destiny, our deepest desire, is to know and worship God.  We have been
created in the image of God.  God will bring people around us who are on a spiritual
quest.  There is a spiritual hold within the human soul that wants to be satisfied.  As Reggi
McNeal writes in “The Present Future” we are to invite people to experience Jesus, not the
church.  They want to know Jesus.

But this God, whom humans seek to know, is a righteous God, infinite in his moral
perfection.  He can not be contaminated by sin.  The Bible says that God is holy and in
Him there is no darkness at all. “ If we say we have fellowship with Him while we walk in
darkness, we lie and do not live according to the truth.”  I John 1:7-8

The Pharisees and Sadducees liked to look religious but God knew their heart.  He knows
our sin, the things we did wrong this week, the offenses we gave, the words we used, the
things left undone, the evil thoughts that would move us toward evil actions.

The natural human tendency is to stand on the banks of the river and watch those
standing in the water being baptized by John.  When we began our service, there was a
time for personal spiritual reflection.  Serious questions were asked:

1)        Have I neglected my home or family duties?
2)        Have I been lazy, neglectful, easily distracted from time with God?
3)        Have I misused God’s name?
4)        Have I missed worship by my own choice?
5)        Have I caused another to sin?
6)        Have I disobeyed my parents?
7)        Have I been greedy with God’s blessings?  Proud?  Jealous?
8)        Have I neglected the care for the poor and needy?

John’s message of repentance at the Jordan river, still reverberates across the centuries.  
His words are signs along the way … on our journey toward the manger.  Repent, turn
back towards God.  Look!  Here stands Jesus, the lamb of God who will take away the sins
of the world.

Jesus, the son of Mary (He grew up in the home of a carpenter in the little middle-eastern
village of Nazareth)  son of a Galilean carpenter, a fellow who came from an unimportant
village, but was in reality  “the visible presence of the invisible God.”  He would bring
healing to the sick.  He took upon himself the sins of all people (objective justification.)  
The cross of Jesus invites each of us to accept his sacrificial death as payment for our
sinful  behavior (subjective justification).

Repentance is simply a call for us to reconsider how we have been approaching our daily
existence.  John is inviting s to find true joy – satisfying life purpose by imitating Jesus.

C.S. Lewis writes, “our faith is not a matter of our hearing what (John or) Jesus said long
ago and “trying to carry it out.  Rather the real Son of God is at your side.  (As you
choose to walk with his spirit) (Gal. 5:25) he begins to turn you into the same kind of thing
as himself … beginning to turn the tin soldier into a live (human being).  The part of you
that does not like (the change) is the part that is still tin.”   

The good news of the cross of Jesus, verified by the Easter resurrection of Jesus from
death and the grave is well known by us.  As Christians we know the good news.  Paul
phrases it well. “ We have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through
our Lord Jesus Christ.  You see, just at the right time, when we were powerless, Christ
died for the ungodly “(Romans 5:1,6).  “The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is
eternal life.”

One can easily slip into the bumper sticker theology, “Christians aren’t perfect, just
forgiven.”  Then you can purchase a little book mark adorned with flowers, bows, green
sprigs, and 14 tiny pink hearts with a tassel on top.  The message below as you well might
expect, “Christians aren’t perfect, just forgiven.”

Well, it certainly is true that Christians are forgiven.  Forgiveness is God’s gift purchased
by the sacrificial death of Jesus and accepted by faith.  Unfortunately the slogan conveys
that forgiveness alone is what Christianity is about.  Not true.  John calls for the Christian,
the repentant soul, to produce fruit in keeping with a turned around life.

The theology of Christian trinkets can cause one to believe that forgiveness works like the
scanner in your local grocery store.  The electric scanner reads the bar code and totally
disregards the content of the package.  God scans it, and forgiveness flows forth.  An
appropriate amount of righteousness is shifted from Jesus’ account to our account in the
Bank of heaven and our debt is paid, our guilt erased.

This trinket theology creates a disjunction between faith and life.  Forgiveness does not
leave human character untouched, unchanged.

“Into our troubled world, into our dark and disordered lives, a Savior has come.  Because
we, in our sin, could not hope to come to God, God in Christ has come to us, embracing
us, redeeming us, claiming us as his own.  The Advent of Christ is God invading our
world.”

John’s message is a sign along the way towards the manger.  It is an urgent warning….not
for the neighbor next door, not for the person across the asile.  It is a call to each of us to
walk down the river bank and stand in the water of baptism, partake of his holy sacrament,
and then let the risen Christ live through us.  

So, as we approach the end of our calendar year we must ask ourselves, “Am I more like
Jesus in December than when the year began”?  By God’s grace I pray it has been so.