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boxes of Bethlehem delights, hailing the wondrous birth. The holy family hangs out in our den all the way until Ash Wednesday.

      But I’m wondering if you have a miniature facsimile of John the Baptist placed on the mantle alongside the other starring characters? Somebody gave us John a few years ago and he has a place in our library on the shelves. But he’s not been given permission to enter the holy of holies: the Christmas tree room. I may sneak him in this year and see if anyone notices.

      There’s something about John the Baptist that takes us by surprise every year. He jumps out at us from the shadows like a Rottweiler who hasn’t eaten in awhile. He doesn’t have a machete, but he does carry an ax and I’ve no doubt the man means business. I know he’s coming, but he jumps out from behind centuries of bushes on our Advent trail and surprises me every year.

      I find it interesting that all four Gospels begin (in the early chapters) with John the Baptist in the wilderness, calling God’s people to repentance and change. But only two of the Gospels bother to mention the birth of Jesus and the details we’ve come to know and love. John stands in a long line of prophets (some thought he was Elijah, back again) who confronted safe and comfortable faith. “There’s nothing safe about God,” John seems to say. “You see this ax lying here? God means to chop away all this stuff in your life that gets in the way of producing good fruit. The Coming One will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire” (Matt 3:11). The Greek word here for “fire” is interesting. It’s the word pur. We get our English word purify from this same root. Jesus means to come into our lives and burn away the chaff, purifying our lives with his love, grace, and yes, judgment.

      This is not a popular image of Jesus, especially for Lutherans, and especially during Advent. The story seems too sweet to accommodate someone like John. We want to swaddle and coo over and protect little Jesus from mean old Herod. In doing so, it’s easy to forget why he came.

      And so John shows up every Advent to remind us. He shows up with ax and fire. Not so much to threaten infidels like me, but as a reminder that following Jesus, paying attention to his teachings, means that I’ll have to knock off and cease certain behaviors. That I’ll be open to the change that the Spirit is trying to effect in me. That I won’t be content with sweetness and sentiment when it comes to church life. “The ax is lying at the root of the trees.” Jesus means to forgive us, but he also means to change and convert us more and more into his likeness. Machete time with our Lord.

      I won’t lie. This is hard and often uncomfortable work. And it may be that we’ve missed this about Jesus even though we’ve been a member of a church all our lives. “Do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our ancestor’” (Matt 3:9). John is basically saying: “Don’t think that four generations of your relatives connected to a congregation gets you any special consideration in your stature before Christ.” Jesus is coming with fire and ax to burn and cut away all that separates us from God, regardless of one’s personal congregational pedigree. John is telling us the truth. And I think we long to hear the truth—long for national leaders who will speak honestly and straightforwardly with us. Who will not lie to us or lead us on. John spoke the truth in the wilderness and people flocked out there to hear him.

      *

      It might be wise each Advent to recall a scene from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the opening book in C. S. Lewis’s stories about Narnia. The kids—Edmund, Lucy, Peter, and Susan—step through the wardrobe into a new land and begin to sense the evil of the White Witch and the hopeful returning power of Aslan the Lion to the woods. (Aslan is the Christ figure in these stories.)

      The children are befriended by the Beaver family and the conversation turns to the fears of Mr. and Mrs. Beaver, but also their hope in Aslan, the great Lion:

      “Ooh!” said Susan, “I’d thought he was a man. Is he—quite safe? I shall feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.”

      “That you will dearie, and make no mistake,” said Mrs. Beaver, “if there’s anyone who can appear before Aslan without their knees knocking, they’re either braver than most or else just silly.”

      “Then he isn’t safe?” said Lucy.

      We prepare in Advent for the coming of Christ—a Lord who intends to change us with his teachings and his grace; his very life.

      One who is always good, but never quite safe.

      For further reflection:

      1. Why is actual change and growth over time important for a follower of Jesus?

      2. Honestly confess to a friend the things that need changing in your life this season with the help of Jesus.

      5. Fire and Soap

      “For he is like a refiner’s fire and like fuller’s soap” (Mal 3:2).

      There was a man in one of my former parishes (let’s call him Stephen) who was not particularly well-liked. And it’s possible I’m even being generous here. Stephen was a grumpy and ornery older man (harmless in most ways, but ornery) and most people just steered clear of him. He enjoyed calling into question my pastoral credentials and made a habit of staring at unruly children. I worried a bit about Stephen; asked others about his background (attempting to discover something from his past that made him behave so badly) and tried to reach out to him. No luck.

      People in the church had a habit of saying, “Oh, that’s just Stephen. Don’t worry. He’s always been that way.” But I did worry a bit. And, after a point, that very common statement about Stephen left me wondering. What does it reveal about another human being when we say, “Oh, that’s just the way she’s always been,” as if some people are simply incapable of change?

      But

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