1The beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. 2As it is
written in the prophet Isaiah, "See, I am sending my messenger ahead of
you, who will prepare your way; 3the voice of one crying out in the
wilderness: 'Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.'" 4John
the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 5And people from the whole Judean
countryside and all the people of Jerusalem were going out to him, and were
baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. 6Now John was
clothed with camel's hair, with a leather belt around his waist, and he ate
locusts and wild honey. 7He proclaimed, "The one who is more powerful than
I is coming after me; I am not worthy to stoop down and untie the thong of
his sandals. 8I have baptized you with water; but he will baptize you with
the Holy Spirit."
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis: Thirsty
When Mark tells us there are sinners in the desert, we shouldn't be
surprised. After all, the Israeli desert is a much better place for sinners
than the Jerusalem temple. Sinners can't enter the sanctuary of the
righteous. Nor do they deserve to stand in the presence of the Lord. No,
it makes sense that sinners came to John in the desert to repent. You
don't need to be in the desert to prove you live the arid existence of a
sinner, though. Walk into any corporate headquarters, enter a chat room on
the Internet, or parent a child, and you will know the arid existence of a
sinner. Even when we are surrounded by a flurry of activity, even when we
find someone with whom we can talk candidly, even when we parent our
children well, our lives can seem pretty arid. We long to find something
-- or someone -- to quench our thirst.
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis: Dried Up
So we search for something to fill the void -- something to satisfy our
thirst. We listen to the seductive voices of the desert, promising us
happiness and guaranteeing satisfaction, and we believe them. We long for
their promises to be true. We buy or we sell, thinking more or less will
make us happier. And, if that doesn't work, we follow those voices deeper
into the desert to contemplate our arid existence -- as if contemplating
it will tell us something we don't already know about ourselves. But, after
listening to all those voices, all we have left is our same arid lives. We
are dried up. And, try as we might to quench our arid existence, we cannot,
because we are looking for water in all the wrong places. No commercial
product, no job promotion, no support group, no retreat will do the trick.
They only leave us more dried up than when we began.
Step 3: Final Diagnosis: Deserted
Our thirst still isn't satisfied. And, what's worse, all of our failed
attempts to find water have only made us realize how parched we really are.
Is there no end to this thirst? Does anybody care whether we wither and
die? Or have we really been deserted -- not just by those seductive voices
-- but by God? Left to die in the desert! That is where we are!
Step 4: Initial Prognosis: Reclaimed
John knew what he was doing when he called sinners to repent in the desert.
What better place to come clean about your sin than in a place that is as
parched as your own life? But John was only the opening act. John was only
the MC introducing the main event. Confess your thirst, John tells the
crowd, and then he introduces the One who can quench their thirst: Jesus
Christ, the Son of God. And as soon as Jesus steps into that wilderness
and plunges himself into the murky waters of the Jordan he demonstrates the
way he will satisfy thirsty sinners. This holy and powerful One will go
where the righteous have never been seen before. He steps onto unholy
ground -- mixes and mingles with people who have something to repent. His
actions are not only a breach of etiquette, they are a radical statement
about where God will be found now that Jesus is on the scene: Don't look in
the temple. Don't look in the courts of the righteous. Look in the unholy
places, because the heavens have been torn open and the Holy One has come
down to mix with the unholy. God has unleashed his power on earth in this
man; God has given us something worth thirsting for.
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis: Refreshed
For those who thirst, the call of John and the promise of Jesus, put all
other voices to shame. John's call to repent forces us to confess that we
have been listening to the wrong voices, that we have been trying to
satisfy our own thirst. But our confession still doesn't quench our thirst.
More important than our repentance, is the One who comes in power to
baptize us with the Holy Spirit. He is the one who offers forgiveness--
refreshment -- for thirsty souls. And since he is unafraid of being where
us parched sinners are found -- since he is unafraid of the desert -- we
can trust that he will not desert us. (Other voices may still try to tempt
us away, but this One who walked into the desert and plunged into the
Jordan with sinners, promises that unlike those others he will keep his
promises.) Wherever we encounter him -- in Word and Sacrament -- we will be
refreshed, satisfied, reclaimed.
Step 6: Final Prognosis: Gushing
Once a believer has been quenched with such satisfying news, it's hard not
to gush: Jesus satisfies our thirst -- and that's no empty promise. It is a
cup of blessing -- a promise that fills us to overflowing. And what better
place to deliver that water of life than back to all those arid places we
know? (After all, in this lifetime we Christians still experience the
desert in this lifetime. We just know who quenches that parched existence.)
So we share what we have been given: Jesus Christ, the Son of God. And,
because he continues to grace us with his watery presence, we never run
dry.