About Me

My photo
Born in 1950’s, Byron has three children, Elyse, Diana and Matthew. Byron and Candy married in 2006. Candy has two sons, Brad and Ben. Ben is married to Ashley and have two children. Brad is married to Sascha and have a dog and a cat.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

2020-01-12 Age of Anxiety: Overcoming the Creeps



Age of Anxiety:  Overcoming the Creeps
John 1:1-18
1In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2He was in the beginning with God. 3All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being 4in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. 5The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.
6 There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. 7He came as a witness to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him. 8He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light. 9The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world.
10 He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. 11He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him. 12But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God, 13who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God.
14 And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth. 15(John testified to him and cried out, ‘This was he of whom I said, “He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.” ’) 16From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace. 17The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.



We had some fantastic services over the Advent/Christmas season, didn’t we? The singing of Christmas carols, the decoration of our church, the retelling of these ancient, familiar, beloved stories of Christ’s incarnation. Is there anything more enjoyable for Christians than Christmas?


In anticipating this Sunday morning more than a month ago, I shared these words with you, “ever feel anxious in the dark?  Do you feel a lot of darkness in the world?”  Darkness gives me the creeps.
There is a lot to feel creepy about in the world today.  Not knowing what we know now about our world situation, I feel like the darkness is closing in upon us.  Violence in Iran and Iraq, wildfires in Australia, another church shooting, you have heard these stories and more.
As I shared those words with you, I was not thinking as much about the global darkness as I remembered experiences of darkness.  Walking into a dark room may give you the creeps.  As you may have learned, I learned to slide my hand on the inside of a doorway before entering a room when the room was dark.  Now, of course, I use the flashlight on my cell phone to find an unfamiliar light switch.  There was other darkness during my childhood that was more than creepy. I remember. 
I remember laying in on a sleeping bag in a church in Washington, D. C. listening to the pop of gunfire.  I remember looking out on parts of the city that were darkened by blackouts and seeing the glow of fire.   In the morning, walking through a burned-out street where riots had been.  I remember body counts displayed on the evening news.  I remember being on a bus and hearing about another political assassination.  To me, as a child, those were dark times.  Creepy
Here is the Good News that was proclaimed then and is for us today!  God has come and moved into our lives, overcoming the darkness around us and in us that we might dwell richly in the Light.
Remember, with me, the book of Genesis.  The books whose name means, “In the beginning.” God says “light,” and dark chaos comes alive with light.  John’s gospel reminds us that Jesus is light as the first light of creation.  Later in this gospel, Jesus will call himself, “light of the world” (8:12; 12:35).


John’s gospel does more than simply announce the advent of Light. John also admits (1:5) that the “light shines in the darkness and the darkness doesn’t extinguish the light.”
Jesus intrudes into the world’s chaos and evil. The NRSV says that the darkness “did not overcome” the light, a good rendering. The old KJV rendering is “the darkness comprehended it not.”
John delights in the use of double entendre; therefore, we are justified in both renderings as either “overcome” or “comprehend.”
The darkness has been unable either fully to comprehend or to overcome the brightness of the Light of the World.
Even a big crowd in church on Sunday morning is still a minority of people in town. Most of these non-attenders are not hostile to the Christian faith; they just don’t get it. For them, Christmas is a holiday, a grand time to eat and drink too much, to spend too much, and to travel too far. When Christians gather to sing, “Joy to the world, the Lord has come!” the majority of the world he came to save just doesn’t get it. They “comprehend it not.”
God, having tried to speak to us down through the ages, in the incarnation at last “spoke to us through a Son” (Heb 1:2). But most people still look at Jesus and see only a historical figure who said a few interesting things and then faded into obscurity. They “comprehend it not.”
The world that the Word created did not know him. He lived among his own, and his own didn’t receive him. What a sad irony: God finally speaks clearly, decisively in an embodied word, and the world comprehends it not.

John illustrates what kind of light Jesus brought into the world. 
For instance, John introduces Jesus at, of all places, a wedding, more accurately, the bash after the wedding. (John 2:1-11) During the festivities, the wine runs out. Jesus’s mother anxiously tells him that the wine is gone. Jesus brusquely replies, “What has that to do with us? It’s not our party.”
“Do whatever he tells you,” Mary says to the servants. Jesus tells them to fill the stone water jars to the brim.
The party is shocked that the water turns to wine. John says this was “the first of his signs” and that “many of his disciples believed in him.” The first of his “signs,” his first wonder, produced 180 gallons of wine? What’s the spiritual good in that? And what on earth did his disciples believe about him?
It is only the second chapter of the Fourth Gospel; Jesus has not yet preached or taught.  Whereas most of the people at the party probably scratched their heads, saying, “How did he do that?” a few came away from this weird moment believing in Jesus.
Questions remain. Whenever the Light of the World is present, even at an allegedly secular occasion such as a post-wedding bash, expect the unexpected. And expect confusion. In all this, John surely wants to say, “Hold on to your hats. Welcome to the world now that the light has come.”

It’s a marvel that anybody encountered the Light and said, “This is God’s light shining on us.”  It’s a theme—listening but not hearing, looking but not seeing—that recurs in the Fourth Gospel.
Jesus the Light of the World shines, but people just don’t get it. “This message is harsh,” said his disciples when he tells them that he is the bread come down from heaven whom they must devour (6:60). “Give us a word,” asks the baffled mob in Jerusalem (7:36), and Jesus says, “My word finds no place in you. You can’t take what I have to say to you” (8:37, 43).
John says that when you see the light, you are a new creation, Genesis 1 all over again. The light does shine in the darkness for you. “But those who did welcome him, those who believed in his name, he authorized to become God’s children, born not from blood nor human desire or passion, but born from God.” (John 1:12-13)
Furthermore, if you stay in the light: “If you remain faithful to my teaching...then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (8:31-32). These words proclaim God’s gracious solution to the problem between you and God: “You have already been cleansed by the word that I have spoken to you” (15:3 NRSV).
We can render the verse, “light shines in the darkness and the darkness doesn’t extinguish the light,” in yet one more way than “comprehend” or “overcome.” It could also be, “The darkness has not overtaken it.”
The darkness doesn’t “get it” in the sense that the darkness doesn’t grasp the Light. In John 12, Jesus warns his disciples to walk in the light lest the darkness “overtake you.” Same verb.
Talk with any person who works for a ministry and is responsible for raising funds, like Eric Lane, at the Fellowship Mission in Warsaw.  If you ask, “How is it going?”  You may hear as the answer, “We are always one step ahead of financial disaster.”  That is all that it takes.    The darkness has not overtaken the light.
Paul says in Romans 12 that we should not “overcome evil with evil but overcome evil with good.” In other words, we respond to evil in the world as God has answered in Christ. Let light shine.
We don’t overcome evil with the ways of the world—through force, violence, retribution, or lying. We overcome evil as Christ—love showing up, light shining into our darkness.
Good news! The Light of the World has come to us, has moved in with us, and nothing will overcome this light!