Sermon for the Second Sunday in Advent

“My words shall not pass away”

“We have here no continuing city,” Hebrews reminds us, “but we seek one to come.” In a litany of figures from the history of Israel, that is what “those who died in faith,” he says, looked for but did not receive, though trusting in the promises of God. What they ultimately looked for was not simply a return to the promised land after exile, he suggests, for “now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly.” I have been thinking about these words in relation to today’s readings because they belong to the strong doctrine of the Scriptures and to a way of thinking the Scriptures, a way of reasoning through the signs to the things signified.

The Scriptures are what Paul here identifies as “whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning.” He is actually speaking about the Hebrew Scriptures but the idea extends to the whole of the Scriptures, to what Christians understood several centuries later as the Old Testament and the New Testament, or simply the Bible. The Bible is really a library of books written over a vast range of years and centuries by many different hands and in many different voices. What gives the Hebrew Scriptures a kind of unity? Even more, what gives the Bible in its various forms a unity? I think Paul’s sensibility is deeply true, “they were written for our learning,” literally for teaching in the Greek, for our doctrine in the Latin.

What thunders forth to us on the Second Sunday in Advent is the profound idea, first, that things are written for a purpose, and, second, that the purpose is our learning. It is the idea of things being made known that are capable in some sense or other of being grasped by us. Therein lies the challenge and the necessity of thinking the Scriptures, pondering the images through which we enter into an understanding of the things of God. What thunders forth in today’s Gospel is the powerful idea that the words of God “shall not pass away.” They are eternal. What does that mean except that through the passing forms of human thought and experience, through the ups and downs of history, something everlasting and universal is known for thought? “That we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope.”

The theology of the Epistle and Gospel is captured in Cranmer’s Collect. It expresses a fundamental truth not only for Anglicans but for orthodox Christians in every age. It speaks to the centrality of the Scriptures for the understanding of the Faith and for the hope that the Scriptures open to us, “the blessed hope of everlasting life,” the idea that we are made “partakers of the divine nature,” citizens of “an heavenly city” all the while we are “strangers and pilgrims on the earth.” It articulates an essential attitude of approach to the reading of the Scriptures: “read, mark, learn and inwardly digest.”

The Scriptures have come down to us through traditions of interpretation which are based upon this principle of the centrality of the Scriptures. But insofar as they are for thought, there is the necessity of our engagement with them. What is that engagement? It is our seeking to enter into the meaning of what is written and proclaimed. That doesn’t mean that the Scriptures are simply there for us to interpret in any way we might choose, as if, proverbially, the Scriptures were but a nose of wax to be twisted and turned in whatever fashion at any time. Or to put it in modern parlance, there is ‘your truth’ and there is ‘my truth,’ and hence no truth, or the reduction of the Scriptures to ‘this is what it means to me.’ That leads really to a kind of meaninglessness.

(more…)

Print this entry

The Second Sunday in Advent

The collect for today, the Second Sunday in Advent, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

BLESSED Lord, who hast caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant that we may in such wise hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that by patience and comfort of thy holy Word, we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which thou hast given us in our Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Epistle: Romans 15:4-13
The Gospel: St. Luke 21:25-33

Bartholomeus Spranger, The Last JudgmentArtwork: Bartholomeus Spranger, The Last Judgment, c. 1570-71. Oil on copper, Galleria Sabauda, Turin.

Print this entry