Joy overflows from God’s own heart, through us, and to the whole world. It’s always accessible to us. Joy is a way we can resist the powers of evil and darkness.
Vicar Natalie Wussler
Third Sunday Of Advent, year C
Texts: Zephaniah 3:14-20; Isaiah 12:2-6; Philippians 4:4-7; Luke 3:7-18
Beloved in Christ, grace to you and peace in the name of ☩ the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
“Rejoice in the Lord always, again I say rejoice!”
“Shout aloud and sing for joy!”
“Rejoice and exult with all your heart!”
Our scriptures sing praises full of joy that sound good to our weary hearts. When joy finds us, it is a welcome guest. It reminds us that there is good and love and beauty in this world. It gives us an abiding sense that we are loved and held as we go through life. Joy shows up in so many ways—in the love shared between friends and family, in a meal that reminds you of how good food can really be, in twinkling Christmas lights that color night sky, in our pets, in people acting with kindness to each other, in the nature, in that still small voice that shows up when it has no business to and assures us we’ll make it through whatever chaos we’re facing. Joy exposes a glimpse of God’s reign and fills us with a hope for the fullness of God’s presence on earth.
But joy is elusive and fleeting. Here one moment and gone the next. And as much as we want joy to be an ever-present guest at our table, it can often feel like a long-distant friend. And this world gives us more than enough reason to pay joy no mind as we go through the motions—surviving one heartache to the next. We are surrounded by evil and death and these glimpses of God’s reign on earth can become reminders of how far we are from it. We know God is working in the now, but we long to witness the restoration of all things that will happen in the not yet and we become weary in the waiting. We long to know a world without shame, without oppression or grief, without violence, without insecurity and sickness, without greed. We desire a world that is safe, one where all people live in peace, where everyone has what they need to lead abundant lives. But often that kind of world feels so far away from us, and so does joy. How can a world like ours ever rejoice?
Our texts are shining lights in our weariness. Because none of them are written when we’d expect joy to show up. Isaiah proclaims joy to Israelites around the time of the exile. Zephaniah spends the most of the book warning of God’s judgement and then pivots to promises of joy and deliverance in these last few verses of the book. And Paul writes to the Philippian church in prison but is completely assured in God’s love. Where is their joy found?
Zephaniah says the rejoicing begins in God’s own heart. “The LORD will rejoice over you!” “God will exult over you with loud singing!” We increase God’s joy. God delights in you and me, and all those who are chasing God’s path of love and mercy. God’s joy is overflowing and spills over to us. And we can lean on the Triune God to fill us up with this contagious joy, one that is not fleeting. It’s always near because God is always in our midst. God rejoices first and gathers people into God’s own heart and embraces everyone, even the outcast. No matter what this world says about you, and no matter what you are facing, God comes near to you and joy is always accessible to you.
“Rejoice in the Lord, always,” Paul says. Always. Joy, for Paul, doesn’t depend on what’s happening in our lives. Paul is a prisoner of the Roman empire, with death looming as an ever-present threat. And yet, he rejoices and does it “in the Lord.” Paul is drawing from the joy that begins in the heart of God and brings it to every part of his life. Paul’s joy is cultivated by the ways God has faithfully sustained him, most notably through people. For Paul, joy is not something we wait to happen to us. It’s an act of resistance against the powers of evil and death. It’s not about rose-colored glasses or finding silver linings. Joy does not negate our suffering, it sustains us through everything and says that our weariness does not have the final say. We can always carry joy with us because we’re rejoicing in the Triune God. And no matter what is happening around us, Paul says we always have reason to rejoice. Because we can turn to God in everything. This joy moves us to thanksgiving even when we don’t know what’s going to happen. Because we lead first with confidence that we will be supported and sustained in many and various ways by the One who is faithful. This joy nourishes us with the peace that surpasses all understanding and casts out fear, because we are drawn into a deeper relationship with God. This is the tenacious joy that gets people out of bed in the morning. It’s food for the journey, even on the hardest days.
“What, then, shall we do?” the crowds ask John the Baptist. And though John’s delivery about how to live a life of faith transformed by the Holy Spirit is harsh, his words give us a guide on what to do with our joy. Overflowing first from God’s heart through us, we pour out this tenacious joy into the whole world. And it can start simply, by sharing whatever you have, whether it’s a coat, food, words of encouragement, a shoulder to cry on, or even a smile shared with a stranger. With each small act of love increasing the joy in others until all people are able to bask in the joy of God.
In this season of Advent, we are a people who are waiting. Waiting for the fullness of God to be born in this world as a baby. We’re waiting for an inbreaking of God’s reign. And this waiting can leave us weary. But joy tells us that God’s reign is brought to birth through each of us. We become active participants in the joy and hope that we long for and essential agents of restoration in this world. And that’s how our weary world can rejoice. Through outstretched arms and coats shared. Through hope against all odds. Joy is not far away, it’s right here. It’s waiting to be grasped, lived out, and given to all people.
In the name of ☩ the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.