A, The Second Sunday of Advent - Matthew 3:10-12 "Three Fires:Destruction,Spirit,Refinement "
Matthew 3:10–12 (ESV) Even
now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does
not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. “I baptize you with water for repentance, but
he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to
carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he
will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the
chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.”
It looks like a forest
full of eucalyptus trees, but on closer inspection the trees are in uniform
rows and not scattered like they are in a forest. No! These eucalyptus trees are a plantation
grown for the purpose of harvesting hardwood. Because the trees were all
planted at the same time they have competed for sunlight and have grown tall
and straight to make good timber for construction.
One week the
plantation stands tall, and then in a relatively short time it’s
flattened. The timber is harvested. It goes on to serve its purposes for many
years to come. But the dying limbs and
leaves are pushed into piles and burnt.
The plantation
forest is a dismal sight compared to its former self. The only thing left is
stumps. Over time the seemingly dead
stumps show signs of life and green shoots appear. Within a year or so, these shoots form a mass
of leafy bushes growing out of the stumps.
But these eucalyptus bushes that replace the tall trunks from the tree’s
former life are stunted and twisted — not good for any use.
In time the owner
of the field looks to a new type of harvest, the collection of electricity in a
solar farm. But first, the stumps are
laboriously and painstakingly dug up one by one and burnt with the now dying
leafy bushes. Then the land can be
cleared and cleaned for a solar farm to be constructed.
Matthew’s Gospel
reports John the Baptist accusing the Pharisees and Sadducees of being a “brood
of vipers”, to “bear fruit in keeping with repentance”,
if they were “to flee from the wrath to come.”
(Matthew 3:7-8) John refers to them as
the trees at which an axe is laid at the roots waiting to see what type of
fruit is produced.
Last week we heard
Jesus speak about signs of his coming. With the picture of the fig sending out
shoots as a sign, we hear about bearing fruit in keeping with repentance. Here we are reminded of the fig again, when
Jesus curses a fig tree for not bearing fruit as he walks the way of the cross
to bear the bad fruit of humanity.
On the day after
Palm Sunday, Jesus, in hunger, seeing a fig tree, “found
nothing on it but only leaves. And he said to it, ‘May no fruit ever come from
you again!’ And the fig tree withered at once.” (Matthew 21:19 ESV)
These decisive
words from Jesus’ mouth destroy the fig tree. Similarly, John the Baptist’s
words to the Pharisees and Sadducees are equally significant as he warns of
their destruction without the fruit of repentance.
Three times John
speaks of fire. First, trees are cut
down and thrown into the fire. These
trees are those that are not repentant.
The Pharisees and the Sadducees have arrived to see what John was doing
at the Jordan River. Perhaps some were
intending to be baptised with others who were fruitful in confessing their
sins. Were they coming to flee the
coming wrath through repentance, by confessing their sin? Or were they coming to make a show before
others who were confessing sin and being baptised with a baptism of repentance? Either way John warns that the axe lies in
wait!
Second, John
compares his baptism of repentance with the coming of Jesus, saying, “I
baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is
mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you
with the Holy Spirit and fire.” (Matthew 3:11 ESV)
Here John connects
Jesus’ baptism in (by, or with) a baptism of the Holy Spirit and fire. This is John’s second mention of fire. We know that tongues of fire appeared at
Pentecost when the Holy Spirit was given.
This was good fire. When Jesus
was baptised by John in the Jordan, he was baptised to fulfil all
righteousness. The fulfilling of all
righteousness meant Jesus faced the fires of hell and death at the cross and
gained victory over the fires of hell that were meant for us. This is also good fire, when we allow the
judgement to fall on Jesus at the cross through our confession of repentance. Otherwise, as John rightly mentions these
fires of judgement await all those who stand stubbornly unrepentant and will be
chopped down and burnt bearing their unrepentant sin. Then the fire becomes dire and deadly!
John mentions fire
a third time to the Pharisees and Sadducees after Jesus winnows the wheat from
the chaff that burns with an unquenchable fire.
Unquenchable fire
paints an ugly picture of those whose unquenchable passions resist the refining
fires of the Holy Spirit. Like one in
the path of a raging unquenchable bushfire, so too is one who does not allow
the Holy Spirit to backburn the human heart and the unquenchable sin that lies
within.
Fire may be
frightening, but I put it to you, a life “without fire” can also be
frightening. Since the first humans
worked out how to make fire, we rely on it for everything. Without fire, we all bathe in cold water, all
food is cold and uncooked, and warmth in winter is just a memory. Without fire, minerals stay in the ground and
never become the metals relied upon in every part of modern life.
One might think
fire and peace are mutually exclusive of each other. The three fires John the Baptist proclaims
speak differently.
The first fire is
the promise of destruction for all those who reject the two fires that
follow. Rightly, this fire fills hearts
with fear. As Luther says of Holy
Baptism in his Small Catechism, “our sinful self, with all its evil deeds and
desires, should be drowned through daily repentance; and that day after day a
new self should arise to live with God in righteousness and purity forever.” In other words, in the face of this fire, we
flee to the cross as knowledge about our sinful selves is daily brought to
light. Like the Prodigal Son in whom the
Holy Spirit wins out over the human spirit, you and I are prodigals brought to
a right mind and daily returned to the graciousness of God the Father, in his
Son Jesus Christ!
We are returned to
the second fire which John proclaims!
This is the baptism of Jesus in the Holy Spirit and fire. In fact, this second fire is essential to
overcome the first fire!
In his baptism
Jesus was baptised into the fires of humanity’s sin — your sin! Having put aside his divinity as the Son of
God, as the Son of Man in human flesh in his baptism he received the Holy
Spirit on which he relied, to sinlessly be the sacrifice for our sin — your
sin!
Just as under the
old covenant God lovingly consumed the sacrifices for the atonement of sin by
fire, God joyfully receives the sacrifice of our sinful pride, as we confess
our sins in repentance. Humility is a
small price to pay for the reception of Jesus Christ’s sinless death, for our sin that deserves death and the
eternal fires of hell.
In light of Jesus’
sacrifice, the need to make fiery sacrifices under the Law is finished. All who know their works are not good enough
for salvation would agree this fire is very good. Just like fire is very good for cooking food,
washing oneself, and for feeling warm!
The fire of the Holy Spirit that allows us to burn our sins in
repentance through Christ is truly very good.
This fire makes us warm when we are cold! It makes us warm in Christ, as he takes the
coldness of death on himself on the cross.
Where the forest,
the plantation of Israel was destroyed and thrown into the fire, Jesus has become
Israel for the repentant, and we the church are his body of repentant
confessing believers. Jesus is Israel’s
shoot from the stump of Jesse, and now stands as the tall, towering trunk into
which the church is grafted.
The Spirit of the Lord
that rested upon him, rests upon the repentant church. This is the Holy Spirit that gives wisdom and
understanding, counsel and might, knowledge and fear of the Lord to the body of
Christ – his holy church. Despite our
humanity looking like a fruitless fig tree, Jesus does not judge us by what he
sees or hears, but by his righteousness sifting the wheat of Holy
Spirit-germinated righteousness from the chaff of our humanity.
This brings us to
the third fire after Jesus winnows or sifts us.
As we live in Christ, daily allowing the death of self in our baptism
and being raised to life in the resurrection of Jesus, we are refined by the fires of the Holy Spirit in Jesus’
death and resurrection. The fruit of the
Spirit is sifted from the chaff of our humanity. We are being constantly pruned and used as
pieces of Holy Spirit-treated timber for the building of Christ’s church on
earth. We are Holy Spirit-refined wheat, cleansed to be germinators of God’s
word wherever he’s put each of us in this world.
The Advent candle
of peace is lit! Let the peace of God
burn in you as the Holy Spirit leads you in your repentance and confession for
the forgiveness of sin. You have been
grafted into Christ to bear the fruit of Christ to others. In the name of Jesus Christ, you are
fruitful — let grace and peace be multiplied in you as the Holy Spirit makes
him known to you.
Let the Holy Spirit make you fruitful and faithful in Christ! May his fire warm your heart, refine your spirit, and strengthen your witness. And may the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, now and always. Amen.
