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December 3, 2003
Advent
Genesis 18:9-15 & 21:1-7
Pastor Ben Berger
Are You Waiting for the One to Come - with laughter?
Ha! Yeah right. Like that's going to happen. Ha, ha, ha! Yeah,
I can't believe that happened. Two different kinds of laughter.
One expresses doubt; the other expresses joy. Either is a possible
response to a promise. "You've won a million dollars."
Ha! Yeah right. Whatever. Ha, ha, ha. Yeah, I've won a million dollars.
"The Packers are going to the Super Bowl." Ha! That'll
never happen. Ha, ha, ha. We're going to the Super Bowl. "The
Savior, Jesus, is coming." Uh-huh, sure. We've been waiting
forever. I don't think so. Yes, finally he is here. This advent
season we are waiting for God to fulfill his promise to send our
Savior - the One to come. Are You Waiting for the One to Come -
with laughter? We'll find the answers to that question by seeing
how Sarah waited for the One to come.
In Genesis chapter twelve God appeared to Abraham. God asked Abraham
to pack up all his belongings to move to a new home. He didn't tell
Abraham where he would be going, just somewhere, to the place I
will show you. At that time God also made any number of promises
to Abraham. He promised: I will make your name great. I will make
you into a great nation and all nations on earth will be blessed
through you. Of course, for any of these promises to happen, Abraham
would have to have a son. At the time he was seventy-five and his
wife, Sarah, was sixty-five, and they still didn't have any children.
Certainly Abraham could have responded to God's promises with doubt
and one great big HA! He didn't; in faith he packed up his belongings
and left.
Twenty-four years later, when Abraham was ninety-nine, the LORD
appeared to him again. Abraham was still waiting for God to fulfill
his promises; he was still waiting for a son. God reaffirmed his
promise. He told Abraham that at the same time the next year Sarah
would have a son. While this conversation was taking place, Sarah
was listening from the tent. When Sarah heard the promise, she laughed.
She laughed with doubt. She must have said to herself, "Next
year I will be ninety years old. At the age of ninety I'm going
to have a son? Yeah right."
The LORD knew that Sarah had laughed, and he called her on it.
He asked Abraham, "Why did Sarah laugh? Is anything too hard
for the LORD?" Sarah responded, "I did not laugh."
And God said, "Yes, you did laugh." Then he reconfirmed
his promise. He said that he would return the next year, and Sarah
would have a son.
God has made any number of promises to you. I've always thought
it would be interesting to just start reading the Bible and write
down every promise God has made. Here are some of the promises God
has made to you. "I will forgive your wickedness and remember
your sins no more," (Jeremiah 31:34). "As far as the east
is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from
us," (Psalm 103:12). "The gift of God is eternal life
in Christ Jesus our Lord," (Romans 6:23). "For it is by
grace you have been saved, through faith - and this is not from
yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no one
can boast," (Ephesians 2:8-9). "And we know that in all
things God works for the good of those who love him," (Romans
8:28). "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path,"
(Psalm 119:105). "I know the plans I have for you, plans to
prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future,"
(Jeremiah 29:11). "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened,
and I will give you rest," (Matthew 11:28). Those are God's
promises to you. Of course, for any of these promises to happen,
God would have to keep one final promise. He would have to send
a son, the One to come.
How will you respond to such great promises? How will you wait
for the one to come, the only one who can fulfill these promises?
Will you laugh with doubt? *sigh* I don't think God can forget my
sins. I have done some pretty bad things. I don't think God can
remove my sins because I have sinned so many times. Ha! I just can't
believe that God would give me eternal life for free, no strings
attached. My gut tells me that I have to do something. I at least
have to go to church or be nice to others, right? Good? You're telling
me that this will work out for good? What good could come from losing
my job? What good could come from someone's death? I'm not buying
it. I think God is punishing me. I know that God said his Word would
guide me, but I don't understand how. I don't know where to go to
college. I don't know whom I should marry. We don't know if we should
move or not. And rest? When is the last time I had rest? I come
to church; I read the Bible. I am weary and burdened, but I don't
find any rest.
Such responses laugh at God's promises with doubt. When we laugh
at God's promises with doubt, God will call us on it. He will stand
in our face and ask, "Do you question me? Is anything to hard
for the LORD?" If we make excuses, he will not accept them.
He will only accept our repentance. Then he will reconfirm his promises
for us. He will forgive us and give us a second chance. He will
encourage us to wait for the one to come not with the laughter of
doubt, but with the laughter of joy. That's what God did for Sarah.
God kept his promise to Sarah. In Genesis twenty-one we're told,
"Now the LORD was gracious to Sarah as he had said, and the
LORD did for Sarah what he had promised. Sarah became pregnant and
bore a son to Abraham in his old age, at the very time God had promised
him," (vv.1-2). Is anything too hard for the LORD? No! God
did just what he said he would. He gave a son to Abraham and Sarah.
And, God did it just when he said he would. Abraham was one hundred
years old and Sarah was ninety. There was no doubt that this child
was the result of God's promise. The next verse tells us that Abraham
named his son Isaac. That's ironic. Do you know what the name Isaac
means? It means, "he laughs." God remembered how Sarah
laughed at his promise, and so did Abraham. The name Isaac would
be a constant reminder.
But now God heard a different kind of laughter. Now Sarah laughed
with joy. Verse six reads, "Sarah said, 'God has brought me
laughter, and everyone who hears about this will laugh with me.'"
Sarah herself saw the wonder of God's miracle, "Who would have
said to Abraham that Sarah would nurse children? Yet I have borne
him a son in his old age," (v.7). Sarah laughed all right.
She laughed with joy. I can't imagine the joy she must have had
at the birth of Isaac.
That joy quickly turned to faith. Remember, the birth of a son
was only the first step to all of the other promises God had made.
Abraham and Sarah were eager to see their family grow into a great
nation. They were especially eager to see the one who was to come,
the Messiah, the one who would save them. God promised that all
nations on earth would be blessed through this one to come. Now
Sarah laughed with joy and faith as she waited for the One to come.
God has kept his promises to you. God sent the One to come. God
sent his son. His name is Jesus. The name Jesus means, "he
saves." Jesus is your Savior. Jesus fulfilled all the promises
you heard earlier. He died on the cross to forgive your sins. He
lived a perfect life and rose from the dead to give you eternal
life, for free with no strings attached. As a result, all things
will work out for your good, for your eternal good. Regardless of
what happens on this earth, you will go to heaven. That's your good.
Jesus guides you with his word. He tells you what things will make
your life go better; they're called the commandments. They are not
rules to restrict you, but guides to protect you. He helps you make
decisions by telling you what pleases God. And, he gives you rest.
That takes us back to the forgiveness of sins. When we focus on
receiving God's spiritual blessings, we will receive them and life
will slow down. Receiving forgiveness in Jesus' true body and blood
at Holy Communion and hearing Jesus' promises when in his word will
give us all the rest we want.
How will you respond to God's promises? I pray that you will laugh
with joy. Rejoice! Be happy! Smile! Have you seen those commercials
where one person just tells everyone the good news? I lowered my
cholesterol. I saved 15% on my insurance. That's the attitude we
can have in response to God's promises. My sins are forgiven! I'm
going to heaven! Everything will work out for good! God helped me
decide! I found rest in God's word and sacrament! Just saying those
things will make you laugh with joy!
And, you can also wait for the One to come laughing with joy. I'm
sure that every year at Isaac's birthday, Abraham and Sarah had
a chance to talk about Sarah's laughter. Sarah might have remembered
how she doubted at first. Then they could celebrate how God kept
his promise. This advent we can look forward to the celebration
of God keeping his promise. We can look forward to the birth of
his son. Are we waiting for the One to come - with laughter? No
-not with the laughter of doubt, but Yes - with the laughter of
joy.
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