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Sermon Illustrations for Advent 2 (2023)

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Isaiah 40:1-11
Recently I shared with colleague that Isaiah is my favorite prophet – if it is even possible to choose. This call of Isaiah to the people who are in diaspora – conquered by the Babylonians – is a call to remember. Yes, there is remembering the power and presence of God. There is also a re-membering of the community that are the people of God. “Get you up to a high mountain, O Zion, herald of good tidings; lift up your voice with strength, O Jerusalem, herald of good tidings, lift it up, do not fear; say to the cities of Judah, ‘Here is your God!’” reads verse 9. Remember that you are not alone. You can proclaim from the mountains the wonder, love and glory of our God. Oh, may we never forget.
Bonnie B.

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Isaiah 40:1-11
Life is fragile.  Here today, gone tomorrow.  John Wesley captured this despair when he wrote, “all men are or have, yes, their highest accomplishments, are but like the grass of the field, weak and vanishing, soon snipped and brought to nothing.” (Commentary On the Bible, p.330) John Calvin said much the same thing about us, contending that humans are nothing but “smoke and vanity,” that their excellence is “deceitful and failing.” Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol.VIII/1, p.208) This lesson and Advent direct us to get ready for the better days of the future which lie ahead.  Famed modern theologian and social commentator Reinhold Niebuhr urged this forward looking way of life when he wrote:

Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; therefore, we must be saved by hope.  (Reinhold Niebuhr: Theologian of Public Life, p.282)

Human life is historical, and we cannot evade the constitution of our life.  We must not be preoccupied about tomorrow, but it is still the day when the promise of youth is fulfilled.  (Justice & Mercy, p.84)     

An unwillingness to look to the future, allowing ourselves to be bound to the past is bad for your brain health, happiness, and facilitates the aging process.  It seems that the brain is capable of self-organization, no matter how old it is, but when it is not challenged to make new connections (a process facilitated by the secretion and enjoyment of good-feeling brain chemicals) it stagnates and so ages (Kelly Bulkeley, ed., Soul, Psyche, Brain, pp.138ff.; Sherwin B. Nuland, The Art of Aging, esp. pp.233ff.)
Mark E.       

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2 Peter 3:8-15a
This passage is rife with apocalyptic memes: For God one day is like a thousand years and a thousand years like one day. The Lord is not slow about divine promises but patient. The day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night. And when it comes, we’re going to know it, with signs on the earth and in the heavens.

Many people respond to apocalyptic warnings with delight! At last those “other” people are going to get what they deserve. It’s going to be fun to watch! Won’t they be surprised?

But when it comes to what one of my professors in seminary used to call the “Yom Yahweh,” Hebrew for day of the Lord, there is almost always a delay formula. The day of the Lord is coming, but it’s not quite here. This is not a failing on the part of the Lord. It’s meant to give us – you and me – time to recognize that we’re one of the ones under a cloud of conviction.

So, this is not meant to be a trailer for coming attractions, action clips that make us say, “I am not missing this movie.” These are warnings that there is still time to change, but not an inexhaustible supply! Whether that day of the Lord is today or a thousand years from now, we should live lives of holiness and godliness, and “strive to be found by him at peace, without spot or blemish….” God’s patience makes our salvation possible. Act now!
Frank R.

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2 Peter 3:8-15a
I have been a fan of C.S. Lewis but have to confess I did not know this story. I found it in two different sources to verify its accuracy.  On the eve of World War 1, Lewis made a promise to a soldier friend, Paddy Moore.  Moore was worried about the care of his mother and sister if he should be killed in battle, so Lewis assured him that if that were to happen, he would look after them. As the war dragged on, Moore was killed. True to his word, Lewis took care of Mrs. Moore and her daughter. Yet no matter how helpful he tried to be, the woman was ungrateful, rude, arrogant, and domineering. Through it all, Lewis kept forgiving her. He refused to let her actions become an excuse to renege on his promise. There was quite a bit of discussion about Lewis and Mrs. Moore, but what struck me, in connection with these verses, is that Lewis was a man of his word. He kept his promise.

God also keeps his word. Jesus Christ will return, and the day of the Lord will come. The things of this life and world will be destroyed. The new heaven and new earth will be ushered in. These things have not happened yet, despite nearly every generation believing their generation was the last. As Peter writes, don’t mistake God’s patience for God not keeping his word. What he’s promised, he will do. Are you ready?
Bill T.

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Mark 1:1-8
In most manuscripts, Mark identifies Isaiah as the author of the prophecy quoted in the first few verses. In point of fact he is actually quoting two prophets — Malachi 3:1 and Isaiah 4:3.

Malachi’s prophecy, “See, I am sending my messenger to prepare the way before me –” is fascinating. The name Malachi can be translated both “messenger” and “angel,” and I can’t help but wonder if Malachi considers himself the messenger who has come to test God’s people “like a refiner’s fire,” revealing who the people really are and both purifying and refining the people so they will shine like gold and silver. Part of what must be burned away from among the people are those Malachi is called to bear witness against: “the sorcerers, the adulterers, against those who swear falsely, against those who oppress the hired workers in their wages, the widow, and the orphan, against those who thrust aside the alien and do not fear me.” The first three categories call to mind the Ten Commandments (those practicing sorcery are serving other gods, and it’s perfectly clear Ten Commandment-wise how God feels about adulterers and those who swear falsely. But as for those who withhold paychecks, oppress widows and orphans, and who do not love the alien as themselves, well, that calls to mind Leviticus 19, which I once called in an article “The Sermon on the Mount of the Old Testament.”

The verse quoted from Isaiah, and by extension the entire passage (Isaiah 40:1-11), is a call to the exiles who have suffered greatly because of their ancestors’ disobedience. The exiles in Babylon (and probably those in Egypt as well) are called to come home. They’ve suffered, they’ve been tested by the refiner’s fire, and they are now purified.  The whole chapter is worth quoting from. Come home, people. You’ve suffered enough, and you are changed.

And since Mark is using these verses to point to John the Baptist, he expects us to see that prophet as fulfilling both the threat in Malachi 3 and the fulfillment of the prophecy in Isaiah 40 – and by extension, the fulfillment of the prophecy in Jesus. John is the messenger who is preparing the way, and purifying the people through his challenging message and his baptism of forgiveness. Mark identifies as the beginning, and only the beginning, of the good news of Jesus Christ.
Frank R.

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Mark 1:1-8
Mark shares the call of one who prepares the way – John the Baptist. Recently I was talking with some youth about their faith. They came to church originally because their parents “dragged” them. And as they listened as little children, they fidgeted as children do and perhaps didn’t experience much of the worship or Christian education. What they remembered was the people holding their hands, offering them juice and cookies, giving them coloring sheets, smiling at them and hugging them. These relationships prepared them to enter into their faith. As they grew, they began to see those acts as acts of Christian love, the living of the faith of the community. Soon that faith became theirs as well. People prepared the way for them to grow into their faith. That is a gift.
Bonnie B.

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Mark 1:1-8
John the Baptist belongs to the Advent Season because John’s word is all about getting prepared.  The boy scout mantra is good advice with Christmas on the horizon, good advice all the time: “Be prepared.”  Shakespeare made a similar point when he wrote, “All things are ready, if our minds be so.”  Thinking about this lesson, Martin Luther offers some good advice in one of his sermons on how best to prepare: 

To prepare is to clear out of the way whatever will be an obstruction.  This preparation is nothing else than humbling ourselves from our arrogance and glory.  Those are the chief obstacles for the hypocrites, who walk in human ways and their own presumption and do not accept the grace of Christ.  To prepare this way, however, is to walk on it naked, without merits of any kind, in the grace of God alone...  (Luther’s Works, Vol.17, p.9)   

Like John the Baptist, we will want to prepare for Christ coming into our lives by getting out of the way.  Getting yourself and all the accomplishments and strengths you think you can bring to a situation out of the way is the best way to prepare yourself to see Jesus and grace in your everyday life.  And it seems that these activities along with prayer feel good and make you happy.  Studies have indicated that happiness is a function of experiencing the feel-good chemicals of the brain (dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin) that are secreted especially when the brain’s prefrontal cortex is activated.  That happens especially when we are planning (or praying).  And because dopamine is a drug to which we can build a tolerance, once the planning ends and has become reality, we gradually experience less pleasure from what is the case, become less happy, when we are not preparing for something new (Stephan Klein, The Science of Happiness).  Preparation helps keep faith vibrant and alive.

Mark E.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Thomas Willadsen
Nazish Naseem
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
George Reed
Christopher Keating
For December 14, 2025:

CSSPlus

Mary Kay Eichelman
Today I have rolled out the red carpet for you.  We are not famous people, movie stars or royalty, so maybe you have not had this kind of fancy treatment. But often for very important people, red carpet is actually put down for them to walk on.

You would think Jesus, the Son of God, would have had the red carpet prepare the way before Him. Do you know what He had instead? He had a man named John the Baptist. It says in Mathew 11:19,

I will send my messenger ahead of you who will prepare your way before you.

Good morning, boys and girls. What am I holding? (Let them answer.) That's right, a loaf of bread. Did any of you eat toast for breakfast this morning? Or did any of you have wheat cereal? (Let them answer.) Bread and (name a wheat cereal) are made from wheat.

Let me ask you another question. Are any of you anxious to see what might be in some of your Christmas presents under your tree? (Let them answer.) You must have great patience to wait until Christmas when you may open them.

That's why I brought this loaf of bread this morning. I want
Leah Thompson
Object: a department store magazine/catalog (or clothing store magazine/catalog)

What then did you go out to see? Someone dressed in soft robes? Look, those who wear soft robes are in royal palaces. (v. 8)

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
There wasn't much that Adrian was good at, except swimming. He learned to swim when he was little more than a baby, and he loved it. When he was seven he joined a swimming club. It was there that he first met Mr Stevens, the swimming coach.

StoryShare

C. David Mckirachan
Frank Ramirez
Contents
"Truckin'" by C. David McKirachan
"Heretic or Saint?" by Frank Ramirez


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Truckin'
C. David McKirachan
Isaiah 35:1-10

SermonStudio

Elizabeth Achtemeier
This passage has many affinities with the prophecies of Second Isaiah (Isaiah 40-55), and it has often been attributed to him. But there are differences. In Isaiah 40:3, the "way" is for the Lord, here it is for the redeemed and ransomed (vv. 9-10). In Isaiah 51:11, the reference is to the return from Babylonian exile. Here in verse 10, that context is missing, and those who are returning to Zion are the members of Israel dispersed throughout the ancient Near East. Thus, this text is probably from a time after Second Isaiah and sometime after 538 B.C.
Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 35:1--10 (C, E, L); Isaiah 35:1--6, 10 (RC)
Paul E. Robinson
Christmas has a way of bringing back memories. One that came to my mind as I was preparing this message was when my family would be driving home at night in the car and my father would lead us in singing a song. To all of us family members who remember those fun, cozy journeys toward home, there are many layers of meaning to the words. The song goes like this:

There's a long, long trail awinding,
Into the land of my dreams,
Where the nightingales are singing
And the white moon beams.
There's a long, long night of waiting
Dallas A. Brauninger
E-mail
From: KDM
To: God
Subject: Be Patient
Message: In the meantime, God.... Lauds, KDM

E-mail from KDM to God. Subject: Be patient. Message: In the meantime, God.... Lauds, KDM.
Susan R. Andrews
It was a painful experience for both of us. Jane was a young mother about my age. She had been on the pastor nominating committee that called us to New Jersey. And we had shared much laughter and friendship through the years. She also was on the session - and that cold November night she seemed edgy and distant. I soon found out why. Following the meeting, she waited for me out in the parking lot. And after I locked the church door, she simply lit into me. "How dare you!" she said. "How dare you push your own political viewpoints down our throats, and abuse your privilege as a pastor!
H. Burnham Kirkland
Theme: Prepare The Way

Call To Worship
Leader: To those wandering in darkness,
People: Christ came as the Light of the World.
Leader: To those who are at odds with others and themselves,
People: Christ is the Prince of Peace.
Leader: To those who seek the presence of the divine,
People: Christ is Emmanuel, God with us.
All: Come, let us anticipate the advent of our Lord.

Invocation

Robert S. Jarboe
(Distribute this sheet to the readers.)

Date:

Reader A:

Reader B:

Introit
(As the introit is being sung, Readers A and B come forward and stand by the Advent wreath until the music is finished.)

Litany
Reader A: Please turn to the Advent litany in your bulletins.
(Pause as they do so.)
Let all who take refuge in God be glad;
let them ever sing for joy.
O God, spread your protection over them,
that those who love your name may rejoice in you.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Coffin
Inevitably it happens to any adult or any church leader toward the end of the year, or the time their driver's license expires. Despite the well-intended efforts to try to settle it through the mail, we end up in a long line at the local Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) office. Typically there is a little box with numbers one is supposed to take so they may be identified when the clerk calls for that number's turn in line. The wait can be very tedious. The workers and customers are both tired and anxious with each unique personal vehicle issue.

Special Occasion

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