Grow in the Scriptures throughout the church year with David deSilva as your mentor.
Beginning with Advent and moving through the church year, David deSilva brings his years of experience as a biblical scholar to the church in the form of sermons delivered to his home congregation throughout the church year, now adapted into a thoughtful and inspiring collection of reflections.
These reflections, which draw on readings from the Revised Common Lectionary, will inform and inspire your understanding of Scripture, written with Dr. deSilva's characteristic warmth and wisdom.
In Season and Out makes for excellent devotional reading that will feed saints both in front of and behind the pulpit.

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Topic
Teologia e religioneSubtopic
ReligionePART ONE
Sermons for Liturgical Seasons
1
âOur Wake-Up Callâ (Advent)
Isaiah 64:1â9; Mark 13:24â37
Today marks the beginning of another season of Advent, that period of watchfulness, of renewed waiting, that begins the church year. This Sundayâs readings remind us that the season of Advent is not just about, nor even chiefly about, getting ready for Christmas. Indeed, Iâve long felt that it was rather artificial, Advent after Advent, to act as if we were looking âforwardâ to Christâs first coming in humility as a baby born in Bethlehem. Putting ourselves in the position of those who, more than two thousand years ago, were anticipating the coming of a Messiah and acting as if we were yearning for the baby yet to be born has long seemed to me to be a kind of playacting, of holy make-believe.
The readings appointed for this Sunday, starting off this Advent, do remind us of that for which we are indeed still waiting, that for which we need very much to get readyâChristâs coming again in glory.
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down,
so that the mountains would quake at your presence. (Isa 64:1 NRSV)
Then they will see âthe Son of Man coming in cloudsâ with great power and glory. (Mark 13:26 NRSV)
What I say to you, I say to all: Keep watching! (Mark 13:37)
If we find that Christmas is upon us this year and weâre not altogether ready for it, it wonât be the end of the world. But if Christâs coming again finds us unprepared, living as people who havenât been looking for itâwell, thatâs another story, isnât it? Advent is our wake-up call to what is coming, to who is coming, rousing us to shake off our sleep and restore our souls to vigilance. And we cannot afford to keep hitting the snooze button on this alarm.
Preparations for Christmas tend to overwhelm Advent, to bury beneath an avalanche of gift buying, travel planning, cantata preparing, menu mapping, and home decorating what Advent, as a gift of the liturgical year, seeks to give usâa chance to examine ourselves and to realign our lives, both as individual disciples and as a church family, so that we will move this year toward greater readiness to meet our Lord at his coming in glory to judge the living and the dead. So letâs pause together and unwrap these two texts, and see if, perhaps, they might help us to receive this gift of Advent and make the best use possible of it, rather than setting it aside in favor of our Christmas preparations.
The passage from Isaiah 64 really begins in the previous chapter. The prophet tells once again the familiar story of Israel. God showed them great favor, leading them out of Egypt and into the land of promise. Rather than keep faith with God by living as he commanded in his covenant, they rebelled against God and Godâs law, so that God brought upon them the punishments that God had promisedâdestruction and exile. And now things are simply not the way they were meant to be. Godâs chosen people are not walking in Godâs ways and relishing Godâs presence; Israel is not experiencing the promises that had been extended to it. Itâs all just wrong. âHow can God stand it?â Isaiah asks. How can he not âtear open the heavens and come downâ and set everything right, the way it ought to be?
We might ask the same questionsâperhaps not on our own behalf (though we have no doubt had our moments) but on behalf of the many who have suffered significantly due to the evil or callousness of others. And we can be sure that the blood of the innocent cries out with these words before the throne of God day and nightââO that you would tear open the heavens and come down!ââthe blood of a young family killed during a house robbery; the blood of countless children dead or maimed by the violence of mercenaries in Africa or land mines in abandoned war zones; the blood of a young woman raped and killed; the blood of generations who died as slaves; the blood of thousands who disappeared as a totalitarian regime protected its interests against potential dissenters; the blood of those who died simply because others refused to share with them the gifts that God intended for all. Iraqi Christians, refugees from the Islamic State, are crying out this prayer today; a Nigerian Christian woman and her children, whose husband and father was lynched in the street, are crying out this prayer today; Christians in the wake of mass shootings in our own country are crying out this prayer today. How can it be that Christ will not come, that a God whose heart is justice itself should not bring all to account before him?
Itâs been almost two millennia since Jesus uttered the words we heard read from Markâs Gospel today, and he still hasnât come back. This raises some difficult but legitimate questions. First, if God is going to tear open the heavens, if the Son of Man is going to descend upon the clouds surrounded by the hosts of heaven, why hasnât he? Second, if he hasnât in the last two thousand or so years, why should we be concernedâthis year or next or the year after thatâthat he will? How important a compass point can his coming again be for us? Of all the things for which we might spend our lives getting ready, why should we say that this one is still so important that it should be placed at the top of our list of priority events for which to be prepared?
We all need to solve these questions for ourselves. My own solution to the second question is not theologically profound, but one of simple math. I figure that, at the absolute maximum, I have forty or so years of life left (and thatâs, in all probability, highballing the figure). If Jesus hasnât returned within that time frame, I shall certainly go to him before the end of it. And the next thing I expect to see after death closes my eyes is the scene portrayed for us at the beginning of todayâs reading from Mark 13:
The sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. Then they will see âthe Son of Man coming in cloudsâ with great power and glory. Then he will send out the angels, and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven. (Mark 13:24â27 NRSV)
It wonât much matter to me how much time elapses between death closing my eyes and the last trumpet opening them again. Jesusâ coming again is, for me, at most the rest of my lifetime away.
As for the first question, it seems to me that God will only tear open the heavens and come down when one of a few possible conditions has been reached. One condition would be that God has seen positively accomplished on this earth and in the human story all that he wants to see accomplished, such that there is no longer any good left to come from delaying. Another condition would be that God has given up hope on humanity in general and sees that his church has exhausted its ability or its willingness to mediate his deliverance further to the people of this world, such that there is no longer any good left to come from delaying. The day on which God chooses to âtear open the heavens and come down,â when the Son of Man will be seen âcoming in clouds,â will indeed at last mean justice for every soul, bringing to each either vindication or condemnation. But every day on which God does not tear open the heavens means opportunity for every soul.
Iâm not speaking here just of an opportunity to âget savedâ or âaccept Jesusâ or any such pale shadow of what God seeks from each one of us. I mean here an opportunity to do the work that our Lord has entrusted to usâto each one of us as a disciple, to all of us as a congregation, and to all congregations together as the global body of Christ.
Beware, keep alert; for you do not know when the time will come. It is like a man going on a journey, when he leaves home and puts his slaves in charge, each with his work, and commands the doorkeeper to be on the watch. Therefore, keep awakeâfor you do not know when the master of the house will come, in the evening, or at midnight, or at cockcrow, or at dawn, or else he may find you asleep when he comes suddenly. And what I say to you I say to all: Keep awake. (Mark 13:32â37 NRSV)
This last sentence is one point in Markâs Gospel where we find Jesus himself thinking beyond his immediate circle of hearersânamely, his disciples who have gathered around him on the Mount of Olives for this teachingâand thinking about the many who will hear him through them. We can almost see and hear Jesus at this point speaking to us, looking past his disciples and directly into the camera, as it were, to deliver this admonition to us: âKeep awake!â
The question for us in this interim is not, âHow long will it be?â or, heaven forbid, âCan we figure out exactly when it will be?â It is also not, âWhy isnât God doing anything to help? To make things better? To make it easier for us to believe and to invest ourselves in his work?â The question for us is: Are we doing the work that Jesus has entrusted to us, like servants who hope to be found faithfully and diligently doing that work when he returns? Or are we doing our own work, attending to our own agendas, seeking our own interests, making up our own list of things to do each day that have little or nothing to do with the work that God has laid upon us to do? Servants cannot afford to act that way; servants must attend first and foremost to the work the master has given them and then to their own interests only as time permitsânot the reverse.
When Christ comes, he will encounter each one of us as either part of the problem or part of the solution in regard to the ills that beset this world. There will be no middle groundâand those who stand on the sidelines watching the ills that beset the world, shaking their heads and complaining that God isnât doing anything about it, are part of the problem, not part of the solution.
What, then, is the work that the master has laid upon us, to occupy us in this interim? God wants for us to know him, to live fully in relationship with him and in response to him. God wants for us to grow into the people that he is re-creating us to be through the working of the Holy Spirit in our midstâto be changed from self-centered and self-driven people into other-centered and Spirit-driven people whose joy it is to do what pleases God. God wants for us to go out to bear witness to and extend his kingdom, his hope, his love, his provision, his justice everywhere that there is need. We can say so much about the work generally; each one of us has to discern our particular tasks toward attaining these ends. Scripture is an indispensable and inexhaustible resource for us in this process of discernment. Every page reveals something about the character, the heart, the driving passions of the God we serve. Every page reveals something to us about the character, heart, and driving passions of the people that Jesus died to empower us to become. Every page has something to say about how to invest ourselves in real-world actions that will advance what God wants to accomplish through us.
Jesusâ word to us this Advent, Jesusâ word to us today, is that those who wake up to understand and pursue these things, who refuse to be as one asleep to God or to Godâs purposes for us any longer, are indeed favored. He invites us to renewed attentivenessâto watchfulnessâin regard to this work of knowing, growing, and going as he desires and directs us day by day. He invites us to put at the top of our list of things to do his list of things to do. The question that his coming again will pose to each one of us when we lay eyes upon him is this: âDid your life show my death to be worthwhile? Did you devote your individual lives and your common life together to everything that my death opened up for you, and did you diligently discharge the responsibility that my death placed upon youâto live no longer for yourself, but for the One who died and was raised on your behalf?â (see 2 Cor 5:15).
The first gift of Christmas is this gift of Adventâthe gift of an opportunity to ask ourselves these questions and work to realign ourselves such that we will be better able to answer âyesâ in the coming year than we were in the year that is now past. And when we can answer âyes,â then we will be living as people who are fully awake rather than still asleep to whatâs really important in this world, for this life.
During Advent, we often sing the familiar hymn, âO Come, O Come, Emmanuel.â I would invite you not to sing it as we might imagine the people of ancient Judea singing out their prayers for a Messiah who would come to deliver them, nor as if the object of this hymnâthis prayerâwas fulfilled in the birth of Jesus so long ago. I would invite you, instead, to sing it to the Christ who sits enthroned at Godâs right hand, whose coming again in glory we confess as a pillar of our faith, and whose future interventions we count on for the fulfillment of our hope. I would invite you to sing it as people who are newly committed to live and invest yourselves such that you will have no cause for shame, and he no cause for disappointment, when he does come in fulfillment of his word.
2
âA Messiah Nobody Expectedâ (Advent)
Luke 1:68â79; Isaiah 11:1â5, 10â12
Our New Testament reading today is known as the âsong of Zechariah.â Luke introduces this as a prophetic word spoken by Zechariah, uttered as he was moved by the Holy Spirit. It is a deeply poetic expression of hope for what was happening in Israel as a result of Godâs activity in Zechariahâs own family. Zechariah, as you may recall, was a priest in Judea, and his wife Elizabeth was also born into a priestly family. They were getting on in years, and Elizabeth had not been able to have any childrenânot until, that is, the angel Gabriel appeared to Zechariah while Zechariah was burning incense in the temple. Gabriel told him that his wife Elizabeth was going to conceive. In nine months, she would bear a son, whom they would name âJohn,â which in Hebrew means âGod has shown favor.â Zechariah said, essentially, âYeah, right. Why should I believe that?â Gabriel replied, âIâll tell you what; Iâll give you a sign. You will be mute, unable to speak another word for nine months until what I have foretold comes about.â This, in turn, prompted the âsong of Elizabeth,â an exuberant hymn of praise to God that has not been recorded in Scripture.
Zechariah now knows that his own son is going to be special, having been announced by an angel as very few babies had been announced in Israelâs history. Six months later, cousin Mary comes to visit the pregnant Elizabeth with surprising news of her ownâshe, too, is to bear a son, about whom the same angel, Gabriel, said even more amazing things:
He will be great and will be called the son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David, and he will rule over the house of Jacob foreverâthere will not be an end to his kingdom! (Luke 1:32â33)
Zechariah has three more months to ponder these things until Elizabeth comes to full term and gives birth to their son. At the babyâs circumcision, with all the family gathered around, Elizabeth announces that the child will be named âJohn,â as the angel had instructed. The extended family has trouble with this, since itâs not a name in the family, so they go to Zechariah and make signs to him to find out what he wants to name the baby. He reaches for his writing tablet and writes down, âHis name is John.â Actually, the first thing he probably wrote down was, âReally? Sign language? Iâm mute, not deaf, you idiots!â Nevertheless, when he fulfills the angelâs word by naming his son âJohn,â he is able once again to speak, at which point he shouts ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Part One: Sermons for Liturgical Seasons
- Chapter 1: âOur Wake-Up Callâ (Advent) (Isaiah 64:1â9; Mark 13:24â37)
- Chapter 2: âA Messiah Nobody Expectedâ (Advent) (Luke 1:68â79; Isaiah 11:1â5, 10â12)
- Chapter 3: âA Mother for Godâs Sonâ (Advent) (Luke 1:26â38)
- Chapter 4: âPrepare Him Roomâ (Christmas) (Luke 2:1â7; Titus 2:11â14)
- Chapter 5: âLiving into Baptismâ (Baptism of Our Lord) (Matthew 3:1â18; Romans 6:1â14)
- Chapter 6: âA Necessary Spoilerâ (Transfiguration) (Mark 9:2â9; 2 Peter 1:12â19)
- Chapter 7: âThe Divine Source Codeâ (Lent) (Matthew 4:1â11; Hebrews 4:12â16)
- Chapter 8: âLetting in the Lightâ (Lent) (Psalm 139; 1 John 1:5â2:2)
- Chapter 9: âHow Far Is Enough?â (Palm Sunday) (Philippians 2:5â11)
- Chapter 10: âA New Commandmentâ (Maundy Thursday) (John 13:1â17, 31â35)
- Chapter 11: âLiving like Youâll Live Foreverâ (Easter) (Luke 24:1â12; 1 Corinthians 15:19â26, 51â58)
- Chapter 12: âOur Great High Priestâ (Ascension) (Acts 1:1â12; Hebrews 9:11â14, 24â28)
- Chapter 13: âShould We Let Him in?â (Pentecost) (Ephesians 3:14â21; John 16:7â15)
- Chapter 14: âNew Spirit, New Heartâ (Pentecost) (Ezekiel 36:24â28; Romans 8:1â17)
- Chapter 15: âAn Unfailing Endowmentâ (Pentecost) (Luke 24:44â49; 1 Corinthians 12:1â14)
- Chapter 16: âA New Pentecostâ (Pentecost) (Acts 2:1â21, 38â39; Ephesians 5:15â20)
- Chapter 17: âThe Arithmetic of Godâ (Trinity Sunday) (Colossians 1:11â20; John 14:8â21)
- Chapter 18: âA Surprisingly Satisfying Spreadâ (World Communion Sunday) (Exodus 12:1â11, 24â28; 1 Corinthians 11:23â26; John 6:48â58)
- Chapter 19: âWhoâs Watching You Run?â (All Saints) (Hebrews 12:1â3)
- Chapter 20: âJust Remember Whoâs Bossâ (Christ the King) (Colossians 1:9â20; Luke 6:46â49)
- Part Two: Sermons for Ordinary Time
- Chapter 21: âGodâs Bottom-Line Performance Metricsâ (Galatians 5:16â25)
- Chapter 22: âJesus Christ, Investment Plannerâ (Luke 12:13â21, 32â34; 2 Corinthians 9:6â15)
- Chapter 23: âFrom Consumers to Producersâ (Ephesians 4:1â16)
- Chapter 24: âFaith Is Just the Beginningâ (2 Peter 1:3â11; Mark 4:1â20)
- Chapter 25: âThe Least Valued, the Most Honoredâ (Revelation 7:9â17; Mark 10:28â31)
- Chapter 26: âThe Lordâs Prayer, the Disciplesâ Pledgeâ (Matthew 6:5â15)
- Chapter 27: âKnowing Christâ (Philippians 3:2â11; John 17:1â8, 25â26)
- Chapter 28: âGrowing More like Christâ (Romans 8:28â29; Luke 6:27â36)
- Chapter 29: âGoing to Serve Christâ (Hebrews 12:28â13:16)
- Appendix: Correspondences with the Revised Common Lectionary
- Scripture Index
- Old Testament
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