Bible Text: Isaiah 9:1-4, Matthew 4:12-23 | Preacher: Rev. Jenn Geddes
This past fall researchers at UBC’s Aging, Mobility and Cognitive Neuroscience Lab made quite the declaration. They stated that we should wear our sunglasses at night. No, they weren’t quoting the amazing one hit wonder Canadian legend Corey Hart (I wear my sunglasses at night/ So I can, So I can/ Watch you weave then breathe your story lines) they were actually researching some serious connections between poor sleep and dementia. The research led to the discovery that too much light exposure at night can interfere with our body’s circadian clock, the natural clock that most living things have that helps regulate behaviour based on light and darkness. They believe that since we have artificial light 24hrs a day our natural habits have been disturbed, but by wearing sunglasses about 2 hours before we go to bed we are teaching our bodies that it is night time and we should go to sleep. I am not a scientist or a sleep specialist, and I have not tried this trick myself, so do not take my word for it but feel free to try it. What I find interesting is this embracing of natural darkness. We understand darkness to be the absence of light, and mythology for nearly all of human history has understood that light is good and dark is bad. I hypothesize that this is in part because we humans cannot distinguish colour in either total darkness or extreme blinding bright light, and so darkness is scary, but when the light is on we can see and therefore feel safe. But what these UBC researchers are telling us is that too much light can also hinder important needs such as a good night’s sleep. I’ll pick up on that again in a moment.
In our Isaiah reading, light piercing a deep darkness is seen as a very good thing and a sign of hope. It gives the Israelites, who have suffered and are about to suffer greatly, a sense of encouragement. What I appreciate about Isaiah is his timelessness. While the historical context for this passage likely comes from an in between time, a time after the Assyrian assaults but before Babylonian conquest, it is a passage that can speak to any time or place. The Assyrians destroyed the Northern kingdom and made the Southern kingdom a pawn in their climb to power. The Babylonians are next in line and the Israelites can see this approaching empire and are terrified. However, Isaiah says, have hope for this darkness will come to an end and not only will we be enveloped in light but the burden of being these superpowers’ play things will come to an end, and God’s people will grow to be great again.
You know, I do not want to get political in the pulpit, but the reason why this passage is timeless is because we seem to be headed toward our own darkness. Between the rhetoric of hate, of misuse of power and of ignorance in the Middle East to the egotistical idiotic behaviour of the new president to the south of us, there is no better time to hear these words from Isaiah. Things may seem dark now, but there is hope for a brighter future. The Message translates this passage well, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. For those who lived in a land of deep shadows- light! Sunbursts of light! The joy of a great celebration, sharing rich gifts and warm greetings. The abuse of oppressors and cruelty of tyrants is gone!” It reminds me of a recent meme that I saw on someone’s Facebook page. It said, this too shall pass, it might pass like a kidney stone but it will pass. Well, we can hope that light always follows dark times. But what about this idea that darkness isn’t always bad.
While darkness might be the absence of light, I do not believe that darkness is the absence of God. Even more so in our own lives, where is God when we are experiencing darkness? Where is God when we are dealing with bad news? Where is God when we have hit rock bottom? God is as much a part of those moments in our lives, perhaps even more, than in the presence of our light-filled celebrations. I’m not suggesting that people should or need to experience deep darkness to experience God. I do not want to wish harm to anyone and I certainly don’t think that things are going to improve in Palestine or Israel by further violence, and I don’t think that a self-centred leader can change overnight. But I am saying that sometimes we need to wear sunglasses at night. Meaning, the light is all the more beautiful and the darkness is all the more rejuvenating if we have moments of transition. Sometimes the only way we can see the light is by experiencing darkness.
There is a lot that goes on in the Gospel passage involving both light and dark times. The passage opens with Jesus hearing of John’s arrest. This is a very dark time for Jesus as his greatest supporter, his predecessor in a manner of speaking, his cousin, is in jail for things John said about Jesus. I would argue that one of the reasons Jesus leaves Nazareth is because he knows that he could be jailed next. Jesus then does the very thing that I said was possible to do with the Isaiah passage because it is timeless. Jesus compares the passage with his current condition of living under the Roman Empire, and it positions Jesus as the light that will save God’s people from Roman rule. Jesus does this by encouraging people to encounter God’s rule. The Greek word used is basileia which is translated as empire, kingdom or reign, but Jesus uses it to mean activity. While the Roman Empire may be the ones in charge, God’s kingdom is established in the heavens and it is becoming an active force on earth- in the activity of Jesus, which is completely different to imperial rules of Roman occupation.
Warren Carter, a New Testament scholar, explains that Jesus demonstrates this new kind of activity or rule through his following actions as he calls Peter and Andrew, James and John who are fishermen, embedded in the imperial economy. “Rome asserted control over the land and sea, their production and the transportation and marketing of their yields with contracts and taxes. Jesus disrupts these men’s lives, calls them to a different loyalty and way of life, creates a new community, and gives them a new mission, to fish for people. His summons exhibits God’s empire at work, this light shining in the darkness of Roman-ruled Galilee.” Basically, while experiencing the darkness of John being in jail, Jesus uses it to teach and demonstrate the light which God brings through him and he calls upon these disciples to follow him.
What is important to note is that the Roman Empire did not fall during Jesus’ ministry. Jesus taught, healed and proclaimed and people were changed, but not from the darkness of oppression, rather within the darkness of the empire. Darkness was as much a part of Jesus’ ministry as light, for without it there would have been nothing to measure the greatest moment of his darkness as he was nailed to the cross or the great joy found in his resurrection. Sometimes we need the darkness to reset our natural clock so that the light can be received with uninhibited gratitude. Amen