01. December 2025
Advent 1 Midweek
Matthew 3:1-6; James 5:7-10
This is the Word of the Lord that came to me, so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing, you may have life in His + Name. AMEN.
âIn those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea, âRepent, for the kingdom of heaven is at handââ (Matt. 3:1â2). And James says: âBe patient, therefore, brothers, until the coming of the Lord⌠Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at handâ (James 5:7â8). Same Lord. Same coming. Same urgency.
John the Baptist is the man for Advent. He is the preparer, the forerunner. He stands between the old and the new, between promise and fulfillment. During these weeks of Advent, we hear him again and again: at the Jordan, in Herodâs prison, questioned by Pharisees, pointing away from himself and toward Christ.
John doesnât build a brand. He doesnât gather a fan club. When they ask him, âAre you the Christ?â he confesses and does not deny: âI am not the Christ.â The Christ is already among them. John isnât worthy to stoop down and untie His sandals. Thatâs Advent.
Advent is the season where God puts John in front of you and says, âListen to him. Learn from him.â Not because John is the Savior, but because John knows he isnât. He prepares the way by preaching repentance and by baptizing sinners. He shows the church how to live in the in-between time: hear preaching, receive baptism, repent.
What you see in Matthew 3âpreaching and baptizingâis not an odd preface to the ârealâ Gospel. Itâs the pattern. Matthew begins with John preaching and baptizing, and he ends with Jesus sending His disciples to preach and baptize: âGo therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them⌠and teaching them⌠And behold, I am with you alwaysâ (Matt. 28:19â20).
John prepares the way by preaching and baptizing. The apostles continue the same work by preaching and baptizing. And in between Christâs ascension and His coming again, this is the life of the church. Thatâs exactly where James puts us. âBe patient, therefore, brothers, until the coming of the Lord. See how the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the earth⌠You also, be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at handâ (James 5:7â8).
You are not living in neutral time. You are not just âdoing lifeâ and âcelebrating holidays.â You are living between the Lordâs first coming in humility and His final coming in glory. This is the season of waiting. Not lazy waiting. Not distracted waiting. Not, âIâll get serious laterâ waiting. The farmer doesnât waste the season between sowing and harvest. He doesnât scream at the field, but he also doesnât sit on the couch binging nonsense while the crop dies. He works, he watches, he prays, he waits.
âEstablish your hearts,â James says. Nail them down in Christ. Fix them on His coming. Because âthe Judge is standing at the doorâ (James 5:9). John says, âRepent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.â James says, âEstablish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand.â Same message: the time is short. Wake up.
So Advent is our season. First, because Jesus is coming. Not as a baby in a manger like He did two thousand years agoâthat already happened. That work is finished. He has already lived, suffered, died, risen, ascended, and sent His Spirit. He has done everything.
Now we wait. We are in the in-between time, and we need to be awake. We need to repent. We need to hear preaching. We need, as Christâs church, to go on baptizing in His Name and teaching all that He commanded. We need to live like people who know the Judge is at the door and the harvest is coming.
Second, Advent is our season because it is a season of repentance, preparation, and discipline. Like Lent, Advent is not about religious sentiment. It is about God dragging your priorities, your habits, and your heart into the light. Advent is not âpre-Christmas.â If it were, the readings would all be about Bethlehem and genealogies and angel choirsâMatthew 1, Luke 1â2. Instead, what does the church give you?
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Advent 1: Jesus rides into Jerusalem on a donkeyâto die.
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Advent 2: He prophesies distress among the nations, darkened skies, and the Son of Man coming again in clouds.
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Advent 3 and 4: John the Baptist, thirty years old, preaching by the Jordan and from Herodâs jail, calling sinners to repentance and pointing to the Lamb of God.
Thatâs deliberate. The liturgy is catechizing you. Advent is not a warm-up act for Christmas. Advent is its own thing. It trains you to live between the comings of Christ: remembering His first coming, receiving His present coming in Word and Sacrament, and longing for His coming again in glory. And that means Advent goes right for your idols.
Advent isnât primarily about giving up soda or sweets, as if the main problem were calories. It may be good to say no to food, drink, or comfort to curb your gluttonous flesh. That can be helpful. But if thatâs where it stops, youâve missed the point. Advent is calling you to take a hard look at where your heart is.
Repent of your pride that puts you above those around you.
Repent of your greed that obsesses over what others have and you donât.
Repent of your lust for people and things that God has not given you.
Repent of wasting hours on brain-dead entertainment while your vocations starve.
Repent of shirking your duties as father, mother, son, daughter, husband, wife, or worker.
Just with pride, greed, and lust, you already have enough to confess to God and to your pastor. And you know thereâs more. You know your heart. James doesnât let you hide it behind pious language: âDo not grumble against one another, brothers, so that you may not be judgedâ (James 5:9). Your complaining, your bitterness, your contempt for fellow ChristiansâChrist hears it. The Judge at the door hears it.
So stop pretending you can sin now and repent later. âThe coming of the Lord is at hand.â The time is short. Repent.
And then what? Just sit and feel bad? No. John doesnât just shout âRepentâ and walk away. He baptizes. He preaches the One who is coming after him, whose sandals he is not worthy to carry, who will baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire. James doesnât just say, âBe patient.â He points you to the Lordâs compassion and mercy and holds up âthe prophets who spoke in the name of the Lordâ as examples (James 5:10-11). The Lord does not fail His people. He never has.
So Advent is also the season to return to what the Lord has actually given you for this in-between time:
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Teach your children the faith at home. Donât outsource it. Open the Scriptures. Speak the catechism. Sing the hymns of the churchâespecially the Advent hymns that point not to a cute baby only, but to the cross and the Last Day.
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Pray with your family. Pray about their needs and the needs of others. Pray âCome, Lord Jesusâ as more than a meal rhymeâpray it as the cry of people who actually want Him to end this broken age.
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Invigorate your own Bible study, prayer, and devotion. Put away some of the noise and fill your ears with what actually strengthens faith.
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Be a neighbor to those who are hurting. Give a listening ear, a helping hand, a clear confession of the hope you have because Jesus is crucified and risen and coming again.
God uses pain and suffering in this world to pry our fingers off of idols and to point us and others to Christ and to the end. Advent teaches you to see that, to receive even the hard days as reminders: âThe Judge is at the door. The harvest is coming. The Lord is near.â
And in all of this, you are not left guessing how the story ends. âThe end is certain. We know it. Itâs been given to us in Holy Scripture. We know who has conquered sin, death, and the devil.â Christ has. The One John pointed to. The One James preaches about.
So you waitânot in terror, but in confidence. You wait knowing with certainty that the same Jesus who was born for you, who was crucified for you, who rose for you, will come again for you, and He will take you to be with Him forever. You have heard the preaching of the apostles. You have been baptized in water and the Word. You are fed with the body and blood of the Lamb. You are exactly where the Lord wants you to be in this in-between time.
So use this Advent well. Let Johnâs preaching, Jamesâs exhortation, the readings, the hymns, the prayers all do their work: calling you to repentance, fixing your eyes on Christ, establishing your heart in the promise of His coming. âThe Lord is at hand.â âRepent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.â âBe patient⌠establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand.â Come, Lord Jesus. Amen.
This is the Word of the Lord that came to me, so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing, you may have life in His + Name. AMEN.
Rev. Christopher R. Gillespie
St. John Ev. Lutheran Church & School - Sherman Center
Random Lake, Wisconsin