Since last Saturday the question that has been on most people’s lips is: “How Are The Roads?”
People in the south or warmer climates whose roads are not plagued with potholes from the severe expansion and contraction of winter freezes and summer’s scorching heat don’t ask those kinds of questions.
I was bumping along with a friend from Virginia one time over pothole scared pavement with traffic doing the usual slalom run to avoid major suspension damage to the car when he said to me: “If a road was this bad back home, it would be closed.”
I just stared at him while I continued to drive on bravely turning the steering wheel this way and that like they do in the movies.
But we all know he is right because we have heard the dreaded reports that the roads are “snow packed and hazardous” and if we were foolish enough to venture out anyway, we have arrived at our destination with our hands permanently cramped from clutching the wheel in a vicelike grip and our eyes as big as our face.
I could go on with what we mean when we ask, how are the roads. Are the plows out? Have they been salted? Are they icy? What about black ice? Sleet? Freezing rain? Fog? Any reports of those? The terrors are almost too numerous to consider.
But living in Chicago, how are the roads, is a question applicable to any season. How much traffic is there with the construction? Did they ever finish the bridge that was demolished two years ago and has yet to be rebuilt?
There is a reason that every news station has a traffic helicopter and several traffic reporters to answer the question, how are the roads, before we’ve even downed our first cup of coffee.
About this time of year there is a human speed bump on our road to Christmas. His name is John the Baptist and try as we might there is pretty much no way to get around him. All we can do is slam on the breaks and wait for the couple of Sunday’s that he shows up in our readings to pass.
How is the road this morning? Well, to tell you the truth, there is some wild guy standing in the middle and, as baffling as it seems, John’s detour is the only way we have to the swaddling clothes, angel's wings, and fleecy lambs we hold dear each December. As baffling as it may seem, the holy drama of the season depends on the disheveled baptizer’s opening act.
Truth be told, I tend to avoid guys like John.
People who introduce themselves as bearing a message from God do not commend themselves to us easily. If we do turn an ear to them out of curiosity, or perhaps out of an amused and sometimes horrified fascination, they tend to wear out their welcome quickly.1
Yet we are told. “People from Jerusalem and from all over the Jordan Valley, and, in fact, from every section of Judea went out to the wilderness to hear him preach.”2
As Dr. Fred Craddock said of him once in a sermon
Crowds came from everywhere ... they came from the towns and from Jerusalem. Plows were left in the furrows, bread was left in the oven, shops were left unattended, school was let out early because the crowds were moving out into the desert to hear this extraordinary preacher.
I’m sure that many people who went were just curious, curious about the way he looked and the way he talked.3
There must have been some kind of beauty to John the Baptist. “I think a lot about his tone of voice. I have always pictured him with a gravelly, loud voice, like one of those street preachers.”4
He is an unavoidable bump on our road to Christmas.
And, as Dr. Tom Are, noted when he was the interim pastor at Fourth Presbyterian. John the Baptist “comes with some anger issues.”
Dr. Are pointed out that in Matthew’s gospel the first words out of his mouth are, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?”5
Both Dr. Are and I can’t remember in all our years of preaching ever starting a sermon by calling our congregations a brood of vipers. We’ve thought about it but thinking and doing are two different matters.6
Anybody who has ever served as an interim can see a lot of our mission in John. Our job is to prepare the way for the one who is coming after us. Our job is not to be a roadblock in his or her path but make the road less rough and the path straight. We have a lot in common with good old John the Baptist without, of course, we hope, the beheading part. Though that is always a risk when you remind people that their past is their past.
It is a great deal like the disclaimer that all the television stock experts couch their predictions with. “Past performance is no guarantee of future results.”
John was less gentle. He said in a paraphase:
It’s your life that must change, not your skin! And don’t think you can pull rank by claiming Abraham as father. Being a descendant of Abraham is neither here nor there. Descendants of Abraham are a dime a dozen. What counts is your life. Is it green and flourishing? Because if it’s deadwood, it goes on the fire.7
We’re not crazy about hearing that we really do need to change. When someone talks about change or tries to bring about change, we don’t want to hear it. Change makes us defensive.
But, if we are open to it, a call to change can also help us say to ourselves. “Maybe I did do that wrong?” “Maybe I have been listening to the wrong voices or maybe only just my own voice instead of those who might just know better?” Change can lead to growth and sometimes, if we are willing to change, it can lead to big growth.
John had a word for it and the word was repent! This is more than just a bump in the road that has to be avoided. This is even more than Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken”. We all remember the closing lines: “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the one less travelled by, and that has made all the difference.” But we forget how Frost framed the options: “I stood ... And looked down one as far as I could ... Then took the other, just as fair.”8 Two equal options. One road just as good as the other.
That is not the repentance neither John nor Jesus was talking about. They are talking about a change so radical that we don’t even have a word for it in English.
Scholars, which means those who have better language skills than I do, tell us: “John is calling on the religious and political elite from Judea and Jerusalem to repent. The Greek word {for repent} metanoia literally means taking on a new mindset. It has the connotation of making an about-turn and changing course.”9
Looks like the road John and Jesus are on doesn’t contain just a speed bump but a big brick roadblock that is not asking, but demanding, that if we are to follow Jesus, we are going to have to completely change course.
It means that when we treat others we don’t do so as we may have done so in the past. Once we’ve met Jesus and sincerely sought to follow him, we just can’t say with a shrug “not everybody is going to be happy at all times”, so what. While they may not be happy Jesus and John remind us that we are ever and always to treat others with respect.
That’s the only way we live out the Gospel. That is the only we will ever be able to live into the peaceable world Isaiah was dreaming about. Turning from the threadbare ways of business and the world and acting the way Jesus would have us act is not just taking another road but taking the right road.
It’s the road that tells us, in another one of my life commandments, that people are more important than things. That the lives and feelings of others are more important than getting the job done. That it is not bulldozing over other people to get what we want to get accomplished, accomplished, but remembering that other people’s lives may be affected by what we are trying to do.
I don’t think that it is any accident that the Oxford University Press picked “rage-bate” as 2025's word of the year.
The Oxford University Press defines "rage bait" as “online content deliberately designed to elicit anger or outrage by being frustrating, provocative, or offensive, typically posted in order to increase traffic to or engagement with a particular web page or social media content.”
Before, the internet was focused on grabbing our attention by sparking curiosity in exchange for clicks, but now we’ve seen a dramatic shift to it hijacking and influencing our emotions, and how we respond. The phrase is shorthand for online content that is intentionally meant to elicit anger. The term has tripled in usage over the last year, according to Oxford.10
It could be said of John the Baptist that he was pure rage bate. “Brood of Vipers.” “Ax at the root of the tree” I’m sure his listeners heart rates increased when John thundered out this kind of stuff.
Again, as Dr. Craddock said of him, “He was no politician trying to make yes sound like no and no sound like yes. He said, ‘The judge is coming, and I’m here to serve subpoenas.’”11
But he didn’t leave us, like the cable tv pundits, to stew in our rage in order that we’ll come back the next day for more. Why anybody would do that, I’ll never know.
He pointed us to Jesus who, if I understand him correctly, not only told us but showed us how life could be not just a little different but really different.
We repent not as an indictment but so that we can clear our minds and imaginations to see the possibilities that have been put before us.
We repent in the belief that in Jesus we don’t have to be who we have always been.
We repent so that we can be the ones who stand tall in a world of smallness.
Maybe John is more than a speed bump or a snowstorm on our road to Bethlehem. Maybe John isn’t even a detour offering us another road which is just the same as any other.
Maybe John is offering us a completely new direction for our lives, in the babe of Bethlehem, to be sure, but in the man of Galilee who, when he grew up showed us a new way, a better way.
How are the roads? With Jesus they’ll be different and they may even be better.
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1. “Opening Act,” The Christian Century, November 29, 2003, https://www.christiancentury.org/opening-act?
2. St. Matthew 3:5. (TLB) [TLB=The Living Bible {Carol Stream:Tyndale House Publishers, 1971}]
3. Fred B. Craddock, Richard F. Ward, and Mike Graves, Craddock Stories (St. Louis: Chalice Press, 2001). 109-115.
4. James C. Howell, “What Can We Say Come December 7? Advent 2,” James Howell’s Weekly Preaching Notions, January 1, 2025, https://jameshowellsweeklypreachingnotions.blogspot.com/.
5. St. Matthew 3:7b. (NRSVue) [NRSVus=The New Revised Standard Version updated edition]
6. Tom Are, “The Metanoia Man.” Sermon preached at the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago. 10 December 2023
7. St. Matthew 3:7–10. (MESSAGE) [MESSAGE:Eugene H. Peterson, The Message {Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress, 2004}]
8. Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken,” The Poetry Foundation, accessed December 5, 2025, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44272/the-road-not-taken.
9. Daniel Smith Christopher, “Matthew 3:1-12. Commentary 1: Connecting the Reading with Scripture,” Connections: A Lectionary Commentary for Preaching and Worship, Year A, 1 (Louisville: Westminister|John Knox Press, 2019): 31–33.
10. Melina Khan, “‘Rage Bait’ Is Oxford’s Word of the Year for 2025. What It Means.,” USA Today, December 1, 2025, https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2025/12/01/rage-bait-oxford-word-of-the-year/87547277007/.
11. Craddock, loc.cit.




