Return of the King

“And this the name by which it will be called: The LORD is our righteousness.” – Jeremiah 33:16

The first Sunday of Advent always seems out of place to me and I’m not exactly sure why.  The primary gospel lesson assigned has always been Palm Sunday. It is the Advent of the King. I think it might be because the Pastor I had growing up always switched the lesson up.  If my memory is still working, I tend to remember a couple of Apocalypse Sundays. And there is an alternate text given.  It could also just be that as an American, speaking about Kings seems foreign, maybe traitorous. We are citizens, not subjects. But the Advent Palm Sunday is about all the legends of the Return of the King and a dwelling of peace.

In the Old Testament you can talk about three covenants. (Well, there is a 4th, but that one with Noah is something of a prefigurement of the three.  Noah receives the promise of no more floods which can only be received by faith.  And immediately after men have no faith and start building the Tower of Babel.  Noah also receives a bit of the law in regards to killing men and animals (Genesis 9). And according to the apocryphal book of Jubilees that Noahide law had six of the 10 commandments.)  The three primary covenants are the one of Faith through Abraham, the law of Sinai through Moses, and the promise of a King with an eternal throne through David.  The old testament reading for this Sunday (Jeremiah 33:14-16) reminds of all three covenants.  “At that time I will cause a righteous Branch to spring up for David, and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land.”

We have a natural sense of justice. Those Noahide laws, the 10 commandments, are a revelation of the natural law. A major part of the purpose of a King is to execute justice. But a King is also called “Your Grace.” Not only executing justice, the King is to execute righteousness.  And it is that grace, that righteousness which is tougher.  We have no true innate sense of righteousness. We only know it when we see it. And even then in our fallen condition don’t always see it let alone desire it.  Because right now, to fulfill the law and justice, the cross is our righteousness. Our King took his own punishment.  The LORD is our righteousness that he might treat us by his grace.

On that first Advent the King came to execute righteousness. “In those days Judah will be saved (Jeremiah 33:16),”  But we await the return of the King.  “In those days….Jerusalem will dwell securely.” We know the law, but the devil the world and our flesh are still too much with us.  Our righteousness and salvation are sure in Christ, but what we will be has not yet appeared. We walk in danger all the way.  The stewards can be faithless.  Tragedies befall kingdoms of this world. We long for the righteous branch.  We wait for the King to approach Jerusalem once again.  And to enter that heavenly city, where the righteous might dwell securely under the eternal throne.

It’s Camelot and Gondor and Rome and Constantinople and Shang-Ri-La and Atlantis and Avalon and every legend, but made real. The LORD becomes incarnate. The LORD has raised up a righteous branch for David.  The LORD keeps his promises. His covenants are true.  The King shall come when morning dawns. And he shall execute justice and righteousness. And we shall dwell securely under his throne.

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