Readings:
Isaiah 65:17-25; Canticle 3; 2 Thessalonians 3:6-13; Luke 21:5-19 These
Sundays leading up to the end of the church year reflect our need to
live our lives in expectancy.
They call us to find grace in an apocalyptic age, an age that
dwells on the end of time.
They call us to deal with the ambiguity of living with
uncertainty about the future.
They call us to live authentically.
It represents a classic theme in Scripture and a distinct view of
history.
Jesus
is speaking to the disciples.
He tells them that the beautiful temple they see before them will
not last.
It is the same temple that was rebuilt at great price following
the exile in Babylon.
"What are the signs," they want to know.
Jesus
paints a portrait of a world in great turmoil and conflict.
"Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom; there will be great earthquakes, and in various places famines
and plagues; and there will be dreadful portents and great signs from
heaven."
Jesus tells them that it will be a time of testing for the
faithful.
They will experience persecution, betrayal, hatred and even
death.
It
is a frightening picture.
It was frightening to the disciples.
It was frightening to the early Christians as they struggled with
the persecution they faced.
Paul in writing to the people of Thessalonica is talking to those
who are ready to give up.
Fear of what the future may hold causes them to opt out of life.
Why bother to work if it will all end tomorrow?
They are unable or unwilling to live with that kind of
uncertainty that often brings with it a sense of hopelessness and
meaninglessness.
And
how remarkably like our own time and place! We live in a world where
there is never peace, war in the Middle East, the war against terrorism,
tribal wars in the Sudan and other parts of Africa, conflict between
Moslem and Christian, Moslem and Jew, Tamil and Senegalese.
The list seems endless.
On top of that, there is an increase in the destructive forces of
nature; consider this past hurricane season in Florida and the
Caribbean.
There is proof of global warming as the polar icecaps recede more
and more.
There are famines.
There are plagues such as we have never encountered before like
SARS and AIDS.
There is poverty in the midst of plenty.
There is violence.
Many continue to question whether we live in the end times.
Jesus’
answer to the disciples was remarkable when you think about it.
He called them to persevere in the faith.
He recognized that it was a time of terrible threat; yet it was
too, as such times are, a time of deep rewards and rich promise.
“Do
not be led astray!” Jesus reminds them.
This may be a time of anxiety and uncertainty, but it is a time
to keep your wits about you.
It is a time to think for yourself, to use the reason that God
has given you.
“Don’t
go after the ones who would lead you astray,” he continues.
Voices may tell you that the end is near.
Don’t follow those voices.
Follow God.
Trust in the promises that God has made to you.
Trust in the promises that God has continued to fulfill in
God’s people.
Finally
he tells them, “Don’t be terrified!” Don’t let fear stop you in
your tracks! You may feel lost in a wilderness where there are a million
questions and no answers.
Trust in God’s promises and live in hope.
It
is not simply good advice to the disciples; it is also good advice to
the early Christians.
The early believers were persecuted and tried.
Many were martyred for the faith.
They needed Jesus’ words to help them live with courage and
conviction.
Their perseverance in the faith has meant over two thousand years
of faithful witness and service.
It
puts our own faith into perspective as well.
It is not up to us to make claims about special knowledge when it
comes to the signs of the end of time.
It is up to us to remain faithful to the message of salvation and
to be obedient to the teachings of Jesus.
It is up to us to live out our lives in faith, being like Christ.
What
frightens you most about the future of the church?
Some people fear that we have become irrelevant, that we need to
change the way we worship and the way we approach God.
Some think that we have deviated too far from Scripture.
There are many who fear that we will allow issues like Same-Sex
blessing to fracture our unity.
What
worries you about the future of the world?
Is it the apathy you see in people who care so little about the
environment that they will throw their garbage wherever it lands?
Is it the resistance on the part of the government to deal with
such things as the Kyoto accord?
Is it terrorism, or child poverty, or the violence in society?
Those
words of Jesus continue to speak to us.
“Don’t be led astray!” There are many voices out there that
can lead us astray.
I suspect that for many of us it is those nagging voices that
tell us that there is nothing we can do to change what is going on.
“Don’t go after those voices,” Jesus reminds us.
Our call is to follow Jesus, to be like Christ, to seek Christ in
those we encounter in our lives, to be Christ in the world.
And especially “don’t be terrified!” That will just stop
you from accomplishing anything.
So
what if we stop wondering when the weeping will cease, and start to do
something constructive about the state of the world?
We are faced with terrible threat.
And yet it is also a time of rich promise.
We live with anxiety and uncertainty, but it is also a time of
great rewards and benefits.
Do we look forward to the coming of God’s reign?
Discipleship
is not about waiting for God to do something; it is about anticipating
God’s actions in the world.
It is about being Christ in the world.
It is about serving with compassion and mercy.
What will you do today in anticipation of the fulfillment of
God’s promises?
It is ultimately up to each one of us.
It begins with putting our trust in our loving God.
It continues with living our lives faithfully and prayerfully.
It means especially living out God’s promises in everything we
do.
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