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A
sermon by Bob Mendelsohn Given
at Cronulla (Sydney) Anglican Church
15
March 2015
BIBLE
TEXT:
Now having been questioned by the Pharisees as to when the kingdom
of God was coming, He answered them and said, “The kingdom of God is
not coming with signs to be observed; nor will they say,
‘Look, here it is!’ or, ‘There it is!’ For behold, the kingdom of God
is in your midst.”
And He said to the disciples, “The days will come
when you will long to see one of the days of the Son of Man, and you will not
see it. They will say to you, ‘Look there! Look here!’ Do not go away,
and do not run after them. For just
like the lightning, when it flashes out of one part of the sky, shines to the
other part of the sky, so will the Son of Man be in His day. But first
He must suffer many things and be rejected by this generation.
And just as it happened in the days of Noah, so it will be also
in the days of the Son of Man: they were eating, they were drinking, they
were marrying, they were being given in marriage, until the day that Noah
entered the ark, and the flood came and destroyed them all. It was the
same as happened in the days of Lot: they were eating, they were drinking, they
were buying, they were selling, they were planting, they were building; but on the
day that Lot went out from Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and
destroyed them all. It will be just the same on the day that the Son of Man
is revealed. On that day, the one who is on the housetop and whose goods are
in the house must not go down to take them out; and likewise the one who is in
the field must not turn back.
Remember Lot’s wife.
Whoever seeks to keep his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life will preserve it. I tell you,
on that night there will be two in one bed; one will be taken and the other
will be left. There will be two women grinding at the same
place; one will be taken and the other will be left. Two men
will be in the field; one will be taken and the other will be left.”
And answering they said to Him, “Where, Lord?” And He said to
them, “Where the body is,
there also the vultures will be gathered.”
Thank you to Pastor Rich, for inviting me today and for assigning me this text from Luke 17. Seems you have been going through this book of the Bible in a series, and I'm glad to fit in today with a message I call "The Last Days according to Jesus."
Who will win the election Saturday week? Who will win the Cricket World Cup? Will the Sharks have a go at the top of the table in League this year? No matter how many tealeaves you use, no matter how many mediums you consult, the content of today’s lesson and today’s text appears to highlight Jesus’ general antipathy toward attempts to engage in apocalyptic timetabling. Even so, today’s text will also clearly show both drama and destruction at the real apocalypse.
Who will win the election Saturday week? Who will win the Cricket World Cup? Will the Sharks have a go at the top of the table in League this year? No matter how many tealeaves you use, no matter how many mediums you consult, the content of today’s lesson and today’s text appears to highlight Jesus’ general antipathy toward attempts to engage in apocalyptic timetabling. Even so, today’s text will also clearly show both drama and destruction at the real apocalypse.
This week into our bookshop in Bondi Junction a
man came who is a real believer. But he spent a significant time trying to
convince me that since the Third Temple was yet to be rebuilt, that all Jews
were not believing in Jesus, that a particular seal in Revelation or a symbolic
event in the prophet Daniel had not happened…since all these cataclysmic events
were yet future, that obviously Jesus was not set to return today. He had time;
others still had time; there was plenty of time to get ready for the return of
the Messiah.
It’s exactly that evaluation that prompted
Yeshua to speak all these red-letter words in today’s text. No, He alleged, you
don’t have time. No, when you think that everything is as it was and is as it
will be, that’s when you need to look up. The end is in view. Your end is in
view. The Kingdom is coming. The Bible says the end will come suddenly, like
lightning, and unmistakably, like lightning.
Then there is another group of people who look
at the future. These are they who watch the newspaper in one hand and read the
Bible in the other hand and will tell you that ISIS is prophesied in that Bible
passage, and the Global Financial Crisis in 2008 was predicted in another
passage. They aver that the world is ending today or maybe tonight, and they
have signs to prove it. Earthquakes and wars and rumors of wars. Tsunamis and
volcanic blasts, the cyclone in Port Vila, Vanuatu, even sycamore trees in New York City. Jesus is coming back
today at 2:30 pm. They can prove it. But
Jesus also has something to say to those people.
Look at verse 20: The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to be
observed.
The words here point to the process of trying to
work out, by means of almost scientific observations, what is happening in
connection with the coming of the kingdom of God, whether these observations
take the form of looking for supernatural signs like blood moons or falling
Temples, people who project truths from the present political situation,
looking at the entrails of animals, examining the configuration of the stars,
or some other form. One cannot discern when the kingdom of God will come by
prognostication on the basis of the observation of raw data.
So Jesus negates both groups of sign observers,
those who think it’s observable and those who think it will happen but not yet.
Both evaluate end-times on the basis of signs. But there are two other groups
we should mention. Give me a moment.
I remember the fabled story of the Italian
peasant who looked up one day and saw Jesus returning in the clouds. He ran to
the neighborhood parish and told the priest, “Look up, Father, Jesus is
a-coming.” Sure enough the parish priest looked up and saw what the peasant
told him, and they ran to the priest’s car, drove to the big city and told the
bishop. “Look up, your excellency; Jesus is a-coming!” The bishop saw what they
other saw, and they together went to the bishop’s car and drove straight to
Rome. There they bypassed formalities and demanded an audience with the pope.
The three men made it into the Vatican and into the pope’s chambers. “Holy
Father, look up, Jesus is a-coming!” The men stood still as the pope ran to the
window overlooking St Peter’s square, checked overhead and ran back into his
office. They watched as he feverishly began writing note after letter after
note. Finally, the bishop gathered the courage and said, “Holy Father, excuse
me, what are you doing?” The pope looked up hurriedly and said, “Jesus is
a-coming, look-a-busy!”
There are two other groups of people, with
equally wrong responses to knowing the reality of the return of the Messiah: 1)
you either become religious or 2) you dismiss the idea altogether. Those are
both in view as well in our passage and in our 21st century world in
Cronulla, in the Shire, in Sydney, and beyond. If Jesus is coming back, and you
want to ‘be ready’ then religion seems to fill the bill for some, as is
evidenced in the pope story of being busy. On the other hand, if Jesus is
coming back and you don’t really care about Him, His Kingdom, or all that
means, then you will carry on life as you know it, with its commensurate political
considerations, footy contests, pub crawling, and work-a-day worldviews. Neither
of those are what Jesus recommends.
Whatever your response to the reality of the
parousia, the appearing again of the Lord Jesus, several things are clear.
1)
You will
not know the day or the time, until it happens.
2)
You will
not be able to withstand its consequences.
3)
You cannot
affect its timing. It will be sudden.
4)
Your fate
is already determined by your professions of faith
Today is the Ides of March, the day when Julius
Caesar was killed in Rome around 40 BC. According to Plutarch, a seer had
warned Caesar about the day and Julius dismissed the warning. When Caesar saw the
seer approaching, Caesar shouted after him, “The Ides of March have come”
implying that the seer’s words did not come to pass. The seer replied, “But
they are not gone,” implying that the day was not over. Sure enough, moments
later Caesar was stabbed to death. Dismissing the reality of warnings is not a
good thing to do, whether it’s a red light on your
car’s dashboard or a leaky faucet in the basement of the parish hall. The
writer of Hebrews said, “See to it that you do not refuse Him who is speaking.
For if those did not escape when they refused him who warned them on earth,
much less will we escape who turn away from Him who warns from heaven.” (12.25)
Warnings have their place, not for us to be academic about the timing
of the warnings, but to listen and learn and change according to the measure of
the warning. When a label on a box of cereal indicates that some peanuts are
included, an anaphylaxic person, one with a peanut allergy, must take notice.
If he doesn’t, it might spell death to him.
So Yeshua tells us in this passage that the end / beginning will be
like two other eras in biblical and world history-- the time of Noah and the
time of Lot and Sodom and Gomorrah. In each narrative, a person warns the
planet about impending doom, people dismiss it as nonsense, go about their
ordinary life as if nothing will ever change, and God sends judgment to the
place, causing havoc, flood, fire, and destruction. Yeshua is teaching that if
we also similarly dismiss the warnings He is giving us from heaven, then we
have no confidence in being part of the Kingdom or community of God.
And God’s judgment comes with precision, so that one is taken and
another left even though they handle similar trades or situations. The judgment
of God is not about trades or economics; it’s about our relationship with the
Almighty.
One more thing about the Kingdom, Jesus says, “it’s in the midst of you.” (17.21) It’s right there,
and some of you will see it, and some will miss it. But whether you think it’s
coming in 2018 or when the Sharks win the Premiership or if you think
cataclysmic events have to take place, a Temple has to fall and rise, or Rome
or ISIS has to be dismantled, the reality is that while we argue about futures,
the King of the Kingdom is right there, and if we are in relationship to Him,
the Kingdom has come. OF course, there will be a future and comprehensive,
instantaneous and cataclysmic new world, but for now, while you wait for it,
the King is already here. Submit to Him and be brought near to the Government
of God. God’s realm is here. God’s son is here. God is here!
Theologically, we learn the phrase, “Now and not yet.” That means
that the Kingdom is now, present in Yeshua, and not yet, but is coming soon,
with clarity and precision, with power and drama, and when God fully
establishes His authority and rule on the earth, no one will withstand it. That
day is certainly coming. This day however, you can join the community of faith.
There is a ‘now’ for you who are listening; there will be a ‘then’ as well.
Don’t wait until ‘then’ to make the choices you should make ‘now’ in following
Messiah.
Don’t look-a-busy.
Don’t dismiss this.
Jesus really is returning, and as dramatic as the flood of Noah and
its commensurate destruction, as dramatic as the fire-and-brimstone of Sodom
and Gomorrah and its commensurate destruction, even to Lot’s longing-to-return
wife, so will the drama and destruction be at the return of Jesus. Be ready,
choose well. Religion won’t cut it; dismissal won’t make it go away.
The question to you today is “What will you do with Jesus?”
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