Mark 13:1-13 Caroline and I have
a picture of us in High School on our senior trip to New York and there in the
background are the twin towers of the World Trade Center. If you had told me back then that they would
one day be reduced to rubble—I wouldn’t have believed you—but it happened. That is just exactly the kind of astounding
news that Jesus tells his disciples in our Gospel lesson today. St. Mark writes that:
As Jesus came out of
the temple, one of his disciples said to him, “Look, Teacher, what wonderful
stones and what wonderful buildings!” And Jesus said to him, “Do you see these
great buildings? There will not be left here one stone upon another that
will not be thrown down.”
The
temple was their identity as a nation.
It united them as Jews. It
connected them to the greatness of their past.
It was the place where they met God.
It was inconceivable that it wouldn’t exist anymore—stone upon stone
thrown down. And yet that is exactly
what happened in 70 A.D. as the prophecy of Jesus was fulfilled.
The World Trade
Center in New York and the temple at Jerusalem were much more than just
buildings—they were symbols of a culture and a people—and with their
destruction, the Americans in our day and the Jews in their day, had to
re-think the cultural and societal foundations that their lives were built
upon.
These foundations
of what we knew to be true and constant and enduring-- have shifted in ways
that we could never have imagined: marriage
as one man and one woman united for life—safe neighborhoods were kids can play
outside unattended—public schools that not only teach academics but morals and
good citizenship. These building blocks
of our culture have crumbled into the dustbin of history.
And what Jesus
told his disciples back then-- and what he tells us today-- is that these seismic
changes are not unrelated accidents—but signs of the end of the world itself
and only those who endure steadfast in faith unto the end will be saved.
But how is it possible
for frail human beings to endure in faith when mighty edifices such as the Twin
Towers and the Temple are brought to rubble?
When the cultural foundations of our way of life can be brought to an
end in a generation? When terrorists
murder the innocent at will?
Endurance to the
end begins with believing what Jesus
says about what we see in the world around us.
Mark writes that Jesus:
…sat on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple, [and] Peter and
James and John and Andrew asked him privately, “Tell us, when will these things
be, and what will be the sign when all these things are about to be
accomplished?” And Jesus began to say to them, “See that no one leads you
astray. Many will come in my name, saying, ‘I am he!’ and they will lead
many astray.
As
unfathomable as it must have been for them to think that the largest structure
in their world would be reduced to rubble—the disciples believed what Jesus
said and wanted to know the signs that would precede its destruction.
What about
us? Do we believe the words of Jesus
that what is happening on the world stage (with wars and terrorism and ethnic
violence) and what is happening in nature (with tsunamis and earthquakes and
famines) and what is happening in our culture (with marriage and sexuality
being turned upside down) and what is happening in the church (with a wholesale
departure from God’s Word) are all signs of the end? Do we believe Jesus?
Or have we
listened to false prophets who deny any ultimate meaning or connection between
these events and would lead us astray by their lies? And there are plenty of false prophets --just
like Jesus predicted. There are:
False prophets
within the church who tell us that the Holy Spirit is doing a new thing when it
comes to sexuality. False prophets
within the scientific community who deny the existence of the God of
creation. False prophets in the
political realm who assure us that lasting peace apart in a violent world will
be reached. And they all claim to speak
with the authority and certainty that can only truly be said of God.
To endure unto the
end and be saved we must first of all believe what Jesus says—that there will be an end. We need to believe that what we see in the
church and among the nations and in nature are not disconnected, random events--
but SIGNS of a systemic sin problem in the very fabric of creation.
That we believe
Jesus and know these events for what they are is the first step to enduring in
faith unto the end and being saved and the second step is trusting that Jesus
is using these events to bring forth a new world. Jesus says:
When you hear of wars
and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed. This must take place, but the end is not
yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There
will be earthquakes in various places; there will be famines. These are but
the beginning of the birth pains.
Twenty
four hours a day—on station after station—we can see the wars and earthquakes
and famines going on throughout the world.
We are eyewitnesses to the blood that flows in the streets of
Paris. But to all of it Jesus says: do not be alarmed. Do not be alarmed—all this must take place.
Not only has Jesus
let us know beforehand that the world we live in will be filled with violence
and war, he has also promised that his almighty, loving, wise hand is guiding
it to a new beginning—to a new heaven and a new earth unstained by sin where
his people who have endured to the end in faith will live in peace.
Believing that what we see in the world
are signs of the end and trusting
that our King is in control, we do not have to be alarmed but can see these
events as the necessary birth pains of a new creation when Jesus comes again in
glory-- and rejoice that Jesus has
given us a part to play in God’s mission of saving others. Jesus says:
“Be on your guard.
For they will deliver you over to councils, and you will be beaten in
synagogues, and you will stand before governors and kings for my sake, to
bear witness before them.
It’s
time for us to come to grips with the fact that we live in a world where much
of the visible church and our own government and certainly the other nations of
the world do not want to hear what Christians have to say and when we do speak
out we can count on mockery and marginalization and even murder if we live in
the Middle East.
Jesus said that
this very thing would happen and that his saving purpose would be fulfilled in
the midst of it: so that we could bear
witness to his salvation.
That salvation has
already been accomplished for us in our Lord’s death on the cross and his
glorious resurrection-- and our unshakable confidence in a rapidly changing
world is the enduring covenant God has made with us in his Son’ blood shed on
the cross and given to us in Holy Communion.
When the world’s
foundations are crumbling and the earth is moving towards its end, that message
must be heard --for God desires the salvation of all people. And that we have a part to play in that--
radically changes how we view what is happening around us and to us.
No longer do we
see ourselves as being at the mercy of forces beyond our control-- but we see
ourselves as God’s people with a mission to fulfill, courageously bearing
witness to Jesus as he provides us with opportunities. Jesus says that:
The gospel must first
be proclaimed to all nations. And when
they bring you to trial and deliver you over, do not be anxious beforehand what
you are to say, but say whatever is given you in that hour, for it is
not you who speak, but the Holy Spirit.
This Gospel
witness is our baptismal vocation, that we would declare the wonders of him who
called us out of darkness into his glorious light-- and it lifts up our gaze
from the hardships and difficulties of life and refocuses our vision to where
it ought to be: on our Great High Priest,
seated at the Father’s right hand, lovingly ordering the affairs of heaven and
earth for our eternal good.
How necessary this
vision is when we discover that opposition will not only come from those who
are far removed from us—but also from those closest to us. Jesus says:
Brother will deliver
brother over to death, and the father his child, and children will rise against
parents and have them put to death. And you will be hated by all for my
name's sake. But the one who endures to the end will be saved.
In
many ways this last hurdle to enduring to the end is the greatest of all for it
comes from those closest to us. We have
already seen it in our lifetimes in places like Nazi Germany and the Soviet
Union as family members turned against family members.
But it is present
among us right now as members of our families abandon the faith- and others make
sinful lifestyle choices- and others exchange the truth of God’s Word for the
lies of false prophets. It’s going on
right now in the lives of Muslims who convert to Christianity only to be
murdered by their own families.
The Christian who
takes their stand upon the Word of the Lord (and clings to it without
compromise in the world and church) is truly hated by all—even by those closest
to them.
And that is a
heavy burden to bear and we could never endure it to the end and be saved if
Christ had not already borne it for us—in our place.
During his earthly
life, his family largely abandoned him.
The religious leaders of his people wanted him dead-- and the political
leaders of the world put him to death.
But Jesus
faithfully endured it all to the end, giving up his own perfect life as the
sacrifice for us all. It is his
faithfulness unto death and the resurrection that is our hope for our own
endurance and victory. It is with his
shed blood that our names are already written in the Book of Life—assuring our
steadfastness to the end. Amen.
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