Reading the Signs - Sermon on Luke 21:5-19
by Dr. Luke Bouman, Valparaiso University
Luke 21:5When some were speaking about the temple, how it was adorned with
beautiful stones and gifts dedicated to God, he said, 6"As for these things that
you see, the days will come when not one stone will be left upon another; all
will be thrown down." 7They asked him, "Teacher, when will this be, and what
will be the sign that this is about to take place?" 8And he said, "Beware that
you are not led astray; for many will come in my name and say, ‘I am he!' and,
‘The time is near!' Do not go after them. 9"When you hear of wars and
insurrections, do not be terrified; for these things must take place first, but
the end will not follow immediately." 10Then he said to them, "Nation will rise
against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; 11there will be great earthquakes,
and in various places famines and plagues; and there will be dreadful portents
and great signs from heaven. 12"But before all this occurs, they will arrest you
and persecute you; they will hand you over to synagogues and prisons, and you
will be brought before kings and governors because of my name. 13This will give
you an opportunity to testify. 14So make up your minds not to prepare your
defense in advance; 15for I will give you words and a wisdom that none of your
opponents will be able to withstand or contradict. 16You will be betrayed even
by parents and brothers, by relatives and friends; and they will put some of you
to death. 17You will be hated by all because of my name. 18But not a hair of
your head will perish. 19 By your endurance you will gain your souls.
Reading the Signs
Fall has come late to my new home in Valparaiso, Indiana. It is at times of year
like this that one does not have to use much imagination to understand why some
of the area's early settlers decided to call this city by a Spanish name that
means "vale of paradise." The splendor of the fall and the colors of red,
orange, brown and the ever present evergreen create a feast for the eyes. This
visual banquet is marvelous, but it is also temporary. Already the leaves are
falling. I know that this weekend, the monumental task of raking the leaves from
the 10 large maple trees that populate my yard will begin. Soon the trees will
be bare, their beauty a memory, and winter's icy blast will quicken the step
that still lingers for the wonder of God's paintbrush. Fall is a signpost of
what is to come.
But even the worst pessimist does not think that fall is the sign of a permanent
winter. We all know that as sure as fall gives way to winter, so too will winter
melt in the face of the spring, which in turn will give way to the warmth of
summer. Such is the way of seasons the times as we know them. They cycle ever
onward and are for the marking of days and weeks and months and years. We know
how to read the signs of the seasons. We have been reading them for a long time.
The evident seasons are one thing to read, but the changes from epoch to epoch
of history are another. What of the signs of these changes. At times the words
of the bible, the words of Jesus himself, proclaim these signs as there for the
reading as well (just continue reading in Luke's gospel after today's text for
an example of this). At other times, we are warned that the days and weeks are
coming, but at an unexpected time, and thus we should stand ready to meet them
at all times (and we'll get a firm dose of that medicine in the season of Advent
come this December).
But in our text for today, the disciples puzzle over Jesus words of warning. The
beauty that they see, signified by the splendor of the Jerusalem temple, seems
so much more permanent than the trees that change with the season. Yet Jesus
warns that it will all pass away. What will this grand destruction mean? Is it
the start of a new epoch of history? Is the age of Messiah and Israel's
vindication upon them? If so, then the destruction of so important a national
symbol seems to bode ill for the whole enterprise. Puzzled, the disciples as
Jesus what it all means.
Jesus answer is surprising. The wars, the destructions, the persecutions, all
will take place. Lots of the kinds of spectacular events associated with "the
end of the world" will happen. But the end is not associated with those things.
They are almost like the colors of the fall. They will happen and will continue
to happen (as they have for nearly two thousand years). But these signs are not
to be read as the time when history will change from one era to another. THAT
change is also happening, but not with the spectacular cosmic events expected.
Changing the Story
Israel, at the time of Jesus and for centuries before, had national stories.
Chief among them was the story of the Exodus. This was the story of their
origins as a people. It was a family story, dealing with their ancient ancestor,
Jacob. It was a patterned story: including an oppressive nation (Egypt) with an
oppressive king (Pharaoh) not to mention God's intervention and the people's
vindication. It was a repeating story: Egypt could also be Babylon and Syria,
Pharaoh could also be Nebuchadnezzer and Antiochus Epiphanes, God still
intervened and the people were vindicated time and again.
The way that Israel told the story in Jesus day followed the same pattern and
expected the same result. Rome was the new oppressor, Caesar the new Pharaoh,
and the expectation was that the intervention of God and the victory of the
people were near. As the story had been retold, it had changed and grown.
Certainly the Maccabees had raised expectations when they had taken matters into
their own hands, though with God's help, as they defeated the Syrians. That era,
200 years before Jesus, also had employed imagery of the end of the world to
explain the cosmic significance of political events.
With this story also came the ability to see the pattern and predict when it
would happen again. The rebuilding of the temple was seen as a sign that God was
about to dwell with the people again. The presence of John the Baptist, a new
prophet like Elijah raised expectations that Messiah and the victorious army of
Israel's resistance were about to reappear. The stage was set for God to do it
all again.
And in a sense, with Jesus, God was doing exactly that. The story was repeating.
In another sense, however, the story was being reframed. It was no longer going
to be part of a cycle. This time, God's intervention was different. No longer
was this the story of Israel alone. Now the story would include an intervention
within Israel, within the people of God that would restore her vocation as
"light to the nations." It would be for all peoples. The story would not revolve
around the symbols of national pride and idolatry: the land, the temple, the
ancestry. Instead, the symbols are transformed as the promise is fulfilled. They
are returned to their rightful place in the national narrative. The people are
no longer exclusively blessed, but are blessed to be a blessing to all nations.
The land is hallowed as the source of healing for the whole creation. The temple
is replaced as God's dwelling is no longer within a building, but within
humanity in Jesus Christ. The more the story is reframed, the more it echoes
with the themes of the prophets, both in warning and in promise.
Good News in the Midst of Lingering Questions
Of note in the middle of all of this reframing of the story is that Jesus never
does answer the question, "When will this be?" He talks around it. He talks of
signs, but not of the end. He talks of persecutions, even within families, but
says that comes way before the end. He talks of endurance, but never states
endurance to what end. We are so apt to get caught up in the images and the
themes that we almost do not recognize that Jesus gives us the slip once again.
He will not be pinned down on this. But that leaves me asking, "Where is the
good news in all of this?" Are we simply to brace ourselves for suffering? Are
we waiting only for the promise of the future? What is God doing for us in the
face the cycles of tumult that whirl around us?
The first answer to that question is found in Jesus himself. When he suggests
that we need not "prepare a defense in advance" because he will give us the
words to say, he is suggesting that he is with us and will not abandon us.
Indeed, his resurrection and ascension are not seen as his absence from the
disciples in Acts, but rather they are emboldened by his presence. This leads us
to the second and perhaps most important answer to what God is doing. God is
already establishing the new age among us.
Here is the paradox. The new age comes not with wars and tumult, but in the
quiet of a night. The new age comes not with a violent uprising, but rather with
the birth of a child in Bethlehem. The new age comes not by resisting the forces
of empire, who control with the threat of death, but rather with a journey
through death to new life, which God, in Jesus, undertakes to destroy death and
its power. The wars and tumult, even in our day, are the dying cries of the
kings of this world. The God of the universe has subverted their power and sewn
the seeds of the new kingdom, the new reign of God, within our world, within our
finitude. For those with faith to see and courage to endure, both gifts of God's
spirit to us, the tumult of the world becomes both more and less than what it
is.
To be honest, the wars, the violence, the cosmic signs are indeed terrible. All
humanity suffers, oppressed and oppressors alike. God too, suffers with us. This
tumult, of which our lesson today speaks, assumes terrible power in the face of
such honesty. But it does not have ultimate power. It cannot control Jesus, and
it does not control those who are named and claimed by God in baptism. Though it
may kill us, yet it does not harm us. God's love is stronger still.
So, we are not fooled by the endless cycles of violence in our world. We take
them for what they are, the death throes of our own sinfulness, on a grand
scale. We struggle against them even as we know we are in part responsible for
the suffering they cause. But we see God's action hidden apart from them, and
hope for the reign of God, promised, already begun, not yet fully present. We
hope not in out great cities, our beautiful churches, our military might. We
hope in the crucified and risen one, our ever present Lord, Jesus Christ.
See Also:
Sermons Home | General Sermons and Essays | Articles | eBooks | Our Faith | Prayers | Library - Home | Baselios Church Home
-------
Malankara World
A service of St. Basil's Syriac Orthodox
Church, Ohio
Copyright © 2009-2020 - ICBS Group. All Rights Reserved.
Disclaimer
Website designed, built, and hosted by
International Cyber Business Services, Inc., Hudson, Ohio