Twenty-sixth Sunday after
Pentecost (Proper 28B)
November 17, 2024
Text:
Mark 13:1-13
The signs of the End are not yet the
End. They are but the beginning of the
birth pains. Contractions indicate the
beginning of labor, but there is an ordeal to be endured before the
child is born. So also, the signs of the
End indicate that we are in the End Times.
We’ve been in the End Times since our risen Lord ascended into
heaven with the Promise He would return to judge the living and the dead. But the signs themselves are ordeals to be
endured between now and His reappearing.
Jesus warns us beforehand, lest we be led astray… lest we fail to watch
and pray… lest we lose heart in the midst of the promised trials and
tribulations.
What are the signs? Well, the Temple prophecy has already been
fulfilled. AD 70: The Roman siege of
Jerusalem, the devastation of the Holy City, the annihilation of the Temple. Not one stone left upon another. All of them thrown down. Simply the consequence of Israel’s rejection
of her Lord. False christs… those coming
in the Name of Jesus, saying of themselves, “I AM”? Yes, we have plenty of those. And along with them, the false teachers who
claim they can predict the day and hour of the Lord’s return. Jesus specifically says that only His Father
knows that (Mark 13:32). Wars and rumors
of wars? Nation against nation, and
kingdom against kingdom? We’ve had a lot
of that these days. And we always
have. Reminders, always, each of them,
of God’s impending Judgment. “This
must take place, but the end is not yet” (v. 7; ESV). Earthquakes?
Famines? Every natural disaster
preaches the Eschaton. That is to
say, the Last Things. Paul says
it this way: “the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of
childbirth until now” (Rom. 8:22) as it waits for the revealing of the sons
of God (v. 19).
So also, there are ordeals to be
endured personally. Jesus
prophesies precisely what the Apostles and the first Christians will endure in
the Book of Acts. Being delivered over
to councils, the Sanhedrin. Beatings in
the synagogues. Testifying to Christ
before governors and kings. These things
happened. Remember the Apostles in Acts
5 (apparently all Twelve of them!), arrested and tried before the High Priest
and the Council and Senate of the people, beaten and commanded no longer to
preach in this Name (the Name of Jesus).
And they left the prison “rejoicing that they were counted worthy to
suffer dishonor for the name” (Acts 5:41).
And then they kept on preaching.
Openly. Because they knew that,
before the End, the Gospel must first be proclaimed to all nations. Remember Paul’s sufferings. Beaten.
Stoned (essentially to death, but he got up again, miraculously, and
kept preaching). Imprisoned. He testified before governors and kings
(Felix, Festus, Agrippa), as his Lord had done before him (Pilate, Herod). And we know he was taken in custody to Rome,
where he eventually suffered martyrdom.
Families torn apart over the Name of
Jesus. These are the signs. Brother against brother. Father against child. Child against father. You all know stories of this very thing. Perhaps you’ve suffered it yourself. Rejection on the part of loved ones because
of your faith in Christ. You will be
hated by all for My Name’s sake, Jesus says.
Yes, we all know about that. And
you may suffer the other trials the Apostles and the first Christians suffered
on account of your faith, the beatings, the imprisonments, death. Yes, it could happen. It happens now, in many places, to our
brothers and sisters in Christ. We’ve
been lulled into a false sense of security here in America, but we are not
immune. These are the signs. The End is not yet, but the End is
coming. Jesus is coming. He is coming soon.
And when we encounter the signs,
beloved, we are not to despair. We are
to take them as confirmation of all that our Lord teaches us in the
Scriptures. These signs are reminders
to stay alert, be on your guard, be prepared.
And above all, keep your ears on the Promise of the Lord Jesus Christ: “the
one who endures to the end will be saved” (Mark 13:13).
How do we endure? Well, perhaps most practically, don’t get
distracted. So many things in life, even
though they are blessings in themselves, take our eyes off of the reality…
these are perilous times… take our eyes off of Jesus, our only help, now, and
in the Day of Judgment, who is coming soon.
You know the things that distract you from Him. Politics.
Your job. The busy-ness of life
in the modern world. Hypnotic glowing
screens everywhere you turn, and in your very pocket. Etc., etc.
Again, fine and good things as far as they go, but you get wrapped up in
them, and allow them to become the main thing in your life, excuses
to turn your ears away from Jesus, to not go to Church (or, as the
writer to the Hebrews says in our Epistle, neglecting to meet together, as
is the habit of some, 10:25)… You make them idols. Repent of that, and look up at the One who
was crucified for you, who is risen for you, and who is with you always, that
you may endure.
Help your children to look up, to be
vigilant, to interpret the signs. Jesus
is coming. Teach them that. Bring them here. And teach them, here, how to participate in
the full life of Christ’s holy people, as we endure the signs and await our
Lord’s appearance. This is actually a
lot easier than we think, guys. But we
do have to do it. Show them where we are
in the hymnal. Show them the words, even
before they can read. Teach them the
words, here and at home, so that they know them by heart. Have them say the words with the congregation
(and with your family at home), starting with the Creed and the Lord’s Prayer. Help them to listen. Tell them (especially when they get loud),
“listen to the pastor. He’s telling us
about Jesus.” Teach them when to stand and
when to sit. Bring them to Sunday
School. Teach them to tithe (have them
put a little money in the offering plate when it comes by). Set an example by your own words and
actions. Speak joyfully and positively to
them about your Church. These may seem
like mundane things (and they are), but they have eternal consequences. Because you are helping them to be ready for
the End. You are equipping them to
endure, come what may, until that day.
Help one another to look up. Always be pointing one another to Jesus. Away from the distractions. To Jesus. Help each other to hear and learn the Words
of Jesus, because these are the Words that will carry you through the ordeals
to be endured. When you stand
before governors and kings, or hostile family members, or the judge in some
lawsuit because you didn’t use the right pronouns, you don’t have to be anxious
what you will say. The Spirit will give
you the words to say. Because He
already has. The Scriptures. The Liturgy.
The Creed. The words you know by
heart, and that you are teaching your children to know by heart. Just faithfully confess what you know and
believe. And then endure, whatever
happens. Endure by the strength of those
Words of Jesus, by the Holy Spirit who is in those words, knowing that the one
who endures to the End will be saved.
And don’t let the ordeals themselves
distract you from keeping your eyes, and ears, on Jesus. That is so easy to do. Watching the evening news is an exercise in
despair. What man does to man. The lies.
The agendas. The violence. The murder.
The wars. Creation itself
subjected to futility by our sin (you know, hurricanes and destructive storms,
fires, yes, earthquakes, famines, drought).
Don’t let Satan and his acolytes in the world convince you this is
evidence of some sort of meaninglessness: a meaningless end to a meaningless
life in a meaningless world. That
is called nihilism, and it is the hopelessness in which so many
people increasingly live and die in this world.
But you know better than that. You have a Lord who was crucified, but who is
risen from the dead. So you know how
this works. These evil things are signs
that the labor is about to end. Endure
for just a little while longer. The pain
will cease. Joy will come. Jesus is coming. And then, He will raise all the dead, and
give eternal life to you and all believers in Christ.
In fact, that is, finally, the
ultimate sign. Never mind the earthly
Temple. “Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up,” Jesus says (John 2:19). You know that He was speaking about the
Temple of His Body (v. 21). He is the
Temple. His flesh is the
dwelling place of God with man. His flesh
is the place of sacrifice for the sins of the whole world. His flesh is the
Sacrifice. They destroyed this Temple… we
destroyed this Temple by our sins (crucified, dead and buried)… and in three
days He raised it up again. For our
forgiveness, life, and salvation. And
that is the pattern. So as we see death
on this side off the veil… false teachers, wars and rumors of wars,
earthquakes, famines, persecutions… we understand that this is the Good Friday
to our Easter. Christ has died. Christ is risen. We are dying.
But He will raise us. On that
glorious Day when He comes again. Until
then, be on your guard. Read the
signs. Look up, believe, and
rejoice. Jesus is coming. The End is near. And the one who endures to the End will
be saved. In the Name of the Father,
and of the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.