Malachi 4:1-2;
2 Thessalonians 3:6-13;
Luke 21:5-19
It’s unusual for today’s readings to fall on Remembrance
Sunday, but due to Advent being early they do this year. And they seem very
appropriate. Both Malachi and Luke speak of times of dread and destruction. We
remember today the dead of two terrible world wars. I wondered, preparing this
sermon, what my predecessors would have preached about, Father Hancock in 1914
and Father Taylor in 1939, as moral darkness and great dread descended on the
world. What words of encouragement and challenge would they have found?
We do not live in such dark times as that, though some
people in the world do – think of Aleppo and Mosul. But we are living through
times of change and turbulence. The free exercise of democracy, both here and
in the USA, has thrown up unexpected results and shattered old certainties. New
popular movements have given expression to various hopes for a different future
– hopes not always compatible with each other. But these movements also give
expression to resentment, fear and anger. Feelings that it seems have been
building for years, unnoticed by the comfortable and well off. “Woe to those
who are at ease in Zion”, says the Prophet Amos. It has been a kind of
unveiling of what has been going on under the surface of society.
The Greek word for “unveiling” is “apocalypse”. In the
Bible, it is used for those passages, such as today’s readings, where we see
beyond surface appearances to the hidden forces that are really driving events.
In today’s Gospel reading we are approaching the end of
Luke’s Gospel. It is Holy Week, in fact, although the disciples do not know it.
In a few short days Jesus will be betrayed and killed, and although Jesus has
warned the disciples about this they haven’t understood him.
And as the climactic disaster of the Gospel is
approaching, Jesus talks about another disaster, further off, but just as
certain – the destruction of Jerusalem. That, too, seems incomprehensible to
the disciples as they gaze round with admiration at the Temple and its
ornaments. But Jerusalem has always been a city of conflict, fought over from
its first beginning to the present day. Ironically, as the name “Jerusalem”
means “vision of peace”.
At the time of Jesus Jerusalem was under occupation, ruled
from Rome through the Governor Pontius Pilate. It was a city of resentment,
fear and anger, heavily suppressed by military might. It was a city where diverse
hopes and aspirations for a future free from Rome were talked about in secret. It
was a city of underground movements, religious fanatics and terrorists willing
to die for their cause.
Jesus saw clearly where all this was heading. People who
are deeply attentive to God often do have a clearer view than most of what is
going on in the world, and the forces driving society beneath the surface
appearance of things. Jesus’s prediction that all this will be destroyed is an
apocalypse, that is an unveiling of what is going on. He sees that the cycle of
resentment and violence is building and in time will burst out of control, with
terrible consequences.
The Jewish historian Josephus described the siege and
destruction of Jerusalem in the year 70, around 40 years after Jesus made his
prediction. It matches anything in history for the scenes of horror, grief and
ruthless violence. And it was all avoidable, as Jesus had said, if only they
had listened to the prophets and known the way of peace.
But, with all that, apocalypse is not of God. These things
must take place, says Jesus, but the end is not yet. The unveiling is of the
heart of human violence; the destruction is self-inflicted. God does not will
these things, but permits human freedom.
What, then, are the disciples to do, in such times as
this? Stay faithful, says Jesus. If you are hated and persecuted, see it as an
opportunity to testify. That is, carry on with the normal business of the
Church, which is to bear witness to Jesus.
You may be betrayed and killed, as Jesus himself is about
to be. But – paradoxically – not a hair of your head will perish. If you die
with Jesus, bearing witness to the truth, you will rise with him. It is the
resurrection that bears witness to God, not the apocalypse of violence. God is
the creator and redeemer and will not let his creation perish. In the midst of
disaster, even self-inflicted disaster, he is present to redeem, to save, and
to create anew.
This is what God is like, and always has been. As Malachi said,
around five centuries before the time of Jesus, even in the time of apocalypse,
“for you who revere my name the sun of righteousness shall rise, with healing
in its wings”.
In such times as this, then, what are we to do? It is a
moment of apocalypse, in a way: resentment, fear and anger are bubbling up, contrary
hopes for the future are being contested. It is an unveiling of what has been
going on under the surface. We in the West indeed are a long way from the dark
days of the two world wars. But Jesus warns us that currents under the surface
of things can lead to calamitous events further down the line, if they are not
attended to.
So what are we to do? Stay faithful. Carry on with the
normal business of the Church, which is to witness to Jesus. Pay attention to
the teachings of the prophets, and above all to Jesus. Live out the values of
the Gospel in our lives. Seek to be peace-makers and influences for good in the
world. If the times seem harsh, if respect and kindness and love are fading
away, then that is a reason to practice them all the more. Renounce violence
and revenge. Never give up doing what is right.
And above all never give up on God. “For you who revere my
name the sun of righteousness shall rise, with healing in its wings.” Our world
needs healing. It needs kindness and love. It needs the good news of God who
offers mercy and reconciliation in Jesus. This is the path Jesus has shown to
the world. It is made real in the world by those who are willing to pay the
price, which may be their lives, as it has been for many in past generations
and in parts of the world today. But, Jesus promises, by your endurance you
will gain your souls.
1 comment:
Good stuff, Farve ..
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