33rd
Sunday OT
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell OP
St.
Albert the Great, Irving
I
was introduced to the Bible when I was nine years old. An older
friend told me about the Great Tribulation found in the Book of
Revelation. I was particularly struck one image he mentioned from
chapter 14: “. . .the angel swung his sickle over the earth and cut
the earth’s vintage...blood poured out...to the height of a horse’s
bridle for two hundred miles.” Being an imaginative kid, I had no
trouble seeing in my mind's eye the angel, the sickle, the wine
press, and the great ocean of blood. I rushed home to read the rest
of Revelation and found myself hooked on the fantastic images and
language of the End Times. For the next decade, I worried about the
apocalypse and my place in it. Are the signs showing us the end? When
will the Lord return? Will I be among those raptured into heaven?
These were the years when Evangelical Protestantism dominated
religious programming on TV: Jimmy Swaggart, Jim and Tammy Faye
Baker, Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell. Their best fundraising pitches
always revolved around matching current events to the signs and
symbols from the prophet Daniel and the BoR. Their biblical
numerology was mesmerizing. Still, I wanted to know: when, Lord? When
will you come again? I wanted to be ready! But the signs were
unclear. Unfortunately, Jesus gave me no answers.
He
does prophesy the destruction of the Jerusalem temple. His listeners
want to know when this will happen. Of course, he doesn't give them a
date, a day and time. Tues., March 3rd
at 4:15pm seven years from now. That's the answer we want. That way
we can be ready! Or more likely, so we know exactly how long we have
to party before the end. What he gives them instead is a string of
cryptic “signs” that could apply to any day of the week or week
of the year. Wars, rebellions, plagues, earthquakes, famines,
“awesome sights and mighty signs [coming] from the sky.” Had I
been among his listeners, I might have yelled out: “But those
happen all the time!” And Jesus would have pointed at me and said,
“Exactly! So, be ready!” The Nine Year Old Me and the
televangelists wanted the signs and wonders of the BoR to match up
neatly with current events so we could calculate the exact timing of
Christ's return. We didn't consider the possibility that Christ could
come again at any moment. That we ought to be always ready. Some
forty years after Jesus' prophecy, in 70AD, the Romans destroyed the
temple. I wonder if any of those who heard his prediction were there
to see the temple pulled down and remembered. . .
We
can be frustrated with Jesus' answer. And we can continue to run
after apparitions and biblical numerology and seers and visions in a
quest to understand the day and time of his return. Or, we can take
him at his word and simply listen. What he is describing is the past
and future history of the Church living in the world. Creation is
fallen. Earthquakes, floods, plagues, and wars are everyday events in
a fallen world. In a fallen world, men will claim to be the Messiah.
I found a list of about 40 claimants btw 1830 and 2022. In a fallen
world, teachers will teach false doctrine. Some of those teachers are
ordained. Some have PhD's and others wear miters. In a fallen world,
the world will persecute the Church. 360 million Christians live in
parts of the world where following Christ will get them killed. Our
persecutors can be religious – mostly extremist forms of Islam. Or
atheistic – mostly forms of left-wing political ideology, e.g.,
Chinese communism and woke progressivism. In a fallen world, those
who follow Christ serve as an irritant to the comfort of those who
serve the world. Our allegiance belongs to Christ not the princes,
politicians, and prophets of this Age. Our citizenship is in His
Kingdom. We're just passing through.
Jesus
assures us: “You will be hated by all because of my name...” OK.
So, where's our hope? Where do we find our strength? He continues:
“...but not a hair on your head will be destroyed.” Alright. Good
to know. But what do we do in the meantime? “By your perseverance
you will secure your lives.” By persevering we will be victorious.
Persevering in what, exactly? Persevering in trust. Persevering in
hope. Persevering in loving one another. Persevering with
the Body of Christ in
the Body of Christ to live wholly and only for Christ until he comes
again. How do we persevere? Obedience to the Spirit. Not just
compliance but truly listening to the Spirit as He speaks to the
Church and by consecrating ourselves – setting ourselves aside –
in His service. The Spirit has spoken, is speaking, and will continue
to speak. And He has said, is saying, and will continue to say just
one word: Christ.
He says nothing new. Nothing contrary. And nothing contradictory.
False Messiahs, teachers, and prophets will tell us that the Spirit
is doing something or saying something new, something completely
novel. No. The Spirit is the love between the Father and the Son.
That love is eternal. And there is nothing new in eternity. Our NO to
the novelty of the Age puts us in conflict with the world. And this
conflict is what Jesus is describing to us this morning. Our
persistent, persevering NO to the world is also a persistent,
persevering YES to Christ. The temple was destroyed as he prophesied.
When will he return? Any minute now. Any day now. My job, your job is
to be ready.
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