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Sunday, November 29, 2009

of Signs and Traps


Of Signs and Traps

Aim

To Alerts the congregation to the signs or the return of Christ& to encourage them to avoid the traps on the way
To introduce Advent

Introduction – Advent

Happy New Year. That may sound like a strange thing to say just before Christmas, but the season of Advent is the start of the churches year. Today is the first of four Sundays in the run up to the birth of God into our world.
So I'm going to ask you to make a new years resolution – one that you will keep and build on during the year.
Advent means
1 coming or arrival; first appearance.
2 (Advent) Christianity the period which includes the four Sundays before Christmas.
3 (Advent) Christianity the first or second coming of Christ.
Each of the four Sundays in Advent is used to help us prepare our selves for that Arrival. On the first Sunday , right at the start of the year we look at the coming and the coming back – perhaps better known as the first and second comings.

Background to passage

The passage that was read today is just a short part of Jesus teaching to his disciples on the future. The full passage starts back in verse 5. The disciples are admiring the great architecture of the temple. Jesus sees his opportunity. His chance to make an impact. Every one of these stones will be thrown down. That got their attention. Then there is the famous Wars and rumours of Wars passage. These things must happen but the end is not yet. There will be persecutions and witnessing – and then Jerusalem will be destroyed. Watch for the signs of that Jesus says and when you see them RUN AWAY. Then follows the time of the Gentiles – the time we are now living in, or towards the end of. Then we come to the passage we heard this morning.

Signs

Then Jesus starts talking about signs – “you recognise the signs of the seasons” he says to his disciples, and so do we. Even if sometimes we are less than certain about when they start an finish. It's advent, but we're all talking about Christmas – the expectation of some time away from work or school, a chance to enjoy some good food and drink and take it easy for a few days before the worst of the winter arrives. But when does Christmas actually start.

Of Christmas

It's not really Christmas until ...
  • X-Factor (or Strictly) is on TV
  • Children in Need
  • The first Carol service (tonight 5pm @ Christ Church)
  • The town lights are switched on (next Wednesday)
  • Break up for school holidays
  • The coke ad is on TV – you know the one with the big truck with way too many lights on it bringing the Christmas Coke.
  • Until there's a postal strike
  • The shopping is complete.
  • In my house it will be until Pete has started his Christmas shopping, or was that Its not Boxing day until …). Well I'm ashamed to say its early this year – I've already received some of the gifts I have ordered for people.)
  • The decorations are up and the tree decorated.
  • midnight on December 24th
We know how to read the signs of the seasons because we grow up with them and are taught them. We have plenty of practice, but for most Children it only takes two or three attempts before they have the basic idea of Christmas, and the looking forward to it.

Signs in the World

The longer term signs are much harder to read though. The signs that Jesus talks about are in the Sun, Moon and Stars, and in the roaring and tossing of the sea. These may refer to physical events, but I think it is a LOT more likely that they refer to political events. The sea is a Jewish symbol for Chaos and Danger. The Sun, moon and Stars are the heavenly bodies – those placed over us – our political and religious leaders, and the systems they work in.

Signs of the End

The world is fascinated with looming disaster – especially the end of the world. There is always some scare, some threat – real or imagined that sets an end date for us all. The latest is 2012. Not the Olympics, but 21 December 2012. Its the date on which the Mayan calendar ends. Their calendar runs from August 11, 3114 BC to 21 December 2012 and is based on astronomic cycles. It is said that it ends as our solar system moves across the galactic equator. This is due to cause all sorts of physical disruption on the earth – from an eruption of the Yellowstone super volcano to earth quakes, tsunamis and environmental collapse. Inevitably someone has also calculated 2012 as the date for the battle at Armageddon, but so many of those have been calculated and proved to be false, I will not be worrying about this one. As for the Mayan calendar, it ends because that is the end of the astronomic cycle – just as our yearly calendar ends at a fixed point after the winter solstice. When its finished we just start again, so would the Mayans. There's a lot more to the 2012 disaster predictions, but we must remember that Jesus also said Mk 13:32 “No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. x

Signs of the return

We should look elsewhere for signs of his return, because there ARE signs. The fig tree is singled out for special mention because it the symbol for Israel. So one of the signs we might consider is the re-birth of Israel. It occurred on 15 May 1948. There had not been a proper state since before the Roman invasion, and the last vestiges were destroyed with the temple in AD 70. That was the event Jesus was talking about at the start of the Chapter. The establishment of Israel has brought more focus to the problems in the region, and may well have created even more chaos. More recently we have seen the destruction of Soviet communist empire and the resulting Chaos in its outlying regions – the Balkans and Chechnya to name but two. The loss of one of the two great powers in the world lead to de-stabilisation in many other places as well.

"This Generation"

There is one little difficulty with the prophecy that we are looking at this morning. It is verse 32.
Lk 21:32 “I tell you the truth, this generation 83 g will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.
In our thinking we would expect 'this generation' to mean the people alive at the time it was spoken. When the last of the WW1 veterans in England died we said that the war had passed into history because the generation that fought it were now dead.
There were most certainly people in the early church who had that expectation too. It could be argued that John waited so long to write his Gospel because he though that Jesus would be back and he wouldn't need to take the time and trouble. The word can mean generation in the sense that we are discussing it here, It can also mean race, in the sense of a people.
I tell you the truth, this race 83 g will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.”
This translation gives the passage quite a different meaning. Particularly when you consider how close the Jews have come to annihilation recently. While the most usual use of the word translates to generation in English, I think we must be prepared to accept that Jesus did not mean it in that sense.

Traps

Jesus continues with a warning:
Be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life, i and that day will close on you unexpectedly j like a trap.
There are three things to watch out for, three traps for the unwary - dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life.
Drunkenness I understand, the anxieties of life I understand, so lets deal with them first.

Drunkenness

Did anyone see the program on the “Red Lions” - a look at public houses all around the country with the name “Red Lion”. Drunkenness, perhaps as you'd expect was also one of the key elements of the program. There were some groups, no quite a few groups that were interviewed whose main aim was to get drunk. It is fairly obvious that someone who is drunk is going to have trouble reading the signs, let alone heed them. Most of them could barely find their way home. I'm assuming that drunkenness does not apply to anyone here.

Anxieties of life

Everyone has something to worry about to keep their life going on as it should. A living has to be earned, the family has to be looked after. The problem is that for some people these things become all consuming. For sure there will be times when there is just too much to do, and your focus will be on a sick relative rather than anything else, but that should only be for a while. If the normal day to day activities become an end in themselves then you will not be able to focus on what is happening in the wider world, and you may get caught in the trap.

Dissipation

Unsurprisingly the root of the word is the same as disperse, according to Chambers UK dictionary dissipate means:
  1. to separate and scatter.
  2. to use up something carelessly; to squander it. dissipated adj over-indulging in pleasure and enjoyment; debauched. dissipation noun.
The second definition contains the information we need.
to use up something carelessly; to squander it. dissipated adj over-indulging in pleasure and enjoyment; debauched. dissipation noun. “
That sounds like it describes the world we live in. For years we have been using up the resources of the planet carelessly. Doing whatever we want for our pleasure and over-indulging. Car engines are left running when the car is going nowhere, heaters are left switched on – because we can't be bothered to turn them off. Our insistence on high quality produce means that up to a third of the food we produce is rejected as not good enough.
The “Red Lions” program also visited Billericay, and interviewed two old ladies, both were well past retirement age, and both spent a lot of their time in the pub drinking bottles of port – if I remember correctly. Neither of them were drunken, although their blood alcohol level must have been off the scale. Both of them were well past retirements and both their husbands had died, some considerable time before the interview. When I was trying to understand what Jesus was getting at here, I thought of their interview immediately. They are the perfect illustration. Their lives do not matter, they exist simply for the pleasure that they can get. Their time together in the pub, and a bottle of port seems to be all they are living for.
Call me driven, if you like, but I can't help thinking that even at that age there must be more to life. Yet is is what many people aspire to. To be comfortable, have some pleasures in life, and not to have any responsibilities.
If that isn't a great help in understanding, let me tell you the story of Wally, the wild duck.

Story of Wally: "The Call of the Farmyard" (Author Unknown)

(Found here: http://www.sermoncentral.com/sermon.asp?SermonID=56399)
A flock of wild ducks were flying in formation, heading south for the Winter. They formed a beautiful "V" in the sky, and were admired by everyone who saw them from below.
One day, Wally, one of the wild ducks in the formation, spotted something on the ground that caught his eye. It was a Farmyard with a flock of tame ducks who lived on the farm. They were waddling around on the ground, quacking merrily and eating corn that was thrown on the ground for them every day.
Wally liked what he saw. "It sure would be nice to have some of that corn," he thought to himself. "And all this flying is very tiring. I’d like to just waddle around for a while." So after thinking it over a while, Wally left the formation of wild ducks, made a sharp dive to the left, and headed for the barn yard.
He landed among the tame ducks, and began to waddle around and quack merrily. He also started eating corn. The formation of wild ducks continued their journey south, but Wally didn’t care. I’ll rejoin them when they come back this way in a few months, he said to himself.
Several months went by and sure enough, Wally looked up and spotted the flock of wild ducks in formation, heading north. They looked beautiful up there. And Wally was tired of the barn yard.
It was muddy and everywhere he waddled, nothing but duck-doo. "It’s time to leave," said Wally. So Wally flapped his wings furiously and tried to get airborne. But he had gained some weight from all his corn eating, and he hadn’t exercised his wings much either.
He finally got off the ground, but he was flying too low and slammed into the side of the barn. He fell to the ground with a thud and said to himself,"Oh well, I’ll just wait until they fly South in a few months. Then I’ll rejoin them and become a wild duck again."
But when the flock flew overhead once more, Wally again tried to lift himself out of the barn yard. He simply didn’t have the strength. Every Winter and every Spring, he saw his wild duck friends flying over head, and they would call out to him. But his attempts to leave were all in vain.
Eventually Wally no longer paid any attention to the wild ducks flying overhead. He hardly even noticed them. He had after all, become a Farmyard duck.
Commentary on Wally
Sometimes we get tired of being wild ducks . . . followers of Jesus Christ. It’s not always easy to be obedient to God and to discipline ourselves to hang in there for the long haul. When we are feeling that way, that’s when Satan tempts us to "fall out of formation" and to join the Farmyard ducks . . . the world . . .
Watch and Pray
Jesus says “be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life”. “Be always on the watch. Pray that you may be able to escape all that is about to happen.”
Be watchful. Keep your eyes and ears open – know what is happening in the world. Be ready to fly away. Keep your wing muscles in good working order. It was interesting watching the program “Life” about predators and pray. In south India the deer were grazing on the grasses as a tiger approached. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. The alarm was given, but the deer stayed in their routine. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. Its not time to go yet. Why not run now? Its simple. They do not know where the tiger is – if they run the way they are facing they might run toward the predator. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. More alarms – enough for them to work out the location – then they turn and are gone in a second. Poor tiger goes hungry.
When you go into a strange building – for example a holiday hotel or a new office, do you check out the fire exits. One expert (he investigates deaths cause by building fires) recommends practising the route out of the building so that you know where to go, if the worst should happen. It could save your life.
You may have to leave you church, your town or your country to stay safe, I cannot tell you what it will be. Or you may not. You wouldn't want to run away and find yourself in serious danger.
Watch and Pray. Or are you like the disciples at Jesus arrest and can't keep your eyes open? Jesus says “Stop worrying about your stuff, or you life with all of its comforts, instead turn to prayer and preparation.” We may not know when the second coming is, but one thing is certain. It is a year closer than it was last advent.

Conclusion

So as the new year starts will you make a new years resolution? This is not going to be one that you can drop after Christmas.
Will you decide to pray more and more, and to be more alert and ever more watchful as the year progresses. Are you prepared to get into the habit of watching and praying, so that when the time comes you know what you have to do, or where you can go.

1 comment:

John Cowart said...

Well, Pete, you've done it again. By bring together divergent elements, you've produced a timeless message.

Great examination of the "signs" we live so close to. I think of the C.S. Lewis story, The Silver Chair, in which the kids were inside the engraved letters of the sign in the ground at the giant castle.

I blogged about ducks the day after Thanksgiving over here, so your tale struck a cord there too.