The man on the street corner, who is wearing a sandwich
board sign, that says nothing more than – “the end is near”, is looking for
something from you. He wants to wake you
up. He wants you to consider your life
and self-examine it. Are you ready for
the end of all things as we know them?
Are you ready to meet your maker?
Or not. Presumably the man with
such a sign on his person, has ideas about how you could become ready, and what
you need to “do”. The overpass sign alongside
of the busy freeway or roadway has an advertisement about a “prophecy
crusade”. The graphics on this sign look
menacing. The message seems to imply the
end is near. And the poster’s of this sign
want something from you. They want to
wake you up. They want you to consider
your life and weigh what you do, against a clock soon running out of time, and
ask yourself if you are ready to meet your maker? Or not.
But the prophecy crusade would purport to tell you what has not happened
yet, what is coming, and at least some notion of when it will be coming.
What is common between the two approaches is also common
across a plethora of “hell-fire and brimstone” churches. The idea that “fear” motivates. You can catch up with love later, for now we
are content to let fear get you where you should be, to hear a message (chalked
full of fear), that is designed to keep you in church, and “get you
straight”. Being “ready” for Christ to come
has devolved from submission to a transforming love that would have Jesus
re-create who you are in the here and now – into a series of actions you must
take, and activities you must continue to do, in order to keep yourself ready
at all times for an end that has been “near” for more than 2,000+ years. And fear does work, for about a minute. It may poke the guilty into taking the next
step. But fear also wears off. It does not work forever. We become immune to fear of a punishment that
has not arrived any faster than the final reward has. And so those who saw only the fear in our
approach, backslide away from that fear, choosing rather to live guilt-free,
than guilt-filled, by a system that offers nothing more than a perpetual game
of fail and forgive – while change eludes us all.
So what does it mean to truly be ready? What does it mean to truly live prepared? To answer that question, start by throwing
out the future tense of your expectations.
Ready is not the goal, harmony is.
Ready implies you are looking forward to an event. To be ready implies that at some future
point, how you live will be judged as worthy or not by what occurs at that
event. Harmony with God, and His love,
implies you are already living like you intend to, whether in a future state of
heavenly bliss, or while still on this earth no matter what conditions surround
and impact you. The future event does
not come as a judgment but as an extension of how you live. To live in harmony with God, requires us to
look back to Jesus, in order to see Him create that state-of-being within us,
and keep it there. It is a continual
submission to Jesus, because we know we cannot get there at all through our own
miserable strength. Only Jesus can
re-make us, changing what we want, how we love, and therefore how we live.
For believers who seek the end of all things as the only
relief from sin they will ever have – they miss the point of the gospel
entirely. Jesus did not come to our
world to live and die and live again, only to leave you in the pain of your sin
until you die. He came to show us, it is
possible to live differently here. Not
through your own strength, but through continually submitting your will to your
Father in Heaven, just as He lived. The
gospel is not about good news, or scary news for that matter, at the end of all
things. The gospel is good news for us,
in the here and now. It is not about
being pronounced forgiven and free to screw up again. It is about being truly forgiven, and a method
for never tasting the pain of screwing up again, because you want different
things, and love with a passion of Jesus buried deep in your newly re-created
heart. Once transformation is a real
part of who you are; what happens in our world that points to His coming is
seen in a different light.
To take the gospel on now and find the rewards of living free
from the self-inflicted pain of sin in the here and now; the signs of His
coming, and the nearness of the end represent a different challenge. It is not about what happens to me then; it
is about what I can still do, to try to help others live in a different way, as
quickly as possible. To see them submit
and end their pain ASAP; not to see them only embrace forgiveness, and then
keep on causing themselves pain that Jesus is so willing to take from them in
their thoughts, motives, and then actions right away. Living differently is the reward of the
gospel. Not just living differently in
the future, living differently in the here and now. Being judged is a not a future event for
believers, it is in the past. Once the
believer embraces Jesus and begins to submit their lives to Him, embracing that
transformation that only His love can bring – judgment of that believer is
completely in their rear-view mirror.
The future is not about judgment then, but only about a welcome home to
a heavenly Dad all too anxious to reunite with His formerly lost children
forever. Forgiveness fixes
judgment. Transformation fixes sin.
So when we change our perspective on the signs of His
coming, it is not fear we examine those signs from, it is about time management
and the accomplishment of the mission of redemption. Not our own, Jesus has already done
that. But to those we love, and those we
can still reach with a message of pure passionate love grounded in the view of
Jesus Christ. We look then for signs,
only as reminders, of the mission our very personal testimony of transformation
will tell to the world, especially the world right around us. In this light, fear will leave the
building. Only love will remain. Only love was truly ever there in the first
place. Instead of trying to find exact
future dates when the end will finally arrive; we can live free from fear, and
steeped in love right here and now, ever letting go of the pain of sin, as we
submit our will to Jesus and He continues to re-create who we are. Jesus saving us from us, all along the road,
not just at the end of it.
It is then with excitement and wonder that we look at what
happens around us, prodding us to stay committed to the mission of the
redemption of others. The disciples were
beginning to understand this. They
understood that Jesus would be coming back, returning in triumph once and for
all, even before they understood He would have to die before that could
occur. There was no fear in them to ask
how soon Jesus would be coming back.
There was eager anticipation.
Bring it on. They already knew
Jesus, they were spending every day with Him, every minute. They had relationships with Jesus where they
knew Jesus as friend and savior and Master of all scripture or religion. Jesus was not some foreign guy no one has
ever seen or met. He was personal to
them. Someone they wanted to spend time
with. So knowing when He would return,
was not about predicting dates and times, it was about signposts to remind them
of the happiness of His ultimate return.
With that in mind, Matthew records in his gospel in the 24th
chapter, picking up in verse one, the beginning of the explanations of how to
read the road-signs that were to present themselves starting all the way back
then, in the days of the disciples, that would continue even in our days, the
last days if we are lucky enough to see them so. Verse 1 says … “And Jesus went out, and
departed from the temple: and his disciples came to him for to shew him the
buildings of the temple. [verse 2] And Jesus said unto them, See ye not all
these things? verily I say unto you, There shall not be left here one stone
upon another, that shall not be thrown down.”
Looking forward begins with keeping your eyes in the right place.
The disciples gave Jesus a tour of the Temple, to be more
precise of the glory of the Temple. Israelites
were significantly proud of “their” Temple.
They had built it centuries ago. The
original building Solomon built with the supplies David (his father) had
gathered, had been torn down with most of the gold finding its way to the
palaces of Nebuchadnezzar who treasured it and respected it. After 70 years in captivity, the Israelites
finally were permitted to return to Jerusalem, and rebuild the Temple to the
best of their abilities then. It was far
less than Solomon had been able to do.
But it was still a magnificent site, and caused much pride in the Jewish
heart. But buildings of precious woods,
finely carved stone & marble, and gold plating were NOT where the eye of
the believer was to stay focused. It is
NOT our church buildings which are to represent the body of Christ, it is our
hearts with His love in them, that will do that. We are not to keep our eyes downward on what
we can see, but upward to Jesus to find love which is unseen, yet very visible
to those around us.
This was so important.
Jesus first warns His disciples, that their magnificent Temple will be
torn down, all the way to the stone floors.
Do not take pride in your structures.
Do not look to your buildings. But
instead look to the refinement of the heart that comes from belief that leads
to submission of all pride, and eventually its absence. When the Romans invaded during the time of
the disciples, one of the soldiers (against orders) threw a torch into the
Temple, lighting it on fire, and melting the gold coverings and plating’s such
that they dripped down all the way in between the stone flooring. The Romans were under orders to return this
gold to Caesar, so they pulled up every stone and scraped the gold from each
one all the way to the floorboards. What
Jesus prophesied came true word for word.
But the lesson was not about the accuracy of His foretelling’s. It was about where we place our vision, and
what we invest our hope in to be saved.
The past and its structures were no longer to govern us going
forward. Only Jesus would remain our
future hope.
The disciples were floored.
They had never even considered such a horrible prophecy. So they came to Him to ask in verse 3 saying
… “And as he sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him
privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the
sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world? [verse 4] And Jesus answered and said unto
them, Take heed that no man deceive you.”
The disciples want to know when the Temple will be destroyed. For the disciples so proud of their Temple,
its destruction was bad enough to signal the end of the world. But those two things would not be the
same. What warnings will happen before
that occurs, and what things will precede the second coming of Jesus. The response of Jesus is equally
important. Just as Jesus has directed us
not to look to our buildings or Temples as the focal point of our vision. So we should not look to men either. Billy Graham, the Pope, Joel Osteen, your
pastor, your parents, anyone that perhaps you admire. No man is to be the center of your hope and
faith as you look forward. For men will
deceive, even if not by intent. But
Jesus alone is true. Vest your vision
and your focus in Jesus alone.
For every truth, Satan looks to invent and present his
counterfeit. Satan tries to distract the
minds of the weak with copies of truth, but void of truth, for they are void of
Jesus. The first very specific warning
of Jesus comes in verse 5 saying … “For many shall come in my name, saying, I
am Christ; and shall deceive many.”
Yikes. We immediately associate
this foretelling with folks like David Koresh who the media reports compared
himself with the son of David in his cult-like following in Waco a few years
ago. But the Dahlia Lama also claims to
resurrect and return to his followers in every subsequent generation. For Christians, finding a “criminal” like Koresh
to cast blame on is easy, and perhaps comforting. But what about when we represent the name of
Christ to others, stating we are Christians, yet spewing the speech of
judgment, condemnation, and frankly disdain that looks a lot like hate. Do we also deceive many, that what we teach
is of Christ, when it clearly is not. In
that view, the David Koresh types are few and far between. The average believer steeped in the speech of
hate is a dime a dozen.
Then comes the politics of power. Jesus continues in verse 6 saying … “And ye
shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all
these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. [verse 7] For nation
shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be
famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. [verse 8] All
these are the beginning of sorrows.”
When we hear of wars and rumors of wars Jesus tells us specifically “do
not be afraid”. For wars and rumors of
wars will happen and the end is not yet.
It is not the politics of power that will initiate the second coming of
Christ. It is not in the power of man to
make God hurry up by starting wars.
Rather as kingdom rises against kingdom, and nation against nation –
they are only the beginning of sorrows.
Satan will not go down without causing as much damage to God through his
errant children as he is able. Wars are
an effective way of killing millions in a short period of time. So they remain sorrows, but only the
beginning of sorrows.
Once again Jesus directs our focus away from the world, and
whatever may be going on in the world, as we look forward. It is decidedly not the world that will save
us, in fact it will only be the source of our sorrows. So just in the first part of this examination
Jesus has asked us not to focus on our church structures, to leave our pride in
them behind. For structures will one day
share the same fate. We do not find
Jesus in a building, we find Him in our hearts.
Jesus asks us to avoid looking to men, for men deceive. Sometimes this is by intent, sometimes by
accident. But men are not to be our role
models, men are corrupted by the disease of sin, even the best of men. Look up to Jesus, for Jesus alone is worthy,
perfect, and able to save. Finally,
Jesus asks us to look away from this world, from wars, even from the natural
disasters. As these are NOT signs, but
simply sorrows Satan will inflict along the road to the end. But the end is not yet. It is not the physical church, the pastors or
leaders even, and especially not the world who can save us; only Jesus can do
that.
To live in harmony requires we focus our vision in the right
place. It does me no good to pledge my
life to a building, or its art. It does
me no good to pledge my life to a pastor or pope or prophet. It does me no good to pledge my life to
natural events, or man made wars, as the guideposts constantly looking down
instead of up. To find Jesus. To submit myself to Jesus alone. This will be the basis of my hope, and the
method of my transformation. Focus, even
of where not to look is important. But
there was more Jesus had to say on this matter …
Beautifully statedone Kristian... Thank you for sharing!! !
ReplyDeleteThank you, I am glad you enjoyed it :)
Delete