“Signs of the times” (St. Luke’s: Friday, October 27th, 2017; Rm. 7.18-25; Ps. 119; Lk. 12.54-59)
On the
“way”. If you are not feeling tired this morning, you should be; after all, since October
3rd, liturgically speaking,
we’ve been on a journey. On October 3rd,
Luke’s Gospel told us: “Jesus set his face to go to Jerusalem” (9.51). We will arrive in Jerusalem, with Jesus, on November 24th. (Apparently, if you don’t dilly-dally, you
can walk from Galilee, in Northern Israel, to Jerusalem in about 4 days.) So, throughout the months of October and
November, all the weekday Gospel readings come from chapters 9-19 of St. Luke’s
Gospel. These chapters are called Luke’s
“travel narrative”.
(Still)
waiting. We are journeying
with Jesus towards Jerusalem as the
Church journeys towards the end of the present liturgical year and towards
the season of Advent. We begin every new liturgical year in a state
of expectancy, celebrating Jesus’ first
advent (his birth) and anticipating his second
advent (return in glory). At the time of
Jesus, God’s people had been in a state of expectancy for a long time, awaiting
the Day when Yahweh would rescue his
people from the power of pagan empires through the work of a warrior-king who would
restore the Golden Age that Israel had experienced at the time of David, the
young hero who had faced down a giant and had gone on to rule God’s people. Many Jews at the time of Jesus believed that
their God, Yahweh, had abandoned his people at the time of the Babylonian
exile, six centuries earlier. When would
Yahweh return to his people and once again make his glorious presence felt in
the Jerusalem Temple? We are waiting for the return of Jesus; Jesus’ contemporaries were
waiting for the return of God…
Return of
the LORD. As he journeys
towards Jerusalem, Jesus tells story after story about a landowner or a king who goes away and leaves his servants with
jobs to do; then he comes back and judges
his servants according to their un/faithfulness in carrying out the tasks that
had been assigned to them (e.g. Lk. 12.35-48; 19.11-27; 20.9-19). The way Luke tells the story, in and as Jesus, Yahweh is finally returning to his “home” – the
Jerusalem Temple; but once he arrives there, Jesus will pronounce judgment upon the nation and its
leaders, who have become corrupted by greed and violence and are busy creating the conditions for a disastrous conflict with Rome (Lk. 19.45-48;
21.5-28).
As the prophet Malachi had said:
“the Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple… — indeed,
he is coming, says the Lord of hosts. But
who can endure the day of his coming, and who can stand when he appears?”
(3.1-2)
God is returning to his people, but they are not ready. What God’s people thought they wanted has finally happened – but once Yahweh shows
up, he will be rejected. It’s the final twist in this pivotal chapter
in the often tragic story of Yahweh and his purposes to save his world. Jesus’
arrival in Jerusalem will set off a chain reaction – the end result of which
will be the absolute destruction of the
city (13.1-5, 31-35; 17.20-37; 19.41-44).
(Still)
time to repent. Immediately
following today’s reading, in the first verses of chapter 13 of Luke’s Gospel,
some people come and tell Jesus about some pilgrims who had been killed by
Roman soldiers in the very courts of the Temple. Jesus replies by making reference to a tower
that had collapsed in Jerusalem, killing 18 people. Then
Jesus states the punchline: “unless you repent, you will all perish just as they did” (13.3, 5). Jesus tells his contemporaries that unless
they “repent”, they will die – how? – on Roman swords and under collapsing
stonework. As it turned out, the
sword-wielding Romans tore down the walls of Jerusalem in the year 70 AD – one
generation (40 years) after Jesus’ crucifixion.
There it is – that is the
disaster that Jesus is constantly referring to as he journeys towards
Jerusalem. Just as the prophet Jeremiah had warned God’s people 6
centuries earlier that the Babylonians
were going to destroy Jerusalem, now Jesus is the mouthpiece of God who warns his
people about the coming disaster. In the
light of this impending catastrophe, the proper response is “to repent”, that is to say, to turn away from the
foolishness of military revolt and to “follow Jesus” in the way of peace, of
love – not only for one’s neighbour –
but also for one’s enemies (cf. Lk.
6.27, 35).
The Bible
& the newspaper. Let’s look at today’s Gospel. At some point along “the way”, Jesus asks the crowds
a question: “Why do you not know how to interpret the present time?” Why can’t you understand what is happening? We’ve been down this road before. Throughout our history as a people, when we’ve
prioritized national privilege over being God’s
people, over being the light of the
nations, disaster has struck. (Imagine
Jesus speaking in an exasperated,
frustrated tone of voice). In
November 2012, a few weeks before his retirement from being head of the Church
of England, Rowan Williams gave his last press conference. When asked which qualities the next
Archbishop of Canterbury would need, Williams quoted the famous theologian Karl
Barth who said, 'you have to preach with
a Bible in one hand and a newspaper in the other.’ Williams added: "You have to be
cross-referencing all the time and saying, 'How does the biblical vision of
humanity and community map onto the
issues of poverty, privation, violence and conflict?' And you have to use
what you read in the newspaper to prompt and direct the questions that you put
to the Bible. (Barth also insisted that one must use the Bible to interpret the
newspaper, and not the other way around).
In today’s Gospel, Jesus invites
those around him to imagine the “present time” in the history of God’s people
in terms of someone being threatened with a lawsuit – “reach a settlement with
your accuser before you arrive at the courthouse” says Jesus. Settle things peacefully, or else the
situation will degenerate to the point where you have nothing left. If you insist on “winning” the case, you will
lose your freedom along with all your wealth, right down to the very last
penny. There is still time to avoid
disaster, says Jesus. There is still
time to make peace. There is still time
to repent and change course. I’m on the
way; I’m not there yet. Repent now!
The
prophetic people. The message of
today’s Gospel is not an easy one. It is
a challenge
to “prepare the way of the Lord”, to make tough decisions and change our hearts
in order to be ready – in the case of Jesus’ contemporaries, to be ready for
the arrival of Yahweh-in-the-person-of-Jesus,
and in our case, to be ready for the return of our Lord. As the Church – God’s people in our “present
time” – we have a prophetic role to play in the world. We are called to model genuine humanity to
the watching world, or perhaps, to the world that has written us off as being
irrelevant. (Most prophets don’t make
the headlines… unless they mess up). In
the midst of our community and society, and in the present time of tabloid-like
“news”, may God give us the courage to give bold witness to Christ and his way, and to show the world what true
humanity looks like. Amen.
"There is still time to repent and change course" Why? To avoid disaster. But how? "give bold witness to Christ and his way, and to show the world what true humanity looks like" Amen.
ReplyDeletei never thought about it that way. the bible to guide today
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