1st Sunday of Advent
Texts: Mark 13:24-37;
Isa. 64:1-9; 1 Cor. 1:3-9
MARK'S GOSPEL AS FULFILLING THE WAY OF
PROPHECY
I would bet that everyone here over the age of 20 remembers where
they were on September 11,
2001. If you're my age or older, you probably remember where you
were when President
Kennedy was assassinated. The octogenarians who are here today can
no doubt remember events
like Pearl Harbor, D-Day, and then the bittersweet moment of the
terrible bombs that incinerated
Hiroshima and Nagasaki and ended World War II. More recently, we
might remember Hurricane
Katrina in 2005 or the 2011 Tohoku, Japan earthquake, with a tragic
loss of life and which at
$235 billion is the costliest natural disaster to date globally.
These are events that changed the course of history and get cemented
in our memories. We refer
to them with language such as "earth shattering." The earth isn't
literally shattered, of course
(except maybe in an earthquake), but it's language we use to talk
about events that are world
changing.
Some of us know this kind of memory-cementing experiences in our own
personal lives. We've
experienced traumatic losses that we will not only never forget but
did literally change the course
of our lives forever. They were earth-shattering for us. In such
instances, we might also use
language such as, "For a while, it was like the sun would never
shine again."
Why am I bringing up these kinds of traumatic events? Because it is
the setting for the writing of
the Gospel of Mark. Today we begin another year of cycling through
the story of Jesus, this year
featuring the Gospel of Mark. And it is actually quite appropriate
that we begin with such a
strange passage as this one in Chapter 13. Because Jesus is
prophesying the traumatic events that
Mark's community has just lived through.
Many generations of Christians have not been aware of this
historical background, and so they
have read these words as Jesus talking about the end of world. One
of the immediate problems
with the "end of the world" interpretation is Jesus saying it will
happen within a generation. Well,
2000 years later we know that the world didn't end within a
generation, so many scholars have
said, "This is an example of either Jesus being wrong, or the early
church incorrectly putting
words in his mouth." It's become a main reason for many scholars
treating Jesus' words as fiction
made up by the early church.
But I began this morning as I did to help us into another way of
interpreting this vital passage
from Mark's Gospel. We need to understand that Jesus was not
predicting the literal end of the
world. He was using language that the Hebrew prophets commonly used
to prophesy about
possible world changing events, traumatic happenings that would
change peoples' worlds forever.
They were using picturesque language to describe moments in history
that would cause terrible
loss and grief and make it seem like the sun had fallen from the sky
and wasn't shining anymore.
But it's also important to understand that, as the greatest of the
Hebrew prophets, Jesus wasn't
just predicting the future. He was prophesying. There's a huge
difference. Predicting tends to
mean something will happen without a doubt. That there's nothing one
can do to change it. To
prophesy is to show someone that they are on a path that will bring
likely consequences. Doctors
prophesy to us when they tell us that our current habits of unhealth
will likely lead to times of
illness and poor health. They try to get us to make more healthy
choices through their prophesies.
The ghosts in Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, that
holiday favorite we will doubt see at least
once in the coming weeks, are prophets. They are trying to get
Scrooge to change the path he is
on, a path leading him into a despised life and an utterly alone
death. They are prophesying to him
the path he is on, not because it is unchangeable, but precisely be
cause it is. He can choose
another path. He can become a different sort of person. He can and
he does.
Jesus has come to his people of Israel, the Jews, to help them see
that God has a wholly other
path for them in the world. They are to lead by showing
others how to serve. They are to be
mighty among the nations by showing the other nations how
to favor the least: the poor, the sick,
the left-out. Above all, they are never to use violence. Those who
live by the sword die by the
sword. If they choose to go down the path of other nations, seeking
greatness and power like
them, they will end up as other nations do eventually, when someone
bigger and more powerful
comes along. Living by the sword, nations die by the sword.
And since the Jews have no chance against Rome, their chosen path of
liberation through military
victory will come upon them soon ... within a generation, in fact. This
is what Jesus is talking
about in today's Gospel lesson. These are the terrible
events which have just taken place for
God's people, the Jews. Beginning in the year 66, about 30 years
after Jesus' arose on Easter, a
majority of Jews launched into a rebellion against Rome. At the
time, Rome was in the middle of
its own civil war, so the Jews actually experienced some victories.
But when the civil war was put
down, they gave their full attention to the Jews. In the year 70,
Rome destroyed and burned
Jerusalem with its temple and slaughtered much of the population. (1) This is the terrible reality that
is still fresh as Mark writes his Gospel in the aftermath.
So why does Mark's story about Jesus become the first written down
version to survive and be
kept? Why do we have this new kind of document in the world called a
Gospel, that we're still
reading 2000 years later? The first reason is because Jesus was a
prophet who, unfortunately, was
right. His fellow Jews continued down the same path and were met
with the disaster he
prophesied. Let's imagine, for a moment, that 99% of scientists
today are correct and that we are
heading into a global warming. They warn us of undesirable events
that will take place if we don't
change some of our lifestyles. And then let's imagine that ten,
twenty, thirty years down the road,
those terrible events are fully upon us and are reeking havoc in our
world. Whose writings might
we turn to? Won't it be those who prophesied correctly about these
events and told us what we
could do to change the path we're on?
That's why we have the Gospel of Mark. Jesus was correct not just
about his own people. But he
is correct about what makes for human beings to live in peace at any
time and place. The themes
we will see over and over again throughout the year of Mark are at
least three:
- True power and might comes through caring for the weakest
among us.
- True leadership comes through serving those least among us,
not in seeking to be served.
- The most important one: God in Jesus the King is showing us
precisely this kind of power and
leadership coming true in the world. How do we know? Because God
has shown us the
powers of this world doing their worst to Jesus and raised him
to new life as the promise that
God's way is the true way to peace.
This is so crucial! That we see: even when we fail these prophesies,
God comes to us in our
weakness. God comes with forgiveness instead of more vengeance. God
comes with the power of
life rather than more death. God comes with the power to take the
mess we have made and begin
to turn it into gracious life.
So Watch! Keep awake! What are the paths we are on right now that
you and I, as disciples of
Jesus, might help lead others into choosing another path? Are the
events this week centered in
Ferguson showing us that we are headed into a greater and greater
racial divide unless disciples of
Jesus increasingly step forward with the path to heal racism? Is it
Global warming? Is it the
increasing gap between rich and poor? Watch! Watch for the signs of
being on the wrong path.
Watch for what we can do as disciples of Jesus to lead others onto
the right path, the one of true
power and true leadership. Following in the way of Jesus is
following in the way of prophecy.
And Come! Come, King Jesus, come. Come and lead us onto your path of
light and life and
peace. Amen
Paul J. Nuechterlein
Delivered at Prince of Peace Lutheran,
Portage, MI, November 30, 2014
1. The Wikipedia
article on the Roman-Jewish War outlines the world changing
events for
Judaism: "The destruction of the Second Temple in 70 C.E. marked a
turning point in Jewish
history. In the absence of the Temple, the synagogue became the
center of Jewish life. When the
Temple was destroyed, Judaism responded by fixating on the
commandments of the Torah.
Synagogues replaced the temple as a central meeting place, and the
rabbis replaced high priests as
Jewish community leaders. Because of the rabbis dominance post-70
C.E., the era is called the
rabbinic period. The Rabbis filled the void of Jewish leadership
created by the Great Revolt and
with their literature and teachings, shaped a new Judaism.