St. Ansgar's Lutheran Church

Sermon for Sunday, November 28, 2004

First Sunday in Advent



The Salvation of God Will See Us Through

"No one knows, however, when that day and hour will come—neither the angels in heaven nor the Son; the Father alone knows. The coming of the Son of Man will be like what happened in the time of Noah. In the days before the flood people ate and drank, men and women married, up to the very day Noah went into the boat; yet they did not realize what was happening until the flood came and swept them all away. That is how it will be when the Son of Man comes. (from Matthew 24:36-44)

Some time ago, the National Geographic showed some colourful photos and drawings of the terrible destruction that wiped out the Roman Cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in A.D. 79. The explosion of Mount Vesuvius was so sudden, the residents were killed while going about their routine daily tasks: men and women were at the market selling and buying, the rich in their luxurious baths, slaves at work and soldiers standing guard. They died amid volcanic ash and superheated gasses. Even family pets suffered the same quick and final fate. It takes little imagination to picture the panic of that terrible day.

The saddest part is that these people didn’t have to die. Scientists confirm what ancient Roman writers recorded –there were weeks of rumblings and shakings preceded the actual explosion. Smoke was clearly visible from the mountain days before the eruption.

If only they had been able to read and respond to the warning that Mt Vesuvius gave. People went about shopping, making money, enjoying a holiday and getting a job ignoring the signs that destruction was about to rain down on them.

It was like that in Noah’s time. The people ignored what Noah was saying about God's anger because of the wickedness that had taken control of the world. They disregarded Noah’s warning about a flood.

They took no notice of the huge boat that the old man and his sons were building. Like the people of Pompeii, they went on making business deals, eating and drinking, reading the daily paper, washing dishes, going to work, hanging out the washing, mowing the lawn, buying things to fill their homes. They had disregarded the signs and they were caught unprepared when the "vast body of water beneath the earth burst open, all the floodgates of the sky opened and rain fell on the earth for forty days and nights" (Genesis 7:11).

And like the people of Pompeii who perished under the ash and lava of Mt Vesuvius, the people of Noah’s day perished in the flood because they ignored the signs. If you are driving along and you notice one of the red lights glowing on your dashboard, especially the one with the oil can symbol on it, you would be a fool to keep on driving and to ignore the warning.

This leads to today’s Gospel reading. I am not here as a preacher of doom’s day, simply Jesus is saying, "Be ready!" The signs are there - he is coming back. When exactly that will be we don’t know, but be assured he will return. Jesus concludes saying, "So then, you also must always be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you are not expecting him" (Matt 24:44).

We know that the Christians of the early church, perhaps at the time when Matthew was writing his gospel, expected Jesus to return during their lifetime. They expected Jesus to return at any moment, raise the dead and establish his kingdom. But 2,000 years have now gone by and still no sign of Jesus on the horizon.

It follows then that since he is taking so long to come back we can relax because he won’t appear for another 2,000 years. It’s too easy for us to be really casual about Christ’s return and fail to take it seriously. In fact, most people only think of Christ’s return once a year on the first couple of Sundays in Advent.

But the fact that so much time has gone by and Christ hasn’t returned ought to make us even more watchful and prepared for his Second Coming. Like the people of Pompeii, the signs are clear. To ignore them is folly. Paul encouraged his readers saying, "The time has come for you to wake up from your sleep. For the moment when we will be saved is closer now than it was when we first believed. The night is nearly over, day is almost here" (Rom 13:11,12).

Again and again throughout the New Testament, there are all sorts of links that urge us to be ready for Jesus’ return. He will come back and we need to be ready. His return might be sooner than we expect and if we aren’t ready then his coming will catch us out.

A fable is told about three apprentice devils who were talking with Satan about their plans to destroy all of humanity. The first apprentice suggested that they would succeed by telling people there was no God. Satan rejected that suggestion because he realized that most people believed in God or at least a "higher power" and would not work.

The second apprentice suggested they could succeed by telling people that sin and evil are okay, but Satan rejected this suggestion too because he knew that most people could not be convinced that there is nothing wrong with sin.

Finally, the third apprentice said, "Let us destroy all of humanity by telling them there is no hurry!" The fable concludes that Satan loved that suggestion because he knew that people would believe there was no hurry, and they would destroyed by the thousands.

There is some truth in this fable. Jesus tells us that many people will not be ready for his return. If Christ was to come back this afternoon, I hate to think of how many would be unprepared and how many would be perish because they ignored the signs – a situation not unlike the time of Noah, or the city of Pompeii. All of us prepared ourselves to come to this service this morning, if we didn’t, we would all be sitting here in our pajamas, hair uncombed, barefoot – not a pretty sight. We all know how to prepare ourselves for worship, but how do we prepare ourselves for the coming of Christ?

The New Testament tells us that the whole of life is a preparation for the coming of Jesus. Getting ready starts with what God does for us, our relation with Jesus Christ.

But for all that God does for us, our nature still takes control of our lives, we make bad decisions, the choices we make are not always in line with what God wants us to do, we forget who we are – God's children – and say, do and think things that we know are opposite to the way God wants us to live.

And so we find Peter telling us, "Your lives should be holy and dedicated to God as you wait for the Day of the God…. Do your best to be pure and faultless in God's sight and to be at peace with him" (2 Peter 3:11,14).

Paul tells us in today’s reading from Romans, "The night is nearly over, day is almost here. Let us stop doing the things that belong to the dark, and let us take up weapons for fighting in the light. Let us conduct ourselves properly, as people who live in the light of day." (Rom 13:12-14).

He encourages us to let Jesus be as close to us as the clothes we wear, let our Spirit-given faith take control of our lives and not give into our sin and our selfish desires. Living in an awareness that Christ could return at any moment urges us to get our priorities right. We may not have the rest of our life to get things straightened out.

We may not have all years ahead of us that we think we have to make time for Christ in our lives. The Advent season reminds us that the hour of Christ’s return might be sooner than we think.

A couple once told me, " O! Pastor, we really want to come to church but we just don’t have the time – on a weekend there is the shopping to be done, the washing and the gardening, the cottage, and when we get a moment we just want to put our feet up.

You see, pastor, we just don’t have the time." That’s fine, but what will happen when time runs out. How prepared will they be for the return of Christ?

The message for us all is "watch out" and have another look at the god you are worshipping, the excuses we give. Where do your true loyalties lie? What is the most important thing or person in your life? How much emphasis do you put on material things? Don't be fooled by a quick answer.

A part of "being ready" for Christ’s return is to get straight what are the important things of this life and what are not. We all have running battles convincing ourselves that this or that is essential when it’s not. We all have to battle against those things, including family, sport, hobbies, work, leisure activities that somehow crowd out Jesus from our lives.

We battle against those things and people that crowd our lives with so much that we don’t have room to read his Word or pray, or join with our fellow Christian and worship together thus weakening – slowly crushing our relationship with God.

Christ will return whether in six months, six decades, or six hundred years.

Advent reminds us to regard these days as the last days and to be constantly ready, waiting for his return, waiting as if this day is our last.

Advent reminds us that our whole life ought to be a time of preparing for his return. God is at work in us giving us faith, forgiveness and hope, urging us to work for the Lord as if this was going to be the last opportunity to carry out his work.

With peace, and joy, and love, Maranatha….. come Lord Jesus, come.

Amen.

Rev. Samuel King-Kabu

November 28, 2004


Prepared by Roger Kenner
St. Ansgar's Lutheran Church - Montreal
November, 2004