|
Different Times Different Signs Keith McFarren December 7, 2025 Matthew 24:36-44 The strange thing about the season of Advent is that it takes us and sits us down in the space between God’s kingdom that is already here and the kingdom of God that has yet to come…and then we are asked to wait. And while we wait in between these two kingdoms we are asked to figure out what we should be doing as Christians as we faithfully wait not only for the birth of Jesus but as we also wait for the fulfillment of God’s coming kingdom. As a people, waiting is hard for us to do. We want everything right now. Fast food wasn’t fast enough for us so we put in drive through windows. And we still have to wait. Prepackaged meals (TV dinners) that went into the oven weren’t fast enough so we developed the microwave to speed things up. We don’t like standing in line. How many times have you jumped from one line to another only to see the original line you were in start moving faster than the one you jumped to? That’s why Advent is such a difficult season…because it causes us to do something that we don’t feel comfortable doing…and that is waiting. For those of us who don’t like to wait, the season of Advent becomes more like a wrestling match pitting the poor, puny overmatched, little thought of season of Advent against the world champion, never ever defeated season of Christmas. And as always…Christmas wins out and the Season of Advent becomes nothing more than a few days on the calendar to mark the number of days until Christmas arrives. But there is more to Advent than just being used as a countdown until Christmas. Advent is meant to remind us that we, as a people, are headed somewhere. As a people we have a holy destination and that’s why we start every Advent season with a check of the map to help us see exactly where it is we are headed. The prophet Isaiah, in 2:2-5, describes a future day when the “mountain of God’s House,” (the Temple) will be sitting at the highest pinnacle, and all the nations of the world will stream to it to learn and to live by God’s ways. There will come a time of universal peace, Isaiah says, when all nations of the world will turn their weapons into farm tools, and no one will be at war and no one will ever learn about war again. Isaiah then finishes up his proclamation by issuing an invitation to all the world to live in peace and live in the light of God. That’s where we are headed. That’s our final destination as Christians. But we don’t know when that day is coming, but we’ve been promised that it will. So, all we can do is wait. But even though we don’t know when the second coming of Christ will happen, we do know beyond a shadow of a doubt that Christmas is coming. December 25th…no doubt about it. Our dinner table may not look quite as flamboyant as Martha Stewart’s. The decorations in our homes may not be as beautiful as the one’s photographed in Midwest Living Magazine’s Christmas edition. And our families may not all be cheery and have big smiles on their faces like the people on TV…but we do know that Christmas is coming and we know what day it will be here. Every year we celebrate the birth of Christ on the same day. But the other part of Advent…this vision of Jesus’ second coming and this vision of peace and love throughout the world stuff…all this stuff that Isaiah seemed so hyped up about…who knows when all of this is going to happen. All that Jesus tells us about his second coming is, “Of that day and hour no one knows.” Advent’s message is that God in Christ is coming to the world. With this being said we can look at his coming from three different points of view: First, we can look at the coming of Christ as a past experience…as something that has already happened. We believe that the promises from the prophets in the Old Testament were fulfilled and came true on Christmas day. We believe that Christ came for us and died for us. It has already happened and we believe that it happened and we live as we do and we believe as we do because it has already happened. We can also look at the coming of Christ as a present day experience. We can look at Advent as a time for rebirth and renewal…something we can do today. We can make a decision right now to make a commitment to God and start a brand new relationship with Jesus. Or we can use Advent to renew a relationship we once had with God. A relationship that over a period of time caused you to go one way and God another. Through Advent we have the opportunity to draw closer to God than we’ve ever been before and to rebuild and strengthen our relationship with him. Our scripture reading today also allows us to look forward to the coming of Christ as a future experience; an experience in which he will someday come and when he does, he will return quickly and quietly and unpredictably and judge us. Since Advent promises us the coming of the Lord, its message is to prepare and be ready for the future. Jesus is coming back whether you or the world is ready or not. For those who are not ready or for those who are unprepared, his coming means judgment. But for those who are ready his coming means salvation. We are told that the people of Noah's day were destroyed by the great flood because of their wickedness. But that’s not the analogy this morning in our scripture reading. This morning, Jesus compares the apathetic attitude of the people of Noah’s day to the apathetic attitude or the “ho hum” attitude that is present in many of our lives today. Before the great flood Jesus said that the people “were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage” (24:38) and Jesus isn’t finding fault with that. The point is not that people were doing these things; the point is that they were so caught up in the everyday routines of their lives that they forgot to include God into it. Their problem wasn’t their "gross sin." The problem was their "secular indifference." The people of Noah’s time had grown to be nonchalant about God" (Bruner, 881). Having been a righteous man and having found favor with God it’s hard to imagine that Noah wouldn’t have told his neighbors what was going to happen and that they should change their ways and listen to what he had to say so that they, too, might be saved. But I can also imagine the people thinking that Noah was nothing more than a religious fanatic - or maybe a little bit crazy - or both. It’s easy to get caught up in our everyday routines. We get caught up in placing so much emphasis on the things of this world, our ourselves and our own wants and needs, that it’s easy to forget the spiritual side of life. And when we forget about our spiritual lives, like Noah’s neighbors did, it just could be that we might be hearing the warning but we don’t take it seriously. That is until the waters begin to creep toward our homes, and then over our ankles and our knees, and our waists and then up to our armpits. But by then it will be too late. The time for preparation is long past. And so it will be with the coming of the Son of Man. We need to prepare or the time will come when it will be too late. Security systems are big deals in today’s world. There are residential systems and commercial systems. Do it yourself systems and professionally installed systems. There are video surveillance systems, there are cameras and alarm systems. You can have security officers drive past your house every so often or if you just plain don’t feel safe with all of the above you can even have an armed uniformed or plain clothed security officer walk around your property 24 hours a day. With the way our world is nowadays we need it because we don’t always feel safe. We need security because we don’t want someone breaking into our house or our car. Whether it’s day or night we need something that is going to alert us if someone tries to break in. We have security systems because we want to be ready. We want to be prepared just in case it happens to us. We don’t know when Jesus is going to come again. Jesus told us that even he didn’t know. Only God knows for sure. The one thing that will lead us to an eventual disaster is when we think we have plenty of time. When we think we have plenty of time to get our relationship back in order with God. Paul reminds us in 1st Thessalonians 5 that “When people are saying, “All is well; everything is peaceful and secure,” then disaster will fall upon them as suddenly as a woman’s birth pains begin when her child is about to be born. And there will be no escape.” (5:3) He could come today, or tomorrow, or next week or next year. That’s the mystery – we just don’t know. Security systems will work in the secular world but they won’t work in the spiritual world. He’s coming quickly and he’s coming quietly, like a thief in the night and he wants us to be ready. He wants us to be physically ready but more so, he wants us to be spiritually ready. Because when he comes there will be no time for looking back…no time to pack our bags, no time to go get money out of the bank or deciding which of our coveted possessions we want to take with us. No time for looking back into the past wishing that we had done this or done that. No time for looking back into the past wishing we hadn’t said this or said that. No time for looking back into the past wishing we had lived our lives a different way. He’s coming quickly and with the blink of an eye or with a beat of your heart he’ll be here and who you are at that very moment in time and how you are living and how you are treating others in that very moment in time is going to make all the difference in the world. Living a life filled with the spirit of expectancy and living a life-style of preparation will inevitably result in an attitude of readiness. We do not know when Christ's second coming may be; it could be in a day or a year or a century from now. We do know, however, that he challenges us to be ready for that day in every way in which we live our lives. Use the reality of Jesus’ return as a constant reminder that we have to be ready…because when we live in a state of readiness, it is then that we are best prepared to serve him faithfully and to serve him effectively until the day he returns. |
