Promises, Promises
Lk. 21:25-36[1]
It seems like Advent is the
“overlooked” season in our calendar. The
days leading up to Christmas are simply the time to load up on stuff and run
around doing twice as much as usual. But
for many of us, Advent is a special time of year. It means different things to different
people. For some of us, we get into the
spirit of giving, whether it may be for someone less fortunate, or for family
members and friends, or for all of the above.
For some of us we get into the
whole spirit of festivity, putting up the tree, decorating the house, and
having people over to celebrate the season.
For some of us, we get into the Advent readings and Advent calendar and
the special services at church, and we find this time to be refreshing and
renewing to our faith. For some of us,
Advent means all of the above!
One of the most important aspects
of Advent for me is that it is a time for us to focus on the hope that is in
our faith. We in the Protestant world
don’t focus too much on the future aspect of our faith, but it is definitely
there.[2] There is a strong element of promise, of
hope, of the future in our faith. And
Advent is a time for us to focus on that.
As our Gospel lesson reminds us, one of the major themes in our faith is
the promise that Jesus will return with power and glory some day.[3] Unfortunately, it seems to me that most of us
don’t really know what to do with this aspect of the Christian faith. We know of the extremists who claim to be
able to interpret all the signs and to pin down the exact date when future
events will happen.
There are others who take the
promises of the future in the Bible and use a “name it, claim it” approach. It’s almost as if the promises in the Bible
are a kind of currency you can plug into a cosmic slot machine and pull the
lever to get whatever you happen to want to come true. I think we are just as keen to distance
ourselves from those people as we are from the ones who think they can lay out
a precise timeline of future events. But
in the process we may be in danger of losing the element of promise and of hope
that figures so prominently in our faith.
I think it’s important to go back
to the beginning, so to speak, and try to find out what the promises were
intended for in the first place. It
seems to me that the point of the promises of a future where Jesus returns is
not to give us a basis for predicting what’s to come, or to give us a way to
claim for ourselves whatever our hearts desire.
And I certainly don’t believe those promises are intended to create fear
in us, or make us worry whether we’ll be “left behind.” They offer us reassurance that the God who
began this creation as something “very good” will not rest until it has been
restored to being “very good” again.[4] And
they promise us that God has begun to do that very thing through Jesus Christ.[5] Yes, there is talk about cataclysmic signs
and being caught unaware, but it seems to me that as long as we trust that “we
belong—body and
soul, in life and in death—to our faithful Savior, Jesus Christ,” then
we have nothing to fear from whatever that day will look like.[6]
In short, I think one of the most
important purpose of the promises of a future in the Bible is to show us the
character of God. They remind us that we
believe in a God who will “never fail us nor forsake us.” We may feel like God has let us down, or we
may feel abandoned by God, but the promise of the Scriptures is that God isn’t
that kind of God. God sticks around, no
matter what. We may not be aware of it,
but God’s always there, loving us, guiding our way, seeking our best. When we look at the promises this way—as
demonstrations of God’s character—I think it gives us a wholly different way to
approach them. Instead of trying to read
them like tea leaves to predict the future, instead of taking them as currency
we can cash in on, we can use the promises of the Scriptures to help us live
our daily lives.
That all sounds really good, but
the fact is that when you look around you, many of the people you see are
suffering. Someone has a loved one who
is near death. Someone else has lost a
job. Someone else has gone through a
divorce. Someone else is no longer able
to live in their own home. And so on,
and so on. People are suffering. Some of us are suffering. I think when were in that position, we want
to know what the promises of the Scriptures have to say to us, right here and
right now. It’s one thing to say that
God promises to return to this world in the future to set all things right
again, as they were at the very beginning.
But what difference does that make when we’re suffering right here and
right now?
I think this is where taking the
promises as pointers to God’s character may be most important. They show us a God who always cares for us,
and so we can cast all our cares on him. They show us a God who never forsakes
us, though everyone else we know may turn their backs on us. They show us a God who loves us with a love
that will never let us go. I think
that’s something to hang onto when the suffering of this world makes you
question whether you can even make it through another day.
I believe the promises of the Scriptures regarding Gods’ future
are treasures for us hold on to firmly.
As we hear the promises read again this year during Advent, promises
we’ve heard read so many times before, I hope we will pay attention to what
they tell us about the God we believe in.[7] I pray that they will rekindle in us a spirit
of hope about what God is doing in this world and our place in it. I hope they will give us courage to entrust
our lives—all of our lives—into the loving hands of our faithful God, who
always keeps his promises.[8]
[1] © 2012
Alan Brehm. A sermon preached by Rev.
Dr. Alan Brehm on 12/2/12.
[2] Cf. R.
Alan Culpepper, “The Gospel of Luke,” New
Interpreters Bible IX:410
[3] Cf.
Culpepper, “Gospel of Luke,” NIB
IX:410. He points out that there is a
whole category of “Son of Man” sayings in the Gospels that deal with this, no
to mention the emphasis found in the rest of the NT.
[4] John C.
Morris, “Anticipation,” The Christian
Century (Nov. 22, 2000):1214: he says
it is the promise of “a future of justice, freedom, reconciliation and
wholeness.”
[5] Jürgen
Moltmann, The Way of Jesus Christ,
26-27, 28, 30, 32-33.
[6] Cf. The
Heidelberg Catechism, question 1, The
Book of Confessions 4.001. Cf. also
Culpepper, “Gospel of Luke,” NIB IX:
411, where he says, “the end of time or the end of life holds no terror for
those who know God’s love because they know the one who determines the reality
that lies beyond what we can know here and now.”
[7] Jürgen
Moltmann, Theology of Hope, 20: “Hope
is nothing else than the expectation of those things which faith has believed
to have been truly promised by God” (quoting John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 3.2.42 ).
[8] Cf.
Moltmann, Theology of Hope, 115: “God
is the same God all the way from promise to fulfillment.”
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