BACKGROUND - In one of the episodes from the Back to the Future trilogy
starring Michael J. Fox, Biff-the films bully-steals a copy of an old sports almanac
and somehow manages to bring it with him into the future. Achieving a 100% accuracy of all
sporting events that he bets on-with, of course his cheat sheet-he immediately becomes
independently wealthy overnight. However, not without character change. Biff has become a
self-serving, spoiled, its all-about-me bad guy. What the future looks like
according to Biff is probably as close to Babylon as one could get! It is a wasted, dark,
oppressive world where drugs, lies, and deceit have made him the overlord of darkness.
Every so often enough of us muck up the present world sufficiently enough to truly need a
New Jerusalem.
NEW HEAVENS AND EARTH - John sees a new heaven and earth replacing the ones that have
vanished. The holy city-the new Jerusalem-descends out of heaven; earlier (chapter 18) we
are introduced to another great city, Babylon which becomes a curse on humankind. Babylon
and Jerusalem are subtly juxtaposed and contrasted; the New Jerusalem will be God-present
neighborhood and thus, a blessing to all those who dwell there.
List the "old things" that hold you in bondage to your past-the
hidden addiction that fills your heart with fear, the destructive habit that brings death
to your hopes and dreams, the unhealed memories that cause you sorrow, the damaged
emotions that inflict pain on you spirit. Then, at each point, read and affirm Revelation
21:3. When you sense in your spirit the reality of Gods loving presence with y0ou,
hear God say, l I am making all things new! [1]
Should
the preacher wish to work with this text as the main passage of the worship service, they
may want to focus on the contrast between Babylon and New Jerusalem; or the focus could be
on the qualities and characteristics of the "the city that God built."
Whoever lives in this New Jerusalem, they are all called Gods "peoples"
(in the Greek text, people is in the plural form). Lukes inclusiveness comes to mind
here-"every tribe and language and people and nation." Thats a pretty
broad description of potential candidates for Gods New Jerusalem.
Notice what is missing from the New Jerusalem: tears, death, mourning, crying, pain,
first things. No place in Gods city for mortuaries or cemeteries, and no need for
Kleenex, therapists, or IRS forms. Even the "first things" are replaced by
"new things."
The final command from the enthroned one: "Write this, for these words are
trustworthy and true." Is this a reference to the promise to make all things new?
Perhaps, but it may also extend further back to include Gods promise to dwell with
people.
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[1] The Spiritual Formation Bible (Zondervan 1999), page 1653.
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