Live Like Today Is The
Day
Based on Matthew 24:36-44
By Dr. David Rogne
A
man who lived on Long Island sent away for an expensive
barometer. When the instrument arrived at his home he was disappointed to note
that the only sector it would point to was the one marked "Hurricane". After
shaking the barometer vigorously several times, its new owner wrote a scorching
letter to the company from which he had purchased the instrument. The
following morning, on his way to his office in New York he mailed the letter.
That evening he returned to Long Island to find not only the barometer missing,
but his house also. The barometer's needle had
been right.
The Bible has
for centuries attempted to tell the human race what
the future
holds so that people could be forewarned and take whatever steps were necessary
to prepare themselves. One of the predictions referred to frequently in the New
Testament is the expected second coming of Christ. Some say this took place on
the first Pentecost, fifty days after the resurrection of Jesus,
when the disciples all sensed that the Holy Spirit had come upon
them. After all, Jesus had said he would not leave them comfortless. Others say
that Jesus comes a second time whenever he comes into an individual's life and
changes that person into someone different. There are those who say that Christ
comes again in the life of each of us when we die. We go to be with him in the
presence of God. Still others say that all people
should be
treated as reappearances of Christ, for he did say,
“...just as
you did it to one of the least of these who are the members of my family,
you did it to me." (Matthew 25:40)
These may all
be valid interpretations of the second coming, but a great host of Christians
throughout the history of the church
have expected
a more glorious and concrete return of Christ.
That
expectation has kept Christians alert when they have been tempted to laziness.
It has provided hope when the outlook for
people of
faith has been grim. Unfortunately, it has also led to
date-setting
and outlandish claims of knowing more than Jesus
claimed to
know. For example, in 1857 one religious writer said:”...
about thirty-five years from this time, the Jews will return to Palestine; in
sixty-five years they will become converts to Christianity; in one hundred years
they will, with the blessing of God and the cooperation of Gentile believers,
carry the victories of the cross to the remotest parts of the
Earth, and
introduce the golden period of the Messiah's reign." Because of such
misguided claims Christianity has often been subjected to scorn. For that reason
many Christians of this generation have been loath to speak much of the second
coming.
Even in Luther's time, 350 years ago, there was much wild speculation about the
return of Christ. In an effort to bridle that speculation Luther reminded his
hearers that humans have no
control over
what God may choose to do. What we need to focus on is what we can do in the
present.
He gave some advice which I
would like to
use as the basis of my message for today: "We are
to believe
and live and love and work," he said, "as though Jesus Christ died yesterday,
rose today, and is coming again tomorrow."
The first
thing he advises Christians to do then, is to believe
as though
Christ would return tomorrow. What we believe affects
our attitude.
"If you think you can, or if you think you can't,
you're
right," said Henry Ford. What you accomplish is enlarged
or limited by
what you believe. Karl Menninger, the psychiatrist, went so far as to say that
"attitudes are more
important
than facts."
What we believe or do not believe
affects our actions. Jerry Whitworth was sentenced to 365
years in prison for
his role in
the Walker spy ring, which stole naval information and sold it to
the Soviets. When the judge passed sentence he said that
Whitworth was not acting out of sympathy for the Soviets.
Rather, the
judge said Whitworth was a person who "did not believe in anything at all. He is
the type of modern man whose
highest
expression lies in his amorality."
We are called
to believe as though Jesus were coming tomorrow. Belief can be strengthened and
cultivated by working at it. For 444 days Kathryn Koob was held as an American
hostage in Iran. In her account of her captivity she tells of a spiritual
awakening which occurred during her imprisonment. She writes of her developing
prayer life and her increasing ability to rely on
God despite
captivity and chaos. "During this time I began to
learn about
joy," she writes. She witnesses to the preciousness
of memorized
Scriptures and hymns, and of the memory of life in the church, which she felt
had prepared her to deal with her
situation.
She wrote her book,
Guest of
the Revolution,
to show
that what we are teaching in our churches is what gives people
strength. Belief is not something we either have or don't have.
We can take steps now to nourish what we have, whether much or
little, so it will strengthen us in the time of testing.
The second
thing Luther advises us to do is to live as though Christ were to return
tomorrow. Certainly, that means to live
adventurously. Sometimes, we search for a placid existence, as
though the
Christian life is supposed to be a life without challenges. Such a life can
become boring and paralyze our potential for zestful living. If life is spent
simply waiting for God to act, we may be brought to a standstill. In order to
stay alive we need to continue to stir the pot.
John
Halvorsen knew the security of a tenured position on the faculty of a
theological seminary. He gave it up to return to the parish ministry. When a
religious journal asked him about the switch he said, "I felt I had pretty much
shot my wad at the
seminary. I
knew it was now or never if I was going to change, because I felt my most
effective period as a teacher was over. My father used to say to me, 'Son, stop
your sermon while they're
still willing
to listen.' So that's what I did with regard to teaching. It's been hard work,
but I'm glad I could make the adjustment." In vocation as well as faith there
must be a newness that challenges. Even if we are waiting for Christ to come
again to set things straight, there are plenty of decisions
we need to
make daily which will make life an adventure.
To live
awaiting the return of Christ is also to acknowledge that
our life is
subject to review. O. Henry tells the story of a thief who sat one evening
smoking a big cigar in the park. He
had swindled
a child out of a dollar for breakfast, and tricked a simple-hearted old man out
a wad of money for dinner. He was very
satisfied
with himself. As evening fell he saw a young woman hurrying home. Their eyes met
briefly and he knew at once that she was a girl who had thought much of him in
high school. In
her innocent
look he felt his whole lifestyle was being judged. He quickly fled down a side
street, laid his burning face against
a lamp post
and murmured, "God, I wish I could die." Meeting up with Christ may be similarly
revealing, but living with the expectation that such a meeting is coming can
have a profound
impact on the
way we allow ourselves to live.
Luther also
advises us to love as though Christ may return tomorrow. Certainly that means
that we need to express love while we have the opportunity. I conducted a
funeral a while back in which people were invited to pass by the casket of the
deceased. At the end of the procession appeared the adult son of
the man whose body was in the casket. The son and the deceased
man had fallen out with each other in recent years and had not healed the
breach. Now the son stood there sobbing and protesting his love to ears that
could no longer hear what was being said. How often we presume that we have
plenty of time to tell someone they are loved, and so we put it off. The
reminder that Christ could come tomorrow encourages us to do what love requires
right now and not to put it off. There may not be
another
chance.
Finally, Luther
advises, work as though Christ may return
tomorrow. For
some believers that leads to a wearying activism. A favorite hymn of such people
is:
"Rise up, O men of God!
His Kingdom tarries long,
Bring in the day of brotherhood
and end
the night of wrong."
It is their
feeling that if God's will is to be done on earth, it
is altogether
up to us to do it.
Others
respond to this call to work as though Christ may return tomorrow as a reminder
of our powerlessness to accomplish God's
will. Such
people live as though the hymn read:
"Sit down, O men of God,
His Kingdom
he will bring
Just as and
when and where he will,
You cannot do a thing."
The truth is
that we are called to cooperate with God, we doing our part and God doing his.
Wallace Stegner, a California
writer,
describes how the gifted photographer, Ansel Adams, went
about
creating his hauntingly beautiful photographs of the Owen Valley in California.
"Adams first quietly studied the landscape. He visualized how the finished print
would look. He
knew what he
was looking for. Then he went to dinner and then to bed. In the chilly predawn
blackness of the following morning,
he came back.
As he waited, clear, grey, sourceless light grew until it showed him the meadow
with its shadowy horse, the
mottled
foothill, and the impressive loom of the Sierras. He set
up the camera
and went under the cloth. Then he came out and
waited some
more. He waited and watched. The sun moved some. He went under the cloth, came
out again and waited. Another beam of light hit the eastern mountains in the
background. Adams went
under the
cloth again, waited for the precise instant, and only
then did he
click the shutter." God created the mountains, the
valley, the
horse and the sun, but Adams employed the skill and
the patience
which captured the scene and made it a blessing for
others to
enjoy.
I close with
this. While on one of his expeditions to the
Antarctic,
Sir Ernest Shackleton was compelled to leave some of
his men on
Elephant Island with the intention of returning for them and carrying them back
to England. Through a series of
mishaps he
was delayed, and by the time he could go for them he found that the sea had
frozen over and his men were cut off.
Three times
he tried to reach them but his efforts ended in
failure.
Finally, during his last effort, he found a narrow channel in the ice. Guiding
his small ship back to the island,
he was
delighted to find his men not only alive and well, but all
prepared to
get aboard quickly. They were soon on their way to
safety and
home. After the excitement ended, Sir Ernest inquired
how it was
that they were ready to get aboard so promptly. They told him that every morning
their leader rolled up his sleeping bag, saying, "Get your things ready, boys,
the boss may come
today."
The needle on
our barometer has been predicting one thing for a
long time:
the return of Christ. It doesn't say when, or how, or
where. It
simply reminds us to get things ready. The boss may
come for us
at any time.