New Heaven, New Earth
a sermon based on Revelation 21:1–6a
by Rev. William A. Palmer, Jr.
Within the past couple of weeks an
evening committee meeting was taking place at the church. Someone
walking down the hall of the education wing stepped on a spider that had
made its way into the building. Another person spoke up: “It’s a good
thing that Carolyn isn’t here,” she said. “Carolyn would have been
upset. She would have picked the spider up and carried it out of the
building.”
This person was absolutely correct in her prediction of what Carolyn
would have done. My wife has an aversion to killing things if she
doesn’t have to. A spider or cricket or moth that finds its way into our
house is unlikely to be swatted or squashed. Carolyn will pick it
up—often on a piece of paper towel—and escort it to the door. After
thirty-five years of marriage, there are still a great many things I
haven’t figured out about my wife. But in this particular case I think I
understand exactly how she feels. In fact, I not only understand but
endorse what may seem like odd behavior to some other people.
Carolyn has a deep sensitivity to the amount and scale of violence in
our world. When she picks up a bug and takes it outside, rather than
squashing it underfoot, she considers it just her small protest to the
violent solutions we often adopt for our problems. I know she’s not a
total pacifist in this regard, because a threatening yellow jacket or
hornet certainly might not receive the same treatment as an innocuous
beetle or cricket. But her objective seems to be the employment of
violence—in our home or elsewhere—only when it is absolutely
unavoidable.
Violence is so much a part of our existence that we almost take it
for granted. Switch your TV on at any time of the day or night and it’s
possible that at least half the channels will be depicting some act of
violence. Fistfights and beatings, assaults and stabbings, and gun
battles—between cowboys and Indians, cops and robbers, terrorists and
government agents—provide a constant theme for our entertainment.
Someone will remind me that such fare has been part of television for
the fifty years we’ve been watching. Yet there is no question that the
acts of violence have become far more graphic in the past few years.
It’s no longer enough to see someone get shot and watch the victim fall
down dead. Today we seem to require special effects that treat us to the
spurting and spattering of blood, the dismemberment of bodies, and
lingering camera shots of guts and gore. What’s worse is the dramatic
emphasis that draws us to the ways in which sick people can terrorize
their victims. A study released just this past week reveals that, in the
United States, thirty percent of children under three years of age have
a television set in their room.
And we haven’t even begun to talk about what you can see on the
nightly news.
The Book of Revelation reminds us that coping with terror and
violence is not just a problem of the twenty-first century. This book
was written against the backdrop of the first great imperial persecution
of Christians throughout the Roman Empire. Contemporary accounts tell us
that Christians were sewn into animal skins and thrown before lions and
hyenas in the stadiums where the populace often gathered to watch
gladiators fight. We learn how Christians’ bodies were covered with
pitch and fastened to poles, where they were set alight as human torches
to illuminate the Emperor’s gardens. We may have some image,
long-planted in our minds, of these early Christian martyrs going to
their deaths with hymns of their lips. But human experience teaches us
that everyone—no matter how strong our faith may be—is prey to terror
and fear. It’s hard to imagine today, when not a single one of us risked
his or her life to come here, what it must have been like to be hunted
down like animals. And perhaps because it’s so hard to appreciate what
they went through, it may be equally hard to appreciate the vision that
sustained them and brought them courage to face death for what they
believed.
Not long ago I was driving down the road and came up behind a car
with a bumper sticker that read, “Envision Peace.” My immediate reaction
was to think that we need to do a lot more if we really want peace than
simply to envision it. But the more I thought about it, the more it made
sense to me that if we do not have a vision of peace, we will not work
to achieve it. As the Bible says in Proverbs 29:18, “Where there is no
vision, the people perish.”
Our New Testament text for today presents a vision of a new heaven
and a new earth. It is a vision of a world in which God is accorded his
rightful place. His relationship with his creatures has been restored so
that he dwells among mortals and has fellowship with them, as he did
with Adam and Eve before the Fall. In this new world God will wipe away
from the eyes of humans every tear. There will be no reason for crying
because death will never again rob from our presence the lives of those
we love. Grieving and mourning will no longer be part of our existence.
And pain—whether the pain caused by disease and disability or the pain
caused by a broken heart or the pain caused by a troubled mind—will be
no more.
What a wonderful world! It is a world in which our nightmares and
daily terrors have been erased from our minds, as a teacher erases her
lessons from a blackboard. It is a world in which everything is new. And
it is a world that is not simply a pipe dream—not some invention of
minds driven to distraction by the unremitting pain, suffering, and
violence of the world as we know it. It is a vision that God declares to
be trustworthy and true. God puts the exclamation point on the substance
of this vision by saying, “It is done!”
In the world that we know other visions continually swim before our
eyes. If those visions are not conjured up by the ugly preoccupations of
television, we have plenty of real life experiences to make their
depressing imprint upon our minds. We watch the suffering of people we
love, wasted by cancer, crippled by arthritis, robbed by Alzheimer’s of
both intellect and personality. We see children who are neglected and
sometimes abused and wonder what will become of them. We see marriages
that have degenerated into loveless relationships in which the partners
take turns in trying to inflict the most punishment on the other. We do
not have to look far to see such things. Sometimes we need look no
farther than the dark sides of our very own beings for a vision that is
disturbing and distressing.
The vision of a new heaven and a new earth seems almost beyond our
grasp in a world where much different visions compete for attention.
Yet, as the bumper sticker reminds us, we would do well to envision
peace. As Christians, we will do well to envision the fount of peace.
“He is our peace,” Paul says of Jesus Christ in the letter to the
Ephesians (Eph. 2:14). When we know Jesus, we can know peace, and we can
envision a world without pain or mourning or crying or death.
What helps us to make the vision one that can enrich our lives? We
can set aside time for prayer and meditation and worship that we need to
help us through every week. We can capture the vision every time we make
a choice to reject the graphic images of violence that pose as
entertainment and become acquainted with the button on our remotes that
says, “off.” We can do it every time we decide to resist the impulse to
say or do something that is fueled by our anger or by our desire for
revenge. We can do it by learning to live each day with a consciousness
that the Lord is King, king of our lives and king of the world now and
the world to come. We may do it by carrying a cricket outside the house
rather than squashing it underfoot. Envision a new heaven and a new
earth. Envision a place where we will know a joy so overwhelming that it
defies the best efforts of the most active imagination. Believe that it
is a vision both trustworthy and true, and embrace that vision, this
morning, as we stand and as we sing. Amen.