Sunday, 22 December 2013

Last Things: The Lord's Return (2 Peter 3.1-13, Luke 12.35-40)


Well, here we are at the fourth instalment in our series on the last things: judgement, heaven, hell and now the Lord’s return.

It won’t be in that order by the way. The Lord will return first, then will come his just and fair judgement and then our eternal destination will be decided.

If you had to make 10 predictions about what the world will be like in 100 years’ time - 2113 - what do you think you would say? Will travelling to space then be as normal as travelling to Spain is now? Will all energy be renewable, like from the sun and wind and waves? Will we be all eating computer generated food? Will we all use one world currency? Will we have established a human colony on Mars?

In 1900, a humble civil engineer from Pennsylvania called John Elfreth Watkins wrote an article entitled What May Happen in the Next Hundred Years. Well, it turns out he was amazingly accurate.

He correctly predicted, for example, the kind of information technology we have today. He said “Photographs will be telegraphed from any distance. If there is a battle in China a hundred years hence, snapshots of its most striking events will be published in the newspapers an hour later and photographs will reproduce all of nature's colours."

He accurately predicted increasing human height. He said "Americans will be taller by from one to two inches" which has proved exactly right.

He correctly predicted x-ray, ultrasound and CAT scans. He said “Physicians will be able to see and diagnose internal organs of a moving, living body by rays of invisible light." Wow!

He did get some things wrong though. He said “There will be no C, X or Q in our everyday alphabet.” He predicted that all rush hour traffic in cities would be in underground tunnels or up in the air. And he said "mosquitoes, house-flies and cockroaches will have been exterminated."

Nevertheless Watkins is celebrated as a brilliant predictor.

But the Bible’s record for future predictions is not just impressive; it is flawless. You find for example, (and there are many, many others) you find predictions for;
  • the fall of Jerusalem
  • for the rise of Babylon and
  • for the spread of the Persian Empire
There's a prophecy about the return of the Jews from exile to Jerusalem after 70 years (not 69, not 71). There's a prediction about the destruction of Herod’s magnificent temple and that it would be within the lifetime of Jesus’ disciples. And it all happened exactly as prophesied.

But there's more. You find predictions for the birth of a Messiah;
  • who had to be a descendant of Abraham (not Lot)
  • who had to be a descendant of Isaac (not Ishmael)
  • who had to be from the tribe of Judah (not any of the other 11 tribes of Israel)
  • who had to be a descendant of David (not of any of his seven brothers, nor from any other descendant of Judah at that time). 
  • who had to be born in Bethlehem, not in any other town anywhere on earth,
  • who had to die from having his hands and feet pierced (not by any other means) and
  • who had to rise again.
Every Old Testament prediction about the rise and fall of nations came true in every last detail. Every Old Testament prediction about the Messiah came true in Jesus.

So when we come to the New Testament predictions for the future, we can be quite confident that they will be fulfilled as well.

There is only really one major prediction about the future (that is still future for us) in the New Testament, though it is repeated many times and it’s this: Jesus is coming back!

That’s what our reading from 2 Peter 3 is all about this morning.

People sometimes ask me about the Lord's return and what the Bible says will happen. So first of all, because there is so much confusion about the second coming of Jesus, I want to look at the broader context of all the New Testament teaching on this event.

There are basically three Greek words used in the New Testament that describe what the Lord's return will be like.

The first word is parousia. This word parousia is found twice in our reading from 2 Peter. Verse 4 “where is this ‘parousia’ he promised?” and v12 “as you look forward to the day of the Lord and speed its parousia.”

We translate it “coming” or “arrival” in English but it’s a quite specific word that was used for the physical arrival of a royal or official visitor. What happens when our Queen goes to visit a foreign country? Usually she steps off a plane at an airport outside the city and is greeted by officials before being driven with a motorcade to the city centre.

This is exactly what it will be like with Jesus. 1 Thessalonians 4 says “the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air.”

It means that Christians, dead and alive, will greet Jesus first - like foreign VIPs do when the Queen arrives - before he is revealed to the whole world. 

Which leads us to the second word. The second word is epifania (from which we get our word Epiphany). It means the manifestation or the appearance of someone.

We had this last year during the Diamond Jubilee when the Mall was chocked full of people, all looking at the Buckingham Palace balcony, waiting for Her Majesty to come out and wave. And as soon as the balcony window opened and she appeared, everyone cheered and jumped up and down waved flags.

We’re told in Revelation 1.7 that “every eye will see him, even those who pierced him and all peoples on earth will mourn because of him.” That’s epipania.

And of course Watkins' true prediction that the whole world can now witness an event simultaneously means that every eye will see him.

And the third word used in the New Testament that describes the Lord’s return is apocalypsis which means to uncover, to draw aside a veil that was hiding something so it can now be seen. We see dignitaries taking the cover off a new statue or drawing a curtain to reveal a plaque. Well, this is what the word means.

There have only been two recorded unveilings on earth of Jesus’ stunning glory and radiance to date - and as far as we know, only four people have ever had a glimpse of it. I wonder if you can work out when those two occasions were and who was there…

The first was when Jesus was transfigured before Peter, James and John. It says it was like direct sunlight coming through his clothes and those who saw it had to hide their faces, such was the intensity of its brightness. Like when you’re driving towards the sun that’s low in the sky and you have to fold down the sun visor in order to be able to drive at all. 

The second time this happened was when Saul was converted on the road to Damascus. Again, the brightness of the light was so extreme, so dazzling, so stunning that Saul was temporarily blinded in both eyes.

When Jesus came at Bethlehem, the brilliance of his appearance was entirely concealed. But when he comes again, his true glory will be revealed and it will be utterly overwhelming.

I read a story recently about a large church in the USA who had hired a new pastor (I'm not sure it's a true story but it's a good one...). The Sunday before he was due to start his ministry at the church, they had a visitor in the morning service. That was nothing new in a large church but this visitor was not the sort of person they were used to greeting. Dressed in scruffy clothes, he was unwashed, unshaven, unkempt, he had a half-empty bottle of whiskey on him and he smelled a bit rough. 

He sat at the back - but nobody said hello. Hundreds of people were there - but nobody made him feel welcome. There were not many free seats available - but nobody sat near him. 

The next week, it was the service to officially welcome the new pastor, and the scruffy man turned up again. Again, no one welcomed him. He walked slowly to the front, he stepped up onto the stage, he slowly took off his disguise and introduced himself as their new pastor. Everyone gasped. That’s apocalypsis.

What a shock! But, oh, the shock will be greater when Jesus returns, not as a child and in cheap clothes as he did the first time, but arrayed in majesty so overpowering, the Bible says, we won’t be able to look without falling to the ground or hiding our faces!

What everyone wants to know of course is when he will return. That’s what they were asking in Peter’s time as well. It says in v3: “In the last days scoffers will come, scoffing and following their own evil desires. They will say, ‘Where is this 'coming' he promised?’”

Have you ever asked yourself the same question? Well, Peter says four things in reply.

Firstly, he says in v5 that the scoffers deliberately forget that God has warned of a great cataclysm before and he did precisely what he said he would do then.

We now have conclusive geological and archaeological evidence of an extensive natural disaster in the Middle East; deep layers of flood sediment that date to ancient times. Furthermore, not just in the Bible, but in many other ancient writings, there are similar references to a widespread and overwhelming flood.

In other words, there is evidence if you want to study it but, Peter says, people deliberately ignore it. They did then. They still do.

Secondly, he says in v6-7 that God used elements that were already on the earth to fulfil prophecy before, and he will do so again – the next time though it will be fire, not water.

Only things that are lasting and eternal will endure; things like your love for the poor, your Christ-like character, your heart for God. All the things we attach ourselves to on this earth; our houses, our cars, our possessions, our treasures, our pursuits… all that will just vanish in a vapour.

Thirdly, in v8, Peter explains that God experiences time differently to the way we do. Let me ask you to think back to what you were doing about this time yesterday morning and about this time on Friday morning…  

…Well, that’s more or less what it’s like for God to think about the Battle of Hastings and the time of Christ. One day for us is like a thousand years to him.

And Peter explains in v9 that the reason why it’s taking so long for Jesus to return is not because God is dawdling, it’s because he’s patient. And he’s patient not because he’s indifferent - it's the opposite! It's because he’s passionate about more people coming to know Christ.

According to American author and political commentator George Weigel, about 80,000 people become Christians every day. He calculates that in the year 1900 there were under 9 million African Christians. In 2011, there were 475 million and their numbers are projected to reach 670 million by 2025.

That’s a good reason to delay the return of the Lord Jesus isn't it? If we just wait 12 years, nearly 200 million African brothers and sisters will have given their hearts to Christ.

But while that’s happening, Christians are also the most persecuted people on earth. 80% of religiously motivated violence is visited on Christians. That figure was quoted in the House of Commons last month in a debate on the persecution of Christians in the Middle East.

Open Doors and the Barnabas Fund - who have people on the ground - report that the Arab spring has resulted in an organised campaign to completely wipe out the Christian community in Libya, in Egypt and in Syria.

Then there are further waves of violence against Christians in Indonesia, Northern Nigeria, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, the Central African Republic and many other places.

Why do I say this? I'll tell you. In the 1970s and 1980s, when I became a Christian, the great hope of the church in this country was for renewal. "If only the church could be renewed, we need renewal, Lord bring renewal" was the preoccupation of believers here.

In the 1990s and into this 21st century, the great hope of the church in this country has been not so much renewal but revival. Looking back to great outpourings of the Holy Spirit under John Wesley, Jonathan Edwards and Evan Roberts the cry has been “Lord, do it again. Let there be a mighty awakening. Revive this land!”

Both those aspirations are good. But the cry of persecuted followers of Jesus both in New Testament times and today is not for the renewal of the church, nor for the revival of the nation - but for the return of the Lord. “How long? Come, Lord Jesus!” And he will. 

Fourthly, in v10, Peter says that when Jesus does return it will be sudden and unexpected. Jesus said the same thing in our Gospel reading; “You also must be ready because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.”

And Peter tells us, in v11 and 12, what we need to know about those who are expecting the Lord’s return, and who will be ready for it.

They will be looking forward to it and they will actually be hastening it by living holy and godly lives. There will be a clear contrast between the way they live and the way unbelievers live around them.

I could say a lot about living a godly and holy life but I’m not going to. I just want to simply end by saying that a Christian who is really ready for the Lord’s return is one who will lavish as much esteem and honour on a loveless down and out as they will on their lovely new pastor.

Are you ready?


Sermon preached at All Saints' Preston on Tees, 22nd December 2013

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