Romans 13:8-14 · Love, for the Day is Near
Awake, Christ Is Coming
Romans 13:8-14
Sermon
by Richard Hasler
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Erma Bombeck, in her book titled When You Look Like Your Passport Photo, It's Time To Go Home, observes: "You can always tell when vacationers are going or coming. Travelers who are at the beginning of a trip laugh and tell jokes. Their clothes match ... Those returning are impatient. Every plane they board is like the last one out of Baghdad and they are going to be on it." Erma's scintillating wit reminds us that there is a right time for action in all walks of life.

Farmers know a right time exists for planting and harvesting, and they know what will happen if they disregard the opportune moment. Investors in stocks know that there is a right time and not a few of them are turning their eyes right now to the so-called Pacific Rim countries and their booming economic markets. Athletes are conscious of the right time. A football game contains 60 minutes or 3,600 seconds, but not all minutes and seconds are equal. As you watch a National Football League game, how often have you seen a key interception, a costly fumble, a daring gamble or a goal line stand in a flash change the outcome of the game. Quarterbacks like Roger Staubach, Joe Montana and John Elway have made a profitable living out of turning the game around in the last two minutes or 120 seconds of a game.

Educators respect the right time, too. Learning does not proceed at the same pace; at certain critical moments new insights appear. Maria Montessori in her pioneer work with children called these critical moments "sensitive periods" during which children are especially receptive to certain stimuli that enhance learning. Abraham Maslow used the term "peak experiences" to identify critical moments when people see something clearly or gain an inner assurance that enables them to be exceptional persons.

In short, in almost every sphere of life there is a right time to be grasped when something creative may be done. Today, the first Sunday in Advent, marks the beginning of the liturgical cycle of the Christian year. The call is loud and clear, "Awake, Christ is coming." To be sure, Advent looks to the future and the final triumph of Christ. Likewise, Advent glances back to the past and the fulfillment of Hebrew prophecy in the babe of Bethlehem. But, above all, Advent confronts us with Christ's coming in the present, right now.

Writing in the first century to Christians in Rome, Paul sets the mood in the opening words of our lectionary text: "... you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep." Paul's word for "time" in this sentence is kairos, not chronological time but a special kind of time. Kairos time is crisis time, the time for opportunity, for fulfillment, for something really qualitatively new to happen -- the right time. Although Paul had not yet traveled to Rome, the many names listed in the closing salutations of the letter indicate that the Roman Christians and he shared numerous acquaintances in the faith. The apostle wanted to make sure that they were aware of the nearness of the Lord.

Unfortunately, in our own day so many self-proclaimed prophetic teachers and evangelists distort the meaning of the coming of Christ. All too often the coming of Christ is explained solely in futuristic terms accentuated with the setting of dates and the naming of names in order to speculate on the exact time and place for this cataclysmic event. Furthermore, as we approach the year A.D. 2000, the millennial hysteria is reaching fever pitch in some quarters of the church. We must reject what J. Christian Beker calls "apocalyptic terrorism" which feeds on human fears about the end of the world.

On the other hand, we who identify with the mainstream of historic Christianity ought not to be hesitant in affirming our hope in the return of Christ. Make no mistake about it, Paul lived in anticipation of his Lord's appearance at the last day. Using the images of sleeping and awaking, darkness and light, the apostle, however, does not speculate on minute details about the end time but rather directs his readers to the imminent need for ethical righteousness. As warriors going into spiritual battle, they are to "lay aside" their old way of life characterized by irresponsible behavior, and they are to "put on" the Lord Jesus Christ who can help them overcome even their most powerful addictions.

In summary, Paul charges his Christian friends in Rome to live in the light of Christ's two comings. The first coming includes his birth, life, death and resurrection. The second coming points to the day when he will appear in glorious triumph. In the meantime, "between the times" believers are to be awake, alert, ready to expect Christ's presence at any time.

Today's lectionary text played a decisive role in the conversion of Augustine, the influential early church father. In his autobiographical Confessions he tells of his early emotional and intellectual struggles as a young man living in North Africa. Emotionally he could not control his sexual passions. He took a mistress, had a child by her, married her and eventually left her. Intellectually he experimented with various philosophies. He embraced Manichaenism with its sharp dichotomy between good and evil, light and darkness and later became enamored with Neoplatonism which taught him to deny the material world and to ascend into the realm of the mind and the spirit.

Augustine's journey was one of continual frustration. Even when he came into contact with Ambrose, bishop of Milan, Italy, and began to be attracted to the Christian faith, he still could not make a firm commitment. He cried, "Grant me chastity, but not yet." Then one day in a garden in Milan while pouring out his heart to God in weeping and praying, he heard what seemed to be a child's voice calling to him, "Pick it up, read it. Pick it up, read it." He interpreted the words to mean that he should return to the bench where he had been reading the Bible. He took hold of the book and read, "... not in reveling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarreling and jealousy. Instead, put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires." Augustine read no further, "For instantly, as the sentence ended, there was infused in my heart something like the light of full certainty and all the gloom of doubt vanished away." The kairos moment had arrived. The right time had come. He delayed no more. He "put on" Christ by faith and became a new person.

When Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the chapel door in Wittenberg in 1517 it was the right time for something new to happen. When Rosa Parks refused to leave her seat on that Montgomery, Alabama, bus in 1956, it was the creative moment for the American civil rights movement to spring to life.

When we are open to the possibility of Christ being present in even the most unlikely situations, transforming things can happen to us, too. A flash of insight, a word of comfort in the time of illness or bereavement, a victory over some form of temptation, all can be expressions of kairos happenings.

As the Christmas season draws near, we may be tempted to dwell on the nostalgic days of Christmas experiences of long ago. Or we may tend to worry about our health, our finances or what is going to happen to our children or our grandchildren tomorrow. Let us not be so preoccupied with the past or the future that we forget that life is meant to be lived in the present.

In the White House there is a portrait of Theodore Roosevelt painted by John Singer Sargent. A fascinating story lies behind the picture. Sargent had been patiently waiting for days to see the president so that he could arrange time to do the portrait. One morning, by chance, he met the president as he was descending the stairway in the mansion. Sargent asked anxiously when would be a convenient time for Mr. Roosevelt to pose for the picture. "Now," the president snapped back. The finished painting has Roosevelt standing at the foot of the stairs, his hand on the newel post. An outstanding picture has caught the dynamic qualities of this man of action. Was the president trying to tell the artist, "Moments come and go ... Here is the time, seize it, do your best"?

Now, in the beginning of the Advent season, is the time to return to the present. Our Lord wants to break into our lives and help us as we struggle with our problems. He wants to release the gifts hidden within us. He wants to do something new in our lives. Awake, Christ is coming. Christ is coming now.

CSS Publishing Company, EMPOWERED BY THE LIGHT, by Richard Hasler