Mark 13:1-31 · Signs of the End of the Age
Destruction Instruction
Mark 13:1-8
Sermon
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Note: As I type these words, I am sitting at a coffee shop just outside the Twin Cities of Minnesota. Nineteen hours ago, the Interstate 35W Bridge, which spans the Mississippi River, collapsed just as the evening rush hour was winding down. Though it is too early to confirm, it is thought that as many as fifty passenger cars plunged into the river last night, not to mention the dozens of cars, trucks, and school busses that remain on the collapsed bridge deck. The recovery continues today, but the number of fatalities will likely reach thirty. By the time you read these words, we will know for sure, but for right now, my community is rocked by grief, suffering, and uncertainty.

So far, I don't personally know anyone immediately impacted by this tragedy, but that could change; the Twin Cities are not that large. On a personal note, I spoke to my son last evening and he told me that he had passed over the I-35 Bridge just fifty minutes before its collapse. I shudder to think of the words I would be typing today, had his timing been off by an hour. Such is the stuff of life!

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On August 1, 2007, at 6:05 p.m., the bridge on Interstate 35W over the Mississippi River came crashing down, and with it, dozens of cars and trucks that were caught in Minneapolis rush hour traffic. This massive structure, eight lanes wide and 2,000 feet long, without warning, collapsed like a house of cards, and left destruction and grief in its path. When it was built in 1967, it was considered an architectural wonder; the longest span of its kind; today, it is a twisted pile of rubble. Over the next few days, countless stories were told by people who had passed over that bridge minutes before the tragedy. Others mentioned that they had changed their route home that evening because traffic was heavy and they didn't want to wait on the freeway entrance ramp. A school bus carrying sixty children rested on the collapsed deck, but a few seconds earlier or later, and all of those children would have been tossed into the fast-moving current of the Mississippi. If only they had known, these victims and would-be victims; if they had known the day and the hour of this tragedy, they could have steered clear of the danger. But we never know these things, do we? There is seldom any warning of earthquakes, tsunamis, or terrorist attacks. If only we had known.

The temple in Jerusalem was a much more spectacular sight than any modern-day bridge. It was first built in 957 BC by King Solomon, and destroyed 400 years later by the Babylonians. A second temple was erected 500 years before Jesus, and stood as a monument to King Herod. It was here where Jesus taught the scribes and the Pharisees, and it was this venue about which Jesus was speaking in today's gospel lesson. "You see these great buildings?" Jesus asked, "Not a single stone here will be left in its place; every one of them will be thrown down."

When Jesus had finished his teaching, Peter, James, John, and Andrew took Jesus aside and asked him privately, "When will this happen? What are the signs that we should be looking for that will tell us that the end is near?" Jesus seems to oblige his friends, telling them that there will be wars and famines and earthquakes and false prophets. "But," Jesus adds, "that doesn't necessarily mean that the end is near." If we were to read a bit further into Mark's gospel, Jesus explains that other signs would tell them that the kingdom is near, but even these signs are more general than specific.

And then, at the end of chapter 14 of Mark, Jesus lowers the boom. In reality, Jesus says, "No one knows the day or the hour when this will occur; neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son of Man." Even Jesus doesn't know! And the final word of the chapter contains Jesus' final advice to his disciples: "Watch!"

Like those victims of the collapsed bridge, humankind will not know when life on this planet will come to an end. Over the centuries, countless attempts have been made to pinpoint the exact date, and all of these arbitrary dates have come and gone. The most notorious example in my lifetime came in 1970, in a book titled The Late, Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsey. In this "best-selling book of the entire decade of the 1970's," Lindsey concluded that Jesus would return within one generation (forty years) of Israel's 1948 rebirth as a nation. Living in a post-1988 world is conclusive evidence that Lindsey was wrong.

But to champion that point is to miss the point! The point is, we're not supposed to know when the end is near; we cannot know and we will not know. The compelling warning of Jesus is not that we should figure out when to be ready; it is that we should always be ready.

I am old enough to have played youth hockey in Minnesota outdoors! That is to say, I played in an age before heated ice arenas, Zambonis, and fancy electronic scoreboards. The fact is, our dads shoveled the rink between periods, and we stood in snow banks, waiting for our turn to play, and the game clock was kept on the referee's wristwatch. We didn't know when there was one minute left to play; the referee would simply blow his whistle and say, "Game over!" I remember our coach telling us that, since we never knew when the game was going to end, the safest thing to do was to get ahead and stay ahead, and then, whenever the game ended, we would be victorious.

I would submit to you today that this hockey advice is also good theological advice; the way to be prepared for the ultimate end is to be in a right relationship with Jesus Christ. To come face to face with the Savior of the world and to confess one's sins; to trust that the only guarantee to life eternal is to place one's life in Jesus Christ; this is what it means to "be ready." It doesn't mean that we need to live sinless lives until he comes; no one can do that. It doesn't mean that we must live in a constant state of wondering and worrying and uncertainty. It means that our faith is in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Period. End of story.

I cannot leave you today without mentioning one more thing that Jesus said in this conversation with Peter, James, John, and Andrew, again, after today's gospel lesson ends. Jesus told his friends "But before the end comes, the gospel must be preached to all peoples." There is an interactive component to this "end times" thing. Everybody gets a chance to hear the good news before the end comes; that's comforting, isn't it? And furthermore, it gives us a purpose while we are waiting for the kingdom. We're not supposed to sit around, twiddling our thumbs, waiting for the trumpet. We're not, as some radical religious sects contend, supposed to go off into the wilderness and live communally until Christ's coming. We're supposed to work! We are supposed to share the hopeful message of Jesus so that all may know Christ's love.

The world is full of people who are worried sick about the end; whether the "end" means the day of their death, or the end of time itself. They are worried that they haven't been good enough or religious enough or smart enough to gain the kingdom. Others worry about the end because they don't see any afterlife. They think that the seventy or eighty years on this planet is all there is, and when those are gone, one's existence is over. But we know the truth; that when our earthly life is over, a new chapter begins, and this one lasts forever. There are anxious souls waiting to hear that message, and Jesus says that he isn't coming back until it is proclaimed. So what are we waiting for? We have work to do! This good news is for everyone! Let us go out from this place and tell the story of a loving, gracious, patient, and powerful God, for this is our purpose in this world. Thanks be to God. Amen.

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