Mark 13:1-31 · Signs of the End of the Age
First Things First
Mark 13:1-31
Sermon
by Thomas Peterson
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In our text Jesus makes a comparison between two different things: buildings and a person.

The buildings he spoke of were of great importance, representing many resources. No doubt the excess wealth of the city or nation was required to build them. Many workers were conscripted to work on them. And, no matter big or small, they were always much larger, more solid, and of greater economic value than any of the persons who helped in their construction. In fact, they gave a feeling of permanence which those who made them did not.

Any individual worker was insignificant among the huge number employed to construct the buildings. Even the most talented of the artists who adorned them are unknown to us today. A person was fragile and of short duration, here today, gone tomorrow. A person was temporary. Further, where a person was a single entity, the building represented the entire nation.

Jesus took this simple comparison and turned it upside down, thereby giving us new insights which might otherwise escape us. “These great buildings,” he told them, “will eventually be torn down. Not one stone will remain on another. Even as nation goes against nation and destruction is the outcome, so earthquakes and wars -- all these are signs that the end is near. And toward the end more confusion and destruction will prevail.” What he is saying might also be put this way: “No matter how imposing and permanent buildings appear, they are destructible, perishable.”

A person on the other hand, though fragile, single, and finite is able to represent God’s good news around the world. By doing this the person spreads an influence that will continue long past any building. Once able to be faithful to a high calling, people endure. They can generate hope and enthusiasm that make nations and civilizations strong and lasting. The effect of a steadfast person can envelope one country after another, while, all around, buildings and nations fall. In spite of destruction and decay, a person has the option to keep faith with the highest and best and endure. In doing so they bring many along with them.

Let’s sketch this out further. Great buildings are monuments. They symbolize what a civilization holds to be most important and most real. The core values and beliefs of a people are literally built into them. As substantial monuments they give the illusion of defying time. Within this illusion people take shelter. Perhaps, if they invest themselves in such a monument in one way or another, they, too, can defy time and even death. Life goes into such structures, so people draw the sense of life from them. The monument becomes the enduring event. Persons take on this permanence as they participate in its construction or function.

What are such monuments? The tower of Babel is one. All the people joined together using excess resources and labor over and above that needed for food, shelter, and clothing, and put these into a tower which would be a sign to them and others that they had reached God and were on a par with him. The pyramids likewise represent hundreds of thousands of laborers vast treasures of wealth, and natural resources. The purpose was not simply to be a fantastically high structure. Within it the bodies of the Pharaohs rested for eternity so that they could be free to roam the world in spirit form and continue existence beyond the life of the human body. For anyone to invest in such a monument was to feel the power of this conviction: there is a spirit that goes on beyond the death of the body. Life is free of physical limitations. The cathedrals of the Middle Ages are huge investments of cities and nations, taking hundreds of years, and consuming all excess wealth and labor to create. I cannot grasp the magnitude of a project that requires hundreds of years of the labor of hundreds of thousands of workers. Before that fact I can only stand in awe. But it was not the building itself that caused such an outlay. It was the sign it asserts to the city and the world. Reaching to heaven, filled with the light of heaven, all signs pointing to the Christ who gave himself for the salvation of humankind -- these monuments still speak to us of a timelessness that goes beyond our few days to eternity.

What of today? What are our monuments? Well, several -- there are the Empire State Building, the Sears Building. These are monuments to our power to build what is biggest in the world and even to out-do ourselves. But, I suggest that the primary monument in our world is the mushroom cloud. Like other monuments, this was not the work of a few brilliant scientists communing with nature in a laboratory. It was the result of tens of thousands of people spending billions of dollars over many years. It was a national effort employing the finest resources at our disposal. Fortunately, we are so wealthy a nation that all excess wealth was not required. Nevertheless we all gave to its creation through taxes -- often at the expense of food, clothing, and shelter for many of our citizens. Or, perhaps the primary monument of our day is not the mushroom cloud but the space rocket, pointing above and beyond, our dream to conquer space and time, indicating to us and the world our mastery over life-limitations.

Monuments are signs of the might and marvel of great cultures. They show to the world what is most important and most real to the people, pointing beyond the temporary and fragile toward the lasting and true, yes, even to a form of immortality. The values Jesus expressed, however, give us a new and inspiring perspective.

A person is not a cipher in this display of wealth and power. After all, first things first. It is people who build monuments. They conceive and formulate the ideals, and they create the monuments which express them. We should not miss this point: the ideal both comes before and outlives the monument. When faithful to the ideal itself, the loyalty of the person is more substantial than the building. When, as Jesus said, there is not one stone upon the other, the person, being the holding base for the ideal, endures. For instance, Paul endured, and he was instrumental in bringing down the Roman Empire. Augustine set standards for the faith that were of central importance for over a thousand years, out-lasting many nations and superceding countless monuments. In fact, the strength of his ideas still animate the faith of Protestants and Roman Catholics. Plato and Aristotle glide through history and, as it were, observe the centuries, ever creating more monuments and ever destroying others. And Jesus, Jesus as Lord over heaven and earth, not only endures past monuments but he enables those who will to endure.

What of today? We have marvelous examples of such persons. Ghandi persevered and was able to see the British Empire brought to an end. John Wesley gave back sobriety and honest labor to the British, putting self-respect and self-control into the British character in place of a gin-based society. Thus England was able to defeat Napoleon. Wilburforce confronted the vested interests of slavery around the world and brought this monument to human avarice toppling down. Our offering is Martin Luther King, Jr. who, by his endurance, shook the foundation of a social system built on prejudice and economic injustice.

Great monuments are important. Even those Jesus predicted would fall were rebuilt. People need to build monuments and express their values in and through them. But buildings can confuse the ideal they represent even as they attempt to express it. People become identified with the buildings and come to believe that as long as their monuments exist they can live in their shadow and stand on them as foundations for invincible living. They do not need to bestir themselves and discover the faith within. Jesus gives us this chance -- to put first things first and decide for ourselves what is really primary, great buildings and what they represent or the freedom and strength to embody the ideal within.

In Numbers 7:9 the tribes of Israel had given Moses oxen and wagons as offerings for use within the monument, the Tabernacle. Once the Tabernacle had been set up and consecrated, Moses divided the oxen and wagons among the various tribes. Whenever the sacred tent had to be moved, which was often, since the people were nomads, all the paraphernalia of the tent had to be moved. The equipment could be transported in the wagons, drawn by the oxen; but the holy things -- the ark and the sacred vessels and garments which represented the ideals of the community -- these could not be entrusted to wagons. “But to the sons of Kohath he gave none [no wagon or oxen], because they were charged with the care of the holy things which had to be carried on the shoulder.”

Matthew 6:19-21 reads, “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.” Great monuments hold within them the great ideals, clues to the lasting power of a people. The temptation is to turn over to the monuments these ideals, believing that so long as the monument exists the ideal is safe. Jesus focused on this belief. Even the greatest monument can become moth ridden and consumed with rust. Even thieves can warp the meaning and, in effect, manipulate its effectiveness away from the people. Dictators do this: the greedy do it; and the proud do it. To those who hold on to the ideal -- who carry it on the shoulder -- in spite of all opposition, moth, rust, and temptation to turn the burden over to wagons and oxen, the ideal is safely carried through the years. Here is the real monument, found on the commitment of the person, giving the best and highest for what is most important and most real. Faithful. Hard. A treasure in heaven.

We Americans are blessed to live in a powerful, wealthy nation. We have great monuments which we all take subconsciously as holding the most important values and the most basic ideals. Those we serve, seldom bringing into question the substance of our beliefs. The “sacred monument syndrome” filters down into every aspect of our lives. We are convinced that we are to be the best in the world, the biggest in the world, the smartest. Yet, despite our monuments, there is a curious fact that creeps into our collective consciousness. When involved in filling a major national office -- president, cabinet member, or a member of the Supreme Court, what do we look for? Now, each of these offices requires an immense amount of training and skill, yet we do not put these requirements first. What we do look for first is a person of integrity. It doesn’t seem to matter as far as an election is concerned what she or he will do, nor the powerful connections, nor the expertise brought to bear on the job. What we want first and foremost is an honest person. Behind this is a conviction, unspoken and perhaps unrecognized, that something inherent in their integrity will tap the honesty in us and make the whole nation faithful to its best. Yes, holy things are still carried on the shoulders. Programs and policies, like great buildings, can be corrupt and corrupt those who hold them; but, a good person -- an honest person -- a person who can endure…!

To endure! That is where we take our stand. Two primary ingredients for enduring come to us in the Gospel. One: to find out that which is most important and most real that we can grasp and accept. Who in all the world is the person from whom we can draw strength to stand for these things? I proclaim to you Jesus the Christ, Lord and Savior of this creation. No one works like him. Find in him the model and the source of power and purpose. Submit yourselves to his guidance and care. Two: give your highest and best to uphold what he stands for. Bear testimony to Jesus. Spread his good news throughout the world, even into your own neighborhood. Represent it in yourself as your own gift. Then it is that no moths can get in to the fabric of life and eat away its heart, for the heart rests in Christ. No rust corrupts, for long as monuments may stand, and strong as they may appear, all buildings have their end points. In the ideal -- our Lord Jesus Christ -- we find that which is truly important and eternally real, that which goes beyond the appearance of permanence. To him we give our highest and best. Through him we endure.

“Therefore, take the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.” (Ephesians 6:13)

C.S.S. Publishing Company, THE NEEDLE’S EYE, by Thomas Peterson