Mark 13:1-31 · Signs of the End of the Age
Making a Clean Sweep
Mark 13:1-31
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
Loading...

The first vacuum clear was constructed of odd parts. The vacuum effect was accomplished by the attachment of an old pillowcase as its bag. A few hundred refinements later, the Hoover family popularized and sold door-to-door the motorized sucking machine dubbed the vacuum cleaner.

It doesn't take a degree in interior design to notice how the humble vacuum cleaner has ably reflected the styles and dreams of popular culture.

In the 1930s Hoover incorporated a round headlight into the front of their cleaning machines causing countless children to turn off the lights, plug in the vacuum, and play train with the noisy machines.

In the 40's the grill-work on vacuums was redesigned, making the machines used to clean carpets resemble the huge, chrome-plated Chryslers and Oldsmobiles sitting in driveways.

As the 1950's space-race started designers again transformed vacuums into cosmic cleaners, round brightly-colored canisters vacs-on-wheels that sped across the floor like rocket-powered capsules.

Today our vacuum cleaners are as high-tech as the rest of our lives. They are light-weight, self-propelled, and cordless. While some homes are now constructed with a built-in vacuum system (just hook up in each room), other home owners have purchased robotic vacuums. Loaded with computer intelligence chips these flat, oval, nimble little cleaning units quietly glide over our dirty carpets and floors all on their own. Come home to find a clean house.

But long before motorized, mechanized, computerized machines cleaned our homes for us, we had to sweep for ourselves. Brooms bound collections of stiff straws or rushes, fastened to some sort of handle served as the primary housekeeping tool for thousands of years. Egyptians swept the sand from their pyramids with brooms, nuns cleaned their cloisters with brooms, medieval merchants swept out their shops with brooms. Anywhere you found people living in permanent structures, you found brooms. Despite the grime and grunge we associate with pre-modern living conditions, we homo sapiens have always had this niggling need to clean up after ourselves.

In earliest days of our nation, brooms were just a bundle of twigs tied to a handle. They weren't called brooms but "besoms" (pronounced "bee-zums"), and they were a far cry from the masterpiece brooms the Shakers created in the 19th century which today you can find only in museums. Benjamin Franklin planted the first broom seeds which he obtained from Hungary (which they got from Africa) and made the first as-we-know-them-today brooms. In colonial America, one of the home's most prized possessions was the broom. There were brooms for every task: cobweb brooms, sweeper brooms, mantel brooms, etc. In fact, it was considered bad luck if you took your old broom to a new house.

Brooms are so commonplace in our culture that they have played a role far beyond that of a cleaning implement. Everyone knows they were used as transportation and as magical side-arms for the flocks of witches that darkened medieval skies and minds. Harry Potter fans are familiar with magical flying brooms that are used instead of flying ponies.

The broom also served as a binding symbol of love and togetherness for early American slaves, who symbolically "jumped over the broom" into marriage and family life. Increasingly popular at African American marriage ceremonies, the bride and groom together jump over one or two brooms laid out on the floor, symbolically sweeping away the old and welcoming the new, symbolically crossing a bridge and beginning a clean life together. (Note: In Jamaica, the broom is a political symbol of the People's National Party, because it aimed to sweep the Jamaica Labor Party out of power. Party members clutch brooms in the streets.)

The individual straws that create brooms have long been used to help determine our personal future every time we agree to draw straws.

In fact the less we actually use brooms as cleaning implements (haven't we all moved on to Swiffers now?) the more we seem to use them metaphorically. Despite their simple structure and less-than-perfect cleaning performance, we all know what it means to make a clean sweep. Though it almost never happens, baseball pennant and world series teams dream of making a clean sweep. And who would argue that some of the most dangerous and necessarily perfect work done by soldiers and civilians alike is the tedious, nail-biting job of accomplishing a clean sweep of a minefield.

In these cases the simple act of sweeping brings about the absolute completion of a task sweeping utterly eradicates all that stands in its way. It's this same type of utter eradication that Jesus predicted for the massive, seemingly indestructible walls of the great temple the structural center of Jewish life and faith.

Jesus is unimpressed and unfazed by the dimensions of the stones or the bulk of the building. Despite the temple's tremendous size and its weighty significance in the history of the Jewish people, he predicts a clean sweep of it from the face of the earth, from its importance to faith.

Historically we know Jesus' words accurately depicted the temple's future. By 70 C.E. the great building was in ruins and the life of faith that was temple-oriented and priestly-orchestrated had come to an end. Everything had changed. The temple was destroyed.

And yet as Jesus had foretold it was not the end-of-time. Indeed this particular clean sweep opened the way for the birth of an entirely new kind of faith a faith not dependent upon animal sacrifices or secret priestly communiques with God. Out of the rubble arose a kind of faith that could live and thrive without a structure, without a central building or privileged born-to-it class of leaders.

And this faith was built on a new temple: the true Temple is Jesus. And this temple will be destroyed and built in three days.

With Jesus as the New and True Temple . . .

Faith became both personal and person-based . . . instead of institutional and legally based. Assurance came from the presence of the Holy Spirit . . . instead of from a list of laws. One sacrifice had paid for all . . . instead of requiring repeatedly paying for substitutionary animal sacrifices. Wherever two or three are gathered Jesus is in our midst . . . instead of the faithful needing to trek to one geographical place to find the divine presence. The temple was so decimated, the priestly class so completely dismantled, that there was no hope of going back to religion-as-usual. The devastation of the temple DID portend the beginning of the end. But it was also just the first twinge, the first birth pang, of the great events that were still to come . . . the New Temple of Jesus the Christ.

It's our mission and our joy to spend this interim period celebrating the towering of the New Temple, the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit, and anticipating the ultimate arrival of the Kingdom of God. Jesus cautioned his disciples not to get so wrapped up in reading the signs that may be around them so that they could recognize the miracle in their midst.

Jesus' words reverberate today.

Has your life been swept clean of all that's preventing the New Temple from being built in your home, your life, this church?

[You may want to want to end your sermon using one of the images introduced above: giving them broom seeds or straw, having them come forward to take the broom you've been using as a prop and sweep something with it, or placing a broom at the exit doors so that they can jump the broom in the slave tradition.]

Now What?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet