Mark 13:1-31 · Signs of the End of the Age
Preparing For An Unknowable Future
Mark 13:1-31
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Let's suppose that the world really was coming to an end. How, do you suppose, the headlines of our major newspapers would read? One day at lunch a crowd of reporters, bankers, brokers and PR types at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. speculated on how various news media would play the story of the end of time. Here are some suggested headlines:

*LOS ANGELES TIMES: NO TRAFFIC ON FREEWAYS TONIGHT.

*USA TODAY: WE DIE! (Late Sports, 1C)

*THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: MARKET CLOSES EARLY.

*SPORTS ILLUSTRATED: THE FAT LADY SINGS. (1)

Our lesson from Mark's Gospel is part of the apocalyptic literature of the Bible.

In very vivid terms it describes the last days of planet earth. Some people get a chill just thinking of the possibility of the end of the world or the Rapture or the Second Coming. Each time predictions are made there are people who sell their homes, cash in their life insurance policies, turn toward the heavens for signs.

Of course, none of this is new. For centuries there have been innumerable theories as to when and how the world might end. In 960 a German theologian calculated 992 as the most likely year. As the time approached, panic was widespread. In 1665 a man named Solomon Eccles was jailed in London's Bridewell Prison for striding through Smithfield Market stark naked, carrying a pan of blazing sulfur on his head, and prophesying doom and destruction. Although the end of the world did not follow, the Great Fire of London did, in 1666.

In 1874 Charles Taze Russell, founder of the sect that became Jehovah's Witnesses, concluded that the Second Coming had already taken place. He declared that people had 40 years, or until 1914, to enter his faith or be destroyed. Later he modified the date to "very soon after 1914."

In 1967 Anders Jensen, the Danish leader of a sect known as the Disciples of Orthon, convinced his followers that the world would end in a nuclear holocaust on Christmas Day. Jensen even appeared on the DAVID FROST SHOW to announce this fact to millions of television viewers. (2)

Since 1967 many other datesetters have come along including one wouldbe prophet who set the date for this past September. Each one has been wrong. It makes me think of a minister in what is now East Germany named Michael Stiftell.

Based on his study of Revelation, Stiftell proclaimed that the world would end on October 18, 1533. When it didn't happen, Stiftell was given a thrashing by the townspeople. Not a bad idea. Jesus said that not even he knew the date, but that does not discourage some of his followers from speculating.

I like something that J. David Bianchin wrote in Leadership magazine. He used the analogy of a basketball game. In the 1987 NCAA Regional Finals, Louisiana State University was leading Indiana by eight points with only a few minutes left in the game. As is often the case with a team in the lead, LSU began playing a different ball game. The television announcer pointed out that the LSU players were beginning to watch the clock rather than wholeheartedly play the game. As a result of this shift in focus, Indiana closed the gap, won the game by one point, and eventually went on to become NCAA champions. David Bianchin goes on to say that God does not want us wasting pointless energy watching the clock. God wants us to be in obedient service. (3)

We do not want to be guilty of clock-watching this morning, but we want to take seriously Christ's words about the last days. There are three significant things Christ says to us about the end of time and Christ's return.

FIRST OF ALL, HE SAYS WE CANNOT KNOW THE FUTURE. Jesus' disciples fully expected his return in their lifetime. They were wrong. No scriptural truth is more sure than this one: Only God knows the future.

Think in our own recent history. Those of you who are fifty or older. Would you have predicted in your younger days that within your lifetime a man would walk on the moon and you would watch it on television? Everyone else, could you have predicted just a few years ago how the computer would change our lives, or the fax, or the cellular telephone or cable TV? Or in political terms. Could you have predicted that the Hippies of the 60s supporting George McGovern would become the Yuppies of the 80s supporting Ronald Reagan? Would you have predicted AIDS or the fall of the Berlin Wall? Who knows what tomorrow will bring? A cure for cancer or perhaps a nuclear catastrophe as weapons of destruction fall into the hands of terrorists? Who knows? Only God.

This brings us to the second truth: GOD DOES KNOW. None of us knows but God does. This is our chief source of comfort. God knows.

In Richmond, Virginia sometime back a broad-minded judge let petty offenders roll a huge pair of dice to determine the number of days they would get in jail. After the judge's death, his secret came out: the dice were loaded. (4) At first thought one might conclude that when God gave humanity freedom, God gave an astounding roll of the dice. How would humanity use its freedom - to build or to destroy? The answer is not yet clear, but let me give you a hint. The dice are loaded.

There is a form of science known as chaology, the study of chaos. The basic assumption of this discipline is that some things in life are basically unpredictable. For example, the weather. Our ecosystem is so interrelated that a butterfly flapping its wings in Beijing may ultimately affect weather over New York City. There are simply too many variables to ever give a completely accurate long range weather prediction. And yet according to computer models there are patterns even to these supposedly chaotic events. The patterns are so huge and so complex that they only seem chaotic to us. The biblical testimony is that there is a basic pattern to all of life. You and I can't discern it anymore than a fish can analyze the water in which it swims. If we could step out of space and time with God, we could see the pattern, and we could see that all things do work to the good for those who love God, but right now we see through a glass darkly. All we know is that God knows and therefore things are all right.

There is a haunting story of a man who was the lone survivor of a shipwreck. He washed up on a small uninhabited island. He cried out to God to save him, and every day he scanned the horizon for help, but none came. Eventually he built a small hut and put his few possessions in it. Then one day, he arrived home to find his hut in flames, the smoke rolling up to the sky. He was angry and grief-stricken. Early the next day, though, a ship drew near the island and rescued him. "How did you know I was here?" he asked the crew. "We saw your smoke signal," they replied. We don't know the future, but God does. God will not forsake us. We are in God's eternal care. But what about in the meantime? What does God expect out of us while we are awaiting the culmination of God's plan?

OUR TASK IS TO MAKE THE MOST OF THE PRESENT.

In the words of the Robin Williams character in the movie, The Dead Poets Society, "Carpe diem" or seize the day."

In the movie Williams plays an English teacher who takes his class into the hall to the trophy case. There he shows them pictures of past heroes of the school. "All of these young men were as you are today," he tells them, "starting life with great promise. All of you will someday be as they are. They're all dead and so will you be. What do you think they would say to you? Get up close to the glass." As the class leans toward the glass, Williams, in a raspy voice, says, "Carpe diem...carpe diem." Seize the day!

Are you making the most of the days God has given you? Someone has noted that the average American disposes of about 40.1 hours of leisure time per week: 15.2 hours are spent in front of the TV. If the same time were invested in walking, during one year you could walk across America from coast to coast. If the same time were invested in education, you could earn an MBA in two years. If the same time were invested in a part-time job that pays $20 per hour, you could earn $47,424 in three years. (5) Carpe diem! Seize the day!

Someone else has noted that if you get up just one hour earlier each morning you will add the equivalent of over two additional months of productive work days each year.

Someone's thinking to himself, "Stop pastor, you're making me tired." Listen, I need to take that risk for just a few moments. There are some of you who are concerned about your future in the marketplace. The world is rapidly changing. Companies are downsizing. Middle management is disappearing, as is unskilled labor. Social Security may be bankrupt in just a few years. I don't know what the future holds. Neither does anyone else. But one thing's clear: the better prepared you and I are, the better our chances of survival. Young people, stay in school. Young and middle adults, realize that in an information society, we must keep learning and growing over a lifetime. All of us, of every age, let's make maximum use of the time God gives us. Carpe diem. Seize the day.

Of course, there are two investments of time that pay the highest dividends. The first is the time we invest in our family and friends. It's a cold, cruel world out there. We need one another. The second is the time we spend with God. God is our primary resource for coping with an unknown future.

Dr. Robert Schuller tells a remarkable story about Christy Wilson, a missionary-educator in Afghanistan. A few years ago there was a near wipe-out of Afghanistan's leading industry, sheep breeding. A fatal disease had entered the flocks and stubbornly resisted efforts to eradicate it. With the entire sheep industry in danger of extinction, it meant that there was a loss of wool for clothing, leather for commercial products, and food to eat. In a country already suffering mass poverty, the potential losses were catastrophic.

Christy Wilson understands prayer better than most people. "What can I do?" he prayed. The answer came: "Write to your friends in the United States and ask them to send you some Long Island ducks." So this is what Christy did. Not long afterwards two dozen duck eggs were shipped air freight from New York. But they didn't reach Afghanistan directly! The shipment was side-tracked and spent many hot days in a warehouse in Calcutta. When the package finally arrived in Kabul, Afghanistan, some of the eggs were cracked and smelled rotten. Christy prayed again, "Lord, let at least two eggs hatch out, and let one of them be male and the other female."

Twenty-two eggs proved to be rotten and infertile. Only two hatched. One was male and the other female. In a matter of months they were reproducing, and the offspring multiplied. Then the miracle happened! The ducks began to devour the snails that crawled along the watering holes where the sheep went to drink. Amazingly, the fatal sheep disease disappeared! For the snails proved to be the carriers of the disease. Today both ducks and the sheep are in abundance, for which Christy Wilson was signally honored by the king himself. (6)

As we prepare for this unknowable future many of us are ignoring our most precious resource, the presence of God in our lives. There is a basic pattern to life, a pattern God alone can see. Trust in God and seize the day.


1. READER'S DIGEST, May 1994, p. 148.

2. FACTS & FALLACIES, (Pleasantville, New York: The Reader's Digest Association, Inc., 1988), pp. 324-325.

3. Volume 8, #4.

4. Robert Wayne Pelton, LAUGHABLE LAWS AND COURTROOM CAPERS, (New York: Walker and Company, 1993), p. 135.

5. PERSONAL SELLING POWER, March 1994, p. 41.

6. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, REACH OUT FOR NEW LIFE, (Garden Grover, CA: The Cathedral Press, 1977 and 1991), pp. 103-104.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan