Luke 21:5-38 · Signs of the End of the Age
Redemption Near And Dear
Luke 21:5-38
Sermon
by Erskine White
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Look up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near. (Luke 21:28)

A few years ago, a rather well-known preacher wrote a book called Shaping a Successful Life, and as is customary in the book business, his publisher arranged a series of interviews on radio and television as a way of promoting sales of the book.

Now, amid everything he had written on being successful, he also included one chapter on coping with troubles and tragedies in life, and to this man’s surprise, everyone who interviewed him wanted to focus on that one chapter. Even the Christian talk show hosts had a hard time reconciling the idea of success with having problems in life. One of them even asked, "If people are going to have troubles in life, why should they follow Christ?"

Of course, many people (and even many Christians) have that same attitude today. All they ask of God is, "What have You done for me lately?" All they seek in Jesus is a kind of supernatural protection against the pitfalls of life - an inoculation against life’s inequities. That is the sum and substance of their faith.

But we know that this popular gospel of "health and wealth" belongs more to the culture than to Christ, because Jesus made it abundantly clear that life does bring trials and troubles, even to the believer. In fact, Jesus promised that those who follow Him will have more than their share of problems in this world.

Our Lord compared Himself to a cornerstone which the builders had rejected (Mark 12:10). He told His followers that they would be persecuted for His sake and even crucified (John 21:18), and that this would be a blessing to them (Matthew 5:10). He promised that the world would hate them (Mark 13:13), that they would be delivered up into courts and councils to go on trial for their lives (Mark 13:9). He even warned that their own families would turn against them because of Him (Matthew 10:36). These are hardly the words of a Man who is trying to attract people by promising them a rose garden without any of life’s thorns or thistles.

At first, of course, it seems strange and inappropriate to be talking like this at Christmas time, because Christmas is a season for joy and good cheer. It’s a time for family reunions and "chestnuts roasting on an open fire," a time for warm generosity and cheerful greetings to strangers on the street. "Merry Christmas!" I hope the holiday season is all of that and more for you.

But before we get too far into the wonder, the joy and the beauty of the season, let’s be honest and admit that the holidays can also be very difficult for many people, even for Christians. In fact, faithful people know that they need not feel ashamed or confused about getting these "Christmas blues" - it is with good reason that our text this morning links words like "distress" and "foreboding" with the Advent season.

I dare say that at least half of us will find the holidays an emotionally difficult time in one way or another, and we’ll need faith to see it through. We’ll need faith to look past our distress to see what is really taking place during this Advent season, and to hear the powerful message of our text: "Look up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near."

I think of those who have lost their loved ones during the past year. This will be their first Christmas without those loved ones, and it may well be the hardest Christmas they have ever had. For them, there will surely be signs of pain and distress in what is supposed to be the most joyous time of the year.

I think of those who are in hospitals, nursing homes or homeless shelters, those who are overseas in the armed forces or locked up in prison, and people who, for whatever reason, cannot be home for the holidays. For them, there will be signs of loneliness and longing during a season in which it seems that everyone but them is headed home to be with family and friends.

I also think of those who face real turmoil when they do go home for what will be, at best, a bittersweet reunion. Their families suffer hurts and antagonisms which date back many years, and holidays always threaten to bring these tensions out into the open. For these people, there will be signs of fear and foreboding during a season which is supposed to be warm and sweet.

Finally, I think of all of us who must cope with the general stress and strain of this busiest time of the year. We’ve got too much cooking, baking and present-making to do, and too little time in which to do it. We’ve got too many gifts to buy and too little money to buy them with. We’ve got to preserve what is spiritual about Christmas amid all that is commercial. Christmas can wear us out even before it has the chance to lift us up! So, for all of us, there can be signs of exhaustion and dread during a season which is supposed to be inspiring and renewing.

Scratch beneath the surface and look behind the smiles of the Christmas season, and you will find a lot of people just trying to survive rather than celebrate these holy days. Any one of us can find some way to identify with a text which talks about distress and perplexity, fear and foreboding at the advent of our Lord.

So, what are we to do? How are we to overcome these feelings of discouragement and despair when everyone knows we’re supposed to be happy? Believe it or not, I saw the answer in a little daily ritual which took place in our house, involving our one-year-old daughter and a golden retriever puppy named Jesse.

To understand the full comic nature of this little ritual, you have to know that Jesse, the puppy, is already taller than our baby girl, and he has at least twice her weight. You also need to know that when we call Jesse into the house, he doesn’t just walk in like a normal dog. He tears around the yard a couple of times to burn off energy, and by the time he hits the front door, he has worked up a full head of steam. In fact, he is just a golden-colored blur by the time he reaches the living room.

Meanwhile, Jordan, our one-year-old daughter who has just learned to walk, would waddle over the door to see what all the commotion is about, and invariably, she would get there just in time to be flattened by Jesse as he bounded inside. She never stood a chance! She never got hurt, mind you, but it must have been pretty discouraging. She had just learned to walk, and she kept getting run over by this four-legged blur flying by.

Well, this went on for several weeks, until finally one day, our baby daughter saw what was coming. She saw Jesse getting ready to race inside. Her eyes got real big, she did an "about face," and as quick as her little legs would take her, she ran over to the living room table and grabbed on to it for dear life, just in time before the golden blur blew by her again.

As I watched all this, I realized that this is how we need to be about the holiday season. Christmas can come racing at you just like Jesse, but don’t let it knock you over. Don’t let it flatten you. Like a little child, get a hold of something firm and sturdy. Grab on to your real comfort, the real reason for the season. In the midst of your distress and perplexity, even when it comes at this special time of the year, look up and raise your heads, and know that your salvation is drawing near.

This message of hope which speaks to our own individual lives is also being given to the nations during Advent. That’s really what Jesus is talking about in our text: "There will be signs in sun and moon and stars," He says, "and upon earth distress of nations ... [people will be] fainting with fear and foreboding of what is coming on in the world ..." Nations as much as people are filled with distress and perplexity, fear and foreboding; and nations as much as people need to know that in the midst of all that troubles them, their redemption is drawing near.

Redemption of the world, indeed. The cheery Christmas music at shopping malls is stilled by the cries of children with hungry bellies. The warmth of the family hearth is chilled by the silent shiver of homeless people huddled around a trash can fire. The boisterous noise of office Christmas parties is muted by the quiet anguish of workers laid off just before the holidays. The sweet symphony of praise for the Prince of Peace is jangled by the jarring, clanging, discordant sounds of war.

The world’s ills do not go into remission during the holidays. In fact, and more so in Advent than at any other time of the year, the sensitive Christian conscience is troubled by the contrast between the joy of the season and the pain of the world.

What are we to do? What are we to think about the perplexities of the world and the distress of nations during this time of Advent? As earlier we found an answer for our own personal situations in a story about a bounding puppy and a baby girl, so now may we find an answer to this larger question in a story about a former big city major named Fiorello LaGuardia.

As some of you know, LaGuardia was mayor of New York during the Depression, and he was quite a character. He would ride the city fire trucks, take entire orphanages to baseball games and whenever the city newspapers went on strike, he would get on the radio and read the Sunday "funnies" to the children.

At any rate, one bitter cold winter’s night in 1935, Mayor LaGuardia turned up in a night court that served the poorest ward in the city, dismissed the judge for the evening and took over the bench himself. After he heard a few cases, a tattered old woman was brought before him, accused of stealing a loaf of bread.

She told LaGuardia that her daughter’s husband had deserted her, her daughter was sick and her grandchildren were starving. But the shopkeeper, from whom the bread was stolen, insisted on pressing charges. "My store is in a very bad neighborhood, your honor," he said. "She’s got to be punished in order to teach other people a lesson."

The mayor sighed. He turned to the old woman and said, "I’ve got to punish you," he said. "The law makes no exception - ten dollars or ten days in jail."

But even as he spoke, LaGuardia was reaching into his pocket and pulling out a ten dollar bill. "Here is the woman’s fine," he said, "and furthermore, I’m going to fine everyone in this court room fifty cents for living in a city where a person has to steal bread so that her grandchildren can eat. Mr. Baliff, collect the fines and give them to the defendant."

The following day, the New York Times reported that $47.50 was turned over to the bewildered old woman. It was given by the red-faced store owner, some seventy petty criminals, people with traffic violations and city policemen - and they all gave their mayor a standing ovation as they handed over their money.1

That’s how it will be with God’s world. Just when it seems that all hope is lost, and goodness and mercy shall never win, the Great Judge will come to set things right, deciding for the hungry and the meek of the earth. Yes, there is also an Advent promise for the nations of the world in perplexity and distress: "Look up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near."

For nations as for people, God is good to make this promise and to bring Himself to us in Jesus Christ just when we need Him the most. He comes as we are walking in darkness, to show us a great light and to lead us safely through the night.

It is a message for Advent and it is our faith for any time of year. Yes, we will be blessed by the sheer joy of this beautiful season in the weeks ahead. Yes, we will be touched by the wonder of the season in worship and music from here to Christmas Eve.

But first, we have a message for those who must face a harder time during the holidays. It’s an Advent message we should neither be hesitant to give nor ashamed to receive: You who are weary and heavy-laden, look up and be strong. You who are living with a hole in your heart or an open wound in your soul, lift up your heads and keep the faith. Don’t give up. Don’t give in and don’t lose heart. Know that these signs of distress are signs of the Advent. These are signs that Jesus is on His way, coming "with power and great glory" into your life and into the world.

Yes, Christians are not immune from trouble on earth, even at Christmas time. Faithful Christians will get more than their share. But through it all and all through Advent, we give thanks to the Lord who is soon to come. We give thanks to God for knowing that we have everything to gain and nothing to fear, because we know our redemption is near and dear. Amen

Pastoral Prayer

O Lord God, who is more generous with Your love than we can expect or deserve, help us to remain faithful when we are beset by the trials and tribulations of life. Do not let us get so discouraged that we fail to see the light at the end of the night. Do not let us get so preoccupied with our problems that we fail to count our blessings as well. And when our distress seems ready to overwhelm us, help us at the moment of our deepest need to look up and know that our redemption is surely drawing near.

Most Holy and Righteous God, we also pray on this Advent Sunday for the distress of the world. Let this season bring hope to those who have no hope and justice to those who are too long denied. Give those who lead us the courage to take risks for peace and the vision to fashion new rules of cooperation and trust for the nations of the world. Let us be guided by Your hand, since we know that You alone can bring about what is best for this world. Humbly, we ask all this in Jesus’ name. Amen


1. This story is told in James McCutcheon, "The Righteous and the Good," in Best Sermons, (James W. Cox, ed., Harper and Row, San Francisco, 1988), pp. 238-9).

C.S.S. Publishing Company, TOGETHER IN CHRIST, by Erskine White