Mark 13:1-31 · Signs of the End of the Age
Satan’s Talking Points
Mark 13:1-31
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
Loading...

Have you heard? Hollywood says we have three years left until the apocalypse.

Hollywood, always a reliable scientific and spiritual source, is basing its prediction on the ancient Mayan long-count calendar. This is a calendar which correctly predicted an astonishing number of other astrological and mathematical events. Unfortunately for the Mayans, even the best math couldn’t factor in and figure out some highly unexpected variables – like their own demise. This ancient and powerful Mayan culture didn’t foresee the arrival and ultimate invasion of a bunch of Spanish soldiers of fortune — soldiers bearing weapons the Mayans had never seen and bringing diseases their bodies had never encountered. The advanced Mayan technology that had carefully calculated “the end of the world” on 21 December 2012, was unable to perceive that “the end of THEIR world” was only a few decades away.

Regardless of the fact that the Mayans couldn’t foresee the end of their own civilization, the Mayan prediction of 2012 as the end of human civilization has captured the imagination of popular culture. The fact that the 5125 year Mayan calendar comes to an end on 21 December 2012 is giving bad dreams and bad thoughts to a whole new generation.

Of course, there are dates that speak volumes just by their numbers. Here are a couple of them:

1776
1789
1000
428 AD (See An Ordinary Year at the End of the Roman Empire by Giusto Traina).

We process time and give it meaning by dates. But the date that you’re going to hearing more and more of us 2012, the alleged end-of-the-world date.

People who claim US citizenship have always been particularly entranced by end-of-the-world scenarios. Maybe it is because our own national history is so relatively short. Maybe it is because our roots are less deeply planted, making uprooting less intimidating. Think here of the Shakers, the Amana society, Millerites, all of whom lived all their lives preparing for the end.

Those that jumped on the apocalyptic bandwagon have often been those who have the least to lose in the event of a widespread materialistic meltdown. Recent immigrants, already uprooted, sometimes decide to send their hopes heavenward instead of sinking roots earthward. The poorest, the disenfranchised, those pushed to the edges and margins because of race, education, disabilities or just plain poverty, have always been rich soil for the germination of apocalyptic angst.

From the ancient Mayans to Nostradamus to Y2K and now 2012, there has never been any shortage of end-of-the-world scenarios. The predictions of a “nuclear winter” have been replaced by global warming, and there is still a debate over whether the devastating climate changes will bring drought of floods to vast regions of the earth — but the general agreement among all these scenarios is, “its gonna be bad.” The grimness of our environmental condition is relentlessly apocalyptic. Technological breakthroughs unaccompanied by spiritual breakthroughs can be apocalyptic. There is no such thing as a happy ending, apocalyptically speaking.

Apocalypticism is all about attitude – and it’s a bad attitude. That was Jesus’ message in today’s gospel text. Don’t dwell on the unknowable, the uncontrollable, the unfathomable. Jesus reminded his disciples that “about that day or hour no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” (Mark 13:32). Did you get that? Even Jesus doesn’t know everything. There is something kept hidden from Jesus himself . . . and that something is the very thing that some people profess to know, even if Jesus didn’t: “that day or hour.”

Participating in the kingdom of God, not cataloging and calculating apocalyptic appearances and disasters that is the role of faithful followers. Jesus has called his disciples, whether in the first century or the twenty-first century, to live fully and faithfully in the time God has placed us in. And God will take of “that day or hour.”

As 2012 approaches, and after that it will be 2020, and after that . . . who knows? . . . How can we avoid a bad attitude? How can we avoid growing an apocalyptic attitude? How can we keep a bad state of mind from becoming bad faith and a bad statement about our faith?

In 375 CE one of the early monastic writers known as a “Desert Father” was the monk Evagrius Ponticus. Evagrius of Pontus spent much of his early life running away. He ran from sin and from the temptation to sin. He ran away from sophisticated Constantinople when he fell in love with a married woman, and fled to the holier city of Jerusalem. In Jerusalem he found he was still tempted by pride and self-importance, and so he fled again. This time he ended up in the Egyptian desert.

But Evagrius was at heart a teacher. He looked for a way to teach his students how to avoid the kinds of temptations that had tormented him on his own faith journey. This teaching became his legacy. We know it today by a different name than, but you all know his teaching, even if you don’t know the teacher. Evagrius constructed a list of “eight evil thoughts,” also known as the “eight terrible temptations.” These were eight mental, emotional, and spiritual attitudes straight for Satan that would lead the one who entertained them into sinful behavior. And all eight of these were attitudes about the future.

In more contemporary language, you might call these eight evil thoughts “Satan’s Talking Points.”* Satan’s Eight Talking Points Evagrius identified were

  • gluttony
  • fornication/lust
  • avarice
  • sorrow (tristiti)
  • discouragement (acedia)
  • anger
  • vainglory
  • pride

This list was famously called the “logismoi,” or the “words/talking points” that, when you gave in to them and followed their train of thought, would lead you down the path of despair and destruction. When you start listening to Satan’s Talking Points, your mind becomes fogged up and fixated on thought trains that so engage the body and mind that the person drifts away into a world of fantasy and detours from what God is calling the person to do in the present.

Two centuries later in 590 CE Pope Gregory the Great used the “logismoi” as the basis for his rendition of the now well known “Seven Deadly Sins.” Gregory combined “acedia” and “sorrow” to create a single category “sloth,” rolled “vainglory” into “pride,” and added the new category of “envy” to create his list that endures to this day.

But there was a difference between Gregory’s list and the original Evagrius list, and it was more than the difference between eight and seven. Gregory focused on “sins,” the acting out of temptations. Evagrius was concerned with the way Satan’s talking points about the future could bring you to fear and paralysis. The train of thoughts themselves were the biggest stumbling blocks on the path to faithfulness, not the acts of sinning. It was the focus on these thoughts that could ensnare and disable you on your life’s journey.

We don’t have time to do this with every one of Satan’s Seven Talking Points, but here is the danger of gluttony from the perspective of Evagrius, not Gregory. For Evagrius gluttony was not over-eating, or even a desire for fancy food, but an anxiety about one’s future health and where one’s food was coming from in a fearful future. Satan’s talking points bring up scenarios of illness, and scarcity, and force us to solve problems which have not yet arisen and need not arise if we don’t engage in a self-fulfilling prophesy. In other words, Satan’s talking point of gluttony leads to the survivalists’ sin of stockpiling.

The same with Satan’s talking point of lust (fornication). Fantasies of loneliness and abandonment run away with us, and entangle us in imaginary scenarios that have no bearing on real relationships. In other words, Satan’s talking point of lust leads to body-worship, the body-is-everything mentality, and immediate gratification.

I personally think that two of Satan’s most deadly talking points are sorrow and discouragement. When we look at all the problems we are facing take the way in which Senator Everett Dirksen’s “a million here, a million there, and pretty soon we’re talking real money” has become “a trillion here, a trillion there”— it is easy to succumb to sorrow and discouragement.

But for Evagrius, and probably for us today, Satan’s most deadly talking point was pride, the ultimate madness which entangles us in Project ME and deludes us into thinking that we can do anything without God. This is the ultimate in Global Warning: Life in the Youniverse, and its unholy trinity of me, myself, and I.

It’s time we learned how to sing “How Great Thou Art” again. For what comes out of our mouths when we’ve listened to Satan’s Talking Points is “How Great I Am.”

I invite you to join me in drowning out Satan’s Talking Points that would capture our imaginations with Armageddon anxieties by singing this song that puts our minds at peace and our hearts at rest: “How Great Thou Art.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet