Luke 12:35-48 · Watchfulness
The Wisdom In Waiting
Luke 12:35-48
Sermon
by W. Robert McClelland
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"Fear not!" Jesus says. These are the same words spoken by the angels to the Bethlehem shepherds on the occasion of his first coming. Now they are used to speak of his second coming. The reason why we need not fear is because God's good pleasure is to give us the kingdom. We cannot earn it. We cannot build it. It is a gift of grace. Despite all the evidence to the contrary and all attempts to oppose it, the promise has been made. The kingdom of God is on the way. We are to wait for it and be ready.

The second coming has fascinated believers from the beginning, wondering when, where, how it will take place. Speculations and predictions abound. Over-anxious belivers have worked out all manner of time tables - all of them wrong, of course - but nevertheless purporting to read the signs of the times, fixing the seasons and marking the calendars. A lot of time, energy and anxiety could be saved by simply remembering Jesus' words on the matter, "No one knows, not even the angels ... nor the Son, but the Father only (Matthew 24:36)." That's the bottom line. Further comment on the time, place and manner of the second coming is pointless. It is not for us to know. So we must wait.

Waiting for the kingdom to come is one of the disciplines of Christian faith. We pray for it every Sunday in the Lord's Prayer, but waiting is not easy. Most of us regard waiting as a necessary evil. The fact that sometimes it is necessary does not diminish our regard for it as an evil, or at least, undesirable. To wait in a long checkout line at the grocery store is irritating. To be stopped on the way home by a changing traffic light and then forced to wait until it turns green is annoying. To wait for a plane that is late in arriving is a waste of time.

Most of us are accustomed to filling our time with activities. We set schedules and measure ourselves against them so that we can know how much progress is being made. We make lists of things to be done and check off the items as each is accomplished. Indeed, our identity or sense of worth is tied up with our accomplishments. Waiting is consciously or unconsciously felt to be a threat to our self esteem. We have no patience with apparent lack of progress in ourselves or our society. Not to feel that day by day in every way we are becoming better and better is a vexing, if not depressing, realization.

The Apostle Paul even frets about the entire universe having to wait, groaning in travail, until its deliverance (Romans 8:22, 23). But he adds, "I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God (Romans 8:18, 19)."

Even the Most High has to wait. We may wonder why Jesus was not sent a hundred years sooner. Why so long a wait? What was so special about that time? Those days? The gospel writers leave the speculations to our imagination. They simply say God had to wait for the "fullness of time (e.g., Mark 1:15 and Ephesians 1:10)." Even then, the Most High had to wait on the pregnancy of Mary. Nine long months had to be endured before God could bring the Word into the world.

Imagine the divine impatience as the little boy, Jesus, grew up one day at a time, maturing slowly into adulthood! First he had to learn to toddle and talk. The Word was burning to be spoken, but God had to wait. What an eternity that must have seemed for the Most High as the years slowly roled by; waiting for Jesus to learn to talk, waiting while he gained the needed experience to speak the mature Word. Thirty more years the God of the ages had to wait before the message was spoken. Those 30 years must have seemed as long to God as the preceding thirty centuries.

It would seem that waiting is a normal part of life. It takes time to heal physical and emotional injuries. A pregnancy cannot be hurried. Not even by God. It takes nine months, and all the impatience in the world or in heaven will not hurry the process along. It is a frustrated farmer who attends his scattered seed day and night hoping that by coaxing it along it will sprout and grow more rapidly. Not until the time is fulfilled will it do so. Waiting is his only option. We could observe that life does not reveal its meaning in a flash of insight. It unfolds over a period of time; year by year, experience after experience. There is no hurrying the process. We have to wait.

Jesus' words, however, are reassuring because they remind us that waiting is not only acceptable to God but intended by divine design. Rather than something to be regarded as a waste of time or a tolerated evil, waiting is a normative part of the life of faith. The kingdom comes to those who are willing to wait.

We may ask why is this so? What is the hidden wisdom in waiting?

Any attempt at an answer may be presumptuous, but at least two things appear to be true. First, we know from experience that when we are forced to wait it becomes abundantly clear we are not in control of the circumstances. Waiting is the vocation of the powerless. In our power conscious culture where being in charge is crucial to our identity and self esteem, waiting forces us to face the fact that someone else is running the show. It serves as a reminder, as indeed we occasionally need reminding, we are only human beings whose relation to God is characterized by not having, not seeing, not knowing and not grasping. Waiting delineates the boundary between our power and God's ability. Paul Tillich warns of the dangers in trying to ignore the boundary.

"A religion in which that is forgotten, no matter how ecstatic or active or reasonable, replaces God by its own creation of an image of God. Our religious life is characaterized more by that kind of creation than anything else. I think of the theologian who does not wait for God, because he possesses Him, enclosed within a doctrine. I think of the biblical student who does not wait for God, because he possesses Him, enclosed in a book. I think of the churchman who does not wait for God, because he possesses Him, enclosed in an institution. I think of the believer who does not wait for God, because he possesses Him, enclosed within his own experience."

Waiting reminds us of our limitations and underscores the basic fact of human existence: we need God. The human equation is not complete without the divine factor. We are not the center of the universe nor is the Holy One at our beck and call. Being forced to wait emphasizes the fact that the power to deliver us from our bondage is not ours to command.

Pauls' cry speaks for all of us, "I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate ... I can will what is right, but I cannot do it. For I do not do the good I want, but he evil I do not want is what I do (Romans 7:15, 18, 19)."

When we have been overwhelmed by that kind of frustration we know that the power to change ourselves does not lie at our disposal. We can only long for the day of deliverance and the joy that cometh in the morning. Until then we have Christ's promise, "It is the Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom."

That is why biblical Israel knew so much about waiting. In the opinion of the world, she was a third-rate power. In her saner moments she had no illusions about her ability to change the course of history nor hope of escaping her predicament as a pawn in the affairs of larger, more powerful nations. Israel knew that control of her destiny did not rest in her hands. Therefore, she looked forward to, and waited for, the coming salvation of the Lord.

By contrast, we can see why it is so difficult for us as Americans to wait. We suffer from a Messiah complex in which we assume that by our might we will bring peace and prosperity to the world. By flexing our military muscles we think we can enforce our will on others and with our technological prowess solve the problems of the world.

We carry this love affair with our capabilities right into our churches, where it is nourished by countless sermons the point of which seems to be that by flexing our motivational muscles and gritting our teeth, we can change ourselves and overcome our flaws. Perhaps we are disappointed with our slowness of heart. Filled with doubts, we find our faith a wooden thing, lifeless. Perhaps we are discouraged by our apparent lack of progess in overcoming some stubborn trait without ourselves which we can no longer tolerate. Or perhaps we are just plain tired of fighting some complusion and feel that we are not winning the battle. We seem to take one step forward and two backward. Well-meaning religious cheerleaders urge us on from the side lines. "You can be a beautiful person, if you try. Work at it! Think positively!"

The problem with such assumptions is that the more sincere we are about doing something to make ourselves acceptable in our own eyes as well as God's, the more frustrating the struggle becomes.

Paul's arid frustration brought him to the oasis of God's grace. "Thanks be to God who gives us the victory (1 Corinthians 15:57)." That is, after all, the premise on which all of Jesus' talk about waiting is based. The good news is that the Holy One has the power to give us the kingdom even if we do not have the ability to create it within ourselves or our world. Waiting reminds us that we are not God and cannot push the stream. But it also reminds us that there is One who brings deliverance in the fullness of time.

This opens to us the other dimension in waiting's wisdom. The fullness of time always lies in the future. To wait, therefore, is to affirm that this present situation, this present condition, no matter how good or bad, is not the kingdom of God. Waiting presupposes that something is yet to happen, that the present is not the end of the adventure, that there is something yet to be hoped for and lived toward. The Old Testament reveals a long history of expectation making it clear that the Christ was awaited a long time before his advent. And when he finally arrived he tells us we must be prepared to wait another long time for his coming again.

Waiting directs our attention to the future wherein our hope resides. The storytellers of the Bible almost always include a future tense when speaking of the Bible almost always include a future tense when speaking of the saving power of God. Old Testament prophets refer to the coming day of the Lord when God will redeem the people. New Testament writers saw that day having arrived in Jesus' birth and life, but even when they spoke of it, they always included a future tense and spoke of his seoncd coming. "It's not over," as the uncultured opera lover declared, "until the fat lady sings." Or in this instance, it's not over until the trumpets sound. Waiting invites us to live on tiptoes because the best view of the scene lies just over the horizon. To wait is to affirm that life is not all it can and will be. Not only is more to come, but the best is yet to be.

People who are content witht he status quo have no future. It is the future which promises what is not yet, but which is looked toward with hope for its becoming. People who change society and make a difference in the way things are, are people who can wait. They live in the present, but have their eyes glued to the horizon. They live as though the future is where the fulfillment of their waiting is to be found. Their minds do not wander. Their attention does not stray. And they do not become cynical. Their hopes are fixed on the future and they wait, single-mindedly and expectantly, for the kingdom of God to come with its new creation. Nothing less will satisfy or fulfill them.

Visionaries who cannot wait are little more than social gadflies who come and go with the changing fashions and the latest fads. Which may be another reason why the Bible is so concerned about cultivating the ability to wait. The activists of the 60s crowded college campuses across the country. They were occupied with dreams of changing the world, creating a new society, righting the wrongs of the disenfranchised and redressing the grievances of the poor. But the world has gone about its entrenched ways for a long time and society proved to be a stubborn resistor to change. Neither yielded readily to their insistance. The wrongs were not redressed, the grievances were not corrected. As a result many of the student activists of the 60s at first became impatient, then cynical, and finally self-centered as they returned to their campuses to throw frisbees, looked inward through meditation, and graduated intent on making money. They could not wait.

Biblical faith, ont he other hand, has sustained a social revolution for nearly 2,000 years because it has cultivated patience: the ability to wait. "The way to break down a brick wall," counseled a social reformer, "is not to attack it with a crowbar, but to lean on it until it gives away." The Old Testament prophet, Habakkuk, speaks of this patient pressure in a time of despair among his own people.

"For still the vision awaits its time; it hastens to the end - it will not lie. If it seems slow, wait for it; it will surely come, it will not delay."(Habakkuk 2:3)

Israel's hope as a nation fed on such expectations. Her constituents literally bet their lives on them. Waiting for the fulfillment of the divine promise is as appropriate for our day as it was for Habakkuk's.

Waiting for the return of Christ is disciplined believing. It is living as though God is at work in our world even though we may not be aware of it or see any immediate evidence to support the claim. Precisely when all of the evidence seems to point to the contrary and there is no reason on earth to assume that we will ever by any different, or our world changed - when it seems we are plagued by the same old temper and jealousies, troubled by the familiar feelings of inadequacy and inferiority, living in a world of obstinate greed and injustice - precisely at that point we are to trust the promise made by the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, not to mention Sarah, Rebekah and Rachel, and the God of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is God's good pleasure to give us the kingdom. And because it is God for whom we wait, we can dance in the meanwhile and live as though it is on the way. The faithful Giver has promised a gift that carries a lifetime warranty, good forever.

Waiting for the kingdom, then, is an activity of faith. It is a skill to be valued and cultivated by every believer. It is not passive acquiescence nor is it born of futility. Rather, it offers rehearsal time for practicing our relationship with God, affirming with the Psalmist of old that,

"I believe that I shall see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living! Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; yea, wait for the Lord (Psalm 27:13, 14)."

C.S.S Publishing Co., FIRE IN THE HOLE, by W. Robert McClelland