Here is my sermon from Sunday. The text was Mark 13:1-10, 12-13, 24-26, 32, 35-37:
If
you are to email NASA with a scientific question, it is likely to be answered
by Dr. David Morrison, who holds a Ph.D. in astronomy from Harvard, and that’s
only important because I don’t think that Harvard gets enough attention for
being a good school. But, according to Dr. Morrison, he spends a minimum of one
hour every day answering people’s questions about the end of times, or at least
the end of the world as we know it. We seem to be obsessed with this idea, but
it’s not really anything new. We find similar things in the Hebrew scriptures,
and the New Testament is full of discussion, as well as speculation within
writings about when such things were going to happen. Clement, an early bishop
of Rome, said the end would happen in the year 90. Hilary of Potiers said it
would be in 365. His more famous student Martin of Tours said the year 400. The
German emperor Otis III thought that an eclipse in 968 would be the harbinger,
and Pope Innocent III said 1284. The Shakers said 1792, and Charles Wesley, the
co-founder of Methodism preferred 1794, although he was already dead 6 years by
that time. For Jehovah’s witnesses it was 1914, also1918, 1941 and 1975, to
name just a few and for Hal Lindsey and Pat Robertson the end was coming in
1980, or 1982, 1985, 1988 and then 2007, and of course there have been many
more failed predictions since then. And what do they all have in common? First,
they were wrong, and second, according to Jesus, they never should have been
making predictions at all, and in doing so were only serving as false prophet’s
intent on leading people astray, and so we need to stop listening to such end
of time mongers telling us they have insider knowledge, because Jesus says they
are all wrong, and we’ll get back to that.
The
selection of passages we heard from Mark today come from the 13th
chapter which is known as Mark’s Little Apocalypse. Now typically, when we hear
the word apocalypse, we think it means talk about the end of the world, and so
we talk about apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic movies, like Mad Max as an
example. But the word itself has nothing to do with the end of times. instead
it simply means an unveiling or revealing, so that some divine knowledge is
being revealed. The apocalypse with which most of us are familiar, is of course
the apocalypse of John, which is also known as Revelation, and is the only full-blown
apocalypse we have in scripture. But we have other types of apocalyptic pieces
found in the book of Daniel, which is the other best scriptural example, but
also to be found in Joel and Isaiah and Amos and Zephaniah, who all talk about
the end of time.
