Tag Archives: church

The End of the World As We Know It



On Tuesday this week, while having lunch at the Chipotle in Woburn, I came across a religious tract called This Was Your Life. It reads like a cartoon, with Bible verses pulled from all different parts of the Bible under each picture. Its about a man who suddenly dies. He is accompanied by an angel and brought before God the throne of God and his life is reviewed. His name is not found in the book of life. He is condemned to eternal damnation, a lake of fire. The tract ends with a call to repent and accept Jesus as his personal savior.

This is how the end of the world is usually characterized: fire and brimstone, judgment and damnation, a violent and angry God.

That is how our Gospel reading is often read and understood. Jesus says that in days of suffering, at a time that only God knows, the sun, moon and stars will go dark, Jesus will return in power and glory. And three times he urges his listeners to “Keep alert! Keep awake!”

This can be easily heard as another This Was Your Life…but not when we understand the larger context for this reading.

This reading is part of what is known as “the little apocalypse” in the Gospel of Mark. These sayings come in the context of Jesus foretelling the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem – an event that would have happened around the time of the writing of the Gospel of Mark in the year 70.

The Temple was the epicenter of religious devotion in Judaism for over 1000 years before Jesus. 1000 years, that’s four times as long as our country has existed. 1000 years. 40 generations. It was simply a given for the early Christians. And even though Jesus cleansed the Temple, he didn’t want to destroy it. But the Romans did destroy it, razed it to the ground, all that remains today is the remnant of one wall.

For the people in Mark’s community, for the early Christians, the world as they knew it – the political world, the religious world, the social world, had ended.

And this is common throughout apocalyptic literature. In the Bible, most talk of the end of the world comes at a time, as in our reading from Ezekiel (and the Book of Revelation), when people are exiled, persecuted, devastated. And so, talk of the end of the world is comforting: the message is that although their lives as they knew it was over, life still goes on, and one day peace and justice will ultimately prevail.

And so what Jesus is saying is this: When all this happens it will not the end of the world. It’s only the end of the world as we know it.

The first Sunday of Advent – the beginning of the liturgical year – always begins with the end of the world. There’s no mention whatsoever of the annunciation, the holy family, the manger.

This is the reason: to alert us to the fact that in the readings we hear the next three weeks, Christmas Eve, and Christmas – that mark the birth and first coming of Jesus -that “its the end of the world as we know it” and we need to “Keep awake! Keep alert!”

Because Christmas is the end of the world as we know it. God is born into the world and takes on our humanity. We call this incarnation, meaning “taking on flesh.” God – all powerful, entirely other, enters into our reality, our existence, collapsing the distance between us. When this happens, things can never be the same.

The incarnation is the end of the world as we knew it.

As we look much further ahead. Easter and Jesus’ resurrection will again be the end of world as we knew it. Everything we thought we knew about life and death will be called into question and flipped upside down. Death and despair no longer have the final word because this God, who entered our reality in Jesus, will submit to death…and then defy death and rise again.

To capture this sense of change, the Gospel writer Mark uses the phrase “torn apart.” When Jesus is baptized, the heavens are torn apart, God speaks and the dove descends. When Jesus dies, the curtain separating the Holy of Holies in the Temple is torn apart.

As one commentator writes, “That which separates us from God, either the heavens or the holy of holies, has been torn asunder and can never go back to the way it was before. …the conviction that there is no keeping God at a distance anymore. God is not and will not be where we expect to find God.”

What this means is when we find moments we think our worlds are ending – and we’ve all been there – its not the end of the world, its only the end of the world as we once knew it.

When our Temples are destroyed.

When our center of gravity is lost and we are displaced and feel scattered.

When things and people we count on let us down, disappoint, or betray us.

When we fail others – and ourselves.

When we receive a diagnosis, or word that a loved one has died.

It can feel like the end of the world.

But its not.

First, because Jesus was born right into it – into human form and into the complexity of human relationship. Jesus knows those places intimately – he himself was hated, betrayed, shunned, celebrated, and misunderstood – and he is there now. Indeed, most present in the hard places.

And second because Jesus died and rose again, new life is possible. What we think is the end really isn’t.

There is something on the other side of whatever it is. On the other side is life.

Advent ushers in the end of the world as we know it. This is what we prepare our hearts and minds to celebrate at Christmas.

This is why we keep awake. To see it happen in the birth of Christ. But also to see it happening in us. Amen.


Our Giving to God Is Not a Tax


Jesus Cleansing the Temple

Taxes. It seems we are always talking about taxes. Income tax, sales tax, property tax, flat tax, no tax. One presidential candidate recently proposed a “9.9.9” tax.

It seems hard to remember a time when we we’re talking about taxes.

Lately, it seems that taxes are not just one of many hot topics, it defines most of our political discourse. It has become the dominant lens through which we determine the common good.

Perhaps talk about taxes is as old as time itself.

This morning we find Jesus in Jerusalem, in the Temple, in the last days before his crucifixion. (This happens on Tuesday. He will be crucified on Friday.) His whole ministry has led to these moments. He has come to the confront the powers-that-be directly. They’re all here in Jerusalem: the epicenter of political, economic, and religious power. At the very heart of it all is the Temple, which had come to represent the unholy alliance of the three.

Jesus cleanses the temple, driving out the moneychangers and vendors. He issues a series of his harshest sayings to the chief priests.

Now, the Pharisees try to turn the tables by sending some of their disciples and some supporters of king Herod to trip him up. After buttering Jesus up by saying how sincere, humble, truthful and fair he is, they ask him a loaded question: “Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?” It’s a question as old as time and yet as current as this morning’s New York Times.

And its a trap. A catch-22. If Jesus says its not right to pay taxes, he could be arrested for sedition. If he says its okay to pay the tax, it will offend his people, the Jews, who despise (and suffer under) the Roman occupation. Continue reading


“It Is Your Destiny”



I love Star Wars.  If you ask my mother, she’ll tell you it was the movie of my childhood. If you ask my wife, Jenny, she’ll tell you its the movie of my adulthood too.

It’s not surprising.  Growing up I had all the action figures, a land speeder, a model of the Millenium Falcon.  I’m pretty sure my bedding was all Star Wars too.  I didn’t have one of those big light sabers, but we pretended.  We’d go out to the front yard, waving our arms around making that light saber sound.  People driving by must have thought we were crazy.

Star Wars has remained a favorite all these years.  Even now, whenever the movies pop up on cable, I put the remote down and turn into an eight year old again.  A few years ago at the Woburn Halloween Parade there was a float with people dressed up as all the Star Wars characters.  I was in heaven.  Although Ellie had no idea who these people were, I made her pose in pictures with them.  I have some great ones of her with the Storm Troopers, Chewbacca, and Jabba the Hutt.

Of course, over time, the special effects in these movies seem a little less special, and the action sequences are not quite as thrilling, but the movie is still endearing.  And I still love the plot, which centers on the dramatic tension in the relationship between Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker.  When it comes down to it, the movie is a story of fathers and sons, about parents and children.  Vader is the father.  Luke is the son.  Vader chose the dark side, with its power and its corruption.  And the big question is whether Luke will follow him.  Vader says over and over again that it is his destiny.  And we wonder: will Luke stay with the good, or will he give into the dark side?  How will he reconcile his love for his father, and his hate for everything he stands for?  Is he doomed to follow in his father’s footsteps?  Is his destiny determined, or can he chose another path?

Ezekiel

For me, this struggle from a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away goes right to the heart of our readings for today.  For, it was said, in ancient Israel, that the sins of the father were visited upon the son, even to the fourth and fifth generation.  They even had a saying for it: “the parents have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge.”  This seemed painfully true to the people Ezekiel was speaking to in our first reading.  These were people, who had been ripped from their homes, marched off across the desert, and trapped in exile in Babylon.  It was a miserable existence.  In an attempt to try to make sense of what had happened to them, they said that they were suffering because of the sins of their parents and forebears.  It was like they were cursed, like they were destined to suffer for the sins of their parents before them.  It felt like an inescapable trap.  Their destiny was set and there was nothing they could do about it. Continue reading


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