Skip to main content

All will fall, except...

There’s a rather nice true story about a volunteer tutor was asked to visit a nine-year-old in a large hospital. She took the boy's name and room number and was told by the boy's teacher that they were studying nouns and adverbs in class. It wasn't until the tutor got to the boy's room that she realised the boy was a patient in the hospital's burn unit.
No one had prepared her to find a nine-year-old so horribly burned and in such great pain. Though she wanted to, she felt she couldn't just turn and leave, so she gathered her courage and entered the room. "Hi, I'm the hospital teacher," she stammered. "Your teacher asked me to help you with nouns and adverbs." And, clumsily, she launched into the lesson.
The next morning a nurse called the tutor. "What did you do to that boy?" The tutor immediately began a tearful apology, but the nurse interrupted her."No, no, no. You don't understand. We've been very worried about him. But since you were here, he's fighting back, he's responding to treatment. It's as though he's decided to live." The boy explained that he had given up hope, until the tutor came. "I figured they wouldn't send a teacher to work on nouns and adverbs with someone who's dying, would they?"
Hope is something that everyone needs – through the darkest times of life, it is often only hope that keeps people going, and in the reading from Mark’s gospel (13:1-8) Jesus tells us that that hope must be placed in the only absolute unchangeable thing in life, and that is God.
This week has marked the 20th anniversary of the destruction of the Berlin Wall. Many of you will remember the incredible scenes as people ploughed over the border seeking something – they weren’t sure what, but that something was based on a hope of something better…
What seemed an almost indestructible wall with all the political and military systems associated with it crumbled almost overnight. Today what is left of the wall are small sections set up for tourists as a reminder of what was. The time since in Germany has often been painful as two very separate systems have struggled to come together, but, founded on hope, things have improved and the unification process continues.
In the gospel Jesus talked of an even more dramatic fall. As the disciples pointed out the wonderful Temple structure with it’s incredible stonework and size, Jesus told them that it would crumble – ‘Not one stone will be left upon another, all will be thrown down…’
The Temple had of course taken years to complete – the Jewish people, not just the religious authorities, were incredibly proud of it – the Temple represented far more than a place of worship…. It was a place of power….
When Jesus predicted the destruction of the Temple he wasn’t talking about just the building. The destruction of the Temple meant the destruction of the whole of the political, economic, religious and social system of the nation. Nothing was unchangeable, nothing unbreakable, nothing would last forever…
But of course Jesus came to offer us something that would last forever – something that would last far beyond wealth or buildings or beauty or any number of material goods…
This week apart from the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall, another major news story has been the two lottery wins of somewhere around £45 million each. The money will be nice, it will be useful, and I’m sure we’d all like some of it, but money by itself will not buy happiness, and money will not last forever.
So Jesus, as he spoke these words, was talking about the future, he was talking about a time that was to come, a time when our earthly lives will end, but he wasn’t telling us to dwell on the future – in fact quite the opposite – Jesus was reminding his disciples that the future was irrelevant if we didn’t get the present right…
Amidst the remains of the Jewish Temple and the Berlin Wall today we can find personal stories of broken dreams and shattered hopes – the Temple builders built a Temple for God’s glory, and yet, unlike God’s glory, it wouldn’t last. They built it with great hopes that one day their Saviour would come and would overthrow the Romans or any other invading force, and establish his base right there.
Their hopes would be shattered because they didn’t understand God. God, who can never be captured in a single building… God, who is interested in people not in things…
The builders of the Berlin Wall – even some of those builders built that wall with principles. They had dreams and hopes of a society that would be equal, a society that wouldn’t favour the rich or the poor, that wouldn’t discriminate between the intellectual and the manual worker and so on. Of course, as we all know, that system became corrupted and that corruption and lack of freedom ultimately brought about the collapse of the wall and the death of the system.
Today people have put their hopes in shares, and seen those hopes shattered. Some have worked so hard to build a god life for themselves that they have no time to enjoy it. Some have bought properties which they couldn’t even afford which have reduced in value so that they are left with huge debts, some tragically put their hopes in expensive loans, or in drink or drugs…
The hopes and dreams for so many are hopes and dreams that will never be fulfilled, because all of those things we think of can destroy or be destroyed – it’s not the most cheerful thing to think of, but at the end of life one certainty is that we will all die!
And as we approach that point, that hopefully far off point, we have to decide on living for the present, concentrating on what is lasting – God, through the centuries, unlike anything or anyone else, has remained unchanged.
God is the only absolutely solid rock upon which we can build our lives, the guaranteed unchangeable in whom we can put our faith and our trust.
Carl Jung, a Swiss psychiatrist and scholar who did some incredibly detailed studies and wrote books which are well beyond my understanding was once asked if he believed in God, and he replied, ‘I don’t believe in God, I know God’.
We can do all the academic work we want, we can study hard, we can read everything, but what Carl Jung said is the essence of a Christian – knowing God and knowing him personally…
God wants to interfere in our lives, but he won’t unless we invite him to…
He wants to share every moment with us, and he wants us to seek his vision and his wisdom and to use those things to show his glory certainly, but also to provide us with a life more abundant than anything else can ever offer… and a life of peace what ever the circumstances we find ourselves in….
In the words from the letter to the Hebrews (10:23), ‘Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful’. AMEN

Comments

Anonymous said…
Sweet website, I had not noticed sermonsforyou.blogspot.com earlier in my searches!
Carry on the fantastic work!

Popular posts from this blog

Characters around the cross reflection

Today I want to think about some of the characters involved around the cross. Some played important and good roles, others were those who turned on Jesus, and sought to hurt him. I want to begin with a short reflection about Jesus written by Gregory of Nazianzus, A.D. 381 “Who was Jesus? He began His ministry by being hungry, yet He is the Bread of Life. Jesus ended His earthly ministry by being thirsty, yet He is the Living Water. Jesus was weary, yet He is our rest. Jesus paid tribute, yet He is the King. Jesus was accused of having a demon, yet He cast out demons. Jesus wept, yet He wipes away our tears. Jesus was sold for thirty pieces of silver, yet He redeemed the world. Jesus was brought as a lamb to the slaughter, yet He is the Good Shepherd. Jesus died, yet by His death He destroyed the power of death.” The Power of Numbers...The Crowd Mark 11:1-10 : When they were approaching Jerusalem, at Bethphage and Bethany, near the Mount of Olives, he sent tw...

Marriage thanksgiving

Today we have dedicated this service to giving thanks for the gift of marriage… All of us I’m sure will join with me in offering prayers to ask God to continue to bless married couples everywhere, but marriage itself can never be taken in a vacuum. The Bible tells us and human nature dictates that actually we are all part of a much bigger family, married, unmarried, old or young, and as such each of us have commitments to each other. And that commitment must surely be to love… If you have a sense of humour, and I’m sure you all do (!) you may like to hear some of the things the Bible says about love in marriage. In the book of Genesis (29:20) we read that Jacob worked for seven years for Laban to earn the right to marry Laban’s daughter, Rachel. We’re told that the 7 years of work seemed to him just like a few days because he loved her so much! He worked seven years for her father so that he could marry her. I am tempted to say he had it bad! Moving on a little, The Song of Songs in ...

Goodness and mercy…

The subject of weather is always a popular topic, but rather unusually today the subject of winter comes up in our gospel reading (John 10:22-30). We are told it was the Feast of Dedication in Jerusalem, a feast that happens in winter time, celebrating the rededication of the Temple by Judas Maccabeus in 165BC.  And so it was probably cold and maybe that's why John, the gospel writer, tells us Jesus was walking in the Portico of Solomon, a covered area in the Temple. Or perhaps it's rather more likely that John was referring to the fact that the spiritual temperature seemed rather cold. This was a great feast - a feast of victory and celebration, a time to think again about God's goodness and how he provided for his people. But no... The Jews instead gathered around Jesus to quiz him. 'How long will you keep us in suspense - if you're the Messiah, tell us plainly'.  There's a story about a farmer who lived on the same farm all his life. It was a good...