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This Month Archive
St. Mark's Lutheran Church

 

  2013

 Sermons



Dez 29 - Never "back to normal"

Dez 29 - Remember!

Dez 24 - The Great Exchange

Dez 22 - Embarrassed by the Great Offense

Dez 19 - Suitable for its time

Dez 15 - Patience?

Dez 13 - The Life of the Servant of Christ Jesus

Dez 8 - Is "hope" the right word?

Dez 1 - In God's Good Time

Nov 24 - Prophet, Priest, and King

Nov 17 - On that Day

Nov 10 - Persistent Hope

Nov 3 - To sing the forever song

Nov 3 - Witness of all the saints

Okt 27 - Is there some other Gospel?

Okt 25 - With a voice of singing

Okt 20 - Are you a consecrated disciple?

Okt 13 - No Escape?

Sep 22 - Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

Sep 15 - Good News in Every Corner

Sep 8 - The Cost of Discipleship

Sep 1 - For Ourselves, or for God?

Aug 25 - Who, Me?

Aug 18 - The Cloud of Witnesses

Aug 11 - Eschatology and Ethics

Aug 4 - Possessed

Jul 29 - How long a sermon, how long a prayer?

Jul 21 - Hospitality, and then...

Jul 14 - Held Together

Jul 14 - Disciple or Admirer?

Jul 7 - Go, fish!

Jun 9 - Two Processions

Jun 2 - Inside or Outside?

Mai 30 - On the Way

Mai 26 - What kind of God?

Mai 19 - Come Down, Holy Spirit

Mai 18 - Good Gifts of God

Mai 14 - Not Zero!

Mai 12 - Glory?

Mai 5 - Finding or being found?

Apr 28 - A Heavenly Vision

Apr 21 - Our small acts and Christ's resurrection

Apr 14 - Transformed!

Apr 7 - Give God the Glory

Mrz 31 - Refocused Sight

Mrz 30 - Walls

Mrz 29 - It was Night

Mrz 29 - Today, Paradise

Mrz 28 - To Show God's Love

Mrz 24 - Bridging the Distance

Mrz 17 - The Extravagance of God's Actions

Mrz 10 - Foolish Message or Foolish People?

Mrz 3 - What about you?

Feb 24 - Holy Promises

Feb 18 - God's Word by the Prophet

Feb 17 - Tempted by whom?

Feb 13 - On a New Basis

Feb 10 - On Not Managing God

Feb 3 - Who, me?

Jan 27 - Fulfilled in your hearing

Jan 20 - Where Jesus Is, the Old becomes New

Jan 13 - Called by Name

Jan 6 - Three antagonists, three places, three gifts

Jan 4 - The Teacher


2014 Sermons         
2012 Sermons

In God's Good Time

Read: Matthew 24:36-44

 

First Sunday of Advent - December 1, 2013

The Rev. Kenneth R. Elkin

 

The clock, the humble clock.

With its regular tick, tick, as it marks off the seconds.

On the one hand, we can think of it as ominous: time running out, slipping through our fingers, the 11th hour, etc.

On the other hand, we can think of it as comforting, with its very regularity and predictability.

We get up every morning and there it is ticking away just as it did yesterday, and we expect it will be tomorrow in exactly the same way.

 

Notice how many different time-designations are sprinkled through the gospel: the next day...it was about the third hour...immediately...on the Sabbath...it was night....and more.

Those time-designations are not merely incidental to the story-telling.

Rather, they mean to locate Jesus within time, within our time, and that is a vital part of the Good News.

We believe that God became flesh in Jesus Christ, thereby entering time, and lived and died.

Then Jesus was raised from the dead, and this act by God broke the stranglehold that time has on us.

Gone forever is the notion that everything is moving inexorably toward death.

The old Greek god of time, Chronos, does not have ultimate power over us anymore.

The resurrection is old Time's defeat.

 

What we thought of as comfortable and predictable about time is disrupted.

Time is now not what we make of it, but what God decides to make of it.

Several weeks ago we were talking about the old gods as being the guarantors and persistence of the past; but the Lord God Almighty is the openness and surprise of the future, because of the resurrection.

 

And even though we know that intellectually, we still try to fall back into the old patterns, the old ways.

What did those first witnesses to the resurrection do?

They went back home! They attempted to get back to “normal.”

They wanted things to be safe and predictable again.

Time under the illusion of normalcy is the world's time; but time eventful and disrupted is Jesus' time!

There is a 50-cent word for what the world wants – homeostasis – everything tied down, and maintained in a fixed order.

But it is the nature of the Trinity to disrupt time, so that in the Gospels, time seems to be super-heated and fast paced.

We remember that one of Mark's favorite words is “immediately”, which  he uses nine times in the first chapter alone!

One of the reasons we keep reading these Gospels week after week is to read ourselves into this peculiar and  intense gospel time.

God is taking what we thought was our time and making it his own time.

Not in today's reading, but in another spot in Isaiah [43:18-19] the Lord says through the prophet:

I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?

I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.

It is so tempting to believe that the present social order is more real, more normal and more eternal than the kingdom of God...but it is not.

So indicates the prophet; so lives out the Lord Jesus!

 

The modern world just has to banish God from time.

For many, God must be a serene, distant deity who never shows up anywhere, who never actually intrudes into our time.

So one of the results of that is that the miracle stories in the gospels are immediately dismissed precisely because they are that intrusion into our tick-tock ordered and predictable world.

God's choosing to do or not to do something gets twisted into God can't do anything in the world.

And when that is said, the whole point of Christmas has just been denied.

 

Advent just does not make much of an impact in the stores, does it?

Shop-keepers' concern is 24 shopping days until Christmas.

Advent's concerns are far larger;

--the reminder that in Jesus, human time was permanently disrupted, reorganized, and redirected.

--the reminder that the time that you thought was your own, to live as you please, really belongs to God.

--the reminder that at any moment this time could become a time for God's specific purposes in your life and mine.

There we are, thinking that it is another humdrum day, and then Jesus shows up.

 

One person told me recently, “I've been through a terrible time.

I could see no way out; the medicines were hurting more than helping.

After many months, Jesus interrupted this downward spiral and pointed me in a new direction.

I have a new career direction on which to focus, which will make use of the things that I learned through my travail.”

Time is transformed for that person.

 

Another person wrote about surviving dangerous open-heart surgery: “I'm not the same person I have been for the past 50 years.

It's as though God reached into my life and, through this illness, made me over, gave me a second chance, different, and capable of making a difference in the world.”

Time for that person is transformed.

 

May each of us whom Christ Jesus calls have such an Advent story!

May time be granted for each of us whom Jesus calls.

 

Some try to escape time, whether by Hindu philosophies or overdoing makeup.

In our lessons today we hear the good news that we need not flee from time, nor pretend that it does not affect us, but rather wake up and know that this is right now God's good time, the time in which he intends to do good things in and through us.

God moves into time, adopts our time, redeems us from bondage to time's ravages, and generates the “fullness of time,” Christ Jesus come to us.

 

Our hymn today captures the sense of God's movement in procession to us.

Adapting the psalmist's words now nearly 3,000 years old, the hymn is a grand statement of the truth that in spite of all the darkness we sense around us, all of the things wrong we know in ourselves and the world, this is God's time, and he will do what is needed.

Christ Jesus is coming; he is come; he will come.

It is, even now, God's good time. Hosanna! Rejoice and sing.  Amen.

 

Please note: The preceding sermon is provided as a resource for the thought, prayer, and meditation of the members and friends of St. Mark's. It is the residue of a verbal event, and thus it does not have academic footnotes and other details that would be expected in a written document. The writer gladly acknowledges the prior thought and work of many Christians before him.