Gospel Reading: Matthew 24:3-35
In the Gospels today and tomorrow we hear Jesus’ teachings about the Last Things. Matthew says on Monday the disciples (most of them “small town boys” from up north) were marveling at the great buildings in Jerusalem. Jesus said, “I tell you, the time is coming when not one stone will be left upon another.” Later as they sat on the Mount of Olives the disciples asked, “When will these things be? What will be the sign of your coming?” They are sure now that He is Messiah who will return in Glory.
So Jesus began a long description of the End Times. This passage is about both the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the Jewish nation which would take place forty years later, and also about the End of the Age. The two themes are somewhat intermingled here – at least as remembered in the Gospel writers’ minds.
Christ says He does not know when He will return, that only the Father knows. So when preachers tell us the date of His coming – which the Lord himself did not know – ignore them. Why should Christ who is God who knows all things not know this? We don’t know. Many in the first generation hoped it would be soon. It was not.
And still we wait. That used to distress me. But then not long ago the thought came to me: If He had come earlier, If, say, I had been in my twenties when He came, I would not know my dear children and grandchildren! If He had come in the 19th Century, you and I would never have existed and been able to live eternally with the Lord and with each other. So… I guess, thank God He has been so “slow”.
Or has he? “Beloved, do not forget this … that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. The Lord is not slow concerning His promise, as some count slowness, but is long-suffering toward us, not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.” 2 Peter 3:8-9
Back to the story. First Jesus gives a warning: Do not be deceived by those who say “I am the Christ”, I am the Savior, the salvation of the world. I think this applies to any who think they’ve got all the answers. Not only crazy people who think they’re God, but also any who make absolute claims: religious leaders, politicians, philosophers, economists and their systems, any who say they alone know how to save the world. There is one Savior, Jesus of Nazareth – and those who give their all to anyone or anything else are riding for a fall.
He said: Do not be troubled by the state of the world. Always there have been wars, famines, diseases, earthquakes. They do not mean the End is near. Then specific prophecies: You will be delivered up to tribulation, killed, hated by all. This has been fulfilled many times, certainly in the first generation. You know the lives of the Apostles. “The Gospel must first be preached in all nations.” That seemingly happened in the first generation. The Apostles went to the ends of the known world. And then more nations were discovered. In modern times the Gospel has been proclaimed in all nations – which means…?
Then come prophecies of the destruction of Jerusalem, the “abominating sacrilege” in the holy place. When the Romans conquered Jerusalem in the year 71, before they leveled the city Emperor Titus, just to rub it in, put pagan idols in the holy of holies in the temple. So this also has been fulfilled, as have the prophecies of the the horrors of the destruction and the flight of the residents. The historian Josephus wrote of the seven month siege – people starving, reduced to cannibalism. A multitude died, the rest scattered in all directions: the end of the Jewish nation, as Christ had predicted.
Then suddenly the Lord is speaking about his Second Coming. If anyone says: “Look, here is the Christ or there”, do not believe it. When He comes it will be like lightning flashing from one end of the world to the other, like eagles gathering. That is, it will be obvious. If you have to ask “Is it Him?” it isn’t.
There will be signs in the heavens: sun and moon darkened, stars falling, cosmic powers shaken. Could il be an angelic invasion into our fallen world from the unfallen world out there? to destroy the demonic spiritual virus that has sickened us on earth. Or will it be a cosmic catastrophe of some sort? Jesus, looking ahead, says only that then the Son of Man will appear on the clouds of heaven in great glory, and He will gather his faithful from the ends of the world. When these things happen, He says, then, not before, you will know He is near, at the gate.
He concluded: “This generation will not pass away till all these things come to pass.” Did all these things come to pass in that generation? The destruction of Jerusalem, yes. The return of Christ in glory, no – but He couldn’t have meant that to be taken literally, since He had just said He did not know the time of the End.
But in another way, yes, this was fulfilled in that generation. In Christ, in His Incarnation, in His Resurrection and Ascension, in the Church, the End of the World has already come. The final destination of the world has doubled back into time, and the New Age is here. Christ began his ministry saying, “The Kingdom of God is at hand” – for He was at hand. He is still at Hand: “Behold, I am with you always to the end of the age.” In the Divine Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom we thank God for already giving us “His Kingdom which is to come”.
“Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.” Put those words on the lips of any other human being who has ever lived, and that’s crazy talk. You see why they accused Him of blasphemy, making Himself “equal with God”. No mere man has the right to talk like that. Who does he think He is? Who indeed.