Saturday, February 28, 2015

Coming Back

     As I indicate in the text of this message, I treated this passage in three sermons.  I am going to follow that pattern in posting this material.  



I Thessalonians 4:13-14

Have you heard of William Miller?  It’s such a common name you might know several men with that name.  A few years ago there was a vice-presidential candidate with that name, but since he lost, he probably isn’t remembered by many.   Had you lived in 1840s the name William Miller might have inspired either devotion or disdain.
Born in Massachusetts, Miller was a Deist until his conversion.  Deism is that view which says God remains uninvolved in the world—there are no miracles and certainly God does not act in history.  This fact makes it all the more interesting that after his conversion Miller became a passionate student of prophecy.  After several years of study he was ordained as a Baptist preacher and began to publish and preach his conclusions.  Miller was convinced Christ would return by March 1843.   He attracted thousands of followers who fully expected Christ’s return.
When that didn’t happen, Miller recalculated and announced just as confidently that Christ would return 22 October 1844.  Once again, his followers were convinced he was right.  Some of the stories told about these “Millerites” are part of the folklore of American church history. 
While some of his followers may have sold their businesses or failed to plant crops that year, there is no evidence they gathered on hillsides the night of the 22nd wearing homemade “Ascension Robes.”  What is known is that his followers suffered what they came to call “the great disappointment.” 
Surprisingly, some of his followers stood by him and joined him as he founded the Adventist Church.  Many others abandoned Christianity.
Miller’s escapades brought great ridicule and scorn on Biblical Christianity in America.  In fact, Dr. J. Edwin Orr says that the Miller episode was one of three reasons for the general spiritual malaise that marked American Christianity in the early1850s.
Don’t assume Christians learned from Miller’s failure.  In my files I have a copy of a book that had many American Christians talking a couple decades ago.  It’s called “88 reasons Christ will Return in ‘88.”,
A certain logic has come to be applied to the discussion of the Second Coming of Christ.  It’s a faulty logic but it is very pervasive.  It says something like this:  Because so many radical, unbalanced people have talked about the Second Coming, anyone who talks about the Second Coming is radical or unbalanced.
It’s hardly fair but that’s the way it goes.
The folly of those who’ve circled some date on their calendar adding the notation, “Christ Coming Today,” has made it hard to speak about the Second Coming.
Some won’t accept the idea of Christ’s Return even though they are sincere Christians. 
Christ’s first coming took place in an atmosphere of the miraculous
--The event was the fulfillment of prophecies made centuries before.
--Mary conceived the holy Child without a man.
--During his ministry Jesus performed miracles, signs which pointed to his identity. 
--Christ died, was buried, and after three days walked out of the tomb.
If you believe these things, believing in his Second Coming should be much easier;  if you deny these things, believing in his Second Coming will be very unlikely.
 The Thessalonian Christians believed in the Second Coming but they were puzzled by something.  Of course, they knew that death is a universal human experience.  The Christians at Thessalonica experienced the loss of loved ones, just as those who were unbelievers.  With centuries of Christian teaching and preaching to draw upon, we aren’t surprised by death’s intrusion into our lives.  Some of the Thessalonian believers appear to have been.  Was death truly unexpected?  Did they think that in becoming Christians they were done with death?   Did they believe Christ would return before their friends and loved ones died?  Did they fear their loved ones who had preceded them in death had somehow missed out on the blessings promised by Christ?
The best clue to what was troubling them appears in verse 15.  It seems as if the Thessalonians worried that those who had died would have a second-class status at the return of Christ.
Paul wrote to correct that thinking.  In so doing, he left behind his lengthiest discussion of the Second Coming of Chirst.

We’re going to take three Sundays to look at this passage.  We’ll begin by looking at the larger implications of the passage and, then, in the second sermon we’ll take a deeper look at the Second Coming itself.
Paul begins his response to their concerns with a simple affirmation of faith:  "We believe that Jesus died and rose again...." 
--Christ’s death and resurrection-heart of the Christian creed.
--Christ’s Return is as much a part of that creed.
Our hope is rooted in what Jesus did for us;  our future is foreshadowed in what happened to Jesus:  "then through Jesus, God will bring back with Him those who have fallen asleep."
  What God did for Jesus becomes a pattern for what he will do for believers.  Paul assumes the historical character of the resurrection.
  There are several important implications in Paul's statement.
   1.  Death is not the end. 
Did you know that “cemetery” comes from the Greek word for “dormitory?”  It refers to a place for sleeping.
Following Jesus’ example (John 11:11), Paul referred to those who had died as having "fallen asleep."  The imagery suggests the possibility of a reawakening.
   2.  Those who have died are presently with Jesus. 
This is a clear inference from the verse.  Some Christian groups--like 7th Day Adventists--have questioned this possibility but any alternative is an anomaly in Christian theology.  Paul's discussion of death in Philippians 1:23 is even more explicit that the believer's spirit goes to be with the Lord at death.
Many saw the dead as dwelling in what was imagined as a dark, shadowy world.  The Christian view was very different.
   3.  Jesus is returning. 
The Return of Christ is mentioned in all but four books in the New Testament.  Every New Testament writer mentions it.
There have already been several references to the Lord's Return in this letter.
Several words are used to describe the event.
Parousia—most common term, refers to “an appearing.”  Used to describe the moment when a dignitary, such as the emperor, would arrive.
Listen to Bruce Milne:  “It conveys the idea that the Lord’s return will be a definite and decisive action on his part.  He will come himself, as surely as he came in the incarnation.  It will be the return of the King.”
Apokalypsis—the simple meaning of the word is “revelation.”    The events surrounding the Second Coming will reveal who the Lord is.  
People still debate his identity.  Was he just a good teacher?  A skilled magician?  A con artist?  A Gnostic guru?  At his coming, any puzzlement will be resolved.   His coming will be that moment when “… at the name of Jesus every knee [shall] bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”  (Philippians 2:9-11) 
Epiphaneia­­—we get the word “epiphany” from it.  It means “appearance” or “manifestation”.   It pictures a veil being drawn back so all could see what has been there all along.   On that Day we will see how the hand of God has been at work in history at those times when we’ve imagined all was chaos.
The Biblical materials provided the foundation for the key doctrine of Christ’s Return.
The second coming is mentioned in all the Creeds of the church.  These creeds summarize Christian doctrines in a way that most Christians—Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant—can agree with.  Here’s a portion of what is usually called the Apostles’ Creed: 
On the third day He rose again from the dead.
He ascended into heaven
and sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty.
From thence He will come to judge the living and the dead.

Christians of every age and from everywhere have held onto that hope in one form or another.
Although Christians have agreed about the fact of the Second Coming, they have not been agreed on the details regarding the timing and sequence of events.
Most Christians have embraced a variation on one of four schemes:
§  Historic Pre-millennialism.   States that in God’s time Jesus will return and Christ’s thousand year reign on earth will begin, followed by the judgment and the beginning of eternity.
§  Post-millennialism.  Christ will return after the faithful preaching of the gospel has brought a new age of righteousness and peace.  Remember singing “We’ve a Story to Tell to the Nations?”  What happens when the church has been faithful in telling that story?   Why…
… the darkness shall turn to dawning,
And the dawning to noonday bright;
And Christ’s great kingdom shall come on earth,
The kingdom of love and light.

§  Dispensational Pre-millennialism.  The Second Coming takes place in two phases:  Christ secretly comes for the church (The Rapture), then, following a seven year period of persecution of those left behind, known as “The Great Tribulation,” Christ comes with the church for the millennium and the final judgment.  This is the view behind the fictional “Left Behind Series.”  It is also the scheme popularized by the Scofield Reference Bible and the books of Clarence Larkin and Hal Lindsey.  Because of the widespread popularity of the Scofield Bible and writers like Lindsey and LaHaye many non-evangelicals assume this is the evangelical understanding of the Second Coming.
§  A-millennialism.   Anticipates Christ’s return but argues that the Biblical references to the millennium are symbolic, not to be taken literally.

  There are those Christians who dismiss the doctrine of the Second Coming but they can only do so by denying one of the most persistent themes of the New Testament and the united voices of Christians from every age and tradition.
   4.  Hope in the face of death rests on being "in Jesus." 
The promises of this passage are for believers, those who have a vital relationship with Jesus Christ.  As some translations make clear, to be "in Jesus" or "in Christ" is to be a Christian.
The Thessalonian Christians were facing trial and difficulty.  They were misunderstood and hated because of their relationship with Christ.  Yet that relationship gave them confidence as they faced the great enemy—death.
   No wonder the prospect of Christ’s Return became a key element of their message.  Upon his Return, the victory of the Risen Christ will be complete.  As Paul would write to the Corinthians,

Conclusion

Paul missed the opportunity to be with the Thessalonians so he could counsel and comfort them as they wrestled with questions and faced persecution.   So, if he couldn’t be there, he wrote to them.  What did he write about when he dealt with their grief and their concerns about the friends they had lost?
He wrote about the Second Coming. 
He understood the difference the knowledge that Jesus would return would make to believers.
The blessings of knowing Christ sustained them; the promise of the deeper knowledge of Christ that would come with his Return enabled them to face the future.
David Peterson, former pastor at the First Presbyterian Church in Spokane, Washington, told about a time when he was preparing his sermon. His little daughter came in and said, "Daddy, can we play?"
He answered, "I'm awfully sorry, sweetheart, but I'm right in the middle of preparing this sermon. In about an hour I can play."
She said, "Okay, when you're finished, Daddy, I am going to give you a great big hug."
He said, "Thank you very much." She went to the door and (these are his words) "then she did a U-turn and came back and gave me a chiropractic, bone-breaking hug." David said to her, "Darling, you said you were going to give me a hug after I finished."
She answered, "Daddy, I just wanted you to know what you have to look forward to!"

When the New Testament speaks of Christ’s Return, it is reminding us of what we have to look forward to.

Monday, February 23, 2015

Responses

    Just noticed I omitted a sermon from this series.  Here's the message that should have appeared then.  Sorry; not reflection on the worth of the passage.


I Thessalonians 2:13-16
They believe they’ve caught those responsible for some ten church fires in Alabama.  Three college students have been accused of the crimes, which they’ve described as a prank which got out of hand.
While these jokesters were burning churches in Alabama, angry opponents to Christianity were burning churches in India and Nigeria.  Christians in other nations were facing pressure because of their faith.
While the college boys thought burning churches would be fun, those arsonists in Nigeria and elsewhere believed they were on a mission.
Every day, wherever there are Christians who take the call to discipleship seriously, the gospel is being presented somewhere in the world.  How do men and women respond to that message?
The experiences of the early Christians in Thessalonica represent a microcosm of how people respond to the gospel. 

There Will Always Be Those Who Reject the Gospel.

Paul doesn’t say this directly but by implication.   Just as the Thessalonians Christians saw the gospel as God’s message to them, some saw the gospel as just another religious philosophy born out of the minds those struggling with questions about life.  Or, perhaps, as we saw last time, some of them may have imagined the gospel to be a scheme to make Paul and his band some quick cash from gullible chumps who believed them.
It’s always been that way.  There are those who say…
--the gospel is too simple.
--the gospel is too unbelievable.
--the gospel is too demanding.
They don’t reject the gospel with hostility, but with indifference.  Though they may pity you, they don’t care if you’re happy believing the gospel.
They may even go through the motions of becoming part of a church.
They are bowing to community or family pressure.
They are recognizing the economic benefits of appearing to be Christian.
In the early days of this nation, wealthy land-owners maintained family pews in the churches and even went regularly, not because of a commitment to Christ, but because it enhanced their reputations and maintained their influence.
Many more don’t even bother with the pretense.
Never more than 45% of Americans have attended church regularly.  (At time of Revolution, 20%.)
Indifference to the gospel is a reality every church hoping to be intentional in sharing the good news has to reckon with; indifference to the gospel is never sufficient reason to give up being intentional in sharing the gospel.

There Will Always Be Those Who Resist the Gospel.
While some meet the gospel with indifference, others respond with hostility.  They are determined to stop the gospel in its spread and to oppose those who have embraced its promise.
Paul had been part of that resistance in is homeland before his miraculous conversion.  Though one of the chief persecutors had been stopped, the persecution continued.
The Thessalonian church was spiritually linked to the churches in Judea, where the gospel was first preached.  There were cultural differences but the essential qualities were present to the degree that the Thessalonians were being persecuted as were the Judean churches.
Those converted in Judea faced the ire of some of their neighbors.  The same thing was happening in Greece.  In Philippi and in Ephesus pagans led the persecution;   in Thessalonica, the both Jews and Gentiles opposed the church.
We need to understand what Paul is saying here so we won’t understand his meaning. 
Most translations are misleading.  For example, one refers to, “… the Jews, (comma) who put the Lord Jesus to death…”  That translation seems to blame all Jews for the persecution Christians were undergoing.  That comma doesn’t belong there.  The proper translation refers to a specific  group among the Jews:  “the Jews who put the Lord Jesus to death.”
Sadly, that misunderstanding has been used to justify anti-Semitic behavior. 
But Paul was no anti-Semite; after all, he was a Jew.  But he was also an observer of history.  The religious elite of Jerusalem did have a history of opposing those who spoke for God.  Even Jesus described the city as a place where prophets were put to death.  Paul had heard Stephen ask the Jewish leaders,  "Can you name a single prophet your ancestors never persecuted?  They killed those who foretold the coming of the Upright One, and now you have become his betrayers, his murderers."
But, again, this refers to only certain Jewish leaders.  In fact, Paul seems to see the tendency to persecute the church as being trans-cultural.  While the Jews persecuted the Judean church, their own countrymen joined the Jews in persecuting the Thessalonian church.  The cycle continues.
Churches in different cultures will differ but there are similarities that mark them as true churches of Jesus Christ.  And that makes them targets of any who would resist the gospel.
So, there is probably no ultimately safe place for the church.  Wherever it may be, if the Christian church challenges the prevailing culture there will be hostility toward its message, its people, and its very existence.
Paul offers two observations about this behavior:
1.  The behavior did not please God.  Even though some persecutors may have believed they were doing God a favor.
2.  The behavior marked them as enemies of the "whole human race."  Not only did their behavior compromise their own souls it put those who needed to hear the prophet's message in jeopardy.
The last half of verse 16 is difficult to understand.  
Willliams’ translation suggests those opposing the gospel, like some of the Jews, would soon "fill up to the brim the cup of their sins."  The idea seems to be that they were continually adding to there record of sin.  Because of this, they faced the threat of judgment for their behavior, a behavior which rejected the only possible way of escape from judgment.[1]
Resistance to the gospel may take a variety of forms:
--Physical persecution.
--Political or social discrimination.
--Ostracism.
Fellow Christians around the world endure tremendous pressure because of their faith. 
--we deal with many who reject the gospel.
--we’re less likely to face the passion of those who resist the advance of the gospel.
In any case, we’re to continue to share the gospel.

There Will Always Be Those Who Receive the Gospel.


 When the Thessalonians heard Paul’s preaching, they accepted what he said, trusted Christ and reordered their lives according to that decision.  This was  another reason why he was thankful for the Thessalonians.  They understood that the gospel message was from God and not merely of human origin. 
They received the gospel because there was someone willing to share it with them.
Because the gospel has a spiritual origin it can deal with our gravest spiritual problem—sin.  Those who are honest enough to admit their sin, find forgiveness through the gospel.    
The gospel gives hope that can overrule the power of death.
  Something about the gospel finds an audience in whatever culture hears it.  Men and women become convinced it is God’s own word to them.   But someone has to share it with them.
That should encourage us to keep;  on preaching and teaching the gospel.
Many people say today that all religions are fundamentally the same, that no religion is to be valued above another.  Even if all religions were of human origin, this wouldn’t be true. 
We’d have to weigh the impact of that religion on the world.  What difference has that religion’s presence in the world made?   When Paul reminds the Thessalonians that “… this word continues to work in you who believe,” he is inviting observers to measure the “work” it has done within those who have believed. 
Christianity, like all religions, has embarrassing periods of its history when those who claimed to be its followers behaved in ways which contradicted its core beliefs.  But, the truth is, Christianity has done great things for humankind, even for those who steadfastly refused to embrace it.  Yet, some critics seem to believe Christianity is a great blight on history.
The notion that the gospel was “the very word of God” explains why the early church was so careful to preserve it.  Aberrant versions of the gospel appeared but they were not allowed to corrupt the apostolic message.  The second-century Gospel of Thomas, made famous by Dan Brown’s novel The DaVinci Code, was not rejected because it was by a rival faction but because it was considered wrong, even frivolous in its treatment of Jesus.
Because there are always those who will receive the gospel, allowing it to do its transforming work, we’re encouraged to keep on proclaiming that gospel.

Conclusion


What Paul said to the Thessalonians leaves us with two big questions:
How do we regard the gospel?
--touching story, but not much more?
--wishful-thinking?
--God’s word to us?
What will you do with the gospel?
--keep it to yourself?
--share it with others?



[1] Paul says, (God's) "... retribution has finally overtaken them."  Most translations seem to suggest the idea that this has been a long time in coming.
Was Paul speaking of some specific event, such as the oppression of he Jews by the Romans?  Did he have in mind the continuing spiritual blindness which resulted from rejecting Jesus?  Did he have something else in mind?
He seems to be saying that the retribution was going on as he wrote.  However, some of the translations seem to suggest that the punishment was only beginning.
"Christian" anti-Semitism has grown out of the notion that Jews ought to pay for rejecting Jesus and crucifying him.  Paul, whatever he may be saying here, is not pre-condoning what would be done to the Jewish people during the coming centuries.