Thursday, December 04, 2025

A, The Second Sunday of Advent - Matthew 3:10-12 "Three Fires:Destruction,Spirit,Refinement "

Matthew 3:10–12 (ESV) Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.  “I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.  His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.”

It looks like a forest full of eucalyptus trees, but on closer inspection the trees are in uniform rows and not scattered like they are in a forest.  No! These eucalyptus trees are a plantation grown for the purpose of harvesting hardwood. Because the trees were all planted at the same time they have competed for sunlight and have grown tall and straight to make good timber for construction. 

One week the plantation stands tall, and then in a relatively short time it’s flattened.  The timber is harvested.  It goes on to serve its purposes for many years to come.  But the dying limbs and leaves are pushed into piles and burnt.

The plantation forest is a dismal sight compared to its former self. The only thing left is stumps.  Over time the seemingly dead stumps show signs of life and green shoots appear.  Within a year or so, these shoots form a mass of leafy bushes growing out of the stumps.  But these eucalyptus bushes that replace the tall trunks from the tree’s former life are stunted and twisted — not good for any use.

In time the owner of the field looks to a new type of harvest, the collection of electricity in a solar farm.  But first, the stumps are laboriously and painstakingly dug up one by one and burnt with the now dying leafy bushes.  Then the land can be cleared and cleaned for a solar farm to be constructed.

Matthew’s Gospel reports John the Baptist accusing the Pharisees and Sadducees of being a “brood of vipers”, to “bear fruit in keeping with repentance”, if they were “to flee from the wrath to come.” (Matthew 3:7-8)  John refers to them as the trees at which an axe is laid at the roots waiting to see what type of fruit is produced.

Last week we heard Jesus speak about signs of his coming. With the picture of the fig sending out shoots as a sign, we hear about bearing fruit in keeping with repentance.   Here we are reminded of the fig again, when Jesus curses a fig tree for not bearing fruit as he walks the way of the cross to bear the bad fruit of humanity.

On the day after Palm Sunday, Jesus, in hunger, seeing a fig tree, “found nothing on it but only leaves. And he said to it, ‘May no fruit ever come from you again!’ And the fig tree withered at once.” (Matthew 21:19 ESV)

These decisive words from Jesus’ mouth destroy the fig tree. Similarly, John the Baptist’s words to the Pharisees and Sadducees are equally significant as he warns of their destruction without the fruit of repentance.

Three times John speaks of fire.  First, trees are cut down and thrown into the fire.  These trees are those that are not repentant.  The Pharisees and the Sadducees have arrived to see what John was doing at the Jordan River.  Perhaps some were intending to be baptised with others who were fruitful in confessing their sins.  Were they coming to flee the coming wrath through repentance, by confessing their sin?  Or were they coming to make a show before others who were confessing sin and being baptised with a baptism of repentance?  Either way John warns that the axe lies in wait!

Second, John compares his baptism of repentance with the coming of Jesus, saying, “I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.” (Matthew 3:11 ESV)

Here John connects Jesus’ baptism in (by, or with) a baptism of the Holy Spirit and fire.  This is John’s second mention of fire.  We know that tongues of fire appeared at Pentecost when the Holy Spirit was given.  This was good fire.  When Jesus was baptised by John in the Jordan, he was baptised to fulfil all righteousness.  The fulfilling of all righteousness meant Jesus faced the fires of hell and death at the cross and gained victory over the fires of hell that were meant for us.  This is also good fire, when we allow the judgement to fall on Jesus at the cross through our confession of repentance.  Otherwise, as John rightly mentions these fires of judgement await all those who stand stubbornly unrepentant and will be chopped down and burnt bearing their unrepentant sin.  Then the fire becomes dire and deadly!

John mentions fire a third time to the Pharisees and Sadducees after Jesus winnows the wheat from the chaff that burns with an unquenchable fire. 

Unquenchable fire paints an ugly picture of those whose unquenchable passions resist the refining fires of the Holy Spirit.  Like one in the path of a raging unquenchable bushfire, so too is one who does not allow the Holy Spirit to backburn the human heart and the unquenchable sin that lies within.

Fire may be frightening, but I put it to you, a life “without fire” can also be frightening.  Since the first humans worked out how to make fire, we rely on it for everything.  Without fire, we all bathe in cold water, all food is cold and uncooked, and warmth in winter is just a memory.  Without fire, minerals stay in the ground and never become the metals relied upon in every part of modern life.

One might think fire and peace are mutually exclusive of each other.  The three fires John the Baptist proclaims speak differently. 

The first fire is the promise of destruction for all those who reject the two fires that follow.  Rightly, this fire fills hearts with fear.  As Luther says of Holy Baptism in his Small Catechism, “our sinful self, with all its evil deeds and desires, should be drowned through daily repentance; and that day after day a new self should arise to live with God in righteousness and purity forever.”  In other words, in the face of this fire, we flee to the cross as knowledge about our sinful selves is daily brought to light.  Like the Prodigal Son in whom the Holy Spirit wins out over the human spirit, you and I are prodigals brought to a right mind and daily returned to the graciousness of God the Father, in his Son Jesus Christ!

We are returned to the second fire which John proclaims!  This is the baptism of Jesus in the Holy Spirit and fire.  In fact, this second fire is essential to overcome the first fire! 

In his baptism Jesus was baptised into the fires of humanity’s sin — your sin!  Having put aside his divinity as the Son of God, as the Son of Man in human flesh in his baptism he received the Holy Spirit on which he relied, to sinlessly be the sacrifice for our sin — your sin! 

Just as under the old covenant God lovingly consumed the sacrifices for the atonement of sin by fire, God joyfully receives the sacrifice of our sinful pride, as we confess our sins in repentance.  Humility is a small price to pay for the reception of Jesus Christ’s sinless death,  for our sin that deserves death and the eternal fires of hell.

In light of Jesus’ sacrifice, the need to make fiery sacrifices under the Law is finished.  All who know their works are not good enough for salvation would agree this fire is very good.  Just like fire is very good for cooking food, washing oneself, and for feeling warm!  The fire of the Holy Spirit that allows us to burn our sins in repentance through Christ is truly very good.  This fire makes us warm when we are cold!  It makes us warm in Christ, as he takes the coldness of death on himself on the cross.

Where the forest, the plantation of Israel was destroyed and thrown into the fire, Jesus has become Israel for the repentant, and we the church are his body of repentant confessing believers.   Jesus is Israel’s shoot from the stump of Jesse, and now stands as the tall, towering trunk into which the church is grafted. 

The Spirit of the Lord that rested upon him, rests upon the repentant church.  This is the Holy Spirit that gives wisdom and understanding, counsel and might, knowledge and fear of the Lord to the body of Christ – his holy church.  Despite our humanity looking like a fruitless fig tree, Jesus does not judge us by what he sees or hears, but by his righteousness sifting the wheat of Holy Spirit-germinated righteousness from the chaff of our humanity.

This brings us to the third fire after Jesus winnows or sifts us.  As we live in Christ, daily allowing the death of self in our baptism and being raised to life in the resurrection of Jesus, we are refined  by the fires of the Holy Spirit in Jesus’ death and resurrection.  The fruit of the Spirit is sifted from the chaff of our humanity.  We are being constantly pruned and used as pieces of Holy Spirit-treated timber for the building of Christ’s church on earth. We are Holy Spirit-refined wheat, cleansed to be germinators of God’s word wherever he’s put each of us in this world.

The Advent candle of peace is lit!  Let the peace of God burn in you as the Holy Spirit leads you in your repentance and confession for the forgiveness of sin.  You have been grafted into Christ to bear the fruit of Christ to others.   In the name of Jesus Christ, you are fruitful — let grace and peace be multiplied in you as the Holy Spirit makes him known to you. 

Let the Holy Spirit make you fruitful and faithful in Christ!  May his fire warm your heart, refine your spirit, and strengthen your witness. And may the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, now and always. Amen. 

Thursday, November 27, 2025

A, The First Sunday of Advent - Romans 13:11-14 Matthew 24 32-44 "Living like We're Dying: The Armour of Hope"

Romans 13:12 (ESV)The night is far gone; the day is at hand. So then let us cast off the works of darkness and put on the armour of light.

Advent is symbolised with candles, with light.  The Advent candles represent the light of hope, the light of peace, the light of joy, and the light of love.  Without hope there is no peace, without peace there is no joy, and without joy there is no agape love or selfless love for others as God has loved us.

Today the focus is on the light of hope ­— the armour of light which gives us hope.  We have lit one candle for hope.  Let’s now hear just what real hope is!

Our hope is that Jesus is coming.  But what is this hope?  It’s not a worldly hope, a “maybe” hope, a hope full of hesitation and doubt.  No! Our hope is a certainty that Jesus is returning to judge the living and the dead!  So, how do we know this?

Jesus tells us he, the Son of Man, is coming and he calls us to be ready.  He says, “Therefore you also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect.”  (Matthew 24:44 ESV)

Earlier in Matthew’s Gospel, just before the reading for today, Jesus says, From the fig tree learn its lesson: as soon as its branch becomes tender and puts out its leaves, you know that summer is near. So also, when you see all these things, you know that he is near, at the very gates. Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.(Matthew 24:32–35 ESV)

Some of you like eating figs, some not so much!  But regardless of liking or not liking the fruit, the fig is a marvellous indicator for the gardener waiting to sow summer crops, waiting for the last frost before planting the summer veggies.  At one manse, we had a fig.  The chooks got the figs I can honestly declare.  But once it started to shoot, veggies were planted and they wouldn’t get frosted, even though on the other side of the head-high fence frosts still fell.  I couldn’t tell you the day or the week this would occur but when the fig shot out shoots, it was time to plant.

Similarly, Jesus says, But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only.” (Matthew 24:36 ESV) Jesus does not even know exactly when, but he knows the Father knows when it’s coming, and so he knows it is coming.  He also says,  Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place.” (Matthew 24:34 ESV)

From this we know that Jesus is not necessarily speaking about the annihilation of the heavens and the earth.  Jesus tells “this generation” to be ready for he, the Son of Man, is near and is coming!  Then we hear about Noah’s generation where despite the signs all but eight people were drowned when God opened the flood gates and it rained for forty days and forty nights.

Like the fig tree giving signs that summer was coming, there was an ark shaped sign that a flood was coming, yet the people of Noah’s day didn’t read the signs and suffered for it.

Even now after the fact many are tempted to doubt the flood actually occurred.  They don’t believe that Noah heard God and faithfully built the ark, and that Noah’s generation was annihilated despite Jesus faithfully reporting the event.  We should trust Jesus because he was there, at the flood, together with the Father and the Holy Spirit, administering the deluge and then drying it up as humanity was reset with eight people coming out of the ark.

 So, the promise is, “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.  (Matthew 24:35 ESV) Jesus is the word made flesh.  His word will not pass away, and neither will Jesus having eternally conquered death!

Jesus’ word will not pass away but our world will.  In light of the reality of Noah and the flood Jesus then speaks about the future of his return where two men and two women are working, one of each is taken and the other is left.  It’s ambiguous whether the one taken is taken to heaven or hell, or if the one who remains, does so dwelling in the new heaven and earth, or whether the one who remains misses out!  In the flood humanity was there before the rain, and then afterwards it wasn’t.  We tend to think that those who are taken are taken to heaven, but Jesus does not say either way. 

Therefore, we do well as “this generation” to understand Jesus’ coming happens in our death and will happen, similar to the recreation of creation, as it did in Noah’s time.

Paul tells us to “wake up”, “you know the time, that the hour has come for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed. But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.(Romans 13:11,14 ESV)

You are called to dress yourself in Jesus Christ’s death and resurrection.  In other words, you’re called to live like you’re dying , like Jesus lived like he was dying!  He was dying to forgive, that is, he was dying to give life through the power of forgiveness at the cross. When we refuse to repent and forgive, we remain with “this generation” that gratifies its flesh with its living to die attitude.  That’s death by one’s desires!

Paul calls us to put on “the armour of light”!  This is the Advent hope in Jesus Christ, to die to the passions of the flesh now, rather than when Christ returns when it will be too late.  But how do we put on this armour of light?  Or how do we cast off our works of darkness, which are revelry, intoxication, that’s not just limited to alcohol and drugs, but casting anything off that makes one toxic in the sight of God? And how does one cast off the desires of improper sexuality and sensual pleasures, quarrelling and zealousness for our jealous selves which shows our true colours, that we’re dressed in darkness?   How does one put on Christ, our “armour of light”?

We live like we’re dying!  In other words, we live like Jesus Christ who lived knowing he was going to die and having risen from death now lives and rules eternally.  But the question goes begging, “How do we live like we’re dying?”  How did Jesus live while he knowingly walked the way of the cross and death?

He lived knowing our sin was going to bring about his death on the cross.  We live in the sight of our sin, as a reminder of the death we still face.  Despite our sin being covered it uncovers the reality of death. However, the eternal death we should receive, has been covered by Christ Jesus, and the Holy Spirit clothes us in him.

Jesus Christ did not live hopelessly, resigning himself to recklessness, irresponsibility, and carelessness — rather, he lived faithfully.  Jesus bore the flame of the Holy Spirit who led him to live faithfully despite death.  You too are called to this life.  Rather than thinking, “I’m dying anyway, so I may as well burn out living recklessly in my desires and pleasures”, in your holy baptism you’ve been dressed in Jesus Christ’s death and resurrection. 

Jesus put off his divinity and put on the cloak of yours and my humanity and fulfilled the will of the Father by the power of the Holy Spirit.  Now having victory over the cloak of humanity’s darkness and death, Jesus lives, so we can continually allow the Holy Spirit to dress us with life eternal in Jesus Christ, because he has carried our eternal death on himself, and gives perfected life for all who believe they need it!

In the knowledge that our sin brings not just earthly death but eternal death, we’re not to be defeated by this, but rather allow the Holy Spirit to use it for God’s glory.  Our sin is  covered, our humanity is covered, God now allows it to be the catalyst, or a burning wick of repentance, within.  There’s no longer the need to justify yourself!  But rather, you can allow the Holy Spirit to turn you, and to justify you in Jesus Christ to the glory of God the Father.

Let the Holy Spirit continually ignite your candle of hope in Jesus Christ and his eternal word!  As hope burns in you, the Holy Spirit will also enlighten you with the eternal candles of God’s peace, joy and love.  Amen. 

Thursday, November 20, 2025

C, Last Sunday of Church Year Proper 29 - Luke 19:11-27 "Faithful Banking: Repentance and Forgiveness"

Jesus tells the parable of the ten minas.  A mina was about three months’ wages for a labourer, weighed out in precious metal.   

In Luke’s Gospel Jesus tells the parable in the home of Zacchaeus, the chief tax collector, after calling him down from a sycamore tree so he could stay at his house.  Because Zacchaeus was a “chief” of tax collectors, he was in charge of gathering taxes from Jews across a city or district.  He likely had other collectors working under him.  Not only was he a chief tax collector, he was rich,  but Zacchaeus was also a Jew.

Tax collectors were not liked by the Jews, because being tax farmers of fortune for Rome, they were seen to be traitors by their fellow Jews.  Roman authorities would have set quotas over areas that the collectors would have to fill. When Rome came calling for the quota, regardless of what you collected, it had to be paid in full. If you hadn’t collected enough, the difference would come out of your pocket.   So, you can understand that if this responsibility was placed upon you to fill the quota, adding extra would be in your best interest, so as not to be bankrupted by not collecting enough tax. 

But if you were the one paying the tax, seeing extra tax possibly banked by your local tax collector who then passes on his quota to the chief tax collector, who also has added an extra increment to his collection, the whole system would seem to stink from double-crossing scandalous pocket-lining crooks.  Therefore, a Jew collecting revenue for their Roman oppressors was viewed by the Jews as sinful and corrupt.  They were banking in badness, and it made these tax collectors rich.

Zacchaeus was a chief tax collector and he was rich.  Yet when Jesus went to pass by the tree Zacchaeus climbed up to see him, Jesus looked up and said, Zacchaeus, hurry and come down, for I must stay at your house today. (Luke 19:5 ESV) When the pharisees and scribes saw Jesus go and stay with Zacchaeus at his house it is reported, when they saw it, they all grumbled, “He has gone in to be the guest of a man who is a sinner. (Luke 19:7 ESV)

However, Zacchaeus, a little man in stature, stood and confesses before the Lord that he was giving half his goods to the poor and repaying anyone he defrauded fourfold.  Since he was a chief tax collector, this could have been anyone who was cheated by other tax collectors under him too. 

It’s interesting to note that Zacchaeus’ name, a Hebrew name, comes from a Hebrew word meaning pure or to be made pure, to be transparent or clean, or made such!  Notice Zacchaeus didn’t seek to justify himself or his wealth, which one might understand him doing, since if not banking enough taxes for the Romans, he would have had to find it himself.

Regardless of whether he was an “honest tax collector” or being made clean in his interaction with Jesus, Jesus says, Today salvation has come to this house, since he also is a son of Abraham. (Luke 19:9 ESV)

This then is the lens through which we can understand Jesus’ parable before us today, the last Sunday in the church year that calls each of us to see on whom or what we’re banking, knowing Jesus is returning when we die or in a special earth-ending event.

That’s why we hear Jesus tell the parable, Because he was near to Jerusalem, and because they supposed that the kingdom of God was to appear immediately. (Luke 19:11 ESV)

Therefore, Jesus says,A nobleman went into a far country to receive for himself a kingdom and then return. Calling ten of his servants, he gave them ten minas, and said to them, ‘Engage in business until I come.’ But his citizens hated him and sent a delegation after him, saying, ‘We do not want this man to reign over us.’ (Luke 19:12–14 ESV)

The parable begins with the nobleman, his servants, and citizens who hated him.  In the house of Zacchaeus this is the chief tax collector, his collectors under him, and the Jews from whom they collected tax.  But Jesus calls him a nobleman now having been made pure, or being transparent through his confession to become a banker of honesty and truth.

Jesus here also speaks of himself having been sent by God the Father to receive a kingdom through the cross and then return to the right hand of the Father.  However, the Jews did not understand this and only those who received the Holy Spirit would understand and believe this after the fact.

Like Zacchaeus, whose name means pure and transparent, Jesus is the chief tax collector.  However, a monetary tax is not the commodity in which Jesus banks.  Jesus banks on repentance and forgiveness with sinners.  Jesus is the chief collector of human sin so he can bank it at the cross for the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation. 

The citizens in the parable are the Jewish pharisees and scribes, or anyone who does not see their own sin and refuses to repent or forgive those who have sinned against them.  Therefore, the parable is for us too.  Jesus is the chief collector, and he has collectors from those who operate under his authority.  But it’s not a collection of tax, rather it’s a collection of sin through repentance and forgiveness. Therefore, Jesus opposes those who are not banking on and building his kingdom through the call to repentance from sin and the faithful forgiveness of sin.

Jeremiah speaks of Jesus when he says, Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. In his days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely. And this is the name by which he will be called: ‘The Lord is our righteousness.” (Jeremiah 23:5–6 ESV)

And of the shepherds who don’t bank in the righteous branch he says, Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture!” “You have scattered my flock and have driven them away, and you have not attended to them. Behold, I will attend to you for your evil deeds, declares the Lord. (Jeremiah 23:1–2 ESV)

In the parable, Jesus says of those citizens who refuse to bank in his righteousness of repentance and forgiveness, “But as for these enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slaughter them before me. (Luke 19:27 ESV)

This is a warning to all pastors and parishioners who don’t bank on Jesus, the righteous branch, and his commodities of receiving the call to repent and the freedom of giving the forgiveness of sin.  

Paul, another type of Zacchaeus, a pharisee who was made transparent and pure by Jesus Christ, says to the church in Colossae, “we have not ceased to pray for you, asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him: bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; being strengthened with all power, according to his glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy; giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. (Colossians 1:9–14 ESV)

Jesus the chief collector of sin banks on you receiving redemption, that is repentance and the forgiveness of sin.  Jesus is the banker of light and seeks to remove the darkness from within you. In his kingdom of light, your inheritance is light, the gift of being made pure through receiving repentance and faithfully forgiving sin.

How much has Jesus invested in you?  He wants to lodge with you today, to purify and cleanse you like Zacchaeus!  He calls you to engage in business with what he has given you.  Are you allowing the Holy Spirit to bring a return through repentance and forgiveness, tenfold, fivefold, or even a percentage above what you’ve been given?   

Like Zacchaeus, are you rich in the reception of repentance, transparent in truth, and faithful in forgiving others?  Or are you holding and hiding what God has given you?  If so, Jesus questions you through the parable, “Why then did you not put my money in the bank, and at my coming I might have collected it with interest?” Luke 19:23 (ESV)

God is calling us to be collectors under the chief tax collector, fulfilling his will on earth that he has fulfilled in heaven.  That is, he wants you to forgive others as he has forgiven you.  This is truly banking on Jesus Christ, for the forgiveness of sins, a peaceful life today, and the joy of salvation on the last day. 

Banking on receiving repentance and faithfully forgiving continues the collection and nullification of sin, and it’s the only way one can have true peace in the Lord, now and forever, Amen.

Dear Heavenly Father, send the Holy Spirit to break our stony hearts so we welcome and receive your rewards of repentance and free faithful forgiveness.  When we don’t bank on these with each other, help us flee to the foot of the cross and demand of the Holy Spirit a heart to forgive as the Lord Jesus has forgiven us. Amen.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

C, Post Pentecost 23 Proper 28 - Luke 21:5-19 "Eternal Endurance"

When what we know and have depended upon for everyday life disintegrates, the restless hearts of humanity will boil over with fear and horrors that history hasn’t even experienced.  The destruction of Jerusalem and its temple—a place where heaven met earth and God dwelt with man—all those years ago in 70 AD, stands as a reminder and warning to us that the collapse of creation is coming. 

God says, For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth, and the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind. But be glad and rejoice forever in that which I create; for behold, I create Jerusalem to be a joy, and her people to be a gladness. I will rejoice in Jerusalem and be glad in my people; no more shall be heard in it the sound of weeping and the cry of distress.(Isaiah 65:17–19 ESV)

However, the hearts of those who elevated their created surroundings into their hope were overcome with unquenchable anguish.  Those who lift up this life as their heavenly paradise are heading for devastation just like the temple.

In stark contrast to these terminal times is the enduring name of our Lord, Jesus Christ.  He is the new temple.  Through him, heaven meets earth.  He is created like you and me, but he is also eternally begotten.  Not only did he have a human beginning, conceived in the womb of a woman, God the Son has always been there eternally enduring with our Heavenly Father.

Like the temple in Jerusalem, we find a place with God in Jesus’ person.  No longer do we need to have our sin atoned for in the sacrifice at the temple with the spilling of animals’ blood, but we’ve had his blood spilt for us.  The temple of his body was bludgeoned, beaten, and bled; left like temple rubble was Jesus dead on the cross.

We know the temple in Jerusalem has never been rebuilt and will never be resurrected.  Nevertheless, Jesus has!  He lives and rules eternally at the right hand of the Father in heaven.  We also know Jesus lives and rules eternally in the hearts of those who allow the Holy Spirit to create life-giving faith.

As the walls of Jerusalem’s temple crumbled and Jesus’ days on earth ended in chaos, we can expect the same thing to happen to us.  As creation shows its signs of coming down, those living in Christ will increasingly be handed over to torturous times.

Human spirituality will increase, as people look for answers.  Those who are faithful to Christ and his word will be rejected by those seeking spirituality in fruitless idols. Those led by the Holy Spirit will get the blame when temporary human temples tumble down.

This includes “so-called” Christian people too.   Many who call themselves Christian, in whom Christ is temple-ing through Holy Baptism, will cast him out of the temple of the human body, perishing through delusion and deception. They will be caught up chasing myths, whipped into uncontrollable frenzies by mob mentality. In fact, some of the greatest attacks against Jesus Christ and his faithful, will come from within the ranks of dysfunctional church institutions.

Like Judas Iscariot, there will be those who act towards the faithful, as he did towards Jesus Christ. With Christ one minute, then against him the next.  There’ll be those who worship Jesus with us one day, and then the next, turn on us and hand us over to all types of torture, just as Jesus was, and the countless martyrs have been since.

As the true church of Jesus Christ is moved by the Holy Spirit to be God’s mouthpiece, it’s not going to win any favours from the those whose idols are exposed by the light of the truth!  However, when the world is shaken, and you begin to witness horrors happening around you, to you,  know the end is drawing near.

Jesus tells us not to be afraid, not to go after those who come seeking to stand in Christ’s place, or who seek to bully you with fear and dread.   Jesus calls you and all who believe to stand firm in what our help really is.  And our help is in the name of the Lord who made heaven and earth. 

Confess your sins and call on the name of the Lord, and he will forgive the guilt of your sin.  In fact, you will only endure in him, his word, his flesh, enabled by the Holy Spirit, who will fire faith within.  He will empower you with endurance as the day of death destroys all temporary goods and evils.

You might wonder how you might survive these dreadful days!  These times are here and have been here ever since Christ ascended into heaven — the Holy Spirit was sent at Pentecost.   From when the Jewish temple was sacked in Jerusalem in AD 70, and every temple and idol God has allowed destruction of since! 

These times of chaos and destruction also come to us individually in our death.  One day there will be a final event on earth, but for many, we’ll be faced with the destruction of our mortal frame first, just as the temple was destroyed and so too was Christ, on the cross.

But those who live in the body of Christ are adorned with the nobility and eternal beauty of Jesus Christ by the Holy Spirit in the faith he gives.  Just like one who loves living in the light continues in the upkeep of the candle or the wick, those who allow Jesus Christ to be lifted up as their Saviour, will be lifted up in faith, hope, and love towards him. 

True believers will want to be in Jesus’ presence face to face in the warmth of his love, so they allow the enduring fuel of the Holy Spirit — faith, to burn within.  For them it’s no longer the temple of the human frame primarily important, but he who lives within making it a holy temple of the Lord.

So, it won’t be a surprise when others hate you for not upholding the righteousness they believe to be beneficial.  They won’t like hearing about the truth of our darkness as we confess our sins to the Lord. They will seek to deceive you and make you doubt Christ rather than enlighten you with the word for hope.  Why?  Because the true light of Christ threatens to expose their pleasure in their unrighteousness.

If you’re wondering if you’re one within the ranks of Christ, know you are when you allow the Holy Spirit to lead you to repentance, returning you to Jesus’ righteousness, rather than a righteousness of your own. Trust Jesus is — the only way, the only truth, and the only life! 

When the struggle is real and it’s before you, Jesus promises,This will be your opportunity to bear witness.  Settle it therefore in your minds not to meditate beforehand how to answer, for I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which none of your adversaries will be able to withstand or contradict.  You will be delivered up even by parents and brothers and relatives and friends, and some of you they will put to death.  You will be hated by all for my name’s sake.  But not a hair of your head will perish.  By your endurance you will gain your lives.(Luke 21:13–19 ESV)

Hear what’s happening!  Some may be put to death, but not a hair of the head will perish!  Holy Spirit assisted endurance gains life.  In faithfulness to death, you gain true life!  Just as Jesus endured by the will of the Father, enduring in the Holy Spirit, and knowing full well he would die, we too can endure, knowing full well we too will die.  But like Jesus, death will have no hold over us, your death will be a restoration to whom you were always meant to be, not one hair of the head will perish.  Some of us might even get a few head hairs back, and some lose a few hairs from where they shouldn’t be growing!

In fact, even today as God allows the idols and temples of your heart to be destroyed, he is calling you to endure in the joy and love of having your sinful self, daily drowned in repentance, having all your righteousness die, so Christ might fulfil all righteousness within you. 

As you notice the kingdoms and nations raging, the earth shaking, and the hatred of those against Christ directed towards you, know that death has already been dealt its death in you, because having been buried with him in baptism …you were also raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised him from the dead. (Colossians 2:12 ESV)

In other words, what now can truly harm you?  Nothing, when you allow him to daily raise you through repentance in faith!  And in the true faith that God gives, he will faithfully fill you with peace, joy, and love. 

Do you realise hell is for Satan and his angels!  It’s not meant for humans! God's will for humanity is to daily raise and recreate within us the new enduring eternal nature of Jesus Christ.

Jesus says, “But when all these things begin to take place, straighten up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.” (Luke 21:28 ESV)  God is working in you, enduring in you, with the holy goal that you gain your eternal life in him.  Amen.