Readings: Dn 7:15-27; Dn 3; Luke 21:34-36
Here I am, only
a couple of years from 80, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen a time when anxiety
and fear have filled the hearts of so many.
COVID has had
its effect on a lot of folks, and yes, many in my age group have succumbed to
the virus, but in truth most have survived. And yet, so many are overcome by
fear. And now the world is panicking over a new variant out of Africa.
To add to our anxieties, we have obvious inflation and a rising cost of living. Then, as we look at our nation and the world, we see far too much division and hatred and threats. Yes, it seems to be a time of very fragile peace, a time of real uncertainty. And yet Jesus tells us, again and again, not to be afraid, but so many seem to ignore Him.
About 35 years
ago, back when I was a business consultant, I used to travel a lot. One Sunday
afternoon, driving my rental car through the hills of Arkansas, I heard a radio
preacher tell his audience that we were only a few years, perhaps just months,
from the tribulations and the Second Coming. As I recall, he was the minister
of a Free Will Baptist Church. Let me paraphrase what he said that day:
“Jesus is
coming, brothers and sisters. But first He’s gonna let the earth be scoured by
Satan and his minions. Don’t you be afraid of them. Put away all those fears
and get ready for Jesus. He’s coming soon, real soon, and you’d better stop all
that sinning. If you don’t call on the Lord and repent, you just won’t be
strong enough.”
I have to admit, I loved it. Of course, Jesus hasn’t returned yet, so his timing was off, by how much nobody but God Himself knows. But the preacher’s message was actually pretty good and mirrors the words of Jesus in today’s Gospel passage from Luke. How did Jesus put it?
"Beware that your hearts do not become drowsy from carousing and drunkenness and the anxieties of daily life...Be vigilant... Pray that you have the strength to escape the tribulations" [Lk 21:34,36].
I’ll admit, many years ago, the first time I thought about those words, I had a hard time picturing those first-century Jews out carousing. In truth, though, I suppose they weren’t much different from us. Even The Villages has its share of carousing and drunkenness, and certainly its share of anxiety.
But we’re all
disciples of our Lord, Jesus Christ, so we must allow Him to take away our
fears. After all, the Gospel is the Good News, the promise of an eternal life
beyond anything we can imagine.
If the gospel
message is good news, then why do so many oppose it with hostility and even
violence? Jesus warns us that we’ll be confronted with persecution, evil, false
teaching, and temptation. But how does He tell us to respond to all this? With
love, with truth, with forgiveness.
Only His Way,
His Way of peace, His way of love, can defeat bigotry, hatred, and envy, and all
that would divide and tear us apart.
Only God’s truth,
His revealed Word, can overcome the lies and confusion in the world.
And only God’s
gift of life, eternal life, can carry us to the salvation He promises.
Only Jesus, the
Way, the Truth, and the Life can dissolve all those fears that plague so many
today.
I don’t know if
you and I will see those tribulations… probably not. But we are still called to
proclaim the Gospel wherever God has placed us – called to be to be witnesses.
Did you know the Greek root of the word martyr means witness? The Book of Revelations calls Jesus “the faithful witness ...who freed us from our sins by his blood" [Rev 1:5].
St. Augustine spoke of this too: "The martyrs were bound, jailed,
scourged, racked, burned, rent, butchered – and they multiplied!" Christians
multiplied because the martyrs witnessed to the truth, to the joy and freedom
of the Gospel; and they did so through the testimony of their lives.
So maybe,
instead of fearing the world and its evils, we should just be joyful that we
have heard the Good News, received the gift of faith, and are called to share
it all with others. What brings others to Jesus Christ and His Church is seeing
Christians loving their enemies; seeing us joyful in suffering, patient in
adversity, forgiving of injuries, and showing comfort and compassion to the
hopeless and the helpless.
This, brothers
and sisters, is our calling.
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