"The Glorious Is Comprehended in the Ordinary"
First Sunday in Advent
November 27, 2011
Mark 13:24-37

On the first Sunday in the Church Year our eyes go toward the end.
Well, it’s not really the end. It’s more like a beginning. It’s the
end of this life as we know it. But it’s the beginning of eternity
where we will see no more death, experience no more pain, cry no more
tears. On the first day of this new liturgical year our focus moves
toward the glory that is the Last Day. The day when Christ will return
for all to see. As He says, with great power and glory.

This is the description Jesus gives in the Gospel reading: “But in
those days, after that tribulation, the sun will be darkened, and the
moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from
heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. And then they
will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory.
And then He will send out the angels and gather His elect from the
four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven.” It’s
all very apocalyptic, the stuff of much glory but also of fear for
many. What we don’t understand can be frightening. But Jesus tells us
why the Last Day is the ultimate day of glory: “they will see the Son
of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory. And then He will
send out the angels and gather His elect from the four winds, from the
ends of the earth to the ends of heaven.”

But perhaps the most amazing thing about all of this is that we don’t
comprehend it in the spectacle and glory of it. We don’t ultimately
understand it in its magnificence. Rather, we comprehend it in, for
example, something like a fig tree. Or, take another example, servants
put in charge of the household while the master is on a journey, and a
doorkeeper commanded to keep watch. Christ’s return in glory and
Judgment Day are comprehended in ordinary things like these. So Jesus
can describe the details of the Last Day in their magnificence and
then say something so plain and ordinary and even seemingly not all
that important, such as, “Learn the lesson of the fig tree.”

Try that on somebody. Hey, let me tell you about the Last Day,
Judgment Day. You see, it’s like this, you need to learn the lesson of
the fig tree. If you were to set them up with something of
magnificence as Judgment Day and then continue on in talking about
something as ordinary as a fig tree, they might wonder what the big
deal is. Or they might wonder if you really understand what the Last
Day is about. But it is in the ordinary that the glorious is
comprehended. If we look for glory apart from the ordinary means
through which our Lord delivers it to us we will miss it. So learn
from the fig tree 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 these things taking place, you know that He is near, at the
very gates.”

Now we have to know what these things are that Jesus referring to.
They are the things He describes earlier in the chapter from Mark that
are Gospel reading is from, the part that isn’t in our Gospel reading
for today. They are things we normally refer to as the End Times. When
you see the fig tree beginning to bloom you know summer is near. It’s
as simple as that. You can look at the signs and know when summer will
happen. It’s an ordinary thing and Jesus is using something as
ordinary to show us His glory. When you see the signs of the End Times
you know that He is near. You know the end is coming. You know that He
will return in glory imminently.

Those things He described earlier in the chapter are things we’ll
recognize: false messiahs, wars and rumors of wars, earthquakes,
famines, persecution of Christians, families divided against each
other. We have seen these things, haven’t we? They are so prevalent
that they have become an ordinary part of life. And there is the
point. God’s glory is comprehended in the ordinary. If we become numb
to the signs of the End Times because they have become ordinary we
miss the glory. If we are alert and read the signs and understand that
He is near, that His return in glory is imminent, we won’t miss it. We
will see it in all its glory. These are words Jesus spoke nearly two
thousand years ago. They are as true today as they were then. Fig
trees have continued to bloom and designate the coming of summer.

But Jesus also said this at the same time: “Truly, I say to you, this
generation will not pass away until all these things take place.” How
is it that this is true when generation upon generation has passed
away when the signs of the End Times have continued to go on and the
End has not come? It’s true that all of those things did take place in
the generation to which spoke. How this was so was that the promise
and prophecies of the Old Testament and His own prophecies are tied to
His coming in the flesh and suffering and dying on the cross. His
coming again in glory is no glory at all without His coming in the
flesh and in humility and in suffering and in dying for the sins of
the world. Any interpretation of prophecy in the Bible and any
interpretation of the Bible in general apart from its being centered
in the suffering, death, and resurrection of Christ is false
interpretation and interpretation that leads you to miss the glory of
the Last Day.

That’s why when Jesus continues on He says, “Heaven and earth will
pass away, but My words will not pass away.” They will not pass away
because all that we see was brought into existence by His very Word.
Even though it was all created to be eternal it will not last because
of the Fall into sin. So it will all pass away but His words will
never pass away. Words are ordinary things, aren’t they? With words
God brought into existence the universe. With words our Lord
prophesies His coming again in glory. His words will never pass away
even though they are among the most ordinary of things. By His Word He
declares us His people. We are His people who hear His Word and cling
to the promise that He will come again in glory even if two thousand
years seems like a long time for the promise to be fulfilled.

This shows all the more reason for us to be ready. Because the
glorious is not comprehended in the spectacular, but in the ordinary.
We should never underestimate the decision of God to bring His glory
to us in the ordinary. The Incarnation is an amazing fact of history.
God became flesh. He dwelt among us. God was born. He became a man.
People are ordinary. We are a normal part of life. God became an
ordinary man. The thing about ordinary human beings is that we don’t
know when our Lord will return in glory. In fact, it’s just an
ordinary part of life that even He didn’t know! This is Jesus’
startling statement: “But concerning that day or that hour, no one
knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the
Father.” Jesus is not afraid of the ordinary. He relishes it. He
rejoiced in His incarnation, in being a man, in submitting Himself to
His Heavenly Father. As a man, He truly did not know when He would
return in glory. According to His human nature He was as in the dark
as every other person, as the angels, as all except God the Father.
Nevertheless, according to His divine nature, He knew everything.

This is difficult for us understand. No, it’s impossible for us to
understand. But it’s tough for us to come to terms with. Jesus is God.
How could He not know? It’s because His glory is comprehended in the
ordinary. He doesn’t want to come in the spectacular but in the
ordinary. The spectacular will come soon enough, on the Last Day. We
need to be ready for it. In the meantime, the way we get ready for it
is in the ordinary ways He’s given us. That’s why He says: “Be on
guard, keep awake. For you do not know when the time will come.” Those
ordinary ways are His Gospel and His Sacraments.

This is how He describes His coming again in glory: “It is like a man
going on a journey, when he leaves home and puts his servants in
charge, each with his work, and commands the doorkeeper to stay
awake.” Notice how simple this is. He doesn’t give spectacular details
but rather an ordinary account of servants taking care of the master’s
home and the doorkeeper keeping watch. This is it. This is how simple
it is. This shows the ordinariness of it all. Jesus is the master. He
has gone away, so to speak. He ascended into heaven and will return
again in glory. As we await His return in glory we are His servants.
We take care of His household on earth, the Church. We take our cue
from the doorkeeper and keep watch. Jesus says: “Therefore stay
awake—for you do not know when the master of the house will come, in
the evening, or at midnight, or when the rooster crows, or in the
morning—lest He come suddenly and find you asleep. And what I say to
you I say to all: Stay awake.”

How do we do this? The Gospel and Sacraments. We partake of them. We
live in them and are sustained by them. Jesus the Master has gone away
for at time, after having come to secure salvation for the world in
His suffering, death, and resurrection. But though He ascended into
heaven He hasn’t just up and left. He comes to us often in His Gospel
and Sacraments. In the preaching of the Gospel we receive Christ. In
Baptism we are united with Christ. In the Holy Supper of our Lord we
receive our Lord, partaking of His body and blood, eaten and drunk by
us for the forgiveness of our sins. He does all of these things
through ordinary means such words, water, and bread and wine. Why He
blesses us eternally and strengthens us through these ordinary means
is so that we can comprehend them. They’re not out there somewhere,
they’re right here among us.

Why He does it through ordinary means is so that we can live as His
servants as He described in His parable of the master going away and
putting the servants in charge. The lives we live are ordinary lives.
That doesn’t make them less special than if they were spectacular
lives. In fact, it makes them more special because God works through
the ordinary. His glory is comprehended in the ordinary. That means in
your life. In the ordinariness of it all. In you serving in the
ordinary ways you do day in and day out. Little things that you do to
help others. Taking time out to comfort someone who is struggling.
Making the effort to tell others who Jesus is and the salvation He
brings. Carrying out the daily responsibilities you have at work and
at home. Since these are all ordinary things you can be assured that
God is the one who is at work in you. If it were up to you to do
spectacular things for God then you would look to yourself and miss
the glory of God that is comprehended in the ordinary.

Be ready. Stay awake. Rejoice and relax and be comforted in the
ordinary. Mostly the ordinariness of God. God coming as a man. Jesus
coming in order to suffer and die in your place. Coming to you in your
Baptism and in His Holy Supper. Strengthening you so that you may be
ready. The glory is coming. You will know it when it happens. When
Christ returns in glory on the Last Day it will be unlike anything you
know. And it will indeed be glorious. But don’t miss the glory that is
comprehended in the ordinary. God loves to bless you in these ordinary
means of His Gospel and Sacraments and there is nothing more glorious
than that. Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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