Sunday, November 27, 2016

Romans 13:11-14


Romans 13:11-14 (NRSV)

11 Besides this, you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we became believers; 12 the night is far gone, the day is near. Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light; 13 let us live honorably as in the day, not in reveling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarreling and jealousy. 14 Instead, put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.  

Year A
First Sunday of Advent
November 27, 2016
Cross~Wind Ministries
November 28, 2010
Cross~Wind Ministries
Title: A Life-giving Christmas of Hope
Prayer tree, building upon the notion of wishes
differentiating secular Christmas from a Christian Christmas

General Introduction 


          Advent is a time of preparation for the celebration of what we celebrate at Christmas, the birth of Christ. I am going to be referring to the four traditional words around this season, often used with the Advent wreath, namely, hope, peace, joy, and love. I want us to be thinking about making this a life-giving Christmas, using these four words. For the past few years, we have been using an advent prayer tree. This year, I am going to be asking you to write down a prayer related to the theme. We will make sure that the prayer gets to our prayer tree.  

 
         Today, I want you to consider your deepest prayer related to hope for this Christmas. Why is hope so important for your life? This life has an incomplete character. Hope suggests its possible fulfillment. Our hope has its basis in the promise of God. Our hope is not just for our individual lives. Our hope includes the rest of humanity and even the entire creation. We can move toward the future with confidence, patience, and cheerful expectation of the revelation of the will of God for humanity. We hope for the one in whom we believe and love. While the specifics of that future elude us, of course, we know what is most important. The content of the future is Jesus Christ in his final form, as he completes the work begun in his life, death and resurrection and in the sending of the Spirit. The content of our hope is Jesus Christ coming in glory. This hope means pardon for humanity. It means a movement out of darkness and into light. It means transformation and eternal life. The hope is for the completion of the reconciling act of God in Christ. Such redemption means peace between Creator and creation. Slumbering humanity needs to awaken to the significance of the coming of Christ as providing the basis for this hope. Christians offer their witness and service today in light of that hope. We move toward the goal. We live with the hope for the dawn of the great light, but we also have joy over the little lights we experience today. The Holy Spirit is the one who awakens us to this hope.

            Your prayer for hope may relate to something in your personal life, for Cross~Wind, for the community, for the nation, or for the world.  

Show video

Introducing the passage

 

            Our passage brings Christian hope and Christian life together. Our hope for the future means we are to live a certain way today. Paul consistently held together two horizons. He is quite aware of the human plight of sin and darkness. He is also quite aware of the hope for a new creation in Christ. He will point out that much of humanity is asleep both to the plight and to the hope. Even we in the church can slumber. We need to awaken. Every moment contains the possibility of being our time for God. We are in the night, but waiting for the full light of day to come. If we are really waiting for the day, then we need to live in the light of the daylight we see coming in Christ. It will be a battle. The darkness is not yet gone. The light is not yet fully come. So we need to put on the armor. We need to have the mentality of a soldier when it comes to spiritual life.

Introduction 


          We often work with children on their Christmas wish list. It is often a very material type of list. 

          Is hope on your wish list for this Christmas? 

          Hope – that things will be better next year? – In your personal life, family, church, community, nation, and world. 

          What is your deepest hope this Christmas?      

Application 


Hope is more important that we know.

St. Augustine says that hope has two beautiful daughters: anger at the way things are and courage to see to it they do not remain the way they are. Our dissatisfaction with the present arises out of our hope the future.  

As Reinhold Niebuhr said: "Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime." Hope always looks ahead, to something greater and better than we have now.

          If we truly want a life-giving Christmas, drawing closer to God needs to take priority over any material desire on this year’s wish list. For week one of Advent, I want to invite you to focus on living into eternal hope, carrying that hope for others, knowing that no matter what we go through, we are never alone. God will break through our circumstances and shed light. 

          First, let us admit this truth: We expend a lot of effort to keep our “real” selves a secret.

          In some areas of our lives, we are asleep and live in darkness. We are not even engaging the spiritual battle.

Keeping secrets, particularly ones involving our own behavior, is a full-time job. As Thomas Carlyle, the 19th-century British writer, once noted, “He who has a secret should not only hide it, but hide that he has to hide.”

          St. Ignatius of Loyola, in his Spiritual Exercises, says that temptations are like secret lovers. He uses the image of a young woman who has a good father. The secret lover wants to stay secret, in the dark, trying to get you to do things you know the father, who loves you and wants the best for you, would not approve. St. Ignatius says sin is like that. Keep everything in the dark, hidden, and secret.

I wonder if the reason Paul encourages us to wake up is that we are asleep when it comes to dangers that confront us spiritually. We spend too much time covering up who we really are.     One way Advent might make you different this year might be painful. You just might see the light more clearly and therefore must face places of darkness in your life.

          Second, we need to live in the light.

          In other words, we need to wake up.

I do not remember a time what it was hard for me to get up in the morning. If I have no reason to get up early, I will usually awaken around 5 or 6. I like being up before others in the house. I like the quiet. I usually spend some time in personal reflection and prayer.

Some of us are not morning persons. You hear the alarm, and you hit the snooze button. By the way, if you find it very difficult to wake up, people have invented some rather creative alarm clocks. Nevertheless, according to some studies, you are setting yourself up for a day of being less alert and productive. All of us know what that feels like. You feel like you are sleepwalking through the day.

During this advent season, we need to avoid being asleep to the dangers that confront us spiritually. The ancient world often used the metaphor of sleep for spiritual inattentiveness. Jesus himself warned against spiritual snoozing lest he return and find his weak followers asleep instead of awake and at work (Matthew 24:43; Mark 13:36). The kairos is getting short, says Paul, and it is time to wake up. What will it take us to wake up and be alert to what God is calling us to be and to do?

            We are more alive some days than we are on other days. We have energies asleep within us. Some days have things that awaken that energy. Some days do not. We may feel like a cloud weighs upon us that inhibit our discernment, clarity, and decisiveness. We may even think of ourselves as half-awake. We are making use of only a small part of the resources we know we have.[1]

          I have a suggestion. As we prepare for Christmas, name three things you will do differently this Advent season, substituting things that bring renewed hope, rather than depleting energy and bank accounts. Work with friends to identify the substitutions. Chances are that friends may remember even better from past years what was exhausting. Together, encourage one another to press on toward the goal. For example, “Instead of spending all day Saturday shopping for the perfect gifts, I will spend Saturday morning having coffee and devotion with someone for whom I’ve not made time lately.” Alternatively, “I will spend time with my children to help them develop a common wish list.” By promoting a common wish list, children will be encouraged to negotiate with one another in individual desires, spend time together and share their gifts.

          We need to wake up to our families. We influence our spouses, children, grandparents, and grandchildren, far more than we know. We need to be sure that what we bring them is the light of day, and not the night of confusion.

          We need to wake up to the moment. We need to seize the day.

          Ann Wells shares the story of her sister dying. She then shares this incident. "My brother-in-law opened the bottom drawer of my sister's bureau and lifted out a tissue-wrapped package.  "'This,' he said, 'is not a slip.  This is lingerie.' "He discarded the tissue and handed me the slip. It was exquisite: silk, handmade and trimmed with a cobweb of lace. It still had the astronomical price tag attached. "'Jan bought this the first time we went to New York, at least eight or nine years ago. She never wore it. She was saving it for a special occasion. Well, I guess this is the occasion.' "He took the slip from me and put it on the bed with the other clothes we were taking to the mortician. His hands lingered on the soft material for a moment, and then he slammed the drawer shut and turned to me. "'Don't ever save anything for a special occasion. Every day you're alive is a special occasion.' As Ann reflected upon that moment, she wrote:  

I'm trying to recognize those moments now and cherish them.  I'm not 'saving' anything; we use our good china and crystal for every special event - such as losing a pound, getting the sink unstopped, the first camellia blossom. "'Someday' and 'one of these days' are losing their grip on my vocabulary.  If it's worth seeing or hearing or doing, I want to see and hear and do it now.  

          Please, wake up to the moment.

          We need to wake up to God. We often discover God in the strangest places. We might discover God in the smile of a child, the hug of a parent, or the simple greeting in church by someone you know really meant it when he or she asked you how things were going with you.

          Third, how can we move from good to great?

          The phrase comes from Jim Collins, who wrote a business book of that title. His point is that “good,” or “acceptable” often becomes the enemy of greatness. Spiritually, you may be doing OK. Yet, how can you make that transition to a fully awake, alive, follower of Jesus Christ?

          Here was one of the observations about businesses Jim Collins made:  

 “Most companies build their bureaucratic rules to manage the small percentage of the wrong people on the bus, which in turn drives away the right people on the bus, which then increases the percentage of wrong people on the bus, which increases the need for more bureaucracy to compensate for the incompetence and lack of discipline, which then further drives the right people away, and so forth.”  

The point is that such managing by negatives will likely have a limited effect. People who want to break the rules will break them, no matter what you do. What we need spiritually are reminders of those times when we encouraged and modeled, lived as children of the day, lived fully awake, and keep expanding those choices in our lives.

Most people will keep things as they are, if possible. We prefer the status quo. We need to be alert, though, to the changes taking place. Being awake is the key to surviving and thriving in our culture.  

One of the great liabilities of history is that all too many people fail to remain awake through great periods of social change. Every society has its protectors of the status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. But today our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change. The large house in which we live demands that we transform this world-wide neighborhood into a world-wide brotherhood. Together we must learn to live as brothers or together we will be forced to perish as fools.[2]  

Conclusion


          Frankly, as Paul puts it, salvation is nearer to us now than when we were believers. Therefore, Paul invites his readers, and us, to put on Christ, the source of faith, hope, and love. Instead of focusing too much upon sin, which can in fact give it more power over you, focus on Christ. Make him more part of your life. Take him with you, to your family, to your friends, to your work, and to wherever you go. That will wake you up. In fact, come to think of it, it may also wake up those around you. You will have increasingly less to hide and increasingly more to share. 

Going deeper


Romans 13:11-14 has the theme of the special need of ethical consecration because of the approaching crisis. He has just referred to the command to love as the primary preparation for the “end.”

Romans 13:11-14 (NRSV)

11 Besides this, you know what time it is, [They know the time is short, which is actually the basis for respect for the state and for love of neighbor. Do not waste time squabbling with either. In that sense, J. Louis Martyn has insightfully described Paul’s vision as “bifocal.”[3] Paul simultaneously has an eye on two horizons — that which is happening on earth because of the enslaving power of sin in the old age and the in-breaking of God’s kingdom into this earthly sphere. These verses reveal the apocalyptic vision of Paul, his understanding that this present age is passing away and his certainty that God is ushering in a new age.] how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep. [Karl Barth has an extensive discussion of the importance of “awakening” in conversion. Where someone is awakened and therefore wakes and rises, he has been asleep. Christians have been asleep, just like others. What distinguishes them is their sleeping is in the past. Yet, is there not still a Christianity that sleeps with the world and likes it? His answer is affirmative. The admonition here, in fact, assumes that Christians still need the admonition to waken. Christians are those who are awake in the sense they are awakened a first time, and then again, to their shame and good fortune. They are, in fact, those who constantly stand in need of reawakening and who depend upon the fact that they are continually reawakened. The sleep from which they awaken is the relentless downward movement caused by their sloth.[4]  Barth also says that the notion of “awakening” in conversion is the result of the influence of pietism and Methodism. He thinks it legitimate in that it has a close proximity to the resurrection of Jesus, it suggests a specific word that awakens, and passages like this suggest the need for continual awakening. The Kairos is the eschatological era or last days, begun by Christ's death and resurrection and is co-extensive with the age of the church, the age of salvation.  Paul evokes the notion of time not with the basic reference to the Greek term chronos, but to kairos. Here he signals that this is a special sense of time, namely God's time and God's activity in history. The "time" is technically before the second coming.  Paul refers to the time that does not occur in time; a moment that is not moment in time.[5] Barth will say that between the past and the future, between the times, a “Moment” exists that is no moment in time, the eternal Moment. At that point, time reveals its secret. Time has not come and gone, but the person is one who has been and will be, who dies and lives, falls and stands. We are the ones who spend our years as a tale that is told, which is the secret of time made known in the Moment of revelation, a Moment that always is, and yet is not. Every moment in time bears within it the unborn secret of revelation. Yet, distinctions within time are appropriate, for some are near and some are far. A tension exists between the “then” and the “now,” a tension that is not just chronological. We stand on the boundary of time. Thus, the “end” of which the New Testament speaks is no temporal event, no legendary “destruction” of the world, but a true end. He makes fun of the “short and perfectly harmless chapter entitled” Eschatology, without naming Schleiermacher.[6] ] For salvation is nearer to us now than when we became believers; [This assertion of the imminence of the day of Jesus’ return is quite similar to what Paul wrote in I Thessalonians (4:15; 5:4-5) and I Corinthians (7:29). In other words, the salvation of the Roman Christians is not completely achieved. It is emerging. This eschatological expectation places the horizon of God's activity in Jesus Christ far beyond any individual's situation, compliance, or non-compliance with the law. Paul signals here that God is at work and that in Jesus Christ, God's saving purposes continue to emerge. Pannenberg finds it interesting that while early Christians expected Christ’s coming imminently, the delay did not shatter the foundations of their faith. Rather, through the risen Lord and the Spirit, eschatological salvation had already become a certainty for believers, so that the length of the remaining span of time was a secondary matter.[7]]  12 the night is far gone, the day is near. [Waiting for the return of Christ is like being in the night and waiting for daylight to come. Night would be the time of spiritual sleep. The life prior to being born in Christ into the Spirit was known as "sleep," "darkness," and "night." The life in Christ and in the Spirit was understood as being "awake," "living in the light," and "in the day." Such a metaphor of night and day, sleep, and wakefulness captures the power of transformation that adult Christians experience in baptism and in being bound together in the Spirit of Christ. By evoking this contrast rhetorically, Paul both reminds the Roman Christians who they are (as opposed to who they were), and encourages them to be steadfast in the commitment to the life that God is calling them to in Christ. God has achieved this transformation within them. They have been awakened, and it is now upon them to keep in the light. Barth stresses that this sense of the shortness of the time available arises because of Christ. The promised reign of God drew near and came right up to them, and with it the end of time. The new day is the event in which to which they in their time bore witness. They continue in their time, but only as they are in the time of the revelation, declaration, and realization of their time in its hastening toward the end that has already come. As Barth sees it, Christ rules time, time is short, and the duration of time is unknown to those who live in it. Essentially, the vanishing of the night and the breaking of the day have begun and can no longer be stopped. The same Lord stands at the beginning and the end, he is also Lord of the time between. [8]] Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light; [reminding us that we can separate the eschatological from the ethical, therefore, we are to lay aside the works of darkness and, using an image drawn from warfare, he urges them to put on the armor of light. We find the image in I Thessalonians 5:8, “But since we belong to the day, let us be sober, and put on the breastplate of faith and love, and for a helmet the hope of salvation.” In addition, in II Corinthians 6:7, we read, “... the power of God; with the weapons of righteousness for the right hand and for the left ...” Warfare and the equipment of war were common sources for ethical metaphors among many writers in Greco-Roman antiquity. For example, the first-century Stoic philosopher and teacher Epictetus compared the challenge of living a virtuous life to a soldier out on campaign. 

Discourse 3.24.34
“Each person’s life is a kind of campaign, and a long and complicated one at that. You have to maintain the character of a soldier, and do each separate act at the bidding of the general, if possible divining what he wishes.”  

The most famous example of military imagery to describe the Christian life can be found in Ephesians 6:10-17, where the various pieces of the “armor of God” are discussed.]

13 let us live honorably as in the day, not in reveling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarreling and jealousy. [Some other lists of such behaviors are in Romans 1:29; 9:10; 1 Corinthians 1:11; 3:3; 2 Corinthians 12:20; Galatians 5:21; Philippians 1:15. These activities all threaten the life of the community. They are the inverse of the commandments of the law and hence are the inverse of love. They provide opportunities for self-interest, social divisions, and broken relationships. These activities make for sleep. However, Paul reminds the Romans that in Christ they have been awakened to a new life in the Spirit. We are to live as if the new order were already here.  We must act like what we are, citizens of heaven. Karl Barth refers to Augustine, who said that it was not self-evident that such activities as described in verse 13 are not compatible with walking, as in the day.” He goes on to say that naïve talk about the spiritual life of the earth church ought to be sobered by this verse, among others. From the point of view of the Christian individual, we have here a degree of worldliness for which the church is later condemned. He thinks we should ask whether the worldliness of the Christian individual is not to be seen more radically here and given its true name, whereas the true evil of the later church consists in the fact that the humanity of its members could disguise itself more cleverly. At any rate, a radical admonition is necessary. Its final word is also the first word, to put on Jesus Christ.[9]] 14 Instead, put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires. [We might connect the "armor" to the concrete manifestation of the law fulfilled as love - that is, none other than "the Lord Jesus Christ" himself. As the dawn of "the Day" or any day approaches, by "putting on" the mind of Christ, Christians are completely prepared for and protected from whatever may assail them in the next 24 hours. Or the next two millennia. “Putting on” should remind us of baptism. In Galatians 3:27, he writes that those who are baptized “have clothed” themselves “with Christ,” which is probably an allusion to the practice of the newly baptized being given a white robe to put on immediately after baptism. Yet, they must continually renew that life with which they have been clothed.]

[It at least seems that Paul expected the return of Christ in his lifetime. Yet, as Pannenberg notes, it also suggests that the length of time between was a secondary matter to him. The “delay” of the coming did not seem to create a crisis. A Christian sense of time is not just clocks and calendars.  It is the tension between God's ways and our ways, good and evil, light and darkness.  It translates into a way of life. The trial on earth is looked upon as a night of gloom that is followed by morning.[10]]  



[1] --William James, "The energies of men," 1907, first published in Science, N.S. 25 (No. 635), 322-23. psychclassics.yorku.ca. Retrieved May 30, 2016.
[2] --Martin Luther King Jr., "The world house," in Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? (Harper & Row, 1967). umn.edu. Retrieved May 30, 2016.
[3](Theological Issues in the Letters of Paul [Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1997], 279-297).
[4] (Church Dogmatics, IV. 2, 66.4)
[5] (Church Dogmatics, IV.3 71.2)
[6] Romans, 497-500.
[7] Systematic Theology, Volume II, 366.
[8] (Church Dogmatics, III.4, 56.1)
[9] (Church Dogmatics, II.2, 38.3, p. 729)
[10] (Systematic Theology, Volume 2, 366)

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