Thirty Third
Ordinary Sunday Year B
I’m not sure if
you still remember that disaster movie which hit the screens in 2009, the one simply
entitled ‘2012’. The plot of the film, as the title suggests, revolves around
one version of a set of beliefs regarding the end of world that was predicted
to take place this year, on the 21st of December. (The clock is
ticking!) It is regarded as the end-date of an over 5,000 year-long cycle in
the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar. There is a whole range of
interpretations, from a New Age version that speaks of spiritual transformation
to eschatological versions predicting the end of the world. According to the
movie, the world will be inundated by a massive flood and reshaped by
earthquakes that will pull continents asunder and reform new ones. I guess
given Malaysia’s size and location, we won’t survive the floods. And if the
movie is going to be a guide of any sort, running to the Himalayas would not
help. Your best bet would be Africa.
You may be relieved
to know that most astronomers and scientists have rejected the above proposals
as pseudoscience and in fact present a distraction from more important
concerns, such as global warming and loss of biological diversity. This is not the first (and most likely would
not be the last) prediction of how and when the world will meet its end. Theories
on when and how the world might end have surfaced for centuries. Consider these,
in 960 Bernard of Thuringia, calculated 992 as the most likely year for the
world’s end. As the time approached, panic was widespread. The German
astrologer Johann Stoffler predicted a catastrophic flood on February 20, 1524.
Believers started constructing arks and a man was accidentally trampled to
death. That year passed without any unusual rainfall. And who can forget the 16th
century seer Nostradamus. The Frenchman favoured 1999 as the year of a Martian
invasion. At the close of the second and the beginning of the third millennium,
we saw a spiked increase in the number of apocalyptic cults who range from
Jehovah witnesses to UFO cults proposing different dates and scenarios for the
end. Some Catholics have also jumped on the bandwagon. We’ve had
unauthenticated messages allegedly from our Blessed Mother, including the most
recent one related the of the appearance of her image on a local hospital’s
window pane.
Given the great confusion among many people with regards to the
end times and Jesus’ Second Coming, compounded by both Evangelical Protestant
theories, pseudo-science doomsday prophecies and alleged Marian related
messages, a clarification is necessary to understand the Catholic position in
this matter. Firstly, the belief in the Last Things, in Jesus’ Second Coming is
a core and essential tenet of our Catholic Faith. It is not something we should
dismiss as a myth. Every time we profess the creed, we affirm this truth in two
distinct articles. In the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed which we recite every
Sunday, we hear and recite the following statement of faith, “He (Jesus) will
come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and his kingdom will have
no end.” At the very end of the Creed, we affirm, “I look forward to the
resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come.” The Apostles
Creed uses different words but adduces to the same events and truths. The Last
things are thus spelt out – Jesus will come again, there will be judgment,
resurrection of the body and then the final conclusion: for some it is heaven,
and perhaps for others it is hell.
In
today’s gospel, our attention would certainly be taken up by the cataclysmic
signs mentioned, namely that “the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not
give its light, and the stars will be falling from the sky, and the powers in
the heavens will be shaken.” With so much happening on a cosmic scale, one can
certainly miss the point. The parable using metaphors taken from nature is the
clue. “When you see these things happening, know that he is near, at the gates.”
It’s just like the fireworks that go off at the inauguration ceremony of a
president. People are often distracted by the pyrotechnic display in the sky,
failing to see or forgetting for a moment, that this isn’t the focus of the
celebrations, just the trappings. Without wanting to generalise, I believe that
the general attitude among millennialist Evangelical Protestants is one of
preoccupation with the signs of the end times and how to interpret them. Part
of the misunderstanding comes from an insistence on precision that arises from
an overly literal interpretation of scriptural texts. The Catholic approach, on
the other hand, has always been Christo-centric. In other words, the focus is
Christ, the Coming of the Son of Man in glory and victory, the one who is
“near” and in fact “at the gates.”
We
should also not be preoccupied with predicting the date of Christ’s Second
Coming. “It
is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has fixed by his own
authority.”(Acts 1:7) To understand the Catholic
position calls for understanding the Greek word ‘parousia’ (lit. ‘a being near’), used to describe the Second Coming
of Christ. The word has several meanings, including coming, arrival or personal
presence. First, the term was used in ancient times to describe the impending
visit of the King to the city. But it also referred to his presence at the
gates of the city. Thirdly, it could also mean the presence of the king in the
midst of its inhabitants. The three meanings were not mutually exclusive. To an
English speaker, it is indeed befuddling that such a term could include all
three senses – past, present and future. Thus, the choice of the word in Greek
is most illuminating to help us understand the Coming of Christ can speak of
the reality of Christ having arrived (his first coming among men), his presence
in our midst as well as his coming again in glory in the future to judge the
living and the dead. Time and space collapses with this critical intervention
of God in human history. We are living in the end times. But ‘already and not yet’ - that is the end is already here, but it has
yet to be consummated.
The
cataclysmic signs that accompany the end should never be a reason for fear but
always one of hope. The signs indicate an undoing of creation in anticipation
of a re-creation. What these forces destroy is not goodness or life, but rather
the power of evil and sin which has soiled the harmony of creation. Destruction
comes before perfection. But a greater problem that can be perceived today is
not the fact that many Catholics are stricken and crippled by fear of the end
times and the signs that accompany it. On the contrary, many Catholics have
grown dull and immune to this event. Today, Catholics experience a different
kind of cataclysmic upheaval – where our secure world seems to be put to the
test on a daily basis. Perhaps, every experience of rejection, or suffering,
death or loss, deprivation and emptiness is perceived as a catastrophe. Our
concerns over money, success at work or in school, health, release from
addiction, political situation of the country, job security, status and
recognition, crisis in family or relationships are taken to be personal signs
of the end of the world. We are so
blinded by our fear of these signs, that we sometimes fail to see the urgency
of conversion and that “the coming of the Son of Man…with great power and
glory” is upon us.
The Catholic approach to the end times (aka
Eschatology) is perhaps less thrilling and provocative. It does not sensationalise
the event, neither does it try to demythologise the message of the Bible and
trivialise its significance. It does not generate panic or cause people to sell
their houses and gather on hillsides waiting for the announced end. It seeks to
balance a lot of notions that often hold certain truths in tension. What it
does is to strengthen faith, unveil hope and challenge every person to a deeper
conversion as they face the setbacks, losses and tragedies of daily life. Death,
suffering and destruction are not the end, Christ is!
At
the end of the day, we will never be certain when the world will really come to
end. We won’t even be sure that the signs are really signs of the end times and
not just natural cataclysmic events arising from shifting continental plates and
changing weather conditions. We can't seem to make sense of the proliferation of alleged apparitions. We can’t even say for certain at this point
whether the image that has appeared on the glass panel is our Lady herself
heralding the end times. All these may seem pressing but Pope Benedict XVI
reminds us that both the search for the Truth and its final outcome should
never distract us from three certainties which should always remain our foci.
The
first certainty is that Jesus is Risen and is with the Father and thus is with
us forever. And no one is stronger than Christ. We are consequently safe, free
of fear.
Secondly,
we are certain that Christ is with me. My faith in him gives me the hope that the
future is not darkness in which no one can find his way. Christ's light is
stronger and therefore we live with a hope that is not vague, with a hope that
gives us certainty and courage to face the future.
Lastly,
we are convinced that Christ will return as Judge and Saviour. Therefore, we
must be accountable to him for our every action and decision.
Last thing about the Last Things, the return of Christ will be
the fulfillment of his promise that the world will reach perfection, not
through the actions and plans of men, but through the transforming power of
God’s love. The world will transcend it’s very self through Christ. History
moves toward a steady goal. It is moving to a climax when “time shall be no
more.” History has a reason and that reason is Jesus Christ. Christ is the central figure of all history. He is the Lord of
History, the past, the present and the future. And so we as Christians should
not cower in fear but joyfully welcome the day when Christ returns – it is “already
(here) but not yet”. Jesus Christ has come to inaugurate the final Hour
of man’s history. He will return in triumph to fulfill God’s eternal purpose
with all of creation. And that will be a marvel to
behold!
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