First Sunday
in Advent
Matthew 24:36-44
Be
Ready
""But of that day and
hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the
Father only. As were the days of Noah, so will be the coming of the Son
of man. For as in those days before the flood they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day when Noah
entered the ark, and they did not know until the flood came and swept
them all away, so will be the coming of the Son of man. Then two men
will be in the field; one is taken and one is left. Two women will be
grinding at the mill; one is taken and one is left. Watch therefore,
for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming. But know this,
that if the householder had known in what part of the night the thief
was coming, he would have watched and would not have let his house be
broken into. Therefore you also must be ready; for the Son of man is
coming at an hour you do not expect." Matthew 24:36-44, RSV.
Grace and peace to you from our
expectant Lord. Amen
The superintendent of a large Christian school was concerned about the
disarray he found in so many of the classrooms he visited. Papers were
often strewn on the floor, and the students' desks were surrounded by
clutter.
Feeling strongly that learning could not take place in such an untidy
environment, he decided to take action.
He chose one classroom for an experiment, introduced himself to the
students and with a smile made this proposition:
"Your teacher, principal and I provide a well-equipped classroom for
you to enjoy but we need your help in keeping your desks and the
classroom orderly. Many of you have crumpled papers inside your desks
with books left open and the pages bent. Often there are pencils on the
floor under your desks along with other debris.
"I would like each of you to clean out your desk today and begin this
school year resolving to keep it clean. One day I will return and
inspect your desks and the person with the neatest desk will be given
this $100 bill. I won't tell you which day it will be. It will be a
surprise. Not even your teacher or the principal will know the day."
The children squealed with excitement and began immediately pulling
things from their desks, filling the trash baskets with crumpled
papers, stacking their books neatly inside their desks, and neatly
lining up their pencils and pens.
Every morning for the first week, every student checked his or her desk
to make sure it was in perfect condition, confident that today would be
the day the superintendent returned.
The next week, a few boys grew weary of the exercise and returned to
their former habits.
By the third week, several students remarked, "I doubt if he'll come
back at all. He just said that to make us keep our desks clean."
After two months, no one in the classrooms bothered to inspect their
desks and in fact, forgot the superintendent's promise.
Except for one girl.
Dutifully, she inspected her desk every morning and several times a
day, making sure things were in proper order.
For months, she was teased by the other students. "He's not coming
back! Why do you keep looking for him? You look stupid believing that
promise, anyway."
Still, she remained quiet, kept her desk in perfect condition and
waited.
Near the end of the school year, there was a knock on the door and the
superintendent entered.
Quickly, the students flung open their desks and began frantically to
clean them. But the superintendent held up his hand for them to stop.
All the students were asked to stand beside their desk at attention
while the superintendent inspected each desk.
One after another, he rejected them for being unkempt. One boy tried
giving excuses but to no avail. Another blamed the teacher for not
reminding them. Still another blamed the superintendent for making them
wait so long.
Finally, the superintendent arrived at the desk of the little girl who
confidently displayed her well-kept desk while beaming at the
superintendent.
After inspecting her desk, he took her by the hand to the front of the
classroom and awarded her the $100 bill.
"Boys and girls," he said kindly, "this girl never stopped believing I
would return so she kept her desk in perfect order. She didn't need to
worry about what day or even what time of day I would arrive because
she was always ready. Always. (1)
Ready that is the key word for our gospel lesson this morning. Be
ready.
We have entered a new church year again as we are in the first Sunday
in Advent. Advent is a time to look ahead to the coming of Jesus as a
babe in the manger. It is also a time for looking ahead for the
second coming of Christ.
Our gospel lesson says very plainly "Therefore you also
must be ready; for the Son of man is coming at an hour you do not
expect."
And how do we get ready?
We are ready for his second
coming by being like that little girl in our story, daily preparation.
We are to keep our desks clean or in other words we are to repent daily.
I want to tell you something about my life which will lead us to think
about being ready.
When I was walking, I enjoyed working in the garden. I would get all
hot and sweaty from pulling weeds and hoeing the garden. The work felt
good.
But it also felt good to get cleaned up afterwards.
Nothing makes me feel better than to come in after a long day other of
hard work, in the garden then peeling off those dirty clothes, take a
refreshing shower, and then put on some clean clothing.
How absurd it would be to put on those same old dirty clothes again!
And that is what Jesus is talking about for the season of Advent. We
are to clean up our lives, to take off the dirty clothes and put on the
new ones of grace.
Advent is a time of preparation and the one preparation we can do is
repentance. Take off the dirty old self and put on the clean new self.
Luther talks about this as he tells us to drown our old self daily in
the waters of our Baptism and then to rise up again as a new, forgiven
person living in the grace of God.
We are to be ready for the coming of Christ through our act of
repentance. We acknowledge before God that we are in need of His grace
through Christ, then we are symbolically drown in the waters of Baptism
and raised up to a new life.
We are to be ready by daily repentance.
Repentance is the act of turning away from our sins to live a new life
in Christ. And so if the second coming does come, God will see us as in
our new selves, cleansed by the blood of Christ.
God will recognize us because he made us clean through Jesus' sacrifice.
It is like the little girl in the following:
Ian Macpherson tells a story about a little girl who was on a train to
London shortly after the Second World War. She had been evacuated from
the city during the air raids and had not seen her mother for a long
time. She was excited about meeting her mother on arrival at the
station.
A fellow-passenger teased her by saying. "What if she does not
recognize you? It is so long since she saw you and she may have
forgotten what you look like."
At first the child was shocked by the idea that her mother would not
recognize her. But soon she was all smiles again as she announced, "It
will be all right. Mummy made the dress I am wearing. If she does not
know me by myself, she'll know me by my frock."
God will know us by the white clothes of repentance we wear when we
repent.
Repentance does not just happen once, it is a daily activity we must do
to be ready for his second coming. Daily, like that girl in our first
story, we must clean our desks, so to speak. We must clean our selves
daily, so we are ready for the second coming of Christ.
Daily preparation is important.
Daily I must repent because we do not know the time or place of his
second coming.
Daily I must repent because daily I sin. Let us not deceive ourselves
into thinking that I do now have to repent because Ii am good even for
God. We are never good enough for God. We are sinful people who
need the daily washing away of our sins.
C.S. Lewis says: “A Christian is not one who never goes wrong, but one
who is enabled to repent and begin over again after each
stumble—because of the inner working of Christ.”
Because of Christ I can repent and begin over again. And this happens
daily if we are truly honest with ourselves that I am a sinful creature
who needs to repent of my sins.
How many of us are like Lucy in the following peanuts cartoon, we want
to change but cannot help ourselves.
Several years ago the Peanuts comic strip had Lucy and Charlie Brown
practicing football. Lucy would hold the ball for Charlie’s
placekicking and then Charlie would kick the ball. But every time Lucy
had ever held the ball for Charlie, he would approach the ball and kick
with all his might. At the precise moment of the point of no return,
Lucy would pick up the ball and Charlie would kick and his momentum
unchecked by the ball, which was not there to kick, would cause him to
fall flat on his back.
This strip opened with Lucy holding the ball, but Charlie Brown would
not kick the ball. Lucy begged him to kick the ball. But Charlie Brown
said, "Every time I try to kick the ball you remove it and I fall on my
back." They went back and forth for the longest time and finally Lucy
broke down in tears and admitted, "Charlie Brown I have been so
terrible to you over the years, picking up the football like I have. I
have played so many cruel tricks on you, but I have seen the error of
my ways! I’ve seen the hurt look in your eyes when I’ve deceived you.
I’ve been wrong, so wrong. Won’t you give a poor penitent girl another
chance?"
Charlie Brown was moved by her display of grief and responded to her,
"Of course, I’ll give you another chance." He stepped back as she held
the ball, and he ran. At the last moment, Lucy picked up the ball and
Charlie Brown fell flat on his back. Lucy’s last words were,
"Recognizing your faults and actually changing your ways are two
different things, Charlie Brown!" (2)
Are you going to change your ways as of today? Lucy saw her fault but
was unwilling to change her ways. What about you? Are you ready to
repent and change your ways? Are you ready to confess your faults to
Christ and allow him to cleans you so that you are prepared for his
second coming?
Jesus says Therefore you also
must be ready; for the Son of man is coming at an hour you do not
expect.
Amen
Written by Pastor Tim Zingale November 26, 2007
You may freely use this but please give credit. Not for
commercial use.
(1) from Illustrator e-mail list
(2) Contributed by: Jeeva Sam from SermonCentral