Fall 1984 Quarterly Review - Theological Resources For Ministry
Fall 1984 Quarterly Review - Theological Resources For Ministry
Fall 1984 Quarterly Review - Theological Resources For Ministry
3 FALL 1984
A Scholarly Journal for Reflection on Ministry
QUARTERLY REVIEW
FOCUS ON APOCALYPTICISM
Gene Tucker, Consulting Editor
Editorial Board
F. Thomas Trotter, Chair
Fred B. Craddock Lloyd R. Bailey
Candler School of Theology Duke Divinity School
Keith R. Crim Cornish Rogers
Westminster Press School of Theology at Claremont
Brita Gill Roy I. Sano
Moderator, Northern California Pacific School of Religion
Conference, United Church of Christ John L, Topolewski
Leander Keck Christ United Methodist Church
Yale Divinity School Mountaintop, Pennsylvania
QUARTERLY REVIEW
CONTENTS
Focus on Apocalypticism
Editorial: Q u e s t i o n a b l e P u r s u i t s 3
C o m i n g to T e r m s w i t h the D o o m B o o m
Robert Jcwett 9
Paul D. Hanson 23
T h e P a s t a s R e v e l a t i o n : H i s t o r y in A p o c a l y p t i c L i t e r a t u r e
Carol A. Nwsom 40
Theodore W . Jennings, Jr 54
Questionable Pursuits
J
from it. Although theoretically to ask about God puts the weight
on something objective, that ultimate reality "out there" we call
divine being or the Other, in reality we become conscious of
ourselves as the questioners. Why are we asking this question in
just this way? we may say to ourselves. Because we are
wondering what we should be, or who we should be, and how we
ought to be acting. Thus to ask "What is God doing?" inevitably
leads to this other question, "What ought we to be doing?"
Apocalyptic theology accomplishes this same result but in a
more direct way. The apocalyptic approach does not lead us
gently by the hand, so that we become dimly aware. Rather, it
takes the sink-or-swim approachit throws us in the water and
reduces all questions to one sharp reality. Carol Newsom
explains this shock-treatment of apocalyptic theology in her
essay. If Newsom is right, then apocalyptic theology has an
undeserved reputation of narrowness and rigidity. Her thesis
intrigues us, the way when the Jehovah's Witnesses come
knocking at the door at dinnertime we would like to sit down
and have a long talk with them but then we remember the family
is waiting for dinner to begin. Once, just once, we probably
ought to give the apocalyptic crowd a few minutes of our time.
What keeps us from having these conversations with
millenniallists and apocalypticists? Surely one reason is that
many of us find their use of metaphors to be ingenuous. They
talk about other worlds as if they were geographical locations
and time as if it were on the clock. Yet whatever our dislike of
such literalisms, we must concede that it is very hard to escape
the use of metaphors of space and time when talking
aboutwell, other dimensions.
Spatial metaphors, for example, seem natural when we ask
questions and seek answers. One questioner, Plato, began
almost all of his dialogues with sentences of location or
movement: "I was going from the Academy straight to the
Lyceum," he wrote in the first sentence of Lysis. And the
Phaedrus started out, "My dear Phaedrus, whence come you,
and whither are you going?" But the most notable line in this
category is the opening of the Republic, where Plato had
Socrates leaving Athens to walk the five miles to Piraeus, the
seaport: "I went down, yesterday, to the Piraeus, with Glaukon
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8
COMING TO TERMS WITH
THE DOOM BOOM
ROBERT JEWETT
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SOME DEFINITIONS
22
THE APOCALYPTIC CONSCIOUSNESS
PAUL D. HANSON
Paul D. Hanson is Bussoy Professor of Divinity at Harvard University and has written
extensively on apocalypticism. His works include The Dawn of Apocalyptic (1979), The
Diversity of Scripture (1982), and Visionaries and Their Apocalypses (1983). This essay is
adapted from a lecture delivered at Principia College and at Mount Holyoke College in
1983.
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ever since Hiroshima, the mood cast over discussions about war
isto put it mildlydecidedly more apocalyptic.
To the ecological, economic, and nuclear threats the
apocalyptically minded contribute other factors to the growing
sense of doom. Is a civilization amenable to rational interpreta
tion which so recently witnessed the use of gigantic gas
chambers to exterminate an ancient and noble race of people?
The minds of many others are thrown into shock by a rate of
cultural and scientific change which seems to erode systems of
values and structures of life as fast as ocean waves washing
away sand castles. In contrast to the optimism with which earlier
generations greeted changes, for many today the change
wrought by science has taken on a Frankensteinian mask.
Robert Heilbroner describes the future science has set in motion
in terms of starving masses, sprawling urban blight, revolution
1
and war. Added to this is the statistical claim of some scientists
of the likelihood that atomic weapons will find mass deploy
ment before the year 2000.
Little wonder that many today have become receptive to this
apocalyptic message: The order of this world has run its course.
A new order is about to replace it. But only those tutored in the
proper secrets will enjoy the rapture. Variations on this
apocalyptic theme are many, but they have in common a
negative attitude toward social reform. This intolerable world is
no longer worthy of our reforming efforts. It hastens towards its
end, and the signs of imminent demise are written all over
nature, the economy, and international events.
The apocalyptic mentality which we have been describing is
no longer the fringe phenomenon of a few marginalized people
which we can ignore. Those viewing the world through its
darkened glasses are not limited to a few fanatics selling their
property and ascending a hill to await the Second Coming.
People given to an apocalyptic worldview sit in seats of political
and economic power. A former secretary of the Interior, James
Watt, has expressed his belief that the world may not have many
years left, an attitude which many discern at the basis of an
official policy whose implementation is having devastating
effects on our environment. Many business people in the
meantime pursue a reckless course in a world which to them
26
APOCALYPTIC CONSCIOUSNESS
faith in the God who created this people and gave them a
vocation in this world, but defeat at the hands of the
Babylonians was followed for some by disgrace and rejection by
their own leaders, leaders who had joined cause with the new
world power, the Persians. The structures of this world no
longer seemed to be open to their message and mission. Two
options beckoned them: despair, or hope based on an
apocalyptic vision. They chose the latter:
Behold, the Lord will lay waste the earth and make it desolate,
and he will twist its surface and scatter its inhabitants. . . .
The earth mourns and withers,
the world languishes and withers;
the heavens languish together with the earth (Isa. 24:1, 4).
"We give thanks to thee, Lord God Almighty, who art and wast,
that thou hast taken thy great power and begun to reign.
The nations raged, but thy wrath came,
and the time for the dead to be judged,
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tic writings of the Bible, this type of application does not deal
honestly with the central message of those writings, for it evades
the severe biblical indictment of those who repudiate God's
righteous order even while claiming God's promises. The effect
of this interpretation of apocalyptic is to direct our attention
away from the victims of our injustice, to whom such promises
rightly apply, as we bask in the pleasure of thinking that God is
engineering history so as to glorify us in the clouds. All we need
do is turn on our TVs, and the 700 Club will open up the heavens
and reveal for us the bliss for which God is marshalling all of
heaven's powers to prepare for us. Such a perverted use of
apocalyptic imagery must be repudiated, for it directs attention
away from those for whom the apocalyptic world of comfort is
rightfully intended, those against whom the powers of this
world have mounted the final assault, obliterating all hope of
escape, save the vision of divine intervention. It is a perverse
trifling with the gravity of the apocalyptic message which
confuses the identity of the oppressors and the oppressed by
insisting that our privileged status which has abetted so much
evil in this world now be imposed on the heavenly kingdom as
well.
If we refuse to take this cheap way out, we will take care to
distinguish between two types of apocalyptic response:
between those who simply titillate their selfish fantasy with
apocalyptic images and those who are driven to the apocalyptic
consciousness by extreme adversity. The latter we shall no
longer dismiss as weird or deviant, but we will instead listen to
their message. We will allow them to open up our eyes to our
own hearts, and shall find the courage to see the world as they
see it, as a world caught in an awesome struggle between good
and evil.
The effect of this new awareness may be the reawakening of
the apocalyptic vision which lies buried in our own subcon
sciousness. Rather than wasting our life-energy on repression of
guilt and denial, we shall search for the humanity which we
share with the apocalypticist. For those of us who derive our
sense of identity and purpose from the drama which unfolds in
the Bible, a compassionate openness to the apocalyptic outpour-
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1. Robert Heilbroner, An Inquiry into the Human Prospect (New York: W. W. Norton,
1974).
2. Sec Norman Conn, The Pursuit of t\\e Millennium (London: Seeker and Warburg,
1957), and Bernard McGinn, Visions of the End: Apocalyptic Traditions in the Middle Ages
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1979).
3. Quoted in John R. Hall, "Apocalypse at Jonestown/' Transaction (September/Octo
ber 1979), p. 58.
Scripture quotations are from the Revised Standard Version Common Bible,
copyrighted 1973 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the
Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., and are used by permission.
39
THE PAST AS REVELATION:
HISTORY IN APOCALYPTIC LITERATURE
CAROL A. NEWSOM
40
PAST AS REVELATION
The Book of Daniel does not return to the imagery of the sea in
speaking of the eschatological resolution, however, though it
well might have done so in the same terms as the early Christian
author of Revelation who said in his vision of the new heaven
and earth that "the sea was no more" (Rev. 21:1). What seems to
interest the author of Daniel more directly is the vision of a new
constitution of political power based on a radically different
source. At the climax of the vision of the four beasts in chapter 7,
when the kingdoms have been judged and the power of chaos
broken, then in imagery which derives from very ancient
descriptions of Yahweh's own epiphany in victory, an angelic
figure appears. "With the clouds of heaven there came one like a
human being, and he approached the Ancient of Days and was
presented before him. And to him was given dominion and
glory and royal authority, that all peoples, nations, and
languages should serve him" (7:13-14**). Because the new
political order derives from God's own sovereignty, it does not
repeat the old pattern of greed and violence, finally collapsing
into impotence. Instead, "his sovereignty shall be an everlasting
sovereignty, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one
that shall not be destroyed" (7:14b).
What should one say about the value of these apocalyptic
visions of history? Certainly as predictive tools the historical
resumes proved to be rather blunt instruments. The quite
specific events predicted by the author of Dan. 11:40-45 did not
occur, though to grant him his due, after Antiochus IV dynastic
instability, local revolts, and the rising of a new world empire,
Rome, quickly drained what remained of Seleudd power. It is
also the case that the author's belief that the bondage of history
to particular cycles of conflict was about to end proved
Christian faith, the event that gives unity to human history, that
shapes and interprets that history. Without diminishing the
complexity of particular events, this paradigm offers a way of
understanding our past not as a mere "parenthesis in time" but
as translucent events shaped by and revelatory of the sorrow of
the cross and the joy of Resurrection. The paradigm of the cross
is not just paradigm of knowledge, however, but a summons to
a particular pattern of participation in the events of the present.
It reveals a God who suffers with and on behalf of the world and
who calls on persons to take up the cross themselves. Yet the
apocalyptic paradigm of the cross is not one of suffering only. It
is completely and wholly linked to the Resurrection. As God
acted in the Resurrection of Christ, so all who take up the cross
to bear the sorrows of others also take up the joy of newness of
life, the realization that they participate already in the kingdom
of life, where God overcomes the alienation of the world. As an
apocalyptic paradigm, however, the cross and Resurrection
cannot be limited to subjective experience alone. As a
transcendent event it stands over all creation, revealing the
nature of God's involvement with the world. As a yet
uncompleted event, the cross and Resurrection is the surety of
the Christian hope for the final redemption of the world. The
authentic appropriation of apocalyptic hope does not consist in
attempts to predict the eschaton but in experiencing the events
of human history as already participating in the paradigmatic
event and anticipating its final resolution.
NOTES
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PAST AS REVELATION
5. R. J. Clifford, "History and Myth in Daniel 1 0 - 1 2 , " Bulletin of the American Schools of
Oriental Research 220 (1975): 23-26.
6. For a thoughtful discussion of the contemporary relevance of the Pauline
apocalyptic hope, see the recent book of J. C. Beker, Paul's Apocalyptic Gospel
(Philadelphia: Fortress, 1982).
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APOCALYPTIC AND CONTEMPORARY
THEOLOGY
54
CONTEMPORARY THEOLOGY
CRISIS THEOLOGY
T H E O L O G Y O F HISTORY
LIBERATION THEOLOGY
COSMOGENESIS
RADICAL TRANSFORMATION
CONCLUSION
68
"WHAT THE SPIRIT SAYS
TO THE CHURCHES": PREACHING
THE APOCALYPSE
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what the text is referring to or talking about. For many, the book
simply does not make sense. At first reading it may appear that it
has no plot. The arrangement of episodes seems random. Some
of the images are familiar from the Hebrew Bible, but it is not
always apparent how they are functioning in their new context.
Many of the images seem opaque and strange, even bizarre.
Another problem is that liberal theology, which has often
been linked with the historical-critical approach to biblical texts,
has generally evaluated the Book of Revelation as theologically
inferior. Some critics have argued that the book is basically a
Jewish work which has been only superficially Christianized. In
such a judgment, "Jewish" often has a negative connotation,
one which must be assessed critically today. Such an attitude
also displays an exaggerated preference for a Pauline type of
Christianity. Is the Gospel according to Matthew any less
"Jewish" than Revelation? Liberal theology has also tended to
denigrate apocalypticism as pessimistic, otherworldly, and
derivative in contrast to prophecy, which is viewed positively.
Further, the Book of Revelation is viewed as a step backward
from Jesus' teaching that one should love one's enemies. It can
easily be read as an expression of resentment on the part of the
powerless and an impassioned cry for bloody vengeance upon
their enemies.
Finally, the historical-critical method itself is limited in its
ability to help the reader understand and appropriate the
Apocalypse. The historical-critical mentality favors concepts,
and the Book of Revelation consists of images, symbols, and
metaphors. The images can be translated into concepts, but
there always remains an elusive surplus of meaning. If the
symbols and plot of Revelation are translated into logical
propositions or timeless principles, they lose much of their
power to evoke emotion and to persuade.
The purpose of this essay is to offer an alternative to the
fundamentalist reading of the Apocalypse, to clarify how the
book makes sense, to show how the historical-critical method
can be complemented by other methods appropriate to the
subject matter, and to reassess typical theological evaluations of
the Apocalypse. These proximate purposes serve the ultimate
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HOMILETICAL RESOURCES:
EPISTLE READINGS FOR THE SEASON
AFTER PENTECOST
MARK TROTTER
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21
I Thessalonians l:l-5a
but their neighbors are. According to the neighbors it's the only
question that matters. So how do we know?
There are two warrants for the claim of election in this
passage. The gospel hit fertile ground when preached to them
(1:5), and then bore fruit through the familiar Pauline "triad"
faith, hope, and love (1:3).
In this letter Paul links each of the triad with a qualifier which
suggests action. Faith, hope, and love, are not things you have
but things you do. The adjectives are worth looking at. (1) A
"work of faith" seems to be self-contradictory in the Pauline
faith-works schema. But "work" here is singular and refers to
working out your salvation in daily life. (2) "Labor of love" refers
to a "magnitude of effort" perhaps some singular, memorable
deed. (See Ernest Best, A Commentary on the First and Second
Epistles to the Thessalonians [Harper and Row, 1972].) (3)
"Steadfastness of hope" means perseverance, hanging in there.
In Corinthians Paul counsels the church to seek faith, hope,
and love. In Thessalonians he thanks God that they have lived
the quality of life in which faith, hope, and love have been seen.
Was there an incident to which he was referring? There does not
seem to have been any direct attack against the church at
Thessalonica. This is not an embattled community, but one that
seems to live peacefully in the pluralistic and cosmopolitan
environment of a tolerant culture. The "affliction" referred to in
verse 6 can be translated "tribulation" and may be used in this
context as an eschatological int -retation of the time, rather
than as refering to any incident of persecution. The passage
2:1-16 suggests a hostile environment but most commentators
consider this a later interpolation, anti-Semitic in nature. It is not
typical of Paul (compare Romans 9:1-3) and seems out of place.
In fact it is edited out of the lection. When Paul advises them to
be good citizens and "to aspire to live quietly, to mind your own
affairs, and to work with your hands, as we charged you; so that
you may command the respect of outsiders, and be dependent
on nobody" (4:11-12), the impression is they live rather
comfortably.
So why the thanks to God for faith, hope, and love? Could it
be a reference to their willingness to risk this security for Paul's
sake? Though the Thessalonians were noncontroversial, Paul
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I Thessalonians l:5b-2:8
I Thessalonians 2:7-13, 17-20
Thessalonica. How can the preacher make two meals out of such
thin soup?
We begin with an attempt to discover what situation is being
addressed, to see if the way Paul speaks to it has anything to say
to us.
"You know what kind of men we proved to be among you for
your sake" (1:5b). It sounds as if he is saying, "For your sake we
lived exemplary lives." The implication is that the Christian life
is lived for the sake of others, and that it is communicated
through deeds as well as words. The following verses suggest
that the Thessalonians' exemplary life as a church is directly
dependent on Paul's exemplary personal life. We lived
exemplary lives, you became imitators of us, you have become
an example to the believers in Macedonia and Achaia, and from
there, "Your faith in God has gone forth everywhere" (l:5b-8). It
is a clear chain of dependence beginning with Paul.
Paul seems to say that the truth of the gospel he preached is
linked to the integrity of the life he lived. If so, that explains his
pains in countering questions about his behavior. Timothy, who
had been sent by Paul to see how the Thessalonians were getting
along, reported they were fine (3:6). But evidently there were
rumblings that Paul was just another traveling charlatan in the
mold of the Cynic philosophers who preyed on the Macedonian
towns. The charge would have had some credibility, given
Paul's brief stay and hasty departure, and his subsequent failure
to return. Perhaps someone said to Timothy, "Paul is just like
the other traveling preachers. You would think he would have
come back after all we did for him. We saved his life."
So Paul, at some length, defends his character, which defense
comprises most of the text for these two Sundays. First, rather
than thinking of himself, Paul exhibited no little courage in
facing danger to preach to them (2:2). Second, he spoke not from
uncleanness (2:3), which has the meaning of "immorality," and
means Paul did not speak out of impure motive such as greed or
ambition. Nor, he continues, did he speak from guile, which
means deception, a common charge against the Cynics. The
remaining disclaimers dissociate Paul from other typically
fraudulent Cynic tactics: speaking to please the crowd, saying
what people want to hear in order to get to their wallets, or being
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The issue lies elsewhere and has to do with the mission of the
church. It is significant that Paul says we were moral "for your
sake" (1:5). Our behavior does not determine the nature of grace
nor the truth of the gospel, but it does affect the credibility of the
church. Could it be that Paul feared the mission of the church in
Thessalonica would be jeopardized if it were believed that its
founder were a charlatan, no different from the hucksters who
exploited the gullible? The church's distinction in the ancient
world lay in the quality of its life. Christians had renounced the
practices of the world.
The Hebrew Bible and Gospel lessons give support to this
understanding of the church. Matt. 22:34-36 reports a dispute
between Jesus and the Pharisees over the law, which gives Jesus
the opportunity to present the Great Commandment. The
passage underscores the fundamental difference between a
morality that merely obeys laws and the more demanding
Christian love of neighbor. The Exodus passage (22:21-27)
reinforces this with laws revealing Israel's God as defender of
the poor and helpless.
The Matt. 23:1-12 lection is the beginning of the woes to the
scribes and Pharisees who "preach, but do not practice," and
who do moral acts to be seen by the crowds. And the Malachi
reading is a diatribe against the priests for the kind of misuse of
office of which Paul was accused, which charge he vigorously
denies. "You have caused many to stumble by your instruction"
( M a i 2:8).
In the tenth verse of the first chapter, Paul uses an early
formula to characterize Thessalonian belief: "to wait for his Son
from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, Jesus who delivers
us from the wrath to come." Scholars believe this fragment,
which uses uncharacteristically Pauline words, is a pre-Pauline
confession, used by Paul because it had meaning for the
Thessalonians. They see themselves as an eschatological
community, called out of the world to wait for the Parousia. To
join the church was to renounce the world and its lax morality.
Indications are that the "God-fearers" who visited the Jewish
synagogues, and from whom Paul recruited members of the
church, were attracted initially to Judaism because its rigid
moral code stood in stark contrast to the disintegration of moral
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life in the culture. The church called them out of that world to
wait for the dawning of a new age upon the return of Christ.
To be in the church, therefore, was to be in an eschatological
community, living a life in marked contrast to the standards of
the world. Their very presence as a community of faith was a
witness to the age that is to come. To be the church, in other
words, was to be exemplary in morals, a lamp set upon a hill. In
that context, moral behavior is not an incidental matter. I doubt
if the church debated morality as we do, on the basis of what was
tolerable or acceptable, waiting on the scientific community to
speak before it made up its mind. For the eschatological
community in the world there was only one question: is it
exemplary? Does it conform to the ethics of the kingdom of God?
Such a question was not academic. It was integral to their
reason for being, or as it would probably be put in today's
bureaucratic language: morality is missional. Their example of a
better way was the best thing they had going for them. The church
was offering to a cynical, demoralized and bored civilization a
new life of discipline, sacrifice, and mutual trust. They waited for
the new age by anticipating its rule in their own life.
Paul knew the gospel transcends the individual. That is why
he could be honest about his own sinfulness and confess that he
is not perfect (Phil. 3:12). He knew we are justified not by our
keeping the moral law, but by God's grace. But Paul also knew
that the church has a mission in this world to be exemplary. The
Thessalonian church was known throughout Macedonia and
beyond for the example of its life, and its life had been nurtured
by his"we were gentle among you, like a nurse taking care of
her children" (2:7). Though the gospel would survive any
unfaithfulness, the Thessalonians might not. So: "You know
what kind of men we proved to be among you for your sake."
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11
I Thessalonians 4:13-18
Kurt Vonnegut said once:
Well, I'm screamingly funny, you know. . . . and I talk about stuff Billy
Graham won't talk about for instance, you know, is it wrong to kill?
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And what is God like: And stuff like that because they can't get it from
the minister, and I show what heaven is like, you know, which you
can't get a minister to talk about. . . And so they want to know. They
want to know what happens after you die. . . . And I talk about it.
That's a very popular subject. (From an interview with Harry Reasoner
on "60 Minutes," quoted in Robert Short, Something to Believe In [New
York: Harper & Row, 1975], p. 277.)
history-view at the same time that they renew our world and our
history. (Amos Wilder, Jesus' Parables and the War of Myths [Fortress
Press, 1982], p. 141.)
The lection for this Sunday challenges the preacher to take the
myth of the Parousia seriously as poetic language capturing the
Christian hope for history and individual life. Since 4:13-18 is the
source for much of the hokum that passes for Christian
preaching, there ought to be a ready and somewhat surprised
audience when the minister embarks on an honest investigation
of the lection.
Paul sent Timothy to Thessalonica to find out how the
Christians were doing. Evidently they were just fine, except for
a few questions, the most pressing being, What happens to
those Christians who have died before the Lord comes? Will
they miss out on the glorious day? The question was not, will
they be resurrected? but when?
To answer the question Paul uses the early church's graphic
and fantastic expression of Christian hope. The Lord himself
will descend from heaven with the sound of a trumpet. The dead
shall be raised first. That was what they had asked about and
there is the answer: the dead will not only not miss out, they will
be first. Paul then rounds out the vision, saying, "Then we who
are alive," shall be taken up with the newly resurrected in the
clouds to meet the Lord,
The story is enriched by examining the details. It is a
theophany in the tradition of the Hebrew Bible. In the Hebrew
Bible clouds were used to hide God, and here they are
ingeniously employed to transport God's Son, but the meaning
is that God is at work to keep the divine promise.
The idea of "meeting" is a tradition taken from the Hellenistic
world and was the practice of dignitaries going out to meet
visitors and ceremonially escort them back into the town. We
observe this practice even today at consecration of bishops and
at political conventions when a delegation leaves the assembly
to escort the new leader into the hall.
It is a glorious picture of the long awaited hope being fulfilled:
Christ the Lord of history returning to claim his own, greeted by
those who have worked and waited for his coming. It is an
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this. "Lo! I tell you a mystery" (I Cor. 15:51). That means all talk
about the end of history and the resurrection of the dead is
speculation. Christians are no different from anyone else in this
regard. The Bible gives us not a blueprint of the future, but a
hope based on what we know now. We know first and foremost
the Resurrection of our Lord, "the first fruits of those who have
fallen asleep" (I Cor. 15:20). We know the creation and its
goodness. We know the Incarnation of our Lord and believe that
his Lordship is over all creation. Just as we must trust God for life
itself, for "without our aid he did us make," so we trust that God
can do it again. And we believe that in God's time, not ours,
there will be a great celebration when the Son, like an exiled
king, returns to his rightful throne.
The other two lections speak to this issue as well. Matt. 25:1-13
is the parable of the bridesmaids who must wait for the
bridegroom to appear. Their responsibility is to escort him to the
banquet. It is a clear parabolic version of the end-time Paul
describes; the Parousia returning on a cloud and the faithful
going to meet him as his escort into his kingdom. The message of
the parable is: You know neither the day nor the hour, so keep
watch. Get ready for a lengthy vigil.
The Hebrew Bible lesson rounds out the theme with a reading
from Amos 5:18-24. Once again the theme of mystery is present
with the warning that you do not know what the day of the Lord
will bring. The faithful do not worry about such things but leave
them to God. In the meantime, they are to be at work doing the
will of God. "Let justice roll down like waters,/and righteous
ness like an everflowing stream" (5:24).
SUNDAY, N O V E M B E R 18
I Thessalonians 5:1-11
night" (5:2). Which means you do not know when it will come.
I am confident that I would use the analogy of the "thief in the
night" to speak to the widespread assumption in our time that it
is possible to date the Parousia. I used to ignore the TV
broadcasters and paperback authors who so flagrantly distorted
biblical prophecy, the way the NFL for years ignored the AFL,
and for the same reasonestablishment arrogance. But the
persistent refusal of the seers to disappear indicates that they are
answering questions great masses of people are asking. These
are times of anomie. People sense something is happening
beyond their control. Events seem to have apocalyptic
significance. To ignore that is to give free rein to those who
would interpret present historical events as having been
anticipated in biblical prophecy. It may be an engaging way to
get into this sermon, therefore, to speak to that issue with an
interpretation of "Nobody knows the hour or the day."
Then an exposition of what it means to be a Christian in the
time of the breakdown of the present and the uncertainty of the
future would be appropriate. This time of uncertainty was
precisely the situation Thessalonica was in. Paul's advice to
them was: get to work. Let the world see what is coming by
seeing the quality of your life: "Put on the breastplate of faith
and love, and for a helmet the hope of salvation" (5:8).
The tone of this passage, and of most of the letter, is one of
tension: the church set against the world. The crucial question
for preaching Thessalonians is this: Is that tension a contextual
peculiarity of Thessalonica and the first-century church, or is it a
definition of the nature of the church? If it is such a definition,
then to be the church, my church must be in tension with its
world.
It is easier to preach the Parousia. Most mainstream Protestant
congregations have too substantial a stake in the present to feel
kindly toward preaching that suggests to be Christian is to be set
against the present. It will sound to them like Communism, or
the next thing to it. In their minds, if the world is disintegrating,
faith should work to shore it up. Their conclusion, therefore,
would be that the advice to the Thessalonians is contextual and
does not apply to us. After all, Paul was wrong. He preached the
immediate return of the Parousia, and he was dead wrong. That
105
Q U A R T E R L Y REVIEW, F A L L 1984
Scripture quotations unless otherwise noted are from the Revised Standard Version
Common Bible, copyrighted 1973 by the Division of Christian Education of the
National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., and are used by permission.
108
Coming in QR
Winter, 1984
The Jewish " N o " to Jesus and the Christian " Y e s " to Jews
/. (Coos) Schoneveld, International Council of Christians and Jews
Heppenheim, West Germany
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