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Are You Ready for Christ's Return?
By Pastor Steven J. Cole
Flagstaff Christian Fellowship May 9, 1999
I believe that the extreme Preterists go outside the
bounds of orthodoxy and are guilty of heresy. Their view robs believers of
the hope of the many promises of our Lord’s coming.
Are You Ready for Christ’s Return?
Luke 12:35-48
The summer after I
graduated from seminary, I worked as a furniture mover in Dallas. I
learned that many of the men I worked with had worked at this job for
years, yet they had no job benefits—no sick leave, no paid vacation, no
retirement, and no raises for seniority. The only benefit was that the
job was strictly day labor, so they didn’t have to show up for work if
they didn’t want to. If you wanted to work, you showed up at 7 a.m. and
they sent out those who showed up.
Once in a while I
noticed that one of the men wasn’t at work. When I asked where he was,
the other workers would laugh and say that he got paid and got drunk. As
soon as he needed more money, he would be back at work.
I have since
discovered that there is a common mindset shared by most of those who
are perpetually poor, namely, that they rarely, if ever, think about the
future. I call it a "welfare mentality." They only think about today. If
they get some money, they don’t think about the fact that rent will be
due in two weeks or that other bills will be coming due. They only think
about the fact that they’ve got money in their pocket today.
Since they’re "rich" today, they will treat all their buddies to a round
of drinks. They’ll gamble or spend it all in frivolous ways. But the one
thing they will not do is save any money, because they don’t think about
the future.
Our Lord taught that
we should not be anxious about tomorrow (Matt. 6:34), but He did not
teach that we should ignore tomorrow! In fact, to the contrary, Jesus
taught that our view of the future ought to be uppermost in our thinking
about how we should live today. As followers of Jesus Christ, we should
think often about the fact that He is coming soon and that every person
must stand before Him to give an account. We should view ourselves as
stewards who have been entrusted with time, money, and abilities, which
we are to use for our Master’s kingdom. At some time—we don’t know when,
but we do know that it is certain—our Lord will return and we must give
an account to Him of how we used what He gave us. After telling His
disciples to seek for His kingdom, Jesus goes on to exhort them to be
ready for His return, because when He comes, He will judge everyone.
We should be ready for the Lord’s return, because
when He comes He will judge everyone.
The text falls into
two sections: the theme of 12:35-40 is readiness for His coming. The
idea in 12:42-48 is that when the Lord comes, He will judge everyone
according to what they have done with what they have been given.
Readiness: We should be ready for the Lord’s
return (12:35-40).
Jesus uses four word
pictures to emphasize the same point: Be ready for His return. "Be
dressed in readiness" is literally, "let your loins be girded." In that
day, everyone wore long robes which were a hindrance if you needed to
move quickly or freely. If a person planned to run or work, he would
tuck his robe into a sash around his waist so that it would not
interfere with his movements. The verb here indicates a state of
perpetual readiness for action.
The second figure,
"keep your lamps alight," comes from a day when there was no
electricity. There were no streetlights or city lights outside and no
nightlights to help you find your way to the bathroom in the middle of
the night. If you were expecting a midnight visitor, you would keep an
oil light burning so that when he knocked on the door, you could see to
let him in. Again, the idea is, be ready for the Master’s coming.
The third picture is
of servants who are awaiting their master’s return from a wedding feast.
Such feasts could last for days, often for a week. The servants would
need to be ready when they heard their master arrive to open the door
and serve him. Scholars debate whether Luke is using a Roman or Jewish
reckoning of the watches of the night, but the point is the same: the
master could come in the middle of the night when you least expect him,
so you must be ready.
The fourth picture is
of a thief breaking into a house in the middle of the night. If the
homeowner had known when the thief was coming, he would not have allowed
his house to be broken into. He would have been ready and waiting. Then
Jesus states the application of all four figures: "You, too, be ready;
for the Son of Man is coming at an hour that you do not expect" (12:40).
Scoffers may say,
"It’s been almost 2,000 years since Jesus spoke these words. Every
generation since then has thought that it was the final generation
before His coming, but they all died without seeing it happen. Face
reality: It’s just not going to happen!"
The apostle Peter
points out (2 Pet. 3:3-13) that such foolish scoffers fail to note that
God spoke the universe into existence by His powerful word and that He
has given us an object lesson of the terror and power of His judgment in
the flood. The present heavens and earth are being reserved, not for a
judgment of water, but of fire. Also, with the Lord, a day is as a
thousand years and a thousand years are as a day. His view of time and
ours are vastly different! The only reason He has delayed judgment is
His great patience as He waits for more to come to repentance. Peter
then uses Jesus’ image of a thief:
But the day of the
Lord will come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away
with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat,
and the earth and its works will be burned up. Since all these
things are to be destroyed in this way, what sort of people ought
you to be in holy conduct and godliness, looking for and hastening
the coming of the day of God …" (2 Pet. 3:10-12a).
An error regarding the
Lord’s coming called Preterism is gaining popularity in evangelical
circles. The basic teaching is that the prophecies of Matthew 24 and the
Book of Revelation were fulfilled in A.D. 70 when the Roman general
Titus destroyed Jerusalem and scattered the Jewish people. There are
various degrees of this teaching. The more mild Preterists would say
that there will be a double fulfillment of some of these prophecies, and
that Jesus Christ’s bodily second coming is still future. While I
disagree with many of their interpretations, this mild view is not
heretical.
But the extreme
Preterists argue that Christ actually came back in A.D. 70 and that He
is not coming again! Although those who hold this view say that they are
attempting to deal with the biblical texts, I believe that the extreme
Preterists go outside the bounds of orthodoxy and are guilty of heresy.
Their view robs believers of the hope of the many promises of our Lord’s
coming. While it is true that we all will stand before Him the instant
we die, the Bible clearly teaches that we should live every day in the
hope that He may come at any time: "Be ready, for the Son of Man is
coming at an hour that you do not expect!"
If you have any regard
for Jesus’ words, you must be concerned with the question, "How can I
be ready for His coming?" Our text suggests three things:
To be ready
for Jesus’ coming, He must be your Master.
There is a sense in
which Jesus is the Lord of every person. In this passage, He clearly
assumes the authority to be the rightful judge of everyone who has ever
lived. But, also clearly, it will only go well for those who are rightly
related to Him, who submit to Him as their personal Lord or Master. They
will be blessed (12:37, 38, 43) when He comes; the rest will face His
punishment.
Some will say, "Jesus
is my Savior, but I haven’t yet made Him my Lord." Really? Can you find
a shred of biblical evidence that gives you comfort with such a
condition? I will grant that a person can truly be saved and yet fall
into sin. Every saint struggles daily against the world, the flesh, and
the devil, and many saints have not learned to have consistent victory
over these enemies of the soul. But I deny that you can be truly saved
and live in sin and yet be comfortable living like that! If you claim to
know Christ as Savior and yet you’re shrugging off known sin as no big
deal, you may be in for a serious reality check when Christ returns! The
only people ready for His return are those who daily seek to bring every
area of life under His lordship. It is a constant struggle, but if you
are not engaging in the struggle, you need to examine yourself to see
whether you are in the faith (2 Cor. 13:5). Those who are ready for
Christ’s return seek to follow Him as Lord.
To be ready
for Jesus’ coming, you must be His servant.
It should be obvious
that a master is master of servants. His servants live to obey his
commands and to do his bidding. Jesus here commends the servants who are
up in the middle of the night, ready for their master’s expected return.
They were not up at that hour because they didn’t like to sleep! They
were up in the service of their master. Servants do not have a life of
their own; they live to please their master. It is only after they have
done what he asked that he might say, "You are free to have some time to
yourself." But even then, if he thinks of something else that he needs,
he will call the servant and say, "I also need you to do such and such,"
and the servant must drop what he was doing or change his plans and
respond, "Yes, master."
Being a servant of
Jesus Christ is first and foremost a mindset and secondarily a specific
ministry. My ministry is to be a pastor, but I only work at that task
about 50 hours a week. But I am a servant of Jesus 24-7. Whether I’m
shopping at WalMart or mowing my yard or spending time with my family, I
should see myself as a servant of the Lord Jesus, obedient to His will.
As Paul says, "You are not your own, for you have been bought with a
price: therefore glorify God in your body" (1 Cor. 6:19-20).
In addition to a
servant mindset, servants of Christ should seek out an area of service
in line with their spiritual gifts. God has given all of us a function
to perform in the body of Christ and that body will be healthy and grow
to the degree that every member functions as he or she ought (Eph.
4:16). If you are not serving Christ in some capacity or looking for a
place to serve, you are probably living for yourself. Servants seek to
serve their Master. When He comes, He doesn’t want to find them sitting
on a hill waiting for His return. He wants to find them serving Him.
To be ready
for Jesus’ coming, you must live in expectation of His return.
"Blessed are those
slaves whom the master shall find on the alert" (12:37). The homeowner
should have been expecting the arrival of the thief. So, Jesus says,
"You too, be ready" (12:40).
If you’re expecting a
guest, especially an important guest, you live differently than if you
are not expecting anyone. On several occasions during President Carter’s
time in office, he spent the night in the homes of common people. It was
his attempt to portray himself as the friend of the average person, a
leader who understood the problems we all face. Although you might not
want our current President to spend the night in your home, imagine how
you would get ready if a normal President announced that he would be
coming to spend the night. Your house would be spotless. All the beds
would be made. You might even put a fresh coat of paint on some of the
walls or woodwork. You would want your yard to look presentable. You
might go to the nursery and buy some flowers to plant. You would want
things to be clean and neat because you were expecting the President.
If you’re expecting
the King of kings, how should your life look? Would you have been
comfortable if He had come back during your activities this past
weekend? Are there books or magazines or videos that you need to get rid
of before He comes to your home? Do you watch TV shows where you would
be mortified if the Savior knocked on your door while they were on?
Jesus says that we should be ready immediately to open the door to him
when he comes and knocks (12:36). We shouldn’t have to yell, "Just a
minute," while we shut off the TV and hide a bunch of embarrassing stuff
in the closet.
Spurgeon uses the
analogy of his dogs to show how we should expectantly be awaiting our
Master’s return. He said that at the very moment he was speaking, his
dogs were sitting inside his front door, awaiting his return. At the
first sound of his carriage wheels, they would lift up their voices with
delight because their master is coming home. Then he adds,
Oh, if we loved
our Lord as dogs love their masters, how we should catch the first
sound of his Coming, and be waiting, always waiting, and never happy
until at last we should see him! Pardon me for using a dog as a
picture of what you ought to be; but when you have attained to a
state above that, I will find another illustration to explain my
meaning (12 Sermons on the Second Coming of Christ [Baker],
p. 141]).
So to be ready for
Christ’s return, make sure that He is your Master; be involved in
serving Him all day every day; and, live as if you expect His soon
coming.
At this point, Peter
asks whether the Lord is addressing this teaching to the twelve or to
everyone else as well. Jesus’ answer is indirect, but in effect He says
that while the teaching applies especially to them (since they have been
given much), it also applies to everyone in proportion to how much they
have been given. Thus,
Reason for readiness: When the Lord returns, He
will judge everyone in accordance with the light they have been
given (12:41-48).
In answering Peter’s
question, Jesus lists four categories of servants, each of whom will
receive a different reward or punishment. As in the parable of the
soils, there is only one good category; the other three face punishment,
beginning with the worst and moving toward the least severe. You can
draw your own conclusions about whether the two categories who receive a
whipping are believers who are disciplined or unbelievers who suffer in
hell, but I wouldn’t want to risk being in either of those categories in
hopes that they will be saved! I want to be solidly in the first camp!
Some will be
rewarded because they knew about the Master’s coming and lived
as faithful and sensible stewards (12:42-44).
The reason this
parable especially applies to those in church leadership is that Jesus
refers to the servants who have been put in charge of other servants to
give them their rations at the proper time. The job of pastors is to
feed the Lord’s flock (Ezek. 34:2). In Ezekiel 34, the Lord upbraids the
shepherds of Israel because they dominated His flock and used them for
their own purposes, just as those in the second category here were
doing. But the faithful and sensible steward who will receive a reward
regards the needs of the servants in his charge and remembers that he
will give an account to his master.
Three times (12:37,
38, 43) Jesus calls these faithful servants "blessed". He makes the
startling statement that He, the Master, will wait on such servants
(12:37)! He literally did that when He washed the disciples’ feet (John
13:1-11). Here, Jesus is probably referring metaphorically to the honor
that He will bestow on those who have faithfully served Him when He
comes. He also states that He will put them in charge of all His
possessions (12:44). This also is probably a metaphor of the rewards of
heaven. We will not spend eternity sitting on a cloud. The Lord will
give us meaningful responsibilities throughout eternity if we have
faithfully served Him here on earth. While we cannot fathom the
blessings that God has in store for His faithful servants, if Jesus
three times calls them blessed, you know that they will truly be blessed!
Others will be
punished very severely because they ignored the Master’s coming
and abused their stewardship (12:45-46).
This is the worst
category of punishment. These slaves wrongly thought that they had
plenty of time before their Master returned and so they began to live
for themselves by abusing those under their charge. They used their
stewardship for their own pleasure and advantage, without regard for the
Master’s purposes. But it is a fatal mistake. The Master will return and
cut them in pieces (the word means "to dismember"). But, that isn’t the
end of these unfaithful servants, because then they are assigned a place
with the unbelievers, namely, hell (12:5).
I believe that these
frightening words especially apply to unfaithful spiritual leaders who
have used their office for their own advantage. They usually teach false
doctrine because they want to dodge their sin, which is exposed by God’s
Word. They use religion to promote their own greed and immorality. Jesus
pronounces this most severe judgment on them because they have taken
that which should have benefited people eternally and used it to destroy
them. Their final punishment shows that they never truly repented of
their own sins and submitted their lives to the Master.
But before you all
say, "Whew, this doesn’t apply to me," you need to realize that there is
a secondary application to us all. If we know about the things of God,
but we don’t repent of our selfishness and abusiveness toward others,
especially in our homes, are we not just like these unfaithful stewards?
This especially applies to every husband and father who professes to be
a Christian. If we do not repent of mistreating our wives and children,
whom God has entrusted to our care, woe to us when the Master returns!
Others will be
punished severely because they knew about the Master’s coming,
but did not get ready (12:47).
This category knew the
Master’s will, but they did not get ready or act in accord with His
will. They will receive many lashes. This refers to people who have been
in religious circles enough to know the truth, but they don’t act on it.
Maybe they procrastinate, thinking, "Someday I’ll follow Christ and
serve Him, but right now I’ve got to devote myself to my business.
Besides, to get ahead these days, you’ve got to cut a few corners, and
so I’m not quite ready to follow Christ." Beware: To sin against greater
light means greater punishment! To hear the truth proclaimed in church
every Sunday and to go out and ignore that truth the rest of the week is
a risky way to live. What if the Master comes this week?
Others will be
punished less severely because they did not know about the
Master’s coming or live in light of it (12:48a).
The final category for
judgment are those who did not even know the Master’s will. They will be
judged less severely, with a few lashes, but judged nonetheless.
Ignorance of God’s law is no excuse for not obeying it because we are
responsible to know it. As J. C. Ryle points out, "Our very ignorance is
part of our sin" (Expository Thoughts on the Gospels [Baker], p.
94). Even those who have never heard of Christ have enough revelation
through creation and conscience to know that there is a righteous God.
But they have suppressed the truth in unrighteousness, so that they are
without excuse (Rom. 1:18-20).
Conclusion
Jesus sums up the
principle in 12:48: "And from everyone who has been given much shall
much be required; and to whom they entrusted much, of him they will ask
all the more." Those who have been given the most light have the most
responsibility and will be judged the most severely. There will be
gradations of punishment in hell. Jesus clearly assumes His own
authority to judge every person!
Each person needs to
answer the question, "Do I have a ‘welfare mentality’ regarding
spiritual things?" Are you living for today only, with no regard for the
Master’s return and the accounting that He will demand? Are you
foolishly putting it out of your mind by thinking, "I’ve got time"?
Jesus says that we should be "like men who are waiting for their master
when he returns." We should live each day with an eye on that future day
when "the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet of God" (1 Thess. 4:16). We
will be blessed if the Master finds us ready when He comes.
Discussion Questions
Should we give
assurance of salvation to a person who says, "Jesus is my Savior,
but not my Lord"? Defend biblically.
How would you
counsel a young person who said that he did not want to spend years
preparing for Christian service because he thought that the Lord
would return soon?
How can a
Christian discover his or her spiritual gift? Should every Christian
be involved in ministry? Cite Scripture.
Should believers
fear God’s judgment in any sense? If so, how so? Cite Scripture.
Copyright, Steven J.
Cole, 1999, All Rights Reserved.
What do YOU think ?
Send an email with your comments to
todd @ preteristarchive.com
Be sure to include the article name.
They will be posted shortly
upon receipt
Date: 30 Sep 2005
Time: 17:41:36
Comments0:
1. Heb. 9:28--What salvation? You don't even have salvation, because Jesus
has not returned according to your beliefs.
2. Please define "preparing for Christian service". What do you mean.
According to Matthew 5, heaven and earth has not dissapear so the law (OC)
is still around. What about you? What kind of "works" do you do for
salvation that you don't have yet (see #1)?
3. Define "spiritual gift". What is there to discovor. The first century
Christians know what "gifts were given to them". They didn't have to
discover anything.
4. We don't live under fear. Under the "law", they had fear, (see #2). What
are you afaid of? Do you have hope or assurence?
Richard K. McPherson
www.preterism-eschatology.com
Date: 29 Sep 2005
Time: 22:30:46
Comments:
The writers of the New Testament were intensely spiritual men who, unlike
the typical futurist and the typical preterist, were able to discern that 1)
the imperfect, old, natural and temporary Israel passed away IN THE SIGHT OF
GOD when his perfect, new, spiritual and eternal Israel appeared in the
moment of Christ's first-century resurrection and that 2) the imperfect,
old, natural and temporary world passed away IN THE SIGHT OF GOD (Rev. 21:1)
when his perfect, new, spiritual and eternal world (described in Rev. 21,22)
appeared in the moment of the first-century resurrection of those who were
Christ's at his parousia (which did not occur in AD 70).
Date: 13 Dec 2005
Time: 16:11:29
Comments:
Sir, we are now partakers of the Promise. And have so much to rejoice in.
Do you know who the apostles and Jesus were speaking to?
Please read Matthew 5:17-18 and tell me what that means. I honestly would
like your comments on it.
For His Glory, Missy
Date: 02 Jun 2006
Time: 13:55:55
Comments0:
The day you die like all those who thought they would be raptured before the
beginning of this 21st century, then you shall stand at the Judgement seat
of Christ. What excuse will you and the futurist's like you give for the
abuse of your flocks and your ignorance of the scripture?
You have made tons of money selling fictional returns and scare tactics?
Fleeced flocks with end time best sellers that are on a par with the Da
Vinci code. So much guess work so little truth.
The end of the world is nigh you say, we have to reach everyone to force
Christ to return. Mission impossible I say. Can you preach to every unborn
foetus and get them to make a confession so none are left behind.
Your Gospel is only for those who can afford it. After all it cost money to
preach it and sustain your affluent lifetsyles.
Just how long are these last days , longer than from Abraham to Christ at
the moment. Or did they start at the Azusa Street revival when some strange
spirit invaded the church?
So many modern day prophets all spouting the same deception , from the news
reports instead of the scripture.
I bought it all once, but thank God for the Preterist view , for the wolves
in sheeps clothing have lost their hypnotic sway over me. |