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Looking for Jesus
a sermon based on Matthew 25:31-40 and Luke 17:23-25
by Rev. Frank Schaefer

"When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his throne in heavenly glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.

"Then the King will say to those on his right, 'Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.'

 "Then the righteous will answer him, 'Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?'  "The King will reply, 'I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.'” Matthew 25:31-40

Advent is really not so much about Christmas theology but rather about expecting Jesus Second Return. Jesus himself said to his disciples: I’ll be back! Of course, he didn’t use these exact same words. But Jesus also left it very much open exactly how and when he would come back.

When you study the Scriptures, there are at least two different ways in which Jesus himself describes the kingdom of God: he says a) the kingdom is now and b) the kingdom is to come! A little confusing, isn’t it? Let’s delve into it:

Once, having been asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God would come, Jesus replied, "The kingdom of God does not come with your careful observation, nor will people say, 'Here it is,' or 'There it is,' because the kingdom of God is within you.”    --Luke 17:20-21

This passage speaks to the “Now” aspect of God’s kingdom. On the other hand, Jesus also taught his disciples that there will be a time when he will physically return and calls us to be vigilant: for the day will come unexpectedly. And that day will be Judgment Day according to Matthew 25 which we read earlier.

So the question then is how are we as Christians supposed to live in this tension between the now and not yet of God’s kingdom. How are we to expect Jesus’ coming? Where are we to look for Jesus?

When you study the Scriptures, you will notice that the disciples very much expected to see Jesus physical return to happen during their lifetime. Especially when the world started persecuting them, they thought for sure the end-times had come.

That’s what they believed and preached. After a while, when it didn’t happen, they had to come up with an explanation. People were starting to wonder: “what takes him so long?” Why hasn’t he come back yet?” Peter offered this explanation for the delay of Jesus return:

But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day. The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.”  --2.Peter 3:8-9

So, now about 1,900 years later we’re still waiting for Christ to return. Even today, some church fellowships believe that the urgency of Christ’s return and the imminence of the end-times need to be preached.

I remember hearing many sermons during my childhood and teenage years about how we live in the end-times. Jesus is coming back and it could be today. Are you ready? Are you ready for his return? Do any of you remember Bob Dylan’s Christian album he produced right after his conversion experience? One song I remember expresses this very sentiment: “Are you ready? Ready… Are you really ready?”

As a result of end-time preaching I grew up thinking that I would not get very old. I used to pray as a teen: “Lord, please wait a little longer until you come back. Let me at least experience some things in life, like having a wife and children.  I also remember that I thought a couple of times that I missed the rapture. I couldn’t find my parents.  I was panic-stricken, I looked through every room in our apartment. They were nowhere to be found and I was convinced Jesus had come back to get his chosen ones and had left me behind because of some un-confessed sin.  Turned out my parents had just stepped out for a few minutes, but I sure was traumatized.

When I shared this experience with our assistant pastor, she started laughing because that exact same thing happened to her too.  She said, she remembered how she and her three younger sisters couldn’t locate their parents one day and they were wondering amongst themselves whether they had been left behind. Clydette recalls her youngest sister, barely four years old, saying: “Yeah, I think I ‘hoyd’ a trumpet.”

Today, I don’t believe in the kind of end-time preaching that strikes fear and trembling in the hearts of believers. I don’t think Jesus calls us to live in fear of an event that should be joyous. I believe Jesus calls us to be vigilant by serving others in his spirit—in the way he would have served them. That’s how we are to wait!

That’s why I believe Jesus told us in Luke 17:20: “The kingdom of God does not come with your careful observation, nor will people say, 'Here it is,' or 'There it is,' because the kingdom of God is within you."

I believe the key to how Jesus wants us to live lies in Mat 25. At the end of times, Jesus is going to judge us based on how we lived in this world as Christians while we were waiting for his return.  And it appears that the way we are to wait for him is to seek him in others.  Jesus says in Mat 25: “Whatever you have done to these the least, you have done unto me.”  Waiting for the kingdom of God is serving others.  Again: waiting for Jesus’ coming means to look for Jesus in the people around us and to help them, while we’re waiting for his return.

The resurrected spirit of Jesus is still living in this world, on our planet and in our neighborhoods.  Jesus is wondering the streets in search for a safe place to sleep during the cold night; you will meet him in the man who is on his deathbed dying from aids; you will meet him in the lesbian teenager who has been humiliated and ridiculed by her peers and is wondering if there is a place for her in the church or even in the world.

Mother Teresa worked with many aids patients and she tried to make a case to the world about aids victims who were at one time treated like the lepers of Jesus time.  She said this remarkable thing: “"Whenever I look into the eyes of someone dying of AIDS, I have an eerie awareness that Jesus is staring back at me.”

I have to admit that I almost made a mistake three months ago.  A person called me whose father used to attend our church many years ago; he asked me to be the spiritual caretaker of his long-term girlfriend and partner during her last days in hospice care. My first reaction was: “I’m already busy and I don’t want to take away time and energy from my faithful members and attendees at church.”  But this man hounded me, he never gave up; he kept calling the church, my cell phone. It was like in the parable Jesus shared about the unrelenting widow knocking at the judge’s door to get justice.

I finally gave in and decided to visit her about 3 weeks ago.  When I stepped into her house I almost stepped right back out. Not only was I greeted by three or four barking dogs, not only was the place utterly messy, but I also could not breathe because the woman is a smoker.  My first thought was, here she is on oxygen and there is a big sign at the entrance that says: “No Smoking--Oxygen in use” and the patient is merrily smoking away.

I judged her even before I saw her, and I had already made up my mind at that point that I was just going to see her that one time and never again.  But then I met her and we started to talk and as she was talking, I met Jesus.  She talked about seeing Jesus standing in the room and Jesus was saying to her: “My child, I will come to fetch you and I will make you whole again.”

I tell you what, when I thought about this experience later, it was almost like Jesus was saying to me: “ok Frank, if you’re not going to visit her, I hope you don’t mind that I will.” Needless to say, I have visited with her ever since.

As we approach Christmas, let us not forget that one of the reasons Jesus chose to come into this world as a pauper and as an “illegitimate” child (in the eyes of the world), is to teach us that God is present even in persons that we think of as least worthy of receiving God’s grace.  God is present in those who fill our prisons; God is in the prostitute, in the heroin junky, in the dying person and in the homeless.

And we all know very well why that is, don’t we? It’s because of God’s Amazing Grace.  If God’s grace is big enough to include those least and last, God’s grace is all sufficient for anybody and everybody. Nobody is beyond the scope of God’s grace; nobody is flying under the radar of God’s grace. 

We as God’s children are to demonstrate that same grace especially to those that are considered the least and last in this world. Truth is: they are not considered the least or last in God’s eyes and neither should we consider anybody that way.  

According to Mat 25, it’s the way in which Jesus wants us to get ready for his final return. By reaching out to the ones that we instinctively think of as “not worthy,” the ones that messed up and the ones that are bullied by society for no good reason, we are readying this world for the kingdom of Christ.  Indeed, in this way Christ’s kingdom is already reigning in us and among us.  Amen!