My Time Is Near
Jason Hsu (Los
Angeles, USA)
When I first thought about the
theme of this issue of Manna, I have to admit that I was a little intimidated.
The theme “racing towards the year 2000” has a kind of esthatological ring to
it that forces us to look into the future. But I know nothing about the future!
Whenever I think about the future I am always reminded of a conversation I had
with someone from our church. I remember asking questions about the
significance of the New Age Movement. I explicitly remember discussing the
possibility of the apocalyptic monarchical world government being instituted
as mentioned in Revelation chapter 13. But he looked at me and said, “Why are
you asking me?! I’m no prophet!” This incident left a deep impression in me.
When we talk about racing towards
the year 2000, we are, in a sense, trying to grasp the future, a future that
often intrigues us. As humans, we realise that we know nothing of the future
explicitly. James talks of those who devise great plans for the future:
“Whereas you do not know about tomorrow” Uas 4:13-14). Jesus also teaches us,
saying, “Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be
anxious for itself. Let the day’s own trouble be sufficient for the day” (Mt
6:34). Yet even if today’s troubles are enough for today, humanity has a
seemingly inherent tendency to worry about tomorrow. On the other hand, we
cannot take Jesus’ statement to mean we cannot even peer into the future. As
Christians, we carry a living hope, a hope that cannot die. Our hope lies in the future, so all the limitless potentialities of
our dreams and aspirations must also lie in the future. The future is rapidly
moving towards us, but at the same time, we are also racing towards the future.
And for me, this race towards the future is what the theme “racing towards the
year 2000” signifies.
Racing towards the year 2000 is
just another way of saying we must race toward the future; more specifically,
it means we must race towards the coming of God’s kingdom. But this race should
not be an exercise in predictions. Rather, if this theme is to have any meaning
at all, it must carry a reality on a more personal level. In this light, how
does the theme “racing towards the year 2000” relate to us personally?
I can think of two benefits of the
theme: one is that “racing” brings with it a sense of imminence,
that we do not have much time; secondly, focusing upon the future forces
the issue of who we are and what we are doing in our present lives. Working
from the common understanding of linear time, the conclusion that the present
has a direct impact upon our future is inescapable. Accordingly, let us now
move towards examining the dynamic effect time has upon our lives.
THE COMING KINDOM OF GOD
Many Christians set their hearts
upon the material world or material enjoyments. Others have their hearts set
upon an “eschatological” time when God will punish the wicked. To have our
hearts set upon a new age is not contrary to the Bible, for even Jesus stated,
“Now when these things [signs] begin to take place, look up, and raise your
heads, because your redemption is drawing near” (1k 21:28). For a long time,
Christians of different stripes have predicted, debated and hypothesised about
the end of time. The millennium often becomes the focal point of a new era for
the Christian. In this sense, many Christians are avid “New Agers”. Sadly
enough though, while we live in the hope for God’s kingdom, we often fail to
live up to the principles of the kingdom.
A group of Pharisees once asked Jesus
when the kingdom
of God was coming. How
did Jesus reply? He said, “The kingdom
of God is not coming with
signs to be observed; nor will they say, ‘Lo, here it is!’ or ‘There!’ For,
behold, the kingdom
of God is in the midst of
you [or within you]” (1k 17:20-2 1). We do not have to look anywhere “out
there” for the kingdom, rather we must look within and
among ourselves. We have to start asking ourselves if we are ready for the
kingdom, not whether the kingdom is ready for us. Again, we should not even
begin to worry about when the kingdom
of God is coming if we
cannot comply with the principles of that kingdom. If we live as if we are the
rulers of our own bodies, as if we control our own destinies, then why do we
even bother to look to an eschatological age?
But as Christians we recognise the
fallacy of putting our whole heart into the belief that we control our own
destinies. And we do not have to be Christians to realise this fact. We
experience it everyday of our lives. We do not control our own destinies. We
wish to get a hundred percent in the test, but we receive a poor score. We hope
against hope to make a business deal, but we fail at the end. We look around us
and we do not see beautiful trees and smiling faces, we see cold hard faces and
smog thick enough to obscure the stars of heaven. Since we do not control our
destinies, we need to pay attention to the signs of the times.
CONCLUSION
Finally, I want to leave you with
a thought about Jesus’ perspective of time, a perspective that is probably very
different from ours. As said before, we like to think of the “good times”. We
like to dream of unlimited potential in our ambitious future. Sorrowfully, we
often meet with the harsh reality of unfulfilled dreams and desires. But Jesus
once told His disciples, “I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with
you before I suffer; for I tell you, I will not eat it [againi until it is
fulfilled in the kingdom of God” (Lk 2 2:15-16). We often wonder what
opportunities lie ahead of us. Respect? Fame? A great-looking spouse? But Jesus
said something that left a deep impression in me. He said, “Go into the city to
a certain man, and say to him, ‘The Teacher says, My time is near; I will keep
the Passover at your house with my disciples.” The kairos Jesus looked forward
to was not part of a self-seeking ambitious enterprise, rather it was a cup of
bitterness. It all fit together to make for a kairos. The disciples were
listening, a donkey was prepared, a man was willing to lend his house, and a
cross was waiting for someone to bear it. May our Lord Jesus help us to
recognise our time. And may He grant us the strength of heart to seize hold of
the opportunities we often do not wish to grasp. Amen.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, when you were
young, you girded yourself and walked where you would; but when you are old,
you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where
you do not wish to go… After this He said to him, ‘Follow me’” (Jn 21:18-19)
Time is a very important aspect of
our social, biological and religious lives. Take for example, the Sabbath. As
God’s covenant people, we are commanded by Him to remember, observe and keep
holy the Sabbath, a concept that has a basis in the notion of time. As
Christians, we often distinguish time — the “sacred” and the “secular”. So we
think, “OK, I’ll go to church for a few hours today because today is sacred
time.” When we consider whether to serve God, we think, “I’ll work for God
later, when I’m about to die or when the world is about to end.” We think this
way because we somehow distinguish between “God’s time” and “my time”. But we
have to ask ourselves if this dividing of time benefits us in any way. For by
such labelling of our time, God becomes part of our time schedule. We are often
only looking at time from our point of view. How many of us, I wonder, actually
consider God’s time schedule?
Jesus tells an interesting parable
that forces us to reconsider our division of time. He shows us that it is not
time in itself that matters, but what we do with our time. It is not so much
the division of time, the distinguishing between 1996 and 2000, that matters,
but what we are going to do between 1996 and 2000. In Jesus’ parable concerning
labourers in the vineyard, the principle that comes across is that “how long”
matters less than “what we do”. Jesus ends by saying, “So the last will be
first, and the first will be last.” This statement is a complete reversal of
our normal assumptions of order. What we think is important is actually in the
last place, and what we feel insignificant is actually of the first order (Mt
20:1-16). One message from this parable is that we need to re-examine our
priorities and values.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES
What is the significance of signs?
Jesus once spoke about the signs of the times, using as analogy the weather. He
said to the crowds, “When you see a cloud rising in the west, you immediately
say, ‘A shower is coming; and so it happens. And when you see the south wind
blowing, you say, ‘There will be scorching heat’; and it happens. You
hypocrites! You know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky, but why
do you not know how to interpret the present time?” (Lk 12:54-56). From Jesus’
statement we learn that “signs” do not imply good or bad. When we think of
signs we often think about the ecological crisis, or the increase in
earthquakes, and so forth. But actually signs do not, in themselves, forebode
trouble. The clouds rising in the west bring rain, often considered a sign of
blessing.
So what do the signs really tell
us? Signs bring a measure of change, that is, signs are a turning point. Some
Pharisees and Saciducees who wished to test Jesus once asked for a sign from
heaven. Jesus answered, “When it is evening, you say, ‘It
will be fair weather, for the sky is red.’ And in the morning, ‘It will be
stormy today, for the sky is red and threatening.’ You know how to interpret
the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times. An
evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign, but no sign shall be given to
it except the sign of Jonah” (Mt 16:2-4). So we find that signs, in themselves,
do not forebode; rather, they signify a turning point. Jesus rebuked the
Pharisees and Sadducees for lacking the discernment to recognise the time which
in Greek is the kairos.
The kairos
means an opportune time or seasonable time; it is a time that brings something
important, an opportunity that should not be missed. In our daily lives, we are
often faced with krnros. When we reflect upon our lives, we often reminisce how
we could have (lone things differently. We think to ourselves, “If only I had
prepared a little harder! I could have got the best grade in the class!” ~. We
say, “I wish I had gone on that trip. I could have made ten thousand dollars!”
We slap ourselves in the face for the ~ opportunities that we have missed. We
often see the opportunities after they pass, but by then,
it’s too late. Today, Jesus may be asking you, “I am giving you an
opportunity not to be missed. Will you accept it?” Perhaps God has allowed many
opportunities, many seasons, to pass before us. Perhaps we have often turned
God down, blinded by our own pursuits. I too can look back and see past
spiritual failures. I too can look back with spiritual regrets. In a sense, we
are like the Pharisees and Sadducees Jesus addressed. We are often blind to the
signs of the times. If God grants us a kairos, let us accept it in readiness
and humiity.
An opportune time is not
necessarily a joyous time. •~. When we think of opportune times, we may think
of times when we get lucky”, such as winning the lottery. ~ But Jesus must have
had quite a different perspective. Jesus understood Himself very well. He knew
His mission, and lie also knew His times. The Gospel of John often recalls
Jesus saying, “My time has not yet come” (Jn 2:4; 7:6, 8, 30). Jesus was very
sensitive to the timing of God. He did not fit God into His schedule, rather,
He lived and (lied according to God’s schedule. We too must learn to understand
the nature of our times. It is no longer a time to sleep and carouse. We are
warned, “ But take heed to yourselves lest your hearts
be weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the cares of this life,
and that day catch you suddenly, like a snare. For it will come upon all who
dwell upon the face of the whole earth” (Lk 21:34-35).