Mark 13: 24-32
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/111724.cfm
For the early Christians, the book of Daniel, our first reading this Sunday, was extremely important to help them understand the person of Jesus and how he was indeed the fulfilment of the Daniel prophecies in the coming of the kingdom of God. Daniel is part of apocalyptic literature – which means literally, a “revelation” or “pulling back of the veil” which reveals something unknown before. God has revealed himself to us in the person of Jesus and thereby took the veil off his face as he now comes in human flesh and blood.
We hear at this time of the Church year – assurance and hope about the future. God is in control and will triumph in the end. In fact, in Jesus and the good news of the Gospel, that triumph is already underway. History indicates that the world has seen the rise and the fall of many earthly kingdoms, but the kingdom of God endures. That is certain if we take the Biblical prophecies as truth. Daniel tell us: But the wise shall shine brightly like the splendor of the firmament, and those who lead the many to justice shall be like the stars forever. (Dn 12: 3)
Science has provided another certainty: what concerns the inevitable end of the universe. It is something we rarely worry about, yet science tells us that approximately five billion years from now the sun will expand and take with it this earth and all the planets. What began with the “bang” of creation will become at the end the “big crunch.” Nothing of this world lasts forever, including us of course. Now at nearly the end of our liturgical year we hear, as in our Gospel, the words of Jesus: . . . the sun will be darkened, the moon will not give its light, the stars will fall from the sky (Mk 13: 24-25), so we can’t help but think in terms of what our scientists tell us is inevitable. Don’t worry much, though, none of us will be here to experience this end billions of years from now.
But in addition, Jesus words of gloom and doom was a response to the disciples amazement at the Temple’s outstanding architecture and beauty: adorned with gold, jewels, tapestry with signs of the planets, stars and the zodiac. It was indeed a representation of the universe, the most sacred place where God himself dwells in the Holy of Holies among his people. It was the center of all that is Jewish, a place of worship, commerce and social life. So, Jesus’ description of its destruction was unimaginable to the Jewish years.
Yet, just a few generations after Jesus, in 70 a.d., the Temple was obliterated by the Romans, Jews taken off in captivity, murdered, starved, crucified by the thousands, people desperately ran and scattered everywhere to spare their lives and other such abominations. It seemed as if the world indeed was destroyed. All of this lies behind the words of Jesus which implies the destruction of an old way in order that a new order of things may take place.
In the end this week’s readings assure us that in the ultimate end of all things Christ will be recognized as Lord of all history. We live now in that in between time. That is, between the two comings of Christ: once in Bethlehem as an infant and the other will be when he returns for the final judgement not as a helpless child but as the mighty King of the Universe in glory.
But today, the age of the Spirit and the age of the Church, the best part of this end time’s imagery is that Christ remains among us now. It is now that new order brought about through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ for the salvation of all: the old has been destroyed and the new now lives in Christ Jesus.
Thus, as a people of future hope and reassurance, we are also people of present-day optimism. The truth revealed to us is that God has claimed creation as his own and in Christ, nature itself responds in a new order to ultimate redemption. In his Church, humanly weak and in need of reform but divinely perfect and in the constant mission of the Church and the Gospel proclaimed we reveal this truth for the world for every generation.
As we enter the mystery of the Eucharist, let’s take heart to know that who we receive, this food for our journey through life and the power of his Word to bring all to himself. Our Lord will come when he is sent by the Father so may he not find us unprepared and ready to welcome him now and in the future. This is the mission entrusted to us, the responsibility to pass on the faith we have received, to live our lives as faithfully as possible to the Gospel we have seen and heard, and to be found busy about the mission Christ has given to us, until he comes again at the end.