(Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Preparing for The Big One”, originally shared on August 6, 2025. It was the 371st video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)
Are you prepared for “The Big One”? Today, Jesus is going to tell us
what it is, and why being prepared for it is important.
Did you feel the earthquake that happened the week before last? Or this
past week?
We in Southern California are
accustomed to earthquakes, even though we aren’t totally used to them. We know
that they are part of the deal we have made for living here, but when they come,
they come unexpectedly.
You can download a
smartphone app called MyShake that will give you a few seconds’ to respond if an earthquake of 4.5 or higher is coming.
But many of us have already
prepared some kind of kit with food and water, and tents and sleeping bags, and
an assortment of tools and conveniences, and things that will allow us to
survive for a few days or weeks when “The Big One” hits us. And those of us who
don’t have good intentions. 😊
“Be Prepared” is the motto of the Boy Scouts
and the Girl Scouts, and it’s the advice of every parent in every time and in
every place.
We learn it from an early age because it’s good for us to expect the unexpected in order to be
prepared.
But there are levels of potential painful
disruption. I saw a bumper sticker on the car of a cross-country runner that
said, “My sport is your sport’s punishment.” 😊
In the Bible, earthquakes are bad, but they are
just signs of the greater disruption.
Are we ready for pure disruption?
We may be as ready as we can be for “The Big
One”, but how do we get prepared for the biggest disruption of all human
history? That’s the subject of Jesus’ words in the reading from the Gospels
that will be shared in the vast majority of churches all over the world this
coming Sunday, Luke 12:32-40. It’s about the end of the world as we know
it.
A wildly popular book called The Late
Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsey was published in 1971. The book stated
that the Bible’s prophecy of the end times was lining up with current events
and that the end of the world as we knew it was imminent.
It
didn’t happen, but it scared people who didn’t want to be unprepared. He
reportedly wrote new books every three years or so afterward, making the same
claims, saying that the world would end in about five years.
None of those predictions came true, but his
books kept selling well. Publishers Weekly reported that his profits were spent on long-term investments
in California real estate. Long-term.
Jehovah’s Witnesses, whose publication is “The Watchtower”,
predicted that Christ would return in 1874, and again in 1914. Now they only
say that he is coming soon.
I was
at a Christmas Day service at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Jerusalem when I was
in college when a man stood up in the middle of the pastor’s sermon and
announced that Jesus had been reincarnated as a boy in India and was being
revealed to the world. Someone else stood up and countered that the Bible says
that no one knows when Jesus will return. (NOTE: this kind of thing does not
generally happen in a Lutheran worship service. 😊)
Order
was finally restored, but it was a reminder that there are always people among
us who believe that they have the inside track on God.
Jesus
speaks of this and tells us how to be ready for the time that Jesus actually
does return in Luke 12:32-40. He turns all our popular ideas about his
return on their heads. He begins by telling us not to be afraid, in verse 32,
32“Do not be afraid,
little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.
There
they are again. Those words. I’ve read that the words, “Do not be afraid,” or
“Don’t Be Afraid” or “Fear not”, or another equivalent appear 366 times in the
Bible, one for every day of the year plus one for a leap year. I’ve never
counted them, but it seems about right. 😊
Whenever the Kingdom comes in its fulness, it will come when Christ
comes to judge the living and the dead. There is no reason for Christians to be
afraid. The Kingdom of God, or God’s Reign, is already here. It is not
something we can earn with our goodness or achieve by being better than others.
We can’t achieve it, and we don’t have to. We can only receive it.
This
isn’t a pay-to-play situation. We have already died in our baptism. We have
been made children of God by our baptism and in the gift of faith. Our eternity
has already begun.
Jesus
came as fully God and fully human being to save us. He reigns, even though we
still sin and still have the opportunity to repent. When will his already here
but not yet fully realized kingdom come to its perfection?
So far, every single person who has
predicted a date for the end of the world and the perfection of the reign of
God has been wrong. But someday someone will be right. How can we be rightly
prepared? Jesus continues in verses 33-34,
33Sell
your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear
out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth
destroys. 34For where your treasure is, there your heart will
be also.
Giving alms is what we do to help the poor. It comes after our tithes
and after our offerings of everything we have and everything we are.
But I
think that it’s the part about, “sell your possessions” that is what makes most
of us nervous. Does God really want us to have a yard sale right now?
I
think that Jesus is warning us not to allow our possessions to own us, but
instead to invest our money in what endures forever. Jesus describes the use of
our money and the meaning of our possessions as a spiritual issue.
Most
of us would agree with the writer and poet, Richard Armour, who taught at the
Claremont Colleges, and wrote:
“That money talks,
I’ll not deny,
I heard it once:
It said, ‘Goodbye’”.
But
what if we could hold onto our treasure forever. Jesus says that we can.
Martin Luther, the 16th century Church reformer, once said, “I have held many things in my hands, and I have lost them all; but
whatever I have placed in God's hands, that I still possess.”
One
day, the reign of God will come, and it will come in its fullness. There will
be a new heaven and a new earth. Before it comes, however, there will a very
bad time. We need to be prepared.
How
does Jesus describe that preparation for us?
Jesus
continues with verse 35,
35“Be
dressed for action and have your lamps lit; 36be like those who
are waiting for their master to return from the wedding banquet, so that they
may open the door for him as soon as he comes and knocks. 37Blessed
are those slaves whom the master finds alert when he comes; truly I tell you,
he will fasten his belt and have them sit down to eat, and he will come and
serve them. 38If he comes during the middle of the night, or
near dawn, and finds them so, blessed are those slaves.
Wedding parties in Israel at the time of Jesus could go on for days,
even weeks! The party goer could return at any time, day or night. Those
charged with the master’s welfare had one primary job! Be prepared.
Jesus
did not endorse slavery. He just used that part of life that most people in
every culture throughout history took for granted to make a point. I sometimes
wonder what aspects of our lives that we take for granted will future
generations condemn us for? Personal transportation? Unsustainable consumerism?
Materialism? War? The internal combustion engine? Red meat? Widespread
homelessness? The list may be long.
I remember seeing a cartoon that showed a
character asking God, “Lord, there is so much suffering in the world. Why don’t
you do something about it?” And the last frame has a cartoon bubble coming from
above saying, “That’s funny. I was just about to ask you the same thing.”
We
prepare for Jesus’ coming by being the people that we have been called,
equipped and sent to be.
We
have already seen the love that is in Jesus on the night that we call Maundy
Thursday, when Jesus gave us a new commandment, to love one another as He has
first loved us, called us his friends, and showed his service to us by washing
his disciples’ feet. We are also to serve one another in the love we
have first received from God.
When
are we to be prepared for the coming of Jesus? Jesus tells us, beginning with verse
39,
39“But
know this: if the owner of the house had known at what hour the thief was
coming, he would not have let his house be broken into. 40You
also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour.”
I
once lived in a neighborhood where my house was broken into so many times that
I lost track at around 13 times. I was only at home to sleep when I wasn’t at
church on the other end of town, or in the community. In the end, it was
costing me more to replace the broken window than to replace what had been
stolen. I had nearly no possessions to sell. 😊
After
the first one, when I still did have some possessions, I prepared some fliers
and took them around the neighborhood, inviting people to come to my house to
organize a Neighborhood Watch group. It didn’t help.
The
front of the vacant lot on one side of my house was overgrown and provided
cover whenever burglars wanted to get into my house. The only time someone was
caught was when some kids going by on their skateboards heard the glass break
and reported it to the police.
Sally
moved into that house when we were married, but not until I had bars put on all
the windows. Then, we were prepared.
You
may have taken some precautions. I’m guessing that you lock your doors at
night, and probably even during the day. Why? Because there are people who
would steal everything you have if you let them, and some of them would even
thank God for the blessing. That’s the world we live in.
You
may have seen on TV or read online about the uptick in residential burglaries
in Encino in the past few weeks, even a couple of murders. In response,
residents have set up their own security in addition to what’s provided by the
police. It’s a wealthy community. They have set up license plate readers, a
neighborhood watch, private security, and they are taking turns patrolling the
neighborhood. They set up WhatsApp groups. They are arming themselves and
upgrading their fences and home security systems. Are they prepared? Maybe.
But,
what about the biggest break-in in the history of the world? The break-in into
time itself.
Just
as in Jesus’ return for the Last Judgement, we see the message of this Gospel
text at the end.
“You
also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour.”
We
see the meaning of this text in its first verse, “Do not be afraid,
little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.”
The
kingdom of God, God’s perfect reign, has already been given to us, God’s
imperfect people, and we want to share that gift with the world.
We
know who our real God is, and we live it.
We
know what the real source of our life is, and we give it.
We
know where the source of our lives is, in the rivers of living water, the
Holy Spirit, and we proclaim it.
We don’t know when Jesus will return
to put all things right, but He shows us in Luke 12:32-40, how to be
prepared:
- Make the reign of God your focus, not this world
- Receive that reign with joy and live in that joy.
- Proclaim that reign to the world and manifest it in every place you
can.
- Make your money your means for ministry and not your master; invest
it to produce eternal benefits for yourself and for all God’s people.
How do we do this
without fear for the future, but with trust in God?
When
I was just starting in my first parish, Christ Lutheran Church in Compton, I
was feeling overwhelmed. One day, during that time, I read an article in the
Christian Century magazine written by a pediatrician.
He
wrote about how his first job out of medical school was opening a new free
clinic on the South Side of Chicago. His supervisor, another doctor, came by
with a file folder under his arm and a book. He laid the file folder on the new
doctor’s desk, opened it, and said, “These are the people I want you to hire
for this clinic.”
The
new doctor looked through the papers and said, “These people aren’t qualified,
and I know we can do better.” “Maybe,” said the supervising doctor, “but I owe
people favors, and you will hire them, and you can train them. That’s how it
works in this neighborhood.”
The
new doctor countered that he would not be hiring them, that he would be
interviewing and selecting his own staff, and he knew he could do that because
he knew the law.
The
supervising doctor took the book he brought with him, laid it on the new doctor’s
desk, and opened it. The book had been hollowed out and a .45 automatic pistol
was nested inside. He said, “Doctor, in this neighborhood, this is the law. Now
hire these people.”
The
new doctor wrote that he became discouraged in his work, believing that the
good he was doing was being overcome by the evil in the system itself.
One
day, someone gave him a book on the Christian monastic hours of prayer. He read
it and began to observe the hours, stopping to pray five times a day.
He
wrote that it didn’t happen right away, but that he began to feel that he was
connected to something larger than himself. That he was like a thread in a
tapestry, the individual meaning of which would not be apparent in his lifetime,
but that someday Jesus would return and weave it together with lots of other
threads into a beautiful tapestry, whose meaning would be clear for all to see.
We
don’t know what the immediate future will hold. But we do know Who holds the
future. Meanwhile, we are the people of God, called, equipped, and sent with a message.
Repent and be saved. Live the love of God for all people. Be the new creation God
has made you to be. Live from the inside out.
Martin Luther once said, “Whatever your heart clings to and confides in,
that is really your God.” Our money and our possessions are means for ministry or
they are our God.
We
are a new Creation. We are God’s people. We have been given a
do-over.
Christ
is coming. Your redemption is drawing near. Don’t be afraid. Stay connected to
God. Always be prepared. Share the good news.

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