People have been
predicting the imminent end of the world and Jesus' second coming since his ascension.
Some of these predictions have been based on supposed prophetic visions or
dreams. Others have focused on auspicious dates such as the years 500, 1000 and 2000 AD. Calculations based on the book
of Revelation have produced a wide range of dates, most of which have already
passed by uneventfully.
Cataclysmic events
such as the sacking of Rome (410 AD), the bubonic plague in 1347-53, and the wars of 1914 and 1939
have also prompted people to predict the
imminent end of the world. Anxiety being created today by various crises
internationally is likely to lead to a rise in end-of-the-world forecasts.
The Bible restrains
us from making such predictions or becoming anxious about them. For one thing,
it provides a record of wars, famines, plagues and disasters spanning over 2000
years. Whatever dreadful thing is happening in our world today, we can be sure
to find something similar in the history described in its pages. "There is
nothing new under the sun" (Ecc. 1:9). In all these events, God remains
sovereign.
Secondly, we have
Jesus' words in Matthew 24:6-8 "You will hear of wars and rumours of wars,
but see to it that you are not alarmed. Such things must happen, but the end is
still to come. Nation will rise against nation,
and kingdom against kingdom. There will be famines and earthquakes in various
places. All these are the beginning of birth-pains." What
midwives call "practice contractions" in other words.
Jesus assures us that when the end does come and he
returns it will be both sudden and obvious. In the meantime may our response to
what is happening in the world be compassion and prayer for those affected,
trust and steadfastness in our own situation.
Image: by tarotastic / photo on flickr
Image: by tarotastic / photo on flickr
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