IF YOU see someone reading a mystery
novel, and you have already read it, you are not supposed to tell
him how the story would end. You are expected to let him enjoy
struggling with every twist and turn of the story. As far as literary
enjoyment goes, that is fine.
In real life though,
when you are personally involved in a story, things can be quite
different. There is a human desire to know how the future will
be and how the story would end. Hence, the popularity of fortune-tellers
and their like. The reason for this is not just human curiosity
but also human anxiety. It is indeed difficult to live life with
the prospect of a bleak future.
Towards the end of His earthly life, Jesus revealed the immediate
future to His disciples, making it increasingly clear that He
was about to be killed. He also predicted that His disciples would
betray and deny Him and would be scattered. If His disciples had
only listened to Him carefully, they would have realised that
a nightmare was about to begin.
Perhaps they sensed it somehow, though they did not fully understand.
Though they probably did not grasp intellectually what Jesus was
saying, their more perceptive visceral alarms (gut feelings) went
off. They must have felt vaguely uncomfortable with what they
heard. Racing pulse, sweaty palms, faces turning pale - these
would have shown their inner anxiety and fear about the future.
Realising this, Jesus reassured them, "Do not let your hearts
be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me." (Jn. 14:1).
Jesus explained to them that He would be leaving them but promised
that He would not abandon them. He promised to send them the Holy
Spirit who would live in them. He revealed that life might be
difficult - "the prince of this world is coming" (Jn.
14:30), but they are to be calm. "Peace I leave with you;
my peace I give you
Do not let your hearts be troubled
and do not be afraid." (Jn 14:27).
After Jesus was crucified, dead, and entombed, the anxiety of
the disciples must have multiplied most uncomfortably. Their dreams
of the future had crumbled in the hands of an angry and sinful
crowd. It must have felt that they had come to the end of the
book. A promising story had ended tragically, so it seemed.
Then the resurrected Jesus appeared to them. The book that had
been closed sadly and reluctantly was again opened with new joy.
The story, after all, had not ended. The cross was not the final
full-stop, only a comma. Jesus met the disciples by saying "Peace
be with you." (Lk. 24:36). They were, not surprisingly, startled.
Jesus asked, "Why are you troubled, and why do doubts rise
in your mind?" (Lk. 24:38). Somehow and strangely, this conversation
seems to be a continuation of that found in Jn. 14, before Jesus
was crucified. Clearly, the disciples had not fully understood
what Jesus had earlier tried to tell them.
But this time it was different.
The disciples encountered the risen Christ. It was the dawn of
a new day in their lives, a decisive turning point in their stories.
As they remembered all that Jesus had taught them - divine forgiveness,
new birth, eternal life, the kingdom of God - they began to see
traces of a larger Story. Their stories were woven and stitched
into that Story. They began to understand how that Story began
and how it would end. They were changed men after realising that
they were part of a story that was larger than themselves. They
marched forward into the dark night knowing for certain that their
journey would end with a new dawn. As changed men, they changed
the world.
Two thousand years have come and gone since then. History has
twisted and turned, ran and stumbled through time. Billions of
personal stories are pasted on it, flapping in the winds of time,
containing untold stories of little dreams, moments of joy and
unshared pain. Each of us also has a story to tell. We meet each
new year wondering how the story will develop and how it will
end. How long more do we have before our stories become another
piece of paper flapping in the winds of time?
It is one thing to read a story in a book. It is another thing
to exist in one that is unfolding. Who knows how the story would
proceed and how it would end?
The Bible tells us how history would end. Jesus is coming again,
and when that happens, a new earth and heaven will appear. There
will be no more death, no more tears, no more pain. The old order
would be no more. (Rev. 21; 22).
If you belong to this Jesus, then His Story becomes the vehicle
for your story. The uncertainty of your fragile story can ride
on the certainty of His Story. His Story gives stability and hope
to our stories. The final hour of history will be Christ's. He
has the final say; the final hour is His. If we belong to Him,
the final hour is also ours.
As we stand at the beginning of yet another new year, who can
tell what the immediate future holds for us personally and collectively?
Who knows what "breaking news" would break our hearts?
Who knows what the headlines would be this year? Who can predict
what would make us laugh or cry, angry or sad? Who knows what
the next day would be like? The next day has all its uncertainties.
And that can make one anxious.
The uncertainty of the immediate future must be lived with the
certainty of the final hour. For the follower of Christ, there
is the promise of glory that will mark the end of the Story. Christ
invites us, with our little uncertain stories, to enter His glorious
Story, to become part of His unfolding Story. When we do so, we
can turn every corner of time, with its immediate uncertain future,
with peace and poise.
To be baptised and united with Christ, to be a part of His Body
is to share in His eternal destiny, to be part of His Story. Let
us live our uncertain days in His Story. He is the Shepherd of
our souls (1 Pet. 2:25). In Him the final hour is ours.
And, paraphrasing Helmut Thielicke, if the final hour is ours,
then why be anxious of the next minute?
QUOTE:
PROMISE OF GLORY
'The uncertainty of the immediate future must be lived with
the certainty of the final hour. For the follower of Christ, there
is the promise of glory that will mark the end of the Story. Christ
invites us, with our little uncertain stories, to enter His glorious
Story, to become part of His unfolding Story. When we do so, we
can turn every corner of time, with its immediate uncertain future,
with peace and poise.'