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November 16, 2003
3rd Sunday of End Time - The Saints Triumphant
Daniel 12:1-3
Pastor Robert Raasch
A Preview of Things to Come
- A Time of Distress
- A Time of Deliverance
Tell me, when was the last time you caught a preview of an upcoming
event? Maybe you were at the movie theatre this weekend and they
showed preview after preview of coming attractions. Or maybe your
toddler tripped and put a big bruise on his forehead. That was probably
the first of many bumps and bruises he'll receive as he grows up.
That bruise was a preview of things to come. Or maybe your daughter
got her first phone called from a guy-and she liked it; spent 20
minutes on the phone. Let me tell you, that's a preview of things
to come, too.
Well, this morning God's Word gives us another preview of things
to come. Only in this case, it's not a preview of what will happen
in next week's TV episode, or next months movie listing. Rather,
God here tells his prophet Daniel and us, what will happen a the
end of time. This morning God offers us what we might call:
A Preview of Things to Come
As we study this account, we will see that God reveals that the end of the world will be both:
- A Time of Distress
- A Time of Deliverance
First, a little background to this text. In the two chapters immediately
preceding our text, God has revealed to Daniel events which would
occur in Daniel's near term future, events in the 500 years before
the birth of Christi. Events like the fall of the Babylonian empire
and the rise of the Roman Empire. But after describing those short-term
events, God goes on to describe some events that were to occur further
down the road,. In fact, here in our text, God gives Daniel a preview
of the events that would occur very near the end of the road, that
is, the end of time.
Listen to what God tells Daniel. He says, "At that time
Michael, the great prince who protects your people, will arise."
Michael? Who's Michael? Actually, Michael is one of only two angels
that are specifically identified by name in the pages of Holy Scripture.
The other angel was Gabriel. In this case, Michael is given the
responsibility of protecting God's people from harm.
And why will God's people need protection, especially in the Last
Days? God answers that for us. He says that they will need protection
because the Last Days will be: I. A Time of Distress. Listen to
what God tells Daniel. He says, "There will be a time of
distress such as has not happened from the beginning of nations
until then."
What event is God here referring to? Well, I believe he's talking
about the same thing that Jesus was talking about in Matthew chapter
24. Remember what Jesus told his disciples would be the signs of
the end of the age? He said that there would be "wars and
rumors of wars; nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom. There will be famines and earthquakes in various places.
You will be handed over to be persecuted and put to death, and you
will be hated by all nations because of me. 10 At that time many
will turn away from the faith and will betray and hate each other,
11 and many false prophets will appear and deceive many people."
Then, after giving all those signs of the end, Jesus makes one
more comment about the time right at the very end of the world.
He says in Matthew 24:21, "For then there will be great
distress" (there's that same word, distress) "unequaled
from the beginning of the world until now--and never to be equaled
again. 22 If those days had not been cut short, no one would survive."
Can you tell me, what period in the history of the world is Jesus
referring to there? Is he talking about what's going on in the world
right now, what with the wars, and earthquakes, and the persecution
of Christians, which we see going on around the globe? Or is he
referring to a period of distress which still lies in the future?
Well, to tell you the truth, that's a tough one to call. On the
one hand, we are living in a time of distress. I mean all those
signs that Jesus pointed to are going on all around us. For all
intents and purposes, we are living in the End Times right now.
But, does that mean that things can't get any worse? No. Things
can get worse, and they probably will. But from our perspective
here and now, we can't just know how much worse they are going to
get. It kind of reminds me of driving down old logging roads in
the Upper Peninsula. I used to drive my old Subaru deep into the
woods looking for ruffed grouse to hunt. Well, you could be pretty
sure that the further away from the highway you got, the worse the
road would get. And yet, no matter how far you drove, you could
never say, "I know this is as bad as it will ever get."
Because it could always get a little worse-and it usually did.
Friends, that's how God describes the road leading up to the end
of the world. In many ways, things in this world will just keep
getting rougher and rougher, until finally, in an act of divine
mercy, God will call a halt to the whole thing. God will say, in
effect, "All right, that's rough enough. I don't want to lose
everybody along the way." Or, as Jesus put it, "If
those days had not been cut short, no one would survive, but for
the sake of the elect those days will be shortened."
Now, why do you think God gives us this dismal preview of the end?
Why would he tell us that the end times will be a time of distress?
I believe that there are two reasons. First, God wants to keep us
from believing that this world is evolving into a better place,
or that the human race, if it just tries a little harder can become
a kinder, gentler, more peace-loving species. As long as there is
sin in the world, that ain't gonna happen.
Secondly, God wants us to know what we're up against as Christians.
As the years go by, it's not going to get any easier for us to stand
up for what God says is the truth. We live in a world that demands
tolerance for every idea, every practice, every lifestyle imaginable.
It doesn't matter how much havoc it wreaks in people's lives, it
doesn't matter how opposed it is to God's will, or for that matter,
how opposed to common sense, still if you or I were to take a stand
and say, "Hey, what you're doing is just not right. You're
hurting yourself and your relationship to a God who dearly loves
you." If we were say that, we would be branded as intolerant,
religious extremists. And sad to say, that kind of intolerance for
God's truth, will probably only get worse. Be forewarned, dear Christians,
the time ahead will be a time of distress.
But, thanks be to God, that isn't all it will be. Here in his revelation
to Daniel, God promises that the time ahead will be something much
better than that. It will be: II. A Time of Deliverance.
Listen to the words of hope God offers here in our text. God tells
Daniel and us, "At that time your people--everyone whose
name is found written in the book--will be delivered. 2 Multitudes
who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting
life, others to shame and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise
will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who lead
many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever."
What event is God referring to there? Isn't he referring to Judgment
Day? That day when God will resurrect the bodies of all the dead,
gather them together with all those human beings who are still alive
at the second coming of Christ, and then publicly judge them, raising
some to eternal life and sending others to eternal separation from
God. And who are the ones who will be raised to eternal life? God
tells us right here: "Everyone whose name is found written
in the book (that is, the Book of Life)."
So, the question is, "Whose name is written in the book of
life?" Does it contain the name of every church-goer in the
world? Or everyone who is a spiritual person? Or everyone who believes
in God? No, the Bible makes it clear that the only names written
in God's book are those who trust that Jesus lived and died in their
place. If you can say that you have done absolutely nothing to earn
God's favor, yet also know that God loved you enough to pay for
your sins, then you can be sure that your name is in the book of
life. You can be sure that the promise that Jesus made in John 5:24
still applies to you, "I tell you the truth, whoever hears
my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not
be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life."
Friends, on the basis of that promise, you can be sure that in
Christ, you have life with God now here on earth and life with God
forever in heaven. In fact, God offers a preview of life in heaven
when he says in the last verse of our text, "Those who are
wise will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who
lead many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever."
Can you picture that scene? You and me and every believer in Christ
gathered around the throne of God, seeing God in his full glory
with our own eyes and then reflecting that undiminished glory in
our faces and our lives. We will be like a million little mirrors
around the Son reflecting his glory perfectly. Right now, here on
earth, we try to reflect the glory of Christ. We try to serve as
mirrors of Christ's love. But too often are mirrors that are smudged
and tarnished by our own sins and failings. It's like we've got
mud on our mirrors.
And yet, once we get to heaven, all that will change. Once we get
to heaven, we will no longer will we simply attempt to shine like
the Son. We will shine like the Son. Or as Daniel says, "We
will shine like the brightness of the heavens." What a
glorious picture that is. The saints triumphant gathered in their
glorious array around the throne of God. What a breathtaking view
that is. Make that, a breathtaking preview. A preview which our
gracious God offers us right here in his Word.
My friends, do you see why God has given us a preview of things
to come? God wants to do more than show us what's in store for us
here in earth. He wants to show us what's in store for us in heaven.
And knowing that the end times will be a time of deliverance for
us, helps us handle the fact that the end times will also be a time
of distress.
The bottom line is this: someone once said, "When it comes
to the future, I hope for the best, but prepare for the worst."
God's Preview of Things to Come allows us to do just that. It allows
us to be prepared for the worst here on earth, while at the same
time, having a sure, God-given hope that the best is still to come,
with the saints in heaven above. God keep us all to that blessed
end. Amen.
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