|
Click here to print
this Sermon
December 4, 2005
2nd Sunday in Advent
2 Peter 3:8-14
Pastor Ben Berger
Live Like There's No Tomorrow
My uncle Bob may only have months to live. He suffers from a lot
of different medical problems. He's had numerous open heart surgeries.
A number of years back he suffered an aneurysm that left him paralyzed
from his chest down. He spends half of his time in the hospital
or in bed. Just a month ago he learned that he has leukemia. His
doctors are fighting over which medication is best for him. This
week he asked if they'd rather have him starve to death or die from
cancer. If you were my uncle Bob, how would you live the last few
months of your life? I suppose there are two possible answers. One,
you could live it up and party till you die. Two, you could take
care of business - spiritual business. My uncle Bob is a believer
and so are we. The apostle Peter encourages us to take care of spiritual
business. Live like there's no tomorrow. 1) Repent while you can
and 2) Await your new life.
At the beginning of chapter three Peter mentions scoffers who mock
the LORD's promise to return. They say, "Where is this 'coming'
he promised? Ever since our fathers died, everything goes on as
it has since the beginning of creation" (4). Unbelievers
don't think that Jesus is ever coming or that the world is ever
going to end. They know that they'll die someday, but don't believe
in life after death. That being the case, unbelievers live for the
present. They need to experience life and fun and happiness right
now! - especially if there's no tomorrow. Unbelievers do whatever
they want, whatever makes them feel good. Unbelievers think only
about life on this earth and what they can get out of it.
Peter reminds us that contrary to what unbelievers think or say
the LORD will return; he promised. God had promised to send a Savior
once before. All the way back in the Garden of Eden, immediately
after Adam and Eve sinned, God promised a Savior. Eve thought that
her firstborn son might be that Savior, but God took his time fulfilling
his promise. He constantly renewed his promise to Noah, Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, and the nation of Israel, but God waited at least
4000 years to fulfill his promise. He waited until just the right
time to send his Son to be born of a virgin in the little town of
Bethlehem. Christmas is our annual celebration giving thanks to
God for keeping his promise regardless of how long it took.
God is also waiting for just the right time to keep his promise
to send Jesus a second time. Peter reminds us that time is not what's
important to God. He says that to God one day is as 1000 years and
1000 years as one day. God lives outside of time. What's important
is the promise. And every promise that God makes he keeps; Christmas
is proof of that. Peter says that God has not forgotten his promise
and he's not slow in keeping his promise. He's just waiting for
the right time.
The LORD is waiting for more believers to repent. Patience keeps
the LORD waiting. For people to whom time is so important, we don't
have much patience. We can't stand to wait. We don't want to wait
in line, don't want to wait for food, don't want to wait for entertainment,
don't want to wait for anything. The LORD is willing to wait because
to him it's worth it.
The LORD wants as many as possible to live with him in heaven.
Peter says, He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish,
but everyone to come to repentance (9). In the very next verse
Peter reminds us that the LORD's patience will eventually run out.
The day of the LORD will come like a thief and everything will be
destroyed - the heavens, the earth and everything in them including
unrepentant unbelievers. That day will expose the sins of unbelievers
and force the almighty Judge to sentence them to hell to perish.
The LORD does not want anyone to perish, not a single soul - not
you, not me, not anyone we know and love, no one. So he waits
with
patience. He waits for us to repent so that he can save us. He wants
to forgive our sins. He wants to take us to heaven. He wants to
keep his promise.
What would you do with only a few months to live? That may be all
the time you have. Christmas is coming in twenty days, but Jesus
might return today. Repent while you have the chance. That's the
first thing to do. Join me in confessing our sins, all of them.
And then join me in believing that the LORD keeps his promise to
forgive our sins because Jesus already came once. That way, if Jesus
comes today, or tomorrow or any day after, we'll be ready for his
patient, waiting arms.
When we repent and believe that Jesus is coming soon, that changes
our outlook on life. Now we look forward to our new life.
Jesus came the first time because we needed a new life. Spiritually,
we were born without life, dead in sin and transgression. The life
we had and lived was selfish and earthly minded. We were and thought
like unbelievers. All we cared about was pleasing ourselves. Even
if we can't remember life as an unbeliever, we still know what it's
like. We still have sinful flesh that thinks only of pleasure on
this earth. We think that alcohol makes for a good time. We think
that sex will give us pleasure and intimacy. We think that money
will make this life easier. We get so caught up in this world that
we forget the next. For example, just contrast how much time you'll
prepare to celebrate Jesus' birth in worship with the amount of
time you'll spend shopping, decorating, baking, cleaning and whatever.
Jesus was born to reform our sinful minds and sinful lives. We
might say that he purified us by fire. First he purified us by the
fires of hell. Jesus became a man so that he might suffer for man's
sin. Though he was completely innocent, he pled guilty before his
Father. He took the blame for selfish attitudes. He became guilty
of seeking earthly pleasure. He volunteered to suffer for every
sin. His Father sent him to hell to pay the price of everyman's
sin. In hell Jesus conquered sin and earned forgiveness for every
man.
Then Jesus purified us by the fire of his Holy Spirit. Through
baptism the Holy Spirit connected you to Jesus. His life became
your life, his suffering your suffering, and his death your death.
The punishment he paid covers your sin and the forgiveness he earned
counts for you. The Holy Spirit leads you to believe in God's promises,
to repent and to look forward to a new life. In faith created by
the Holy Spirit we celebrate Jesus' first coming for our purification.
In faith we look forward to Jesus' second coming to reform the
world. Just as we were sinful and needed to be purified, the same
is true of this sinful world. Sin has not only corrupted people
but also everything around us. Can you imagine what it would be
like to have reformed, holy people living in a sinful world? We
might have better relationships, but we'd still suffer. We'd still
fight sickness and disease and death all around us. We'd still have
days without sunshine. We'd still have needs. That would not be
a life to look forward to.
Jesus promises to also purify this world with fire. That day
will bring about the destruction of the heavens by fire, and the
elements will melt in the heat (12). Just as Jesus suffered
in the fires of hell to remove our sin, so also he will use fire
to remove sin from this world. He will take away painful labor and
childbirth, sickness and disease, disaster and death. In their place
he will bring righteousness. In keeping with his promise we are
looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, the home of righteousness
(13). At that time we will be holy, reformed people living in a
holy, reformed world. Jesus will be our sunshine and he will provide
all of our needs. We will live in perfect relationships with him
and every other believer. We'll enjoy our work, our time with one
another and our worship with our God. Everything will be perfect.
That's a life to look forward to.
We can look forward to our new life by the way we live life right
now. Right now we can strive to get rid of sin in our lives. Right
now we can strive to live holy lives according to God's will. Forget
the selfish, earthly-minded thoughts of unbelievers. Ignore the
desires of your sinful flesh to focus only on this life. Plan ahead;
look forward to a new, better life.
My uncle Bob might only have a few months to live on this earth.
You and I may have even less. That's OK because we have a better
life waiting. We know that Jesus came once to take away our sin
and that he's coming soon to take us to heaven. How will we use
our time left on earth? We'll live like there's no tomorrow. First,
we'll repent while we can and then we'll look forward our new lives.
That's what uncle Bob is doing.
|