Our readings this week are more focused on the eschatological or end times as we move into the final two weeks of Ordinary Time and the end of the liturgical year. These writings are also called apocalyptic because they unveil or reveal hope to a people in dark times of oppression. In much of today’s gospel from Mark, Jesus is referring to the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and then he pivots to the end of all time.
Jesus did share how the temple would be destroyed, but that he, the living Temple, would rise up in three days (see John 2:19). The temple was destroyed in 70 AD by the Roman army. The acts of violence in those four years of siege were horrific and Jesus was helping those of his time to prepare for it. This destruction of the Temple was also symbolic of the end of the world at the end of time. That is what Jesus leaves off with at the end of today’s reading. Continuing on with the following parable that we did not read today helps to give the context that he has made this shift from the prediction of the destruction of the temple to the final judgment when “heaven and earth with pass away” (Mark 13:31).
Jesus is echoing the imagery of Daniel from the first reading as well as Old Testament prophets such as Jeremiah, which all refer to the fall of cities. These readings address the issue that God is present in the midst of our suffering and for those who persist and remain faithful, he will bring about a greater good. As he himself would live out so vividly. There would be no resurrection without the crucifixion. As to the final judgment: “But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” (Mk 13:32).
There have been those who have attempted to glean the time or the hour over the generations, and in every instance been proven to be false. We are still alive and the earth is still revolving around the sun. Seeking that day or hour is not for us to know nor to seek. As Jesus said, even he does not know the time or the hour.
What is important is relationship with God. This truth is what we have been created for. Relationship with God is what we are to seek before all else. We are not written in the book of life by some predestined oracle such that we are merely pawns on God’s chessboard. We are written in the book of life when we say yes to the invitation of building our relationship with Jesus so that we may come to experience and know his Father through the love of the Holy Spirt.
I have been asked multiple times if and told just as often that we are living in the end times. If the person appeared to be open, I would share with them Jesus’ words that only the Father knows the time or the hour. And this statement by Jesus is not a proof that he is indeed not divine because he does not know. It is just as the Catechism states: (see 473-474), he was not sent to reveal this information, he said just as much in Acts 1:7.
What is important to remember in times of trial and tribulation, no matter how challenging, is to anchor ourselves in the love of God. God will not abandon us or leave us orphans, God is our foundation and our refuge, he is our hope and fulfillment. God sent his Son to be one with us in our humanity so that he could experience the fullness of our humanity, experiencing our sinful condition, while not committing sin himself. As he grew and matured as a human being, he was limited in what he knew about his Father. He trusted, as we are to trust him with our lives. Jesus who was willing to follow his Father’s will all the way into the horrific suffering on the Cross did this, so he could not only experience death but through the love of the Holy Spirit conquer death, and we who follow him, will follow him into death and into new life. To be one with him in his divinity.
Viktor Frankl in his book Man’s Search for Meaning wrote:
“We who lived in the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in numbers but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: The last of his freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”
When we face our challenges, let us resist the temptation to curve in upon oneself, to hide in our shell, and/or to put our head in the sand. Instead, let us daily spend time with Jesus in: quiet, his word, spiritual reading, the sacraments, in being willing to see him in one another. Improving our relationship with Jesus is much more important than knowing the time or the hour of the end. The end of the world or the end of our lives on this side of heaven will come, and if we know Jesus, his Father, and the love between them, the Holy Spirit, we will be ready whenever either moment comes.
Jesus built the Church one person, one relationship at a time. He is inviting us to trust in him and to know his love, so that we may be filled with the fullness of his Father. This love we receive, this relationship that we develop, we are to offer and invite others to partake in. Let us choose to breathe, to rest, to receive, and to abide in the love of God no matter the circumstance we find our selves in, so to reflect the light and share the love of Jesus with others.
Photo: One of my first evening Rosary walks here in Vero Beach, back in mid July.