“Little
children, it is the last time” (1Jn. 2:18). True Christianity
is a pronouncement of the end; not an end unto death but an end unto
never ending Life. What then is ending? The corrupt system of sin and
death that is proliferated and energized through human
rebellion against truth in Christ Jesus. Christ our Lord came to put
an end to this tyranny of destruction. The good creation that God
Himself called into existence from nothing languishes under the evil
yoke of sin that mankind has willingly subjected himself and creation
to through rebellion and self-exaltation (cf. Rom 8:19-22). But not
without hope, it awaits the refashioning of all things at the end,
the restoration of incorruption and the victory of Life and Truth.
Yet St. John the Theologian proclaims, “The world is passing
away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides
forever” (1 Jn 2:17). The world, the system of rebellion
against God, is passing away, it is ending, it is its last time. And
its death throes are visible in rippling effects which are growing
with every passing day. The world is passing because, as a system, it
has rejected Christ. Only Christ is Eternal. Christ announces to the
world: I have come (the first time) not to condemn but to save (Jn.
3:17, 12:31); I have come to bring you from death to life, so that
you shall not perish (Jn 6:33,51); I am the light of the world (Jn
9:5); cease your rebellion and be healed. Essentially Christ
announces: I have come to bring an end to the darkness and death that
have bound you. The tragedy is:“Light came into the world, and
men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil”
(Jn. 3:19). The world system was - and is - too in love with its own
darkness and bondage, it fears the freedom proclaimed by Christ
Jesus. What would we do without the bonds we have grown so use too,
indeed that we have grown to love? Fear then turns to hatred, for the
love of bondage can be nothing but hatred. The world system has
turned against the very One Who has come to heal, save, and bring
life to all. Thus our Lord Jesus said, “The world … hates Me”
(Jn 7:7, 15:28), “I am not of this world” (Jn. 8:23), and
He tells His disciples that the world will rejoice in His seeming
destruction (cf. Jn. 16:20). Christ proclaimed the end of death and
darkness and the beginning of Life and Light. He ratified this
freedom with His own Blood, destroying death and sin, rising on the
third day as the Victorious King. “Remembering the saving
commandments, and all those things that have come to pass for us: the
cross, the tomb, the resurrection on the third day, the ascension
into heaven, the sitting at the right hand of God the Father, and the
second glorious coming again”, in truth these are the events of
the eschaton.
True Christianity is mandated with the same dramatic eschatological proclamation. For all those who have been truly born from above through water and in Spirit (Jn 3: 5) have begun to put on Christ (Gal 3:27, Rom 13:14), to acquire the mind of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16), and thereby crucifying the flesh and its lusts (Gal. 5:24). The Body of Christ, the fulness of Him who fills all things (Eph. 1:23), continues Christ's proclamation to the world: Come, abandon death and darkness, throw off the totalitarian dictates of sin and the devil, they are passing away into the never ending destruction of Gehenna. Christ has come to set you free. But Christ Jesus soberly warns his Church, “If the world hates you, you know that it hated Me before it hated you. If you were of this world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of this world, therefore the world hates you ... If they kept My words, they will keep yours also” (Jn 15:18-20). The Theologian instructs, “Do not marvel, my brethren, if the world hates you. We know that we have passed from death to life” (1 Jn 3:13-14). It is a difficult thing to endure hatred. But there seems to be only two general responses (most of all according to St. John) to this proclamation of end: Hatred or love, rejection or acceptance. Thus the world that continues in darkness seeks to stop up the mouths of those proclaiming its end.
True
Christianity in its essence is eschatological. Indeed it must be.
Christ calls His followers out of the world, which insists on
grasping relentlessly to its bonds. Why? Because these bonds will
destroy true Life, they will burden the soul and keep it in bondage
to death. “Where your treasure is there your heart shall be
also,” Christ the Lord reveals (Mat. 6:21). From the very
beginning of this proclamation of the end, the consciousness of the
Church has been that She is no longer part of this phantom reality of
the world. She has become the ambassador of the World without
end. Thus She warns those who call Her their home and mother, “Many
lose their true home because they have greater love for the road that
leads them there. Let us not love the road rather than our home, in
case we should lose our eternal home … Let us keep to this
principle, therefore, that we should live as travelers and pilgrims
on the road … free of lusts and earthly desires, but let us fill
our mind with heavenly and spiritual forms” (St. Columbanus).
St. Peter calls us to remember, “Beloved, I beg you as
sojourners and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts which war against
the soul” (1 Pet. 2:11). Elder Sophrony warns, "The tragedy of our times lies in our almost complete unawareness, or unmindfulness, that there are two kingdoms, the temporal and the eternal. We would build the Kingdom of heaven on earth, rejecting all idea of resurrection or eternity." Normalizing and acceptance of sin
reveals a complete lack of true love, it betrays a cancer like
infiltration by this world system. When Christianity becomes an
integral institution of this fallen world something is dreadfully
wrong. When it emulates the fashions and mentalities of mutable
fallenness as standards of governing principles it has completely
failed and lost its way. Indeed it is no longer by any means
Christian. Not that the Church can ever be corrupted in Her essence,
there She will remain pure and spotless to the end, and we as believers are called to enter into and conform our lives to that
realm of purity. But those who would call themselves Christians and
yet refuse to heed the pure call of Christ in the bosom of the Church
are but building permanent structures on the road; and shall share in
its destiny. When eschatological vision fails, Christianity becomes a
hallow ringing of nicety, an empty gonging of ritual, a sterile
structure, it becomes temporal institution using an eternal message
for passing gain. Then every woe spoken by Christ to the pharisees
aptly applies in fulness (cf. Mat 23:13-36). Therefore it is written,
“Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with
God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of this world makes
himself an enemy of God” (James 5:4).
True
Christianity is always an apocalyptic vision of the eschaton. Thus
the book of the age is the book known as Revelation, or the
Apocalypse. It is the record of this vision of the Church. The
revelation of the struggle of this dying age with the coming
Eternal One. It is the great and final Exodus, the last journey of
the Children of God from the midst of Egypt and Babylon, which was
inaugurated by Christ Himself and will be consummated by Him. “Come
out from among them and be separate, says the Lord” (2 Cor.
6:17). St. Ignatius of Antioch radically councils, “Do not talk
about Jesus Christ while you desire the world.” It may be that
one of the reasons the book of Revelation is not read liturgically in
the Church is because the Church Herself is the book of Revelation.
In Her, as in Her Bridegroom, the proclamation of the end continues
as the existent reality. Thus we see reflected in the very structure of the
Church and Her worship the Apocalypse. The
Church is not simply a reflection of the coming age, She is the
unfolding revelation and reality of that eternal age in this
withering one. The message is clear: this
world is ending and those who cling to it will share the same fate.
Thus all believers are constantly reminded by every means possible to
lift their hearts and eyes unto the heavens, and by doing so afford
the world the only true hope and help possible. This vital
eschatological experience must never cease to be the heart of the
true Christian proclamation to the world, could it ever truly not be?
If those claiming Christ lose this message they simply become members
of this world system but with "Jesus" tags, salt which has become
insipid. Those who are Christians are throwing off this world and its
hegemony of lusts and passions, they have left behind this decrepit
land of bondage and have transferred their “citizenship (to)
heaven, from which we also eagerly await the Savior, the Lord
Jesus” (Phil. 3:20). Yet Christ extends His mercy to all,
compassionately delaying the culmination of the end so that humanity
may repent (cf. 1 Pet. 3:1-9). He has not left the world without
testimony, nor will He until that great and Final Day. Therefore the
Church longs for Her Savior, and Her unending cry is the culmination
of the age, the exclamation of the end, the eschaton: “And the
Spirit and the bride say, 'Come!' And let him who hears say, 'Come!'
And let him who thirsts come. Whoever desires, let him take the
waters of life freely … Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus”
(Rev. 22:17, 20).
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