A Little While
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Grace and peace to you from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ!
A few years ago (more than 15), we
were headed to Gillette, Wyoming for a wedding. My grandson Abbott started
fussing, so I just said: “Ten more minutes and then we’ll stop.” Much to my
surprise, he quieted down. And in ten minutes, I kept my promise. After a quick
diaper change and a bottle of formula he was good to go for another 200 miles. Then
he started fussing again. Since it worked the first time, I decided to try the
same line again: “Ten more minutes.” It seemed to work so well that I used it
over and over again the whole trip.
Now as biased as I may be about my
grandchildren’s advanced abilities, I realize Abbott didn’t actually understand
what I was saying. He was only four months old at the time. But still that
voice seemed to reassure him. And the running joke seemed to pass the time more
quickly for us adults than a crying baby. At the same time, it was a reminder
to me that the day would come when Abbott would ask that age-old question: “How
much longer until we get there?”
One of the keys to good communication is to
speak to someone’s level. Not too far below as to be condescending. Not too far
above, as to be unintelligible. What do you say to a young child who has no
real concept of time or distance? You tell them: “We’ll be there in a little
while.” They don’t really understand “10 minutes” or “15 miles,” but they do
learn to quickly understand “a little while.”
And that’s what Jesus is doing in
our text. He’s talking to His disciples, who are like young children
theologically speaking. They don’t understand His plan of salvation. They don’t
realize that God, who is not bound by time and space, looks at time and space
in a much different way than we mortal, finite men and women. Besides that,
Jesus really doesn’t have too much time left with them and He’s still got so
much to say—more than they can understand and process right now.
But no worries about their recalling
and understanding in the near future. Jesus promises the Holy Spirit who will
lead and guide them into all truth. What Jesus has from the Father, He gives by
the way of the Spirit. And the Holy Spirit leads the apostles to pass on that
Word to the Church. From Father to Son through Holy Spirit by way of the
apostles and the Church passed along through the centuries to you today. And by
God’s grace, to His people throughout all eternity.
Jesus prepares His disciples for His
soon-to-come death and resurrection. But the death of a loved one is never
easily understood, much less accepted; and though eternity is written in our
hearts, it’s impossible for us to wrap our minds around it. So, to explain to
them what is going to be happening in the next few terrible days and in the
glorious age to come, Jesus simply says to His childlike apostles: “A little
while, and you will see Me no longer; and again a little while, and you will
see Me… because I am going to the Father.”
“A little while.” We’ll come back to
that phrase. But before we do, we need to understand the context in which Jesus
speaks these words. “A little while” could be a few days if you’re waiting for
Christmas, but not much more than a minute or two if you really have to use the
restroom. And so, it’s helpful for us to have a better understanding of the
situation Jesus and His disciples faced.
As Jesus speaks with His disciples,
they are still laboring under messianic misconceptions. They are also
bewildered by Jesus’ change in mood since Sunday, when He had purposely
fulfilled messianic prophecy and entered the city to acclaim as the Son of
David. He seemed ready to establish His kingdom, but now He is talking about
going and suffering and dying. He’s telling them that they will be denying Him
and be put out of the synagogues and killed. And if that isn’t enough, Jesus is
trying to explain the work of the Holy Spirit, the interaction of the Trinity,
and indicates that He has many other things on His mind He wants to share with
them, but they are more than they can bear at this time.
No wonder they are confused and
bewildered. Indeed, their hearts are breaking. They’ve left their homes behind.
They’ve given up everything just to be with Jesus. And being with Him is enough.
Hearing that voice, sometimes so gentle and sometimes so stern. Looking into
those eyes, sometimes filled with laughter and sometimes sparking in anger. Jesus
is their everything. But now He says He is going away, and they can’t come with
Him. Their hearts are breaking.
Jesus tries to help them understand.
“I am not leaving forever. I am going away. Going to the Father. You will not
see Me. But then you will see Me. Truly you will have sorrow. You will cry and
weep and the world will go on oblivious to your pain. But your sorrow will be
turned into joy.” In a little while, by the close of that day, Jesus would be
dead and buried. And then, in a little while—three days—He would rise, and they
would see Him again, and their sorrow would turn to joy.
Would that all our sorrows lasted
but three days! Wouldn’t that be nice? Wouldn’t be great if all the pain and
suffering and loss of this life could be packed into a Friday and over with by
Sunday? In a very real and profound sense, it has! It is all there in the death
and resurrection of Jesus. His death is your death, your loved one’s death, the
death of the world. His life is your life, your loved one’s life, the life of
the world. “Behold, I make all things new,” Jesus says. And He does it by His
suffering, death, and resurrection.
But all that’s a lot to take in at
once. And the look on the disciples’ faces must tell Jesus that they still
don’t get it. So, He uses an analogy of a woman about to give birth: “Look,
it’s like this. A woman, when she is in labor has sorrow because her hour has
come. She’s in pain. It hurts. It hurts badly. But it doesn’t hurt forever. No.
There comes the moment when the little baby is laid beside her and she looks
into his face. She embraces him in her bosom and her joy is total
and complete. The sorrow and pain are forgotten. The anguish is gone. Her
heart swells with joy that a human being has been born… her little baby.”
Jesus looks around at them. “Do you
understand now?” There is the dawning of understanding on their faces, but they
are still not sure of its application. So He goes on: “That’s how it is with
you and Me. Now you will have sorrow. Your gut will feel as though it’s being
ripped in two. Your heart will feel like it’s being pulled out. You will cry
out in your pain. Because of what’s about to happen to Me. You are going to be
alone for a little while. Do you hear that? ‘A little while.’ Cling to that. Through
the days ahead keep saying to yourself: ‘A little while, a little while.’
Because I will see you again. Though death bars the way, though the grave
closes its gates upon Me, I will see you again. Me. The One speaking to you now.
Not a ghost. But Me, the flesh and blood Me that you have come to know.
“You will see Me again when the time
of sorrow is through and when you do… and when you do… such joy will fill your
heart…. such happiness will flood your very being that you will be forever
changed. You will have planted in you a joy that no one and nothing has the
power to take away. Because you will see Me again. And then you will understand.
Joy overflowing. Joy abounding.”
Their heads are nodding now. Pain is
ahead. Bad pain. The pain of their own weakness, their own denials and running
away. The pain of watching their Beloved hanging on the tree in agony. Knowing
that it is their sin and the world’s sin that puts Him there. Knowing that
there is nothing they can do to help Him. Having to stand by and watch Him die,
utterly helpless and alone. Pain indeed. But it isn’t forever. Not for Him, and
not for them, and not for you. It is only for a little while. And when it is
over, there is the promise of joy that never ends in Jesus’ presence.
That joy is theirs when Jesus comes
and stands among them and says to them: “Peace be with you!” And their
hearts burst with joy as they see it is indeed the Lord, risen and alive with
life that never ends. And the promise He brings them is that He is only the
firstfruits. There are many to follow. He, who conquered death, will set all
His children free from its power.
What joy! Abounding and overflowing.
It is indeed a joy that no one can take away from them… no circumstances can
rob of them.
They go out into the world a
laughing, joy-filled, celebrating people. They march out into the world where
death and the sadness of sin hold sway, and by the news they bring they set
free people who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death. Everywhere they go
they announce: “Your sins have been answered for completely. Your guilt has
been taken away. Your death has been destroyed. You are loved by God in His Son.
Repent and believe! Taste and see! Your Lord is good to you!”
And they do not forget to tell the
rest of the message: how to walk through all the sorrows of this world. Life
under the cross is real life. There is genuine suffering, heartache,
brokenness, and death. There are tears and disappointments and grief. Luther
called it the “theology of the cross,” and he pointed to such times of testing,
tentatio, along with prayer and
meditation, as the chief components for learning to truly understand God and
His Word. God hides Himself in suffering, and promises to use all things—even
our suffering!—for our good.
Still, any attempt at a Pollyannaish
attitude toward life in this world is foolhardy, even destructive. Can you
imagine telling a woman about childbirth and leaving out the birth pains? Of
course not! It would be downright dishonest. With pregnancy, as with life
itself, it’s the whole thing or nothing at all. You have to embrace all of it. If
you are going to embrace life, you must also embrace death. If you are to know
the joy of the resurrection, you must endure the cross.
The Christian has one foot in Good
Friday and the other on Easter Sunday—now and not yet. That’s the clear message
of our text from the Revelation: Our present sufferings are not worth comparing
with the glory that will be revealed in us. And that glory is already present
in a hidden, sublime way, in, with, and under our present sufferings.
The apostles tell us flat
out: “In this world you will have trouble.” All kinds of troubles. In this
world your heart will break. You will grow old and begin to fall apart. You
will have disappointment and heartache and trial upon trial. You will watch
your closest friend turn his back on you just when you need him the most. You
will fail so miserably that you’ll want to crawl into a hole and die because of
the shame and guilt. You will suffer the consequences of your own sinful
actions and the decisions of others. You will watch helplessly as a loved one
struggles with a terrible disease… perhaps, even dies. You will face the day of
your own death. But do not despair. Learn to say to yourself: “A little
while.”
And a little while, and it will be
over. For it is true that Jesus will see you again. He will see you again in
His kingdom, on that day when He wipes the tears from all eyes and comforts and
heals all hurts and gives eternal joy to His people. In the meantime, remember
that we are God’s children now, and what we will be hasn’t been revealed yet. And
when our hearts are overwhelmed and the joy of Jesus Christ seems far away, we
learn to say inside: “A little while, it’s just for a little while.” We
lift our eyes of faith to the heavenly City and see the joy and feasting that
awaits us up ahead and so we go on. We journey towards the goal.
And for the moments when we are so
weary that we do not know if we can go on, when we are bone tired and the
thought of our own failures to win the battles against the flesh and our
betrayals of the new life in Christ and our sins weigh heavy and we feel
discouraged and down, Jesus provides us with a heavenly meal. He says to us: “Eat and drink. My body and My blood
for you… to get you through. I will strengthen you as you walk the road until
the day arrives when you need this food no more, when you will sit down with Me
at the Table of the Father’s household. Your place is waiting, child. Think of
it, and rejoice. It’s only for a little while that the sorrow lasts; the joy
goes on forever.”
That’s the motto, then,
people loved by God. The motto of us pilgrims. Carry it in your hearts. It is
the word Jesus gives His friends to get them through the hour of sorrow. Words
from the lips of Jesus to carry in your hearts always. Say: “A little while.” A
little while of sorrows… then an eternity of joy.
How do you know this is
true? Jesus died on the cross for your sins. “A little while” later—three days,
in fact—He rose from the dead. Before ascending to the right hand of the Father
He promised He will return… in a little while.
As I mentioned earlier, God’s perspective of
time is much different than ours. In this case “a little while” is nearing
2,000 years. But then as St. Peter reminds us, “with the Lord one day is as a
thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. The Lord is not slow to
fulfill His promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not
wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance” (2 Peter
3:8-9).
Christ will return. He
has promised, and He always keeps His promises. Even now, as you await that
day, He comes to you in His Word and Sacraments with His grace and love. Though
there will be sorrow for “a little while,” no one can take this joy from you:
For Jesus’ sake, His suffering, death and resurrection, you are forgiven for
all your sins.
In the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the
Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a
publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
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