Jesus answered: \u201cWatch out that no one deceives you.\xa0 For many will come in my name, claiming, \u2018I am the Messiah,\u2019 and will deceive many.\xa0 You will hear of wars and rumors of wars, but see to it that you are not alarmed.\xa0 Such things must happen, but the end is still to come.\u201d\xa0 (Matthew 24:4-6)
\xa0
This month, I have been struck, through the assault on the US Capitol, the protests against lockdowns, masks, and vaccines, and the prevalence of numerous conspiracy theories from QAnon and other sources swirling through the internet feeds of people we know\u2014I have been struck through all this that we perhaps haven\u2019t been talking enough about the \u2018end times\u2019 in church.
The words of Jesus from Matthew 24 have sprung to my mind numerous times this past month as I\u2019ve begun more and more to witness the distinctly religious character of some of the disinformation, conspiracy theories, and protests out there, to say nothing of the quite religious way that some hold to these beliefs.\xa0 A number of these threads of disinformation lay a nearly ultimate claim on truth or knowledge that really is the realm of faith more than civics.\xa0 \xa0
Some threads are even more overt.\xa0 Some evangelical leaders in the States have claimed for the past five years that Donald Trump is/was the \u201cLord\u2019s anointed,\u201d which in Hebrew is \u201cmessiah.\u201d\xa0 Hence my reflections on our true Messiah\u2019s words from Matthew 24 where Jesus explicitly warns us, a few times across the chapter, against the deception of false messiah figures.
Now, it can be easy to get caught up in some of these threads of disinformation, especially when we feel distrustful of authorities, feel unheard, have been hurt by those in authority, or receive this stuff as a recommendation from a friend we trust.\xa0 Being an insider to some secret or sensational reality can return to us a feeling of a sense of control over an otherwise chaotic world or can add fuel to our already simmering dislike of those in power.\xa0
But the truth is rarely so sensational\u2014it\u2019s often much more commonplace, sad, or even boring.\xa0 So when we hear of troubling evils in this world or sensational rumors as many of us are right now, Jesus cautions us to hold our ground.\xa0 \u201cDon\u2019t be deceived and don\u2019t be alarmed,\u201d he says.\xa0
All this comes in Jesus\u2019 comments on the end times, something that has tended in Christian circles to generate quite a bit of sensational speculation itself.\xa0 But, I don\u2019t believe that was Jesus\u2019 intent.\xa0 I appreciate how commentator Dale Bruner puts it.\xa0 He says:\xa0
"The signs of the end are not so much decipherable political events (with the single exception of the destruction of Jerusalem, which happened in AD 70) as they are warnings to be level-headed, clear-thinking, and warmly loving Christians in difficult times. Jesus does not so much charge the air with signs as he charges disciples with sobriety. Jesus\u2019 sermon does not intend to create apocalyptic seers but to create spiritual long-distance runners; it does not so much give disciples supernatural knowledge of coming events as it supplies disciples with supernatural endurance for any coming events."
So, hold the line, friends, come what may.\xa0 These are challenging times.\xa0 Tiring times.\xa0 Times when, as Jesus will say just a few verses later, the love of many will grow cold.\xa0 But the truth remains: Jesus is the Lord\u2019s anointed, and no other.\xa0 He is the one who saves us.\xa0 And he is the one who will ultimately set things right and heal our every disease.\xa0 He is our hope in the end.\xa0 So hold firm and place your trust, not in any sensational internet phenomena, but in Jesus.\xa0
And let\u2019s continue to talk with and support each other through this time too as we all seek to hold faithful to the truth, together, in faith.
\xa0