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Braaten - The Last Things (CC)

The document discusses Christian eschatology, or beliefs about the end times. It explains that Christianity began as an eschatological faith, influenced by Jewish apocalypticism. While Jesus preached of the coming kingdom of God, after his death and resurrection the church formed as the community living between his first and second comings. The document examines different approaches to interpreting eschatological texts and argues they are best understood as pointing to real future events with Christ at the center.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views3 pages

Braaten - The Last Things (CC)

The document discusses Christian eschatology, or beliefs about the end times. It explains that Christianity began as an eschatological faith, influenced by Jewish apocalypticism. While Jesus preached of the coming kingdom of God, after his death and resurrection the church formed as the community living between his first and second comings. The document examines different approaches to interpreting eschatological texts and argues they are best understood as pointing to real future events with Christ at the center.

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pishoi gerges
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Last Things

By Carl E. Braaten

The Apostles Creed ends with a statement of Christian belief in "the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting." The second article of the Nicene Creed states that Jesus Christ "will
5come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom will have no end."
Eschatology, from the Greek word eschata, meaning "last things," is the technical word for
the Christian vision of the future end and fulfillment of history and the cosmos.

Christianity began as an eschatological faith, but it didn't start from scratch. Eschatology was
also a constitutive part of the story of salvation in the Old Testament. The prophets announced
10the day of Yahweh, the coming of the Messiah, and the new Jerusalem, looking forward to a
new and different future in history. In the Book of Daniel and in the period between the two
testaments Jewish eschatology became apocalyptic. In apocalyptic writings we find visions of
a wholly new future of history, a new age above and beyond this one.

Jesus' message of the kingdom can best be understood within the milieu of late Jewish
15apocalypticism. In the world of apocalyptic literature we read about Satan, angels, demons,
dragons, aeons, signs of the times, the millennium, cosmic catastrophes, resurrection of the
dead, the last judgment, the end of history and the final restitution of all things in God. All
these together add up to what the tradition has called "the last things." Who can understand
what they mean?

20Jesus said, "Let anyone with ears to hear, listen!" In the Apocalypse of John we read, "Let
anyone who has an ear listen to what the Spirit is saying to the churches." Apocalypse means
revelation, hence the unveiling of hidden mysteries and meanings. It takes something like
apocalyptic imagination to grasp "the things which are above."

There are three unsatisfactory approaches to the "last things": 1) to construct a travelogue or
25literal timetable of events that will happen soon or in the distant future; 2) to interpret the
images as metaphorical expressions of religious experiences and inner states of mind
unrelated to real history and the future; 3) to read apocalyptic literature as social commentary
or subversive rhetoric of an oppressed community in times of persecution.

Though there may be some truth in all these approaches, the great tradition of church teaching
30has controlled eschatology by keeping Christ at the center. The central motif of Jesus'
message was the kingdom of God. This was a favorite theme of the social gospel movement;
it symbolized social values and political ideals worthy of human striving. Eschatology was
reduced to ethics. In that era, Albert Schweitzer gained theological fame by recovering the
full eschatological meaning of Jesus' preaching of the kingdom of God. The kingdom is the
35power of God breaking in upon the present world, not the crowning fulfillment of its progress.
It comes on God's own terms, not as a result of human cooperation and calculation.

Jesus began his ministry announcing that the day had come for God to begin his reign, that his
kingdom was about to be realized in history. For his Jewish audience this could only mean
that the eschaton was at hand. The hope of Israel was that when God comes in the power of
40his rule, the world will really change. The arrival of God's kingdom will bring a turnabout of
all things, putting an end to misery, poverty and even death.

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Jesus did not merely announce the coming of a future kingdom, like one of the Jewish
prophets. For Jesus the kingdom of God was at once a present reality, functioning in his very
person and ministry, and a promise of fulfillment still to come. Then suddenly something
surprising happened: Jesus was crushed by the ruling powers of his day. The fulfillment he
5expected was shattered on the cross. But soon after the crucifixion there arose a core of
friends and followers witnessing to the reappearance of the crucified Jesus. This was good
news -- God had raised Jesus from the grave, a kind of event that Jews expected to happen
only at the end of time. Surely, this must be an eschatological occurrence, the beginning of
the end. Henceforth, for Christians resurrection hope will be forever founded on the person of
10Jesus, the Messiah of God, the bringer of the new age. "Christ the first fruits, then at his
coming those who belong to Christ" (1 Cor. 15:23).

The paradox for Christians is that if the kingdom has already arrived in Jesus, why do things
look pretty much the same A.D. as B.C.? The hope of Israel was that when the Messiah came,
God would at last destroy all resistance to a permanent establishment of peace, justice and
15freedom. That would spell an apocalyptic transformation of the [1175] world. So why, since
the Messiah has come, has the world not changed in a fundamental way?

The answer is that it has; world history has been changed by the missionary proclamation of
the church. The good news of the kingdom has been preached throughout the world, the Bible
has been translated into very tongue, and churches have been planted among the nations.
20Somewhat cynically, Alfred Loisy said: "Jesus preached the kingdom of God; but what came
was the church." The church was founded at Pentecost as the community of the endtime. The
community of believers lives between the times, between the first coming of the Messiah
Jesus in the flesh and his final advent in glory. The future eschatological kingdom is already
present for those who are in Christ. In worship believers sing of a "foretaste of the feast to
25come."

The Revelation of John identifies Christ as the One "who is and who was and who is to come"
(Rev. 1:4, 8). It is noteworthy that the present tense comes first. The risen Christ is really
present in the community of believers according to the Spirit. However, the risen Christ in
none other than Jesus of Nazareth whose story the Gospels tell. And the crucified Jesus who
30is the risen Christ will come again in glory to judge the world. Christ is the Alpha and the
Omega, the beginning and end of all things, the Lord of history and the cosmos.

The "last things" are not like a runaway train that takes off on its own. Everything must be
tethered to Christ. He is the basis of resurrection hope. His is the promise of eternal life. All
things will be subject to his judgment in the end. There is no way to the Father's heart except
35through the Son. All the so-called "last things" cohere in Christ. Faith generates hope that in
the end the power that God displayed in raising Jesus from the dead will transform the world
and triumph over the forces of sin, death and the devil.

Meanwhile, before the "last things" come to pass, Christ is present in his church as the head of
the body. Christ indwells the church by virtue of his Spirit. Under his authority the renewal of
40the world is under way through the missionary witness of his people. But a struggle is going
on between divine and antidivine forces. Even though their days are numbered, Satan and his
servants are on the loose, making martyrs of those who witness to the victory of Christ. That
is why the church lives in anticipation of the parousia of its Lord, who cries out: "Surely I am
coming soon." And the church responds in its eucharistic prayer, "Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!"
45(Rev. 22:20).

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For many today, the images of biblical hope seem to have lost their magnetic pull. The sense
of transcendence remains strong enough perhaps to say no to the way things are, but too weak
to construct a positive scenario of the future. In modern existentialism only a sense of crisis
prevails; nothing but nothingness looms in the future. Marx does offer a revolutionary model
5of utopian hope – the oppressive system can be changed – but this ideology too has failed.
Theologians have looked to biblical eschatology for a hopeful alternative. In doing so they
have also worried about whether or how it is still possible and relevant to believe in the
eschatology of the Bible.

Can we who live in a secular age governed by a scientific mind-set still share the hopes of the
10first believers, using their language and idioms? All sorts of interpretive schemes have been
tried to purge the Bible of its supposedly naive images of the future. We cannot go into them
here, but they have one thing in common – all references to the future are converted to the
present. The parousia, the end of the world, the final judgment, the second coming of Christ,
the resurrection of the dead, and everlasting life – all these are understood not as pointing to
15real events or a real future. Instead they serve merely as signals of transcendence, symbols of
existential experience or roads to ethical seriousness.

There is a better way. The time-dimension of the future not only belongs to biblical
eschatology, it is also deeply rooted in the structure of human being. Not only are hopes the
genes of biblical faith, but hope is essential to meaningful existence. It is to the lasting credit
20of the "theology of hope" (as developed by Wolfhart Pannenberg and Juergen Moltmann) that
it discovered the profound connections between biblical eschatology and the phenomenon of
hope. Perhaps now is a good time to dust off the old books of the 1960s that reclaimed what
the Bible says about the history of promise, resurrection hope, the future of Christ and the end
of the world.

25Source: The Christian Century, Vol. 116, Issue 33, December 1, 1999, pp. 1174-75.

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