Login / Signup

Free Access

The Times They Are A Changing

Commentary
Back in 1963 Bob Dylan, at that time coming into his own at a folk singer, wrote and recorded a folk song based on an old English ballad, “Lord Randall,” and called it, “The Times They Are A Changing.” As in the ballad, the singer asks, “O where have you been, my blue eyed son, and where have you been, my darling young one?” In Dylan’s song, the sun replies in a series of cryptic and sometimes not-so-cryptic images, concluding each stanza with the refrain, “For the times, they are a changing.”

I like the biblical images that tumble out in the final stanza —

The line it is drawn, the curse it is cast.
The slow one now will later be fast
As the present now will later be past.
The order is rapidly fadin'
And the first one now will later be last
For the times they are a-changin'.


The song warned that history was reaching a crescendo and things were about to change. Indeed, in the early sixties, what with the Cuban Missile Crisis and the constant threat of nuclear war, as well as racial unrest and the call for justice, and the general impatience with the old order, an apocalyptic turning point seemed very timely.

Sixty years later, the song still seems current — because we still live in a time when society is being turned upside down, and the times they still are a-changing. Rather than becoming dated, tied to the early sixties, it seems to have become, instead of timely, timeless.

I bring all this up because the three scriptures we are studying this week also point to the moment as a time of change, timely if you will, but they are also timeless. They are not only addressed to their historical moment, but to ours! The times, they are still a changing.

Jonah 3:1-5, 10
The lectionary invites us to jump past the first two chapters, when the prophet is called by God, refuses the call, flees as far as he can imagine, all to no avail. Wind, storm, and the casting of a lot leads to seeming death and destruction. He is cast into the waters of chaos, swallowed by a large fish, which should lead to total eradication, with nothing left to be buried, something of the ultimate punishment for his disobedience. And yet it is not so. Jonah is vomited ashore, and we see him at last accept God’s call to preach doom to the Ninevites.

The Ninevites delighted in leaving behind in their wake unimaginable carnage, and they also left behind monuments in which they bragged about the brutality they inflicted on other people. I can’t imagine choosing to be a missionary to Nineveh, but the author of this book chose it because Nineveh stood not just for the evil of that time, but the evil that exists in all times, including ours. The Hebrew style and vocabulary strongly suggest that this book was written long after the destruction of Nineveh and the Assyrian Empire, but in every era and in all times there are evil empires, some uncomfortably close to us.

This particular lectionary passage allows us to get past the Big Fish, and your explanation that it was not a whale, and either your spirited defense of the literal truth of the man-swallowing reality denizen of the deep or your pained explanation of whether it all matters or not and get down to brass tacks — God intends to save everyone, including our enemies. Whether it happens or not has something to do with free will, but heaven is not going to segregate us into separate warrens. The times, they are a changing, because there’s no telling with God.

Did you notice there is no “if” in Jonah’s message (if you do not repent Nineveh will be destroyed). It’s a declaration that destruction is coming. Period. No way out. Yet God is able to repent as well as the Ninevites. Nineveh repents from top to bottom. God relents. Jonah takes God’s mercy as a personal insult, and in the end God’s prophet is invited to rethink God, the way God acts, and his own vision and version of God. Nineveh changed. (Unbelievable). God changed (inconceivable!). How about us? (Why do I have to?)

In our world today, there are nations and peoples for whom repentance seems unlikely, or even impossible. In the midst of our own prophetic witness let us remember that we are not exempted in these changing times from confessing our own sins and asking that our own hearts be changed.

1 Corinthians 7:29-31
You know, the Apostle Paul has been trying to explain in his first letter to the house churches in Corinth that the times, they are a changing, and in 1 Corinthians 7:29-31 he gives a few suggestions about how we should act in this new age. Some may think this is a dead letter. Nearly two thousand years have gone by and we’re still here, so why do we have to act as if “the appointed time has grown short,” or that “the present form of this world is passing away.” Jesus didn’t immediately return. No need to put off a wedding engagement, nor cease buying and selling. Indeed, it’s hard not to laugh (or to cry) when, as happened over a decade ago, some self-appointed prophet proclaims the exact day of the end of the world, and his disciples sell their houses and possessions in order to get his message out, and then find themselves broke and homeless when the appointed day comes and goes (though the prophet himself doesn’t seem to have missed any meals along the way). Indeed, words like these, depending on the way they’re presented, can turn earnest hearts away from Jesus.

Yet for many of us, the times haven’t changed enough, or maybe what I mean to say, is we haven’t done any changing. We’re still living by the old rules. Marriage, intimacy, mourning, rejoicing, buying, selling — none of this has to change yet it all has to change, because the present form of this world is passing away. Time is growing short. As one nonagenarian in my congregation likes to say, “Every day is judgement day for somebody.” Jesus calls us to a radically different way of living, living in the world, but remaining decidedly not of it. I can still plan a vacation, buy gifts for Christmas, think about what I want to cook for dinner, do some planning (jointly, with my spouse) for our fiftieth wedding anniversary which is still over a year away, and enjoying living in this moment, while never losing sight of the radically different way of living we are called to share in Jesus.

Mark 1:14-20
In Mark 1:14-20 Jesus announces, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent and believe in the good news.” History — sacred history, Roman history, Judean history — has come to the point. Jesus calls disciples and expects them to act NOW because there is no moment like then. It’s the same now. The kingdom of God is come near — and the Greek word near allows both the meaning of right next to us as well as close but on the way — and we must be prepared to drop everything and follow Jesus in this moment.

This passage has a trigger — the arrest of John the Baptist. It’s not that the ministry of Jesus is tied to current events. But current events make it clear that we don’t start living differently, repenting and believing in the good news of Christ Jesus — then we are condemned to live according to the dictates of the false prophets, phony Caesars, and misguided values of the world around us.

What follows this initial proclamation of the good news by Jesus is the calling of the first disciples — and their response! I think of this wonderful passage in The Lord of the Rings, where Fordo and Sam take a short rest in the darkness of a corridor outside of Mordor, and Sam speculates about how being in a story has turned out to be much different than he imagined when he used to love listening to stories. Speaking of those who ended up in a great tale, Sam said:

Folk seems to have just landed in them, usually — their paths were laid that way, as you put it. But I expect they had lots of chances, like us, of turning back, only they didn’t. And if they had, we shouldn’t know, because they’d have been forgotten.” (The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, chapter 8, The Stairs of Cirith Ungol.)

Did Jesus ask others before Simon, Andrew, James, and John? Perhaps he did. If so, we don’t know their names because they refused. For that matter, did Gabriel visit another young woman before Mary? Those who turn aside from God’s call may have a more comfortable story, but maybe not as glorious!

The kingdom of God has come near, Jesus says. (and here I’m translating) “The season is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is near — (near to us physically, near as in “still on the way but getting closer!”) Change your minds and believe in the good news.”

The Greek word kairos refers not to chronological time, but to the change in a season, a way of saying the times, they are a changing! It has started, we’re not finished, but it’s happening, right now. The nearness of the kingdom of God means it’s all around us, and we’re living it, but it’s not actually quite physically present with us — yet!  Repenting is not simply the rejection of what happened in the past. It’s a turning around (something like the Hebrew word shuv, used for the same purpose), a change in orientation and direction, the beginning of a journey back to where we belonged all along. And believing means acting.

If we have changed our orientation and are facing in a different direction, if we truly believe the kingdom of God is all around us, yet it’s not quite here but on the way, if the season of God’s grace and love is all around us, whether those we share this world with perceive it or not, then not only the times are a changing, but so are our hearts!
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Christ the King Sunday
29 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
27 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Thanksgiving
14 – Sermons
80+ – Illustrations / Stories
18 – Children's Sermons / Resources
10 – Worship Resources
18 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Advent 1
30 – Sermons
90+ – Illustrations / Stories
33 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
There was an incident some years ago, when an elderly lady in some village parish in England was so fed up with the sound of the church bells ringing, that she took an axe and hacked her way through the oak door of the church. Once inside, she sliced through the bell ropes, rendering the bells permanently silent. The media loved it. There were articles in all the papers and the culprit appeared on television. The Church was less enthusiastic - and took her to court.

SermonStudio

Stan Purdum
(See The Epiphany Of Our Lord, Cycle A, and The Epiphany Of Our Lord, Cycle B, for alternative approaches.)

This psalm is a prayer for the king, and it asks God to extend divine rule over earth through the anointed one who sits on the throne. Although the inscription says the psalm is about Solomon, that is a scribal addition. More likely, this was a general prayer used for more than one of the Davidic kings, and it shows the common belief that the monarch would be the instrument through which God acted.

Mark Wm. Radecke
In her Pulitzer Prize winning book, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, author Annie Dillard recalls this chilling remembrance:
Paul E. Robinson
There is so much uncertainty in life that most of us look hard and long for as many "sure things" as we can find. A fisherman goes back again and again to that hole that always produces fish and leaves on his line that special lure that always does the trick. The fishing hole and the lure are sure things.
John N. Brittain
If you don't know that Christmas is a couple of weeks away, you must be living underground. And you must have no contact with any children. And you cannot have been to a mall, Wal-Mart, Walgreen's, or any other chain store since three weeks before Halloween. Christmas, probably more than any other day in the contemporary American calendar, is one of those days where impact really stretches the envelope of time not just -- like some great tragedy -- after the fact, but also in anticipation.
Tony S. Everett
One hot summer day, a young pastor decided to change the oil in his automobile for the very first time in his life. He had purchased five quarts of oil, a filter wrench, and a bucket in which to drain the used oil. He carefully and gently drove the car onto the shiny, yellow ramps and eased his way underneath his vehicle.

Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
We've gathered here today on the second Sunday of Advent to continue to prepare ourselves for the coming of our Lord. This task of preparing for the arrival of the Lord is not as easy as we might think it is. As in other areas of life, we find ourselves having to unlearn some things in order to see what the scriptures teach us about God's act in Jesus. We've let the culture around us snatch away much of the meaning of the birth of the Savior. We have to reclaim that meaning if we really want to be ready for what God is still doing in the miracle of Christmas.
Timothy J. Smith
As we make our way through Advent inching closer to Christmas, our days are consumed with many tasks. Our "to do" list grows each day. At times we are often out of breath and wondering if we will complete everything on our list before Christmas Day. We gather on this Second Sunday in Advent to spiritually prepare for what God has done and continues to do in our lives and in our world. We have been too busy with all our activities and tasks so that we are in danger of missing out on the miracle of Christmas.
Frank Luchsinger
For his sixth grade year his family moved to the new community. They made careful preparations for the husky, freckle-faced redhead to fit in smoothly. They had meetings with teachers and principal, and practiced the route to the very school doors he would enter on the first day. "Right here will be lists of the classes with the teachers' names and students. Come to these doors and find your name on a list and go to that class."
R. Glen Miles
The text we have heard today is pleasant, maybe even reassuring. I wonder, though, how many of us will give it any significance once we leave the sanctuary? Do the words of Isaiah have any real meaning for us, or are they just far away thoughts from a time that no longer has any relevance for us today?
Susan R. Andrews
When our children were small, a nice church lady named Chris made them a child--friendly creche. All the actors in this stable drama are soft and squishy and durable - perfect to touch and rearrange - or toss across the living room in a fit of toddler frenzy. The Joseph character has always been my favorite because he looks a little wild - red yarn spiking out from his head, giving him an odd look of energy. In fact, I have renamed this character John the Baptist and in my mind substituted one of the innocuous shepherds for the more staid and solid Joseph. Why this invention?
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Litany Of Confession
P: Wild animals flourish around us,
C: and prowl within us.
P: Injustice and inequity surround us,
C: and hide within us.
P: Vanity and pride divide us,
C: and fester within us.

A time for silent reflection

P: O God, may your love free us,
C: and may your Spirit live in us. Amen.

Prayer Of The Day

Emphasis Preaching Journal

The world and the church approach the "Mass of Christ" with a different pace, and "atmospheres" that are worlds apart. Out in the "highways and byways" tinsel and "sparkly" are everywhere, in the churches the color of the paraments and stoles is a somber violet, or in some places, blue. Through the stores and on the airwaves carols and pop tunes are up-beat, aimed at getting the spirits festive, and the pocketbooks and wallets are open.
David Kalas
In the United States just now, we're in the period between the election and the inauguration of the president. In our system, by the time they are inaugurated, our leaders are fairly familiar faces. Months of primaries and campaigning, debates and speeches, and conventions and commercials, all contribute to a fairly high degree of familiarity. We may wonder what kind of president someone will be, but we have certainly heard many promises, and we have had plenty of opportunities to get to know the candidate.
During my growing up years we had no family automobile. My father walked to work and home again. During World War II his routine at the local milk plant was somewhat irregular. As children we tried to guess when he would come. If we were wrong, we didn't worry. He always came.
Wayne Brouwer
Schuyler Rhodes
What difference does my life make for others around me? That question is addressed in three related ways in our texts for today. Isaiah raised the emblem of the Servant of Yahweh as representative for what life is supposed to be, even in the middle of a chaotic and cruel world. Paul mirrors that reflection as he announces the fulfillment of Isaiah's vision in the coming of Jesus and the expansion of its redemptive effects beyond the Jewish community to the Gentile world as well.

CSSPlus

I baptize you with water for repentance, but one who is more powerful than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to carry his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. (v. 11)

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL