Sunday, November 09, 2025

Pentecost 22, Year C (2025)

Job 19: 23–27a / Psalm 17: 1–9 / II Thessalonians 2: 1–5, 13–17 / Luke 20: 27–38

This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, November 9, 2025 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“WE ALL WANT TO KNOW: WHAT DOES THE FUTURE LOOK LIKE?”

(Homily texts: Job 19: 23–27a; II Thessalonians 2: 1–5, 13–17; and Luke 20: 27–38)

Perhaps it’s because we human beings have a need for safety and security (after all, having those needs helps to keep us alive!), we want to know as much as we can about what will happen tomorrow, the next week, the next month, the next year, or – for that matter – in eternity once this life is done.

Countless numbers of writers and prognosticators in the media rely on this deep-seated need, telling us what trends they see, what the likely outcome is likely to be, and – in many cases – whipping up needless concern and even hysteria in the process. The newspapers are filled with the output of these seers of the future, as is the internet, and television news programs.

Not to be left out, religious leaders of various sorts also tell us about future events, managing – in the process – to whip up hysteria over future events which (they say) will prove to be catastrophic. Perhaps, in an attempt to calm the hysteria that leaders who are prophets of doom and judgment have produced, another writer, quite recently, has published a book telling us great detail what heaven is going to be like.

The concerns that are deeply implanted in our hearts aren’t new to us. They have been among the concerns of human beings for a very long time. People of faith harbor those sorts of concerns as well, as our reading from St. Paul’s Second Letter to the early Christians in Thessalonica makes clear. Paul has to remind them that the Lord Jesus’ second coming (His return to reign in glory) hasn’t yet happened, and – no – they haven’t missed it, and – no – they haven’t been left behind.

And yet, on this side of eternity, we want to know what it will look like once this life is ended and we enter into whatever lies beyond death. For, as St. Paul makes clear, death is that great and final enemy, that great mystery. Writing to the early Christians in Corinth, he has to remind them that death isn’t the harbinger of fear and loss that we might imagine it to be. Not at all. In I Corinthians 15, he says that death has lost its sting. Its seeming victory isn’t a victory at all. He puts this truth eloquently: “Death is swallowed up in victory, O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?”[1]

How can Paul say such a thing? Is he delusional? Is he denying reality?

No, not at all. Paul can be confident about the transition from this life into eternity because of the reality of our Lord Jesus Christ’s own resurrection on Easter Sunday morning. That event transformed the original band of the Lord’s disciples from wayward, unreliable followers into champions of the truth of God’s power to create, and – in the case of our Lord’s resurrection – to recreate. Yes, this is a power even over life and death itself.

In the Old Testament, this is Job’s hope, as he confidently says that he knows that his redeemer lives, and that he will – in his flesh – see God. (I am reminded of the wonderful aria from Handel’s “Messiah” which makes use of this text.)

We would do well to look at today’s Gospel text.

There, Jesus is confronted by a group of Sadducees[2], who put a wildly unlikely tale before the Lord. They put forth a situation in which a woman was married, but whose husband died without producing any children. Then, these priests tell the Lord that the woman passed from brother to brother, each one marrying the woman, but there are no children from any of these subsequent marriages (all six!), either.[3]

Jesus cuts through their argument. Marriage in that day and time had as its primary goal the begetting of children. (Recall that child mortality was very high in those days.) Children were, in that society, ones “retirement plan” once life became too difficult to allow a person to work.

But Jesus tells these Sadducees that, once people have entered into eternity and into the resurrected life, they will never die (so there is no need for offspring).

In the fulness of time, Jesus will affirm the reality of life after death, in a resurrected state, in God’s presence.[4] His own coming to life again affirms God’s power over all things, including death.

So, if we are to live after death, this time in God’s presence directly, what does heaven really look like?

Is it like the new book we referred to at the beginning of this sermon, with detailed descriptions of heaven’s appearance and so forth?

Well, maybe.

But, perhaps the more prudent course for us to take is not to obsess over the details of what heaven will be like, for surely, Holy Scripture’s descriptions could well be figurative, and not literal, ones.

So, perhaps we can rest securely in two great realities: 1.  We become inheritors of God’s eternal love when we come to faith in God the Father through God the Son, Jesus Christ. By whatever means we come to that relationship (and, I think it’s important to say that the New Testament describes a number of different paths of coming to faith), it is the receiving of God’s great and good gift of God’s love and God’s eternal embrace that guarantees our future with God once this life is over; and 2. God’s got a plan, and that plan will be glorious, perhaps much more wonderful than we can imagine this side of heaven.

So then, the details of the future take a back seat to the essential truth of God’s ability to keep us in His love and embrace, both now and into eternity.

Thanks be to God!

AMEN.



[1]   See I Corinthians 15: 54b, 55.

[2]   The Sadducees we a priestly caste. Notice that Luke reminds us that the Sadducees denied the reality of the resurrection.

[3]   This is a process that is outlined in the Law of Moses (Torah), called Levirite Marriage, because the name (levirate) refers to “brother-in-Law”. See Deuteronomy 25: 5–10.

[4]   May I encourage you to read the entire fifteenth chapter of First Corinthians? It will lift your spirits.