Christians are expectant people, looking ahead to see Jesus face-to-face. Uh, we are?
After the Ascension, first-century Christians expected Jesus to return visibly, to return soon, but it still hasn’t happened. Honestly, won’t we believers also be shocked when “every eye will see him” (Revelation 1:7)? If we’re not really expecting His return soon, doesn’t that affect our attitude, make us less expectant and more like people plodding in the daily drudge?
Permit me to visit again the Day of Atonement. On that special day only the High Priest went into the Holy of Holies to perform sacrifices to atone for the sins of the people and to send the scapegoat into the wilderness. “No one may be in the tent of meeting from the time he (the High Priest) enters to make atonement in the Holy Place until he comes out and has made atonement for himself and for his house and for all the assembly of Israel” (Leviticus 16:17). God’s people were outside, waiting expectantly for the High Priest to appear with Good News that the sacrifice for sin had been made and sin removed from their daily lives.
Origen was a father of the early Church, late second to mid-third century A.D. In a sermon on Leviticus 16 he presented the ancient Day of Atonement as our expectation of Christ’s return from the heavenly Holy of Holies. “Let us stand ‘before the gates’ waiting for our high priest who remains within ‘the Holy of Holies,’ that is, ‘before the Father’; and who intercedes not for the sins of everyone, but for ‘the sins of of those ‘who wait for him.’” “For this reason, it is commanded in the Law that ‘we meditate’ on it when we go into the way and when we sit at home and when we lie in bed and when we get up. This is truly ‘to wait before the gates for the high priest’ who waits within ‘the Holy of Holies” (187-188).
Jesus has ascended to the Holy of Holies and is on His own clock for His visible return. Still, on the clouds of heaven or at death, you’re only one heartbeat from eternity. “Soon and very soon we are going to see the King.” “Though you do not now see him, you believe in him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls” (1 Peter 1:9). That’s an attitude changer!