As the passages from Isaiah 11:1-10 and Matthew 3:1-12 illustrate, we await the coming of the peaceable Kingdom, the fulfillment of the promises of God, the establishment of the Kingdom that shall not end. And we await it in the context of history, otherwise known as our ordinary lives. Christianity is lived out in historical contexts and circumstances, from which none of us can escape. In our historical contexts we make missteps, false steps, and encounter problems and frustrations. Paul’s passage from Romans 15:4-9 gives us insight into the lived reality of Christianity in the middle of the 1st century in Rome. The Church at Rome encountered its own difficulties with living out the faith, as the Church in Rome does, I believe, even in the 21st century. So it is interesting to be in 21st century Rome, commenting on Paul’s 1st century Epistle to the Romans in light of Pope Benedict’s encyclical regarding the nature of Christian hope, Spe Salvi. In the midst of these lived realities, the encounters with our failings on a regular basis, we have “hope,” not just as individuals, but as the Church, and as the Church for the whole world through Jesus Christ. Paul speaks of this “hope” in 15:4, which he links to the “steadfastness” (hypomonL) and “encouragement” (paraklLsis) of the Scriptures. Our hope is promised in the Scriptures and one can trust in their “steadfastness” and in the “encouragement” (or “consolation”) which they bring. Pope Benedict’s new encyclical Spe Salve 9 discusses hypomonL in the New Testament and of this word he says, “knowing how to wait, while patiently enduring trials, is necessary for the believer to “receive what is promised” (Heb. 10:5)…Thus the word indicates a lived hope, a life based on certainty of hope” (9). Paul wrote of hope in light of the historical circumstances of a Church which was divided – at least at some internal level – between the Strong and the Weak (14:1-4; 15:1). This division probably highlights differences between Jewish and Gentile believers in the 1st century Church at Rome (14:1-6). Paul asks in light of Christian hope that the Strong and the Weak live in “harmony with one another, in accordance with Christ Jesus” (15:5), in order “that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (15:6). Paul calls upon the Church in Rome to “welcome one another, therefore, just as Christ welcomed you” (15:7). Paul does not deny the differences between the Strong and the Weak, but he asks that the Christians in Rome seek “harmony,” glorify God with “one voice” and “welcome one another.” In the 1st century context Paul calls for unity based on the hope of Jesus Christ, asking Jewish and Gentile Christians to live out their faith together. These differences in the Church have been swallowed up by history – we no longer look with awe on the reality that “God has given even to the Gentiles the repentance that leads to life” (Acts 11:18) – but the question we might ask is: who are the Strong and the Weak in the Church today? Since the 16th century, western Christianity has been divided, how can we “together…with one voice glorify God”? Yet even within the Church at Rome, there are differences amongst those who seek different models of Church leadership, different models of liturgy, different models of ordination. Are we able to “welcome one another, therefore, just as Christ welcomed you”? Do we live in “harmony with one another, in accordance with Christ Jesus”? In making sense of Paul’s image of the Strong and the Weak, as we prepare for the coming of the peaceable Kingdom this Advent, who are the Strong today and who are the Weak? How should the Strong “put up with the failings of the weak” and not act “to please” themselves? (15:1). I do not know who are the Strong and who are the Weak, but I do know that however great our failings, and in the midst of the even greater messiness of history, we are called “to live in harmony with one another” (15:5). John W. Martens

John W. Martens is an associate professor of theology at the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn,where he teaches early Christianity and Judaism. He also directs the Master of Arts in Theology program at the St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity. He was born in Vancouver, B.C. into a Mennonite family that had decided to confront modernity in an urban setting. His post-secondary education began at Tabor College, Hillsboro, Kansas, came to an abrupt stop, then started again at Vancouver Community College, where his interest in Judaism and Christianity in the earliest centuries emerged. He then studied at St. Michael's College, University of Toronto, and McMaster University, with stops at University of Haifa and University of Tubingen. His writing often explores the intersection of Jewish, Christian and Greco-Roman culture and belief, such as in "let the little children come to me: Children and Childhood in Early Christianity" (Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2009), but he is not beyond jumping into the intersection of modernity and ancient religion, as in "The End of the World: The Apocalyptic Imagination in Film and Television" (Winnipeg: J. Gordon Shillingford Press, 2003). He blogs at  www.biblejunkies.com and at www.americamagazine.org for "The Good Word." You can follow him on Twitter @biblejunkies, where he would be excited to welcome you to his random and obscure interests, which range from the Vancouver Canucks and Minnesota Timberwolves, to his dog, and 70s punk, pop and rock. When he can, he brings students to Greece, Turkey and Rome to explore the artifacts and landscape of the ancient world. He lives in St. Paul with his wife and has two sons. He is certain that the world will not end until the Vancouver Canucks have won the Stanley Cup, as evidence has emerged from the Revelation of John, 1 Enoch, 2 Baruch, and 4 Ezra which all point in this direction.