forest hill united church

an intercultural Christian community

 

2 Wembley Road, Toronto           one block north of Eglinton at Bathurst Street

 

November 9, 2025
Twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost 

Remembrance Day Observations

Celebration of Holy Communion

 

"Keep Calm and Carry On"

2 Thessalonians 2:1-5, 13-17

“Keep Calm and Carry On” is a slogan that was originally written in 1939 and never used. The British government’s Ministry of Information printed 2.45 million posters with the slogan but they planned to release it only if there were a full-scale invasion or a serious escalation of the war. Things never got that bad, and the posters were pulped in 1940, to help with a paper shortage. The slogan didn’t even become public until 2000 when a single surviving poster was discovered. Since then, of course, it’s become a powerful Internet meme and appears on coffee mugs, t-shirts and hoodies throughout the English-speaking world.

I suspect it’s become so popular because those five words capture a sense of how to endure dire things. We humans are a lot stronger than we sometimes imagine; we can indeed face adversity with grit even when hope seems irrational. That grit is part of what we acknowledge on Remembrance Day; it’s also important life-advice for the other times in our lives when adversity seems to overwhelm possibility. When hope vanishes, act hopefully anyway.

When Paul was writing to the Thessalonians in this week’s Scripture reading, he offered a strikingly similar message. They were living with persecution; they were expecting wars and conflicts; they were concerned that some of their church members had even died before the Second Coming of Jesus would set things right and rescue them; they wondered whether the adversity meant that God had given up on them.

With 2000 years of hindsight, we can scoff at their belief that Jesus would return immanently to set things right. The Second Coming that so many expected in the first generation of Christianity simply didn’t happen, and eventually we evolved new ways to understand what God is doing to set the world to rights. Clearly swooping in with an army of angels to punish the bad guys didn’t happen! It still hasn’t. And still, people live with adversity: global societal crises that kill or maim thousands, and personal devastating tragedies that degrade or destroy human lives.

Whether we’re trying to make sense of intractable wars or the impact of Alzheimer’s on a family, we need ways to cope with the worst that can happen. And we all wonder about how and whether the God we trust in could make a difference to us when everything falls apart.

Paul’s advice to his flock is still just as relevant today: give up on the notion that being Christian protects us from times adversity. It doesn’t. There were always devastating times, and there continue to be. Wars and rumours of war are part of the human condition. But even when rational hope fails, we have resources in our traditions that help us to move forward. They help us to “keep calm and carry on.” And so, says Paul, plumb the depths of that tradition. Saturate yourself in the ways that our ancestors found God even as the world fell apart around them. Trust that when all else fails, still God is there to pick up the pieces and inspire new life, new growth, new joy, new wonder.

In 1939 when that slogan was coined, no one knew what the outcome of the war would be. No one knew how bad things would get. No one knew whether they would survive the catastrophe. But the world is still here; life continues; joy is possible; hope is still a reasonable option. We remember this week … and we also give thanks for all that emerges when we follow Paul’s advice to, “stand firm and hold fast to the traditions that you were taught by us” (2 Thess. 2:15)

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