Children's talk:
Today is the first Sunday in Lent.
Lent is the time when we
prepare for Easter.
But Easter is still a very long way away,
it
isn't happening until April.
We get just over six weeks to
prepare, which is quite a long time, really.
At Christmas, we
only get four weeks,
can you remember what that time is
called?
The thing about Lent is that it's traditionally
been a time of fasting.
This means some kind of physical
deprivation,
to help you with your spiritual preparation.
Some
people find that not eating sweets, or meat, or fizzy pop –
booze
if you're grown up –
or something like that helps them to be
more spiritually aware,
and more ready to think about Jesus at
Easter.
In many churches they don't have flowers in
Lent,
to remind us that this is a special time.
And then we
appreciate the Easter flowers all the more.
And in churches
where they have different colours on the communion table or the
minister's robes at different times of year,
during Lent and
Advent it's purple.
This can be a good discipline, but of
course it can just be done for the sake of doing it!
I don't
know if any of you know the children's author, Noel Streatfield?
She
wrote a lot of books for children,
the most famous of which is
called Ballet Shoes, and is still a very good read, even though it
was written a long time ago.
Well, Noel and her sisters grew up
about many years ago;
their father was a vicar,
and in
their family, as in many others,
it was assumed that nobody
would want to eat sweets or cake or jam during Lent, so they were
never served!
So even if you had wanted to eat them, you
couldn't have done so.
And I don't really see what good that
did, as it wasn't a voluntary thing,
and just made the children
dread Lent each year.
My mother used to say that if you
give up something for Lent,
you ought to put the money you save
aside,
and give it to Children in Need or a similar charity,
so
that you aren't just doing it for yourself.
She has a
point!
Some people take on something extra during
Lent.
Perhaps they go to a study group, or read a bit of the
Bible every day,
or spend time visiting someone who isn't well,
or something.
Or maybe you could do something like remembering
to say "Thank you" to God for something every day.
I try to do that on social media every
year, but it is surprisingly difficult to do, too, to find something
different to say “Thank you” to God about every day.
The
thing is, it doesn't really matter what Lenten discipline you choose,
as long as it's something that helps you come nearer to Jesus.
If
it doesn't, don't do it!
Main Sermon:
The first reading today was about a man, and a woman and God.
The
man and the woman don't have names –
later on, they are called
Adam and Eve,
but at this stage they don't need names.
They
are just Man and Woman.
They are the only Man and Woman that
exist –
God hasn't made any more, yet –
so they don't
need names.
Man can just go, “Ummmm”
and Woman will
know he's talking to her.
God has made the Man and the
Woman, and put them in a garden,
where there is plenty of food
to eat for the picking of it.
It's lovely and warm, so they
don't need clothes,
and in fact they are so comfortable with
themselves and with God that they don't want clothes.
There are
animals to be cared for, and crops to be tended,
but the work
is easy and pleasurable.
And all the fruit in the garden is
theirs, except for one tree,
which God has told them is
poisonous.
If they eat the fruit of this tree, God said, they'll
die.
Well, so far, so good.
But at this point, enter
another player.
The serpent.
Now, the Serpent is God's
enemy,
but the Man and the Woman don't know that.
They
think the Serpent is just another animal.
Now Serpent comes and
chats to Woman.
“Nice pomegranate you've got
there!”
“Mmm, yes,” says Woman.
“Look
at that fruit on that tree over there, though,” says Serpent.
“That
looks well tasty!”
“Yes, but it's poisonous!”
explains Woman.
“God said that if we ate it, we'd die, so
we're keeping well clear of it!”
“Oh rubbish!” says
Serpent.
“God's stringing you a line!
It's not poisonous
at all.
Thing is, if you eat it, you'll be just like God,
and
know good and evil.
God doesn't want you to eat it,
because
God doesn't want any rivals!
Go on, have a bite!
You won't
regret it!”
So Woman has another look at the tree,
and
sees that the fruit is red and ripe and smells tempting,
so she
cautiously stretches out her hand and grabs the fruit,
and,
ever so tentatively, takes a tiny bite.
Mmm, it is good!
So
she calls to Man, “Ummm, hello?”
“Mm-hmmm,” calls
Man, looking up from the game he was playing with his dogs.
“What
is it?”
“Come and try this fruit,” says Woman,
and
explains how the Serpent had said that God had been stringing them a
line,
and how good the fruit tasted.
So Man decides to
have a piece himself.
But it's coming on to evening,
and
at evening, God usually comes and walks in the garden,
and Man
and Woman usually come and share their day.
But tonight,
somehow, they don't feel like chatting to God.
And those
bodies, the bodies they'd enjoyed so much,
suddenly feel like
they want to be kept private.
They look at one another, and both
retreat, silently, into the far depths of the garden, grabbing some
fig leaves to make coverings for themselves.
Presently,
God comes looking for them.
“What's up?
Why are you
hiding?”
“Well,” goes Man, “I didn't want to face
you, 'cos I was naked.”
“Naked?” says
God.
“Naked?
Who told you you were naked?
You've
been eating that fruit I told you was poisonous, haven't
you?”
“Well, er, um.”
Man wriggles.
“It
wasn't my fault.
That one, the Woman you gave me.
She said
to eat it, so I did.
Wasn't my fault at all.
You can't
blame me!”
So God looks at Woman, and says, “Is this
true?
Did you give him the fruit?”
Woman goes
scarlet.
“Well, it was Serpent.
He said you, well, that
the fruit wasn't poisonous.”
But, of course, the fruit
had been poisonous
It wasn't that it gave Man and Woman a
tummyache or the runs;
worse than that, it poisoned their whole
relationship with God.
They couldn't stay in God's garden any
more.
Serpent was going to have to crawl on his belly from now
on,
and everyone, almost, would be afraid of him.
Woman
was going to have awful trouble having babies,
and Man was
going to find making a living difficult.
But God did show
them how to make warm clothes for themselves,
and didn't abandon
them forever,
even though, from that time forth, they weren't
really comfortable with God.
Well, that's the story, then, that
the Israelites used to explain why human beings find it so very
difficult to be God's people and to do God's will.
And it shows
how first the Woman and then the Man were tempted, and fell.
They
had tried, although they didn’t know it, to settle for something
less than God, for human knowledge and ambition.
They thought
they knew better than God.
At least, though, they didn’t think
that they didn’t need God, as all too many people do today!
The
man and the woman fell.
But Jesus resisted temptation.
You
may remember that he was baptised,
and there was the voice from
heaven that said
“This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased.”
And then Jesus went off into the desert for six
weeks or so,
to come to terms with exactly Who he was,
and
to discover the exact nature of his divine powers.
It must
have been so insidious, mustn't it?
"Are you really the Son
of God?
Why don't you prove it by making these stones
bread?
You're very hungry, aren't you?
If you're the Son of
God, you can do anything you like, can't you?
Surely you can
make these stones into bread?
But perhaps you aren't the Son of
God, after all...."
And so it would have gone on and on and
on.
But Jesus resisted.
The way the gospel-writers
tell it,
you would think he just waved his hand and shook his
head and said,
“No, man shall not live by bread alone!”
But
that wouldn't have been temptation.
You know what it's like
when you're tempted to do something you ought not –
the
longing can become more and more intense.
There are times when
you think,
Hmm, that'd be nice, but then you think,
naaa,
not right, and put it behind you;
but other times when you have
to really, really struggle to put it behind you.
“If you are
the Son of God....”
The view from the pinnacle of the
Temple.
So high up.... by their standards,
like the top of
the Shard would be to us.
"Go on then –
you're the
Son of God, aren't you?
Throw yourself down –
your God
will protect you!"
The temptation is to show off, to use
his powers like magic.
Yes, God would have rescued him, but:
“Do
not put the Lord your God to the test.”
That's not what it's
about.
That would have been showing off.
That would have
been misusing his divine powers for something rather spectacular.
It
would have been settling for something less than the best God had for
him.
Jesus was also tempted with riches and power beyond
his wildest dreams –
at that, beyond our wildest dreams,
if
only he would worship the enemy.
We can sympathise with this
particular temptation;
I'm sure we all would love to be rich and
powerful!
But for Jesus, it must have been particularly subtle
–
it would help him do the work he'd been sent to do!
Could
he fulfil his mission without riches and power?
What was being
God's beloved son all about, anyway?
Would it be possible to
spread the message that he was beginning to realise he had to spread
if he was going to spend his life in an obscure and dusty part
of the Roman empire?
And again, after prayer and wrestling with
it, he finds the answer:
“Worship the Lord your God, and serve
only him.”
Let the riches and power look after
themselves;
they are not God.
The important thing was to
serve God.
If that is right, the rest would follow.
You
may remember that Jesus was similarly tempted on the Cross, he could
have called down the legions from heaven to rescue him.
But he
chose not to.
It wasn't about spectacular powers –
often,
when Jesus did miracles,
he asked people not to tell
anybody.
He didn't want to be spectacular.
He'd learnt that
his mission was to the people of Israel,
probably even just the
people of Galilee –
and the occasional outsider who needed
him, like the Syro-Phoenician woman, or the Roman centurion –
and
anything more than that was up to his heavenly Father.
And,
obviously, if the "anything more" hadn't happened,
we
wouldn't be here today!
But, at the time, that wasn't Jesus'
business.
His business, as he told us, was to do the work of his
Father in Heaven –
and that work, for now, was to be an
itinerant preacher and healer,
but not trying deliberately to
call attention to himself.
And a few years later, Jesus
was crucified.
It is, I think, far too complicated for us to
ever know exactly what happened then,
but it is safe to say
that a change took place in the moral nature of the universe.
St
Paul expands on this idea in our second reading.
Paul
compares and contrasts what happened to the first Man, Adam, with
what happened to Jesus,
pointing out that sin came into the
world through Adam, which poisoned humanity’s relationship with
God,
but through Jesus, we can receive the free gift of eternal
life, and thus restore our relationship.
Of course, it’s
never as easy as that in practice.
You know that and I know
that.
Can we really live in a restored relationship with God?
All the time?
Twenty-four seven?
Well, maybe you
can, but I find it very difficult indeed!
We know we’re apt
to screw things up in our relationship with God.
Usually
because we screw things up in our relationship with other people, but
not always.
Sometimes we just screw ourselves up!
We
don’t take the exercise we promised ourselves.
We lounge
around all day and don’t get on –
so easy to do, I find,
when the weather is as awful as it’s been lately, don’t you
agree?
But the point is, Paul seems to think that we can
live in a restored relationship with God.
And so does John,
when he reminds us that
“Those who are children of God do not
continue to sin, for God's very nature is in them;
and because
God is their Father, they cannot continue to sin.”
He also,
of course, reminds us that if and when we do sin, we need to confess
our sins and we will be forgiven.
We need to look at ourselves
honestly, and admit not only what we did, said or thought,
but
that we are the kind of person who can do, say or think such things.
And allow God not only to forgive us, but to help us grow so
that we will stop being such people.
John Wesley very much
believed Christian perfection was a thing.
He didn’t think
he’d attained it, but he reckoned it was possible in this life.
He
preached on it and it’s one of the sermons we local preachers are
supposed to have read –
you can find it on-line easily
enough.
Anyway, what he said about perfection was that it wasn’t
about being ignorant, or mistaken, or ill or disabled, or not being
tempted –
you could be any or all of those things and still be
perfect.
Wesley reckons that the closer we continue with Jesus,
the less likely we are to sin.
I believe he didn’t
consider that he’d got there himself, but he did know people who
had.
He said even a baby Christian has been cleansed from sin,
and mature Christians who walk with Jesus will be freed from
it, both outwardly and inwardly.
I hope he’s right....
But
the point is, it’s not something we can do in our own strength;
we
have to allow God to do it for us and in us.
The first Man and
Woman listened to the serpent, and destroyed their –
and our
–
relationship with God.
Jesus was able to restore
that relationship through the atonement.
And because that
relationship is restored, we can be indwelt by the Holy Spirit, and
made whole again.
Let’s not settle for anything less than the
best God has for us! Amen.

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