“Here is some water.
What is to keep me from being
baptised?”
This is an odd little story, the one we heard
from Acts, isn't it?
I wonder who these people were,
what
they were doing,
and, above all, why it matters to us this
morning.
Well, finding out who these people are is
probably the least difficult part of it.
The man was, we are
told, a eunuch who held a high post in the government of the Queen of
Ethiopia.
Now, we do know a little about her
her official
title was Candace, or Kandake, or even Kentake
nobody is really
sure,
but if you know somebody called Candace,
that's
where the name comes from.
Anyway, this one was called
Amanitore, apparently,
and her royal palace of Jebel Barkal in
the Sudan
is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Her tomb is
also in the Sudan, in a place called Meroƫ.
Confusingly, the
area that our Bibles call “Ethiopia” or “Kush” is actually in
what is now Sudan,
and present-day Ethiopia was then the
Kingdom of the Axumites!
Anyway, the Queen isn't important,
except that you should understand that she was a ruler in her own
right, not just a regent
Amanitore, for instance, was co-ruler
with Natakamani,
who may have been her husband, but was more
probably her son.
The Candaces were very powerful, and could
order their sons to end their rule by committing suicide if
necessary.
So a senior treasury official in her government would
be a pretty high mucky-muck back then.
We know rather more
about his employer, though, than we do about the treasury official
himself.
He might not even have been a Kushite, which is the
more proper term for Ethiopians back then –
the word “Ethiop”
in Greek basically just means someone from sub-Saharan Africa.
He
probably was a eunuch, though;
many people in positions of
authority were, in those days, rather like in the Middle Ages in this
country they were usually in holy orders of some kind.
Basically
they were people who were celibate, for whatever reason, so as not to
have divided loyalties between their job and their families –
with
all the stuff one hears about work-life balance,
and the sort
of hours people who work for American companies are expected to put
in, maybe they had a point!
Although, of course, the people in
the Middle Ages were voluntarily celibate, which our friend could not
have been.
He was probably a slave, or at least born into
slavery,
and brought up to eventually get this high and
trustworthy position.
There is, of course, plenty of form for
this –
look at Joseph, who was sold into slavery in Egypt but
ended up as a hugely influential administrator in Pharoah's
court.
And the same was true for this man.
We don't
know his name, which is unfortunate as I don't like to keep referring
to him as “The Eunuch” as though it were the most important thing
about him, so let's call him “The Treasurer”.
He was
probably born into slavery, maybe into a family who belonged to the
Ethiopian court, and raised from an early age to serve the Royal
Family.
I have no idea what sort of education he would have had,
but he obviously was an educated man;
he could read, which
was not very usual in that day and age,
and what is more, he
could read Greek or Hebrew, I am not sure which,
but neither
could have been his first language.
And when we meet him,
he has just been to Jerusalem to worship God.
Again, I have no
idea how he became what's called a God-fearer, a non-Jew who worships
God without converting to Judaism,
but he could not have been a
convert, or proselyte as they were known, because he was a eunuch,
and the Old Testament forbids anybody mutilated in that way to
enter the Temple.
And now he is on his way home –
he
must have been a pretty high-up official to have been allowed to go
on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, don't you think?
I wonder
whether he bought his copy of the Book of Isaiah during his visit?
I
don't know whether it was in the Greek translation known as the
Septuagint, or whether he had been able to read Hebrew and buy one of
the Hebrew versions.
Jewish men could all read, because they
were expected to read the Scriptures in their services,
but
elsewhere the skill was not that common long before printing was even
thought of,
when all manuscripts had to be copied by hand.
So
a copy of the book of Isaiah would have been very valuable.
And
he had one, and was reading it during his journey, but not really
understanding what he read, and doubtless wishing for someone to come
and explain it to him.
That someone turned out to be
Philip the Evangelist.
Now, this isn't the Apostle Philip, the
one who tends to be partnered with Bartholomew in the lists of
apostles;
he's a different Philip.
We first meet this one
early in the Book of Acts,
when the gathering of believers is
getting a bit large, and the Jewish and Greek believers are
squabbling over the distribution of food.
Philip and seven other
people were appointed deacons to sort it out for them.
Philip
would have been Greek –
it's a Greek name –
but he
might also have been Jewish,
since he was fairly obviously
resident in Jerusalem around then.
He, incidentally, is
the chap who ends up with four daughters who prophesy who entertains
St Paul on his way back to Jerusalem later on in Acts.
But
for now, he is wanted on the old road between Jerusalem and Gaza and,
prompted by the Holy Spirit, he goes there and walks alongside the
Treasurer in his carriage –
I expect the horse was only going
at walking pace.
Back then, the concept of reading to yourself
was, I believe, unknown, and everybody always read aloud, even if
only under their breath,
so he would soon have known what the
Treasurer was reading, and was intrigued:
“Do you
understand what you're reading?”
This man, an obvious
foreigner, someone who obviously wasn't Jewish, probably didn't know
the traditions at all
what on earth was he finding in the
book?
And the Treasurer admits that yes, actually, he is a
bit lost.... and Philip explains it all, and explains about how the
prophet was referring to Jesus, which of course meant explaining all
about Jesus.
And so the Ethiopian challenges him:
“Okay,
there's some water.
Any reason I shouldn't be baptised?”
He
couldn't be accepted in the Temple as a Jew –
would these
followers of the Way –
they were barely called “Christians”
yet –
would they accept the likes of him, or was this going
to be another disappointment?
I can hear a challenge in his
voice, can't you?
The Authorised version, which some of you may
still like to read, claims he made a profession of faith,
but
apparently that's not in the earliest manuscripts available and has
been left out of more recent translations.
“Why can't I
be baptised?”
Well, there was no good reason.
Jesus loved
him and died for him, and Philip knew that, so he baptised him.
And
then left the new young Christian to cope as best he could, while the
Holy Spirit took Philip off to the next thing.
It is a
strange story, and I know I've spent rather a long time on it, but it
intrigues me.
You can't help comparing it with the story of
Cornelius,
a couple of chapters later.
Cornelius, too, is
an outsider, a member of the Army of Occupation, a Gentile
but
he, too, loves God and wants to know more.
And Peter is sent to
help him, although Jewish Peter needed a lot more persuading than
Greek Philip to go and help.
And again, it is clear that God
approves, and Cornelius and his household are baptised.
The
thing is, this was an age when the Church was gaining new converts
every day –
three thousand in one day, we're told, after
Pentecost.
How come these two are picked out as special?
I
think it's because they are special.
These are the outsiders,
the misfits.
They aren't your average Jewish person in the Holy
Land of those days.
Cornelius is a member of the hated Roman
army;
but at least he lives in Caesarea and might have been
expected to pick up one or two ideas about local culture and so
on.
But the Treasurer?
He is not only a Gentile, but of a
completely different race, and a different sexuality.
A total
and utter outsider, in fact.
But he is accepted!
That's
the whole point, isn't it?
There was nothing to stop him being
baptised.
The Holy Spirit made it quite clear to Philip that
this man was loved, accepted and forgiven and could be baptised with
the contents of his water-flask!
How difficult we make it,
sometimes.
We agonise over who is a Christian and who isn't.
We
wonder what behaviour might put people right away from God.
And
sometimes we cut ourselves off from God by persisting in behaviour,
or patterns of thought, that we know God doesn't like, and we aren't
comfortable in God's company.
And yet God makes it so
simple:
“Here is some water.
What is to keep me from
being baptised?”
And the answer, so far as God is concerned,
is “Nothing”.
Anybody, anybody at all, who stretches out a
tentative hand, even a tentative finger, to God is gathered up and
welcomed into his Kingdom.
I don't know what happens when it's
people like Professor Alice Roberts or David Attenborough who really
don't want God to exist –
I suppose that when people say “No,
thank you!” to God,
God respects their wishes, even if that
means He is deprived of their company, which He so wanted and longed
for.
The Treasurer, the Ethiopian Eunuch, was the most
complete outsider, from the point of view of the first Christians,
that it was possible to imagine.
And yet God accepted him and
welcomed him, and he went on his way rejoicing.
We aren't told
what happened to him.
Was he able to meet up with other
Christians?
Was he able to keep in touch with the early
Christian communities and learn more about early Christian
thinking?
We don't know.
We aren't told anything more about
him –
but then, I don't suppose Philip ever heard any
more.
Our Gospel reading minded us that unless you abide in
Jesus you wither away
or perhaps more properly that your faith
does –
and perhaps that happened to him.
We will never
know.
But perhaps he did abide in Jesus.
Perhaps, even
without fellowship and teaching and the Sacrament and the other Means
of Grace we find so important,
perhaps he still went on
following Jesus as best he knew how.
I hope he did.
Maybe
his relationship with God would have been purer and stronger than
ours is, because there wouldn't have been anybody to tell him that he
was doing it all wrong.
“Here is some water.
What
is to keep me from being baptised?”
We have, I think, all
been baptised;
possibly as babies or perhaps when we were older
–
but what keeps us from entering into the full relationship
with God that this implies?
My friends, if there is something
between you and God, put it down now,
come back to God and rest
and rejoice in Him.
There are no outsiders in God's kingdom –
everybody is welcome, and that includes you, and that includes
me!
Amen.
And as soon as we started the next hymn I realised what I should have said, so said it before the notices - because God loves and accepts absolutely anybody, we need to love and accept them, too. I didn't have time to unpack this, but if I preach this sermon again, I'll be sure to work it in!
Showing posts with label Easter 5B. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Easter 5B. Show all posts
28 April 2024
The Treasurer
06 May 2012
The Ethiopian Eunuch
“Here is some water. What is to keep me from being baptised?”
This is an odd little
story, the one we heard from Acts, isn't it? I wonder who these
people were, what they were doing, and, above all, why it matters to
us this morning.
Well, finding out who
these people are is probably the least difficult part of it. The man
was, we are told, a eunuch who held a high post in the government of
the Queen of Ethiopia. Now, we do know a little about her – her
official title was Candace, or Kandake, or even Kentake – nobody is
really sure, but if you know somebody called Candace, that's where
the name comes from. Anyway, this one was called Amanitore,
apparently, and her royal palace of Jebel Barkal in the Sudan is a
UNESCO World Heritage Site. Her tomb is also in the Sudan, in a
place called Meroƫ. Confusingly, the area that our Bibles call
“Ethiopia” or “Kush” is actually in what is now Sudan, and
present-day Ethiopia was then the Kingdom of the Axumites! Anyway,
the Queen isn't important, except that you should understand that she
was a ruler in her own right, not just a regent – Amanitore, for
instance, was co-ruler with Natakamani, who may have been her
husband, but was more probably her son. The Candaces were very
powerful, and could order their sons to end their rule by committing
suicide if necessary. So a senior treasury official in her
government would be a pretty high mucky-muck back then.
We know rather more
about his employer, though, than we do about the treasury official
himself. He might not even have been a Kushite, which is the more
proper term for Ethiopians back then – the word “Ethiop” in
Greek basically just means someone from sub-Saharan Africa. He
probably was a eunuch, though; many people in positions of authority
were, in those days, rather like in the Middle Ages in this country
they were usually in holy orders of some kind. Basically they were
people who were celibate, for whatever reason, so as not to have
divided loyalties between their job and their families – with all
the stuff one hears about work-life balance, and the sort of hours
people who work for American companies are expected to put in, maybe
they had a point! Anyway, our friend was probably a slave, or at
least born into slavery, and brought up to eventually get this high
and trustworthy position. There is, of course, plenty of form for
this – look at Joseph, who was sold into slavery in Egypt but ended
up as a hugely influential administrator in Pharoah's court.
And the same was true
for this man. We don't know his name, which is unfortunate as I
don't like to keep referring to him as “The Eunuch” as though it
were the most important thing about him, so let's call him “The
Treasurer”. He was probably born into slavery, maybe into a family
who belonged to the Ethiopian court, and raised from an early age to
serve the Royal Family. I have no idea what sort of education he
would have had, but he obviously was an educated man; he could read,
which was not very usual in that day and age, and what is more, he
could read Greek or Hebrew, I am not sure which, but neither could have
been his first language.
And when we meet him,
he has just been to Jerusalem to worship God. Again, I have no idea
how he became what's called a God-fearer, a non-Jew who worships God
without converting to Judaism, but he could not have been a convert,
or proselyte as they were known, because he was a eunuch, and the Old
Testament forbids anybody mutilated in that way to enter the Temple.
And now he is on his way home – he must have been a pretty high-up
official to have been allowed to go on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem,
don't you think?
I wonder whether he
bought his copy of the Book of Isaiah during his visit? I don't know
whether it was in the Greek translation known as the Septuagint, or
whether he had been able to read Hebrew and buy one of the Hebrew
versions. Jewish men could all read, because they were expected to
read the Scriptures in their services, but elsewhere the skill was not that
common long before printing was even thought of, when all manuscripts
had to be copied by hand. So a copy of the book of Isaiah would have
been very valuable. And he had one, and was reading it during his
journey, but not really understanding what he read, and doubtless
wishing for someone to come and explain it to him.
That someone turned out
to be Philip the Evangelist. Now, this isn't the Apostle Philip, the
one who tends to be partnered with Bartholomew in the lists of
apostles; he's a different Philip. We first meet this one early in
the Book of Acts, when the gathering of believers is getting a bit
large, and the Jewish and Greek believers are squabbling over the
distribution of food. Philip and seven other people were appointed
deacons to sort it out for them. Philip would have been Greek –
it's a Greek name – but he might also have been Jewish, since he
was fairly obviously resident in Jerusalem around then.
He, incidentally, is
the chap who ends up with four daughters who prophesy who entertains
St Paul on his way back to Jerusalem later on in Acts.
But for now, he is
wanted on the old road between Jerusalem and Gaza and, prompted by
the Holy Spirit, he goes there and walks alongside the Treasurer in
his carriage – I expect the horse was only going at walking pace.
Back then, the concept of reading to yourself was, I believe,
unknown, and everybody always read aloud, even if only under their
breath, so he would soon have known what the Treasurer was reading,
and was intrigued:
“Do you understand
what you're reading?” This man, an obvious foreigner, someone who
obviously wasn't Jewish, probably didn't know the traditions at all –
what on earth was he finding in the book?
And the Treasurer
admits that yes, actually, he is a bit lost.... and Philip explains
it all, and explains about how the prophet was referring to Jesus,
which of course meant explaining all about Jesus. And so the
Ethiopian challenges him: “Okay, there's some water. Any reason I
shouldn't be baptised?”
He couldn't be accepted
in the Temple as a Jew – would these followers of the Way – they
were barely called “Christians” yet – would they accept the
likes of him, or was this going to be another disappointment? I can
hear a challenge in his voice, can't you? The Authorised version,
which I know some of you still like to read, claims he made a
profession of faith, but apparently that's not in the earliest
manuscripts available and has been left out of more recent
translations.
“Why can't I be
baptised?” Well, there was no good reason. Jesus loved him and
died for him, and Philip knew that, so he baptised him. And then
left the new young Christian to cope as best he could, while the Holy
Spirit took Philip off to the next thing.
It is a strange story,
and I know I've spent rather a long time on it, but it intrigues me.
You can't help comparing it with the story of Cornelius, a couple of
chapters later. Cornelius, too, is an outsider, a member of the Army
of Occupation, a Gentile – but he, too, loves God and wants to know
more. And Peter is sent to help him, although Jewish Peter needed a
lot more persuading than Greek Philip to go and help. And again, it
is clear that God approves, and Cornelius and his household are
baptised.
The thing is, this was
an age when the Church was gaining new converts every day – three
thousand in one day, we're told, after Pentecost. How come these two
are picked out as special?
I think it's because
they are special. These are the outsiders, the misfits. They aren't
your average Jewish person in the Holy Land of those days. Cornelius
is a member of the hated Roman army; but at least he lives in
Caesarea and might have been expected to pick up one or two ideas
about local culture and so on. But the Treasurer? He is not only a
Gentile, but of a completely different race, and a different
sexuality. A total and utter outsider, in fact.
But he is accepted!
That's the whole point, isn't it? There was nothing to stop him
being baptised. The Holy Spirit made it quite clear to Philip that
this man was loved, accepted and forgiven and could be baptised in
the nearest puddle. Or perhaps there wasn't a puddle - he would have had water with him in a carafe of some kind, perhaps they used that!
How difficult we make
it, sometimes. We agonise over who is a Christian and who isn't. We
wonder what behaviour might put people right away from God. And
sometimes we cut ourselves off from God by persisting in behaviour,
or patterns of thought, that we know God doesn't like, and we aren't
comfortable in God's company. And yet God makes it so simple: “Here
is some water. What is to keep me from being baptised?” And the
answer, so far as God is concerned, is “Nothing”. Anybody,
anybody at all, who stretches out a tentative hand, even a tentative
finger, to God is gathered up and welcomed into his Kingdom. I don't
know what happens when it's people like Richard Dawkins who really
don't want God to exist – I suppose that when people say “No,
thank you!” to God, God respects their wishes, even if that means
He is deprived of their company, which He so wanted and longed for.
The Treasurer, the
Ethiopian Eunuch, was the most complete outsider, from the point of
view of the first Christians, that it was possible to imagine. And
yet God accepted him and welcomed him, and he went on his way
rejoicing. We aren't told what happened to him. Was he able to meet
up with other Christians? Was he able to keep in touch with the
early Christian communities and learn more about early Christian
thinking? We don't know. We aren't told anything more about him –
but then, I don't suppose Philip ever heard any more. Our Gospel
reading minded us that unless you abide in Jesus you wither away –
or perhaps more properly that your faith does – and perhaps that
happened to him. We will never know. But perhaps he did abide in
Jesus. Perhaps, even without fellowship and teaching and the
Sacrament and the other Means of Grace we find so important, perhaps
he still went on following Jesus as best he knew how. I hope he did.
Maybe his relationship with God would have been purer and stronger
than ours is, because there wouldn't have been anybody to tell him
that he was doing it all wrong.
“Here is some water.
What is to keep me from being baptised?” We have, I think, all been
baptised; possibly as babies or perhaps when we were older – but
what keeps us from entering into the full relationship with God that
this implies? My friends, if there is something between you and God,
put it down now – come back to God and rest and rejoice in Him.
There are no outsiders in God's kingdom – everybody is welcome, and
that includes you, and that includes me! Amen.
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