I thought that today, for once, we wouldn’t look
too closely at the Gospel reading,
as Luke’s account of
Jesus’ appearance to the disciples after the Resurrection
is
very similar to the account in John’s gospel,
which I expect
you looked at last week.
We certainly did at Brixton
Hill!
The only thing I will point out is that Luke says
Jesus actually ate with them –
ghosts, after all, don’t
eat!
So that particular detail is, for the gospel writer,
just
another proof that Jesus really was raised.
He wasn’t just a
ghost;
he wasn’t just a figment of their imagination.
He
ate some fish –
and there’s the dirty plate!
You
may have read the first chapter of this letter from John last week,
too.
I want to focus on the passage we read today, in a
minute.
It isn’t quite a letter, is it –
it’s more of
a sermon.
He doesn’t put in the chatty details that Paul puts
into his letters,
nor the personal messages.
Nobody seems
to know whether it was really the disciple that Jesus loved that
wrote the Gospel and this letter,
or whether it was someone
writing as from them, which was apparently a recognised literary
convention of the day.
But have you ever noticed that right at
the very beginning of the letter, or sermon –
hey, let’s
just call it an Epistle and have done –
right at the very
beginning, he says:
“We write to you about the Word of
life, which has existed from the very beginning.
We have heard
it, and we have seen it with our eyes;
yes, we have seen it,
and our hands have touched it.
When this life became visible,
we saw it;
so we speak of it and tell you about the eternal
life which was with the Father and was made known to us.”
In
other words, the writer, too, claims to have seen, known and touched
Jesus!
But to today’s passage.
“See how much the
Father has loved us!
His love is so great that we are called
God's children –
and so, in fact, we are.”
“See how
much the Father has loved us!
His love is so great that we are
called God's children –
and so, in fact, we are.”
We
are God’s children!
You know, when you come to think of it,
that’s a pretty terrifying concept.
People tend to think of
themselves as serving God, or as worshipping God.
But to be a
child of God?
That’s a whole different ball-game.
After
all, if we worship God or serve God,
that doesn’t necessarily
imply that God does anything for us in return.
But if we are
God’s children?
That’s different!
That implies that God
is active in caring for us,
in being involved in our lives,
in
minding.
Many of us here this morning have had children of
our own.
And all of us have been children!
Perhaps some of
us didn’t have very satisfactory childhoods,
or our parents
weren’t all they should have been.
The model of God as Father
isn’t helpful to everybody, I know.
But I still want to
unpack it a bit, if I can, as I do think it’s important.
We
are all children of God, so we are told.
We are not servants.
We
are not just worshippers.
“Children” implies a two-way
relationship.
Actually, it almost implies more than
that.
It implies that God does the doing;
we don’t have
to.
No, seriously, think about it a minute.
I have a
daughter –
she’s grown up and married now, of course,
but
for eighteen years she lived at home,
and for many of those
years she was totally dependant on Robert and me for everything, and
her own boys are on her and her husband –
for food, for
clothing, for education, you name it!
And babies need their
parents even more than older children do.
Until they are about
two or three, they can’t even keep themselves clean, but have to
have their nappies changed every few hours.
Parents look
after their children.
Quite apart from the seeing to food,
clothing, education and so on,
it’s about the daily care
–
seeing to it they get up and so on.
All the things we
need to remind them to do or not do each day:
Have you washed
your hands?
Have you cleaned your teeth?
Put your shoes
on.
Put your coat on.
Pull your trousers up,
please.....
Don't bite your nails!
And so on and so
forth.
But it is, of course, because we care for and about our
children,
and want them to grow up to be the best possible
person they can be.
And parents do this because they love
their children.
Ask any new parent –
all those sleepless
nights,
the pacing up and down, the nappies, the lack of sleep
–
and yet, they are delighting in that precious baby,
and
will show you photographs on the slightest provocation.
And that
is just how God feels about us!
Pretty mind-blowing, isn’t
it?
And yes, God does want us to grow up to be the person
he designed us to be.
And sometimes that will involve saying
“No” to us,
as we have to say it to our children.
“No,
you mustn’t do that;
no, you can’t have that!”
Not to
be mean, not because we are horrid –
although it can feel like
that sometimes when you’re on the receiving end –
but
because it is for their best.
You can’t let a child do
something dangerous;
you can’t allow them to be rude;
they
can’t eat unlimited sweets or ices.... and so on.
When my
elder grandson was about five, he once said, with a deep sigh, when
reminded that sweets weren't very good for him:
“Is anything
good for me?”
And the same sort of thing with us.
God
loves us enormously and just wants what is best for us.
And
because we are, mostly, not small children, we tend to be aware of
this, and allow Him to work in us through the power of the Holy
Spirit.
John goes on to comment about sin and
sinfulness.
It is rather an odd passage, this;
we know that
we do sin, sometimes, because we are human.
And yet we know,
too, that we are God’s children and we abide in Him.
Yet John
here says nobody who sins abides in God.
If he were right, that
would mean none of us would, since we are all sinners.
But
then, are we?
I mean, yes, we are, but the point is, we are
sinners saved by grace, as they say.
God has redeemed us through
his Son.
We don’t “abide in sin” any more.
St
Paul tells us that when we become Christians, we are “made right”
with God through faith in his promises.
I believe the technical
term is “justified”, and you remember the meaning because it’s
“just as if I’d” never sinned.
However, we also have to
grow up to make this a reality in our lives.
That’s called
becoming sanctified, made saint-like.
One author described
it like this.
Suppose there was a law against jumping in mud
puddles.
And you broke that law, and jumped.
You would not
only be guilty of breaking the law,
you would also be covered
in mud.
My grandsons seem to have spent most of lockdown rolling
in the mud in Epping Forest, according to their mother, and they do
seem to enjoy getting filthy!
Anyway, when you are justified,
you are declared not guilty of breaking that law –
and being
sanctified means that you wash off the mud!
So we no
longer abide in sin, but are we washing off the mud?
That’s
not always easy to do –
the temptation to conform to the
world’s standards can be overwhelming at times.
We all have
different temptations, of course;
I can’t claim to be virtuous
because I don’t gamble,
since gambling simply doesn’t
appeal to me!
But I am apt to procrastinate, and can be
horrendously grouchy at times, particularly when stressed.
And I
am very prone to self-pity.
These lockdowns have been
stressful for all of us, I think, and many of us have found it all
too easy to get cross at the slightest provocation.
And
even now there is light at the end of the tunnel, we know we’re not
out of the wood yet – we could easily still be locked down
again.
Look how all Lambeth residents have been told to get a
PCR test because there have been a few cases of a variant of the
virus –
and we are all supposed to get two lateral flow tests
a week, too,
though quite why those of us who have been
vaccinated must do so escapes me.
But the point is, it’s
stressful, and I’m finding it all but impossible to make plans more
than a couple of days in advance.
And I know I’m not the only
one to have found it all very difficult –
I’ve had it easy,
of course;
I’m retired, so I haven’t had the worry about a
job;
I live within a few metres of a large supermarket, so
shopping hasn’t been an issue, and so on.
But even still, I
can’t pretend it’s been easy, and there have been times when I’ve
had to cling on to the fact that my relationship with God depends far
more on God than it does on me!
But once, some years ago now,
I posted a very self-pitying status on Facebook – can’t remember
now what I said.
But a couple of posts down on my feed,
someone had posted “Cast all your cares on Him, for he cares for
you!”
So I laughed, deleted my status, and tried to do just
that.
But you know, and I know, that it’s not always
easy!
And, of course, there are those who have not said
“Yes” to God,
who perhaps have no idea of doing so.
In
this model, they are not God’s children –
but that doesn’t
mean they are not loved!
Indeed, God so loved the world that he
sent his Son while we were still sinners, so we are told.
God
loves the worst and most horrible person you could imagine,
just
as much as he loves you or he loves me.
Even terrorists.
Even
paedophiles.
Jesus died for them, too.
Just as he died for
you, and just as he died for me.
And we, we are Children
of God.
We are God’s precious Children.
We are not just
servants of God.
We are not just worshippers.
We are
children.
And the Risen Christ calls us his friends. Amen.