You know, I don't know about you,
but usually when I think
about the calling of the disciples,
I think about the scene by
the See of Galilee,
with James, John, Simon Peter and Andrew
all mending their nets after a hard days' fishing –
or,
perhaps, them out in the lake still and Jesus pointing out to them a
shoal of fish that he could see and they couldn't.
And Simon
Peter falling on his knees before Jesus,
and Jesus telling them
that if they followed him,
he would teach them to fish for
people.
That's what I think of, anyway.
So this story
in St John's gospel comes a little strange.
In this passage,
Andrew is already one of John the Baptist's disciples, and, at John's
suggestion, goes after Jesus,
and then comes and gets his
brother, Simon Peter, and introduces him.
Not a fish or fish-net
in sight!
You wonder, sometimes, when the stories were being
collected,
who told what to whom,
and who was trying to
make who look good!
Not that it matters, of course;
truth
and historical accuracy weren't the same thing in Bible days,
and
don't need to be today.
So for now we'll stick with John's
story, since it was our reading for today.
And today's
story introduces us to a very important person –
Andrew.
At
least, Andrew is very important in John's gospel.
We don't often
think of Andrew, do we?
He's Peter's younger brother,
but
it's Peter, James and John who go with Jesus when he is
transfigured;
it's Peter, James and John who accompany Jesus to
the Garden of Gethsemane.
Andrew gets left out.
Andrew
stays back with the other disciples.
But here,
according to John's version of events,
Andrew was with John the
Baptist, and when they encountered Jesus,
he and his friend
went off after him.
“What do you want?” asked Jesus.
“Where
do you live?” asks Andrew, in return.
And Jesus says, “Come
and see!”
We're all so used to the idea that “Foxes
have dens and birds have their nests but the Son of Man has nowhere
to lay his head”
that it might strike us a bit odd –
but,
of course, when Jesus hadn't yet started his ministry,
he was
not yet itinerant,
and presumably still lived with his mother
and brothers in Nazareth,
or perhaps at his lodgings in
Capernaum.
Although, in fact, the story says that they were in
Bethany,
on the other side of the Jordan, where John was
baptising,
and later on they leave to go home to Galilee,
so
presumably he was staying with friends somewhere.
This wasn't
the same Bethany where Martha, Mary and Lazarus lived, though, so he
wouldn't have been staying with them.
This Bethany is sometimes
called Betharaba, to distinguish it.
I did read that the
questions have a deeper meaning –
I don't know enough Greek to
be sure,
but apparently they can be interpreted as Jesus asking
Andrew what he is really looking for,
Andrew asking Jesus who
he is at the deepest level,
and Jesus inviting Andrew to come
and find out.
But whatever happens, Andrew and his companion
spend some time with Jesus, and the first thing that Andrew does
afterwards is go and find his brother Simon Peter, and introduce him
to Jesus.
Andrew does this a lot in John's Gospel.
He
introduces people to Jesus.
First of all he introduces Simon
Peter –
to become Peter, that great Rock on whom Jesus was to
build his church.
And Simon Peter becomes one of Jesus' closest
friends and supporters,
far closer than Andrew himself
did.
Then a bit later on, Andrew introduces some Greek
travellers to Jesus;
the travellers speak to Philip, and he goes
to Andrew,
and then both of them take the travellers to see
Jesus.
We aren't told what happened next;
John goes off
into one of Jesus' discourses.
But it was Andrew who introduced
them.
And in John's version of the story of the feeding of
the Five Thousand,
it is Andrew who brings the boy to Jesus,
that nameless youth who had five barley loaves and two fishes,
and who was prepared to share them with Jesus.
Andrew brought
the boy to Jesus.
Yes, well.
I've heard, and I'm sure
you have too, lots of sermons on St Andrew where they tell you that
you ought to be like him and introduce people to Jesus.
Which is
all very well, and all very true,
but it's not quite as simple
as that, is it?
First off, when preachers say things like
that, the congregation –
well, if I'm any representative of it
–
go all hot and wriggly and feel they must be terrible
Christians because it's so long since they last introduced anybody to
Jesus.
And the ones who are apt to feel the hottest and
wriggliest are those who really do more than anybody else to
introduce people to Jesus.
But you see, Andrew only
introduces people to Jesus when they want to be introduced.
Simon
Peter, his brother, was probably already following John the Baptist,
and was anxious to meet the Messiah.
He may, of course, have
thought that the Messiah, the Anointed One, would rebel against the
occupying power, an earthly leader,
but, of course, he soon
learnt differently.
The Greeks in chapter 12 of John's Gospel
had asked for an introduction.
The boy with five loaves and two
fish was anxious to share his lunch with Jesus, but couldn't get past
the security cordon of the disciples.
And when our friends
want to be introduced to Jesus,
that's when we need to imitate
Andrew.
If they don't want to know him yet, and we keep trying,
we'll just end up being utterly boring and probably lose their
friendship!
It's probably better to just pray for our friends,
and hold them up to Jesus that way –
if and when they are
ready for more, they will let you know.
There is, as the
Preacher tells us, a time for everything!
Brixton Hill, as
a church, does have activities which =make Jesus known in the
community,
what with the various youth activities,
the
Warm Space on a Thursday
and Pop-In.
We are giving
people the opportunity –
they know what a church stands for,
and if they don't, they can always ask.
We may never know how
much we've done for people,
how much our example has led them to
want to find Jesus for themselves,
to question the easy,
unthinking atheism popularised by Richard Dawkins and his ilk.
That's
as it should be –
our job is to be ourselves, to be Jesus'
people, as we have committed ourselves to being.
So what
sort of people are we going to be being?
I think Jesus gives a
very good picture of what his people are like in that collection of
his teachings we call the Sermon on the Mount:
poor in spirit
–
not thinking more of themselves than they ought;
mourning,
perhaps for the ungodly world in which we live;
meek, which
means slow to anger and gentle with others;
hungry and thirsty
for righteousness;
merciful;
pure in heart;
peacemakers
and so on.
They
love everyone, even those who hate them;
they refrain from
condemning anyone,
or even from being angry with them in a
destructive way;
they don’t hold grudges or take revenge,
value or use people just for their bodies,
or end their
marriages lightly.
Their very words are trustworthy.
In
short, they treat everyone with the greatest respect
no matter
what that person’s race, creed, sex or social class.
They also
treat themselves with similar respect, looking after themselves
properly and not abusing themselves any more than they abuse others.
We don't, of course, have to force ourselves to become
like that in our own strength –
we'd make a pretty rotten job
of it!
We do have to give God permission to change us, though,
to “let go and let God”.
We have to be willing to
allow God to work in us,
gradually transforming us into the
people we were created to be.
It isn’t easy –
I do so
know!
But we do need to be willing,
or at the very least,
willing to be made willing!
And as we do so, we will be
able to have a response when our friends ask what Church is all
about, or who Jesus is.
And people are asking, aren't
they?
Like Andrew, they want to know where Jesus is.
Where
is Jesus in this dreadful war in Ukraine?
Where is Jesus in the
energy crisis, the rising cost of living?
Where is Jesus in the
strikes that beset us?
Where is Jesus in Brazil, in the USA, in
Iran?
Jesus answers us, as he answered Andrew:
“Come,
and see”.
And the answer, of course, is that he is there in
the middle of it all, as he always is.
“Behold the Lamb of
God,” said John, “Who takes away the sins of the world.”
There
are always dreadful things happening in our world.
There always
have been –
even back in Jesus' day, you remember, the
disciples asked what had gone wrong when a tower collapsed, killing
rather a lot of people.
Look at the book of Job, or at some of
the Psalms,
trying to come to terms with why bad things happen,
and so often to people who really didn't deserve it.
And
there are no easy answers;
all we can do is to trust and to
believe that God is there in the middle of it.
“Come and see,”
said Jesus, and they went and saw.
And we are invited to stay
with him exactly where he is:
in the middle of it all.
Amen.
15 January 2023
Come and See
08 January 2023
The Baptism of Christ
My apologies for the coughing - it developed during the service!
This Sunday, the Church celebrates the baptism of Christ.
St
Matthew tells us how Jesus came to John to ask for baptism.
John,
we are told, demurs, saying that it is Jesus who should be baptizing
him, but Jesus says he wants everything done properly in good order.
And then the voice comes from heaven, saying “This is my Son, the
Beloved, with whom I
am well pleased”
For Jews, baptism was really a
matter of washing.
They had –
and still, as far as I
know, have –
a way of washing in their ritual baths,
which
made them no longer unclean.
But it was not, I believe, until
the time of John the Baptist
that baptism was linked with
repentance.
John had one or two things to say to people who
wanted baptism without repenting,
baptism without tears, if you
like,
calling them “a brood of vipers”,
and reminding
them that just because they were children of Abraham didn’t mean
they were excused from bearing “fruits worthy of repentance.”
In
other words, they had to show their repentance by the change in their
lives, and their baptism was to mark this fresh start.
Now
for me, at least, this raises at least two questions.
Why, then,
was it necessary for Jesus to be baptised, and, secondly, what about
our own baptism?
Why did Jesus have to
be baptised?
He, after all, was without sin, or so we are
told,
so he, alone of all humanity, did not need,
and never
has needed, to repent.
But when John queried him
he said
“Let it be so now;
for it is proper for us in this way to
fulfil all righteousness.”
In other words, let’s observe all
the formalities,
don’t let anybody be able to say I wasn’t
part of the religious establishment of the day.
And,
of course, one other very good reason is that it was an opportunity
for the Father to proclaim Jesus to the crowds thronging the
Jordan.
John probably baptised hundreds of others that day, I
shouldn’t wonder, with Jesus waiting his turn very patiently.
But
it was only when Jesus rose up from the waters of baptism
that
God sent the Holy Spirit upon him in the form of a dove, and said,
out loud,
“You are my Son, whom I
love;
with you I am well pleased.”
God
proclaimed Jesus as his beloved Son.
And then what?
There
was no triumphant upsurging against the occupying power,
no
human rebellion.
Not even a triumphal entry into Jerusalem.
No,
what awaited Jesus after his baptism was forty days in the
desert,
and an almost unbearable temptation to discover the
depths of his powers as God’s Son, whom God loves,
and to
misuse them.
And it was only then, after Jesus had wrestled
with, and conquered, the temptation to misuse his divine power,
that
he could come back and begin to heal the sick,
raise the
dead,
restore sight to the blind
and preach good news to
the poor.
And gather round him a band of devoted followers, of
course, and eventually, the Cross and the triumphant resurrection
from death.
Well, so much for Jesus’ baptism;
what
about ours?
For many Christians, baptism does seem to be
very similar to John’s baptism, a baptism of repentance, of changed
lives,
a signal to the world that now you are a Christian, and
plan to live that way.
But for a great many more Christians,
baptism is something that happens when you are a tiny baby, too small
to remember it.
That’s usually the case for Methodists and
Anglicans, so it applies to us.
I was baptised as a baby and so,
very probably, were you.
Now, some folk say that being
baptised as a baby is a nonsense,
how can you possibly repent
when you are an infant in arms,
and how can other people make
those promises for you?
I think it depends very much on whether
you see baptism as primarily something you do, or primarily something
God does.
The Anglican and Methodist churches call baptism a
Sacrament,
and you may remember the definition of a Sacrament
which is
that a Sacrament is the outward and visible sign
of
an inward and spiritual grace.
The other Sacrament that
Methodist churches recognise is, of course, Holy Communion.
The
Catholic church recognises at least five more,
but as I can
never remember all of them off-hand, I won’t start listing them
now!
The point is, that a Sacrament is a place where we humans
do something and trust that God also does something.
When we
make our Communion, we believe that we are meeting with
Jesus,
communicating, if you like, in a very special way
during
the taking, breaking, blessing and sharing of the bread and wine.
And
in baptism, we believe that God comes and meets with us in a very
special way, filling us with the Holy Spirit.
Yes, even babies
–
do you really have to be old enough to be aware that you are
doing so in order to love God?
I don’t think so!
You
certainly don’t have to be aware to be loved by God,
and
that’s really what it’s all about.
You see, baptism,
like Communion, is one of those Christian mysteries, where the more
deeply you penetrate into what it means,
the more you become
aware that there’s more to know.
You never really get to the
bottom of it.
St Paul goes off in one direction, talking about
baptism being identifying with Christ in his death.
I’m never
quite sure what he is getting at, when he says in the letter to the
Romans,
“Do you not know that all of us who have been baptised
into Christ Jesus were baptised into his death?
Therefore we
have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as
Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too
might walk in newness of life.
For if we have been united with
him in a death like his, we will certainly be united with him in a
resurrection like his.”
I may not have totally
understood Paul there –
who does? –
but it’s
nevertheless part of what baptism is all about.
Another
part of it is, indeed, about repentance and turning to Christ.
For
those of us who were baptised as infants,
someone else made
promises on our behalf about being Jesus’ person, and we didn’t
take responsibility for them until we were old enough to know what we
were doing,
when we were, I hope, confirmed.
We confirmed
that we were taking responsibility for those promises for
ourselves,
we became full members of the Church and, above
all,
we received, once again, the Holy Spirit through the
laying-on of hands.
And so it goes on.
But it’s all
very well me droning on about baptism and what it really means, but
what is it saying to us this morning?
For some of us, our
baptism was more than six decades ago, after all!
For some of
us, it may have been a lot more recent, but you may well not remember
it, even so!
Well, first and most importantly is that
baptism is important for Christians,
as important as the
Sacrament of Holy Communion.
So if for any reason you never have
been baptised,
and you know that you want to be Jesus’
person,
do go and talk to Lena or someone.
The same applies
if you haven't yet been confirmed, but feel you are ready to become a
full member of the Church and ready to take responsibility for those
promises they made on your behalf.
But for the rest of us,
for whom our confirmation is nothing more than a memory, and baptism
not even that, so what?
What does it mean for us today?
I
think that, like so much that is to do with God,
baptism is an
ongoing thing, not just a once-for-all thing.
Yes, we are
baptised once;
St Paul reminds us that there is one baptism,
just as there is one faith, and one Lord.
But when Martin
Luther was quite an old man,
and the devil started whispering in
his ear that he was a rotten human being and God would cast him out,
et cetera, et cetera, you know how he does,
Luther threw his
inkpot at the spot where he felt the voice was coming from, and said:
“Nonsense!
I have been baptised, and I stand on that
baptism!”
Even though that baptism had been when Luther was a
newborn baby,
he still knew that its effects would protect him
from the assaults of the evil one.
As, indeed, it does for
us.
There are times when life seems to go very pear-shaped,
aren’t there?
The 2020s, so far, haven’t exactly been a
wonderful decade.
It sometimes feels that God has forgotten us,
that we are stumbling on alone, in the dark,
totally unable to
see where we are going.
Whether that is true for us as
individuals, or as a church, or even as a nation,
these times
are very hard to deal with and to understand.
All we know is,
they happen to all of us from time to time, and we simply can’t see
the reason from this end.
Of course, we know
intellectually
that God hasn’t in the least bit forgotten
us.
Some folk say these times of darkness are when God is
testing us,
but I’m not sure it’s even that.
It’s
some part of the pattern that we don’t understand,
can’t see
what is happening,
and tend to try to rationalise.
I do
believe that one day we’ll know what it was all about,
and see
how it fitted in.
But our first reading reminds us, when
we are going through these dark patches, that the “Servant”, who
we identify with Jesus these days, even if there was a local
application back at the time when Isaiah was writing, is gentl and
loving: “a bruised reed he will not break, and a dimly burning wick
he will not quench;” In other words, it doesn’t matter how weak
and feeble your faith – our faith – may be; God will not snuff it
out, but instead encourage it, help it to grow. And help justice be
established in our world once again.
In some way we know
that our baptism is part of that.
As I said earlier, it’s what
they call a mystery;
we’ll never know the whole truth of how
it works, only that it does!
Jesus came for baptism to John, and
from his baptism he was sent into the wilderness to wrestle with one
of his bad times –
another, as we know, was in the Garden of
Gethsemane the night before he was crucified.
And if Jesus can
have bad times, then it’s all right for us to, I reckon!
The
bad times will happen, they happen to everybody.
But we will
not be broken or extinguished; God will be with us.
Life doesn’t
have to be perfect, and nor do we, before we can remind ourselves
that God loves us.
Of course, that love isn’t just warm
fuzzies;
it’s about going out there and doing
something.
Christian love is something you do,
not
something you feel.
But in the dark watches of the night, we
need our warm fuzzies.
And I think God knows that,
which is
why there are those lovely passages in Scripture about how much he
loves us, about how he protects us and cares for us.
18 December 2022
Carol Service reflection
A very brief reflection in the middle of our carol service
All our readings so far have been optimistic promises –
that Abraham’s descendant will bring blessings to all the nations of the earth;
that the king is coming and will usher in a reign of justice for the poor and peace for all of God’s creation;
that a king will be born to a people in darkness.
And that God is rejoicing over us with singing.
So what, I wonder, has gone wrong?
These last few years have been pretty awful. I
believe there is an ancient Chinese curse that reads “May you live
in interesting times!”
Seems that someone has invoked that
curse,
what with first of all the pandemic,
and then this
year, just as things got a bit easier,
the war in Ukraine and
its impact on the rest of Europe,
the Queen’s death,
galloping
inflation, the energy crisis, strikes….
What has happened, and
will there ever be an end?
And where, we wonder, is God in all
this?
What of those magnificent promises we have just heard?
You know, desperate as
it feels right now, we’ve been here before.
Some of you may
remember, as I do, the 1970s,
when it was very similar to now
–
an energy crisis, galloping inflation, strikes, a government
which appeared not to care…
I missed the worst of it as I was
living and working in Paris at the time,
but it was difficult
not to know about it from letters and phone calls from family and
friends.
And, of course, there
have been wars, plagues, storms, all sorts of disasters, both
man-made and natural, all down the centuries.
And people have
looked around and wondered “Where is God in this?”
One of the earliest
efforts to come to terms with it all is the Book of Job.
You
remember how Job’s life went totally pear-shaped –
God knew
all about it and had given permission for this to happen –
and
his friends tried to make it be all his fault.
Which it totally
wasn’t, and Job knew this,
so he demanded answers from
God.
God eventually answered Job, reminding him of the glories
of creation that were all around him, that Job could have done
nothing about:
‘Do
you give the horse its might?
Do you
clothe its neck with mane?
Do you make it leap like the
locust?
Its majestic snorting is
terrible.’
It’s wonderful stuff,
and goes on for several chapters.
And at the end, Job has to
acknowledge God’s greatness,
and “repents in dust and
ashes”, we are told.
It’s one of the earliest attempts to
come to terms with the fact that awful things do happen, and we can
often do nothing about them.
But then, Jesus himself
said they would.
He said there would be wars,
and
plague,
and famine,
and all sorts of disasters.
He
told his disciples that they would be killed by those who thought
they were doing God’s work.
But he also reminded them –
and
us –
that the Holy Spirit would come.
And, he said, he
has told us this so that we may have peace.
In this world we
will have trouble.
“But take courage!
I have overcome the
world!”
So as we move into the
second half of this service,
and hear once again the ancient
story of how God became a human baby in a remote corner of an
Empire,
let’s remember that, despite appearances,
God is
in charge, and we can know his peace –
shalom, which means so
much more than peace.
In the Bible, according to one
scholar,
Shalom, in other words, is the way things ought to be.
The way things ought to
be.
We know full well that right now, things are not right,
and
they very seldom are.
But we can know God’s peace, God’s
shalom, in our hearts, no matter what.
Emmanuel.
God with
us.
Amen.
04 December 2022
The Root of Jesse
Do you remember, back in September when the Queen died, the
official announcement told us that the King and Queen Consort would
remain at Balmoral that night, and return to London the next
day.
King Charles became King the instant his mother died, and
when the time comes for him to die in his turn, his heir –
presumably
the current Prince of Wales –
will instantly become King in
his turn.
Our Royal Family’s line of succession is
pretty secure just now;
all being well, we know who the next few
Kings will be.
But it hasn’t always been so.
Sometimes,
when a reigning monarch dies without an obvious heir, a more distant
relation is invited to become King, as when the first Elizabeth died
and the then James V of Scotland became also James I of England, thus
moving from the Tudor to the Stuart dynasty.
And after Queen
Anne died, the next available Protestant monarch became George I,
instituting the Hanoverian dynasty.
But what has this to
do with our Bible readings this morning?
Well, the Davidic
dynasty was in extreme danger, when this was being written.
The
Assyrians had already taken over Israel and were threatening Judah,
where the Kings were still descended from David.
The descendents
of Jesse –
you remember, that was the name of David’s father
–
the descendents of Jesse are about to be cut off, the tree
cut down.
All that remains is a stump.
But you have
seen tree stumps, haven’t you?
When they have cut down a tree,
or it has blown down in a storm, leaving nothing but a stump.
And,
often, a shoot grows out of that stump, often many shoots, and
sometimes a whole new tree.
And here, Isaiah sees the stump that
is what the House of Jesse is reduced to, and a shoot coming out.
And
that shoot will grow into a tree, and bear fruit –
a new King,
about whom we are told:
“The Spirit of the Lord will
rest on him –
the Spirit of
wisdom and of understanding,
the Spirit
of counsel and of might,
the Spirit of
the knowledge and fear of the Lord –
and he will
delight in the fear of the Lord.”
Christians have,
of course, traditionally seen this passage as referring to Jesus.
It
does, of course, but there was probably a local application, too.
But
I don’t know how the picture of what is often called “the
peaceable kingdom” could have had a local application.
A
picture of a garden, perhaps a second Eden, where predators and prey
were together with no fear, although what the predators could have
eaten escapes me, since most are obligate carnivores and do very
badly on a plant-based diet.
A place where children could play
happily in snake pits, and where there was no hatred or
destruction.
A place filled with the knowledge of the Lord “as
the waters cover the sea”.
I wonder if or when that can
ever come true, or a version of it, this side of Heaven.
After
all, we are in a very dark place in our world just now, what with
war, the energy crisis, prices spiralling out of control.
We
have been there before, of course, and no doubt we will go there
again in future times, but when we have just emerged from a global
pandemic –
and in fact, Covid-19 is still around, although
mostly it’s not nearly as serious as it was two years ago –
when
we are just getting back together, to be hit by the current crises,
the Queen’s death, three Prime Ministers in as many months… where
is our hope in all this?
Well, our hope is where it always
was and always has been, in Jesus Christ.
St Paul reminds us
that Christ came for all, no matter who we are,
no matter what
we have done.
And the outworking of that is that through the
endurance taught in the Scriptures –
for often and often they
had to endure far worse than we do –
the endurance, Paul says,
“through the endurance taught in the Scriptures and the
encouragement they provide we might have hope.”
And our
hope, he reminds us, is in Jesus.
And so we must accept
everybody, no matter who they are,
because Christ has accepted
us.
And Paul quotes from Isaiah, that the Root of Jesse will
spring up, and bring hope to the Gentiles.
Jesus is our
hope.
Mind you, when we turn to our Gospel reading for
today,
John seems much more fiery and threatening.
But the
point is, who is he threatening?
It was the religious leaders of
the day, the Pharisees and Sadducees.
Now, you have to remember
that these were good men, holy men, and by and large they really did
try to live as they thought God wanted.
But they were very
exclusive.
They were Children of Abraham, and precious few other
people were.
They reckoned that if you were rich, God had
blessed you, but the poor were quite outside the pale.
As for
people like tax-collectors, who collaborated with the occupying
powers, and who sometimes overcharged people by more than the
necessary amount –
they were not paid, but expected to pay
themselves out of the money they collected;
you can quite see
the temptation to charge far more than absolutely
necessary.
Zaccheus, you remember, promised to repay fourfold
those whom he had defrauded. People like Samaritans, the neighbouring
tribe who had a few theological differences with the Pharisees, they
were out.
People who were eunuchs, like the Ethiopian eunuch we
read about in Acts –
they were out.
As for prostitutes,
well…. Plus you had to be very careful not to go near the Temple if
you were unclean, too, and it was all too easy to become unclean
accidentally.
Anyway, the Pharisees and Sadducees were
convinced that they were better at being God’s people than anybody
else was.
But John says they need to produce fruit in keeping
with repentance.
John’s core message was “Repent and
be baptised”;
we have often interpreted repentance to mean
being sorry for our sins, but what it really means is turn right
round and go God’s way, not yours.
If you own a satnav and you
are driving somewhere and misinterpret the instructions,
that
computer voice is apt to say “Turn around when possible”.
You
are not turning round just to retrace your steps,
but to go the
way you need to go to get to your destination.
When the
children of Israel were in the desert and started worshipping the
Golden Calf, God was angry and threatened to wipe them all out and
raise up a new tribe from Moses, but Moses begged him not to, and, in
the old Authorised version, we are told “God repented” and didn’t
wipe them out.
Well, obviously God has no need to repent in the
sense of being sorry;
it just means he changed his mind up, and
decided not to wipe them out, after all.
But the Pharisees
and Sadducees couldn’t see John’s point at all.
They were
interested in what he had to say,
but it didn’t actually apply
to them, they thought.
But John said that their status as
children of Abraham,
which they thought almost automatically
made them right with God, didn’t make them special.
“God
could raise up children of Abraham from these stones, if he wished!”
And then he speaks of the stump –
but in this
case, the stump would be that of a tree cut down because it ceased to
bear fruit.
Echoes here of Jesus in John’s gospel saying:
“I
am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener.
He cuts off
every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does
bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more
fruitful.”
And talking of pruning, John the Baptist goes
on to say that the One who will be coming after him, immeasurably
greater, will have
“his winnowing fork in his hand, and he will
clear his threshing-floor, gathering his wheat into the barn and
burning up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”
And
Isaiah, before he gets to his peaceable kingdom, tells us that Jesus
“will strike the earth with the rod of his mouth;
with
the breath of his lips he will slay the wicked.”
It’s
worrying, isn’t it?
I don’t know about you, but I find
myself far more apt to feel that I’m not going to measure up.
I
am terrified that I will be one of the branches, if not cut off, then
at least severely pruned.
But, you know what?
I think
I am worrying needlessly.
You see, I can’t –
and nor
can you –
make myself into the person I was created to be.
It
doesn’t matter how much willpower we have, we are never going to be
who we were meant to be –
at least, not without Jesus.
In
the passage I quoted earlier about Jesus being the true vine, he says
that branches that bear no fruit will be pruned, certainly –
but
he goes on to say that “If you remain in me and I in you, you will
bear much fruit;
apart from me you can do nothing. If you
do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and
withers;
such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and
burned.”
Of course, that leads me on to worrying that I
am not remaining in him, but
again, that’s a needless worry.
God has far more invested in
our relationship than I do,
and I do
know, when I think about it,
that he will not let me fall out of the hollow of his hand!
I
seem to have wandered away from the Root of Jesse a bit, but that’s
okay.
The Root is still there.
It is still producing its
shoots, the main branch being Jesus,
and our hope is still in
Jesus.
What better words to end with than Paul’s
benediction at the end of the passage from Romans that we heard
read:
“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and
peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the
power of the Holy Spirit.”
Hope.
Joy.
Peace.
May
God fill each and every one of us with all of those!
Amen.
27 November 2022
Getting Ready
So today is Advent Sunday.
It's the first Sunday in the Church's Year, and, of
course, the first in the four-week cycle that brings us up to
Christmas.
Christmas is definitely coming –
if you go by
what the supermarkets do, it's been going on since late
September!
It seems strange then, doesn't it, that the
readings for this Sunday are about as un-Christmassy as you can
get!
This from the Gospel we've just heard:
“For as
in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking,
marrying and giving in marriage, until the day Noah entered the ark,
and they knew nothing until the flood came and swept them all away,
so too will be the coming of the Son of Man.
Then two will be in
the field; one will be taken and one will be left.
Two women
will be grinding meal together; one will be taken and one will be
left.
Keep awake therefore, for you do not know on what day your
Lord is coming. ”
It's all about the end of the
world!
The time when Jesus will come again in glory to judge the
living and the dead, as we say in the Creed.
Now, there are
frequently scares that the end of the world is about to happen –
some
cult or other claims to have deciphered an ancient text that tells us
that it might occur on any given date –
about ten years ago,
some people claimed an ancient Mayan calendar proved that the end of
the world would happen on 21 December that year –
As you can
see, it didn't!
And that was only one of a very long line of
end-of-the-world stories which people have believed.
Sometimes
they have even gone as far as to sell up all their possessions and to
gather on a mountain-top,
and at least two groups committed
mass suicide to make it easier for them to be found, or something.
I
don't know exactly what....
Some Christians believe that they
will be snatched away with no notice whatsoever, to the extent that a
couple of them, worrying what would happen to their pets if they were
taken very suddenly, have set up a site called After the Rapture Pet
Care.
Apparently, some people who are either unbelievers or
belong to another religion will undertake to take care of your dog or
cat if you sign up.
This is, of course, in the USA, although I
gather the idea started here as a joke.
People who
believe in what they call the Rapture take it from this very reading,
where it says that two people will be in the field and one will be
taken and the other not....
but we don't know how much notice
we get, if any!
It sounds to me rather more like the sort of
pogroms where the dictator's army swoops down and takes people,
chosen at random or not, away to imprisonment.
God is not
like that, of course, but such things have happened throughout
history.
Actually, the end of the world is a very
difficult thing to think about
because it hasn’t happened
yet!
The Bible shows us most clearly that the early church was
convinced that it was something that would happen any minute
now,
certainly in their lifetimes.
But here we are, two
thousand years later,
and nothing has happened.
So most of
us don’t really believe it will,
or if we do believe it, it
isn’t a belief that’s in the forefront of our minds.
It
doesn’t really affect the way we live.
But maybe it
should.
Jesus said we don't know when it's going to
happen.
Nobody knows.
He didn't know.
He assumed, I
think, that it would be fairly soon after his death –
did
anybody expect the Church to go on for another two thousand years
after that?
Certainly his first followers expected His return
any minute now.
Of course, in one sense Jesus has already
returned through the coming of the Holy Spirit, indwelling each and
every one of us as we give him permission.
But I don’t quite
think this is what he is talking about here.
It is more about
the end of the world.
What is clear from the Bible –
and
from our own knowledge, too –
is that this world isn't
designed to last forever;
it's not meant to be permanent.
Just
ask the dinosaurs!
We don't know how it will end.
When I
was a girl it was assumed it would end in the flames of a nuclear
holocaust;
that particular fear lessened in 1989, but has now
come back with a vengeance given what Putin has been threatening.
All
we can do is pray this doesn’t happen –
but if it does, well…
we will be with our dear Lord in heaven.
These days we
think more in terms a major asteroid strike or, more probably,
runaway global warming,
which the boffins seem
to think has already started.
Or another pandemic.
We were
fortunate in the recent one that the death toll, while horrendous,
was still relatively low when you compare it to the fifty percent
losses during the Black Death, and in other outbreaks of plague.
Our
scientists worked so very hard to find an effective vaccine –
in fact, several effective vaccines –
and medical staff tried to find what treatment options worked best
for those who had a really bad attack.
We did not, and will not
die out because of Covid-19, but who knows whether another pandemic
might be much worse?
What is clear, though, is that one day
humanity will cease to exist on this planet.
We don't know how
or when,
but we do know that God is in charge and will cope
when it happens.
Whatever is going to happen, whenever it
happens, we need to be ready.
Our readings today all reflect
that.
Our Gospel reading sounds a bit disjointed, almost as
though Matthew has collected odd bits of Jesus’ sayings.
But
it still has a clear theme –
be ready, because you never
know!
Some years ago there was an ad put out by the
police, I think, saying that leaving your doors and windows open was
absolutely inviting burglars to come in.
I don’t think Jesus
could have seen that ad,
but the end of the gospel reading
reminded me of it:
“if the owner of the
house had known in what part of the night the thief was coming,
he
would have stayed awake and would not have let his house be broken
into.
Therefore you also must be ready, for the Son of Man is
coming at an unexpected hour.”
Okay, so we need
to be ready.
Fair enough, but how?
How do you get ready,
how do you stay ready,
and above all, how do you go on
being ready when nothing seems to happen?
I think the
answer is also in the parallel with the thief in the night.
We
make it a habit, don’t we,
of checking that our doors and
windows are locked before we go out,
even on a short trip to
Lidl or Tesco.
If we have our car, it’s automatic to check
that we haven’t left anything visible, and that it is locked,
before we leave it.
And we have insurance to cover us in case
the worst happens anyway,
no matter how careful we’ve
been.
Well, it’s the same, I think, in our Christian
lives.
We can build good habits of prayer, of reading the
Bible,
of fellowship and of coming to the Sacrament
regularly.
These are what John Wesley called “The means of
grace”,
and they are the building blocks of our Christian
life.
They are as essential to our Christian life as food and
drink are to our physical life.
But they are also habits that
one can acquire or break.
You’re in the habit of locking your
front door whenever you leave the house –
are you in the habit
of contacting God every day, too?
You make sure you’ve shut
your windows –
are you sure you take the Sacrament?
And
so it goes on.
Parallels only work so far, of
course,
especially because it’s not all down to us.
I
know we sometimes talk as though it is,
and, of course, we are
always free to say “No” to God –
though I do very much
hope we won’t choose to do that.
But God has far more invested
in the relationship than we do –
either that, or God is so far
above us that he’s totally uninterested in us as individuals.
And
we know that’s not true!
So it must be true that God is
numbering every hair on our head,
and being far more interested
in maintaining a relationship with us than we are with him.
We
don’t have to do all the hard work.
Nevertheless, good
habits are good habits,
and we need to acquire them!
And
with God’s help, we can.
We don’t have to do it alone,
because God indwells us,
through the Holy Spirit,
and
enables us to actually want to read the Bible and pray, and worship,
and take Communion, and so on.
We don’t often think
about the end of times and the Last Judgement,
and that’s
probably as it should be.
If we thought about it too much, we’d
never get on with our lives,
and we’d end up being so
heavenly-minded we’d be of no earthly use.
But we do need this
annual reminder,
because we don’t want to end up living as if
this life were all there is, either.
Obviously we don’t
absolutely know that when we die,
we’ll go on with Jesus
somewhere else.
It might just be wishful thinking on our
part.
But that’s what faith is all about!
We can’t
know, not really, but we can choose to believe it,
and to live
accordingly.
And to work together with God to become the best we
can possibly be.
And then, if, or perhaps when the
unthinkable happens,
then we’ll be ready.
Are you
ready?
Oh, one loose end –
in my parallel with
burglar-proofing our houses,
I mentioned insurance.
Do we
have insurance?
As Christians, yes, we do.
We have Jesus’
promise in John’s gospel:
“For God so loved the world that
he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not
perish but may have eternal life.
Indeed, God did not send the
Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world
might be saved through him.
Those who believe in him are not
condemned;
but those who do not believe are condemned already,
because they have not believed in the name of the only Son of
God.”
Says it all, doesn’t it!
13 November 2022
Job and Remembrance
“In my flesh, I will see God.” I wonder how much comfort that verse really is, when your cities are being bombed and your energy supplies disrupted, your children’s education interrupted and maybe you are even forced to flee your country and depend on the kindness of strangers for a roof over your head.
As has been happening, as I’m sure you know, in Ukraine over the past few months and, although things seem to be going badly for Russia just now, there is no sign of an end, or even a ceasefire. Many of you may know, or know of, Ukrainian refugees who are in this country temporarily until things improve. My sister-in-law is giving house space to one family, and I believe they are great friends, but naturally the family wants to go home. The son has already gone – he wanted to go and fight, but I think he has been persuaded to finish his university course first. But there are plenty of others – I know a girl who needs a room to rent; she has a good job that she can do remotely, but can’t afford a flat at London prices on Ukrainian wages!
You know, in many ways we have been very lucky here in the UK. Yes, this war is bringing increased energy prices – and increased profiteering by the energy companies – but we don’t, yet, have to suffer bombs and foreign soldiers stamping around killing the men and raping the women on the slightest provocation. Not yet, and I pray God we never will.
We were blitzed once, still just about within living memory – you can still see the scars in many local roads, with 1950s housing next to the 19th-century stock that remains. I pray it will be the last time, and I pray our armed forces will never be required to go and bomb foreign cities, too.
Today is the day we remember those servicemen and women who have given their lives in the service of their country. I don’t know about you, but I do know that I lost at least three relatives in the First War, two of whom have no known grave but are commemorated on the various memorials in and around Arras. The third one has a grave – my brother has just visited it and sent me photographs – in a tiny cemetery literally in the middle of nowhere, about two kilometres from the main road! And my father, and one of my grandfathers, saw service in the Second World War, too. I’m sure your families may have similar stories to tell, of people who served their country in this way. And, of course, not just those in the armed forces, but those who risked their lives bringing desperately-needed provisions across seas studded with enemy submarines, or who were dropped “behind the lines” to help the Resistance movements. And the countless millions whose lives were simply interrupted by the way – evacuated to safe areas, or directed to jobs that helped the “war effort”, such as making munitions or working on the land. All these we remember, too.
I think not.
They are not easy, of course.
For those who have been involved in war,
whether actively or by default because their whole country was,
they bring back all sorts of memories.
For those who have not been involved, they can seem irrelevant.
and refuse to join the armed forces, even in a time of conscription.
I’m inclined to agree, I have to admit, but for one thing –
do we really want our armed forces to be places where God is not honoured?
That’s the big problem with Christian pacifism –
it leaves the armed forces very vulnerable.
But almost more important is to bring hope.
To bring the good news that
Job, and then Jesus proclaimed.
“I KNOW that my Redeemer lives.”
“God IS the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob.”
You may well have known people who have died very suddenly; I know I have.
We may have known people who have been the victims of terrorist attacks, or just the random shootings and stabbings that seem to have happened far too often recently.
And we wonder, as Job must have done, where God is in all this.
Job, we are told, never lost faith –
but many people did when they saw the horrors of war.
if this life is not all there is,
if the best bit is still to come,
then death isn’t a total, unmitigated disaster.
Of course it is a disaster.
Of course we hurt, and ache, and grieve, and miss the person who has gone.
But we can know they haven’t gone forever, and it does help!
“In my flesh I shall see God.” It may not be much comfort when God seems far away and the enemy near, but it is something to hold on to in times of trial.
Some preachers will say that God limits those who can get into heaven to those who have professed faith in Jesus,
but I think it is rather we who exclude ourselves than God who excludes us.
People who are seriously anti-God,
seriously anti-faith,
wouldn’t be comfortable in eternal life, would they?
“I KNOW that my Redeemer lives and that in the end he will stand upon the earth.
And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God.”
06 November 2022
What Belongs to God
I tend to use contactless payment via my phone, and even in places like France or Germany, which were far slower off the mark to adopt contactless payments, most places now accept cards.
But cash is still there, and for some things you have to use it.
we barely even notice that they have a picture of the Queen on one side, and a few odd remarks in Latin printed round the picture. The first coins featuring King Charles are to be issued next month, I understand, starting with a 50p piece.
and then DG, which means by God’s grace;
Reg, short for Regina, means Queen or Rex, which means King,
and FD means Defender of the Faith –
a title, ironically, given to Henry the Eighth when he wrote a book supporting the Pope against the Protestant Reformation,
the old shillings, sixpences, florins and half-crowns had often been issued during the reign of George the Sixth and pennies were often even older –
We didn’t have pound coins back then;
and there was also a banknote for what we now know as 50p, but was then called ten shillings.
It was quite a lot of money back in the day
a useful amount for visiting godfathers to tip one!
based on which reign it was, and if we were right we got to keep it
Different countries have different things on their coins, of course;
You see, God created us in His image and likeness,
It's not so much that we owe him the duty of giving ourselves back to him –
We don't have to do it ourselves.
Amen.