This was shorter than usual because we were celebrating the end of Black History Month, so needed to make sure we didn't overrun too badly. Which we didn't!
Today, we are celebrating the end of Black History month, 2023.
I
hope that most of our liturgy is reflecting that, and we will have
some more contributions to our celebration later on in the
service.
It’s also Bible Sunday;
when I was a girl,
this was celebrated during Advent, but they changed the calendar
around some years ago now, so now it’s celebrated on this Sunday.
I
had to learn the collect, the special prayer for the day, off by
heart when I was a schoolgirl!
I used to love “help us so to
hear them, to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them….”
And
it’s that which we have to do with the Scriptures, isn’t
it?
Read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them,
until they
become part of us, part of who we are, part of our lives.
We are
told to let the Word of Christ dwell in us richly!
But,
having said that, we do have to be aware
that our reading of the Bible is always going to be flawed,
we’re
always going to read it through the lens of our own prejudice,
our
own experience, our own political viewpoint.
Or,
if we read with the help of a daily commentary, of that commentator’s
prejudice, experience, political viewpoint, and so on.
But,
by and large, we want to internalise
Scripture;
to let it dwell in us richly.
And
I rather think the passage
that [the reader] read to us earlier is one that we really need
to internalise: “You shall love the Lord your God
with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.
This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it:
You shall love your neighbour as yourself.”
Love.
Of
course, there are all sorts of different kinds of love, and our
English language, unusually, doesn’t have different words for the
sort of love we give to our parents, our partners,
our children, our friends, even strawberries or our teddy bear!
Greek
does, which is helpful, and the word it uses for loving God is
“agape”;
it’s not used anywhere else.
St Paul gives
that wonderful definition of agape love in his letter to the
Corinthians, you may remember:
“Love is patient;
love
is kind;
love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude.
It
does not insist on its own way;
it is not irritable or
resentful;
it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in
the truth.
It bears all things,
believes all things,
hopes
all things,
endures all things.
Love never ends.”
Pretty
amazing, really.
This is the sort of love that Jesus was talking
about, when he told us to love God with all of our being, and to love
our neighbours as ourselves.
We
need to be centred on God, not on ourselves.
But how do
we do that?
After all, most people manage pretty well
without God, and even those of us who try to be God’s people spend
vast swathes of time doing other things,
sleeping,
for one, or cooking, or working….
We are, of course,
still God’s people while doing all those things,
but it’s
not often at the forefront of our minds!
In
John’s first letter, he equates
loving God with loving our neighbour,
saying, basically, you
can’t have one without the other.
“Those
who say, `I love God', and hate their brothers or sisters, are
liars
for those who do not love a brother or sister whom they
have seen,
cannot love God whom they have not seen.
The
commandment we have from him is this:
those who love God must
love their brothers and sisters also.”
But then, just to
get us even more confused, he says
“Everyone who believes that
Jesus is the Christ has been born of God,
and everyone who loves
the parent loves the child.
By this we know that we love the
children of God,
when we love God and obey his
commandments.”
So for John, loving God and loving our
neighbour,
our brothers and sisters,
are one and the same
thing.
And, indeed, that God's love for us is first and foremost
–
our love for God is just a response to that.
And
I think he's probably right.
We love, we are told, because
God first loved us!
The love of God has been poured into our
hearts by the Holy Spirit.
And without God, our human
loves can be desperately flawed.
Parents can be overly
possessive of their children, not allowing them to grow and develop
in their own way;
I
don’t need to tell you how often romantic love can go wrong;
and
even friendship can be more about excluding another person or group
of people than anything else.
But
if Love is the most important commandment in the Bible, then we
mustn’t exclude anybody, for whatever reason.
Not even if they
hold views we find abhorrent.
It’s
not always easy, of course –
how do we pray for politicians
whose views we loathe?
And
how easy is it to forgive, and to love, those who have rejected us
for whatever reason?
I know my experience is peanuts compared to
what many of you have gone through, but I was rejected by my peers at
boarding-school a lot of the time, and those were not always happy
years.
And
even though we are all friends now, over 50 years later, I still
have
to bite my tongue on occasion!
Loving and forgiving those who
have hurt us, or those whose views we find abhorrent, or those who
have inflicted gross damage on the world –
it really isn’t
easy.
And I really think it’s only through God’s help that
we can.
We are, we are told, to love our neighbours as
ourselves;
and sometimes that is a case of “pity the poor
neighbour”.
We are often either totally self-absorbed, or we
fail to value ourselves as we should.
And, there again, it’s
only through God’s help we
can .
Just
as we can’t love
God without God’s having first loved us, so we can’t love our
neighbours, or ourselves, without God’s help.
It’s all one,
really.
We need to allow the word of God to dwell in us richly,
to allow God the Holy Spirit to indwell us;
we need to allow the
Spirit to grow us and change us and teach us to love.
Amen.
I ad-libbed the children's talk which makes up the first part of the recording.
What an incredibly nasty Gospel passage was set for today! I don’t
like it one little tiny bit. But it’s there, it’s in Matthew’s
Gospel, and it’s our Gospel reading for today, so we had better
look at it, I think.
A king is holding a wedding-feast
for his son. And, one presumes, his daughter-in-law, but she isn’t
mentioned! I believe even in Orthodox Jewish weddings to this day
the bride and groom celebrate separately, so perhaps that’s not as
surprising as it sounds.
What is surprising, though, is
that people didn’t want to come. The King sent out his servants to
call them in, and they refused. And then when they were asked a
second time, they even beat up the servants and killed them. So the
King, in retaliation, sent his soldiers to burn down the city, and
gets the servants to invite a whole different set of people, “good
and bad alike”, who all jump at the chance to visit the royal
palace. Or who are too scared not to, by that stage. But then, there
is one bloke who isn’t properly dressed, and doesn’t justify
himself, and isn’t just asked to leave, as you might expect, but
bound hand and foot and cast into outer darkness.
Well,
what’s it all about? The thing is, people tend to see the King who
throws the party as God inviting everybody in in place of the Jews
who refused Jesus’ invitation, and then the ones who are invited
later are the ones who, like us, have said “Yes” to Jesus. But
all that violence in the middle? Doesn’t sound like the Jesus I
know, does it you? And what of the guy who was thrown out for not
wearing the right clothes? Maybe he’s the one who tried to get in
on his own merits, without putting on “the garment of salvation”.
But this story, with blood and gore everywhere, with the
King seeming to be happy to kill everybody and burn their towns, even
while letting the feast get cold – what is that saying about God,
if we look on the King as representing God? What does it say about
the Kingdom of Heaven?
St Luke, and some of the
non-canonical Gospels, the ones that didn’t make the cut, tell the
story in a very different way, where the party-giver is definitely
God, there are no reprisals for those who chose not to come, but then
the gaps are filled with anybody and everybody, no matter who they
are, no matter what their physical condition. All are welcome. Now,
that version of the story is giving a very different picture of God.
So what’s Matthew trying to say. Why is his version the kind of
image of God that can really damage our mental health, leaving us
worried and fearful of “doing it wrong” and being thrown out. Or
which can make us justify hating groups of people who are not like
us. Or can make us justify using violence in God’s name.
Ah,
but think a minute. Matthew is Jewish, writing for Jewish believers.
And what was their experience of kings? Not the King of Heaven that
we associate with kings – but the puppet kings installed by the
brutal Roman regime. Maybe this story can be read another way. The
king is brutal, so violence and killing become the norm in that
society. Maybe the one who refused to wear a wedding garment, and
who refused to justify himself, and who was bound and violently cast
out – could that, could that, do you think, be Jesus? That is,
after all, what we are told happened to him. He was the one who
stood silently in front of his accusers, refusing to justify himself,
and who was bound and taken to the shameful death of the cross.
If
you have ears to hear, said Jesus, then hear. Maybe many of his
followers were unwilling to see such a story as anything other than a
picture of God at his most vengeful; maybe they liked seeing God like
that. Maybe you do, too? One trouble with seeing God like that is
that it makes salvation be down to us, not down to God. If we get it
wrong, we’ll be chucked out.
Although one way of seeing
the wedding garment, is the salvation that comes from God. We need
to acknowledge that we can do nothing of ourselves to save ourselves,
and we need to put on the “wedding garment” that Christ provides
for us. We can’t be, and won’t be, accepted on our own merits.
Acceptance is through Christ, and is unlimited. We will, of course,
receive due recognition, I am sure: “Well done, thou good and
faithful servant” – but it is through Christ we gain admittance
to God’s country.
You can look at the story either way,
of course. But all that violence – isn’t there enough violence
in the world these days without having to see the rather cartoonish
violence in the story Jesus told. As so often, it’s over the top –
Jesus spoke Aramaic, which is a very over-the-top language. The king
wasn’t very likely to abandon his feast, go and kill those who had
killed his messengers and burn their towns to the ground, and then
come back and expect to find his feast just as he had left it, after
all!
St Paul, in the part of the letter to the
Philippians that we also read earlier, reminds us that we should be
filling our minds with “those things that are good and that deserve
praise: things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and
honourable.” This doesn’t mean, of course, that we must close
our eyes to the horrors that go on in this world – God
forbid!
Even Paul is at his most practical at the start of
the chapter, urging two of the stalwart women who run the church to
get over themselves and sort out their differences, and he asks the
bearer of the letter, and some of the other elders of the church, to
help them do that. We’re not told what they were disagreeing about
– whether it was an important point of doctrine, or just whose turn
it was to arrange the flowers that week, or what was to be on the
menu for the communal meal at Pentecost. Even the little things can
assume undue importance at times!
But then he reminds us
that we need to be joyful always in our union with Christ, and not to
worry about anything. Well, that’s easier said than done, for a
start! But the point is, Paul says, pray about it. Pray about the
issues, bring them to God, being thankful that God is there to listen
and to help. And you listen too, in case God wants you to be part of
the answer to your prayer, as does often happen. And the more we can
leave the issues with God, and focus on the good things, the more we
will experience God’s peace.
Now, the word usually
translated “peace” comes from the Hebrew word Shalom. And Shalom
means far more than peace as in an absence of worry, although that
too. It’s more than just an absence of war and quarrels, although
them, too. It’s about wholeness. About things being the way they
ought to be, but so seldom are.
The way things ought to
be. Wholeness. Reconciliation, not just within families, within the
church, between denominations, between nations, but reconciliation
between people, God and nature. Wholeness. And it’s the wholeness
of creation, the wholeness of ourselves within it. That is the sort
of peace that Paul says will “keep our hearts and minds in Christ
Jesus”.
Now, you know as well as I do that we live in a
broken world. The horrendous conflict that has suddenly sprung up,
yet again, between Hamas and Israel over the past few days is just
one of the many conflicts going on around the world. The war between
Russia and Ukraine is still ongoing, even though the latest conflict
has knocked it off the front pages. Afghanistan is still refusing
women basic rights over their own bodies, as are parts of the USA,
but Afghanistan goes further and refuses them most of their rights as
human beings.
There is still trouble in Syria… and so it
goes on.
And then there is the brokenness of God’s
creation: climate change, pollution, extinctions and so
on.
Nevertheless, St Paul says to pray, to thank God, and
then to fill our minds with “those things that are good and that
deserve praise: things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and
honourable.”
I’m not entirely sure that Jesus’ story
in our Gospel reading comes under that heading! But if the person
thrown out in chains for not wearing a wedding garment is Jesus, as
there is a strong argument that he is, then that is something we can
focus on.
The thing is, I think, that we need to be
aware of the evil, bring it to God in prayer, and then put it aside
for now. We need to listen to or read the news, of course we do, and
pray as we read or listen, but we shouldn’t wallow in it! When our
friends on social media post something that means they need our
prayers, we should pray at once, so we don’t forget, and then move
on. We need to be disciplined about the rabbit-holes we fall down
on-line – some, of course, are wonderful, but others, not so much!
And so it goes. Common-sense, really, but how many of us have any
common sense? And we need to focus on peace, pray for peace, yet
still aware that there will probably be no peace in our lifetimes.
And as for the story Jesus told – let’s not wallow in
the bloodthirstiness and the nastiness, but let’s focus on the
solitary figure, silent, bound, and cast out – for it is through
him that we can know God as our heavenly Father, and experience his
peace and wholeness. Amen.
With thanks to Nathan Nettleton of the South Yarra Community Baptist church in Melbourne, Australia, whose sermons, as published on Laughingbird.net, helped me enormously with this sermon.
“Where two or three are gathered together in My name,” said
Jesus, “there am I with them.”
I expect you know that
the Gospels were only written down about 50 or 60 years after Jesus’
death.
A lot of things happened during those years, of course,
and although we know how accurate oral transmission can be,
there are a few places where it looks as though an extraneous
passage got inserted.
I don’t quite mean extraneous, I don’t
think –
but a passage attributed to Jesus that perhaps wasn’t
what he actually said,
but what the early Church thought he
ought to have said.
And part of the passage we heard just now
is, I think, one of those passages, mostly because it talks about the
Church, a gathering of Christians –
and such a thing didn’t
exist in Jesus’ day.
But whatever, it got into our Bibles, so
we need to read it and learn from it.
And although my text is,
as I said at the beginning, “Where two or three are gathered
together in My name, there am I with them,” we do need to look at
the whole passage, as “a text without a context is a pretext!”
The
first part does seem, at first reading, extraordinary, though.
We
know from elsewhere that Jesus tells us never to put limits on our
forgiveness.
We know we must forgive, or it’s impossible for
us to receive God’s forgiveness, we block ourselves off from
it.
And we are told never to judge.
We’re told to
sort out what’s wrong with ourselves first –
you remember
how Jesus graphically told us to remove the very large log from our
own eyes before we could possibly deal with the tiny speck that
bothered us in someone else’s.
But we are human.
No
matter how much we want to love our neighbours as ourselves, it’s
difficult.
It’s easy enough to love suffering humanity en
masse, to send a text to a certain number to give three pounds
towards relieving some kind of community suffering somewhere
else.
It’s easy enough to throw an extra box of tea-bags into
the food bank box at the supermarket, or to donate to homeless
charities.
It’s even relatively easy to do small things to
lower your carbon footprint –
to take reusable produce bags to
the supermarket, to be scrupulous about recycling, and so on.
Now,
don’t get me wrong, all these are good and right and proper things
to be doing, and we should probably all do them more than we actually
do.
But they are all relatively easy –
the difficult bit
comes when we have to start interacting with other people, and loving
them.
“To love the world to me’s no chore.
My problem
is that lot next door!”
That’s when we’re apt to forget to
be loving, when we are apt to go our own way, when we’re apt to
hurt people, most probably totally unintentionally.
The careless
word, the accidental insult –
or even, sadly, the intentional
one.
Now, obviously, if we realise we’ve hurt someone,
the thing to do is to apologise at once.
Sometimes there
are times when we don’t really want to apologise –
they
started it, it was their fault.
Well, even if it is, we are the
ones who need to apologise, if only because it makes us bigger than
them….
Well, perhaps not for that reason, but you know what I
mean.
But what if it is they who hurt you?
The human
thing to do is to hit out and hurt them back, but we’re not
supposed to do that, and with God’s help we won’t.
This
passage tells us what to do –
first, go and explain what has
gone wrong,
and if they agree and apologise, all is well and no
harm done.
Then you take a couple of friends along to witness
that you had a problem and to try and help you be reconciled,
and
then, finally, take it to the church.
The church, note –
not
the world!
And then, the passage says, if they still won’t
listen,
let them be to you as a tax gatherer or a
gentile.
Which, on first reading, sounds as if you should shun
them completely,
which was how Jewish people of the time
behaved towards them.
But that’s not what Jesus
did!
Remember the story of Levi, who was a tax collector, and
Jesus called him to become one of the disciples.
Remember
Zaccheus, who resolved to pay back anybody he had cheated after Jesus
loved and forgave him and went to eat with him.
Remember how
many times he talked with, and healed, Gentiles, non-Jews, people who
observant Jews would have nothing to do with.
So what is
the church to do with those who won’t see that they’ve hurt
someone, or if they do see it, don’t care?
From Jesus’
example, it looks as though we have to go on loving them, trusting
them, and caring for them.
Heaven, as one paraphrase puts it,
will back us up.
Obviously, there are very rare occasions when
steps have to be taken,
if a child or a vulnerable adult is at
risk, for example,
but mostly things can be put right without
that.
And even when steps do have to be taken –
and the
Methodist church has systems in place to organise such steps,
so
our safeguarding people know what to do –
we still have a duty
to love and care for the perpetrator.
Now, the next part
of the passage is really not easy to understand.
If, says Jesus,
or the Church speaking in Jesus’ name, two or three agree on
anything in prayer, it will be granted.
But we know that, with
the best will in the world, this doesn’t always happen.
We
have all seen times when our prayers, far from being answered,
appear to have gone no further than the ceiling.
But then
again, were we only looking for one answer to our prayer?
Were
we telling God what to do, as, I don’t know about you, but I find
I’m rather apt to.
Were we just talking at God, and not trying
to listen,
trying to be part of what God is doing in the
world?
All too easily done, I’m afraid.
But the
final sentence –
ah, now that brings hope.
“For where
two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”
You
see, in the Jewish faith, you need what’s called a minyan, a
minimum of ten people –
in many traditions, ten men, not
people.
If there are only nine of you, you can’t go ahead with
the service.
But not for we Christians.
We know that even
if there are only a couple of us,
Jesus will be there with us
and enabling our worship.
I think I told you that last time I
was with you, when the congregation was rather smaller than usual
because of the Cup Final!
But Jesus was definitely with
us.
“Where two or three are gathered together in
My name,” said Jesus, “there am I with them.”
I
don’t know about you, but I found that to be very true during the
pandemic, during those long, weary months when we weren’t allowed
to meet together, and when we could, there were huge
restrictions.
Last time I preached on these passages, it was, I
think, the first Sunday we had been allowed back to church in five
long months.
We had to sign in, and in some churches we even had
to book a seat!
We had to sit miles apart from anybody except
our own families, we had to wear masks, we weren’t allowed to sing,
or to take an offering (there was usually a box by the door for those
who had brought one), or even share the Peace or make our Communions
as we were accustomed to do.
But it was a lot better than not
meeting at all, which had been the case for so many months, and was
to be again the following winter.
Many of us lost loved
ones during that hard time, either to Covid-19 or to other
illnesses.
Many of us had Covid ourselves, and although some
recovered quickly,
others, myself included, were still feeling
the after-effects a good two years later.
Many of us had mental
health issues during that time.
Many, if not most, of us
wondered where on earth God was in all this.
But God was
there.
There in the many different ways we struggled to be
church together –
the recorded services, the Zoom services,
eventually, the livestreams.
Some of those continue to this day
–
we now have two Zoom services weekly in the Circuit, the
Wednesday evening Compline and the Sunday evening service which,
although it is Clapham who run it, welcomes any of us who care to log
in.
But most of this is, we hope, ancient history.
There
may or may not be another pandemic in our lifetimes –
I hope
and pray there won’t be.
Eventually, there will be one, of
course;
but I hope not for a long while yet!
But what is
total, current, today’s news, is that Jesus is here with us, right
now this minute.
We are gathered together in his name, and he
has promised that where two or three –
or a dozen or so, in
this case –
are gathered together, he is there with us.
We
have been told what to do if we have a problem with someone else who
refuses to acknowledge it, or to clear the air.
Although I’ll
just remind you here that Jesus said that if you know someone has a
problem with you, or you with them,
you really ought to make it
right before you come to the Lord’s table together.
But that,
as this passage points out, isn’t always practical.
All we can
really do is pray for God’s grace.
It’s not as if church
quarrels were anything new –
even St Paul has to tell two of
the women in the church at Philippi to get over themselves and get
their acts together!
They happen.
They have always
happened.
And they probably always will happen.
But
Jesus is there with us, no matter how many people’s backs we’ve
put up.
Jesus is there with us because we are gathered in his
name.
And this, of course, means we can’t actually exclude
anyone!
How can we be gathered in Jesus’ name and exclude
anybody from that gathering?
We can’t, of course.
Not
even people like tax-gatherers or pagans!
Jesus would never have
turned his back on such people unless they had made it very, very,
very clear that they wanted nothing at all to do with him, and how
can we do differently?
“Where two or three are gathered
together in My name,” said Jesus, “there am I with them.”
And
it doesn’t matter what we are doing in His name,
whether we’re
attending public worship,
or visiting someone who is ill,
or
helping at the food bank,
or any other form of community
service.
Or even being at work or school, or at home.
If we
do it in Jesus’ name, and if there are other people involved, he is
there in the midst of it all!
I think I remember first hearing the story of Moses in the bulrushes,
which was our first reading today, when I was in primary school! I
imagine you did, too, most probably. It’s one of the first Bible
stories we ever learn.
It’s an important story, as Moses
was an important person – so important, in fact, that he was one of
those who visited the transfigured Jesus on the mountain-top, along
with Elijah. God made it clear then that it was Jesus who we are to
listen to, Jesus who has superseded both Moses and Elijah, Jesus who
is God’s beloved son.
But Moses, like Jesus, wasn’t born to
greatness. In fact, rather the reverse. The Israelites, at that
time, were living in Egypt – you might recall how they moved down
there at Pharaoh’s invitation, and that of his right-hand man
Joseph. And at first they settled down, and built farms, and lived
their lives according to God’s word as it was then understood, and
all went swimmingly. They grew, and they prospered.
Meanwhile,
however, the Pharaoh grew old, and died, and a few generations later
a new Pharaoh ascended the throne, and this Pharaoh had never heard
of Joseph, and didn’t really want to, either. He was concerned,
because here was this enormous group of people who weren’t Egyptian
at all, living in the middle of Egypt and it was possible –
although not probable – that they could overturn his throne.
Pharaoh wasn’t having that!
So he got together with
his advisors, and they pretty much enslaved the Israelites, demanding
– and getting – forced labour from them to build things and carry
burdens, work in the fields, and so on. They didn’t build the
pyramids – the pyramids existed long before Joseph went to Egypt –
but they did build a couple of towns, Pithon and Rameses. But the
harder the Egyptians forced them to work, the more children they had,
and the more they prospered.
So the Hebrew midwives,
Shiphrah and Puah, were told they must kill any boy baby that was
born to an Israelite woman, although they could let the girls live.
But the midwives were not about to do that, and ignored their
instructions. And when summonsed to explain themselves, they said
blandly that all that work in the fields meant that the women had a
very easy time giving birth, and the babies in question had been born
long before they got there! And the children of Israel became
stronger and stronger and more and more numerous.
So
Pharaoh got very cross indeed, and ordered that all baby boys must be
thrown into the river, there either to drown or to be eaten by
crocodiles, or both. But it still didn’t stop the Israelites.
The
Bible doesn’t give the names of Moses’ parents; they are just
referred to as a Levite man and a Levite woman. This means they were
both descendants of Levi, one of Jacob’s sons. The Levites,
traditionally, end up being the tribe that is responsible for Temple
worship and so on – not the priests, but the worship leaders, if
you like. I don’t know if they had that role back in Egypt, but it
seems significant that Moses should be a Levite.
This
couple had two other children that we know of; a girl called Miriam,
and a boy called Aaron who was a few years older than Moses, so
presumably born before the edict to kill the male babies was made.
And then Moses arrives.
I wonder whether Moses’ mother
knew what she was going to do if she had a boy. I expect she was
praying and praying that it be a girl, and then it wasn’t.
Disaster! What on earth was she going to do? How could she give up
her beloved baby to be killed?
We aren’t told that she
prayed, but I’m sure she did. And she was able to hide the baby
for three months, but babies are not an easy thing to hide, and
eventually she realised she simply couldn’t. But she had been
plotting and preparing. Her baby must go in the river, okay. But
she wasn’t going to let the authorities throw him in – instead,
she would put him in herself, in a basket she had spent time weaving
from rushes, and covering it with pitch so it would be waterproof.
And she took the basket, with Moses in it, down to the
river herself. Her heart must have broken as she placed it tenderly
in the reed-bed. She had done what she could, complying with the
letter of the law, if not the spirit. Only God could help her baby
now.
She didn’t dare hang about to see what would
happen, but her daughter Miriam could lurk discreetly, pretending to
be playing, perhaps.
And what does happen is that
Pharaoh’s daughter comes down to the river to bathe, with all her
attendants. And she hears the baby crying, and sends one of her
women to go and see what the noise is. And the woman brings back the
baby in his basket.
Pharaoh’s daughter – we don’t
know her name, either; the Bible is so bad at giving women names –
is entranced by the baby, and even though he’s obviously a Hebrew
baby, she wants to keep him for her own, as though he were a stray
puppy or kitten. But the baby is getting hungry now, and howling,
and his sister, very bravely, comes up to the women and says “I
know where there’s a wet-nurse, if you want one for the baby!”
The
wet-nurse is, of course, her own mother, who has just that very day
put the baby in the river. And Pharaoh’s daughter says “Ooh, yes
please!” and so the family end up moving into the palace, albeit
into servants’ quarters, and Moses is brought up as befits a royal
child.
There are some obvious parallels with Jesus here,
aren’t there? The humble parents, the oppressed people, the edict
to kill the baby boys. Ironic, perhaps, that Mary and Joseph fled
into Egypt to keep Jesus safe!
Meanwhile, Moses grew up as
a child of the palace, although he obviously did know he had Hebrew
roots, as we learn later in his story. But Jesus, we hope, had a
happy and serene childhood in Nazareth, treated no differently from
other boys his age, playing with his friends, going to school, and
only very gradually learning that he was different and special as he
grew up.
I’m not sure, by the way, whether he knew what
Peter’s answer to the question “Who do you say that I am?” was
going to be, as we heard in our Gospel reading. Did he already know
he was the Messiah? He obviously knew he had a special calling from
God, that he was God’s beloved son – but, the Messiah? Peter’s
answer was very definitely God’s voice to him. Yes, you are the
Messiah. But he asked the disciples not to say anything, as he
didn’t want to be elevated to the status of a political leader,
which is what they had always imagined the Messiah was going to
be.
Moses, as we all know, led his people out of slavery
and to the very boundaries of the Promised Land; Jesus wasn’t about
overthrowing the occupying power, or really anything to do with
politics; he brings us out of slavery in a totally different way –
the slavery of sin, as the Bible calls it.
But Moses’
story has more to teach us than just the parallels with Jesus. It’s
about God’s wonderful provision for his people.
It must
have been so awful for Moses’ mother, mustn’t it? She knew she
had to put her precious baby into the river; he could be – and
probably would be – swept away and drowned, or eaten by crocodiles,
or both. But she was also placing him into God’s hands, and God
wasn’t going to let him be swept away or eaten. God saw to it that
it was just at that precise moment that Pharaoh’s daughter and her
attendants came down to bathe. And just at that precise moment that
the baby woke up hungry.
And so Moses was saved from the
crocodiles, and grew up a child of the palace.
Jesus, too,
was saved from the edict that all baby boys be killed; his parents
listened to the angel who warned them, and took him to Egypt, where
they stayed until that Herod died, and then resettled in Nazareth,
where Jesus grew up as a normal village child.
I wonder
how God provides for you and me? We are probably not going to be
leaders of our people, but we are still God’s beloved children.
And St Paul reminds us that “God will meet all your needs according
to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus”.
We didn’t
read the passage from Paul’s letters set for today, as it would
have made the service too long, but it was that bit from the letter
to the Romans where Paul reminds us that although we are one body in
Christ, we are all different, and God has given us all different
gifts, which we should not be shy about using.
I am sure
that almost all of us, looking back, can see times when God provided
for us – I know I can, several times, over the course of my life.
Sometimes it was using decisions I made; other times it was the right
person in the right place at the right time, and so on. And I expect
– although I don’t actually know and don’t especially want to
know – there have been times when I’ve been the right person in
the right place at the right time. And I’m sure there have been
times when you have, too.
Pharoah’s daughter was in the
right place at the right time. So, of course, was Simon Peter, to
tell Jesus that “You are the Messiah, the holy one of God!” I
pray that all of us may be the right person in the right place at the
right time – and I think I pray that we’ll never know it, as then
we might think it was we who did it, not God! Amen.
Our Gospel reading this morning is a very odd sort of story, isn't
it?
Here we have Jesus telling his disciples that what goes into
your mouth doesn't matter, it's what comes out of it –
what
you say, even, perhaps, what you think –
that matters.
And
then he goes and says something that everybody, certainly today and,
I suspect, throughout a great deal of history, finds incredibly
offensive.
Well, the first bit is easy enough to
understand.
Jews and Muslims both have very strict dietary
rules, and believe that breaking them makes you unclean, and unfit to
be in God's presence.
And they also have strict rules about
washing yourself before worship,
being clean on the outside
before, one hopes, being made clean within.
But Jesus was
able to see, as his followers couldn't,
that what you eat
doesn't actually matter.
Many of the rules –
about not
eating pig, or shellfish, for instance –
made sense in an era
where there was no way of refrigerating food.
Eating them might
give you a tummy-upset,
but it wouldn't be the end of the world
if you did.
What goes into your mouth, says Jesus, eventually
passes through and comes out the other end, but what comes out –
well, that just shows what kind of a person you are!
And
then a few days later –
we don't know the exact date, that
wasn't the kind of thing that the first gospel-writers thought
important –
a few days later he's off in a non-Jewish region,
and he is so incredibly rude to the woman who comes begging for
healing.
What is going on?
Of course, the traditional
explanation is that he was testing her.
Well, that may or may
not be the case, I don’t know, but it’s what people often say
because it’s what they think Jesus is like.
The
difficulty is, of course, that we can't hear the tone of voice he was
speaking in.
Did he snap at her, which is a bit what it sounds
like?
He had ignored her for some time until the disciples asked
him to deal with her or send her away.
Was he trying to be
funny?
I wonder how you “hear” him in your head when you
read this passage, or one of its parallels.
I tend to hear
him as being thoughtful, trying to work it out.
You see, in the
time and place when he was brought up,
he would have learnt to
assume that the Jews were God's chosen people, and nobody else
mattered.
Some things, it would appear, given the situation in
Gaza today, never change.
But the point is, Jesus didn't know
any better,
which I think today's Israelis ought to.
It
might sound strange to say “Jesus didn't know”, because after
all, He is God, he is omnipotent and so on.
But we believe –
or at least we say we do –
that He is also fully
human.
Unlike the various gods and goddesses of Greek myth,
he
wasn't born already adult,
springing fully formed from his
father's forehead, or something.
He was born as a baby.
Think
about it a minute.
A baby.
Babies are so helpless when they
are born; they rely on us, their parents, to do everything for
them.
And they gradually grow and learn –
first to sit
up,
then to begin to play with objects,
chewing them as
well as fiddling with them.
And gradually to pull themselves to
standing, and to walk, and so on.
And Jesus had to do the
same.
He will probably have chewed on Mum's wooden spoon when
his teeth were coming through, and when he was of the age to put
everything in his mouth –
and later, he will have discovered
that it makes a lovely noise when you bang it on the table,
and
have to learn that not everybody enjoys that noise!
And so
on.
He had to learn.
We are told he grew in learning and
wisdom.
Remember the time when he was a teenager and got so
engrossed in studying the Scriptures that he stayed behind in the
Temple when everybody else had packed up and gone home –
and
then, when his parents were understandably cross,
he said “Oh,
you don't understand!”
Typical teenager –
and, of
course, Jesus was learning the whole time about the Scriptures,
about who God is,
and, arguably, maybe a tiny bit about
who He was.
And here, perhaps, he is learning again.
We
can't rely on the Gospel-writers' timelines,
they tend to put
episodes down when it suits their narrative.
And here is Jesus,
perhaps having slipped away for a few days' break into Tyre and
Sidon,
where he was less likely to be disturbed than in
Galilee.
And then this woman comes and will not go away.
We
don't know anything about her, other than that she was a foreigner –
Mark says she was Syro-Phoenician, Matthew, here, calls her a
Canaanite.
Either way, she was basically Not Jewish.
An
outsider.
You know, the Bible is full of stories about
outsiders coming to know and trust Jesus!
Just off the top of my
head you have the centurion whose servant was healed, the other
centurion who Peter went to after his dream to tell him it was okay
to do so,
and the Ethiopian treasury official.
Oh, and
Onesimus, Philemon's slave.
Philemon himself, come to that, but
I think by the time the letter was written, it was becoming more
widely accepted that non-Jews could be Christians, as well as
Jews.
But at the time, these people were outsiders.
No
good Jew would have anything to do with them.
And Jesus ignores
the woman, until his disciples ask him to get rid of her.
And
even then, he doesn't heal her daughter.
Instead, “It's not
right to take the children's meat and give it to the dogs!”
But
I wonder.
Do you remember the wedding at Cana, which we are told
is his first recorded miracle?
And his mother came to him and
said “Disaster!
They've run out of wine!”
His first
reaction was basically, “So what?
What's that got to do with
me?”
but then he went and got the servants to fill those huge
amphorae
and the water turned into wine.
He changed his
mind.
His first reaction was not to do anything, but if there is
one thing
he appears to have learnt, it is to listen to the
promptings of the Spirit.
And in this case, too.
The
woman, consciously or not, said exactly the right thing:
“But
even the puppies are allowed the crumbs that fall from the children's
table!”
And to Jesus, that was God's answer.
Yes,
he could and should heal this woman's daughter.
So he did.
With
the comment that right then, her faith was probably greater than
his!
You know, the first time I heard this sort of
interpretation of this story,
my immediate reaction was “No
way!”
Jesus couldn't be like that –
he couldn't have
got things wrong!
You may be thinking the exact same thing, and
I really wouldn't blame you!
But, you know, it wouldn't go
away.
Like a sore place in one’s mouth, or something,
I
kept on thinking about it and thinking about it.
Why was this so
totally alien to my mental image of Jesus?
Then I realised
that, of course, it was because I was confusing “being perfect”
with “never being wrong”.
There’s a difference between
being mistaken and sinning!
And, as I said, Jesus had to be born
as a human baby, to learn, to grow.
And he may well have learnt,
consciously or unconsciously, that as a Jew,
he was one of the
Chosen, and thus superior to everybody else.
But he had already
learnt, as we found in the first part of our reading,
that
keeping the Jewish Law wasn't what made you clean or unclean –
so
perhaps it wasn't such a huge leap to discover that being Jewish or
not didn't actually matter.
God still loved and cared for you,
whoever you were.
And in the end, I found this thought
very liberating.
It made Jesus far more human.
I realised
that, while I had always paid lip-service to the belief that Jesus is
both fully human and fully divine, in fact, I’d never really
believed in his humanity!
For me, he had always been a plaster
saint, absolutely perfect,
never making a mistake,
never
even being tempted.
I realised I’d envisaged him overcoming
those temptations the gospel-writers talk about with a wave of his
hand, not really tempted at all.
But, of course, it wasn’t
like that!
St Paul tells us that he was tempted “in every way
that we are”,
and if that doesn’t include really, really,
really wanting to do it,
then it wasn’t
temptation!
But if Jesus could be mistaken,
if he
sometimes had to change his mind,
if being perfect didn’t
necessarily mean never being wrong,
then that changed
everything!
Suddenly, Jesus became more human, more real than
ever before.
The Incarnation wasn’t just something to pay
lip-service to, it was real.
Jesus really had been a human
being, with human frailties,
just like you and me.
He had
had to learn, and to grow, and to change.
Suddenly, it was okay
not to get everything right first time;
it was okay not to be
very good at some things;
it was okay to make mistakes.
And,
what’s more, it meant that the Jesus who had died on the cross for
me wasn’t some remote, distant figure whom I could aim at but never
emulate, but almost an ordinary person,
someone I might have
liked had I known him in the flesh,
someone I could identify
with.
As I have frequently said, these Sundays in Ordinary
Time are when what we think we believe comes up against what we
really believe.
Do we really believe that Jesus, as well as
being divine, was also human?
Do we think of him as having had
to learn, to grow, to change.
Do we think of him as having made
mistakes,
having to change his mind, having to –
to
repent, if you like, since that basically means changing one's mind
because one realises one is wrong?
And if that is
so, if Jesus is not some remote plaster saint, but a human being just
like us –
how does that change things?
How does that
change our relationship with Him?
And how does it change things
when we make a mistake?
In fact, a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day.
He had
just learnt that his cousin John had been killed by Herod, and he
badly wanted to get away by himself to talk to God about it, and to
begin to come to terms with it.
He did manage to get away
a bit later, and when he was feeling more peaceful, he walked across
the water to rejoin the disciples.
But right now, he
hasn't had a chance to get away by himself,
He went across the
lake in a boat, but the crowds walked round
and because Jesus
was nice like that he gave up all thoughts of going off by himself
for a bit, and he healed the sick people, and I expect he taught them
a bit, too.
It was getting dark, and the disciples
know that Jesus really needed to eat,
and they could use a break
themselves,
so they try to get him to make everyone go away.
But
they've all followed Jesus further away from town than they meant,
and it would be rather a long way to go back without a breather
first, and some food.
But there is no food –
and nowhere
to buy any,
even if they could have afforded it.
Just five
loaves and two fish.
In some of the other gospels, we learn that
this belonged to a small boy, who had shyly come up to Andrew and
offered to share his lunch with Jesus, although Matthew doesn’t
mention this.
But it appears that this was all the food there
was.
Of course, I don't suppose it was all the food there
was, not really.
After all, there were mothers in the
crowd,
mothers with small children.
They would have made
sure they were well-provisioned for the day.
Probably many of
the men had lunchboxes
or whatever they carried their food
in;
certainly the children would have.
Mothers do tend to
see to it that their families are provisioned,
and few people
would go out for the day without some sort of arrangements for a
meal!
But it was, so we are told, a small boy who was the
catalyst,
who offers his lunch.
And Jesus takes it,
gives
thanks,
breaks it,
and shares it.
And everyone has
enough food,
and there are twelve basketsful left over.
Enough
for each of the disciples to take a basket of food home to
Mum.
Before we think about what this story means, and why
it’s still important, I want us to listen to a video I found which
tells this story through puppets.
Did
you enjoy that?
I did!
But we need to look at the story,
and what it tells us.
I think it tells us something about
Jesus,
something about God the Father,
and something about
ourselves.
2.
Something About Jesus
So what does the story tell us about Jesus?
This
sort of food-stretching isn't unique to him, you know!
It
happens in the Old Testament, too.
Elijah goes to stay with the
Widow of Zarephath during a famine and promises that her oil and
flour won't run out if she will feed him, too.
Which she
does,
and it doesn't.
Elisha, Elijah's
successor,
performs a miracle very like Jesus',
making 20
barley loaves stretch to feed 100 people, with some left over.
Which
mightn't sound too bad to us, but those loaves were only about the
size of a hamburger bun –
and if you were only given 1/5 of a
bun,
you might well want to complain that it wasn't quite
enough!
So this kind of miracle was something that
prophets did.
You might have noticed that John doesn't tend to
record Jesus' miracles unless they teach us something about who Jesus
is.
So on one level, in John’s gospel, the story shows that
Jesus was not only a prophet like Elisha, but something greater.
And
did you notice something else?
Jesus took the food,
gave
thanks,
broke it
and shared it.
Doesn't that sound
awfully familiar?
Doesn't that sound like something we do some
Sundays,
those Sundays we have a Communion service?
So
the story is saying something about who Jesus is;
it is showing
us that Jesus is not only a prophet,
he is more than a
prophet.
3.
Something About Godthe Father
Then
secondly, the story tells us something about God the Father.
You
see, Jesus says elsewhere that he only does what he sees his Father
doing.
And one of the things that always strikes me about this
story,
when I read it,
is the amount left over.
Twelve
basketsful.
As I said earlier, enough for each of the
disciples to take a basket home to Mum!
It isn't that
there was just enough food to keep everyone going until they got
home.
It isn't that there was enough for everyone to have a
decent meal.
There was enough for everyone to have a decent meal
and still have masses left over!
That seems to be so
typical of Jesus, though.
When he turned the water into wine at
the wedding at Cana,
he made enough wine to stock a young
off-licence,
never mind be enough for a few guests at the
tag-end of a party.
And when people were healed,
they were
healed!
He made a proper job of it,
even if it took him two
goes.
It's typical of Jesus, and it's typical of God.
I
mean, look at the sort of extravagance we see in the natural world
–
all those desert flowers, for instance,
and nobody knew
they were there.
All those stars,
all those
universes.....
This story, with the twelve basketsful left
over,
reminds us that God is generous to the point of
extravagance.
And also, it was Jesus who broke the bread and
shared it out.
He did the serving.
It was Jesus,
elsewhere
in John's gospel,
who kneels with towel and basin,
washing
the disciples' feet.
It was Jesus who said of himself,
"The
Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve."
So
this story helps to remind us that God longs
and longs
and
longs
to give us, his children,
more good things than we
can possibly handle.
God wants to serve us,
to heal
us,
to make us whole,
to give us what we need –
not
just grudgingly,
barely enough,
but pressed down, shaken
together and running over!
4.
Something About Us
But the third thing that
this story tells us is something about us.
And I'm afraid that
it isn't very flattering.
All those thousands of people –
five
thousand men,
and maybe up to four times that number when you
include the women and children –
all those people, and one,
just one, was willing to share what he had!
One little boy who
came up to Andrew and whispered, shyly,
"Jesus can have my
lunch if he'd like".
Nobody else was willing to share.
Yet
most people probably had more than they needed that day.
We tend
to take along more food than we'll need, just in case.
And if we
make a packed lunch for our family,
if they're going on an
outing,
there's usually enough that we could share it,
if
we wanted to,
without going hungry ourselves.
But the
people in the crowd weren't willing to risk going hungry.
They
weren't willing to share their food,
not even with Jesus and his
disciples.
That was too great a risk.
Perhaps they wouldn't
have minded missing lunch, for once,
but what about their
children?
Incidentally, I'm aware that I'm sounding as
though the sole source of food was from the crowd,
rather than
from Jesus.
I rather suspect it was a case of "both, and"
–
I'm perfectly certain that if the small boy's five loaves
and two fishes were really all the food there was,
Jesus both
could have and would have produced
a delicious meal for
everyone from just that.
However, I find it almost impossible to
believe that nobody else at all had brought any supplies with
them!
Like so much of Christianity,
the truth is probably
somewhere in between;
a case of "both, and", rather
than "either, or".
The crowd was selfish.
Either
they had come out without any food, or,
if they had brought
food,
they weren't willing to share it.
Either way,
they
expected Jesus to do something about it.
They weren't going to
do anything.
They were going to hedge their bets,
to wait
and see,
to look out for Number One.
And are we like
that?
Well, yes, we are, some of the time, aren't we.
We
can be extraordinarily selfish.
Look how just a quarter of the
world consumes about seventy-five percent of the planet’s
resources.
And even in our country, there are those of us who
have plenty, and those who are reliant on the food banks to feed
their children because their benefits simply won’t stretch far
enough.
And if you are one of the ones who have enough, have you
given anything to the food bank lately?
It’s easy enough to
buy an extra tin of tuna or packet of ramen noodles and drop it in
the bins the supermarkets all provide for such purposes.
We
can be extraordinarily selfish,
and we can be extraordinarily faithless.
We
can't offer more than ourselves to Jesus,
but how often do we
offer even that?
The small boy offered what he had –
five
loaves, and two fishes.
It wasn't much, but he had the courage
to offer it.
Nobody else seems to have had the nerve.
But
why not?
Partly, of course, it was selfishness and fear
–
if I give my lunch to Jesus,
maybe I won't get
any.
Maybe my kids won't get any.
I'm not going to offer;
I
need what I have for myself.
But partly it was a different
sort of fear.
Fear of rejection.
And that is one of the
most difficult of all fears to overcome.
Been there,
done
that,
read the book
bought the T-shirt
You don't go to
Jesus with your five loaves and two fish because you're afraid he'll
shriek with laughter and say
"Who on earth do you think you
are!"
You don't go to Jesus and say
"Use me as
you will",
because you're afraid he'll either send you off
to work somewhere highly disagreeable,
like somewhere with a
seriously nasty climate
far away from all your friends and
family.
Or else we're afraid that he won't!
That he will
say "Oh, I couldn't possibly use you!”
and sort of
throw you aside like a used tissue.
But, you know, that's
not God!
We've just seen how God longs and longs to be far more
generous to us than we can possibly imagine.
And when we say
"Use me as you will",
he says "Great!
Now,
here's this present,
and do take some of that,
and are you
sure you won't have any more of the other,
and you really need
some of this, and...."
until you practically have to
say,
"Hey, hang on, give me a chance to breathe!"
Oh, but, you are saying,
I've offered and offered and
nothing has happened.
God doesn't want me!
Well, I have to
ask two questions, then.
The first is, did you really mean your
offering,
or did you pull it back as soon as you'd made it.
And
the second question is,
are you sure God isn't helping you do
exactly what you're meant to be doing right now?
Not all of us
are called to spectacular tasks, or to go and work somewhere with a
disagreeable climate, and so on.
Some of us are asked to stay
right where we are, and be salt and light in our own families and
communities.
Students are probably meant to be studying
hard and waiting to see where the road leads to next.
Parents
are probably meant to be making a safe home for their children.
The
elderly are often such enormous lights to the rest of us –
we
need you so much in our churches,
just for who you are and
what
you have learnt about our dear Lord as you have followed him!
In
fact, it's always safest to assume that God will want you to stay
where you are, doing what you're doing.
If that should change,
you can be quite sure you will know about it totally
unmistakeably!
But God can't use you unless you offer yourself
to him,
and he will use you if you do!
And if you hold
back, whether from fear, or from selfishness, or from any other
motive,
then not only do you prevent the Kingdom of God from
going forward in the way God would like,
but you also cut
yourself off from all the good things God wanted to give you!
5.Conclusion
I've
gone on quite long enough for one morning!
But this story,
this
central story,
of how Jesus fed a huge crowd,
does teach us
that Jesus is greater even than Elijah and Elisha,
and does
foreshadow the taking, blessing, breaking and sharing of bread that
is so important to us.
It reminds us of how extravagantly
generous God can be,
and how much he longs and longs to share
that generosity with you and with me.
And it reminds us that all
too often we can be selfish and afraid,
and hold back from
offering what we have and who we are to Jesus.
So lets make an
effort this morning to conquer our fear and selfishness, and to offer
ourselves anew to the God whose response is always so infinitely
greater than our terrified offerings. Amen.
Imagine, if you will, that there is a place you’ve always wanted to
visit.
It sounds as though it’s really wonderful –
permanently
great weather, fantastic scenery,
lots of great places to
visit,
lots of walking, or swimming,
great bars and
restaurants,
you name it, this place has it!
And you long
and long to go there,
but you don’t know how to get there,
and what’s more, you don’t know anybody else who has been
there.
All the things you’ve heard about it are rumour or
hearsay.
And then one day someone comes along who very
obviously has been there, and he starts to tell you all about it.
But
–
oh dear –
it’s not at all what you thought!
Weeds
everywhere, attracting masses of birds which could and did eat all
the crops!
And the food, far from gourmet, is rotten bread made
by women!
And then, he goes on to tell his special friends in
private –
but you hear about it later –
the place is so
infinitely desirable that people sell all they have to get tickets
there!
Well, the place is, of course, the Kingdom of
Heaven,
or God’s country,
which Jesus is telling people
about.
Unfortunately it seems to be the kind of place that
doesn’t go into words very well,
and the parables that Jesus
uses to talk about it are,
although we don’t hear it much as
we are so familiar with them,
really not what his listeners
would have been expecting.
To start with, the mustard
seeds –
well, you know mustard seeds.
I expect you use
them in your cooking, as I sometimes do.
You can buy the seeds,
or you can buy the ground seeds as a powder to make your own mustard
–
lovely in salad dressings and cheese sauces –
or you
can buy ready-made mustard with or without various flavourings.
I’m
sure they used mustard as a seasoning back in Bible times, too –
but
it was, and is, a terrific weed.
They do grow it, of course –
very pretty flowers, a pale yellow, much nicer than the brash yellow
of oilseed rape.
But in Bible times they tended to use the wild
plant, because if you cultivated it –
well, it was like kudzu
or rhododendrons, or even mint –
you’d never get rid of
it!
Nobody would actually go and plant it,
any more than
you or I would plant stinging-nettles in the fields.
And, of
course, it doesn’t grow into a terrific tree,
never has and
never will.
But it does attract birds –
and you don’t
want birds eating all your other crops, either!
Yet in God’s
country it seems as if you plant mustard and it does grow into a
tree, and you actively want to encourage birds, rather than
discourage them.
And then the second story is almost
worse.
You see, for Jews, what was really holy and proper to eat
was unleavened bread, which is what you had at Passover.
You
threw out all your old leaven –
we’d call it a sourdough
starter, today, which is basically what it is –
and started
again.
I remember being told in primary school that this was a
Good Idea because you need fresh starter occasionally.
But the
thing is, leavened bread was considered slightly inferior –
and
the leaven itself, the starter –
yuck!
It isn’t even
the bread that is likened to God’s country, it is the leaven
itself!
And did you notice –
it was a woman who took that
leaven.
A woman!
That won’t do at all!
Again, for
male Jews, women were slightly improper –
and who knew that
she wouldn’t be bleeding and therefore unclean?
And she hid
the starter in enough flour to make bread for 100 people!
She
hid it.
It was concealed, hidden.
Not what people would
expect from God’s country, is it?
And yet, in the
stories Jesus told his disciples privately, a little later, it’s
like treasure hidden in a field, and it’s worth selling everything
you own just to get hold of that field, and its hidden treasure.
Or
the one perfect pearl that the collector has been searching for, and
he finds it worth selling the rest of his collection to buy it.
God’s
country is worth all we have, and all we are.
It’s all
very contradictory.
God’s country is totally not what we might
expect.
It’s not a comfortable place –
when Jesus told
the story of the lost son, he explained that the son was reduced to
looking after pigs, a job which the Jews, then and now –
and
Muslims, too, incidentally –
thought was really
disgusting.
Perhaps we could think of him as working in a rat
farm, or a sewage works.... not a pleasant job, anyway.
And yet
the father went running to welcome him home –
and men in that
day and age never ran.
The story is taking place in God’s
country!
And if we want to be part of it, part of God’s
country –
as, indeed, we probably do or we’d not be here
this morning –
if we want to be part of the Kingdom of God,
then we need to expect the unexpected.
Someone once said
that God comes to comfort the afflicted,
and to afflict the
comfortable, and I think that’s very true.
Often we are called
to do things we never expected.
What would you think if a
group of refugees turned up here one Sunday morning, and asked if you
could find a time for them to worship –
but they were Muslim,
and had no idea of converting to Christianity.
They just wanted
to find a sacred space in which they could pray.
Perhaps they
couldn’t find a mosque where they would be welcome, for whatever
reason –
maybe there wasn’t one where their own particular
style of worship was practised,
or maybe they simply weren’t
welcome there for one reason or another.
What if they wanted to
join you on a Sunday morning because it was where the worship of God
was taking place,
even if it wasn’t in a form they were used
to?
Would you welcome them, or would you find their presence
intolerably disruptive.
I understand that this very thing
happened in a church in the Midlands a few years ago;
the
refugees just wanted a place where they could pray, no matter what
their faith was.
The minister of the church was all in favour
–
of course, come in, be welcome!
But, sadly, the
congregation was horrified, and many of them moved elsewhere.
They
thought the minister should be there for them, not for these incomers
who weren’t even Christians!
But surely the church should be
the institution that cares more about those who are not yet its
members, or even who never will be its members?
I’m sure that
in God’s country we will find that to be the case.
Sadly,
though, it’s not surprising that the congregation reacted like
that.
Look what happened when the Empire Windrush came over
and the people on it turned up in Church their first Sunday,
only to be turned away.
Not everywhere, of course –
many
churches made a point of welcoming immigrants;
Railton Road
church, in this very circuit, had a big poster outside welcoming
people, and I believe many others did, too.
But in some churches
people were turned away, simply because they weren’t “like
us”,
God used this for good, of course, and we saw the rise of
the Black-led churches which did, and still do, so much good in our
inner cities.
But all the same….
I feel ashamed on behalf
of those who were turned away!
In God’s country, values
are turned upside down.
It’s not the wealthy, the educated,
the important who matter.
It’s the poor, the downtrodden, the
refugee, the single mum on benefits.
It’s the people who come
to the food bank for help,
not those who give out the bags and
the coffee!
Remember how Jesus said that at the last day,
he
will say to those who did nothing to help “You didn’t help me!”
and will commend those who did help for helping him.
Talking
of single parents, do remember, won’t you,
that this can be a
very hard time of year for many families –
they might just be
able to cope in term time when the children get a meal at school,
but in the holidays they struggle and have need of our food
banks,
so do give extra when you can.
As I’m sure you
know by now, Brixton Hill now runs a food bank and advice hub every
Wednesday,
and it’s also a bit of a social centre where people
can sit down for a coffee and a chat.
And donations, in cash or
in kind, are always very, very welcome.
I don’t know
about you,
but I am not very good at recognising Jesus in the
beggar outside Tesco,
or even the checkout operator inside the
store.
And yet we know that in God’s country, we are all loved
and valued, whoever we are and whatever our story is.
And, as we
heard from St Paul earlier:
“Nothing can separate us from his
love:
neither death nor life, neither angels nor other heavenly
rulers or powers, neither the present nor the future,
neither
the world above nor the world below –
there is nothing in all
creation that will ever be able to separate us from the love of God
which is ours through Christ Jesus our Lord.”
And
however disconcerting we may find God’s country, we know that
because of that love, it is worth all we have, and it is worth all we
are.
Welcome! I am a Methodist Local Preacher, and preach roughly once a month, or thereabouts. If you wish to take a RSS feed, or become a follower, so that you know when a new sermon has been uploaded, please feel free to do so.
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