I have, I hope, been able to edit out my own coughing fits, but not those of the congregation!
From our first reading this morning, the passage from Jeremiah chapter 17:
“I will bless the person
who puts his trust in me.
He is like a tree growing near a stream
and sending out roots to the water.
It is not afraid when hot weather comes,
because its leaves stay green;
it has no worries when there is no rain;
it keeps on bearing fruit.”
who puts his trust in me.
He is like a tree growing near a stream
and sending out roots to the water.
It is not afraid when hot weather comes,
because its leaves stay green;
it has no worries when there is no rain;
it keeps on bearing fruit.”
And
in the Psalm we read together, we are told that those who delight in
the law of the Lord “are like trees planted by streams of water,
which yield their fruit in due season. Their leaves do not wither.
In all that they do, they prosper.”
Earlier
in the week, I was watching a documentary about the Kalahari desert
in Africa, which is one of the driest places on earth. But water
still flows under, and very occasionally on top of, the dried river
beds, and you could see, from drone footage, exactly where the rivers
run, because they are lined with green trees, and it was those trees
that enabled giraffes to live there, as they could feed on the
leaves.
Israel
is pretty dry, too, I understand – the Negev, do they call the
deser there? Anyway, the whole thing of irrigation, and planting
trees by the river, has a great many echoes in the Bible, so I
imagine it must have been very much a thing, especially back in the
days before modern irrigation techniques were able to make the
desert, quite literally, blossom like a rose.
One of my favourite passages is in Ezekiel, where that prophet has a
vision of a stream of water beginning in the Temple in Jerusalem and
flowing down to the Dead Sea, becoming wider and deeper as it flows,
full of fish, fertile, bringing fertility to the whole area,
including the Dead Sea. And we are told that “On each bank of the
stream all kinds of trees will grow to provide food. Their leaves
will never wither, and they will never stop bearing fruit. They will
have fresh fruit every month, because they are watered by the stream
that flows from the Temple. The trees will provide food, and their
leaves will be used for healing people.”
Zechariah
also mentions this river, but says half of it will flow to the
Mediterranean and half to the Red Sea. He doesn’t put trees
alongside it explicitly, though.
This river appears, according to the book of Revelation, to be in the
heavenly Jerusalem rather than the earthly one we know. The writer
has a vision of the new Jerusalem, and in part, “The angel also
showed me the river of the water of life, sparkling like crystal, and
coming from the throne of God and of the Lamb and flowing down the
middle of the city's street. On each side of the river was the tree
of life, which bears fruit twelve times a year, once each month; and
its leaves are for the healing of the nations.”
But
the point of the passages in both Jeremiah and the Psalm is that it
is we who are – or who can be – like the tree planted by the
water. It is we who can bear fruit all year round, who can stay
green and fresh even in times of drought. And at this point we all
start to wriggle and feel uncomfortable and think, “Oh God, I’m
not like that at all!”
And,
of course, we aren’t like that. At least, most of us aren’t.
Some of us are, and you will know who those people are in your life.
But they won’t know it – partly because if they did know it, they
would start thinking what great people they are, and then, of course,
they wouldn’t be. Because the whole point is, those of us who do
bear fruit, or green leaves, or whatever, are the ones through whom
God’s Spirit flows. Jesus said that if we abide in him, we will
bear much fruit, and apart from him, we can do nothing.
We
know, too, what the fruit is that we are going to bear – those
lovely, life-enhancing qualities that St Paul lists in his letter to
the Galatians: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. And I am sure there are
others – Paul’s lists are apt to be descriptive, not
prescriptive!
But
to get back to our passage, Jeremiah also points out that people who
do not trust in God are like desert shrubs – small, stunted, good
for nothing much at all. A far cry from the lush trees growing by
the river. And we may well know people like that, too; people who do
make a fair fist at being human, but oh, how much more they could be
if only they trusted Jesus!
And
Jesus himself had some pretty harsh things to say to people who only
trusted themselves, as we heard in our Gospel reading. We are more
used to the version of this teaching given in Matthew, I think,
probably because Matthew’s version is so much easier. We can think
of ourselves as poor in spirit, as hungry and thirsty after
righteousness – but we are manifestly rich and well fed, just like
those whom Jesus condemns here.
I
imagine Jesus does not condemn us just for being rich and well fed
and content – after all, that is largely an accident of birth. Had
we been born in another country, at another time, things might have
gone very differently for us. But it’s the “I’m all right,
Jack” mentality that so often goes with being rich and well fed
that is to be shunned at all costs. We may be all right – but
there are plenty of people who aren’t. We may be going home to a
big Sunday lunch, or we might be planning to go out for brunch, as
there are so many good restaurants in this area that serve it on a
Sunday. But what of those whose cupboards are bare, who depend on
the food banks for today’s meals? What of those who are homeless
and begging in the streets? These appear to be the ones who, in this
passage, Jesus is praising and blessing.
I’m
not saying, of course, that we should be giving to every beggar on
the streets – there are better ways of helping to relieve
homelessness. The Robes project is going on at Mostyn Road at the
moment, and there are plenty of other homeless charities you could
donate to, if you wish. And I hope you sometimes put something in
the food bank box if the supermarket you use has one. But it isn’t
so much what you do, as your attitude. Remember Jesus’ story of
the rich man ostentatiously giving huge amounts to the Temple, and
then the poor old beggar woman giving a tiny coin? It was, said
Jesus, the woman who had given the most; the rich man wasn’t going
to miss what he’d given, but that coin might have meant the woman
going without her supper that day.
But
how do we become that sort of person? I know I’m not! The sort of
person who resembles a tree planted by the water, bearing fruit and
leaves all year round – well, that’s not me! I’m far too
selfish and lazy and greedy and so on…. But then, we all have our
faults. And if I were to try to conquer mine in my own strength, I’d
just be setting myself up for failure.
The
thing is – and this isn’t easy, either – it’s about letting
God grow us. We are to produce fruit, and fruit isn’t
manufactures, it’s grown. Leaves aren’t stuck on the tree with
Blu-tak, they are grown, too. I have an orchid at home, which is
many years old now – my daughter and her husband gave it to us as a
“thank you” for helping organise their wedding, and they have
their twelfth anniversary coming up! But the orchid continues to
flower, and is in bud at the moment, even though it is so old. I
can’t do anything to make it flower – I occasionally give it a
few drops of water, but orchids are best left alone most of the time.
Flowers
grow. Fruit grows. Leaves grow. We can’t make them grow, and we
can’t make ourselves produce the good qualities that are required
of God’s people. But we can allow God the Holy Spirit to flow
through us, to fill us, to indwell us, to enable us to become the
people God designed us to be. And if we do that – and, let’s
face it, we’re not going to be able to do that every moment, but
the more we try to allow God to work in and through us, the more
successful we will be – if we do allow God the Holy Spirit to flow
through us, we will gradually become a tree planted by the water
side.
Amen.