The first reading today was about a man, and a woman and God.
The
man and the woman don't have names –
later on, they are called
Adam and Eve,
but at this stage they don't need names.
They
are just Man and Woman.
They are the only Man and Woman that
exist –
God hasn't made any more, yet –
so they don't
need names.
Man can just go, “Oi, you!”
and Woman will
know he's talking to her.
God has made the Man and the
Woman, and put them in a garden,
where there is plenty of food
to eat for the picking of it.
It's lovely and warm, so they
don't need clothes,
and in fact they are so comfortable with
themselves and with God that they don't want clothes.
There are
animals to be cared for, and crops to be tended,
but the work
is easy and pleasurable.
And all the fruit in the garden is
theirs, except for one tree,
which God has told them is
poisonous.
If they eat the fruit of this tree, God said, they'll
die.
Well, so far, so good.
But at this point, enter
another player.
The serpent.
Now, the Serpent is God's
enemy,
but the Man and the Woman don't know that.
They
think the Serpent is just another animal.
Now Serpent comes and
chats to Woman.
“Nice pomegranate you've got
there!”
“Mmm, yes,” says Woman.
“Look
at that fruit on that tree over there, though,” says Serpent.
“That
looks well tasty!”
“Yes, but it's poisonous!”
explains Woman.
“God said that if we ate it, we'd die, so
we're keeping well clear of it!”
“Oh rubbish!” says
Serpent.
“God's stringing you a line!
It's not poisonous
at all.
Thing is, if you eat it, you'll be just like God,
and
know good and evil.
God doesn't want you to eat it,
because
God doesn't want any rivals!
Go on, have a bite!
You won't
regret it!”
So Woman has another look at the tree,
and
sees that the fruit is red and ripe and smells tempting,
so she
cautiously stretches out her hand and grabs the fruit,
and,
ever so tentatively, takes a tiny bite.
Mmm, it is good!
So
she calls to Man, “Oi, you!”
“Mm-hmmm,” calls Man,
looking up from the game he was playing with his dogs.
“What
is it?”
“Come and try this fruit,” says Woman,
and
explains how the Serpent had said that God had been stringing them a
line,
and how good the fruit tasted.
So Man decides to
have a piece himself.
But it's coming on to evening,
and
at evening, God usually comes and walks in the garden,
and Man
and Woman usually come and share their day.
But tonight,
somehow, they don't feel like chatting to God.
And those
bodies, the bodies they'd enjoyed so much, suddenly feel like they
want to be kept private.
They look at one another, and both
retreat, silently, into the far depths of the garden, grabbing some
fig leaves to make coverings for themselves.
Presently,
God comes looking for them.
“What's up?
Why are you
hiding?”
“Well,” goes Man, “I didn't want to face
you, 'cos I was naked.”
“Naked?” says
God.
“Naked?
Who told you you were naked?
You've
been eating that fruit I told you was poisonous, haven't
you?”
“Well, er, um.”
Man wriggles.
“It
wasn't my fault.
That one, the Woman you gave me.
She said
to eat it, so I did.
Wasn't my fault at all.
You can't
blame me!”
So God looks at Woman, and says, “Is this
true?
Did you give him the fruit?”
Woman goes
scarlet.
“Well, it was Serpent.
He said you, well, that
the fruit wasn't poisonous.”
But, of course, the fruit
had been poisonous
It wasn't that it gave Man and Woman a
tummyache or the runs;
it poisoned their whole relationship with
God.
They couldn't stay in God's garden any more.
Serpent
was going to have to crawl on his belly from now on,
and
everyone, almost, would be afraid of him.
Woman was going to
have awful trouble having babies,
and Man was going to find
making a living difficult.
But God did show them how to
make warm clothes for themselves, and didn't abandon them forever,
even though, from that time forth, they weren't really
comfortable with God.
Well, that's the story, then, that
the Israelites used to explain why human beings find it so very
difficult to be God's people and to do God's will.
And it shows
how first the Woman and then the Man were tempted, and fell.
They
fell.
But Jesus resisted temptation.
You may remember that
he was baptised,
and there was the voice from heaven that said
“This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
And
then Jesus went off into the desert for six weeks or so,
to
come to terms with exactly Who he was,
and to discover the
exact nature of his divine powers.
It must have been so
insidious, mustn't it?
"Are you really the Son of God?
Why
don't you prove it by making these stones bread?
You're very
hungry, aren't you?
If you're the Son of God, you can do
anything you like, can't you?
Surely you can make these stones
into bread?
But perhaps you aren't the Son of God, after
all...."
And so it would have gone on and on and on.
But
Jesus resisted.
The way the gospel-writers tell it,
you
would think he just waved his hand and shook his head and said,
“No,
man shall not live by bread alone!”
But that wouldn't have
been temptation.
You know what it's like
when you're
tempted to do something you ought not –
the longing can become
more and more intense.
There are times when you think,
Hmm,
that'd be nice, but then you think,
naaa, not right, and put it
behind you;
but other times when you have to really, really
struggle to put it behind you.
“If you are the Son of
God....”
The view from the pinnacle of the Temple.
So
high up.... by their standards,
like the top of the Canary
Wharf tower would be to us.
"Go on then –
you're the
Son of God, aren't you?
Throw yourself down –
your God
will protect you!"
The temptation is to show off, to use
his powers like magic.
Yes, God would have rescued him, but:
“Do
not put the Lord your God to the test.”
That's not what it's
about.
That would have been showing off.
That would have
been misusing his divine powers for something rather
spectacular.
Jesus was also tempted with riches and power
beyond his wildest dreams –
at that, beyond our wildest
dreams,
if only he would worship the enemy.
We can
sympathise with this particular temptation;
I'm sure we all
would love to be rich and powerful!
But for Jesus, it must have
been particularly subtle –
it would help him do the work he'd
been sent to do!
Could he fulfil his mission without riches and
power?
What was being God's beloved son all about, anyway?
Would
it be possible to spread the message that he was beginning to realise
he had to spread
if he was going to spend his life in an
obscure and dusty part of the Roman empire?
And again, after
prayer and wrestling with it, he finds the answer:
“Worship
the Lord your God, and serve only him.”
Let the riches and
power look after themselves;
the important thing was to serve
God.
If that is right, the rest would follow.
You may
remember that Jesus was similarly tempted on the Cross, he could have
called down the legions from heaven to rescue him.
But he chose
not to.
It wasn't about spectacular powers –
often, when
Jesus did miracles,
he asked people not to tell anybody.
He
didn't want to be spectacular.
He'd learnt that his mission was
to the people of Israel,
probably even just the people of
Galilee –
and the occasional outsider who needed him, like the
Syro-Phoenician woman, or the Roman centurion –
and anything
more than that was up to his heavenly Father.
And,
obviously, if the "anything more" hadn't happened,
we
wouldn't be here this evening!
But, at the time, that wasn't
Jesus' business.
His business, as he told us, was to do the work
of his Father in Heaven –
and that work, for now, was to be an
itinerant preacher and healer,
but not trying deliberately to
call attention to himself.
And a few years later, Jesus
was crucified. It is, I think, far too complicated for us to ever
know exactly what happened then, but it is safe to say that a change
took place in the moral nature of the universe. St Paul expands on
this idea in our second reading tonight.
Paul compares and
contrasts what happened to the first Man, Adam, with what happened to
Jesus, pointing out that sin came into the world through Adam, which
poisoned humanity’s relationship with God, but through Jesus, we
can receive the free gift of eternal life, and thus restore our
relationship.
Of course, it’s never as easy as that in
practice. You know that and I know that. Can we really live in a
restored relationship with God? All the time? Twenty-four seven?
Well, maybe you can, but I find it very difficult indeed!
We
know we’re apt to screw things up in our relationship with God.
Usually because we screw things up in our relationship with other
people, but not always. Sometimes we just screw ourselves up! We
don’t take the exercise we promised ourselves. We lounge around
all day and don’t get on – so easy to do, I find, in lockdown,
don’t you?
But the point is, Paul seems to think that we
can live in a restored relationship with God. And so does John, when
he reminds us that “Those who are children of God do not continue
to sin, for God's very nature is in them; and because God is their
Father, they cannot continue to sin.” He also, of course, reminds
us that if and when we do sin, we need to confess our sins and we
will be forgiven. We need to look at ourselves honestly, and admit
not only what we did, said or thought, but that we are the kind of
person who can do, say or think such things. And allow God not only
to forgive us, but to help us grow so that we will stop being such
people.
John Wesley very much believed Christian
perfection was a thing.
He didn’t think he’d attained it,
but he reckoned it was possible in this life.
He preached on it
and it’s one of the sermons we local preachers are supposed to have
read –
you can find it on-line easily enough.
Anyway,
what he said about perfection was that it wasn’t about being
ignorant, or mistaken, or ill or disabled, or not being tempted –
you
could be any or all of those things and still be perfect.
Wesley
reckons –
and by and large he reckons that the closer we
continue with Jesus,
the less likely we are to sin.
I
believe he didn’t consider that he’d got there himself, but he
did know people who had.
He said even a baby Christian has been
cleansed from sin,
and mature Christians who walk with Jesus
will be freed from it, both outwardly and inwardly.
I hope he’s
right....
But the point is, it’s not something we can do
in our own strength; we have to allow God to do it for us and in us.
The first Man and Woman listened to the serpent, and destroyed their
– and our – relationship with God. Jesus was able to restore
that relationship through the atonement. And because that
relationship is restored, we can be indwelt by the Holy Spirit, and
made whole again. Let’s do it! Amen.
21 February 2021
Tempted and Fallen
24 January 2021
Extravagance, revisited
A rewrite of an old friend!
It
seems a very long time since I was last able to give a party, or even
to invite someone round for coffee – I keep dreaming I’ve been
able to, and then wake up and find it was only a dream! I can’t
even remember when I last gave a big party, although I’m sure I had
a couple of lunch parties in 2019!
But one of the things
about parties, or weddings, or any other big event that you’re
hosting, is worrying whether you have enough food and drink – to
the point that, very often, there is far too much! I do know we got
it right when it came to buying the sparkling wine for our daughter’s
wedding, all those years ago, but I also remember worrying lest we
should, perhaps, have got another case…. As it turned out, there
was plenty – we were even able to take a couple of bottles home
with us!
But it seems to have been very far from the case
for that poor host of the wedding at Cana we have just read about.
As I understand it, back in the day wedding feasts lasted two or
three days, and a host would expect to have enough food and drink to
cater for the entire time. But something had gone badly wrong here.
We don’t know what had happened, or why – only that it had. Such
embarrassment – the party will be going on for awhile yet, but
there is no wine.
But among the wedding guests were a very
special family.
Mary, the carpenter's widow from Nazareth, and
her sons.
Cana isn't very far from Nazareth, only about twelve
miles,
but that's quite a good day's journey when you have to
rely on your own two feet to get you there.
So it's probable
that either the bride or the groom were related to Mary in some way,
especially as she seems to have been told about the disaster
with the wine.
And then comes one of those turning-point
moments in the Gospels.
Mary tells her eldest son, Jesus, that
the wine has run out.
Now, as far as we can tell, Jesus is
only just beginning to realise who he is.
John's gospel says
that he has already been baptised by John the Baptist,
which
implies that he has been out into the desert to wrestle with the
implications of being the Messiah –
and the temptations which
came with it,
and John also tells us that Simon Peter, Andrew
and some of the others have started to be Jesus' disciples
and
had come with him to the wedding.
But, in this version of the
story, Jesus hasn't yet started to use his divine power to heal
people and to perform miracles,
and he isn't quite sure that
the time is right to do so.
So when his mother comes up and says
“They have no wine,” his immediate reaction is to say, more or
less, “Well, nothing I can do about it!
It isn't time
yet!”
His mother, however, seems to have been ahead of
Jesus for once, on this, and says to the servants, “Do whatever he
tells you!”
And Jesus, who was always very close to God,
and
who had learnt to listen to his Father all the time,
realises
that, after all, his mother is right
and the time has come to
start using the power God has given him.
So he tells the
servants to fill those big jars with water –
an they pour out
as the best wine anybody there has ever tasted.
As someone
remarked, right at the fag-end of the wedding,
when people are
beginning to go home and everybody has had more than enough to drink,
anyway.
I don't suppose the bridegroom's family were
sorry, though.
Those jars were huge –
they held about a
hundred litres each, and there were six of them.
Do you realise
just how much wine that was?
Six hundred litres –
about
eight hundred standard bottles of wine!
Eight hundred.... you
don't even see that many on the supermarket shelves, do you?
Eight
hundred.... I should think Mary was a bit flabber-gasted.
And it
was such good quality too.
Okay, so people drank rather
more wine then than we do today, since there was no tea or coffee,
poor them, and the water could be a bit iffy,
but even still, I
should think eight hundred bottles would last them quite a while.
And
at that stage of the wedding party, there's simply no way they could
have needed that much.
But isn't that exactly like
Jesus?
Isn't that typical of God?
We see it over and over
and over again in the Scriptures.
The story of feeding the five
thousand, for instance –
and one of the Gospel-writers points
out that it was five thousand men, not counting the women and
children –
well, in that story, Jesus didn't provide just
barely enough lunch for everybody, quite the reverse –
there
were twelve whole basketsful left over!
Far more than enough
food –
all the disciples could have a basketful to take home
to Mum.
Or what about when the disciples were fishing and
he told them to cast their nets that-away?
The nets didn't just
get a sensible catch of fish –
they were full and over-full,
so that they almost ripped.
It's not just in the Bible
either –
look at God's creation.
You've all seen pictures
of the way the desert blooms when it rains –
look at those
millions of flowers that nobody, for a very long time, ever knew were
there except God.
Or look at how many millions and millions of
sperm male animals produce to fertilise only a few embryos in the
course of a lifetime.
Or where lots of embryos are produced,
like fish, for instance, millions of them are eaten or otherwise
perish long before adulthood.
And millions and millions of
different plant and animal species, some of which are only now being
discovered.
Or look at the stars!
All those millions
upon millions of stars, many with planets, some with planets like our
own that may even hold intelligent life.....
God is amazing,
isn't He?
And just suppose we really are the only intelligent
life in the Universe?
That says something else about God's
extravagance in creating such an enormous Universe with only us in
it!
Our God is truly amazing!
Scientists think that
some of the so-called exoplanets they have been discovering lately
might contain life, although whether or not that would be intelligent
life is not clear, and probably never will be.
So how
did God redeem such beings, assuming they needed redemption? We know
that here, his most extravagant act of all was to come down and be
born as a human baby – God, helpless, lying in a makeshift cradle
fashioned from an animal feeding-trough. Having to learn all the
things that human babies and children have to learn. Becoming just
like us, one of us, knowing what it’s like to work for his living,
what it’s like to be a condemned criminal and to die a shameful
death!
But God, God who could only allow Moses the
teeniest glimpse of his glory, or he would not have been able to
survive it, and even then his face shone for hours afterwards, this
God became a human being who could be captured and put to death.
You know, sometimes I think the main function of the
church is to help us cope with God. Perhaps the church, quite
unwittingly, limits God, or, like Moses, we’d not be able to handle
it. St Paul prays that we might know “what is the immeasurable
greatness of his power for us who believe, according to the working
of his great power. God put this power to work in Christ when he
raised him from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the
heavenly places, far above all rule and authority and power and
dominion, and above every name that is named, not only in this age
but also in the age to come. And he has put all things under his
feet and has made him the head over all things for the church, which
is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all.”
The
Church, which is His body. And yet we – we the Church – are so
bad at being His body. We limit God. We tell God what to do. We
tell God who God may love, and who is to be considered beyond the
pale. We judge, we fail to forgive, we withhold, despite the fact
that Jesus said “Do not judge, and you will not be judged; do not
condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be
forgiven; give, and it will be given to you. A good measure,
pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your
lap; for the measure you give will be the measure you get back.”
And
yet we still hold back from God. I don’t mean just money –
although we do that, too, despite the promise that if we: “Bring
the full tithe into the storehouse, so that there may be food in
my house, and thus put me to the test, says the Lord of
hosts; see if I will not open the windows of heaven for you and pour
down for you an overflowing blessing.”
But we hold
back ourselves from God. We aren’t – well, I know I’m not, and
I dare say I speak for you too – we aren’t really prepared to
give ourselves whole-heartedly to God. After all, who knows what God
won’t ask of us if we do? We might even have to give up our lives,
as Jesus did! Or worse, perhaps God would say “No thank you!”
Perhaps we would be asked to go on doing just exactly as we are doing
– how disappointing!
But I wonder if it’s really
about doing. Isn’t it more about being? Isn’t it more about
being made into the person God created us to be? Isn’t it more
about allowing God into us extravagantly, wholeheartedly…. I would
say “completely”, but I don’t think that’s quite possible.
God is simply too big, and we would be overwhelmed.
Nevertheless,
Jesus came, he told us, so that we can have life, and have it
abundantly!
Abundantly.
Can we let more of God into our
lives, to be able to live more abundantly? It doesn’t feel
possible in this time of pandemic, but maybe we could learn what
abundant life in lockdown is?
Do you dare? Do I dare? Do we
dare? Amen!
03 January 2021
The Light of the World
Preached via Zoom
In our Gospel reading today, that great Christmas gospel, the
prologue to the Gospel of John, we find this verse: “The light
shines in the darkness, and the darkness has never put it out.”
“The
Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has never put it
out.”
I have been holding very tight on to that verse
for the last two months, ever since it sprang into vivid prominence
on All Saints’ Day, when we sang “Thou in the darkness drear
their one true light”. Jesus is the light of the world. In the
darkness, Jesus is the one true light, and the darkness has never put
it out.
Jesus himself said, if you remember, “I am the
Light of the World. Whoever follows me will have the light of life
and will never walk in darkness.”
You see, darkness
can’t conquer light! Think about it one moment – you go into a
dark room, and the first thing you do is flick a switch to turn the
light on! You don’t have to scrub for hours to make the darkness
go away. You don’t have to sit and chant or sing or beat yourself
up. All you have to do is turn the light on. Or open the curtains,
if it’s daylight outside.
Of course, it’s only been
for about the past hundred years that we have had that luxury, and in
some parts of the world it’s still not the norm. Even when I was a
girl, I sometimes visited a house that was lit with gas, rather than
electricity. And Robert, growing up in Northern Ireland, remembers
his house being lit by oil lamps, known as Tilly lamps, before it was
wired up to the electricity supply. The last part of the UK to be
wired up to the national supply was Rathlin Island, of the north
coast of Northern Ireland, which was only linked in 2005.
But
even sixty years or so ago, when Robert and I were children, electric
lighting was mostly the norm in the West. By then, there was a
national body that governed the production and distribution of
electricity, but prior to that, if you weren’t in a big town you
had to have a generator to make electricity for your house, as they
do in many parts of the world today.
And when you didn’t,
or don’t, have a generator, you have to rely on gas, or oil lamps,
or candles – or even a “button lamp” where a shred of material
is pulled up through a hole in a button which sits on some grease in
a pot, and you light the grease-soaked material and it works like a
candle. Rush lamps work on the same principle, I believe.
But
the point is, no matter what the light source, it is always greater
than darkness! It seldom gets properly dark here in London unless
there is a power cut, and that doesn’t happen very often. But when
it does happen, we only need to find an emergency lantern, or even a
tea-light, and we have light of a sort. It’s not, perhaps, enough
light to read or sew by, but it’s enough to prevent us from
knocking into the furniture. The light shines in the darkness, and
the darkness has never put it out.
That, of course, is why
we celebrate Christmas at this darkest time of the year. Jesus’
birthday probably isn’t on 25 December – if the shepherds were
out in the fields, it was more probably spring, lambing time, when
the sheep and their lambs were at their most vulnerable. But we
don’t know the exact date – those who wrote Matthew’s and
Luke’s Gospels didn’t think it important enough to record. And
it doesn’t matter, anyway – after all, the Queen has an official
birthday which is celebrated in June, where her real birthday is in
April, and if the Queen can, so can Jesus! The point is, of course,
that the ancient pagan festivals that celebrated the turn of the year
and the renewal of the light, the fact that the days would now start
to get lighter, rather than darker, were merged into the celebration
of the coming of the Light of the World. The return of the sun and
the coming of the Son….
Think of lighthouses and
lightships. They aren’t quite so necessary in these days of
satellite navigation, but still useful, to help ships know where they
are at sea, and to warn them off rocks and other hazards. But, of
course, there were people known as “wreckers”, who would
purposely shine lights to lure ships to their doom, whereupon they
would plunder the wrecked ship! It was a light in the darkness, but
sadly, the wrong light.
Which, of course, brings me to
another point about light – Jesus said that we, too, are light.
“You are like light for the whole world. A city built on a hill
cannot be hid. No one lights a lamp and puts it under a bowl;
instead it is put on the lampstand, where it gives light for everyone
in the house. In the same way your light must shine before
people, so that they will see the good things you do and praise your
Father in heaven.”
Now, of course, some people like to
dwell on that verse to make us feel guilty and fearful, and afraid
that somehow we are letting Jesus down by not being light, or not
being bright enough, or something. But it’s not like that. Jesus
is the Light of the World, and if we are indwelt with the Holy Spirit
– and if we are dedicated to being Jesus’ people, then we are
indwelt by the Holy Spirit – then we will be shining with Jesus’
light. Sometimes we are not very bright lights, but even one candle
is enough to drive away the darkness, and when a bunch of candles
come together, the light gets brighter and brighter and
brighter.
And there are times when our own light seems to
flicker despairingly, and that’s when we depend on one another to
get through. We will sing no 611 at
the end of this sermon, because of the verse that goes:
“I
will hold the Christlight for you
in the nighttime of your
fear;
I will hold my hand out to you,
speak the peace you
long to hear.”
It’s been a long, dark time for many of
us, these past nine months, and it’s not over yet. There is light
on the horizon – see what I did there – with the news that the
Oxford vaccine is going to start being rolled out tomorrow, and I
think they hope that by Easter, we’ll be able to be together again.
But this time of year, when it is still really dark and although we
know Spring will eventually come there’s no sign of it yet, this is
the time when people’s mental health is going to really suffer.
We’ve been suffering horrendous restrictions for the best part of a
year, with only a few weeks’ respite in the summer, and right now
it feels as though it’s going to go on forever. And it’s now we
need to hold the Christlight for one another, now when we falter,
someone needs to be there for us – they probably can’t be
actually with us, as that’s not allowed, but they can be there at
the end of a phone, or on WhatsApp, or whatever your preferred way
of contact is. And similarly, when we falter – and I don’t know
about you, but I’m finding it all too easy to falter just now –
I know I can rely on you, or others, to hold the Christlight for
me.
I imagine there was a bit of a giggle when Jesus said
– and quite probably illustrated with gestures – that nobody
lights a lamp and puts in under a bowl… although mind you, I have
been known to light the torch on my phone and wave it around under
the sofa when I’m looking for my crochet hook, which must have a
lover or something down there, the way it escapes down there whenever
I’m not looking! But that’s different. Jesus knew all about
that sort of thing, too, as you may remember when he told the story
of the lost coin – the woman who had lost it lit her lamp and took
it to all the dark corners of her house to light them up and see if
the coin was there.
I wonder what else she found while she
was looking for her coin – you know how you so often find something
you’d given up looking for when you are looking for something else!
But the light also lights up all the nasties that live in the dark
corners – the dust and dirt, the dead spiders, all the things we’d
really rather visitors to our house didn’t see. I was horrified to
notice, the other day, a really dirty stretch of floor in the
corridor; we quickly washed it, but I’d have hated someone else to
have seen it. Normally that part of the corridor was in shadow, but
for some reason it got lit up and we noticed the grime.
And
that is what can happen, too, when we let the light of Christ shine
into our own dark corners. All the dust and dirt and grime and dead
spiders come into full prominence, and all need to be swept away and
washed – I was going to say “washed in the blood of the Lamb”,
which is a fearful cliché, but for once it’s accurate. We mustn’t
try to hide the dark corners from God – I know it’s tempting,
because we hate looking at them. But it’s only when we let God in
to all the corners that there will be no darkness at all in us.
The
Light came into the world, and the darkness has not overcome it. On
the contrary, the light has brought light to all of us, and has lit
us, too, so that we shine out into a dark world. Let us follow that
light, wherever it leads us, and pray that we won’t be lured onto
the rocks by the false light of the wreckers, but that, like the Magi
of old – for it’s nearly Epiphany, when we celebrate the coming
of the Magi – like the Magi, may we be led by the light of God’s
shining star. In the words of the old hymn:
The distant scene; one step enough for me.” Amen.
27 December 2020
Searching the Scriptures
The trouble with Luke's telling of the life of Jesus
is all the
things he has to leave out!
Of all Jesus's childhood,
adolescence and, indeed, young manhood,
we only get this tiny
glimpse.
And there is so very much we don't know,
Which
makes it very awkward, at times,
to know what to make of this
glimpse of an adolescent Jesus,
such a tiny glimpse.
When
my daughter was adolescent,
I spent a lot of time with this
story!
It was so encouraging to know that Jesus, too, in his
time,
had gone off to do his own thing without reference to his
parents,
and when they had remonstrated, he was like
"You
just don’t understand!"
And sometimes people said
"But,
of course, it was different for Jesus!"
But was it?
You
see, we know so very little.
All we are really told is that
they went to Jerusalem every year for the
Passover, and that
this year, Jesus was twelve.
And that is significant.
You
see, from time immemorial, Jewish boys have become,
at the age
of 13, a man.
They are required to keep the commandments,
and
they may take their place in the synagogue,
taking their turns
at reading the Scriptures.
Their presence helps to make up the
"minyan", or quorum,
that is required before Jewish
people can have a service.
And so on.
Nowadays, this
transition is marked by a ceremony known as a Bar
Mitzvah,
where the boy in question reads a passage of Scripture during a
special service in the synagogue, and makes a speech, and then
there is
a bun-fight afterwards.
In Jesus' day they
didn't do that, but the rising-13s would have expected
to be
called upon to read the Scriptures in public any time after their 13m
birthdays.
So I am quite sure that those who taught the
classes of 12-year-olds
really concentrated on the Scriptures,
to ensure that the boys knew their Bibles really thoroughly,
and would be able to make a good showing
whatever portion
they were asked to read.
So Jesus, at 12, was engrossed
in Bible Study.
And, for him, it became more than an interest,
more than something he had to Study at school
if he was
to get good marks and avoid trouble.
It became a passion.
Now,
here is where we get a little stuck,
because it simply isn't
clear how much Jesus knew about who he was,
when he was 12.
We
don’t know whether Mary and Joseph had told him anything about his
conception,
Or that Joseph was not his natural father.
We don’t know whether he knew there was anything special
about him at
hope he didn’t.
I hope he had a really
happy childhood,
quite untouched by these things.
And
probably he did.
God, after ail, had chosen Mary to be
his earthly mother,
and Joseph to act as "Dad" on
purpose.
But nevertheless, as Jesus studied the Scriptures,
became engrossed in them.
God helped them become real to
him.
And, of course, Jesus had endless questions.
I'm
sure his parents did their best to answer him,
but perhaps they
didn't know all that much themselves.
And his teachers,
perhaps, didn’t have the time they would have liked to
answer
his questions -
Or perhaps he wanted to go more deeply into
these things than they
cared to do in an academic environment.
Who knows?
Once again, we are not told.
But we do
know that when he reached Jerusalem that year,
he found all
that, for then, he was seeking with the scribes in the Temple.
They
knew.
They could answer his questions,
in the way that
the folks back home in Nazareth could not.
They could deal with
his objections,
listen to him,
wonder
at his perspicacity at such a young age.
I hope the
scribes didn’t laugh at him;
it's not clear from the text,
but they might have.
But probably not, if his questions were
sensible and to the point.
And Jesus, typically
adolescent,
totally forgets about going home,
forgets
that his parents will have kittens when they find he's not with
them,
forgets to wonder how he's going to get home,
Or
even where he's going to sleep –
or, perhaps, thinks a vague
mention of his plans was enough.
Anyway, Aunt Elizabeth and
Uncle Zach will put him up, he’s quite sure.
And his
parents thought he was with the company –
they would be
travelling with a group of people, probably mostly from Nazareth.
It
wasn’t just so safe to make that journey other than in a caravan of
people, donkeys, merchants, and so on.
This gives us a glimpse
that Jesus was, at that time, a normal human boy.
He was
probably off with his friends –
they would tended to walk
together, away from the grown-ups,
and then in the evening
they’d all sit round one fire, singing, perhaps;
maybe a
different parent each evening.
He’s fine, they thought.
He’s
with the others.
And then they found he wasn’t…. panic!
So
they went rushing back to Jerusalem –
not the safest thing to
do on your own, but needs must. And there he was, safe and well.
No, his parents didn't understand;
of course they
didn’t.
How could they?
It was, perhaps, the first
glimpse they had had that he was somebody
very special.
Maybe
Mary remembered the events surrounding his birth.
In any event,
they were not aware of what he was talking about.
I expect they
were livid with him, but then, that curious “I must be about my
Father’s business” –
hurtful, to Joseph, but then, when
have adolescent kids ever really thought about other people’s
feelings?
Of course, later on, Jesus knew that searching
the Scriptures was not
enough.
Remember what he said to
the Pharisees:
search the scriptures because you think that in
them you have
eternal life;
and it is they that testify
on my behalf.
Yet you refuse to come to me to have life."
He knew that you needed more than just the words on the page –
but at twelve years old, this was what had intrigued him,
fascinated him,
to the point of ignoring anything
else.
Jesus was fascinated by the Scriptures, but then –
so what?
What has this got to say to us, this dark and dismal
Christmas so unlike any other that we can remember?
Some of us
may have teenage children or grandchildren and much of this story
resonates with us!
But even if we don’t, it’s lovely to see
that Jesus, growing up, was a normal human boy.
All too often,
we forget that he was human, as well as divine.
The passage from
the Epistle, which we didn’t read,
emphasises his divinity
rather than his humanity:
“The Son is the image of the
invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.
For in him all
things were created:
things in heaven and on earth,
visible
and invisible,
whether thrones or powers or rulers or
authorities;
all things have been created through him and for
him.
He is before all things, and in him all things hold
together.
And he is the head of the body, the church;
he is
the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in
everything he might have the supremacy.
For God was pleased to
have all his fullness dwell in him,
and through him to reconcile
to himself all things,
whether things on earth or things in
heaven,
by making peace through his blood, shed on the
cross.”
Well, yes, but that passage, from Paul’s
letter to the Colossians, emphasises that Jesus was divine.
He
was.
He is.
But also human –
and this little
glimpse of him growing up shows that.
It gives us a Jesus of
flesh and blood, if you like;
a Jesus who played and sang with
his friends,
who could get engrossed in a new interest to the
exclusion of all else…
For me, it makes him more real, more
approachable.
I hope it does for you, too.
I was
interested to see that the story was paired with the reading we heard
from Isaiah –
one of my favourite passages in the whole of
Scripture!
And could anything be more appropriate for us right
now?
“The desert and the parched land will be glad;
the
wilderness will rejoice and blossom.
Like the crocus, it will
burst into bloom;
it will rejoice
greatly and shout for joy.
The glory of Lebanon will be given to
it,
the splendour of Carmel and
Sharon;
they will see the glory of the Lord,
the
splendour of our God.”
and so on and so forth – wonderful
words of comfort. It’s not now, it’s a one day, but one day….
One day. Maybe one day I will be able to hug my grandsons again.
Maybe one day we’ll be able to travel. Maybe one day we will be
able to sing “Joy to the World” and “Christians, awake!”
And
the picture at the end of that passage, of the redeemed walking
across the desert highway, singing as they go –
perhaps that
was what Jesus experienced walking to Jerusalem with his friends and
family.
And one day, we will, too. Amen.
06 December 2020
St Nicholas
I hate to tell you, but I’m not going to preach on today’s readings! Instead, for reasons that will become clear in a bit, I’m going to tell you a story.
Once upon a time, long, long ago, in a – well, not in a galaxy far away, as this story takes place on this earth, but certainly in a country far away, a little boy was born. No, not Jesus of Nazareth – this birth took place a couple of hundred years later, and the little boy grew up to be one of Jesus’ followers. He was born in the city of Patara, in what is now Turkey, and you will remember from your reading in Acts that this was one of the places that St Paul visited during his travels, so it’s quite probable that his parents or grandparents were either converted by St Paul, or by the church he established there. His parents were rich, by the standards of their day, and when they died when the boy was quite young, he inherited all their money. But because he loved Jesus, he didn’t think it right to keep the money for himself, and began to give it away to the poor and needy in the area.
He dedicated his whole life to God, and was made Bishop of Myra while still a young man. One famous story about him tells of a poor man with three daughters, whom he could not hope to marry off as he had nothing to give for their dowries, something that was considered vital back in the day. And the future for unmarried women back then was bleak – slavery was probably the best option. So this young Bishop, anonymously, threw three purses of gold, one for each daughter, through the window of their house, and the purses landed in the shoes the girls had put to dry by the fire.
There are lots of other stories about this man – some probably legendary, as when three theological students, traveling on their way to study in Athens were robbed and murdered by wicked innkeeper, who hid their remains in a large pickling tub. It so happened that the bishop, traveling along the same route, stopped at this very inn. In the night he dreamed of the crime, got up, and summoned the innkeeper. As he prayed earnestly to God the three boys were restored to life and wholeness.
There are several stories of his calming storms for sailors, and one story tells how during a famine in Myra, the bishop worked desperately hard to find grain to feed the people. He learned that ships bound for Alexandria with cargos of wheat had anchored in Andriaki, the harbor for Myra. The good bishop asked the captain to sell some of the grain from each ship to relieve the people's suffering. The captain said he could not because the cargo was "meted and measured." He must deliver every bit and would have to answer for any shortage. The Bishop assured the captain there would be no problems when the grain was delivered. Finally, reluctantly, the captain agreed to take one hundred bushels of grain from each ship. The grain was unloaded and the ships continued on their way.
When they arrived and the grain was unloaded, it weighed exactly the same as when it was put on board. As the story was told, all the emperor's ministers worshiped and praised God with thanksgiving for God's faithful servant!
Back in Myra, the Bishop distributed grain to everyone in Lycia and no one was hungry. The grain lasted for two years, until the famine ended. There was even enough grain to provide seed for a good harvest.
The Bishop, of course, was made a saint when he died. And the stories of his miracles didn’t stop coming. One very early story tells how the townspeople of Myra were celebrating the good saint on the eve of his feast day when a band of Arab pirates from Crete came into the district. They stole treasures from the church to take away as booty. As they were leaving town, they snatched a young boy, Basilios, to make into a slave. The emir, or ruler, selected Basilios to be his personal cupbearer, as not knowing the language, Basilios would not understand what the king said to those around him. So, for the next year Basilios waited on the king, bringing his wine in a beautiful golden cup. For Basilios' parents, devastated at the loss of their only child, the year passed slowly, filled with grief. As the saint’s next feast day approached, Basilios' mother would not join in the festivity, as it was now a day of tragedy. However, she was persuaded to have a simple observance at home – with quiet prayers for Basilios' safekeeping. Meanwhile, as Basilios was fulfilling his tasks serving the emir, he was suddenly whisked up and away. The saint appeared to the terrified boy, blessed him, and set him down at his home back in Myra. Imagine the joy and wonderment when Basilios amazingly appeared before his parents, still holding the king's golden cup!
This man became the patron saint of children, and the patron saint of sailors, too. And as the years and centuries passed, he was revered in Christian countries all over the world, both Orthodox and Catholic. In the 11th century his remains were moved from Myra, now called Demre, which was under Moslem rule, to a town in Italy called Bari, where he is venerated to this day. Nuns started to give poor children little gifts of food – oranges and nuts, mostly – on his feast day. And his cult spread right across Christendom.
You will notice that I haven’t said his name! Who knows who I have been talking about? Yes, St Nicholas, Bishop of Myra. And now, these days, transmogrified into Santa Claus.
Today is his feast day, which is why I’ve been telling you his story, but, of course we associate him more with Christmas. Although in many European countries, children would have put their shoes outside their bedroom doors last night for St Nicholas to fill with small gifts. A few years ago, Robert and I went to the Christmas markets in Cologne on St Nicholas’ Day, and there was St Nicholas on the public transport network there, giving sweets to children (with their parents’ permission, of course); we saw him doing it!
But the association with Christmas came about because of the Protestant reformation – seriously! If you were Protestant, you didn’t revere saints, so you couldn’t possibly have St Nicholas giving you oranges and nuts on his feast day!
Here in England, with our gift for religious compromise, our folk traditions changed to include Father Christmas and yule logs and things, but in many Protestant countries, particularly the USA, Christmas Day was considered “just another day”. But it seems that German colonists brought the St Nicholas tradition to the USA, and gradually he became the “jolly elf” of the famous poem.
And, of course, the illustrations for the Coca-Cola advertisements began to settle his image as the fat old man we know today. A far cry, really, from a young Bishop in ancient Turkey!
But what, you may ask, has this got to do with us?
How does it affect us on this second Sunday of Advent in this pandemic year, when many of us won’t be able to celebrate Christmas as we usually do?
It’s going to be a strange, sad Christmas for many this year. Okay, some people will be glad not to have to socialise or perhaps even more glad to have an excuse not to have to invite their family to eat and drink too much, but for many people it will be a real hardship. We’ll hate not being allowed to sing carols, I expect – I know I shall, and belting them out in the shower really doesn’t count! Nor does singing on Zoom, as it distorts so!
But I find it comforting to know that even the secular side of Christmas has its roots in Christianity. Father Christmas was a devout Christian! And he is going to come this year – our politicians have said so!
Similarly it is comforting to know that we are loved by God. Isaiah, as we heard earlier, reminds us that
God,
like a good shepherd, takes care of his people.
He
gathers them like lambs in his arms.
He
holds them close, while their mothers walk beside him.
I don’t know about you, but this year I really need to be reminded of God’s love. Emmanuel means “God with us”, and whatever happens, whatever we can or can’t do this year, we know God will be with us.
So as we prepare for our scaled-down Christmas, and continue with whatever Advent observance we have undertaken, let’s remember that even Santa Claus worshipped the God who is with us. Amen.
29 November 2020
The Coming King
Preached via Zoom during lockdown.
So, Advent.
In a normal year people
would starting to celebrate Christmas already –
the shops
would
have
had their decorations up since the beginning of last month, or even
earlier,
and
the round of office parties, works celebrations, school festivities
would
be starting any day now.
And the endless tapes of carols and
Christmas songs that would
be
played in the shops, I should think they’d drive the shop
assistants mad!
But not this year, when we are still in lockdown until, at the soonest, the end of this week, when shops where we might be doing our Christmas shopping are closed, where we can’t even meet in person to worship. I’d even trimmed some masks in purple –the colour for Lent and Advent –specially!!! I hope I’ll be able to use them before Christmas, but who knows?
But, even this year, Advent is really a season of hope. We look forward to “the last day when Christ shall come again” to establish the Kingdom on earth. We also look back to those who’ve been part of God’s story, including John the Baptist and Jesus’ Mother, Mary.
Today, though, our readings are about the coming King. Our first reading, from the prophet Isaiah, tells how the prophet, and perhaps the people for whom he was speaking, longed and longed to see God in action.
I think we can probably all identify with that this year!
Scholars think that this part of Isaiah was written very late, after the people of Judah had returned from exile. They would have remembered the stories of the wonderful things God had done in the olden days, in the days of Abraham and Sarah, of Isaac and Jacob, of Moses, and of David the King – and then, they would have looked round and said “But hey, why isn’t any of this happening today?”
They reckoned the answer must be because they were so sinful.
It does sound very much as though the prophet were longing for God, but somehow couldn’t find him, in the mists of human sinfulness and this world’s total abandonment of God.
One of the interesting things about this pandemic is how it has begun to bring people back to God. It’s too early to tell whether it will last – after all,
Somehow, someday, he will come back again. He obviously doesn’t know all that much about it while he is on earth, and rather discourages us from speculation as to when or how. But he draws pictures for us:
But elsewhere he tells us that even when there are plagues and wars and rumours of war, we mustn’t assume he is going to return imminently.
We have remembered Jesus’ warnings about being prepared for him to come, but He hasn’t come. And we get to the stage where we, too, cry with Isaiah:
But that doesn’t mean that we can blame God – if You had come back before now, this wouldn’t have happened. Every generation has been able to say that to God, and it’s not made a blind bit of difference. So maybe there’s something else.
You
see, in one way, Jesus has come back.
And we know from history, and from our own experience, that God the Holy Spirit still comes to us, still fills us, still empowers us.
One of the purposes of these so-called penitential seasons is to give us space to examine ourselves and see if we have drifted away from God, to come back and to ask to be filled anew with the Holy Spirit. Then we are empowered to live our lives as Jesus would wish. We don't have to struggle and strain and strive to “get it right” by our own efforts. God himself is within us, enabling us from the inside. Jesus doesn’t just provide us with an example to follow, but actually enables us to do it, by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
All of us will face the end of the world one day. It might be the global end of the world, that Jesus talks about, or it might just be the end of our personal world. Until this year, we expected, here in the West, to live out our life span to the end, and many of us, I am sure, will do just that, pandemic or no pandemic. But we can’t rely on that.
You never know when terrorists will attack – or even muggers, or just a plain accident. We can’t see round corners; we don’t know what will happen tomorrow.
None of us foresaw this pandemic, which has taken so many lives – although, it has to be said, far fewer than in most previous pandemics. The Black Death, after all, is thought to have killed over half the population of Britain, which makes the 0.08% of the population who have so far died of Covid-19 look like peanuts!
Although, of course, each and every one of those who has died has probably left their family devastated, we must never forget that they are individuals, not numbers. They are people who God loved, and knew, and cared for.
But whether it is tomorrow, or twenty, thirty, forty or fifty years from now, whether of Covid-19, of an accident, or of “frailty of old age”, which is what they put on my father’s death certificate, one day each and every one of us will die, and then, at last, we will meet Jesus face to face. And we need to be ready. We need to know that we have lived as God wants us to live – and when we’ve screwed up, as we always do and always will, we’ve come back to God and asked forgiveness and asked God to renew us and refill us with his Holy Spirit.
We
can only live one day at a time, but each day should, I hope, be
bringing us nearer to the coming of the King.
Amen.
25 October 2020
The Great Commandments
I did actually leave a little more time between the prayer at the start and launching into it than can be heard on the recording - this is because I made a nonsense of the recording and had to concatenate the prayer and the main sermon, and cut it just too fine!!!
Today is called Bible Sunday, largely because of the Collect for the Day, which, when I was young, used to be the Collect for the second Sunday in Advent, but has since been moved!
“Blessed Lord, who
caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning:
help
us so to hear them,
to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest
them
that, through patience, and the comfort of your holy
word,
help
us so to hear them,
to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest
them
that, through patience, and the comfort of your holy
word,
we may embrace and for ever hold fast the hope of
everlasting life,” and so on.
I had to learn it off by
heart as a schoolgirl!
I wonder, if you were
asked,
what you would think was
the most important rule in the Bible?
Some people would be
horrified at the thought that any one rule could be more important
than another,
as they would say that
all the Bible is the inspired Word of God and we need to obey all of
it –
and then they don’t,
being perfectly happy to wear polycotton clothes or eat
bacon and oysters.
Other
people would pounce on their own pet hate, finding justification for
it somewhere in the Bible, even if it is a bit of a stretch –
gay
marriage, for instance,
or
abortion,
or
divorce,
Sunday
trading or sex before marriage.
Still
others would try to use the Bible to justify their political
worldview, whether far right, far left, or somewhere in between.
Or
to place perhaps undue emphasis on social justice,
or
homelessness, or poverty.
But
in our Gospel reading, when Jesus was asked what the most important
rule in the Bible was, he replied that it was to love God, one’s
neighbour, and oneself.
Love,
for Jesus, was the most important thing.
Now,
you know as well as I do that you’re apt to find whatever you look
for in the Bible.
If
you want to find a picture of God as determined to send people to
hell at all costs, and only grudgingly accepting those who trust
Jesus,
then
it’s easy enough to find that.
If,
on the other hand, you want to find a God who moves heaven and earth
to save people, any excuse will do not to condemn someone,
then
it’s easy enough to find that, too.
We
have to accept 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
Jesus said that the greatest commandment is love.
Love
God, love your neighbour, love yourself. Anything else is
subordinate to that.
help us so to hear them,
to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them
that, through patience, and the comfort of your holy word,
So
what is he talking about, and how do we do it?
Our English language
lets us down here, unusually.
Normally, as it has both
Latin and German roots,
we have several synonyms
for most words, words that mean the same thing, like illness,
sickness and disease,
to
name the one that is on top of most people’s minds just now.
But
when it comes to love, it lets us down,
as we only have the one
word that has to cover an awful lot of meanings,
from loving God down to
loving cheese on toast,
including loving
our families,
our friends,
our pets,
our old teddy-bear,
our hobbies
and the person we're in
love with!
In Greece they managed
better, and had several different words!
There is “storge”,
or affection,
the kind of love you
feel for your child or your parents
then there is “eros”,
which is romantic love
“philia”, which is
friendship,
and “agape”, which
is divine love,
and this is the word
that is used in this passage,
and is actually only
found in the New Testament.
It is also, as you may
or may not know, the word that St Paul used in that lovely chapter in
1 Corinthians,
when he talks of the
nature of that sort of love:
“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.”
One of the interesting
things is that when Jesus reinstates St Peter after he has denied
him, you remember, by the lakeside,
when he says to him
“Simon, son of John, do you love me?”
he uses the word
“agape”.
Peter can’t quite
manage that, so he, when he replies
“Lord, you know that I
love you”,
he uses the word
“philia”
in other words, “Lord,
you know I’m your friend”.
Then when Jesus again
asks him, “Simon, son of John, do you love me?”,
he again uses the word
“agape”,
and Peter again replies
using the word “Philia”.
And
then the third time, Jesus himself uses the word “philia” –
which is why Simon Peter
was so hurt.
He’s already said
twice that he is Jesus’ friend,
why does he have to say
it a third time?
Simon Peter found that
committing himself to agape love,
to God’s love,
was pretty much
impossible.
I’m not surprised, are
you?
Let’s look at it
again:
“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.”
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!
Jesus
said we need to love God, our neighbour and ourselves.
St
John equates loving God with loving our neighbour,
saying,
basically, you can’t have one without the other.
“Beloved, let us love
one another, because love is from God
everyone who loves is
born of God and knows God.
Whoever does not love
does not know God, for God is love.
God's love was revealed
among us in this way:
God sent his only Son
into the world so that we might live through him.
In this is love, not
that we loved God but that he loved us
and sent his Son to be
the atoning sacrifice for our sins.
Beloved, since God loved
us so much, we also ought to love one another.”
And a bit later on, he
says
“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.
But it's not always
easy, is it?
Again, I dare say we
would find it easier if we were more aligned with God.
The trouble is, quite
apart from anything else,
our human loves can be
so desperately flawed.
You might think that
there is nothing more wonderful than the love between parents and
children
but
how easily that love can turn into wanting to dominate the child,
to
dictate how they
should live,
what
they
should do,
which
university they should attend;
which
career they should follow;
and
so on, often up to and including the type of person they would like
them to marry….
And I don’t need to
spell out just how easily romantic love can go wrong,
do
I?
As for friendship, you
would have thought it would be difficult for that to go wrong.
People tend to be
friends because of shared interests
Robert and I have a
great many very dear friends with whom we would not otherwise have
anything in common, apart from our love of skating.
That is the thing that
we are friends about.
But sometimes friendship
can be more about excluding the other person, not including them.
Particularly among
children, of course, but it can happen among adults.
Sadly,
we see it a lot in the churches –
we exclude those who,
perhaps, are not of the same denomination as we are, or don’t
worship God in quite the same way.
Or perhaps we are
Evangelical and they are not, or vice versa, so we tend to be sniffy
about their way of being a Christian, and exclude them.
As I said at the
beginning, we all read the Bible through the lens of our own
prejudices,
and we are apt to
exclude those who don’t read it quite the same way we do.
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.
I don’t know about
you, but I found it really difficult when Donald Trump was taken ill
with Covid-19 the other week –
how do you pray for
someone you are required to love,
but whose policies and
values you really don’t like?
In the end, I just said
“Oh well, God, you sort it out!”
because it was far too
difficult to pray the way I knew I ought….
I sometimes have to
resort to that when it comes to praying for our own Government, too!
We are told the most
important thing is to love God, our neighbour and ourselves.
Now loving ourselves is,
very often, the most difficult bit.
It's all too easy to
have the wrong kind of self-love,
the kind that says “Me,
me, me” all the time and demands its own way –
the absolute opposite,
in fact, of the love that St Paul speaks about in 1 Corinthians.
You can't love your
neighbour –
or God, either, for that
matter –
if you are full of that
sort of self-love.
But then there is the
equal and opposite problem –
we don't value ourselves
enough.
We don't really like
ourselves, we have a big problem with self-image,
we are not what the
French call “comfortable in our own skins”.
And often it is the
people who appear most self-absorbed,
most unable to love
others,
who are the most wounded
inside,
and who are totally not
comfortable with themselves.
And again, it is only
through the love of God,
and by the power of the
Holy Spirit,
that we can be made
whole,
and thus enabled to love
ourselves and other people, as we should.
So really, it's all one
–
we love, because God
first loved us
we can't love God
without also loving our neighbours
we can't love our
neighbours unless we love ourselves –
or, at the very least,
have a healthy self-image,
which amounts to the
same thing
and we can't love
ourselves unless we are aware that God loves us!
So the important thing,
as it always is,
is to be open to God's
love more and more
to continue to be God's
person
and to continue to be
open to be being made more and more the person God designed us to be.
To be open to a
different interpretation of the Bible to the one we grew up with.
To know that if we get
love right, the rest will fall into place.
To know that be fully
human is to be fully God's person.
Amen.