Tuesday, 3 January 2017
New Year's Day Sermon 2017
Matthew 2:13- end. The massacre of the innocents
Herod was a bad man. The list of people he directly or indirectly put to death is extensive and includes his political opponents, members of the Jewish high court, several judges, his own wife Mariamme, her mother Alexandra, Mariamme's grandfather, his three sons and many other relations. Caesar Augustus famously pointed out, knowing that Herod pretending to be a Jew did not eat pork that it was "better to be Herod's pig than his son." It is then quite consistent with his reputation that should order the massacre of the innocents. Herod was filled with paranoid suspicions and was addicted to the aphrodisiac of power. Thousands of years later we are all too aware that this potent drug still flows among the leaders of the world and too that some of those in power still commit atrocities against their own people. The twentieth and the twenty-first centuries have been extraordinary for this with the events in Syria being only the most recent in the line. Only a week, then, after Jesus' birth we are brought up short, with a big bump and confronted once more with the reality of the evil around us.
There are echoes here of Pharaoh commanding all the Israelite boys to be killed at birth and it may have been Matthew's purpose to highlight the connection between Jesus and Moses, whose infancy is also carefully chronicled and who came to receive and give the Ten Commandments. You recall that Jesus gave us a new one: you shall love one another as you love yourselves.
But maybe for us the important thing is this contrast between the earthly power of kings and other temporal rulers and the true power of God enshrined in the image of a baby lying in a manger and for us at this time the hope that is there. The power that God exercised in sending his son to us, in this sending of himself to show us how we should be is the true glory, power and majesty pointed up by the blackness of Herod's murderous and appalling acts.
The aphrodisiac of power in us is destructive, but the power of God is beautiful. Though the book of Proverbs tells us that money is the root of all evil, surely the true root of all evil is this addiction and love of power. So as we approach this new year, let us pray that we will learn from the example of the humility and love of God that to lead is a privilege and a gift and one that must be treasured, husbanded and used with the utmost love and wisdom.
Friday, 16 December 2016
Isaiah's Prophecy 7:14 and the Bible today
I was cutting it fine the other day when
leaving the house and I put out my hand to pick up the keys from the kitchen
counter only to find myself outside trying to lock the door with a
teaspoon.
The reason I bring this up is that our
passages from Isaiah and Matthew this morning need thinking about. The
background is that Ahaz the new young king of Judah
is being attacked by his powerful neighbours, modern day Syria and Israel who have formed a strong
alliance against him. Isaiah has received word from the Lord that these two
enemies will not succeed to overturn the kingdom of Judah .
“It shall not stand it shall not come to pass!” Ahaz is disbelieving so Isaiah
says “Ask your God for a sign - anything you like.” Now we might recognise
Ahaz’s response - we are sometimes very reluctant to ask questions especially
when we fear an unwanted answer and this is especially the case where God is
concerned - you have to be strong to ask God for something. Isaiah is a little
exasperated with Ahaz, knowing that his people who had expected vigorous new
policies from their young king to rescue the country from its difficulties were
also weary of him, Isaiah says “is it too little that you weary mortals that
you weary my God also?” Prophets frequently offered signs to accompany their
foretelling so that their hearers would know that God will fulfil the
prophesies that the prophet has made. Isaiah then decides to get on with it
even if Ahaz will not ask himself:
“A young woman is with child, and shall
bear a son and shall name him Immanuel.” (which means God with us)
Now the King James Bible is more
explicit:
“Therefore the Lord himself shall give
you a sign; Behold a virgin shall conceive and bear a son and shall call his
name Emmanuel.”
So this verse when looked at in its
context and in its place in history is very clearly concerned with the immediate
future of Judah, the prophecy that Judah will survive the attacks of these
powerful neighbours and indeed this survival was extraordinary – years later Ahaz
was able to survive and place his son on the throne of a still intact kingdom.
What seemed impossible by human measure was well within the power of God.
Isaiah was spooning God’s words into Ahaz even if he did not want to hear.
But then we come to Matthew, who writing
seven hundred years later found not a teaspoon but a key.
“All this took place to fulfil what had
been spoken by the prophet:
‘Look, the virgin shall conceive and bear
a son and they shall name him Emmanuel’”
The Messianic hope burned brightly in the
first century Jewish Community and it was natural for Matthew to take this
verse from the works of Isaiah and apply it to Jesus. You see, even if Isaiah
was at the time talking only of the local situation he was speaking the words of God which have been handed
down to Matthew and us as scripture.
Matthew accepted all scripture as prophecy and that it was intended to
be interpreted in the time that it was being read. This kind of interpretation
presumes that God moves in all ages mysteriously so that later ages may unravel
the puzzle to determine God’s intention and direction.
And I am very happy with that! It is
perfectly right that God may have spoken in the 8th century BC about the
situation then and about the birth of Jesus in the 1st century. It means that
the Bible can and should be read with a view to understanding what it is saying
to us today, about our times. Scripture is not like my 1920 Encyclopaedia
Britannica which enshrines scientific thought and geography of that time only.
Scripture is alive and God continually reveals his intentions to us by his
presence in the world and by his holy word and our present day reading of it.
So I return to my idea that verse 7:14 of
Isaiah may have been both a teaspoon of medicine for Ahaz but still is a key for
us.
Amen
Saturday, 3 December 2016
Advent and Preparing: Isaiah 11:1-10
When
still a Catholic boy I would go to church on Saturday morning to make my
confession. It was dark and musty inside even before entering the confessional
which was darker and mustier. Freshly absolved, emerging into the outside
brightness and attractiveness of the day a boy was confronted with the problem
of the coming twenty-four hours. The challenge of keeping sin free until the
eleven o’clock mass the next day was considerable. In my defence I did have a
little brother – who of course was very irritating. Nonetheless, the confession
on Saturday was to prepare for Sunday.
“Repent
for the kingdom of heaven is near.”
John the
Baptist cries that we should repent with urgency for the axe is lying at the
foot of the tree, the winnowing fork is to hand and one more powerful than he
is coming. John’ heartfelt purpose is to prepare us to be in the presence of
God, to be ready to receive him.
Isaiah
foretells who we are waiting for he reminds us of the greatness of God. He does
not shirk the humbleness of Jesus’ coming. A shoot, just a shot, a small tender
and delicate product, from a stump a humble beginning the idea reinforced by
Isaiah saying that this branch will come out of Jesse, not referring to King
David, but Jesse who lived and died in meanness and obscurity, whose family was
of little account.
But very quickly
we hear of his greatness: The spirit of the Lord shall be upon him, Wisdom, Counsel, Might, and Knowledge.
There will also be fear of the Lord for this fear comes from an appreciation
and acknowledgement of his power. We need to imagine how we would feel if Jesus
came in through the church door, that he walked down our aisle and is now
standing there next to the front pews.
It is one
thing to think about God, to believe in God, to hold onto an idea of God in our
heart and mind but quite another to be in his presence. “He shall not judge by
what his eyes see or his ears hear,” he will know us, each one of us perfectly,
he will know our inmost selves. He will judge with righteousness and equity.
Isaiah
then continues with extraordinary imagery to tell us what the result of all this
will be: the Prince of Peace when he comes will usher in a new world, where men
of the fiercest disposition who used to bite and devour all around them, making
easy prey of the meek, will be transformed. They will live in love with all as
if the wolf were lying with the lamb, the lion eating straw and the snakes
rendered peaceable. If we are in doubt about the greatness of God, here is a
wonderful description of his power, to rid the world of wickedness, evil, war,
dissent, even the tiniest most venial sin.
“Repent
for the kingdom
of God is near”
This is
why when we come to church, the great cathedrals, the minsters, the parish
churches, the mission huts we begin our services with the confession; for we
have come to meet with God, to come into his presence and so we start by
acknowledging that we have erred and strayed like lost sheep, that we have
followed the devices and desires of our own hearts, we receive absolution and
open ourselves up, prepared to receive – to receive the word of God in
scripture and teaching, to receive Christ in the sacrament of bread and wine
and then to depart in the peace of the Holy Spirit.
Amen
Saturday, 19 November 2016
Christ the King
Luke 23:33- 43 and Jeremiah 23:1-6
As some
of you know I have been cooking carrot cake. The problem is that for the
first time ever this year I watched a whole series of the Great British Bake
Off. I am of course too late in discovering its charms just as it is all about
to change but nonetheless inspired I set off with flour, butter, sugar and a
carrot or two persuaded that if Candice of Barton could do it then Steve of
Streatley might be le to bake a cake! Well people were kind about the first
effort, taste, texture, lightness flavour, were all OK (no soggy bottoms) and
to be fair it was eaten in two days. But I was dissatisfied with the rise – on
holiday I had watched other boys and girls eating carrot cake like this; but
mine was I felt rather skinny and so to try and improve I have been cooking
carrot cakes. I have also been asking your advice, which has been
plentiful, beat the flour less, beat the butter and sugar more, grind the
carrots to a powder – yet so far for all my efforts I feel that at the moment
of judgement KING Paul will kick me out of the tent.
Christ
the KING takes a different view. The tent of heaven remains open to those who
believe and as we hear in today’s Gospel to those who recognise and repent even
though they may seem to us and to themselves to have failed.
“Jesus
remember me when you come into your kingdom,” says the condemned criminal and
Jesus replies “truly, I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise .”
The kingdom of God is like no other, it is not bounded
by walls, fortresses or tent flaps and guy ropes but is open; there are paths
to follow, shepherds to guide us, good shepherds who will give us good advice
and counsels, who will tend us and lead us. Christ the king recognises those
who are seeking the way, working in our lives to teach and encourage us placing
people around us in whom we can see goodness. We all look at our lives and find
ourselves unworthy knowing that we fall short but as we reach this Sunday, the
end of the church’s year when our cycle of readings closes it is appropriate to
remember the sweep of the story, the great truth of the Gospel.
“When
they came to the place called ‘The Skull’ they crucified him there.” Christ
died on the cross to save us – He died for you and me.
Metropolitan
Andrew Bloom, who has written books about spiritual endeavour, meditation and
enrichment speaks of the value of these practices, of trying to perfect the
inner self, in his description he reminds me of learning to play a musical
instrument – there is hard work perhaps some struggle but there is joy in the
learning and approaching some competence. The kingdom of God
is something to be sought with joy.
In the
season of Advent, traditionally one of
penitence and reflection as we look forward to the celebration of Jesus’ birth,
Paolo will lead a series of four reflections in the Parish Centre at 8.00 on
the Thursdays of Advent beginning with Thursday the 1st December.
So please
join us for these so that we can explore, discuss and practice our faith – it
may be if I practice hard and heed all the advice I have been given that by the
last reflection on the 22nd December there may be a carrot cake
which comes closer to keeping me in the tent.
Saturday, 12 November 2016
Remembrance Sunday 2016
“For those who laid down their
lives for God and country”
There was
some discussion at the Parish Council about the wording of the memorial plaque
on the green in front of St. Margaret’s church. I think that it came out about
right. We gather today in common with millions of people to remember and honour
those who have fought for their country and after this service we will lay our
poppies on this stone with these words as a symbol of our remembrance. The
remembrance collect we have just read includes the words: “Hear our prayers and
thanksgivings for all who we remember this day.”
But I
wonder if this is enough? Yes we should surely remember and give thanks for the
men and women who gave of themselves and who are still doing so in hostile
environments, deployed across the world in the many conflicts that continue to
rage but I think that I want us to do more.
To quote,
once again from Archbishop
Temple broadcasting in
1939
“No positive good can be done by
force; that is true. But evil can be checked and held back by force and it is
precisely for this that we may be called upon to use it.”
We might
very well think about the first part of the sentence – “no positive good can be
done by force“ in reference to recent conflicts and we have as a nation been
thinking about the wars in the Middle East where the use of force is seen by
some to have had unwelcome consequences. That no positive good can arise is
of course why we avoid using force wherever possible. But in the same theatre
the second part of Temple ’s
sentence can also be seen to be true “Evil can be checked and held back by
force.” We saw the evil of the Second World War when liberating soldiers
discovered Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Ravensbruck and Dachau
among others, we saw the evil in Serbia
and in Rwanda , we have seen
the evil of violent men in Paris and I am
fearful of the evil we shall yet discover in Mosul .
Those who
gave their lives gave them to preserve a way of life, to preserve our rights,
freedoms and liberties; theirs was a struggle for good against evil a good that
resided in shared values especially
in the way they believed and understood that we should behave towards one
another.
And that
is why the words on the stone are not simply “for those who laid down their
lives for country” – but “for God and country” because there was more to it –
and the best values the best ways of living together come from our
understanding of God and his message of love.
When we
lay our poppy on the stone it is this that I would like us to also think
about. Is our society the one they were fighting for, do we as a community and as
individuals do more than remember, do we struggle to uphold and live by these
values that they fought for and for which many are fighting for still?
As we read this morning:
“This is
my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you, no-one, ”says
Jesus “has greater love than this – to lay down one’s life for ones friends.”
Let us
then lay our poppy to remember and honour but also let us think deeply as we do
about our lives and how we live together let us resolve to live up to the
values of those who sacrificed themselves for us.
Amen
Saturday, 29 October 2016
Blessed are the (poor) refugees Luke 6:20-31
Jesus is
turning things upside down.
In
ancient Israel
the commonly held belief was that if you had something wrong with you, if you
were blind or crippled or leprous, then somehow you deserved it. If you were poor,
destitute or starving, then somehow you deserved it. You or perhaps your
forebears were sinful and this is both the result and the confirmation of your
wrongness. Of course this was a convenient idea for the complacent, rich, well
fed and happy.
The shock
then of “Blessed are you who are poor” would on its own be considerable. And to
follow it up with “for yours is the kingdom
of God ” overturns doubly
the prevailing opinion:
“How so?”
says the rich person, “I am rich, I am blessed; see, God is showering his
favour upon me and the kingdom
of God is surely mine.”
Jesus
speaks against this self fulfilling idea and is speaking of both the future
kingdom of heaven and now. In the future kingdom the poor, hungry and broken
will be blessed for as Jesus tells us over and over again the kingdom of heaven
is open to all. But now those who are better off face a challenge firstly to
accept this paradox, that the kingdom is open to all – and then to understand
that their way into the kingdom is to work to bring about compassion and love
now in thier time.
- Love
your enemies
- Do good
(even) to those who hate you
- Pray
for those who abuse you
- Give to
everyone who begs from you.
I wonder
if, when we think about the refugees, the rich countries have somewhere in their corporate or governmental
subconscious that ancient idea that those who have fled terrible conditions,
including war, persecution, starvation and death are somehow responsible for some
of it.
“Why
didn’t they stay on the other side of
the Mediterranean ? Why did their government behave so badly? Are we
not baling them out at both ends with money to the camps and now do we have to
take them in as well? “
Jesus though
does not argue in our ways. He sees the poor, starving homeless refugee and he
sees a soul, whose place is in heaven.
He does not see a man, woman or child who might perhaps be a threat or a
burden, he sees a soul who is blessed.
He tells
the rich, the well fed, the amused and the laughing ones to see the refugees
with his eyes and if we could we
would love them and give them all we can.
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Harvest 2016
In my mind at least I have been toying with goats! One of the advantages may be shorter grass in my meadow - it used to be a paddock but this year I let it grow to encourage the wild flowers and was rewarded with an abundance of butterflies visiting the buddleia in the garden - but back to the goats there would be milk, cheese and wool and eventually some years off maybe a curry. Frances is less certain, or rather she is very certain that she does not wish the company of goats. We have though been richly blessed with the fruits of the earth this year. Samphire picked straight from the marshes, blackberries and little plums from the hedgerows, elderflowers for making a sorbet, cobnuts from Kent, rhubarb from the garden, all the herbs that flourish in outdoor pots and best of recent days, figs from a neighbour’s tree enjoyed with Bulgarian cheese.
There is something special about eating from the wild that is exciting- the special treat of something freely given which is available when it is ready, not forced or imported from afra but right there within reach and to hand. These things need to be wild in my case for I am a poor cultivator. I walk my dogs jealously past the allotments admiring the raspberries, marrows and tomatoes knowing that I could never make those work for me.
There has been a resurgence of eating “in season.” My present cookbook of choice is Nigel Slater’s third set of kitchen diaries with his particular recipes for each month of the year and recently I found Tamasin Day Little’s book subtitles “The art of seasonal cooking.”
Abandoning the supermarket mentality of having everything whenever you want it restores our connection with seasonality and the rhythm of life but also sharpens our anticipation. Waiting for blackberries, gooseberries, mushrooms brings with it a mouthwatering expectation. Deuteronomy tells us
“When you have come into the land that the Lord your God is giving you ……you shall take some of the first of all the fruit of the ground ….. And you shall put it in a basket.”
The basket is to be taken to the priests to be placed on the altar where you are to celebrate with all the bounty that the Lord your God has given you.”
My father would say of his garden at at certain times that “it had gone over” meaning that the roses, the fruit or the flowers were past their best and were looking a little dowdy. There is no question of that with our offerings to God: We are to give the first fruits, those which appear when the all the conditions were perfectly right, when the fig, the apple or the strawberry judges that it is time to put forth. Notice too that our anticipation is then at its peak. We wonder at the things we have been freely given, we pause to give thanks for the abundance and the beauty and bounty that we have been gifted we do not eat the first but give it in thanksgiving to almighty God.
Tamsin's book - the art of seasonal cooking has a better and fuller main title: It is called “Simply the best”
And that is what we offer, what God gives us and what we give thanks for.
Amen
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