Sunday 10 July 2022

St Mary, Balcombe Trinity 4 (15C) 10.7.22

 


No other religion puts such a store on love. We are clear in principle - the Beatles put it right: ‘All you need is love’. Unfortunately Christianity as a movement over 20 centuries has fallen short of that principle. Though we’ve built hospitals and schools, framed laws to protect human rights and raised up saints through those centuries, Christianity has also seen crusades, cruelty and a degree of abuse in the name of Christ. As GK Chesterton wrote, defending our Faith, ‘The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried’. It's important we take that point as Christians whilst not being deterred in aspiring to live our faith as best we can with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. 


There are few bible passages that spell out practical love as clearly as the one we just heard, Luke 10:25-37, the Parable of the Good Samaritan. In the story we need to know that in age old Jewish tradition, linked to hygiene, touching a corpse led to ritual defilement so the Priest and Levite were actually doing right by their law. The Samaritan who wasn’t a Jew followed a higher law, that of love. His action illustrates love as not so much an ideal but a task. It’s not just benevolence let alone tolerance but doing concrete acts for people in concrete need. Our Lord turns the lawyer’s question who is my neighbour? back on him by the question which of these three was a neighbour, or in another translation, proved neighbour to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers? 


Loving your neighbour in Jesus’s book doesn’t mean loving some but not loving others. It means loving all, good and bad. This teaching was acted out when Jesus died outside the walls of Jerusalem. 


The Christian vision of love links to a God of love who acts concretely to serve and save outsiders so that Jesus Christ’s last conversation was with the thieves crucified with him outside Jerusalem. To the generous one he said words in Luke 23:43 believers will joyfully accept on our deathbeds: Today you will be with me in paradise. 


I must leave you to work out for yourself the relevance of today’s scripture to the elements of xenophobia sweeping through the world, Britain included. Can there ever be outsiders so far as God’s concerned? Can we trust a nationalism that falls short of the deep British sense of fair play and inclusion, itself built from 1500 years of Christianity? 


We want a society that doesn’t just tolerate difference but which respects those who’re different. Building respect is costly in time and trouble. It refuses to pass by on the other side especially when it comes to the disadvantaged. The Samaritan exemplifies this in the concrete tasks he took on. When he saw him, he was moved with pity. Then, from the heart’s motivation, followed these concrete tasks. He went to him and bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. The next day he took out two denarii, gave them to the innkeeper, and said, “Take care of him; and when I come back, I will repay you whatever more you spend.”  The hospitality offered in Balcombe to Ukrainian refugees is a vivid example of where many villagers are coming from in their readiness to give practical service to people at the sharpest end of the war in Europe. 


We come to Church to join the angels, as the Glory to God and Holy, holy, holy chants affirm, in looking forward to the certainty of heaven. Our Sunday celebrations lift us up beyond the changes and chances of life, the hardships we bear in love, to the certain, all embracing love of God that will be ours in heaven with the angels and saints. ‘All you need is love’.


We come to Church to worship God and bathe in his love through word and sacrament, prayer and fellowship which builds us up. Church is a temple more than a preaching house but it is both. When we hear the word, offer ourselves in Christ’s Sacrifice and receive his body and blood we are the better equipped to love. The Holy Spirit comes again and again in prayer and worship. Through reading the Bible we’re further strengthened since there’s no word of God without power. 


It’s hard to love – in our own strength. It’s hard to persevere through tribulations small or great. The story of the Good Samaritan awakens us to God’s vision of what it is to love, a vision to be written on our hearts. The word of God this morning has reminded us of the task of love and how respect triumphs over mere tolerance in a Christian culture. The worship ahead brings love’s supply to help that, through Holy Communion, through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit.


It’s my prayer for all assembled that we experience that love more fully through daily prayer, Sunday worship, reading the Bible, serving others and regular reflection upon our need for God and for one another as God’s people. ‘All you need is love’. 


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