Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 September 2022

Trinity 15 (26C) Dives & Lazarus St Richard, Haywards Heath 25.9.22

‘May flights of angels sing thee to thy rest’ was King Charles’s last word and prayer for his mother our late Queen Elizabeth. The phrase from Hamlet is borrowed by Shakespeare from the age old Christian funeral liturgy

‘May holy angels lead you into paradise; may they receive you and with Lazarus, once poor, may you have eternal rest’.


Those beautiful words, used at the procession of a coffin out of Church, capture movement of the soul from earth to heaven parallel to the carriage of the body to earth. They are built from today’s Gospel of Dives and Lazarus from Luke 16:19-31 and they provide opportunity for reflection on our ultimate destiny as believers. 


In the Gregorian chant for this closing rite of Requiem Mass the melodic highpoint comes on the name of Lazarus, the poor beggar in Our Lord’s parable. The musical lifting is a pointer to the poor man’s lifting, Lazarus ‘was carried away by the angels to the bosom of Abraham’.


In today’s parable Our Lord takes an age old story of the reversal of riches and poverty in the afterlife to challenge ‘those among the Pharisees who loved money’ reminding us how those who care nothing for those less fortunate than themselves will receive harsh judgement from God in the life to come.


It’s an uncomfortable piece of scripture underlined by today’s first reading from Amos challenging those who lounge in luxury. I remember Cardinal Hume saying after visiting famine victims in Ethiopia how today’s Gospel haunted him more than any other passage in the Bible. It’s hard to shake off its force. Given our knowledge through the media of needs in Pakistan and elsewhere are we not like Dives - Latin for the money-loving man in the story - unless we give at times to help relief of the destitute?


With that thought let’s change gear to look at the Church’s teaching on the afterlife, something I’ve been treating in my Premier Christian Radio series build from my book ‘Pointers to Heaven’ (show). A passage like today’s Gospel has a prime place in funeral liturgy but its imagery needs unpacking to unveil ‘the life of the world to come’. 


Such an unveiling happened to me personally fifty two years ago on Michaelmas Day 29th September 1970.  I was just 21 then and was travelling on my Lambretta from Harwell, where I’d completed some neutron scattering on a polymer specimen, to Oxford. 

As I drove along the front tyre blew and despite repeated application of front and rear brakes the vehicle veered across the road into the path of a lorry. I said what I thought were my last prayers. Amazingly I passed just in front of the lorry landing on the kerb with a sprain to my thumb and shoulder and lived to tell the tale. Coming so close to death made for a fuller evaluation of the significance of my life. It contributed no doubt to a radical career switch a few years later from polymer scientist to parish priest.


My interrupted journey - it entailed a brief visit to hospital - pointed me beyond my own pursuit of truth as a scientist to Truth’s pursuit of me. Heaven came close. It  became more real to me, especially as the accident occurred on 29th September, Feast of St Michael and All Angels. As for many, God became real to me not through thinking or feeling but through circumstances that stopped me literally in my tracks. It was natural to interpret my survival to divine intervention through an angel steering my scooter a shade. I lived on, and continue to live on, aware of an unseen realm, how it pierces through on occasion into our life experience, especially at Holy Mass, and will accompany us as we look to the Lord on the day of our death.


‘May the angels lead you into paradise; may they… receive you and with Lazarus, once poor, may you have eternal rest’.


A few thoughts to conclude on the Christian doctrine of judgement.


Christian tradition distinguishes an individual judgement at the moment of death and a general judgement which completes God’s righteous task at the Lord’s return when the dead are raised in body as well as soul. After death scripture speaks of two ultimate destinies, heaven and hell, although there is a qualification that no one dying with unrepented sin can face the Lord without cleansing, since no unclean thing shall enter his presence as stated in Revelation 21v27. This is the origin of the doctrine of purgatory which speaks of the need for the faithful departed to be purged or cleansed of residual sin to come close to God. 


Our minds argue against judgement because they think they know best.  Actually God knows best in the end.  When we look into the eyes of Christ at his return there will be pain, but an ‘if the cap fits, wear it’ sort of pain. Purgatorial pain may be as short as that. Our wrong actions affront God in his holiness but he has given us a remedy in repentance. Hell, refusal to face God, will be our choice. As the video of my life is prepared for showing on judgement day Christ has power to edit out the unacceptable points if I give them to him. Mercy triumphs over judgement when we repent and allow Christ a place in our hearts! 


‘There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus’ we read in Romans 8v1. God looks on those who are in Christ with the same love with which he looks upon his Son. Judgement has in a profound sense been passed already for those who have accepted God’s judgement on their lives. To accept one’s sinfulness and inadequacy is in the Christian tradition the pathway to joyful freedom. Such acceptance springs from the vision of God given in Jesus Christ we celebrate at every Mass, vision of a God of majesty, yes, but also a God more concerned to give us what we need than to give us what we deserve.


To believe in Jesus Christ who ‘will come to judge the living and the dead’ is therefore to face the future with an infectious hope. If faith shows you that the whole world is in God’s hands so is its future. 


Christianity provides a deep sense of certainty that any perceived triumph of evil will be seen ultimately as an illusion. All will come right in the end because in the end there will be the grace and truth of Jesus Christ (John 1v14, 17). 


Ultimately there will be grace – mercy - for repentant sinners and truth to prevail over all who live and act deluded by falsehood.


‘May flights of angels sing thee to thy rest’ is an aspiration drawn from today’s Gospel suited to Lazarus and to our late Queen Elizabeth whose Christian faith coloured the superb Anglican liturgy the nation shared on Monday. Like her, may we live watchful of our thoughts, words and deeds, accountable to God day by day until the hour our guardian angels come to carry us home.


I conclude with John Donne’s prayer used at the Queen’s funeral which implies the angels’ help bringing us to God after death: ‘Bring us, O Lord God, at our last awakening into the house and gate of heaven, to enter into that gate and dwell in that house, where there shall be no darkness nor dazzling, but one equal light; no noise nor silence, but one equal music; no fears nor hopes, but one equal possession; no ends nor beginnings, but one equal eternity: in the habitations of thy majesty and glory, world without end. Amen.’

Wednesday, 29 September 2021

St Wilfrid, Haywards Heath Feast of St Michael & All Angels 29.9.21

 
On this day in 1969 I was heading on my Lambretta from Harwell up the A34 to my Oxford College when the front tyre burst and I went across the road to slide under a lorry. I was heading to keep this feast of St Michael & All Angels by serving the evening Mass at St Mary Magdalene, Oxford. 

The good news is I passed under the lorry though I missed that Mass and ended up in the Radcliffe Infirmary. I remain convinced St Michael and his angels were sent by God to protect my life for a purpose. 

Four years later that purpose was revealed. I left my work at Oxford University and the nuclear power station at Harwell to train as a priest.

The angels who shifted the lorry, or my scooter, helped shift my career their way. I say ‘their way’ because angels and priests have the same mission: to bring God’s love to people and people to God’s love. We are both in divine service, sent to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation.

Both ministries are about serving God and the church so church members are made better servants of the message of salvation. We are all caught up with the angels in worship of the God we cannot see and in witnessing him to our neighbour in deed and word. The joy of the angels over sinners who turn to God is for us as well. 

Michaelmas day reminds us how God delights to work indirectly through his creatures, angels or men. The angels who watch over us do so as an expression of the love of a God who so many times prefers to do good through his willing servants, earthly or heavenly. 

In the Eucharist we are promised the support of angels and archangels and all the company of heaven in lifting ourselves through, with and in Jesus Christ to the Father whose face the angels see and whose sight is promised to us on the day we ourselves will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man. (John 1:51). 

Sunday, 29 September 2013

St Michael and All Angels 29th September 2013

Are not all angels spirits in the divine service, sent to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation? (Hebrews 1:14) So asks the writer to the Hebrews at the end of today’s second reading giving us as he does a biblical definition of angels.

The passage in question is about Christ’s being higher than the angels and so it started with another question: To which of the angels did God ever say, ‘You are my Son; today I have begotten you’? Or again, ‘I will be his Father, and he will be my Son’? (Hebrews 1:5)

I wonder what questions go through your mind though as in obedience to the Church Calendar we keep this Feast of St Michael and all Angels?

The materialist in you is bound to question theories of the invisible world, be they of God, of the realm of the resurrection or of angels.

The democrat in you will question the whole hierarchical business descending from God in Christ through angels and saints down to mortals, further down to demons and then to the devil himself.

The pacifist in you will be alarmed by that Revelation reading: War broke out in heaven; Michael and his angels fought against the dragon. The dragon and his angels fought back, but they were defeated.(12:7)

The hard headed part of you will balk at today’s Gospel: seeing heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending on Jesus. (John 1:51)

What has the preacher got to allay those questionings as the Church calls us this morning to reflect on the historic quarter day Festival of St Michael and all angels on God’s constitution of the ministries of angels and mortals in a wonderful order?

I have four thoughts for you.

First, for the materialist. Have you heard the theory of parallel universes? Or of the multiverse in which at any moment there are simultaneous happenings in St Giles Church on Sunday morning 29th September 2013 with a good, bad or indifferent sermon? Which one are you in right now?

Lay aside the multiverse! Might it not be more reasonable to put faith in One whose throne is for ever, and who in Christ is shown to have loved righteousness and hated wickedness? (Hebrews 1:9) Jesus Christ, whose resurrection lifts human nature into a world beyond this world? Christianity holds to no parallel universe save one beyond the material order, since God is Spirit. His Mind comes before all matter and he has spirits in the divine service, sent to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation.

Second thought for the democrat. It is a good principle to challenge inherited power and questionable hierarchy. That principle has limited application, even in this world, as is amply demonstrated by western attempts to export democracy to the Middle East! If this world is just one section of reality we have to humbly accept our place, rather lower down than we might like, in that full supernatural reality.

Human beings aren’t top dogs. They never have been. The angels are above us, with God, in highest heaven. In scripture we read they excel us in both knowledge and power so they remind us that, even among created things, humans aren’t top of the heap. In the Gospel Nathanael is struck by Christ’s supernatural knowledge of him. ‘Rabbi, you are the Son of God! You are the King of Israel!’ In answer Our Lord speaks to him of that fuller understanding of reality, shared by angels not by mortals, which his resurrection unveils. Jesus answered,you will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.’

Third thought for the pacifist. Watch your talk of peace doesn’t distract from building peace. ‘Jaw, jaw’ can be better than ‘war, war’ but sometime there’s need for action, however limited, to disarm an evil power. We are sensing this over Syria aren’t we? Talking at the United Nations may be insufficient in this situation.

The way things actually are, what the Bible teaches, is this. We human beings are caught in a cosmic conflict between the truth of God and those who balk at it, led by the devil as father of lies. By his Cross and resurrection Jesus has shifted things forward. The great dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent, who is called the Devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world - he was thrown down to the earth, and his angels were thrown down with him. (Revelation 12:9) To put faith in the angels is to recognise this decisive victory and God’s mopping up operation, the peace keeping work of angels and mortals in a wonderful order.

Fourth and last thought: for the hard-headed. A human mind can’t think itself into salvation. God knows this, which is why he sends spirits in (his) service, (sending them) to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation. If God is the ground of our being he is being itself so our perception of him is like an insect’s perception of us humans. We must reach up for his helping hand if we are to leave the limited dimensions of our existence and enter salvation, the glorious liberty of the children of God.

Angels are about that freedom. They possess it. They fly because they’re not hard-headed. They don’t take themselves too seriously. This brings me to a word of testimony.

On this day in 1969 I was heading on my Lambretta from Harwell up the A34 to my Oxford College when the front tyre burst and I went across the road to slide under a lorry. I was heading to keep this feast by serving the evening Mass at St Mary Magdalene, Oxford. The good news is I passed under the lorry though I missed that Mass and ended up in the Radcliffe Infirmary. I remain convinced St Michael and his angels were sent by God to protect my life for a purpose. Four years later that purpose was revealed. I left my work at Oxford University and the nuclear power station at Harwell to train as a priest.

The angels who shifted the lorry, or my scooter, helped shift my career their way. I say ‘their way’ because angels and priests have the same mission: to bring God’s love to people and people to God’s love. We are both in divine service, sent to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation.

Both ministries are about serving God and the church so church members are made better servants of the message of salvation. We are all caught up with the angels in worship of the God we cannot see and in witnessing him to our neighbor in deed and word. The joy of the angels over sinners who turn to God is for us as well.

Michaelmas day reminds us how God delights to work indirectly through his creatures, angels or mortals. The angels who watch over us do so as an expression of the love of a God who so many times prefers to do good through his willing servants, earthly or heavenly.


In the Eucharist we are promised the support of angels and archangels and all the company of heaven in lifting our selves through, with and in Jesus Christ to the Father whose face the angels see and whose sight is promised when we ourselves will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man. So to God…