Showing posts with label God's love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God's love. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Trinity 17 Shock treatment 18th September 2016

We all need shock treatment from time to time.

It's a way of getting our attention when we're deluded or distracted.

Our Lord has a gift of shocking our complacency that the scriptures hand straight on to us without spin.

Take that shocking Gospel reading. Did we hear the Son of God, who is truth, commend dishonesty?

Or that sock-it-to-them passage from Amos striking at injustice?

And, shocking in another way, that lesson from 1 Timothy 2 begging prayer for the established order as if those in authority were God's appointees beyond challenge?

The one most evidently bearing the Queen's authority shocked me last week. I was shocked by her speech on education, but it got me thinking. 

Grammar schools were one of her four prongs to expedite getting more good schools. I was impressed by her concern for those consigned to poorer schools by their post code and began to wonder if  even in Horsted Keynes we can do as she says and get Cumnor, Walstead and Ardingly to share their gifts with St Giles School.

Sometimes we're made to wake up, sit up and listen. Today's readings are shock treatment. You could argue they don't need a sermon - save in the case of the last reading, an explanation - so that my task this morning is to give some forward  lines once we get our breath back from the hefty challenges they have given without mincing words. 

Before I go further, then, some explanation of the Gospel:
[The] master commended the dishonest manager because he had acted shrewdly; for the children of this age are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than are the children of light. And I tell you, make friends for yourselves by means of dishonest wealth so that when it is gone, they may welcome you into the eternal homes.

What did Jesus mean?

Some suggestions from scholars, and I warn you, I’m going with the most shocking!

Theory 1: the point of the parable is not the servant's dishonesty, but his wise decision-making in the time of crisis. He’s an example of decisive thinking and action to save yourself which the coming of Jesus invites.

Theory 2: the servant, as a man of the world, is an example of diligence. What if we had the same diligence about God’s kingdom as we do towards our work or hobbies?

Theory 3: the steward was acting within his legal rights reducing the debts as he did. Luke 16 is a parable against excessive profits, the same kind of judgment uttered by Amos in the first Lesson (Amos 8:4-7).  That’s also one of the most shocking passage in the Bible Hear this, you that trample on the needy, and bring to ruin the poor of the land, [who] practise deceit with false balances, buying the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals… The Lord has sworn… I will never forget any of their deeds. Shocking stuff, which is why Christians have always been concerned about good finance in the public domain. There’s as much about wrong use of money as wrong use of sex in the Bible and the Church forgets that at her peril. So much for interpretation 3.

Theory 4 on Luke 16 is my favourite though. It runs like this. Our Lord knew his commending of this servant for such unjust behaviour is so absurd no one would believe it. How ridiculous to commend a cheater who expects to be commended for his dishonest actions! Understood this way, Jesus is here attacking the Pharisees who made a very big show of giving very little money to the poor.

I can’t imagine Jesus teaching without humour. His gift or mocking irony is so pointed it would bring people up short, touch their hearts and loosen emotion into laughter. In this case laughter directed against those claiming to be religious who are in fact self-serving cheats.

Enough on the first and last reading – make of them what you will, however the Holy Spirit impacts you – now for that second reading. It is shocking in a more subtle way. I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings should be made for everyone, for kings and all who are in high positions, so that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and dignity. It begs our prayers for the established order as if those in authority were God's appointees and beyond challenge! Isn’t the Holy Spirit who gives at times a quiet and peaceable life also at times working to challenge the powers that be?

The Holy Spirit like today’s scripture is given to both comfort and challenge us!

Today’s scripture might shock and trouble us if we’re guilty of injustice, financial dishonesty, hypocrisy, giving little to the needy or holding to an uncritical support of the established order of society, as in the predictable backlash against the idea of selection I mentioned.

Let me tell you, though, what I found most shocking in today’s scripture because it is a statement of the most important thing in the world that we let slip from being most important.

It comes half way down that second reading from 1 Timothy Chapter 2 in verses 3 to 6: God our Saviour… desires everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. For there is one God; there is also one mediator between God and humankind, Christ Jesus, himself human, who gave himself a ransom for all.

It is profoundly shocking that God loves us all – that God loves you and me through and through – and that knowing our need he should come among us to demonstrate it for all time in the sacrificial gift of Jesus.

God loves us all and desires all to be saved, but he knows we’re guilty of injustice, cheating, hypocrisy and narrow attitudes about the way things are. He knows our sins make us incapable of union with himself - for a holy God can have no fellowship with evil. God therefore has provided the loving remedy, giving his Son as a ransom for all.

We all need shock treatment from time to time. We need shocking out of selfish concerns and many delusions and distractions into seeing afresh the profound truth of Christianity.

The body of Christ. Amen.  The blood of Christ. Amen

This morning’s scripture wakens us to human failing but it does so with a reminder of how awesome this service is. We have sin in our lives but we also have Christ in our lives, mediator between God and humankind.. himself human, who gave himself a ransom for all.

There is nothing we can do – however base or despicable – that can make him love us less. There is nothing we can do – however noble or selfless – that can make him love us less.

That’s a shocking yet affirming thought and it’s the main thing of Christianity we’ve got to keep the main thing, though it means fighting off oh-so- plausible distractions!  Let’s pause to see what the Holy Spirit is saying to us individually through the scripture passages and what has been said about them.

Saturday, 5 April 2014

Lent 5 - I'll say Yes, Lord - Baptism of Dexter Elwell 6th April 2014

It is a special joy to welcome Dexter with his mum and dad this morning.

Craig and Samantha were married in 2004, divorced and then remarried two years ago. In their own words they’ve gone back to the truth.

Their choice of Amazing Grace for this service captures their being lost and found as will the baptism promises they make for Dexter this morning.

Today though we’re all invited by our Lent challenge to come back to the truth by writing a Letter to God and returning it in a sealed envelope via the collection plate, to be burned on Easter Day as a sign of offering.

‘I’ll say Yes, Lord’ is the theme of these last two weeks of Lent – yes to celebration, yes to sorrow, yes to today, yes to tomorrow – and the yes artwork includes a Cross.

The sign of the Cross is ‘I’ crossed out – in one interpretation. In another it says ‘Jesus came down from heaven to earth and died upon the cross for me’.  This is the truth we all come back to at Easter.

Incidentally you don’t have to be Roman Catholic or Orthodox to make the sign of the Cross. Our service booklet has the invitation to do so and a pointer to where we might do so together. Anglicans have always included the sign of the cross in their worship and especially in baptism.

Saying Yes to God in the baptism service is about Craig and Sam with Dexter committing to regular worship with God’s family, as the promise puts it ‘with the help of God’.  It’s saying God I turn to you, I repent of my sins, I renounce evil.

In a similar way we as a congregation are being invited to voice a Yes to God in a confidential letter, giving him our strengths and weaknesses, hopes and fears, as concrete expression of our love for him and commitment with him to love and serve a hurting and needy world.

Just as St Giles is getting a spring clean this week, so her members are being invited to make Lent the springtide of the soul it should always be by coming back from all our delusions and pretensions to the truth. That truth we call Christianity, which is relationship with God and one another. Its truth that energises us, as faith comes again and again to life, through God’s amazing grace.

What’s suggested won’t involve going to extra services so much as examining your life and saying Yes to celebration, sorrow, today and tomorrow. Those four headings touch on gratitude, penitence and seeking God’s provision for today and tomorrow. Sometimes it takes putting pen to paper, or keyboard to screen, to present our thanksgivings and needs to ourselves and to God. Talking to him in this way can take us deeper into his love and open up more of what he’s got in store for us.

Doing this together, symbolised by placing our letters in the Easter fire, will I believe have enormous repercussions for St Giles, especially as we look from next week at the annual reports and ready ourselves  for the Annual Meeting in three weeks time with the opportunities there for commitment to service.

How might my letter look, as your parish priest?

Yes to celebration – I would tell God I’m so grateful St Giles is the high achieving church it is in terms of community service.

Yes to sorrow – I would say sorry our ownership of proportionate giving to his work is so weak, reflecting not just suspicion about where the money goes but lack of faith in the future he has for us.

Yes to today – I would tell God in my letter that we need today Elishas to follow Elijah’s like James Nicholson, new leaders to be elected as church officers at the APCM, and leaders in prayer to back them up – today!

Yes to tomorrow – I would tell God of our concern to be a church that grows in faith, love and numbers and of our need for toilet facilities so as to make for that better tomorrow in terms of access to Christian community.

Those are just some of my ideas I’ll give God in my Easter letter, alongside personal thanksgiving for lives I’ve helped touch for him, regrets over my shortcomings, prayer for his Spirit to empower me today and discernment about best future employment of my gifts.

Yes to celebration, yes to sorrow, yes to today, yes to tomorrow is our prayer. It is also that of Craig and Samantha with Dexter. Craig is au fait with the sort of strategic thinking I’ve presented through the large team he runs at EDF Energy. He knows any organisation must struggle to keep the important things the important things. Sam is a good foil to him in her child care work which is less strategic and more of a going with the day by day hour by hour flow of things.

I’ve talked to them and at least two other young families recently about the struggle to get to Church on a Sunday. It seems the answer is a matter of discipline and nothing less. If, as the promises of baptism indicate, church is be all and end all, how can we fail to keep Sunday, the Lords’ day, but with the Lord’s family around the Lord’s table?

Children need a path to follow, they need both to know and to honour the most important things in life. Daily prayer, Sunday eucharist, bible reading, knowing the creed, welcoming the sacraments, confessing your sins, placing your time, talents and money into God’s service are part of serving the great cause that will outlast us all - that of the Love which moves the sun and the stars.

Today’s gospel reading showed us this love as Jesus wept over the death of Lazarus and then showed his power raising him from the dead. I believe Jesus weeps over me and over you and what is deadly within us through sin. Then, again and again, he says ‘come out!’ drawing forth from us the immortal life of his Spirit.

My letter to God will have words like the first sentence of the gospel, ‘Lord, he whom you love is ill’.  Sickness of spirit is our condition but it’s a condition with a remedy. God who made us anticipated this sickness, caused by misuse of our freedom, and provides in Jesus Christ the remedy for sin, sickness, fear, doubt, death and the devil! When we call on God he counters these evil powers with forgiveness, healing and deliverance - but we need to call on him!

This morning we join Samantha and Craig in calling on God for Dexter and his future.  We join them in saying ‘Yes to God’ who offers spiritual regeneration to all who believe and are baptised. Just as this couple strayed from one another and yet came back, so we all stray from God day by day and still find our way back, drawn by his magnetic love. The Letter to God exercise is his call to come back to the truth and love that is in Jesus. 

God wants our yes and our success but he wants our yes more than our success – a costly yes signed, as Dexter will be, with the cross.