Showing posts with label Pentecost gift of the Holy Spirit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pentecost gift of the Holy Spirit. Show all posts

Friday, 18 May 2018

Pentecost at St Bartholomew, Brighton 20 May 2018



The Church of England - is there a Church like it?
The English love it and imagine they made it!
It's Archbishop ranks with Pope and Patriarchs.
Puritans and gay activists find cover under its wings.
Feminists and Romanists contend within it.
Christian atheists love its liturgy.
Evangelicals use it to fish for souls.
Charismatics dance down its aisles.
Few churches worldwide get the headlines the Church of England gets - even if they embarrass and shame us!
It calls itself 'the ancient church of this land, catholic and reformed', not Roman Catholic or Protestant but a middle way true to the faith of the church through the ages.
Is there a church like it, welcoming honest seekers after truth and the Truth that seeks us in Jesus? Liturgical beauty, community care and  thoughtful engagement with a fast changing world?
Long live the Church of England!

I wrote this ode for Horsted Keynes parish magazine years back and it's a good opener for today’s celebration of the church’s birthday.

Yes, the Church of England’s birthday is Pentecost and not 1534 when King Henry VIII declared himself its Supreme Governor. As ‘the ancient church of this land’ we trace back to Whit Sunday. We’re part of the ‘one, holy, catholic and apostolic church’ even if some things you read in the Church Times might lead you to believe otherwise - that the C of E starts and ends in England! Most of my ministry I’ve contended with those who make our Church less than she is as part of the Church of God in England. On many issues I’ve found myself fighting against what I call ‘the conservative tendency in Anglicanism’ - the tendency to conserve our position in society which has led us more and more distant from our major partners worldwide, the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches.

The good news of Jesus Christ wasn’t started here - it came to Britain from overseas so that Augustine’s arrival from Rome in 597 and not 1534 is the biggest date for us after the bigger event recorded in today’s first reading which dates from 33 years after the birth of Christ. 

The dynamic of the love, truth and power of God’s Spirit flows down to us through 20 centuries bearing fruit in individuals, communities and nations more ready to conform themselves to Christ than conform Christ and his church’s teachings to themselves!
When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth Our Lord promises in the Gospel. We heard in the Acts reading how that promise was fulfilled. Later on the priest will lead our exultation on this great feast that according to God’s most true promise the Holy Spirit came down as at this time from heaven with a sudden great sound, as it had been a mighty wind, in the likeness of fiery tongues, lighting upon the Apostles, to teach them and to lead them to all truth; giving them both the gift of divers languages, and also boldness with fervent zeal, constantly to preach the Gospel unto all nations: whereby we have been brought out of darkness and error into the clear light and true knowledge of God, and of his Son Jesus Christ.

Some years back a great preacher captured the essence of the work of the Holy Spirit in two paragraphs. Here are words from Greek Orthodox Archbishop Athenagoras.

Without the Holy Spirit:
God is far away,

Christ stays in the past,

the Gospel is a dead letter,

the Church is simply an organisation,                                                                                         authority is a matter of domination,                                                                                    mission is a matter of propaganda,                                                                                                    the liturgy no more than an evocation,                                                                                       Christian living a slave morality.

But in the Holy Spirit:

the risen Christ is there,

the Gospel is the power of life,

the Church shows forth the life of the Trinity,                                                                          authority is a liberating service,

mission is a Pentecost,

the liturgy is both memorial and anticipation,                                                                                 human action is deified.

‘Without the Holy Spirit the Gospel is a dead letter, the Church is simply an organisation,
But in the Holy Spirit the risen Christ is there, the Gospel is the power of life..’ Patriarch Athenagoras’ comment warns how the Gospel and the Church reduce to words, images and structures without the breath of the Lord and Lifegiver.

So it is in our lives as Christians unless we beware. I know a priest who has over his desk, ‘I am a human being, not a human ‘doing". All we do as Christians flows from what we are - this is the powerful reminder of the Feast of Pentecost. For God has made us what we are in Baptism and Confirmation by the Gift of his Spirit. He renews that Gift of his own Life week by week in the Bread of Life and the Cup of Salvation. This is the great Mystery of our Faith, that God is real and personal and present, so real and personal and present to us and in us that Scripture says that as human beings we ‘live and move and have our being’ in him. 

But do we? Do we really recognise in this coming Holy Communion the claim of Christ upon us that should make him central to our life? Open your hearts to the Spirit of God who this day first came upon the Church. 

I close with the Pentecost prayer of another Patriarch, this time of the Western rather than the Eastern Church, Pope John XXIII: ‘Holy Spirit renew your wonders in this our day. Give us a new Pentecost!’ 

Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful people and kindle in them the fire of Your Love. May Your Life overflow here at St Bartholomew’s so that people will be intrigued, drawn to you by our worship, our words about you, our deeds of service and our love for one another and for Brighton!






Sunday, 12 June 2011

Pentecost all age eucharist 12th June 2011 Birthday of the Church

Is it anyone's birthday today? This week? This month?

Tell us.... who you are, how old you’ll be and what you expect will happen on your birthday.

Well, whilst I’m very happy that your birthday coming up, today's eucharist is to celebrate another birthday.

It's not really the birthday of another person (although some people do talk about 'her') and it doesn't seem right to call it a thing.

Can the children think whose birthday they might be celebrating today?

Ask one of the children to open the present with the Spanish dictionary in it.Are they any clearer?

Ask another child to open the card and read out the greeting: 'Happy Birthday, The Church'.

How can the Church have a birthday?

When Christians talk about the Church, they aren't just talking about a building – they’re talking about all the people in the world who follow Jesus.

Nowadays there are about 2,000 million Christians in the world but roughly 2,000 years ago there were only about 120. Not 120 million, but just 120.

On the day that the Church was born, a day which Christians call Pentecost, these 120 people were hiding in a house in Jerusalem.

It must have been rather squashed in that house.

Rather like a baby ready to be born is a bit squashed inside its mother's tummy.

These 120 people were all together because they were very anxious. In the previous month they had been through a lot. First, they had seen Jesus die on a cross. That had made them very sad.

Then they had seen Jesus alive again. That had made them very happy.

Then, before their very eyes, Jesus had gone up to Heaven.

Now they were very confused and concerned.

What was going to happen next?

So the 120 people went back to Jerusalem and waited.

Ten days later, something amazing happened. There was a great wind from Heaven...

Let’s blow very hard as if we were the wind

Along with the wind there was something that looked like flames. These flames fell on the heads of Jesus' 120 followers and, like a baby being born, they came out of their hiding place and into the big wide world.

Now children who can tell me the first thing they did when they were born?

No doubt you cried. Babies cry because they want people to take notice of them. The first followers of Jesus didn't cry when they emerged out of their hiding place, but they did get the attention of other people in the city by using their voices.

They told everyone in the city about Jesus. But they all spoke in different languages - languages that were different from their own and which they had never learned. This was one of the many birthday presents that God gave the Church.

That’s behind the dictionary. At Pentecost God gave people the capacity to share about Jesus in every language and nation and send them out to just that.

Church members read out one of the different translations of 'Happy Birthday'.

At that time in Jerusalem, there were many people from different parts of the world. They were so amazed to hear their own languages being spoken that they gathered around to hear what the followers of Jesus were saying.

After Peter, one of Jesus' followers, had spoken to the crowd, 3,000 of them became Christians. Like a newborn baby, the Church had started to grow bigger.

Well no birthday would be complete without a cake.

Server lights the candles.

While this is being done the candles can be a reminder to us of the flames that fell at Pentecost on the heads of the first Christians.

Invite children to blow out candles.

When the candles are blown out, remember the great wind from Heaven that blew the disciples out of their house and into the street.

That’s what Pentecost means today, it’s a reminder that the Holy Spirit who came on this day is still with us and is waiting to inspire us to share with others about Jesus.

Just as the first Christians shared their love of Jesus with people, the cake will be shared amongst everyone after the eucharist.