Friday 25 March 2022

It is party time

“…And they began to celebrate.” (Luke 15:24)




Luke 15:11-32 (Year C: The Fourth Sunday in Lent 27th  March, 2022)


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A NOTE ABOUT TODAY’S READINGS
Old Testament: Joshua 5:9-12, Psalm 32,
New Testament epistle: 2 Corinthians 5:16-21.

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SERMON NOTES (2,186 words)

So much has entered into the English language and other languages via the Bible and its many images, stories and turns of phrase.  The story of the prodigal son is just one example.  We are familiar with the image of the wayward son who acts irresponsibly and goes off to sow his wild oats only to return later in penury and misery and to be met by a loving and compassionate father.  The jealousy of a brother and the reaction of their father adds spice to the story.  The parables of mercy found in the fifteenth chapter of Luke is preceded by the discourse on the demands of total discipleship in Luke 14 and is followed by some very challenging parables about riches in Luke 16. We should be aware that a parable of mercy is not a soft or easy option sandwiched in between hard discipleship and renunciation of attachment to material wealth. Rather, mercy explains everything we need to know about our God and it explains everything we need to know about how to live out our discipleship in this world as we know it. The fruits of this is joy and joy without shame.

The scene for this parable is set by the opening verses of Luke 15:1-2
Now all the tax-collectors and sinners were coming near to listen to him. And the Pharisees and the scribes were grumbling and saying, ‘This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them.’
How ironic that Luke should have chosen this opening challenge as the context, first, for the parable of the lost coin (Luke 15:3-7), then the lost sheep (Luke 15:8-10) and finally the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32) when many of the followers of Jesus over the coming centuries would spend much time leaving lost coins lost, not bothering with the one lost sheep and setting barriers and exclusion orders for those who seek a return to fellowship at the Lord’s table. Of course, it may be pointed out that various anathemas and exclusion orders are present elsewhere in the New Testament including some references in the gospels. However, the overwhelming thrust of what Jesus said and did and what we know about sayings and actions attributed to Jesus is that he didn’t play it all by the Rules of religion or custom. Rather, he exposed the shallowness, selectivity and duplicity of those managing these Rules when the overriding Rule of Life was and is chesed – a loving kindness that is faithful and moved and moveable.  We are not dealing, here, with some micro-manager God who is eagerly waiting to punish and control us. Neither are we dealing here with some ‘God of the ancient Greek Philosophers, that God who had no truck with the world, its people or its existence’, but remained ‘the unmoved mover of all things’ as Irish poet John Deane put it in his autobiography (Give Dust a Tongue: A faith and poetry memoir).

On the contrary, we are dealing with a living God who is all powerfully vulnerable to human suffering and delights in what has been created by love, in love, for love. The common thread running through each of the three parables in Luke 15 is that joy is the fruit of repentance and being found again. However, there is, potentially at least, a snag with the Prodigal son story.   A plausible reaction on the part of those listening to the story of the Prodigal Son for the first time might raise the following three questions:

1.    Wasn’t the father being unfair to the well-behaved and consistently loyal son?

2. Didn’t the father have a responsibility to reprimand the wayward son because bad behaviour should not be rewarded and a lesson needed to be taught even if he forgave all and the wayward son repented of all? What sort of message was the father sending out to other sons and fathers in the locality?

3. Did the prodigal son remain virtuous or fall by the wayside again? It is known to have happened that persons fall more than once in the course of a lifetime. The parable stops at this point.

Good questions to which answers are not readily available!  Let’s listen carefully, again, to this all too familiar and all too human story. The story begins like this:
‘There was a man who had two sons. The younger of them said to his father, “Father, give me the share of the property that will belong to me.” So he divided his property between them.  A few days later the younger son gathered all he had and travelled to a distant country, and there he squandered his property in dissolute living.’ (v. 11-13)
How would any parent feel about a child doing a ‘runner’ with their precious savings?  We can assume that the Father was at least surprised, annoyed, resentful when this happened. But he ought to have known beforehand given his youngest son’s character. While you can’t predict someone’s actual behaviour in advance you can guess a range of possible scenarios.  We are talking here of an ordinary human being in a story about human beings which sets the scene for a story about a heavenly father.  Note the absence of women in this story from start to finish (except by reference to women of ill-repute when the prodigal son was abroad). This is a classical scene from a patriarchal society where women do not feature when it comes to money, power and division of assets. 
When he had spent everything, a severe famine took place throughout that country, and he began to be in need. So he went and hired himself out to one of the citizens of that country, who sent him to his fields to feed the pigs. He would gladly have filled himself with the pods that the pigs were eating; and no one gave him anything. (v. 14-16)
The younger son fell on hard times. It happens. We all make mistakes. If we have not made mistakes when we were younger how would we learn? But, hold on wait for what is coming next….
But when he came to himself he said, “How many of my father’s hired hands have bread enough and to spare, but here I am dying of hunger!  I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you;  I am no longer worthy to be called your son; treat me like one of your hired hands.’”  So he set off and went to his father. (v.17-20a)
The traditional reading of the Prodigal Son is based on the idea that the prodigal son realised his mistakes, repented and returned to the Father.  But, there is another way of reading this story even if it is much less the assumed one – the son was cunning and clever enough to realise that when the money runs out the money runs out and the options are dire.  This son knew that his father was a bit of a push-over?  Did he gamble on pulling a fast one and putting on a repentance and self-humiliation scene? What was there to lose by giving it a try?  There are enough hints in the story to not exclude this possibility.  But, either way, the son returned and he was met by a compassionate father who took the initiative to meet him more than half ways. Read on…
But while he was still far off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion; he ran and put his arms around him and kissed him.  Then the son said to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.” But the father said to his slaves, “Quickly, bring out a robe—the best one—and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet.  And get the fatted calf and kill it, and let us eat and celebrate; for this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found!” And they began to celebrate. (v.20b-24)
Well that was some scene in front of everyone!.  Just imagine this disgraceful and disgraced son who turns up out of the blue and publicly abases himself in remorse.  The neighbours, cousins, friends and local persons of note must have been dumbfounded. ‘Well, who would have thought?’. Perhaps we could imagine some wondering if this was just a show (it is a parable after all). The father is, indeed, a soft-hearted old man. He saw his son far off and ‘was filled with compassion’.  He must have been thinking of him night and day and wondering was his son alive, well and in one piece. A first century parable didn’t allow for WhatsApp, email, mobile phones and facebook messenger. But, here in this moment of strong emotion and bonding the father immediately accepts his son without question, without interrogation, without conditions, without reserve and without hesitation. This was man-to-man stuff and Father-to-son work. The father ‘put his arms around him and kissed him’ not afraid to show his emotions. To Northern Europeans this seems sloppily southern European or eastern European!  Except on the sports field, showing emotions like that especially among men and among male family members is difficult for some of us in colder climates! But, back to the story…
‘Now his elder son was in the field; and when he came and approached the house, he heard music and dancing.  He called one of the slaves and asked what was going on.  He replied, “Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fatted calf, because he has got him back safe and sound.”  Then he became angry and refused to go in. His father came out and began to plead with him.  But he answered his father, “Listen! For all these years I have been working like a slave for you, and I have never disobeyed your command; yet you have never given me even a young goat so that I might celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours came back, who has devoured your property with prostitutes, you killed the fatted calf for him!” (v.25-30)
Oh Oh. Enter the other son.  Many a family feud has started over questions of honour, pride, inheritance and favours. The eldest son was furious: why should he who had been the loyal, respectable and obedient son be treated the same as or even not as well as the younger irresponsible brother? It was a fair question but one that missed the point of the story – the one who was lost and found deserves a double celebration. This can be a hard one to swallow especially if there is a hint of manipulation on the part of the prodigal son who weighed up his options and decided that offering himself as a hired servant was a least worst option.  We may note that the elder son refers to his younger brother not as a brother but ‘this son of yours’ (v.30).  How often do we use language to put a distance between ourselves and particular others especially when relationships are frayed or sundered?

But, in responding to the very understandable anger and astonishment of the older son we are confronted with a very different and disruptive logic. The logic and metrics of God-love are very different to ours. Notions of merit, proportional reward and punishment for past wrong doing (even when someone has repented) are very different in the kingdom of God. This is why the kingdom of God is an alien and distant place for many in society and even, sometimes, in our very own churches.
Then the father said to him, “Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. But we had to celebrate and rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.”’ (v.31-32)

The Father’s response is firm but gentle and affirming to the second son. There is a place for everyone at God’s table including those who believe themselves to have been faithful all their lives. But, there is a special place for those who feel awkward, excluded, judged and unsure. This is not about ‘opening the floodgate’ to everyone and anything. It is about the practice of a compassionate reaching out to those who come to us in search of meaning, understanding, acceptance, inclusion and encouragement in their journey. Are we up to this challenge? If we are honest with ourselves we will admit that we are the prodigal daughters and sons who need acceptance, understanding and encouragement. We receive these gifts when we are ready to give them to other prodigals. There is no shame in forgiving or in being forgiven. Rather, shame is a sign of hurt that is not healed.  We need to practice mercy as much as receive it. Indeed, it is party time.  Laetare - traditionally rejoicing Sunday on the fourth Sunday of Lent - can be every Sunday – a time of mercy, visitation, renewal.

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SOME IDEAS FOR INTERCESSIONS

Father of mercies, in Jesus you embrace us in our weakness and in our waywardness. We place our trust in your infinite mercy as we own up to our sins as individuals and as church. We pray for:
  • Healing and reconciliation in the churches and in our church community…..
  • Those seeking healing in the places we work and pray and gather…
  • All the nations of Europe at this time of uncertainty and strain….
  • For mothers on this 'Mothering Sunday'...
  • One another….
  • Other named persons ….
  • Remembering with thanks those who have gone before us….
  • … praying in silence….

Loving God take to yourself our pain, our grief and our wounds. Transform us in Christ to become what you have meant us to be. And we make this prayer in the name of Jesus. Amen.


Saturday 12 March 2022

Feel the fear and do it anyway

 “…Yet today, tomorrow, and the next day I must be on my way” (Luke 13:33)

Genesis 15:1-12, 17-18

Psalm 27

Philippians 3:17-4:1

Luke 13:31-35

 New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org

Year C: Second Sunday in Lent, 13 March 2022

It has been claimed that the instruction, ‘do not be afraid’, arises 365 times in the bible. That seems like good advice until we are presented with a situation that is truly scary!

In recent times I have been listening to and watching in complete amazement and astonishment 18 year old Ukrainian volunteers – boys really – addressing journalists and saying that they are bit scared but at the same time but that they must do what they have to do.

Is it realistic to advise someone not to be afraid even if we know and trust that God is with us through it all? I suggest a nuanced reply.  It is entirely natural and rational and unavoidable that we would experience fear throughout our lives. It is the way of survival and growth to learn about facing and living with danger.

This leads us to ponder the meaning of trust in the midst of daily life especially at times of great uncertainty and not a little anxiety as we hopefully emerge from a pandemic and embrace the shock of a new and somewhat terrifying world ushered in during the early hours of Thursday the 24th February 2022. Our world will never be the same again.  And for those fleeing or staying to defend across the land of the Ukraine millions are faced with stark and dreadful choices. We cannot even begin to imagine what it is like.

Jesus faced fear and extreme hostility as we learn in today’s Gospel reading.  He declared: ‘Yet today, tomorrow, and the next day I must be on my way’.  Jesus was no less human than we are. He felt hunger, pain, fear and desolation as well as times of great joy.  He did not flinch from his mission.  Neither did he succumb to fear.

Abram, our Father in faith, was faced with a similar challenge when God asked him to leave his home country and travel to an unknown place. Abraham or Father of the nations, as he was to be called, trusted in God and allowed God to lead him.  A covenant was made by God to protect and reward Abraham with many heirs.  We are the children of Abraham along with many outside the household of Christian faith.

We may note that Abram’s act of faith – abandonment to the will of God – did not mean that he would not face fear.  In Genesis 15:12, after Abram put his trust in the Lord, we read the following:

“As the sun was going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abram, and a deep and terrifying darkness descended upon him”.

In other words, the act of faith – abandoning our will to the will of God – does not abolish fear. Rather, we continue to experience fear but now we travel with God through the fear because, as the psalmist sings, ‘The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom then shall I fear?’ and again, ‘The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom then shall I be afraid?’

God is indeed in the hellish places of our present world.  And God cares infinitely for each creature even those inflicting great suffering on others.

May each of us face and acknowledge fear but do what we have to do in the name of Christ who leads us forward.


Friday 4 March 2022

A struggle to counter evil


Year C; First Sunday in Lent (6 March 2022)

Deuteronomy 26:1-11

Psalm 91

Romans 10:8-13

Luke 4:1-13


This first Sunday of Lent comes at a critical time for humanity.  War has returned to Europe on a scale and at a speed we have not known in generations. 

Many are anxious and unsure.  And now an even greater gulf has opened up between East and West fanning the flames of distrust and enmity.  We are challenged to do something.  

Lent is traditionally associated with spiritual warfare. In the 'desert' we are left to contend with the devil, the world and the flesh just as Jesus did on the eve of his public ministry.  How do we enter into the spirit of Lent during this time of enormous stress and anxiety?

How do we reset the compass so that our actions and words reflect the mind of Christ?

We need to take some time out for ourselves even if many of us have no peace or place to lay our troubled heads.  In the noise and commotion of living we need to find quiet spaces in which to listen and be refreshed. You see the world is in a mess because we – humanity - have not listened to the voice of God crying out in the least of our brethren.

We took so much for granted - peace, free speech, democracy, gas and oil, wheat and grain, travel, holidays, rule of law and relative prosperity.  Now, everything could be up for grabs. Virulent nationalism not just in Russia but also in China, in the USA, in the UK, in Europe, yes and even fragments of the Ukrainian political landscape, Africa, India is on the rise and menaces the delicate peace that held for much of the globe for much of the last 70 years.  Here in Ireland we know something of virulent nationalism and its toxic effects.

Yet, in all this chaos we are witnessing extraordinary examples of heroism, generosity and integrity. Perhaps we, in our place, are being urged to consider opening our hearts, our homes and our countries to some of the many millions that will be displaced across central and western Europe? 

In all of this we must remember our brothers and sisters in other continents for whom war, famine and deprivation are a daily reality. Perhaps the one of the biggest human catastrophes triggered by war has been in Syria in the last decade. Afghanistan is undergoing famine as we speak.  And there is the never ending brutal war in Yemen and other places. We do not hear as much about these conflicts and the pernicious role of all the super powers both historically and in more recent times.

But back to the here and now. What about us? I suggest three things for today and the coming week – the first full week of Lent.

1.            We need to steady our minds in the presence of God. Find a place and a time each day where you can rest even if only for a few minutes.

2.            Second, reach out to the person nearest you. Be mindful of others who are in need and who face their own worries and uncertainties.

3.            Third, be ready for all eventualities. We literally know not the hour or the day when we will have to give an account for our lives (Matthew 25:13). In the end we will be judged on one thing only: love.