Saturday, 27 April 2019

Haunted by Christ


“…My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28)




John 20:19-31  (Year C: The Second Sunday of Easter, 28th April, 2019)

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In some places this  Sunday is called ‘Low Sunday’ after the ‘High’ of last Easter Sunday. In some traditions, this Sunday may also be referred to as ‘Divine Mercy Sunday’ marking a special celebration of Jesus’ mercy.

A NOTE ABOUT TODAY’S READINGS
COI
RC


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SERMON NOTES (1,480 words)

The reality of living faith in today’s world is complex. We are caught up in that world whether we are regular church goers or not. Recently, a senior Irish church figure cited a book entitled ‘Haunted by Christ: Modern Writers and the Struggle for Faith’ by Richard Harries. Harries considers the work of 20 poets and writers and their struggles to believe and to express it in their lives and writings.

‘Thinking’ and ‘believing’ go together. However, since the age of enlightenment people have pushed the boundaries of thinking and human reason to a point where, in the fullness of time, and here in Europe belief in a supernatural being has been relegated to the domain of private opinion and choice.  This is a pity because ‘reason’ and ‘faith’ can and do complement each other. The act of, and will to, believe that Jesus rose from the dead and is now alive among us and within the hearts and minds of each one is central to Christian belief and practice. Without this cornerstone our faith would be in vain and we, of all people, would be most to be pitied (1 Corinthians 15:19).

The evangelist, John, is about to finish his book with a bang. In the space of one half of the second last chapter we hear about the resurrection, the primary role of women in witnessing and telling of the resurrection, the struggles of doubting Thomas, the call to mercy and a ministry of forgiveness, the sending out on mission, the few words spoken by Jesus in the period after his resurrection and, finally, the statement of purpose in this gospel of John:
Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book. But these are written so that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through believing you may have life in his name.
‘that through believing’ we might have life in the name of Jesus. That’s it. Grace, Response through faith and eternal life in the time to come as well as here and now. Very simple! But, does any of this make sense in a 21st century world, someone might ask? 

Among many of my friends, colleagues and acquaintances there is a marked reluctance to talk openly about matters of faith. Indeed, there appears to be a growing trend towards open and self-declared agnosticism or atheism. The code phrase used is ‘O, I am not religious’. Sometimes, the phrase ‘but I have a spirituality of my own’ is added. Far be it for me or anyone else to peer into the soul of another. The wells of knowing and experiencing are deep indeed and each of us has rarely gone deeply down under in our own souls let alone those of others (and I will not define, here, the term ‘soul’!).

Making sense of if today
We need to enter into a respectful and learning attitude towards the world that has, in many ways, moved beyond the core beliefs and practices of orthodox Christianity (taking the word orthodox in its widest application to all Christians who profess Jesus as both Saviour and as God).  We are, after all, asked to love God with all our faculties including our minds (Luke 10:27):
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbour as yourself.
With all our mind and not just part of it …. Tragically, some Christian folk distrust the mind as something separate and subordinate along with that other untrustworthy thing called the body. Yet, all of these faculties, which form part of the whole are to be cherished and used lovingly to bring glory to God and freedom to humanity. Instead we fall into the trap of incomplete human development. A form of this is a type of belief and practice that is born out of fear and ignorance. When confronted with a world of ideas, relationships and evidence we may retreat into the ‘certainties of our age’. Now the certainties of our age can take many forms. I will refer to only three of them that seem particularly relevant to this Sunday’s reading:
  • Scientific reductionism
  • Biblical literalism
  • Absolute and unqualified ecclesial infallibility across the board.
Ecclesial infallibilism
Let’s get the third one of the way first.  Finding solace and refuge in religion many a ‘convert’ elevates ‘mother church’ or some leader in same to a pedestal and status that is not consistent with faith as a living, growing and personal relationship.  Put another way, ‘the church teaches’ or ‘the pope says’ are convenient ways of avoiding painful, sometimes bitter but always fruitful struggles on the part of thoughtful and grounded disciples. The hard work of thinking through, reviewing, changing, adapting but above all listening to others and to one’s heart and mind does not come easy for some of us.

Biblical literalism serves a very similar role to that of ecclesial infallibilism – it elevates some version or other of sacred scripture to a position of exact, legal and rational interpretation that admits of no living tradition, experience and depth. Everything is set in stone (sometimes literally) so that each one must follow a blueprint and believe in the exact same formulations. Now, unity of doctrine and practice on the ‘essentials’ is a good and necessary thing any time in the history of church. However, we need to go back to the sources with informed minds and open hearts. Even ‘the devil can cite scripture’ as William Shakespeare has it in The Merchant of Venice.  The sad reality, today, is that this insight of Shakespeare is very true. Of course, any serious scholar will quickly spot that the biblical literalists are selective in which passages or extracts they cite to advance their particular theological project or schema.

And, then, there are the scientific reductionists. These come in different forms and guises from the half-informed scientist or would-be-scientist as well as the people who live and move in a very incomplete world lacking in trust and imagination.  In many ways classical scientific reductionism is dead and along with it 20th century ‘scientific socialism’ (the very term insults both socialism and science).  Thanks to science we are, perhaps, more aware than was the case in previous generations that our knowledge is limited and that there is much that we do not know or cannot know.

One characteristic binds together the ecclesial infallibilists, the biblical literalists and the scientific reductionists is fear and deep insecurity masquerading as certainty. They know they are right (and by inference others are wrong) because they have it on high authority from a book, a pronouncement or a some scientific tract – or simply themselves. However, the pretenders to certainty remain locked behind closed doors as the 10 disciples were (where was Thomas?) because they had not still met the Risen one and had not yet been fully baptised in his Holy Spirit.

A 21st century Thomas
In a way Thomas – who was chided for lack of faith – was a very pre-modern character for us today.  He didn’t take the word of his ecclesial comrades because he wanted to ‘see the evidence’ for himself. Neither was he prepared to entrust himself to some biblical certainty in the prophets.  Ultimately, it was for Thomas a personal encounter with the living Christ – but crucially in the company, life and mutual love of others –  that made all the difference. And though we may not be able to see or touch or reason in the way our ancestors in faith did we are no less vulnerable to the challenge of faith in a world crying out for the risen life of Jesus.  Grounded in the here and anchored to the present moment we, too, can taste this risen life to such an extent that we cry out ‘My Lord and my God’. There, we will find that peace (v. 19), that joy (v. 20) and that freedom (v. 23) that stands out in this story of the resurrection.

As much as formal, organised and outward religion is in rapid decline in most modern western economies and societies there is a curious rise in minority expressions of interest and attachment. This can take many forms from fanatical adherence to cults – benign or otherwise as well as ‘back to basics’ movements where religious faith is largely reduced to certain doctrinal statements and particular ritual practices. On a more positive note we see the rise of various local or transnational fresh expressions of the Holy Spirit especially among lay people called and consecrated to serve in and to the world. Authenticity of source and communion of living and practice are the cornerstones of new expressions of Christian spirituality. Thank God for that.


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SOME IDEAS FOR INTERCESSIONS

Praise to our God in Jesus Christ truly risen. We are a people called in his name. Together with all peoples throughout the world we pray for:
  • True freedom of conscience and expression in society…..
  • Those suffering the effects of sectarianism, war and terror…
  • The people of Sri Lanka at this time …
  • The communities in which we live and work…may we extend a genuine and warm welcome to those who seek truth and love….
  • The Christian churches … that we may hold to the true faith of Christ and the gifts of the Holy Spirit entrusted to us…
  • One another….
  • Other named persons ….
  • Remembering with thanks those who have gone before us….
  • … praying in silence….

Loving God accept gather up our prayers – those spoken and those unspoken in the depths of our hearts. In the places we live, work and communicate, may we be channels of peace and reconciliation in a tormented world.

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A PRAYERFUL WALK THROUGH JOHN 20:19-31

v.19   Jesus Christ Risen among us
When it was evening on that day, the first day of the week, and the doors of the house where the disciples had met were locked for fear of the Jews.
Fear is the overwhelming emotion as the disciples are bolted in on the evening of the Day of Resurrection. The full significance of what had happened had not fully dawned on the apostles. Were they in denial or were they waiting for a further sign? Either way, they were scared for understandable reasons.

v.20   Peace and joy
After he said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord.
On seeing the Lord’s face the disciples were filled with joy.  ’This is the day that the Lord; we will rejoice and be glad in it’ (Psalm 118:24). When we greet one another at the Eucharist or in our daily lives do we mean what we say and do? Do we really mean peace and well-being to the other?

v.21   The apostles are sent
Jesus said to them again, ‘Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.’
This was an important moment in the resurrection story. The disciples would not be mere spectators. At this sacred time power would be given them to announce the good news to all of humanity. We, too, are sent (apostolos). And the gifts of peace, joy and healing that we have received in the course of our lives is there for the quiet and discrete witnessing. Let us not be afraid.

v.22-23   The mission of reconciliation
When he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.’
Empowered with the Holy Spirit the apostles were not only given power to announce the good news but to impart a ministry of healing and forgiveness. This retaining and releasing is entrusted to them as is indicated, also, in Matthew where Jesus specifically addressed Peter (Matthew 16:19).

In the Gospel of John, resurrection, ascension and the coming of the Holy Spirit are very much brought together in what looks like the concluding chapter of the Gospel. The following chapter, number 21, looks like an addendum. In true Johannine tradition, the ‘Signs’ of Jesus point to outward things effecting and signally inward change. Herein lies the mysteries of Christ to use an Eastern expression or the sacraments of Christ to use a Western term. Baptism, the coming of the Holy Spirit, the forgiveness of sins and the Eucharist emerge from what is happening in the Passover of the Christ.

v.24-25   Doubting Thomas
But Thomas (who was called the Twin), one of the twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. So the other disciples told him, ‘We have seen the Lord.’ But he said to them, ‘Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.’
The story switches gear by jumping forward to the one apostle who happened not to be present when Jesus appeared to the disciples. Perhaps he was on an errand for the company of disciples. Here, we enter a new phase in the resurrection story. Thomas stands for those who would follow the first direct witnesses. He saw and he believed. However, before seeing he was put to the test.

It is poignant that the first explicit designation of Jesus as not just Lord (Kyrios) but God (Theos) was by a doubter - Thomas.

The reference to the mark of nails and the wounds in the side of Jesus are the only explicit Gospel references indicating crucifixion by nailing and not by hanging.
v.26   Jesus repeats his message of peace
A week later his disciples were again in the house, and Thomas was with them. Although the doors were shut, Jesus came and stood among them and said, ‘Peace be with you.’
Jesus appears again and again to greet his friends with a message of peace. Peace is the first and the last message of the Risen Christ who remains with us today just as he did two millennia ago.

v.27-29   Surrender in faith
Then he said to Thomas, ‘Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.’ Thomas answered him, ‘My Lord and my God!’ Jesus said to him, ‘Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.’
These words – ‘blesses are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe’ (v.28) are a source of comfort to us in this age of doubt and indifference if not outright hostility.

v.30-31   The so what of this Gospel
Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book. But these are written so that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through believing you may have life in his name.
Scripture is the rock foundation of what we believe and say. Yet, the evangelist John reminds us that there is much that Jesus did and taught that was not written down in this book. Indeed, John concludes his gospel as follows:
 But there are also many other things that Jesus did; if every one of them were written down, I suppose that the world itself could not contain the books that would be written. (John 21:25).

Saturday, 13 April 2019

On our knees


“…When the hour came, he took his place at the table, and the apostles with him” (Luke 22:14)




Luke 22:14-23 (Year C: The Sixth Sunday in Lent (Palm Sunday) 14th April, 2019)


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A NOTE ABOUT TODAY’S READINGS

Liturgy of the Passion (COI)
The readings in the Roman Catholic Church are the same except for the psalm which is number 22(21) instead of 31.
Direct parallel gospel readings to that of Luke are found in:

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SERMON NOTES (672 words)

Most who read this weekly blog are familiar with the idea and practice of Holy Communion regardless of how frequently we participate in it. I suspect that our ideas of Holy Communion, the Mass, the Eucharist or the Lord’s Supper is shaped by our very early experiences in life. We watched other people including our parents and neighbours. We picked up – by osmosis or explicit teaching – the spoken and unspoken assumptions, mysteries, firmly held beliefs and norms of the Christian tradition into which we were introduced or in which we ended up (the two not always being synonymous).

The Eucharist is a mystery. We do well to embrace it as a mystery in the totality of daily living. To see the Eucharist as something separate from life or some-Thing that exists outside ourselves does not justice to the mystery. Over-thinking or over-analysing is likely to impede a living relationship with God and our neighbour of which the Eucharist is a very – even crucial – part. It is good to explain and to explore the mystery by means of trusting prayer and living theology. However, I suggest that we do best to approach the mystery literally on our knees (which is why I appreciate the widespread Anglican practice at the time of reception in the service of Holy Communion even if the evidence suggests that Christians in the earliest of post-apostolic times tended to stand throughout the liturgy on the Lord’s Day (Sunday).

This Sunday, Palm Sunday, opens with a special liturgy with the procession marking Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem.  There follows a very long Gospel which can lead to long standing in many places! 
In this blog, I have chosen to reflect and pray about one part of that rather long Passion story from the Gospel of Saint Luke. I have chosen what is commonly referred to as ‘the institution of the Eucharist’ found in each of the synoptic gospels and, in the case of Luke, in chapter 22.

This is end time for Jesus as he eats his last supper with his friends before his impending trial, torture, death and resurrection. Running through the story of the Eucharist and the sketchy account of it in Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians (written before Luke was) is the theme of betrayal.

Human betrayal is present in God’s story from Adam right through to the Book of Revelation and in our own times. Many betray the God of life and love. The authority, authoritativeness and credibility of the Christian churches has been hugely undermined by many factors including their handling of betrayal by a minority of its ministers. How ironic that the last supper of Jesus with this disciples was the occasion of a huge historical betrayal on the part of Judas. This overshadows the entire story of what happened that night. It opens the gates of hell because Jesus would pass through hell on earth and beyond death in the days that would follow before opening the gates of heaven to all who would believe and submit to this rule of love.

The setting for Paul’s teaching on the Eucharist (1 Corinthians 11:23-27) found in chapter 11 of his letter to the Christians at Corinth is one of strife and betrayal of the principles of the gospel.  Those partaking in the sacred meal were excluding others and fighting among themselves for a share of what is available. If Christians are not squabbling about doctrine we squabble about our share of the spiritual cake. Put another way, it is a struggle of power and about who is in the right and who is in the wrong. This is anti-Gospel and therefore anti-Eucharist. Whatever about the technical validity of sacred orders and rites, the meaning and value of the Eucharist is besmirched when we behave in a thoroughly selfish and self-righteous manner.

I suggest a thorough examination of conscience, confession of sins and, if we can manage it, an approach to the Table of the Lord’s Word and Bread on our knees this coming week.

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SOME IDEAS FOR INTERCESSIONS

As the Church  enters the most sacred of weeks in the year, we place before the tender mercies of God our needs and those of others. We pray for:
  • Action by Governments, communities and churches to change our way of living, consuming and producing so as to leave our God-given Earth in a better condition to future generations…..
  • The people of Sudan at this time …
  • The communities in which we live and work…may we extend a genuine and warm welcome to those are strangers….
  • The Christian churches … that we may witness to common baptism in this time of the Lord’s Passion and Resurrection …
  • One another….
  • Other named persons ….
  • Remembering with thanks those who have gone before us….
  • … praying in silence….

Loving God gather to yourself the scattered people called by the name of Christ. Anoint us with the oil, water and fire of your holy sacraments as we journey through this passiontide of 2019.

Friday, 5 April 2019

Extravagant love

“…The house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume” (John 12:1)



John 12:1-8 (Year C: The Fifth Sunday in Lent 7th April, 2019)


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A NOTE ABOUT TODAY’S READINGS


Direct parallel Gospel readings are as follows: Matthew 26:6-13  Mark 14:3-9 and Luke 7:36-50
(Readings in the Roman Catholic church are as above except for the Gospel: John 8:1-11. For a previous blog on this latter passage see ‘Love set you free’)

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SERMON NOTES (791 words)

Jesus was eating in a safe house in the village of Bethany right beside Jerusalem. At this point he was on the run as the authorities were seeking him. A woman called Mary took a very large consignment of perfume to the value of 300 hundred denarii – apparently the equivalent of ‘a year’s wages’ (verse 5) one denarius being a day’s wage. Some versions say, simply, ‘very costly’ or ‘a pound of costly anointment’.  Now, a year’s wages today might be around €30,000 or £25,000 a year. This, clearly, was top of the range perfume!

John never misses an opportunity to situate a story in the wider drama of Jesus’ impending death.  We are now in the final week of the liturgy of the Christian year moving towards the Passover of the Christ. Such a display of affection, trust and love in the house of Lazarus was not accidental. We may assume that the lady in question had much to be thankful for. She had met goodness, truth and beauty in the person of Jesus. Why wouldn’t she ‘waste’ (to quote Judas) a huge and precious gift? Where did she it from? Maybe it was a gift to her? Or, maybe she traded in such goods? Or, maybe she ran down her savings to buy this? It was an exercise in generosity towards a person who would display the greatest generosity a few days later by dying on the cross for Mary and Martha and Lazarus and Simon the leper and you and me and everyone else. Judas’ smoke screen about giving the money to the poor instead of wasting it as Mary had just done triggers a saying well known to Jews at that time (Deuteronomy 5:11):
There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be open-handed towards your fellow Israelites who are poor and needy in your land.
Some readers have interpreted both Jesus’ response and the fuller quotation in Deuteronomy to claim that Christians must accept that poverty and severe economic inequality will always exist and that the role of good people is to lessen its effects in local, partial and limited way through charitable donations from the surplus we have. This is not consistent with a reading that invites everyone – including Christians – to work for a different world where poverty and all the lack of dignity that goes with it are abolished and the values of the kingdom of God triumph.

Love acts more than speaks
Washing feet was a deeply symbolic (as in connecting and signalling) gesture – something to be repeated on the eve of Jesus’ passion when he gives his disciples (us) a lesson in discipleship.  In Mary’s case, it was extravagant involving the mostly costly of perfumes and ointment and her very own hair (a touching and sensuous gesture befitting of John’s gospel). A 21st century reader might view this gesture as slightly risky and inappropriate. Matthew and Mark’s version of the story is that Mary poured the oil over Jesus’ head. Ointment bucket challenge!  Luke (7:36-50) spells it out in terms of Mary a ‘sinner’ and a well known one at that anoints Jesus with oil in front of everyone. And she was ‘weeping’. She goes one step further than Mary in John’s gospel by not only using her hair to wipe the feet of Jesus but she kissed them as well!

Whatever the context and the meaning of gestures in another cultural milieu and time we can be sure that Mary was not ready to settle for half measures. Neither should we in our in particular situation, calling and duty. Mediocrity, timidity and fear of social sanction can impede modern-day Christian witness. But, everything in its rightful place and time!

(‘And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume’ (v. 3). This might hint at high church worship in the Johannine community?!)

And so
In the way that this story is told in the gospel of Matthew (26:6-13) Jesus confounds his listeners by saying that ‘she has done a beautiful thing to me’ (Matthew 26:10) and that ‘wherever this gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her’ (Matthew 26:13).  Today, each of us ought to live in such a way that some day – eventually – we will be a good memory for others who follow in our families and in our circles of friendships and acquaintances. Actions speak louder than mere words (the gospels do not indicate that Mary said anything).  Mary ‘did what she could’ (Mark 14:8). We should do what we can as long as there is light. And we should be generous and prompt about it. Leave the rest to God.

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SOME IDEAS FOR INTERCESSIONS

God is love and whoever lives in love lives in God and God lives in her. Together with all of God’s people we pray for:
  • Those without adequate food, drinking water, shelter and the means of dignified living…..
  • Those who bring relief and practical support and advocacy for the poor…
  • The peoples of Europe at this time …
  • People in our lives who bring us blessing….
  • People in our lives who make our journey challenging…
  • The Christian churches throughout the world especially in places of persecution and danger…
  • One another….
  • Other named persons ….
  • Remembering with thanks those who have gone before us….

… praying in silence….

Eternal God, you are perfect love. Through the help of your grace may we grow in love for one another and for you that we may find that blessed peace you have willed for us from all time. Amen.