29 July 2021

Sermon: 9th Sunday after Pentecost

 Sermon: 9th Sunday after Pentecost

25 July 2021 – Archdeacon Mark Long

Ephesians 3:14-21 ; Psalm 14; and John 6:1-21; NRSV

As you may already have realised, the Gospel of Mark is this year’s Lectionary focus. The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke alternate within our three year Lectionary cycle and they are known as the Synoptic Gospels, which is a Greek phrase meaning in essence that these three Gospels contain many of the same stories often in a similar sequence and with similar wording, although their individual focus and audiences are different. Occasionally – as we do today – we break away from the “Gospel of the Year” to spend some time with a contrasting perspective from John’s Gospel, this time a five week focus on John chapter 6. 

We launch into this diversion with one of the few stories in John’s Gospel that is also found in the other three Gospels: the feeding of the five thousand. I invite you to take a moment to bring to mind what you know about this event {silence} … a number of aspects may have come to mind … hungry crowds … a few loaves and fish … Jesus blessing these … food shared and people fed … lots left over. Now think back to the Gospel reading as you heard it read this morning … while it has probably melded in with your general awareness of the story there are some significant differences to the way it is told in comparison to the other three Gospels. In the Synoptic narratives Jesus’ compassion for the crowd is a highlight, the disciples handing out the bread and fish to the crowds, left over food being collected afterwards doubtless to be shared again with others. It’s big picture stuff, painting a broad overview of the purpose of God’s kingdom in the world. In John’s Gospel the focus is a little different, and a little more intimate and a little more specific, and focused on Jesus rather than the hungry crowd, and it’s context is in relation to the upcoming Passover celebration. The bread is not just bread, it is Barley bread; the fish are dried fish [this is lost in the English translation]; it is not the disciples that distribute the bread, it is Jesus; the edge is not just taken off the crowd’s hunger, their hunger is satisfied. The testing question Jesus asks of Philip is not an exam question with a pre-decided answer, but one that requires Philip and the other disciples and ourselves as we hear the story again today to see more than just the feeding of this crowd; it is for us to acknowledge Jesus as the Bread of Life, to recognise God in Jesus giving God’s-self to us, intimately, personally, satisfyingly. 

And just in case we missed all this, John immediately follows up with the Jesus walking on water … a wonderful insight I think into John’s sense of humour! 

In John’s Gospel the feeding of the five thousand is a sign[1], an activity not just to be celebrated for the wonder of a God who cares deeply for the physically hungry, but of a God who cares for the fullness of creation; a God who has power over the elements and an ability to multiply these as Jesus does with the Barley bread and dried fish, or to use them differently as Jesus does in walking on the water. Our humanity responds to these physical events, and – certainly speaking for myself – longs for similar power. However John also comments on the nature of this power and we need to heed his insight: this power is not used to control. Jesus uses this power to serve, and does so intimately, demonstrating the depth and wholeness of his humanity in this moment. John underlines this commitment by noting that when the crowds having had their hunger satisfied move to make him King, Jesus hot-foots it into the distance. The English translation politely says he ‘withdrew’; the Greek word would better be translated as ‘fled’! John makes it abundantly clear that Jesus’ did not seek to hold political or economic power. The reference to the upcoming Passover Festival accentuates this, a reminder that God is committed to our physical liberation from all that seeks to hold us captive in this life, and to resource us for the journey. However, the power that God exercises – an power in essence is the ability to act – is one that seeks at all times to make space for and to build wholeness in community, and where those spaces are constricted in any form, especially with the purpose of exercising power to control and even oppress others, God acts to liberate. Too often we trip over our ideas of what that liberation may look like, and miss the salvation God is offering. 

In 1994 we experienced and celebrated the political liberation of South Africa, and while we knew there was work ahead we too easily accepted the miracle of 1994 as essentially sufficient. In recent years many, and most notably those born after the birth of Democracy in South Africa, highlight for us that political liberation was never meaningfully translated into the economic and social spheres of the South African experience. The  #FeesMustFall movement speaks to the ongoing economic oppression of the poor in our country, and the #BlackLivesMatter movement speaks to the social inequalities that continue to ravage our Nation. While we are realising these issues are not endemic to Southern Africa, nonetheless we need to acknowledge the need for ongoing social and economic renewal and transformation, and awaken afresh to this being a legitimate focus for people of Faith. Whatever your interpretation of recent social unrest in KZN and Gauteng may be, we cannot deny the underlying frustration of South Africans with the present status quo. Just as Jesus’ feeding of the five thousand in John’s Gospel is a sign, so these events are one of the signs in our time; and while we like Jesus need to flee any attempt to become politically and economically aligned – and clearly we don’t control the political, economic, and social arenas – we are not without influence and agency. 

My question this morning is how do we as people of Faith apply the lessons of today’s Gospel message in our broader context? As described in all four Gospels, responding to and meeting the immediate needs of the people is unquestionably legitimate, but not sufficient. John reminds us of the importance of ensuring our action doesn’t just touch on the problem, but meets the need in such a manner that people are content. Jesus exercised his agency in this, and the structures of his day sought to limit his influence, and failed. Our lives are embraced by the same Spirit that filled Jesus, and we need to trust that while the signs of our times often appear to ask more of us than is possible, God knows what he is going to do. In response to Jesus question, while Philip saw all the difficulties, Andrew looked around to see what resources they had. Their resources were woefully lacking, but in Gods hands they proved not only fruitful, but satisfyingly so. 

We all have agency; let us offer that to God. We all have resources of some form; let us offer these to God. We often feel overwhelmed – at least I do – by our situation, be it personal or societal, and the disciples clearly felt overwhelmed by the needs of the crowds before them. Let us take heart that God acted then, and will act now. Let us trust that God supplies us with sufficient resilience to act in the present, and that no matter how limited we perceive our agency or resources to be, in God’s hands they are abundant! 

Let us pray, 

I pray that, according to the riches of his glory, [God] may grant that you may be strengthened in your inner being with power through [the] Spirit, and … that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.[2]

Amen.

Sermon: 6th Sunday after Pentecost

 Sermon: 6th Sunday after Pentecost

4 July 2021 – Archdeacon Mark Long

2 Corinthians 12:2-10; Psalm 48; and Mark 6:1-13; NRSV

In this season that follows on from Pentecost we are exploring what it looks like to live the Christian faith, and one of the best ways to explore is to ask questions. Any question is useful if it helps us broaden or even change our perspective, if it helps us be more open to participating in what God is up to in our world, and if it increases our willingness to be progressively welcoming and inclusive. 

In today’s Gospel narrative we find Jesus in his home town teaching in the Synagogue, and the people asking questions that steadily limit their openness to what God is up to among them in the person of Jesus, to the point where Mark reports that Jesus is amazed at their unbelief. Interestingly this lack of openness, this lack of trust, does not stop Jesus healing a few local people, but does limit the village from experiencing any act of power; they remain blinkered to the opportunity in their midst. 

Jesus clearly doesn’t hang around to persuade them differently, and Mark immediately reports that Jesus moves on to other villages in the area. This opens up an important perspective: sharing the Good News is not to be done at all costs, and specifically not if there is disinterest. This is evident in Jesus subsequent instruction to the disciples as he sends them out: they are not to waste time with those who are unwelcoming and more specifically also unwilling to hear; they are instead to shake the dust off their feet and move on. The disciples go out to call people to repentance. 

What are some of the questions we are asking at the moment; and are these questions ones that open us up to what God is doing in our time, or are they questions that keep us asleep to God’s presence and purpose for us? And of course, how do we know the difference? In Jesus’ home village the questions they asked kept them asleep to what God was doing despite their initial amazement at Jesus’ wisdom. They were quickly scandalised and chose to not allow this wisdom to change their outlook. They were discomforted by Jesus’ prophetic presence and chose to not be changed by it. Perhaps our discernment needs to reflect on how we respond to discomfort, and on how we may adapt our questions to ease any discomfort we experience? 

What does it mean to repent? In terms of today’s Gospel reading it is to wake up to God’s presence; it is to really hear what God is saying and calling us to; it is being open to having our perspectives changed by what we both hear and see. However, it’s not about change for the sake of change; rather it is a setting aside of attitudes and perspectives and resulting actions that keep us at a distance from God and from other people, that maintain our independence and invulnerability. Repenting is to be open again to the power of God and the power of God’s word, both Biblical and prophetic; to being guests of other people’s hospitality where we lay aside our own desire to control our social context and be willing to hear the pain of other people’s lives even in the midst of our own struggles; to welcome people whose practices or belief systems may appear different to ours, and engage in meaningful dialogue; and in doing so to share prophetic hope.[1] 

As Jesus sends his disciples out he also gives them authority over unclean spirits, and we hear that not only do they call people to repentance, but they drive out demons and anoint and cure many who are sick. One way in which we deal with our discomfort is to demonise that which discomforts us. If we are to share a prophetic hope, we need to be cognisant of this strong human tendency, and open to God’s activity in setting us free from it.  A chapter earlier in Mark’s Gospel we hear how Jesus cleansed the demoniac of Gerasa, chasing a legion of unclean spirits into a herd of pigs. Not only was this man set free of the evil that had controlled him, but for Jesus’ disciples who likely held the common orthodox Jewish hostility for the Hellenistic culture of the Decapolis there was a symbolic cultural cleansing that altered their perspective and allowed for people of that region to be a welcome part of the crowds that subsequently followed Jesus. 

And so what does it look like to live the Christian faith in this post-Pentecost season of the Church year? I believe it is to allow the Spirit of God to work deeply within us, giving us the courage to confront our own demons; it is to repent and recognise afresh the presence of God in our lives and world; it is to be healed of that which afflicts us; it is to see the world differently, to see the world and others from God’s perspective; it is to acknowledge the image of God in every person, and see the potential for good in every cultural context; it is to be indiscriminate in the manner in which we share the bounteous love of God at every opportunity. It is to be humble, dependant, and vulnerable before God, the Source of all Being, and before one another; always. It is finding the courage to say, “With God’s help, we will!” 

Let us pray,

                … Jesus, …
               you turned,
               and spoke words of
               togetherness
               in the places of the torn.
               May we always find
     words to hold,
     especially in times
     when the world
     harms.
     Because sometimes
     words can
     heal.
     Amen.[2]


[2] Pádraig Ó Tuama, Daily Prayer with the Corrymeela Community, page 53

Sermon: Trinity Sunday

 Sermon: Trinity Sunday

30 May 2021 – Archdeacon Mark Long

Isaiah 6:1-8; Psalm 29; and John 3:1-17; NRSV

I last preached two weeks ago in that liminal space between the Ascension and Pentecost and made the comment that faith is primarily about relationship. Today’s focus on the Trinity continues this theme, asking us to reflect on God’s Kingdom, present in our midst, as primarily about relationship and interconnectedness. The symbol for the Trinity, the Trinity Knot or Triquetra, with its triangular shape of a continuously interlinked line woven into a cirlce is a far better description of what we believe when we speak of God as Trinity than words can ever paint. It did, after all, take the Church close on three centuries to refine the Christian understanding of who God is, and the various Creeds we use – particularly the Apostles, Nicean and Athenasian – reflect this ongoing discussion from the 4th to 6th centuries after Constantine in the Edict of Milan in 313 CE decreed tolerance for Christianity in the Roman Empire. The Athenasian Creed quite tediously but importantly reminds us that while the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are all God, at the same time they are not each other. It is their relationship in the fullness of the Godhead that keeps them interconnected and united in their diversity. Trying to describe and/or understand this relationship through either the written or spoken word can be mind-numbing, whereas the image of the Trinity Knot woven into a circle gives space for our awareness to contemplate the relational and interconnected reality of the God we serve.

What I have said so far may already be leaving you somewhat confused, and our understanding of the Trinity is one of the more complex Christian teachings. It may be helpful to recognise in the Gospel account of Jesus’ interaction with Nicodemus that we are not alone in our confusion. We can be quite critical of Nicodemus, but he was a respected Jewish scholar and leader of his time, and even he struggled to understand the nature of God and God’s purposes for us in this life. We need to acknowledge Nicodemus’ courage in approaching Jesus, even if it was in the darkness of night, and entering into conversation with him. Nicodemus sought to understand Jesus’ insight into the very nature of life, and we see something of Jesus’ understanding of the roles that he, the Father, and the Spirit play in ensuring we are physically and spiritually alive.

It is important that we grapple with the teachings of our faith, but it is even more important that we experience our faith, particularly what it offers in terms of our daily experience of life and relationship. Rowan Williams helpfully reminds us in his book God with Us that through the Easter journey we are invited into the very heart of the Godhead, into the very heart of the relationship shared by the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This is an amazing thought, because we acknowledge God as Creator, as the Source of all Being; we acknowledge through our celebration of the Ascension that Jesus is the Eternal Son, restorer of relationship; and the Holy Spirit is the sustainer of all life, and so much more. We are invited to participate in the interconnectedness of all that God is, to ourselves be co-creators and sustainers of life, committed to the important ministry of restorative justice and hope.

Which part of the Godhead are you drawn to? Perhaps reflecting on your favourite hymns will give you an inkling? If I offered you the choice of “Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise,” or “What A Friend We Have in Jesus,” or “Spirit of the Living God”, which one would you choose and why? And what does your choice say to you about your relationship to the Trinity; about what you are attracted to in God? And then of course, how do you live this attraction out in your relationships with other people, and with Creation itself? To some degree our personalities and life experience will define the direction of our attraction. However, we also need to remember that relationship and life itself is a journey, the call of our faith is into an ever increasing wholeness. It’s important to remember that we are called into relationship with the fullness of God, not just a part of God. Which parts of God do you need to know better? In recent years I have found myself really attracted to God as the Source of all Being, the creative fullness of God; as a teenager it was all about Jesus; and then as a young adult it was the Spirit that particularly drew me. Our recent Lent and Eastertide journey has awoken within me a desire to revisit my relationship with Jesus and the Holy Spirit, and to do so in such a way that my relationship with Jesus and the Spirit is congruent with my understanding of God as the Source of all Being. I’m recognising that there has been too much disconnection in my relationship with the various persons of the Trinity, and I need to embrace a more whole relationship that builds a new consonance in my awareness of the role God plays in and through my life.

 

How is God prompting you today? Perhaps in recognising which aspect of God you are presently attracted to there is a need to explore this aspect further? Or perhaps like me, you may feel a prompting to a greater congruence in your relationship with all aspects of God? Or even the need just to explore another aspect of God? There is no one answer and no one response; and God will be prompting you in a way unique to who you are, and where your relationship with God presently resides. There are also no easy or quick answers: it is always a journey. It is also a collective journey, even while our individual journeys continue, and while we explore our own personal relationships with God, with God’s kingdom, and with Creation itself, we also need to be asking these questions of ourselves as a community of Faith. What are we hearing God, Source of all Being, Eternal Son, and Holy Spirit, saying to us all today?

Let us pray,

               As we seek to be human together,
               may we share the things that do not fade:
               generosity, truth-telling, silence, respect, and love.
 
               And may the power we share
               be for the good of all.
 
               We honour God, the source of this rich life.
               And we honour each other, story-full and lovely.
 
               Whether in our shadow or in our shelter,
               may we love well
               and fully
               with each other

               Amen.[1]



[1] Pádraig Ó Tuama, Evening Prayer with the Corrymeela Community

Sermon: The Baptism of Christ

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