Abundance in disappointment

Trinity 3 

Isaiah 55.10-13 :  the word of the Lord is sent forth to bear fruit
Romans 8. 1 – 11 :  Christ sets us free to live according to abundant grace
Matthew 13.1-9, 18 -23:  The Parable of the Sower

I am writing this on 4th July, so I have come across some comments on the USA, particularly the following comment in the Telegraph :
“What is needed above all is optimism: it is a prerequisite for the risk-taking needed to invest and start new businesses. Its absence could turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy as belief in American decline helps ensure that the halcyon years are indeed in the past.”  (Toby Harnden)

How do I find this connects with the Gospel ? It connects because the Gospel is about the abundant yield of the harvest despite the disappointments along the way; much of the seed is lost or comes to nothing, but there is still enough to yield a great result. And yet, if the sower just thought about all the seed which would not germinate, he might get discouraged and not get on with the job of sowing. So it is that Jesus says to us, “don’t worry about failure, go out with the good news and be confident of success, despite setbacks.”  Often it is the fear of failure that holds us back from mission, and hinders growth.

Within our six parishes, there are many forms of outreach to the wider community. And Hugh has pointed out for us a link which gives many encouraging examples of how churches do not just preach the good news, but live it out, bringing new hope and new life to the communities that they serve : http://www.justmap.org.uk/

And yet optimism is not everything.  Jesus also speaks of himself as the seed which has to die in order to bring about new life (John 12.24 ); so also radical transformation of the church can sometimes feel like a “dying” of the patterns of the past. We need a strong faith and abundant prayer in order to know what to let go of, and what to carry with us into the future. The future will certainly have its challenges for our group of churches : there is a time ahead of us when the numbers of ordained ministers will be much less than we have at the moment.   Yet if we make use of all our resources, and respond to the calling which God is bringing to us, then we can be sure that the Lord will provide, and with an abundance that is beyond our imagining.

A parable means “something which is thrown alongside.”   It is a story or an example thrown alongside life, in order to open our eyes to see things in a new way, or to disclose to us the way in which God is at work. The parables of the Good Samaritan, and of the Prodigal Son, are wonderful examples. Coming back to the Sower, I would like to conclude by sharing with you a couple of poems I have written, which have been prompted by this parable.

Peal of Six
Together we grow,
Six thrown together,
not entirely by chance:
partly by accident of proximity;
and then by churchly strategy
t
o make the funds go round…

Even chance, you know,
can be a thing of beauty,
if we so will,
and grace is with us.
Humankind is full of chance,
to this family, to that
a child is given
and will grow,
please God,
we know not how,
and what we do
is not the end of it.

If we can listen and reach out -
one to another -
we may yet become
what in my mind’s eye
I would hope for us to be:
a peal of bells, each with its own
distinct and gifted quality
but so much more when
adding to the chime
that sets the fields and
hillside ringing
with bridal music
bursting and fading on the ear
with tones of joy.
Words….
Our mouth is a crazy scatter-gun of words,
some useful, some hateful, some profound
some better swallowed whole
than widely distributed.

If each word were a seed,
what kind of crops would we sow ?
I suspect a right tanglewood it would be !

I wonder…. if the Word was made flesh
to deliver us from all our words;
To call us to the centre of ourselves,
to know a stillness in our lives.

If we surrender our words to the Word -
“Lord take my lips that I may speak”-
we will then become a different kind of vessel
anointed, hallowed, like the Name we hallow daily.

A journey

Christ the Teacher of our souls – from text to faith :
A  journey around Matthew 11, vv 25 – 30 : “my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

I want to take you on a journey.  We start out from Southampton ( for some reason ), where we find ourselves taking the ferry across to Cherbourg, and then travelling swiftly by train across the plains of Normandy to Paris. Once we arrive at the Gare Saint Lazare, we take a taxi across to Gare du Lyon, and enquire about the night train to Marseilles. Yes, our place is booked. We settle down about 10pm in our reasonably comfortable bunk in our compartment, a compartment which is shared with an elderly French gentleman who is very polite, retires early, and wishes us goodnight. The train sets off on its long night journey down to Marseilles; we found it quite rainy and chilly in Cherbourg, but as we travel south, waking from time to time we sense a change of air, and wafts of warmth with the scent of trees and flowers gust through the windows. In the middle of the night, we suddenly awake, and to our consternation a kind of round halo of light is floating in the middle of the carriage. It oscillates in the darkness. It feels quite spooky ! Suddenly, the movement of the train enables us to see the moon more clearly, and its full light is beaming down into our carriage, – and the moonlight has come to rest on the bald head of the French gentleman who for some reason is meditating, sitting crosslegged on the floor in the middle of the compartment. We breathe a considerable sigh of relief, and try to get back to sleep !
The rhythm of the train rattling along the tracks helps us to drop off.  Suddenly, after what seems like only some minutes, it is broad daylight, the air is full of heat, rather than warmth, and the sound of birds and of the cries of porters and the distant hoots of ships in the port. We have arrived in all the bustle and excitement of Marseilles. We check of our ferry, which sets off to Algeria early next morning.
So we have time to explore Marseilles, discovering that it is quite a place to wear out shoes with its hilly slopes and valleys; finally we make our way to the great church of Notre Dame de la Garde,  the Church of the Blessed Virgin overlooking the port and the sea. The church is topped by a gilded bronze statue of the Virgin and Child.  It is really two churches, one set up on top of another. In the lower “basement” church, doors open to the East and a statue of the Virgin extends her arms in blessing over the mariners both near and far. I’m not a great lover of such statues, but I become aware of the hope and encouragement the distant sight of the great church, illuminated by night, must have brought to thousands of sailors and fishermen, some in small craft rocked perhaps by an unexpected Mediterranean storm. We retrace our steps and find a small pension for the night, and go out for an evening meal. In the small bistro, a middle aged Frenchman makes urgent conversation with us – “you are traveller, yes ? To where ? Algeria ? Ah, some pains of history there !” He goes on to spell out his vision for world peace and proudly speaks of his membership of the communist party. His ideals are splendid, but I can’t help feeling they are based on something which has been itself overtaken by history.

After a rather short night’s sleep, we make our way down to the port to catch our ferry which sails at 6.00am. Finding the ferry takes a bit of doing because of the sheer size of the port. Just as well we do not have too much luggage ! A large party of nuns is waiting at the quayside, and then slowly gather themselves and file on board ahead of us. Soon we are on our way, and Marseilles becomes a distant panorama. Our ship, L’Esperance, makes good headway with the 17 hour crossing. The captain has introduced me to the Mother Superior of the sisters, Soeur Benedicta, and at noon we are invited to join them for their mid-day office which is held in a lounge area below deck… however with the crowded stuffiness of the confined area and the motion of the boat, there are certain consequences which could have been predicted ! However we all survive, and Christian charity has been multiplied.

Rather tired from the long journey, we arrive in the port of Annaba at 11pm. (Annaba, as well as being a port, is the fourth largest town in Algeria. ) There are some slightly disconcerting noises going off from time to time, which rock the ship slightly – don’t worry, an officer says, it is just the navy practising its depth charges ! There is a real clamour getting off the boat; fortunately the captain takes control and makes sure the Sisters get off with some dignity first, then all hell breaks loose, with shouting in Arabic and French and manhandling of boxes and crates in between which passengers seem to be risking their lives to get ashore. The customs procedures are fairly perfunctory, and quickly we are ushered through to the line of taxis, which are held in some kind of order by a police officer in attendance. We are through customs in time to catch the last of the taxis, but the driver insists on also taking on board a very fat gentleman wearing a fez, who seats himself in the front, and spends the entire journey fingering a very expensive looking set of worry beads. Of course, he will be dropped first at the destination of his choice. He finds out we are from Britain, so he spends the journey criticising the French. He is a man who likes talking, and I am sure if we were French he would spend his time criticising the British or Americans. Finally, we drop him off, and the taxi reverses at speed out of the courtyard of the plush looking apartment block,  and then we are off up to the distant hillside, where we are due to be welcomed at  Lil Abouna – the Arabic for “the place of our Father.” As we approach, we can hardly miss the splendid basilica built in 1881 by a French architect. From the darkness we can also hear the call of a distant muezzin from a mosque. And we have arrived at the gates of Lil Abouna, which is the ruined remains of the fifth century monastery home of the “Abouna”  – one Afghoustinos, better known to us as Augustine, just as this town of Annaba is better known to us as “Hippo”, its ancient name under the Roman Empire. We now discover our room at the neighbouring Pilgrim hotel. It will not be difficult to sleep at the end of this long day’s journey.
We wake early, summoned by the intense bright daylight forcing its way through the shutters. After breakfast, from the balcony of our hotel, we notice  halfway down the hill a Christian school, which is no doubt where the Sisters were heading.

Following a visit to the ruins of the monastery, with their fragments of mosaic pavements, and outline of an abbey church, we find our way to the excellent library belonging to the basilica. Guided by the Father Librarian, we survey the many shelves of St. Augustine’s works, mostly editions in the original Latin. I settle down with an index volume at a long table; I just wonder; I just wonder what Augustine had to say about Matthew 11. verses 25 – 30 ? Yes, there is something…. a meditation …. ; strange to think of Augustine sitting at his desk here in this monastery, and writing this down in about 400 AD :

Take my yoke upon you and learn from me …

“Christ
 came that
The Bread might hunger
 that The Fountain might thirst
that The Way might be tired on his journey,
that The Truth might be accused of false witness,
that The Healer might be
wounded.”

I think to myself, I have come on a long journey to find a riddle at the end of it ! But a little voice deep inside me says “ take these words of paradox, and go for a walk in the courtyard; hear the running of the fountain as it irrigates the gardens, and let your mind relax and be reached by living waters.”
And so I do. And gradually it begins to make some kind of sense. “That the Bread might hunger;” Jesus is the Bread of Life, and yet he hungers in the wilderness,   “that the Fountain might thirst” : Jesus said “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink” ( John 7.17f. ) and yet on the Cross he said, “ I thirst.”
“that the Way might be tired on his journey” : Jesus said “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life”; and yet “foxes have holes, and birds have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head  ( Matthew 8.20 ) and on the road to Calvary he fell down from exhaustion;
“that the Truth might be accused of false witness”, so they accused Jesus when he stood before Pilate – and ‘jesting Pilate said “what is truth ?” and did not stay for an answer.’
“that the Healer might be wounded” : yes, for Jesus who healed so many is our healer, and  we know his healing, “for by his stripes we are healed.” as Isaiah prophesied ( Is. 53.5 )

So in these few words Augustine teaches us what it means for God to come among us, to become vulnerable. Our salvation requires God’s complete humiliation at the hands of humankind, offered freely and with love. And we are left in wonder and awe. We stay there for a time, and then reach out to make our response :

Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me…

Lord,
make us hunger;
teach us how to thirst for you;
let us know how the easy Way, got tired,
and was accused,
and let us be one with you

Yes, Augustine, your wisdom is for real, your prayer extends its life to us, across these centuries and endures while the empire which you knew has vanished, the city which you knew here has fallen and risen time and again, and the faith which you proclaimed in this place is now here as a guest, and not as a ruler.  You grieved over the changes of your time; you pray for us down the centuries,  that our faith may not be shaken with the shaking of the world’s foundations. And you pray for the remaking of this world after the likeness that is given from above :

“let the whole world feel and see
that things which were cast down are being raised up,
and things which had grown old are being made new,
and all things are returning to perfection
through him from whom they took their origin;
even Jesus Christ our Lord.”

Notes :
The journey I describe is one which I made in 1973 when I went out to Beirut as a missionary with CMS. The difference : our boat from Marseilles docked at Alexandria and then went up the coast to Beirut. So I have put together some imagination and a little research in order to end up in Hippo ! This “journey” was inspired by the quote from Augustine given on the Center for Sunday Liturgy website, and the prayer of response is also from the same source :
http://liturgy.slu.edu/14OrdA070311/prayerpathmain.html
The final prayer is from the Gelasian Sacramentary ( c. 8th century. )

I decided to write this story of a journey, as I wanted to discover Augustine not as a remote figure in a stained glass window, but belonging to the same tormented world as ourselves.  He learnt how to have confidence in Christ at time when all was changing around him, and as it seemed at that time, in a disastrous way, with the fall of the Roman Empire and with the Vandals laying siege to the city of Hippo as he lay dying.  You can read more about him on :
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo

Illustrations
Notre Dame de la Garde : wonderful photograph : http://www.flickr.com/photos/meteorry/2651850751/
The modern town of Annaba, photographs:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annaba
 http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/26092/Annaba……

Trinity 1

Pre-prayer

Jeremiah 28. 5 – 9: how to tell a true prophet from a false one
Romans 6.12 – end: law and grace, the harvest rewards of sin and of faithfulness
Matthew 10. 40 – end: welcoming Christ among us


Where do our readings lead us ?

Sometimes it is quite difficult to find “the thread” between the scripture readings, and this Sunday is a case in point. So we have to use some creative imagination ! The best I can do is to suggest that a true or false attitude towards life marks people out : those who welcome false prophets put their trust in vanity or emptiness. Those who follow false gods in their lives have a reward which vanishes like the end of a rainbow. Those who miss “Christ among us” miss their great opportunity.  On the other hand, those who welcome the right teachers and teaching and respond to the grace of Christ in their lives know a joy which conquers pain and loss, and which is a bridge between this life and the life to come.

The Gospel of hospitality

On Trinity Sunday we reflected on the hospitality of Abraham to the three strange visitors, and on God’s hospitality and welcome to us in Christ, and God’s calling to us to show hospitality to others. Here in St. Matthew’s Gospel we find Jesus teaching about giving a welcome in his name. If we welcome others for the sake of Christ, then the Kingdom is close at hand. I can’t help thinking of our Well  initiative in the Six. By doing this not in our own name but as service on behalf of the Lord, we are preparing for a harvest which we cannot foresee, because it is in God’s hands. Hospitality is both a very simple action and a costly one. And you cannot pin down the results.

I would like to quote from a minister with a special brief for church growth and development who writes from Cleveland, Ohio -  Kathryn Matthews Huey :

“Many sermons on this short text (at the end of Jesus’ speech) will focus on hospitality (a ‘holy welcome’) and that’s a good thing, of course. In the United Church of Christ, we claim extravagant hospitality at the heart of our vision for the church, and we try to live that out the best we can. Jesus, interestingly, doesn’t speak of extravagance here but of one little cold cup of water. Even that much, he says, will be rewarded. If he was arguing from the lesser to the greater (as he so often did), we can imagine how pleased God is by an extravagant welcome offered in God’s name. But offering that welcome and the gift of compassion is as good for our spiritual health as it is for the well-being of the one welcomed. It’s one way we experience the reign of God drawing near.  Welcome must be extravagant in sincerity and persistence. Jesus himself lived in a “place of welcome,” and one story after another from the New Testament confirms this.  How did the church move so far away from living in “a place of welcome” to be perceived by many as sitting in a place of judgment instead?’

‘As we think about this passage, we are challenged to bring together hospitality (the “chief necessary act” in a nomadic society) and the risk of discipleship. The ancient stories in the Bible about welcoming strangers strike a deep chord within us of “delight that arrives when human beings treat each other as human beings, with honor and respect, and perhaps a little food….” This old sign of Torah  faithfulness is taken as a sign, house by house, of who expects God to keep the old promises.’ In any age, comfortable or not, it takes courage and tenacity to hold onto the promises and trust in the One who has made them: ‘Those who have given up on God’s promises and have cast their lot with [the opposition ] will reveal themselves by refusing welcome. They would not welcome a prophet… ‘ But, when someone opens their heart to the promises of God and their door to one who bears them (the “sent” ones, the “little ones” who are small and humble but speaking with the authority of the One who sends them), it does not escape God’s notice. God pays attention, after all, to small things and humble acts.’ ”

(Kathryn quotes from Professor Richard Swanson who writes about storytelling and the Gospel. )

God’s hospitality in Holy Communion – ‘ Corpus Christi.’

The Thursday after Trinity Sunday is kept in many churches as a special day for thanksgiving for Holy Communion, and is traditionally known as the feast of Corpus Christi. Some churches will be celebrating this feast the coming Sunday. As we think of our Roman Catholic friends who are celebrating Corpus Christi, we are reminded of the ‘extravagant hospitality’ of God’s invitation to us in Christ to draw near to the Lord’s Table, and to find there the source of our renewal, and the well which replenishes us with the joy of eternal life.

Prayer

Lord of welcome, let us not neglect your invitation.

Lord of hospitality, let us extend your welcome to others.

Lord of the open door, keep us faithful to your spirit of generosity 

And at the last welcome us to your heavenly dwellings.   Amen

Pentecost

Pentecost 1

Acts 2.1-21 : the pouring out of the Holy Spirit
Corinthians 12.3-13 : varieties of gifts of the Spirit in the life of the Church
John 20.19 -23 : the risen Jesus comes to ten of the apostles in the upper room and “breathes on them” the gift of the Holy Spirit.

There are many things that could be written about these passages of Scripture, and many approaches to understanding the Holy Spirit. But I want to choose just one way of reflecting on the work of the Holy Spirit : the one who sets us free.

We find this idea throughout the New Testament. I think particularly of that time when Jesus went to the synagogue in Nazareth, read from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah, and announced:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free.” (Luke 4. 16 – 18) 

And then in St. John, “when the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth” (John 16.13 ); and “the truth shall set you free”  (John 8.32 )

There is no gift greater than the gift of freedom, and without it, life can not be fully human. Yet there are many ways in which we can stumble in our search for freedom.

Many stumble as they seek freedom through the use of drugs, or in a life style which knows no constraints. Quickly they can become the prisoners of their own choices, which finally leave them without a choice. But the gift of the Holy Spirit calls us to be truly free, in a way that enables us to love others without making them our captives, but rather seeking out the divine potential in each person whom we encounter or get to know. As we have been set free ourselves, so we have been entrusted with the mission to bring others to true freedom in Christ, so that they too may set people free, creating “a virtuous circle.” Sometimes we may feel like giving up; human beings by nature are contrary and difficult; but then there are the surprises of life, when just at the point of giving up we discover a dimension to another person’s life that we hardly believed could be present. Sometimes it is the misfortunes of life which enables a person’s soul to shine. They may lose their self-consciousness in caring for others, and so discover themselves at a deeper level.

We read a lot at the moment – or hear it in the media – about how science leads us into all truth, often from those scientists who promote a form of atheism. It is sad that an unnecessary conflict is set up between religion and science. But people who think like this are often the deniers of human freedom, who believe that freedom is just an appearance and a delusion.

Our Christian faith teaches us that we are called to exercise our human freedom and responsibility in our families, communities, and the world beyond. In order to be free, we must believe that we have the capacity for freedom, and for growth in the spirit and in love. If we doubt, well let us look at the beautiful lives of those people of faith who can still inspire us. Many of them are not famous; they do not seek fame, but without them, our lives would be very much poorer. Our lives are shaped by our beliefs in many ways, sometimes at a more profound level than we are aware.

If someone really does not believe that human beings are in any true sense free, already they are living in a kind of prison of the mind. What we meet in life is strangely shaped by our sense of expectation.

This all may sound very theoretical, so I conclude with an example from my own experience. When I was beginning my ministry as a curate in London, on my day off I used to begin the day in church with a eucharist of the Holy Spirit, calling upon the Spirit to enable me to use the day to the full. My day off turned into a wonderful chain of adventures, and sometimes when I went to bed at night I looked back with some amazement at the places I had been to and the people I had met, which I could have never imagined before breakfast ! Praying to the Spirit had set me free, free from myself, to use my imagination and be responsive to the Spirit’s guidance.

In the New Testament, the word for “spirit” and “ wind” are the same : pneuma.
In the Old Testament, the word for “spirit” and “breath” are the same. So these overlapping words ripple out to inform our understanding of the Holy Spirit.

I take delight in the song “Spirit of God, unseen as the wind” which you can find, sung to the Skye Boat song, on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7Qi2O_u1YY

The words are as follows :

“Spirit of God, unseen as the wind, gentle as is the dove,
teach us the truth and help us believe,
show us the Saviour’s love.

You spoke to us long, long ago,
gave us the written word;
we read it still, needing its truth,
through it God’s voice is heard.

Without your help we fail our Lord,
we cannot live his way;
we need your power, we need your strength,
following Christ each day.”
Margaret Old ( 1932 -2001)

And finally, some words from an Orthodox prayer :
Blessed are You, O Christ our God, who made fishermen all-wise, sending upon them the Holy Spirit and, through them, drawing the world unto yourself. O Loving One, glory to You.

That sums up our Christian beginnings !