Saturday, 15 August 2015
Monday, 10 August 2015
Be imitators of God
Be imitators of God , the
author of the letter to the Ephesians exhorts the early church.
It is a bold statement
It is a statement that would
have caused some confusion and even contention, these words are startling and
upsetting and seem to be an impossible ideal – how can we seriously be expected
to be imitators of God?
So what does this challenge
we find in scripture mean for you and me?
How is it possible for a
sinner like me to be imitate God?
Sometimes it is easier to
understand something when we look at what it is not?
The writer is not saying we
should try and put ourselves in the place of God. This is something that all of
us who believe in God struggle with, the temptation or the desire to be God
like.
What do I mean by God like ?–
never being wrong, knowing everything, being in control of one’s destiny. We
are not called to try and imitate God’s sovereignty. He alone is eternal,
omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient, etc. These are attributes that God cannot
or will not share with us, but they are the very things that often come between
ourselves and God and lead us away from a life of obedience to God.
So the author is not saying
strive to us be like God in that way.
So we return to the question
what does it mean to be imitators of God?
For Christians the answer
lies in the person of Jesus. We believe that Jesus is God, not just a prophet
or a holy man, but God. We state this every time we recite the creed at the
Eucharist
God from God
light from light
true God from true God
of one being with the Father
so to be imitators of God we
have to look at the person of Jesus in whom we see the fullness of God, not a
partial reflection of God but the fullness of God.
It is because of the
revelation of God in Jesus Christ that we are able to draw near to God, to know
God – through him.
To be imitators of God
therefore we need to imitate Jesus, not just admire him or follow him but be
him in this world. This is something that we can do without running the risk
associated with trying to take on the sovereignty of God.
As imitators of Jesus Christ
we too reach out and welcome the stranger the sick and disposed, we too walk
along side the poor and the destitute.
This may sound easy but look
at how hard just in the last few weeks it has been to do that when we hear the
language used to speak about refugees in Calais or fleeing north Africa to find
refuge in Europe? And how different our society seems to be from 75 years ago
when we did open our doors to those who were fleeing the evils of Nazism, how
in this part of London we welcomed the children of Israel who left their
parents to be exterminated in the death camps and began new lives here in this
part of London.
How different is our language
from 40 years ago when we welcomed hundred and thousands of East African Indians
many of whom came to these parishes to begin a new life free from the tyranny
and evil of Edi Armin.
Be imitators of God
challenges the author of the letter to the Ephesians. If we are to take up this
challenge then we will not be able to close our lives, our doors, our boarders
to those around us and their needs.
We imitate Jesus in the way
in which he loves the way in which he was obedient to God the father even to
the point of giving up his own life that we might have life and life in
abundance. We see in Jesus the only begotten Son of God and are called to
imitate this Son of God and in so doing become one with him as the Son of God
We imitate God by being his
children, as surely as Jesus was the Son of God, so you and I are the children
of God and through Jesus are offered a new relationship that is defined and
transformed by Love.
As children of God we are to
live within this relationship of love that begins and ends with the Cross,
Where Jesus gave his life to the Father and received it back at the
resurrection. So too when we imitate Jesus we give our life to God and he
returns it to us for eternity through the promise of the resurrection.
1Therefore be imitators of God, as beloved children, 2and live in love, as Christ
loved us* and gave himself up for us,
a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
Ephesians 5.1-2
How does Jesus love us in whom we see the fullness of God, by the way he
loves us, forgives us, treat us with compassion and kindness. Thank God we have
not been treated as we deserve, in deed how we would be had not Jesus taken up
his cross and given himself us for us a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
Sunday, 2 August 2015
Jesus the bread of life
Over
the next month the gospel readings in Church come from the 6th
Chapter of St John’s gospel. It an important chapter in the account of Jesus
live and teaching according to St John.
The
chapter begins with the miracle of the feeding of the 5000, which we looked at
together last week, it begins with a miracle of God’s ability to provide for
those who place their faith in him, as powerful as when 4,000 years earlier
those who placed in their faith in God and his servant Moses were led from
Slavery in Egypt, through the red sea and the desert beyond towards to the
promise land. The chapter however ends with these words in Verse 66 “Because of
this many of his disciples turned back and no longer went about with him”
And
what was “this” thing that caused many of the disciples to loose faith in the
person of Jesus – the teaching of Jesus in the synagogue at Capernaum. Teaching
about the Eucharist, the bread from heaven, his own flesh and blood.
No
wonder that there has in the history and life of the church and in the
experiences of the church been so much dissent and argument over our
understanding of the Eucharist, the Mass, the Holy communion, so much argument
over what Jesus and his church mean when they declare “This is the body of
Christ”
The
parable of the feeding of the 5000, that opens this chapter, makes a bold claim
that Jesus is here for both the crowd and the disciples He shows this by
seeing to it that the crowd is satisfied and twelve basketfuls are left
over—one for each apostle. So the miracle has a message for the world, and a
personal lesson for the apostles.
To the multitude, he was saying: I am the bread of heaven. Just like God
sent your ancestors manna in the wilderness to sustain their life, he has sent
me into the world to give life—eternal life. What Jesus gives is something more
than has ever been given before for the life of this world and everyone of us
created in God’s image in this world. And personally, he was saying to the
apostles: Serve me faithfully, and you will never lack what you need, indeed
you will find that you have more than when you first started. I will be for you
everything you need, even in the hour of suffering and death.
However it is clear that both the crowd and the disciples run the risk
of missing the true significance of this miracle. John’s gospel is sometimes
referred to the book of signs. The first miracle that Jesus performs is the
transformation of water into wine at a wedding in Cana of Galilee, it is
recorded as such. Here in miracle of the feeding of the 5000 is another sign. A
sign pointing beyond the miracle itself to an eternal truth.
The danger is that we get caught up in the sign and forget to look where
it is pointing. If set out on a walk in a place I have never been before and
get lost without a map, the sight of a signpost indicating the direction of
travel will be most welcome. Anxiety about the right direction of travel will
be replaced with the glowing relief that the direction is now clear, the danger
of becoming lost is replaced with certainty that my destination can now be
reached.
However the sign in of itself will not ensure that our journey will end
well – we cannot simply sit down by the sign and be thankful, we still must
continue on the path. But having seen the sign, that path will not be as hard
as it was without the sign and with only our doubts and fear to guide us.
Then the disciples in verse 34 say “give us this bread always” what
exactly do you think they were asking for?
Was it for the physical bread that could sate their hunger and sustain
their lives without them having to labour for the money with which to purchase
a life time supply of the bread? Was it that with this bread, always there for
them, they could sit down and never again worry about where their next mouthful
would come from?
If the answer is yes to these questions then they have missed the point,
they have focused on the bread, and ignored the sign and to whom the sign is
pointing. What has satisfied them is the product of this miracle, rather than
the person, Jesus Christ. Jesus warns in verse 26 “You are looking for me, not
because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves.”
They have labored for that which will perish.
What does the sign point to – to Jesus who will provide us with what we
need if we bring what we have to him. It points to Jesus who is the food that
endures for eternal life.
When we see the feeding of the 5000 as a sign of eternal life how does
this affect the way in which we get up tomorrow on Monday morning and go about
our daily living?
The key to the answer is found in verses 28–29: “Then they said to him,
‘What must we do, to be doing the works of God?’” Now that question follows
from what Jesus just said. He said, “Labour, or work, for the food that endures
to eternal life.” And they ask, How? What are those works? How do you work for
the bread that gives eternal life?
The answer is simple – to believe in Jesus. Jesus answers in verse 29,
“This is the work of God”—this is the kind of work you do - to please God and
get the bread that gives life, this is the work that you do—namely, “that you
believe in him whom God has sent.”
So what does it mean to “labour for the food that endures to eternal
life”? Jesus says in verse 29 that it means believe in Jesus as the bread that
God has sent from heaven for the life of the world. “Believe in him whom he has
sent.”
And belief in Him whom God has sent will mean that we will not become
either distracted or obsessed with the bread (the product of the miracle) that
we have in our laps but in the one who makes it possible (the person)
'"Bread for myself," wrote a great
Russian thinker, "is a physical question; bread for my neighbour is a
spiritual question."
The basic needs of those around me, my neighbours
struggle for life and their lack of bread, is not just a political or economic
question but a spiritual one as well.
Archbishop Rowan has said “The hunger or need of
some is the problem of all, I am not being fed if my neighbour is struggling, nor
is my neighbour fed when I am hungry.”
The
injunction upon us by our Lord when he teaches his disciples to pray
“Give
us to day our daily bread” is one that means we cannot be content only with our
own needs but the needs of all God’s children. Praying for daily bread is a way
of countering the forces of our modern age that seeks to compartmentalise life
so that the over all picture becomes obscure until it is finally lost all
together and at this point the evil of which we pray to be delivered -swallows
us all.
The
hunger or need of some is the problem of all - which is exactly what St Paul
says about living in the Body of Christ in his first letter to Corinth:
"If one part of the Body suffers, all suffer."
Sunday, 26 July 2015
transforming life through generosity - Feeding of the multitude
In
the story of the feeding of the multitude we read of how in spite of the
rational, understandable doubt expressed by the disciples the impossible is
made possible. From small beginnings Jesus is able to manifest his glory, a
little faith goes a long way just as a few loaves and fishes feed the
multitude.
Despite
these small beginnings, the hungry are fed,
and
there are leftovers - indeed in the story involving Jesus there is an abundance
of leftovers - there is more than when the feast first began.
Jesus
did that is described in all four gospels.
For this reason, if no
other,
we need to pay close attention to it. We
need to ask ourselves - why
is
this so? What is it about this miracle -
unlike all the other miracles
performed
by Jesus - that so catches the attention of all the gospel writers.
I
think it has to do with at least three separate things.
The
first is the fact that this story tells us that Jesus is used by God -
he
has God's blessings, remember at his baptism the voice of God is heard
declaring to the world that here is God’s son the beloved in whom he is
pleased, and is able to feed the hungry - much as
the
people of Israel were fed by God in the wilderness with Manna.
In
fact John goes on after the telling of this story to speak of Jesus as the
bread
of heaven come down to earth - the one who is not only able to satisfy
the
physical hunger of his people - but their spiritual hunger as well.
Jesus
has, and is able to use, the power of God to feed the hungry.
The
second thing is that the story shows us not only God's power at work in
Jesus,
but also God's care for us. God reaches
out through Jesus to meet the needs of those who are following him.
Jesus
cares for those who seek him out. He
wants to meet their needs, and he
instructed
his disciples, and so he instructs you and I his church, to work together to
ensure that the needs of those around us, the multitude are met.
The
third thing is that the story shows us is that Jesus is able to take what
is
offered to him and to multiply it - so that where there first seemed not
enough
it ends up by being more than enough.
There
is a story of a man named Paul.
Paul had received a special pre-Christmas
gift from his brother. It
was a beautiful new car - fully loaded and
ready to go. On Christmas
Eve, when Paul came out of his office, a
street kid was walking around
the shiny new car, admiring it. "Is this your car, mister?", the
kid
asked.
When he replied that it was., and that his brother had given
it to him for Christmas, the boy said,
"You mean your brother gave it
to you, and it didn't cost you
anything? Free? For Nothing?
Gosh,
I wish..."
The boy hesitated, and Paul knew what he was
about to say. He had
heard it many times over the past few
days. He was going to wish he
had a brother like that. But what the boy said shocked Paul.
"I wish", the boy said, "I
wish I could be a brother like that."
We
can be a brother like that. Or a sister
like that.
All
it takes is that we offer ourselves and what we have to God.
All
it takes is that we cease to worry about how little we have
and
begin instead to think about what it is that we can offer.
Praise
be to God who multiplies that which is given to him,
day
by day. Amen.
Sunday, 12 July 2015
senseless violence is given meaning in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ
Another meaningless murder.
Another life destroyed. A massacre of holiday makers in Tunisia; Escalating
violence in Iraq and talk of ground troop’s in Syria, A fresh bunch of flowers
appears on the road side. A family, a community
broken by a sudden and unforeseen death.
This is the world of this
past few weeks, it is our world just as much as it is the world of Mark’s gospel. John the
Baptist’s beheading wasn’t necessarily a unique event during the Roman
occupation of Palestine—and, you could say, it’s hard to see how it wouldn’t fit in our world today, especially
when we witness the barbaric actions of terrorists in the Arab world.
For the sake of the stability
of Palestine, Herod and others in the Roman administration had to douse the
wild-fires of revolution spreading across the countryside by silencing protesting
voices—and sometimes, as in the case of Jesus’ cousin, John, the best way to
quiet the tongue, to silence a protest, was to cut off a head.
But we don’t remember this
story in Mark 6 as just another example of the violence Empire’s, and corrupt
regimes thinks is necessary to stay afloat in a sea of anarchic terror.
For some reason Mark thinks
this murder is an important piece in the story of Jesus. But the funny thing
about this episode in the drama is that Mark doesn’t really explain why we
should think it’s important;
Mark begins his gospel with
this enigmatic figure appearing in the wilderness baptising. After Jesus, it is
the person of John the Baptist to whom Mark dedicates the most verses of his
gospel – more than Mary or Peter or any other character within his compact
edition of the life of Jesus.
Mark doesn’t tell us why
John’s death is significant. He doesn’t explain why this bit of information
fits in the story of Jesus of Nazareth.
Right after the story of
John’s beheading, Mark returns to the disciples’ adventures as if the past 16
verses—the ones we just heard this morning—didn’t even happen. Except that he
just spent all that time telling us about it. What’s Mark up to?
Why is this detailed story
important?
We walk away from the text
very curious. And here’s the question I think Mark forces us to think about: Is
this death important to us?
If our answer is yes, then we
have to ask a follow up question: Why is this death significant to us?
Mark doesn’t do the work for
us. He leaves us on our own. How do we give this death significance? How do we
make it important for our understanding of the story of Jesus?
The death of John is of
course pointless, its senseless. King Herod cuts off John’s head for no
significant reason—and so in one sense this story is not an important part of
bigger story of Jesus.
And I wonder if this is not
also true when it comes to all the deaths that we hear of and talk about today?
There is so much death in our
modern time, and it seems so senseless—somebody killed over a grudge, like
Herodias’ grudge.
Countless victims of war, of
crime, of murder.
Another Father or husband
taken before his expected time
For most of the deaths, in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and now Tunisia even the streets of our own city
their names mean so little to us. We may well stop for a minute to pay tribute,
as we did last week on the 10th anniversary of the 52 people who
were killed by the July bombers, and then we have to, we choose to get back to
our lives and all that demand’s our attention from the moment we wake until the
moment we take our rest.
For the most part those
nameless people who we read of and are told about don’t play a role in the
story of our lives, at least we don’t live and act like they do. They don’t
really fit. They are senseless victims of violence. Victims of someone else’s
madness. And that’s what Mark gives us in the middle of his story about Jesus—a
senseless beheading, the product of a drunken oath, the consequence of that age
old sin Pride.
By placing this death in the
middle of the Gospel, Chapter 6, St Mark
is placing a story about a tragic and senseless death in the middle of a far greater and more
important story. The story of the death of Jesus of Nazareth.
And this maybe is the way in
which St Mark is suggesting we understand our life and the lives of those
around us. Because of the importance and significance of the death of Jesus our
view of death is transformed, so that there is no truly senseless or
meaningless death. When we consider John’s beheading, just as we should when we
hear and see the victims of the violence of this world we do so in the context
of the death of Jesus.
And here is the answer to
question I asked earlier Why is this death significant to us?
John’s death is significant
because Jesus takes into himself the wounds of all victims as he breathes his
last on the cross.
Jesus’ crucifixion gives
John’s beheading significance, and in turn brings a new understanding and hope
in to the face of loss and tragedy so that death does not have the last word. This
is the case for John the Baptist and it is now true for every other senseless
and tragic death since that of Jesus.
When Mark includes John’s
beheading in the middle of Jesus’ story, even when it doesn’t contribute
anything to the unfolding drama, Mark wants us to see that every senseless
death finds a place in Jesus’ story. It’s already there. John’s beheading shows
us that victims of violence, even when senseless, belong to the story of Jesus.
And if death is important so
then is life – the life of each one of us. It is in the writing of St Paul that
we see this most clearly articulated. He,
that is God, destined us for adoption as his children though Jesus Christ
v5 of the fist chapter in his epistle to the Ephesians.
It is because through Jesus
Christ that we enter a relationship with God like that of a child with a parent
– precious and loved that we find the ultimate meaning in the meaningless fact
of death because in v7 In him, Jesus
Christ, we have redemption through his blood….
Let us therefore in the prayers we offer today
and every day in the week ahead, echo the words of St Paul as he writes to the
Ephesians: Blessed be God the father of our Lord Jesus Christ who has blessed us
in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he
chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless
before him in love.
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