This
is an extraordinary weekend – one of those which surely will live
on in our collective memory
The
first Diamond Jubilee since Queen Victoria's
A
festival of national and international dimensions, that is brought
close to home by the multitude of picnics, street parties, Big
Lunches and local celebrations of all kinds;
an
opportunity to engage with our neighbours as we may not have done for
a long time, a chance to celebrate being a community.
That's
good because today the Church too invites us to think about Community
– GOD in Community, - the relationship that is represented, however
imperfectly, by the doctrine of the Trinity.
You'll
know so many of the hopeful illustrations...from St. Patrick's
shamrock, to the scientist's water/ice/steam or the school children's
favourite the jammy dodger – biscuit, cream and jam...or even the
Union Flag - but actually I think these take us further and further
from what we really need to know.
Indeed,
I think we could spend a lifetime attempting to understand the
doctrine of the Trinity and, in the process miss the truth of it
completely.
In
Genesis God declared
“It
is not good for human beings to be alone”
and
as we look at human life lived to perfection in the person of Christ
we see him engaging not only with the people that he encountered in
his earthly ministry, but deeply, intimately with his heavenly
Father, in the power of the Spirit.
Relationship
demonstrated for us, a reminder that we are designed to face each
other, to draw together not turn our backs and walk away.
It
is not good for us to be alone
And,
amazingly, though God exists in relationship with God – God seeks
relationship with us as well, and draws us into God's redemptive work
in the world.
That's
the message of the Isaiah reading.
We
hear of the prophet coming, as we do ourselves, to worship God
...perhaps with no great expectations.
But
against all expectation, he has a transforming experience....seeing
God in
the royal court, with cherubim and seraphim in attendance.
A
vision of heavenly glory that puts even the most extravagant jubilee
celebration to shame.
Heaven
and earth touching as worship takes place.
And
you know -that's how it should be for us, week on week.
In
our worship, we should, as our own Bishop Michael has put it, “grasp
the heel of heaven”...knowing that our half hearted praise and
imperfect prayer is swept up into that great chorus of “holy, holy,
holy” that resounds throughout creation
“Heaven
and earth are full of God's glory”
That's
what we sing...week on week on week...
but
typing it just now I was suddenly brought up short.
HEAVEN
AND EARTH ARE FULL OF GOD'S GLORY –
but
we, we
are
invited to participate in God's mission in the world.
Woe
is me...says Isaiah
I'm
not equal to the vision...small,
inglorious, I
don't belong in this holy place, tarnished by life's
guilt
as I am.
I'm
no more at home in the courts of heaven than a tramp at a royal
Garden Party...
That's
the human judgement.
But
God sees things differently.
God
sees not present inadequacy but future potential...and offers pardon,
transformation – and a clear call to mission.
God
offers this not just to Isaiah, once long ago...but to us, here and
now.
Today
we celebrate the response of one woman to the call that she heard
from God
We
celebrate the way that she has lived out the anointing that, at her
Coronation, set her apart for loving service to this country and the
Commonwealth.
We
rejoice, for whatever your politics, there is clearly much to
celebrate.
But
all God's baptised children are anointed too.
Each
of us is set apart for loving service.
We
are Christians ...anointed
ones....for “the Christ” MEANS the anointed One...and we are
called to be little Christs...
Set
apart for loving service, our experience, our journey, matching
Isaiah's own.
We
come to worship and glimpse for a moment the glory that fills heaven
and earth.
We
recognise our own wretchedness, but are absolved and transformed.
And
then, like Isaiah, we are invited to take our place in God's mission,
to reflect in our lives that relationship of self-giving mutual love
that is at the heart of the Trinity...
Here
I am, send me
Send
me to build community....
to
engage with my neighbour,
to
find meaning in community,
to
join hands with friend and stranger...
not
to understand but to mirror, as best I can, that relationship of
love in which we live and move and have our being.
2 comments:
Thank you *again*, Kathryn!
What more can truly be said about the Trinity, than "Send me ... not to understand but to mirror, as best I can, that relationship of love in which we live and move and have our being."
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