We
have a tendency, I think to regard the saints, heroes and heroines
in the faith, as people who've got things sorted.
They
are the ones who've managed to keep all of the Commandments – even
that pesky one about loving your neighbour.
People
whose lives are so overwhelmingly full of the joy of the Lord that
they float through their days in a kind of glorious golden haze,
secure in faith and hope and chock full of love at all times.
Finished
products, secure and serene – so focussed on the promises of heaven
that earthly struggles pretty much pass them by unnoticed.
If
that's your impression, you might just need to think again.
Saints
are real people, forthright, outraged, not afraid to take God to task
Saints
are people like Teresa of Avila, who exploded one day
“If
this is the way you treat your friends, Lord – I'm not surprised
you have so few of them”
Her
words most definitely struck a chord with me as I looked at today's
gospel
Jesus
says of his cousin
“Among
those born of woman there is none greater than John the Baptist”
but despite this affirmation, things don't exactly turn out well for
him...(any more, of course, than they do for Jesus)...The story of
his death is one of the most gruesome and disturbing in the New
Testament. No easy ride for him.
“If
that's how you treat your friends...”
Actually,
when you're called to be a prophet easy rides are almost unheard of.
Small
wonder, then, that most of the great Old Testament prophets resisted
their vocation with all that was in them.
“Me?
speak truth to power? God, you have to be joking!”
Think
of Jonah, bolting for Tarshish when told to take God's message to
Nineveh
Or
Jeremiah, insisting “How can I speak. I'm only a child...”
or Moses, pleading that his stammer disqualified him
Or
Amos
“I'm
neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet, but I'm a herdsman and a
dresser of sycamore trees”
That
sounds wonderfully bucolic and peaceful – but God is adamant
“Go
prophesy......”
Background
doesn't matter....John the Baptist's father was a priest in the
Temple, dedicated to the rites and observances of Jewish
tradition...nor was Amos's father a recognised spokesman for
God......but God called both their sons and placed HIS words of
radical challenge on their lips.
You
see, God persists in calling unlikely people
Ordinary
souls with no particular gifting, fearful souls who would much sooner
stay at home, sceptical souls who aren't really sure that God is
still active, truculent souls who fight him every step of the way.
People
like you and me
God
calls them.
God
calls us
He
calls, because there remains so much in our world that needs to be
challenged, needs to be changed...
But
don't panic if you don't see yourself as an orator, - for often
prophetic action speaks louder than all the words in the world.
Yesterday
morning, some of you came to help us raise money for the 5K feast, a
month long fund-raising drive for Marah and the Stroud & District
Foodbank.
Those
who came may have thought they were simply buying a cake or
supporting a raffle – but actually they were part of an act
of prophetic challenge.
I
have to admit, I do have some reservations about the foodbank –
because only those with an official referral can be fed, because
there are limits to the help that one individual or family can
receive. If we set this prudent strategy against the reckless
generosity of God – it seems to me that the food bank organisers
are setting their sights a little too low. But for all that, they
ARE doing something...their words and their actions proclaim them
emphatically a sign of God's kingdom.
Motivated
by their faith, they are affirming with every food parcel they give
out that the hungry in our society matter to God...that it is not
acceptable that men, women and children should be going to bed with
empty stomachs while just down the road their neighbours spend money
on diet foods and exercise classes.
Their
presence is a reminder that something is badly broken in society –
and, as Christians, we have a responsibility to challenge that
brokenness by our actions and by our words.
Does
that bother you?
Perhaps
I'm sounding too political?
But
faith and politics absolutely belong together, until the power
structures of our society and all societies are fully reflective of
Kingdom values.
When
Jesus began his public ministry, he took as his mission statement
those words of the prophet Isaiah
“The
Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring
good news to the poor”
If
you are poor and hungry, then good news will surely involve being
fed...
If
you are frightened of persecution, good news will involve finding a
place of safety...
If
you are helpless, dis-empowered, good news will arm you with the
tools that you need to claim your own future.
Good
news changes things
I
know that many feel the church should stay out of politics – and
perhaps it may be inappropriate to engage in PARTY politics...
But
our God has never been content to sit, robed in majesty, untouched by
the plight of his children
Our
God chose to become incarnate – to join in the mess and muddle and
heartbreak of human life, so that that same mess, muddle and
heartbreak might be transformed and redeemed.
Our
God CARES – and charges us to live as signs of that care.
“Preach
the gospel...Use words if you must” said St Francis...
Today
too many will be deaf to the gospel unless we show them what it
really means for them.
The
clamour of their own struggle, their own pain, deafens them to our
cry of “good news” - unless they can see, experience
and recognise it as
good news for
themselves.
So......we
are called to live as prophets, signs of the Kingdom, to
the elderly,
selling their homes to fund social care,
to the mum crying in
the Co-op because there's
not enough cash in her purse to buy the food her family needs, to the
children sent to school without breakfast, the rough sleeper, the
battered wife.
We
are called to show that there IS a better way, to live as
prophets...sometimes to speak but ALWAYS to act to bring about
transformation and root out injustice
This
is the agenda presented in the letter of James
“ What
good is it, my brothers and sisters, if you say you have faith
but do not have works? Can faith save you? If a brother or
sister is naked and lacks daily food, and one of you says to
them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill’, and yet you do
not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that?”
But
to act will probably not win you many friends
To
act AND to speak will undoubtedly win you enemies
The
Brazilian Archbishop, Dom Helder Camara said
“When
I feed the hungry, they
call me a saint.
When I ask why
people are hungry,they
call me a Communist...”
and
you can be sure that “Communist” was not intended as a
compliment.
No,
it's
definitely not easy being a prophet...downright dangerous at times.
But
safety can be over-rated.
Remember
the Collect for today, with its invitation to shake the kaleidoscope
and see the world in a different way...
Our
current preoccupations with personal
security, prosperity, popularity, become
second-order concerns when set against those good things which pass
our understanding...God's promises that exceed all we can desire
There
IS a better way
There
IS more on offer than we can imagine in our wildest dreams
So
we CAN dare the risk of faith, we can speak and act as citizens of
this world who know that our true home is the Kingdom of God...
Let's
pray that Collect once again, as we thank God for all those who speak his Truth in our world and ask for courage and faith to do the same
Merciful God, you have prepared for those who love you such good things as pass our understanding: pour into our hearts such love toward you that we, loving you in all things and above all things, may obtain your promises, which exceed all that we can desire; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.
Brilliant stuff. Amen and Amen
ReplyDeleteThis is an amazing sermon which reminds us of our core tasks, thank-you.
ReplyDeleteKaren
This is a great sermon. I think its one of those sermons which always points back its key message of faith to its author. You are the prophet. Good News changes things, not our best efforts or our good will. The parable of the sower comes to mind - your role is to spread the seed, not to create the fruitfulness that comes from it. Be blessed in being faithful to that call and know that the hidden fruit of your work will be seen in years to come
ReplyDeleteYes and Amen to all of the above!!!
ReplyDelete"But our God has never been content to sit, robed in majesty, untouched by the plight of his children
ReplyDeleteOur God chose to become incarnate – to join in the mess and muddle and heartbreak of human life, so that that same mess, muddle and heartbreak might be transformed and redeemed."
lovely and what I needed to hear today....
Really well expressed & thought-provoking, thanks
ReplyDelete