One
of the more challenging aspects of preaching at Evensong is the way
that Old and New Testaments sometimes seem to offer us such very
different pictures of God as they recount the story of God’s
dealings with humanity, so that it’s quite hard to know what to do
with them.
So
tonight we are confronted in Exodus with a God who seems capricious,
deeply partisan, maybe even rather egotistical as events are mapped
out.
It’s
impossible not to ask what harm it would have done if, instead of
ramping up Pharoah’s resistance, God had instead worked to SOFTEN
his heart.
OK,
so the Exodus story would have lacked a bit of drama without the
plagues, the Passover, the crossing for the Red Sea – but THINK of
all the lives that might have been saved, the fear and grief
avoided….
Yet
we are told explicity (in verse 4 of our first reading) that God
chose to harden Pharoah’s heart...to so arrange events that Pharoah
flew in the face of wise and compassionate leadership with the
dubious justification that, in effect, all this would be good for
God’s image.
“I
will harden Pharoah’s heart and he will pursue them. But I will
gain glory for myself through Pharoah and his army and the Egpytians
will know that I am the Lord...”
In
other words – that’ll show them.
Arguably,
of course, this says little about the true nature of God and a great
deal about the mindset of God’s people, guilty then as now of
sometime forming God in their own image. That’s a danger we can all
fall prey to once in a while, I suspect. The Israelites really needed
to confirm their own status as Very Important People, and aspired to
this by confirming THEIR God at the top of the tree.
That’s
a version of salvation history that’s not easy for us to deal
with...particularly this picture of a deity who is actively out for
his own glory…
It’s
hard to imagine how our prayers would run tonight – or at any other
time – if this remained our key understanding of God.
We’d
offer a lot of humilty, blended with at best anxiety, at worst dread,
fear, trembling.
Would
we even choose to approach God at all? Or be tempted to stay far
away...
Who
knows how he might be feeling? Those first-born Egyptian infants,
after all, had done nothing to provoke his wrath...the soldiers of
Pharoah’s army were only obeying orders...It would seem foolish to
engage with this unpredictable character, but if needs must, then the
keynote must surely be GREAT respect but absolutely NO affection.
And
of course, it is absolutely true that we should never sit lightly to
our relationship with the One in whom all things hold together, but
we are given a very different picture of God as we enter the world of
the New Testament and hear what Jesus has to say about his heavenly
Father.
Yes
this IS the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob – Jesus leaves us in no
doubt about that- but we meet him in a new way, not only, and
supremely, in the person of his Son – but also in the way the Son
relates to the Father.
While
we always need to remember that the status of a father in a 1st
century Palestinian household was very different from the casual
friendliness of “dear old Dad” today, with a clear sense of
paternalistic authority held as of right...nonetheless the idea that
WE, you and I, are invited into that kind of “Father/child”
relationship with GOD is, frankly, mind-blowing.
Remember,
Moses and those who came after him were given such an abiding sense
of God’s holiness that they weren’t even allowed to pronounce his
name...the point of the Hebrew letters that we repeat as “Yaweh”
was that they were unpronouncable, - because God’s name is
unsayable.
And
now – suddenly – Jesus is inviting us to make a relationship with
a heavenly Father and is focussing on what one commentator has called
the “essential kindness of God”.
And,
actually, that essential kindness is the thing to cling to no matter
what.
When
you pray say “Our Father”...
And
so the prayer unfolds, in all its blessed familiarity.
Words
we may have said at bedtime every day of our lives.
Words
we sing and say together in this place day after day after day.
Countless
times.
Countless
voices saying “Father..” “Father” “Father”….
–
and we’re in danger of failing to notice what it really says to us.
We
pray with the confidence that God will supply our daily needs.
We
pray with the assurance that if we come to God conscious of our sin
and brokenness, and ask for forgiveness – we WILL be forgiven.
We
pray, knowing that God is interested in what we are saying...that he
cares about US and not simply about the “glory of his name”.
This
is worlds away from the picture of God that the Exodus passage
painted.
Yes
God is awesome, amazing, beyond all that we can aspire to...BUT
nonetheless
God
wants us to know ourselves as members of God’s family….As Jesus
invites us to call God “Father” he invites us, too, to rediscover
our place in creation...We are made, as the catechism puts it, to
know, love and serve God here on earth so that we may finally be
happy with him in heaven.
WE
exist “for the glory of his name” - but in glorifying God we both
celebrate and receive God’s gift of Love that is lavished on
creation.
Of
course we must always remember that “Our Father” is “in
heaven”. Forget the slippers, and the cosiness of a family hearth.
We
are invited into intimacy but balance that with reverence. We are
wonderfully welcome to approach (there is something so hugely
appealing about that vision of going into a secret place, having
“time out” alone with the God who knows us through and through
and loves us all the same) but while we are invited to come close,
this is never, ever cosy.
God
remains GOD...Hallowed, holy, revered…
Once
again, our tapestry of Christ in glory helps me out.
Remember
Jesus tells us that to see him is to see the Father. All God’s
power and glory present in Christ, true God and true man.
So –
look up and see him – awesome, beyond our reach and our
understanding.
But
notice, too, the human being standing between Christ’s feet.
Dwarfed.
Insignificant. But held there safely.
Prayers
spoken there will be heard.
Sins
taken there will be forgiven.
And
God who keeps watch over Israel, will keep watch over us too – and
deliver us from evil, no matter how parlous the times may sometimes
seem.
So –
PRAY. Pray this prayer that reminds us of who we are and who God is.
Of
how to live in relationship with God and of what that relationship
can mean in our lives and our world.
Pray
confident in God’s grace and his abiding love, which Jesus both
shows and tells us.
Amen
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