Monday, February 17, 2014

Sermon 16th February 2014


Today, our Vicar, Cameron Barker, continues our study of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount.  The Gospel reading is from Matthew 7 verses 1-14.

“The Sermon on the Mount isn’t meant to be admired, but obeyed”! I realise that this is quite a departure from my usual, more amusing, way of beginning sermons. But that does need to be said, and heard, as we come towards the end of this series. So: “The Sermon on the Mount is not meant to be admired, but obeyed”! And yes of course that means by you, and me!

Now it should be noted that taking this starting route cuts off all sorts of amusing possibilities. I even discovered that there is comic strip called Pearls before swine, which has great fun-poking potential. Failing that, I might have quoted whoever first used that famous line in response to the person who had let her go through the door first. After hearing, “Age before beauty”, the actress allegedly responded, “Pearls before swine”. Or I could jokingly suggest that this is what is happening right now, of course! But doing anything of that kind would be a long way from what Jesus meant when he first said it. It would also detract from the key lesson that we all need to learn, before we move on into Lent: that Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount isn’t meant to be admired but obeyed. So, that is now out there!

The way dates have worked out means that we’ll take an all-age break next week, before closing out this series. But by this stage of his teaching Jesus has already begun to draw some conclusions. Yes, it’s probably more accurate to suggest that Matthew has had a hand in that. As we’ve heard a few times along the way, most scholars think that Matthew gathered Jesus’ teaching from several occasions into this condensed collection. But these are all Jesus’ words; and it’s easy to see how they have built up to this point. There will doubtless be more to say on that in a fortnight; but today we do need to see how Jesus was bringing it all together. In best, succinct, most challenging, and unarguable fashion, Jesus said, in 7 v. 12:Do for others what you want them to do for you: this is the meaning of the Law of Moses and of the teachings of the prophets. (GNB) // So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the law and the prophets.(NIV). And there is the Golden Rule!

Now just to be clear, Jesus wasn’t the first great teacher to express this thought. It was already in 1st-Century Jewish use – and they’d probably copied it from the Greeks. But! Jesus was the first one to express it positively. It may be subtle, but there’s an important difference here. It’s not the same as saying “Don’t do to others what you don’t want them to do to you”. I’d say that’s made very clear in the second part of this quote – which was unique to Jesus. And what a staggering statement that is! Think of just how much there is in the Law and the Prophets; of all the ground those Old Testament books cover; and of what they teach us about God. And now think that they can be boiled down to just this one phrase: “Do for (or to) others what you want them to do for you”. Of course the detail is complex, and needs careful working out; but loving God is as simple as this! “Do for (or to) others what you want them to do for you”.

The positive expression of it is important - because it then becomes a positive invitation to do good! Christianity has, unfortunately (and, even more unfortunately, often rightly so) been portrayed as a negative religion. And, to be honest, it is all too easy to slip into negative, legalistic thinking, acting, and being. That’s well illustrated in the way that Jesus began today’s section – which is a subject that we’ll come back to. But for now we’ll stick with the positive that immediately precedes Jesus’ declaration of this ‘Golden Rule’. That’s the positive that is God himself - our Heavenly Father, as Jesus taught us to know Him.

In his commentary Tom Wright focuses on what verses 7-10 teach about prayer. There certainly are wonderful, and very important, prayer-lessons to learn from them. Members of both Action Groups could tell you that I began our recent meetings talking about prayer based on these very verses. I quoted them from a translation which best conveys the sense of the Greek. That encourages us (as Jesus himself does) to go on asking; to go on seeking; to go on knocking – because that is what prayer so often is and take. It needs persistence – as well as ever-better listening to God, for how and what to pray for, of course. And yes, there is easily a full sermon that could be preached on prayer alone from these verses.

However, it’s one of the delights of the Bible that God can speak to us on different subjects from the same passage. As I say, I think that in the greater sweep of Jesus’ whole Sermon, the bigger-picture focus here is on who God is, and what He’s like. Not least amongst the points that Jesus is making is that God really is the best Father that we could ever want, or have. He is the one who loves us; who always has time for us; who always wants us to want to spend time with him; and who is always more ready to listen than we are to pray, as the saying goes. So His response is always to give us the good that we need (not what we ‘want’, note well!)

For all the failings of our own earthly fathers (or of our own as fathers, perhaps), very few of us doubt that they want the best for their children. To explain Jesus’ illustration here, fathers aren’t mean practical jokers. The Palestine 1st-Century staple bread was round loaves that could have looked like stones. The local fish was eel-like looking, rather like a snake. What kind of father would ever trick their hungry child like that – give them a stone instead of a loaf, or a snake instead of a fish? How much more true is that of God, who is our heavenly Father, Jesus says. And He, that, is to be our example, then: we are positively to seek out the good of others, and to do it for them. That is to be our response to being loved and cared for by our Father. And that is the summary of the Law and the Prophets, Jesus says!

So: how are we to go about doing that, in practical terms, then? It’s not at all often that I suggest we start with self; but this may just be right time to do that, in fact. Following the example, and teachings of Jesus, as ever, we need to begin with the positive. As he said, “Do for/ to others what you want them to do for you”. Of course there is always a need to be a little bit careful and sensitive in these things, because people do have different tastes. But in what ways would you like to experience God’s love and care for you? Well, who then comes to your mind as someone who may need to experience something of God’s love and care right now? How about (after listening prayer) then doing that good, kind, loving, and caring thing for them; with the aim of them experiencing God’s love through your positive actions?

I could say that this is a radical thought, because in many ways it is one! Certainly it is in the eyes of people who don’t believe in God (which is probably just what Jesus meant about pearls before swine, by the way.) But one of the joys about being part of this church are all the ways in which this does already happen. That’s not to say that we can’t do better, or more, because of course we can – and we ‘should’, if I can risk saying that. Of course we don’t all spend all of our time looking for ways to show each other God’s love. But that is the aim. It starts with doing it more than we do now; and it take each of us being responsible for what we do, and say.

So, that is the positive: and very positive it is too. But today’s passage begins with the negative, and we mustn’t try to duck that, any more than we can ignore the positive. So: “Don’t judge” then, Jesus said, because how you treat others is the way that you will be treated yourself. As the NIV has it, God isn’t mentioned here; but that’s certainly the implication, so the GNB is also right. And it is the same, Godly principle that’s at work here, I’d suggest. This too is based on the nature, and character of God – who judges, yes; but He does so with the mercy, grace and forgiveness that we can’t manage. The facts of this Communion service remind us of all that very powerfully, as we’re all welcomed at the Lord’s Table.

So we can’t, and mustn’t judge, then: not in the sense of refusing to be part of the legal system; but rather morally. Let’s be honest: it’s oh so easy to do that, to judge others. And often we do so by standards that we wouldn’t dream of applying to ourselves. But, in the classic illustration, every time we point the finger at someone else, there are 3 fingers pointing back at us! Jesus says very clearly that here too we are to start with ourselves. Of course none of us has nothing in our eye, to use his word-picture for it. We are indeed called to help one another to live more Godly-shaped lives, as other parts of the Bible teach. But it is to be help; not condemnation; and even to begin to manage that, we first need to take a long, hard, honest look in a mirror. What we see in there won’t be pretty; but it will be freeing, in the sense of enabling us to help and be helped in our quest to become more like Jesus. And there is no doubt that key in that process is stopping looking down on others.

That just about covers the whole of today’s passage. At the end of it – even with so much left unsaid, on so much of it – we may quail slightly when we hear again the quote that I began with: “The Sermon on the Mount isn’t meant to be admired, but obeyed”. It doesn’t make that statement any less true, though. So it’s little wonder, then, that Jesus (or Matthew) ends this Sermon with a series of warnings to his hearers. They (and we) have been hearing serious, life-changing, eternity-impacting teaching. They (like us) had to decide how they would respond to it, and to the person of Jesus.

It’s a very long way from easy, Jesus said. There are choices to make, at every turn. Nobody can drift along in the flow, and just get there in the end. No, if you want to get in through this gate, into God’s life, you have to be intentional about it. The road to travel to it is narrow; and not many people choose it, because it is so hard. How about you, then? I’m asking that not in a judgmental way, but rather because nobody else can make these choices for you. Today we have been shown some more of the signposts along this road. We’ve seen more of what it looks like to travel along it. Of course there is another, much easier road to drift down, for those who want to. But this is the one into God’s kind of life. It’s the one that is to be walked step by transforming step; into His likeness; with His help, and His gifts. So let’s pray that we do indeed go this way, then ...


Friday, February 14, 2014

Sermon 9th February 2014

Today, one of our Lay Readers, Adjoa Andoh Cunnell, continues our study of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. The reading is from Matthew 6 verses 16-34.

Dear Mum and Dad,
Our scoutmaster told us all to write to our parents in case you saw the flood on TV and worried. We are OK. Only one of our tents and two of our sleeping bags got washed away. Luckily none us got drowned because we were all up on the mountain looking for Andy when it happened.
Oh yes, please call Andy's mother and tell her he is OK. He can't write because of the cast… I got to ride in one of the search and rescue jeeps. It was great. We never would have found him in the dark if it hadn't been for the lightning. Scoutmaster Long got angry with Andy for going off on a walk alone without telling anyone. Andy said he did tell him, but it was during the fire so he probably didn't hear him. Did you know that if you put gas on a fire, the gas can will blow up? The wet wood still didn't burn, but one of our tents did. Also some of our clothes. John is going to look weird until his hair grows back.
We will come home on Saturday if Scoutmaster Long gets the car fixed. 
Guess what? We have passed all our first aid merit badges.
Don't worry about anything. We are fine.
Love, Carl
P.S. How long has it been since I had a tetanus injection?

Oh my goodness – stuff and worries….
I started writing this sermon on the Notes bit of my iPhone
If you could see all the other notes...
Lists...
What jobs I have coming in
Whose paid, who do I need to chase up
Phone:- school, electricity people, car mechanic
Dog walker
Plant tulip bulbs..is it too late?
Birthdays to remember oops ones I've forgotten 
School exams
homework  school trips 
Essay deadlines
People to visit 
Grocery lists
Emails and phone calls I haven’t answered
ring dad
fence falling down
Sort out cupboard of doom

And that's just the stuff I've written down 
Do you lie in bed with stuff whizzing round your head while the minutes tick by and then do you add to the whizzing by looking at the clock (deadly) and calculating how much sleep you'd get if only you could just fall asleep right now which only makes it harder to get to sleep....
Or is that just me...

WORRies we carry a lot of worries
 Back in January Cameron introduced this series we call the sermon on the Mount, telling us amongst other things, that what we would be sharing over the coming weeks is a presentation of a group of teachings, by the Gospel writer known as Matthew, teachings that Jesus shared most probably with his disciples alone at some times and also with larger crowds at others.. And no doubt some of his teaching may indeed have taken place on the mountains and hills surrounding Capernaum
Running Through all the subsequent talks given by Gill, Ben and Trevor is the understanding that It’s not just our actions that need to change; it’s our hearts.
This Understanding is the spine that runs through what Jesus has to say to us from that Mountain.
AS Tom Wright puts it in his version of one of the beatitudes from earlier in the Sermon on the Mount, a version that Cameron shared with us
Jesus says
“Wonderful news when you’re content with just who you are: no more, no less. That’s the moment you find yourselves proud owners of everything that can’t be bought.
Today we are looking at what can and can’t bought in the world and in our hearts.
Possessions, stuff, anxiety and the Peace of Jesus
How do we face up to life as it keeps rolling towards us?
I’m very much struck in this mornings passage how Jesus appears to be giving us a ‘How To’ manual, to address ‘how to ‘ respond to all that life may send our way.
But this is not just any How To Manual it comes direct from the manufacturer. The Sermon on The Mount from our Creator to His Creation, the Maker of the World telling us directly how to live at our optimum in the world he made for us.
In the Friday home group I go to we’re following a series by Canon Jay John on the 10 commandments – an earlier How To Manual…? Jay John was talking the week before last about attending a school assembly where before his talk the head teacher really let fly at the assembled students  about their being badly behaved and what some of them could look forward to as a result…
and then Jay John was introduced ….
These were quite no nonsense boys who had just been publicly torn off a strip or two and now they had to listen to the God man.
They planned on giving JJ a bracing time, so he got in there first and asked them if they had any questions
Yes a boy from the back stood up
What’s your question JJ asked
What does God look like?
At this point in the story I have to admit I was expecting JJ to say something like ……God looks like a kind act to a stranger, a courageous act with no thought for ones own safety, a sunrise, a flower..
That sort of thing
But JJ said none of that
He said ‘I don’t know I wasn’t there when Jesus was alive and that’s the only time God has been on earth in a visible form.. I mean it’s like asking me what Queen Victoria looks like..I don’t know I wasn’t there, bit before my time…”
But the point he went on to make was that while he wasn’t there to know what Jesus looked like or was like, there were people who were.
Just like there were people who were around when Queen Victoria was around and in both cases, there were those who wrote about their experiences of these people.
We have letters and diaries and stories passed on about Queen Victoria.
And similarly we have the same about Jesus, in one handy carriable document – the Bible…
How extraordinary when we stop and think about that – God in human form, a form we could cope with, documented during his time on earth.
Yesterday, Readers in the diocese were relicensed – you’ll be relieved to know I’m officially ok… and I was struck by this phrase from one of our workshops
The scriptures point us to Jesus
The written word points us to the living word.
We have the privilege in the Gospels of hearing directly from Jesus, via the Gospel writers, how an Optimum life can be lead, what a life of inner Peace can look like.

The Australian theologian William Loader observed that Jesus is framed in Matthew as the judge who is made of love. Matthew emphasizes the way Jesus sets discipline against poor behaviour and compassion for the fallen, side by side.

No doubt to engage Jews with their history, Matthew is purposefully reminding us of Moses coming down from the Mountain with the tablets of stone on which were written the ten commandments, when here he shows us God in Jesus communicating not by the written word during his Sermon on the Mount, but by that living word.
Jesus shares with his listeners a ‘How To’ of living
 in the way that we are made for, and that pleases our maker
Optimum living is Optimum, the Best, because this How To Live from Jesus, is not simply a list of instructions to cope with a variety of circumstances but over and above this, it is a way to actively engage with our life in peace.
A way to live peacefully , harmoniously , confident in the enduring healing love that Christ has for us and has showed in the way he lived his life on earth.
Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid’
Jesus says
In John’s Gospel 14:27

Peace – we share it symbolically with one another on many Sundays here, but do we really feel it in our lives?

GN
33 …be concerned above everything else with the Kingdom of God and with what he requires of you, and he will provide you with all these other things.
NIV
33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.
What makes our lives ‘unpeaceful’
Thinking about Stuff, food, bills, clothes, medicine, transport, gifts Holidays, cars repairs, - possessions, stuff –
Jesus answers - Peace
GN
34 So do not worry about tomorrow; it will have enough worries of its own. There is no need to add to the troubles each day brings.
NIV
34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
Worries –jobs , friends, family, beloveds, anger resentments, loneliness, health – worries.
Jesus answers- Peace
Chasing wealth, success, acquiring more and more stuff, sacrificing time love friendship in the pursuit of status, financial security, nice extras
 It’s all transitory,it can be lost in an instant    
We own nothing, it all comes from God *****

I was recording an audiobook by Ian MacDonald
The Broken Land. In it one of the characters says

 Like pilgrims lifting handfuls of holy water from the river that runs away through their fingers the moment they claim hold of it, no man can own a river, only borrow it and let it flow on….
the river runs away through their fingers the moment they claim hold of it
If we get right with God. We can see that all that stuff we yearn for is transitory, passing, as are all our worries, they may not feel it at the time but they too pass and God remains .
Jesus says you CANT be servant of two Masters, the pursuit of worldly wealth or the acceptance of God’s love -  he says
24 ‘No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and Money.
Why cant you?
Jesus says
21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
God or money – where is our treasure?
We need to be with the source of creation not with the by product
If we believe God created the world why would we want to focus on the made stuff and not the maker
Stop rushing after the world. Jesus says
Be present first with God. Psalm 46 v.10 says
“Be still and know that I am God”
In hearing Jesus and seeking his Peace, his “how To’, his leadership in our lives, we are required to Listen.
Have you noticed that the word Listen is an anagram for Silent??
As the hearers on the Mount did, we need to echo the Psalm - be still, be silent and listen for God.

While we have our How To Manual to support the foundation of our lives we get our daily updates specific to our particular circumstances in conversation with the manufacturer – in Prayer
American theologian Philip Yancey says of prayer
‘Why pray?..Prayer has become much more than a shopping list of requests to present to God….I pray to restore the truth of the universe, to gain a glimpse of the world, and of me, through the eyes of God….Prayer is the act of seeing reality from God’s point of view’
The Psalmist says in Psalm 139
“before a word is on my tongue you know it completely O Lord..”
And Jesus confirms this here in the most poetic of images in this beautiful passage as we read in the King James version verses 28-30
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; 29 and yet I say to you that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. 30 Now if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will He not much more clothe you,
For all the stuff of our lives Jesus continues, V 32
‘your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.’
We need to make space to hear God - as the phrase goes
For one Soul that exclaims “ Speak Lord for thy Servant heareth” there are ten that say “Hear Lord! For thy Servant speaketh”
Trevor spoke in depth about prayer last week, he said
Prayer isn’t just vertical. It’s not just us praising God and asking him to meet our needs. Prayer must be horizontal; it must also affect our social relationships.

Just as when we pray we are praying to a creator who knows already what we need, God’s intimate knowledge of who and what we are, means that our faith is intimate too - Jesus calls on us to respect it and not use it as a status symbol of public godliness in our communities. That spine running through this series, it is a matter of what is in your heart that concerns Jesus, not what you appear to do or be on the outside.
GN
16 “And when you fast, do not put on a sad face as the hypocrites do. They neglect their appearance so that everyone will see that they are fasting.
NIV
16 ‘When you fast, do not look sombre as the hypocrites do, for they disfigure their faces to show others they are fasting.
God sees everything -  you can be private and humble or you can be public and a hypocrite, God sees it all…
Don’t be a hypocrite,
don’t be greedy – you can’t take it with you
Look to the quality of your relationships.Have a generous opinion of people, Jesus says
GN
If your eyes are sound, your whole body will be full of light;
NIV
‘If your eyes are healthy,[a] your whole body will be full of light.’
Generous , healthy, sound.
Eyes like a lamp, look with generosity – healthy eyes
Not with meanness – unhealthy eyes
Look for the good see the positive, be generous
Don’t be mean spirited
Or as Canon Jay John would put it
‘Say what you mean, mean what you say, don’t say it mean’.
Talking of Heaven On Earth in his wonderfully named book ‘Love Wins’ Christian writer Rob Bell observes
‘Jesus calls disciples in order to teach us how to be and what to be, his intention is for us to be growing progressively in generosity, forgiveness, honesty, courage truth telling and responsibility so that as these take over our lives we are taking part more and more and more in life in the age to come now’
we are working more and more to bring God’s Kingdom of peace love and justice into the world we live in now.
In other words as we learn to live our optimal life, in a body full of light,( the one God has made us for,) not only will we be more at peace in our lives but we will also share that loving light with the world around us – light puddles of heaven on earth'
Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
Jesus doesn’t say if you trust in me everything will be easy street, but once you do trust in me,
know that you can be present, in the moment, you need only deal with today
and at the same time do see and enjoy those lilies and birds too,
Just like for everyone else, there is trouble in the Christian life too, but God has us in mind, our heart is concern, we are not alone in our troubles.
if we release ourselves from making the world our master and stop being overwhelmed by its demands, if we give ourselves over to Peace in Christ wholeheartedly, we may become part of the change that can ease the troubles in the lives of others, as well as our own
God is concerned with that change in our hearts
He wants to heal our hearts, so we can heal our lives and then help in the work of healing our world
and however it is that the loving Peace of Christ inspires us, if we focus on him first, if we seek first his kingdom, he will carry us through anything and everything in His Love.
Amen