Thought for the parish pew slip – Sunday 27th December 2009
Readings: 1 Samuel 1: 20-22 & 24-end 1 John 3: 1-2 & 21-end Luke 2: 41-end
Our readings today offer stories in sharp contrast with our present day attitudes which encourage us to be possessive and protective of our children.
As we read of the extraordinary generosity of Hannah in giving her only child to the Lord we must remember the great struggle that Hannah endured before Samuel was conceived (see 1 Samuel 1: 1-19). We must also remember the great fruit that came from this gift. Samuel grew up to become the last of the Judges of Israel and the man who anointed David as king.
John reminds us that we are children of God. We are much more truly God’s children than anyone else’s (see also Matt 23:9). We must behave as good brothers and sisters to one another, loving each other as the Lord commanded.
Our gospel reading records a moment of great drama for Mary and Joseph when they think they have lost the child Jesus. In fact Jesus is in the temple. He does not feel lost at all; he is in his Father’s house.
27 December 2009
24 December 2009
Being a gift for others
Article for the Faith Matters column in Solihull News – Christmas Edition 24/12/09
Christmas - Being a gift for others
When I was little I used to get very excited about Christmas presents. Unwrapping new toys and games was a big part of what Christmas was all about. Now I am older, I still enjoy Christmas gifts, but I am more aware of the real gift that lies at the heart of the celebration. This is God’s gift to us of his only Son, Jesus, who we remember arriving among us at Christmas time.
Jesus was a real gift to people. He healed people. He taught people. He accepted the consequences of people’s sin to the point of dying for them. He is the gift that God gave so that we might have eternal life (c.f. John 3: 16).
This Christmas we too can try to be gifts for other people. We may not have the power or wisdom of Jesus, but we can find practical ways to serve other people, loving them as Jesus loves them. We can do all our share in helping to prepare Christmas meals, and washing up afterwards. We can share the presents we receive. We can show honour and respect to the relatives who we meet at Christmas time. We can be ready to welcome people who we don’t know so well.
If we can live our lives as a gift for other people, then we are being like Jesus. Our behaviour starts to make Jesus more present in the world, as Mary did 2000 years ago. This is the way to really enter into the Christmas story. This is the way to bring peace and goodwill on earth.
May all the joy of Christmas be yours! Fr Gerard
Christmas - Being a gift for others
When I was little I used to get very excited about Christmas presents. Unwrapping new toys and games was a big part of what Christmas was all about. Now I am older, I still enjoy Christmas gifts, but I am more aware of the real gift that lies at the heart of the celebration. This is God’s gift to us of his only Son, Jesus, who we remember arriving among us at Christmas time.
Jesus was a real gift to people. He healed people. He taught people. He accepted the consequences of people’s sin to the point of dying for them. He is the gift that God gave so that we might have eternal life (c.f. John 3: 16).
This Christmas we too can try to be gifts for other people. We may not have the power or wisdom of Jesus, but we can find practical ways to serve other people, loving them as Jesus loves them. We can do all our share in helping to prepare Christmas meals, and washing up afterwards. We can share the presents we receive. We can show honour and respect to the relatives who we meet at Christmas time. We can be ready to welcome people who we don’t know so well.
If we can live our lives as a gift for other people, then we are being like Jesus. Our behaviour starts to make Jesus more present in the world, as Mary did 2000 years ago. This is the way to really enter into the Christmas story. This is the way to bring peace and goodwill on earth.
May all the joy of Christmas be yours! Fr Gerard
20 December 2009
Magnificat
Sermon preached at St Alphege, Solihull at the 9.15am Eucharist on Sunday 20th December 2009 – Advent 4 Year C. A shorter version was also preached at St Catherine's, Catherine-de-Barnes at 11am.
Readings Micah 5: 2-5a Hebrews 10: 5-10 Luke 1:39-56
If you are one of those people who simply can’t stand looking at other people’s holiday photos, then now is the moment to bury your head in your hands. As you probably know I was went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in November and I came back with 208 photos. Well, before you all run for the doors, I am not going to show all 208 to you now. I am going to show you three! So that should be pretty painless.
Here’s the first one. This is the Church of the Visitation at Ein Karem, on the western outskirts of Jerusalem. It is the site traditionally associated with Mary’s visit to Elizabeth that we heard about in our gospel reading today. Now you can’t really see it from the photo, but the site is about three quarters of the way up a steep mountain side. It seems that Zachariah and Elizabeth had two houses. One here, high in the hills, for the summer, and another one lower down in the valley for the winter. The church on the lower site is associated with the birth of John the Baptist, this church higher up is associated with the Visitation. There is also a tradition that when King Herod sent his soldiers to murder all the baby boys under two years old, that Elizabeth hid the baby John the Baptist here. The rocky hillside somehow swallowed them up and concealed them from the soldiers.
Now we have to recognise that there is a great deal of uncertainty associated with all these traditions. Many of the stories come from an ancient book called the Protevangelium of St James. The Church has never regarded this book as authoritative, and which has never been counted as one of the books of the bible. Also the archaeology is uncertain. Unquestionably, the remains of ancient churches have found on these sites, but the tradition of Christian worship here has been broken for many centuries, on three different occasions; first by the Romans, then by the Persians and then by the Ottoman Empire.
But despite the uncertainties, I found that this place did draw me into the mysteries of the Visitation. In particular I found the artwork inspiring. There was this picture in the roof vaults of a lower chapel. Look how the two women are being filled with the Holy Spirit. Also notice how the ground on which they are standing is bursting with grass and trees, while in other places it looks arid and dry.
Then there is this sculpture. Mary is on the left, in the first months of pregnancy, and Elizabeth on the right, in the last. It could all be very awkward. Elizabeth was really far too old to be pregnant, and Mary really too young. Then there is the problem that Mary is not married, and the worry of what Joseph will say when he finds out that his betrothed is pregnant. Yet despite these difficulties there seems to be a real closeness between the two women.
Our gospel reading tells us what happens when Mary arrives at Elizabeth’s house. First of all, when Elizabeth hears Mary’s greeting the child in her womb, John the Baptist, leaps for joy. Elizabeth makes a big speech, declaring Mary blessed, and recognising that the child Mary carries is the Lord. She says that Mary is blessed because she believed that what the Lord had promise her would come to pass.
Then Mary makes this extraordinary speech, which we call the Magnificat. We repete it everyday in this church at evening prayer. It starts “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my saviour.” If you look at the photo again, you will see on the wall behind the sculpture lots of plaques with writing on them. Each of the plaques has the words of the Magnificat in a different language. There are dozens of plaques in the courtyard and it is quite fun to look around them all until you find the English one. When our group arrived in the courtyard an American group were also there. They found the English plaque before we did, and one of them read it out very loudly in a powerful American ascent, “MY SOUL MAGNIFIES THE LORD…”
I couldn’t help but be struck by the contrast between the way the Magnificat was being read, and what its words seem to mean. The words of the Magnificat speak of the faithfulness of God, his patience and his mercy. They speak of the lowliness of Mary and of her blessedness. Perhaps it is uncharitable to say it, but the booming voice seemed to speak of earthly power and self-sufficiency. And nowhere was the contrast stronger than where the Magnificat says of the Lord,
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones
and lifted up the lowly;
he has filled the hungry with good things
and sent rich away empty.
And these words are such a challenge to us in the western world. We might not have the wealth of the Americans, but we do share in a prosperity which is unprecedented in history and which appears unsustainable. The words remind us that there is a complete social transformation implicit in the gospel message. We are seeking to build a world in which we administer our wealth with generosity for the good of all; we exercise our power and influence for the common good. It’s a world in which the sharing of problems and opportunities becomes so well done that it become impossible to distinguish the rich from the poor.
So how do we play our part in this social transformation? How do we build the Kingdom of Heaven? Well, first of all, let’s remember that it is God’s work not ours, so our first contribution is to do what God wants from us, nothing more and nothing less. And very often this will be very simple things; listening to the person next to us, sharing some gift, being ready to lose our own aspirations for the sake of the others. We can treat our daily lives as a training ground in which we can grow in patience and generosity and in trust in God. Certainly there will be problems and failures but if we keep on training we build up treasure in heaven. Sooner or later this has to flow over from heaven to earth and transform everything. Let’s be like Mary, blessed because we believe that what the Lord has promised will come to pass. And let’s play all our part so that it comes to pass sooner rather than later! Amen.
Readings Micah 5: 2-5a Hebrews 10: 5-10 Luke 1:39-56
If you are one of those people who simply can’t stand looking at other people’s holiday photos, then now is the moment to bury your head in your hands. As you probably know I was went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in November and I came back with 208 photos. Well, before you all run for the doors, I am not going to show all 208 to you now. I am going to show you three! So that should be pretty painless.
Here’s the first one. This is the Church of the Visitation at Ein Karem, on the western outskirts of Jerusalem. It is the site traditionally associated with Mary’s visit to Elizabeth that we heard about in our gospel reading today. Now you can’t really see it from the photo, but the site is about three quarters of the way up a steep mountain side. It seems that Zachariah and Elizabeth had two houses. One here, high in the hills, for the summer, and another one lower down in the valley for the winter. The church on the lower site is associated with the birth of John the Baptist, this church higher up is associated with the Visitation. There is also a tradition that when King Herod sent his soldiers to murder all the baby boys under two years old, that Elizabeth hid the baby John the Baptist here. The rocky hillside somehow swallowed them up and concealed them from the soldiers.
Now we have to recognise that there is a great deal of uncertainty associated with all these traditions. Many of the stories come from an ancient book called the Protevangelium of St James. The Church has never regarded this book as authoritative, and which has never been counted as one of the books of the bible. Also the archaeology is uncertain. Unquestionably, the remains of ancient churches have found on these sites, but the tradition of Christian worship here has been broken for many centuries, on three different occasions; first by the Romans, then by the Persians and then by the Ottoman Empire.
But despite the uncertainties, I found that this place did draw me into the mysteries of the Visitation. In particular I found the artwork inspiring. There was this picture in the roof vaults of a lower chapel. Look how the two women are being filled with the Holy Spirit. Also notice how the ground on which they are standing is bursting with grass and trees, while in other places it looks arid and dry.
Then there is this sculpture. Mary is on the left, in the first months of pregnancy, and Elizabeth on the right, in the last. It could all be very awkward. Elizabeth was really far too old to be pregnant, and Mary really too young. Then there is the problem that Mary is not married, and the worry of what Joseph will say when he finds out that his betrothed is pregnant. Yet despite these difficulties there seems to be a real closeness between the two women.
Our gospel reading tells us what happens when Mary arrives at Elizabeth’s house. First of all, when Elizabeth hears Mary’s greeting the child in her womb, John the Baptist, leaps for joy. Elizabeth makes a big speech, declaring Mary blessed, and recognising that the child Mary carries is the Lord. She says that Mary is blessed because she believed that what the Lord had promise her would come to pass.
Then Mary makes this extraordinary speech, which we call the Magnificat. We repete it everyday in this church at evening prayer. It starts “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my saviour.” If you look at the photo again, you will see on the wall behind the sculpture lots of plaques with writing on them. Each of the plaques has the words of the Magnificat in a different language. There are dozens of plaques in the courtyard and it is quite fun to look around them all until you find the English one. When our group arrived in the courtyard an American group were also there. They found the English plaque before we did, and one of them read it out very loudly in a powerful American ascent, “MY SOUL MAGNIFIES THE LORD…”
I couldn’t help but be struck by the contrast between the way the Magnificat was being read, and what its words seem to mean. The words of the Magnificat speak of the faithfulness of God, his patience and his mercy. They speak of the lowliness of Mary and of her blessedness. Perhaps it is uncharitable to say it, but the booming voice seemed to speak of earthly power and self-sufficiency. And nowhere was the contrast stronger than where the Magnificat says of the Lord,
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones
and lifted up the lowly;
he has filled the hungry with good things
and sent rich away empty.
And these words are such a challenge to us in the western world. We might not have the wealth of the Americans, but we do share in a prosperity which is unprecedented in history and which appears unsustainable. The words remind us that there is a complete social transformation implicit in the gospel message. We are seeking to build a world in which we administer our wealth with generosity for the good of all; we exercise our power and influence for the common good. It’s a world in which the sharing of problems and opportunities becomes so well done that it become impossible to distinguish the rich from the poor.
So how do we play our part in this social transformation? How do we build the Kingdom of Heaven? Well, first of all, let’s remember that it is God’s work not ours, so our first contribution is to do what God wants from us, nothing more and nothing less. And very often this will be very simple things; listening to the person next to us, sharing some gift, being ready to lose our own aspirations for the sake of the others. We can treat our daily lives as a training ground in which we can grow in patience and generosity and in trust in God. Certainly there will be problems and failures but if we keep on training we build up treasure in heaven. Sooner or later this has to flow over from heaven to earth and transform everything. Let’s be like Mary, blessed because we believe that what the Lord has promised will come to pass. And let’s play all our part so that it comes to pass sooner rather than later! Amen.
13 December 2009
This is the record of John
Sermon preached at Choral Evensong at St Alphege, Solihull on Sunday 13th December – Advent 3
Readings: Isaiah 35: 1-10 Matthew 11: 2-11
Choir Anthem: This is the Record of John by Orlando Gibbons
Before I arrived at St Alphege Church, three and half years ago, I had had very little exposure to serious church music. Well, over the last three and half years, I have had quite a lot of exposure and I am very grateful for it, and I have enjoyed it far more than I expected. And now that I have been here some time I have started to notice how certain pieces of music come round and different times of the year the Churches calendar and I start to look out for them and to enjoy them all the more.
Our anthem today is just one such example. This is the record of John by Orlando Gibbons. I find it a particularly distinctive anthem because of the very demanding countertenor solo, and we are very fortunate to be able to sing it. The composer is Orlando Gibbons, who lived from 1583-1625 and was one of the outstanding Anglican musicians of his period. Apparently his is particular known as a master of counterpoint, which is where more than one tune is being sung simultaneously by different parts. Nigel was explaining to me earlier that This is the record of John is written for five parts. There are places they are all singing different tunes, and then there are sudden contrasts when all the voices come together, as though to emphasise certain lines.
This is the record of John is a perfect anthem for the third Sunday in Advent when we think particularly about the John the Baptist and the preparations her urged for the coming of Jesus. Gibbon chose English over Latin and the words come from King James’ Authorised Version of the bible, John chapter 1, verses 19-23. These words come up in the gospel reading for Advent 3 in year B of the Revised Common Lectionary. John explains to the priests and Levites that he is not the Christ, nor even a prophet. When John is pressed to explain who he is he says, “I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord.” Here John the Baptist is quoting from the book of Isaiah, chapter 40. In Advent we always read a great deal from the prophet Isaiah. At present the OT readings set for Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer are both ploughing their way through different sections of the prophet Isaiah. At Morning Prayer in Advent we say a canticle every day based on the words that we have already heard in this service from Isaiah 35.
The reason that we read so much Isaiah in Advent is that the book of Isaiah, especially that part of it which the scholars attribute to second Isaiah, is full of promises about the coming Messiah; God’s anointed one. Second Isaiah was writing in the sixth century BC when the Jews were in exile in Babylon. They were in a very bad way, utterly oppressed, unable to help themselves and a long way from their home in Jerusalem and the Promised Land. Into this experience of desolation God speaks a message of hope. God pours out this message through the prophet Second Isaiah, but he also pours it out through other prophets like Ezekiel and Daniel. Even the prophet Jeremiah, who is all doom and gloom in the build up to the exile, starts to preach a message of consolation and hope once the worst has occurred.
When we read these prophets from the exile period, and their great message of hope, it always a little bit difficult to pin down exactly what the hope is. There is lots of promises about joy and celebration. There is a great deal about the restoration of the Jews in Jerusalem. There are lots of promises about the strengthening of the weak, the healing of the deaf the blind and the lame, the uplifting of the oppressed. The Isaiah 35 that we read today also talks of environmental miracles; the wilderness blossoming with flowers, dry deserts being filled with water so that they can grow with beautiful trees and gardens that we might normally associate with Lebanon or Carmel. Although the hopes are not always clear, it is clear that many of them revolve around this Messiah, the anointed one of God.
It is also very difficult, reading these prophets’ messages of hope during the exile, to pin down exactly when these hopes and blessings might be realised, when they might come about. Some of hopes were spectacularly realised in 539 BC when Cyrus, the king of the Medes and Persians mounted a surprise attack on Babylon. He conquered the Babylonians and promptly announces that he wants the Jews to go back to Jerusalem. This was undoubtedly an extraordinary moment, but other promises remained unfilled and the Messiah figure was still awaited.
Then, eventually, John the Baptist bursts onto the scene, preparing the way of the Lord. His ministry is a great success, with many people coming for baptism and great expectations about the Messiah. When Jesus comes to him for baptism and John recognises him as the Lamb of God, the Son of God, the one on whom the spirit of God descended (John 1: 29-36) and from this point Jesus’ ministry grows, and John’s starts to shrink. Eventually John is put in prison, and it would seem that while in prison he starts to have doubts about whether Jesus really was the Messiah. In the reading we heard today John sends his disciples to Jesus to check if he is the Messiah. Jesus doesn’t give a simple “Yes” answer, but he does point to the evidence. The after John’s disciples are gone, we hear Jesus’ testimony about who John is. Jesus describes him as the greatest of all born of women. Meanwhile John is languishing in jail, full of doubts, and is eventually beheaded. The price of being a top-dog in the kingdom of heaven is very high.
As we leave here, let’s take with us those words of John’s which we heard in the Anthem, “Make straight the way of the Lord”. Jesus is coming. We need to get ready. We need to make straight his way, so that we can enter into our hearts. Are there crooked aspects of our lives that we need to straighten out? Are their relationships where healing and reconciliation is needed? Are there hurts or disappointments that we need deliverance from, which we need to move beyond? Advent is the time for this. Advent is the time to humbly lay these things before God, to offer the pain to God, to seek his healing. We can do this in prayer. Often it becomes more real if we talk about it with someone we trust. We can do this before a priest in confession; I’m going to confession next week. Above all we need to do it before God so that we can be filled with the promise Advent and of all God’s good gifts to us in the coming of Jesus.
Readings: Isaiah 35: 1-10 Matthew 11: 2-11
Choir Anthem: This is the Record of John by Orlando Gibbons
Before I arrived at St Alphege Church, three and half years ago, I had had very little exposure to serious church music. Well, over the last three and half years, I have had quite a lot of exposure and I am very grateful for it, and I have enjoyed it far more than I expected. And now that I have been here some time I have started to notice how certain pieces of music come round and different times of the year the Churches calendar and I start to look out for them and to enjoy them all the more.
Our anthem today is just one such example. This is the record of John by Orlando Gibbons. I find it a particularly distinctive anthem because of the very demanding countertenor solo, and we are very fortunate to be able to sing it. The composer is Orlando Gibbons, who lived from 1583-1625 and was one of the outstanding Anglican musicians of his period. Apparently his is particular known as a master of counterpoint, which is where more than one tune is being sung simultaneously by different parts. Nigel was explaining to me earlier that This is the record of John is written for five parts. There are places they are all singing different tunes, and then there are sudden contrasts when all the voices come together, as though to emphasise certain lines.
This is the record of John is a perfect anthem for the third Sunday in Advent when we think particularly about the John the Baptist and the preparations her urged for the coming of Jesus. Gibbon chose English over Latin and the words come from King James’ Authorised Version of the bible, John chapter 1, verses 19-23. These words come up in the gospel reading for Advent 3 in year B of the Revised Common Lectionary. John explains to the priests and Levites that he is not the Christ, nor even a prophet. When John is pressed to explain who he is he says, “I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord.” Here John the Baptist is quoting from the book of Isaiah, chapter 40. In Advent we always read a great deal from the prophet Isaiah. At present the OT readings set for Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer are both ploughing their way through different sections of the prophet Isaiah. At Morning Prayer in Advent we say a canticle every day based on the words that we have already heard in this service from Isaiah 35.
The reason that we read so much Isaiah in Advent is that the book of Isaiah, especially that part of it which the scholars attribute to second Isaiah, is full of promises about the coming Messiah; God’s anointed one. Second Isaiah was writing in the sixth century BC when the Jews were in exile in Babylon. They were in a very bad way, utterly oppressed, unable to help themselves and a long way from their home in Jerusalem and the Promised Land. Into this experience of desolation God speaks a message of hope. God pours out this message through the prophet Second Isaiah, but he also pours it out through other prophets like Ezekiel and Daniel. Even the prophet Jeremiah, who is all doom and gloom in the build up to the exile, starts to preach a message of consolation and hope once the worst has occurred.
When we read these prophets from the exile period, and their great message of hope, it always a little bit difficult to pin down exactly what the hope is. There is lots of promises about joy and celebration. There is a great deal about the restoration of the Jews in Jerusalem. There are lots of promises about the strengthening of the weak, the healing of the deaf the blind and the lame, the uplifting of the oppressed. The Isaiah 35 that we read today also talks of environmental miracles; the wilderness blossoming with flowers, dry deserts being filled with water so that they can grow with beautiful trees and gardens that we might normally associate with Lebanon or Carmel. Although the hopes are not always clear, it is clear that many of them revolve around this Messiah, the anointed one of God.
It is also very difficult, reading these prophets’ messages of hope during the exile, to pin down exactly when these hopes and blessings might be realised, when they might come about. Some of hopes were spectacularly realised in 539 BC when Cyrus, the king of the Medes and Persians mounted a surprise attack on Babylon. He conquered the Babylonians and promptly announces that he wants the Jews to go back to Jerusalem. This was undoubtedly an extraordinary moment, but other promises remained unfilled and the Messiah figure was still awaited.
Then, eventually, John the Baptist bursts onto the scene, preparing the way of the Lord. His ministry is a great success, with many people coming for baptism and great expectations about the Messiah. When Jesus comes to him for baptism and John recognises him as the Lamb of God, the Son of God, the one on whom the spirit of God descended (John 1: 29-36) and from this point Jesus’ ministry grows, and John’s starts to shrink. Eventually John is put in prison, and it would seem that while in prison he starts to have doubts about whether Jesus really was the Messiah. In the reading we heard today John sends his disciples to Jesus to check if he is the Messiah. Jesus doesn’t give a simple “Yes” answer, but he does point to the evidence. The after John’s disciples are gone, we hear Jesus’ testimony about who John is. Jesus describes him as the greatest of all born of women. Meanwhile John is languishing in jail, full of doubts, and is eventually beheaded. The price of being a top-dog in the kingdom of heaven is very high.
As we leave here, let’s take with us those words of John’s which we heard in the Anthem, “Make straight the way of the Lord”. Jesus is coming. We need to get ready. We need to make straight his way, so that we can enter into our hearts. Are there crooked aspects of our lives that we need to straighten out? Are their relationships where healing and reconciliation is needed? Are there hurts or disappointments that we need deliverance from, which we need to move beyond? Advent is the time for this. Advent is the time to humbly lay these things before God, to offer the pain to God, to seek his healing. We can do this in prayer. Often it becomes more real if we talk about it with someone we trust. We can do this before a priest in confession; I’m going to confession next week. Above all we need to do it before God so that we can be filled with the promise Advent and of all God’s good gifts to us in the coming of Jesus.
Labels:
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