Category: Sermons

  • Jesus the Jewish religious progressive

    Baptism of the Lord
    Christ Church Cathedral
    7 January 2018
    [Video of the sermon from 8.00 am service]

     

    May the Spirit of God that moved across the waters of creation,
    may the Spirit of God that fell upon the disciples of John,
    and may the Spirit of God that was poured out on Jesus at his baptism,
    descend upon us this day. Amen.

    Well, here we are at the beginning of a transition.

    Yesterday was the Feast of the Epiphany, so—for those of us in the Western Church—Christmas has ended. Of course, for Christians in the Middle East—as well as Australians in the Coptic and Orthodox faith communities—today is Christmas.

    As our Christmas wraps up we pray for our friends whose Christmas is just commencing.

    For us a new season begins, the Sundays between Epiphany and the beginning of Lent. This Epiphany season is a liminal space, a time of transition, a period for reflection.

    “Epiphany” is an ancient Greek term that means manifestation or revelation.

    We have been celebrating Emmanuel, the God who is to be found among us, and now we are invited to reflect on on the Epiphany moments in our own lives: those times when we catch a glimpse of the Sacred One who is always present but often unnoticed.

    On the first of these Sundays in the Epiphany season we celebrate the baptism of Jesus, an Epiphany moment for him, for John, and for his earliest followers. It is a major festival in the life of the church and a wonderful day for Baptisms, but for us it always falls in the middle of our summer holidays.

    It was certainly a significant moment for Jesus.

    A couple of Sundays ago I alluded to the special relationship between Jesus and John the Baptist, when our Advent readings featured the prophetic ministry of John.

    The baptism of Jesus by John is rock solid historical tradition. Along with the crucifixion, this is one of those episodes from the life of Jesus that none of his followers would ever have invented. Scholars refer to this as the ‘criterion of embarrassment’.

    The idea that Jesus—our great spiritual master and the human face of God—began as a disciple of someone else, was an ‘inconvenient truth’ for the Gospel writers. When we compare the four Gospel accounts of this episode we can see their embarrassment at this awkward truth.

    The core historical reality is clear. Not only was Jesus baptised by John, but Jesus seems to have been a disciple of John, one of his many followers. At least for a time.

    We cannot be certain of the exact location, although we know it was at the southern end of the Jordan River, just north of the Dead Sea.

    We do not know exactly what form the ritual actions took, but it most likely involved a complete immersion in the river to symbolise ‘scrubbing up’ in preparation for God’s next big thing.

    And we are unable to determine the exact words that passed between Jesus and John, as each Gospel writer tells the story a bit differently.

    Such matters are what I describe as ‘micro history’ and they need not concern us now. I happen to find them fascinating but they are not appropriate for a sermon. Some other time, perhaps. In a Bible class discussion.

    What can can focus upon in a sermon is the ‘macro history’ of this tradition, both then and now.

    As we reflect in the big picture of Jesus being baptised by John, we can choose to see the forest rather than being distracted by all the trees. When we do that there are insights to be gleaned about Jesus ‘back then’ and also about ourselves ‘here and now’.

    When we look at the baptism of Jesus in this way there are several things that attract our attention.

     

    Jesus and Second Temple Judaism

    The first and most obvious point, although it is too easily overlooked by Christians, is that Jesus was deeply embedded in the religious beliefs and practices of Judaism in the Second Temple period. He was a Jew, not a Christian. His core beliefs and all his actions were shaped by the ancient tradition of Judaism, and there was nothing that he did or said which was inconsistent with the best of that spiritual tradition.

    We do a disservice both to Jesus and to Judaism, when we suggest that Jesus was somehow alienated from the spiritual tradition that nurtured and shaped his own prophetic instincts. In time, and most unfortunately, the new tradition centred around the person and teachings of Jesus would part ways with his own faith tradition, but that is no reason to project our history of alienation, competition and suspicion back onto Jesus himself.

    In our own time and place, we do well to be as deeply embedded in our own spiritual tradition as Jesus was in his tradition. One of the tragedies of our time is that most people have lost confidence in the Great Tradition, and thus have lost their own connection to the accumulated spiritual wisdom that we need to draw from in order to live lives that are authentic.

    We live in a society that might be described as ‘SBNR’—spiritual but not religious.

    That is a distinction unknown to Jesus, and the sooner we overcome this false dichotomy the better for everyone. We need people who are both religious and spiritual, and Jesus was just such a person.

     

    Jesus and progressive religion

    While Jesus took his own religious heritage very seriously, he was no traditionalist.

    In fact, I want to claim Jesus as a religious progressive.

    He was drawn into the radical reform movement of John the Baptist—‘John the Scrubber’—who stood firmly within the prophetic tradition of Judaism, but also called for root and branch reform of the religious institutions of his day.

    John’s radical stance is seen most clearly in the ritual washing that gave him his nickname, the Baptizer, the Scrubber. Baptism was not unknown in Second Temple Judaism, although it had not existed in earlier stages of the Jewish religion. However, it was not something Jews did. Rather, it was a rite for the conversion of Gentiles to Judaism.

    In demanding that his Jewish audience undergo this water ritual, John was dismissing their existing religious identity. They were no better and no worse than the goyim who needed to be baptised (“scrubbed up”) in order to particulate in the blessings of the covenant.

    We can imagine John shouting, “I don’t care if your grandmother was Jewish! Your religious pedigree means nothing to me. Everyone has to be scrubbed up to get ready for God’s next big thing.”

    That is the radical reform movement within Second Temple Judaism with which Jesus aligned himself.

    We may like to imagine that Jesus would attend the Cathedral if he lived in Grafton today, but I suspect he would cause us some headaches if he did.

    Were Jesus on our parish roll he would be constantly challenging and questioning what we are doing, and how we are doing it. Why are you doing that? Why are we not doing this? Why are we doing it this way?

    Jesus, of course, is not on our Parish roll. But those are precisely the uncomfortable questions that Jesus is asking us all the time.

    Reconnect with the heart of the tradition, he would demand. He does demand. Now.

    He was—and is—a true radical, a genuine progressive.

     

    Jesus had the heart of a disciple

    Another of the things we see in the baptism tradition is that Jesus was willing to learn from others.

    He did not walk around thinking to himself, “I am the Son of God. I do not need anyone to tell me what to think or how to act.”

    On the contrary, as best we can tell, Jesus joined a wider movement of reform minded Jews who embraced John’s message and went back to first principles in their own spiritual tradition. Most likely he spent some time with John, and did not simply turn up anonymously among the crowd of candidates waiting for baptism in the Jordan River. In the Gospel of John we find hints of a deep and longer connection between these two people

    Jesus submitted himself to the spiritual authority of John. John was his master. Jesus was the disciple. Only after John is arrested does Jesus seem to begin his own prophetic ministry, and we find those fascinating accounts of John sending other disciples to Jesus to ask whether Jesus was the one for whom John had been looking.

    In the true style of spiritual masters, John and Jesus defer to each other.

    Jesus would later defer to the spiritual wisdom of a Lebanese mother who offered him a ‘master class’ in divine compassion.

    May we all have the capacity to see the wisdom that others have to share with us, regardless of their status, their ethnicity or their gender.

     

    Jesus loved the liturgy

    Jesus is sometimes portrayed as a critic of the Temple and an opponent of the Pharisees. This is misplaced.

    He was surely a fierce critic of the Temple elite who exploited their privileges for their own benefit. He was certainly a tough opponent of religious teachers who imposed on their students burdens they were not prepared to carry themselves.

    As a Second Temple Jew, Jesus was familiar with the biblical tradition but in the baptism episode we see Jesus going beyond the text of the Bible to engage in religious ritual.

    For Jesus as for John, it was not sufficient to read the Bible and make an interior commitment to faith, repentance, justice, and faithfulness.

    Such commitments needed to be acted out in ritual. We embodied personas, and our religion is better when expressed in tangible actions and ritual moments.

    Like Jesus, we are called to go beyond reading and reciting the sacred scriptures—which, as it happens, are replete with ritual actions involving individuals, families, and whole societies.

    More than that, we need to teach people how to celebrate their life journey with appropriate rituals, and to develop a robust religious literacy that includes both the capacity to work with the canonical texts and also to draw on the rich storehouse of the faith to shape rituals old and new that speak sacred truth in this secular age.

     

    Jesus’ own religious experience

    My final observations takes us onto holy ground indeed. We may want to take off our shoes—another ancient ritual that we still see observed before people enter a mosque—as we tread this space.

    The biblical accounts of the Jesus’ baptism by John in the Jordan River hint at a profound spiritual experience for Jesus at that time.

    He is participating in a personal, profound and prospective ritual moment. The whole drama is presided over by his mentor and teacher. Jesus is stepping into his vocation, even if he is not fully aware of what is happening.

    The crowds are oblivious, as they mostly are when something of deep significance is happening in our own lives.

    These moments matter to us. They transform us. But they may pass unnoticed by those around us at the time. Even those who are closest to us.

    Jesus gains new and deeper insight into his identity and his worth, as well as God’s call on his life.

    You are my child,
    the chosen one,
    the beloved.
    I am well-pleased with you.

    It would take Jesus the rest of his life to discern what that meant for him.

    Likewise, our great work is to discern what it means in our life when we hear the bat-qol, the heavenly voice, naming us as a beloved child of the universe and expressing her delight in us: just as we are, right now.

    In our brokenness and confusion we make God’s heart skip for joy. Just as we are.

    Can we believe that?

    Can we wrap our hearts around that possibility?

    It is surely the deepest and most profound religious experience to discover that we are loved—unconditionally—by Life in all its depth and in all its fullness. That, surely, is good news as well as a transformative religious moment.

     

    At the start of this sermon I said some truly dangerous words:

    May the Spirit of God that moved across the waters of creation,
    may the Spirit of God that fell upon the disciples of John,
    and may the Spirit of God that was poured out on Jesus at his baptism,
    descend upon us this day. Amen.

    You probably thought I was just staying some religious words at the start of the sermon, and they could be safely ignored as you settled back into your seats.

    But these are dangerous words.

    What if my prayer was answered?

    What if the Spirit that hovered over the watery chaos of creation was poured out on us?

    What if the Spirit that overwhelmed John’s disciples fell upon us?

    What if the Spirit that enveloped Jesus was also to envelope us?

    What would it means for us, for our Cathedral and for our city, if we heard those ancient words addressed to us?

    You are my child; my daughter, my son.
    I am delighted in you,
    Be all that you are,
    become all that you can be.
    Grow into the promise,
    grow into my dream for you.

     

  • Peace to those who are far off

    Midnight Mass
    Christ Church Cathedral
    24 December 2017

    [video]

     

    In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, asking, “Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage.” [Matthew 2:1–2]

    In churches around the world, and in many of our homes, the three wise men are kept off stage tonight. They may be down by the church door, or on the far side of the lounge room. But they will rarely be found adoring the Christ Child before January 6, the Feast of the Epiphany.

    The reasons for this are complex and misplaced. We shall not bother with them tonight.

    Suffice to say that the Western Church has tended to focus on the angels and shepherds on December 25, and to delay the wise men until the twelfth day of Christmas, January 6.

    Guess what? There will be very few people in church on January 6, so most of the time most of the people miss out on the message of the wise men.

    Tonight, I want to bring these oriental visitors in from the cold.

    I want to make room for them in the presence of the Christ Child. Indeed, I want to base my reflections in this sermon around the wise men.

    To do this we need to gently deconstruct the version of the Christmas story that we each carry in our mind.

    As we welcome the wise men into the Christmas scene, we suddenly notice there are no shepherds by the manger when the wise men arrive. Indeed, there is no manger. And no inn with limited rooms available.

    The annunciation, the census, the long trip from Nazareth, the shepherds, the angels, the inn with no space, and the manger—all belong to Luke’s story of Christmas. They have no part in Matthew’s story of the Saviour’s birth.

    We blend these two stories together, and that is fine. Then we add other elements found in neither Matthew nor Luke. The story grows richer and more elaborate.

    The Christmas story that we all know and love is not found in the Bible, but that does not make it any less precious to us.

    But for tonight, since I have chosen to make room for the wise men, we find ourselves paying attention to Matthew’s story of Jesus’ birth. In doing so I hope to enrich your appreciation of the Christmas story, by paying attention to one of its overlooked themes.

    There is one other important difference between Luke and Matthew, which we miss when we blend their two stories into a single narrative.

    Luke is very upbeat.

    Everything is great. All is going well. Even the Roman Empire is unwittingly collaborating with the divine purposes, as it orders a census that causes Joseph and Mary to visit Bethlehem just in time for Jesus to be born there.

    Matthew is more sombre.

    There is a shadow hanging over the Holy Family, as Herod seeks to destroy the Christ Child. They will flee to Egypt as refugees, in Matthew’s account. No triumphant visits to the Temple in Jerusalem for this story teller. The family will only return to Palestine after Herod has died, and even then they go north to Nazareth rather than returning to their home in Bethlehem. The only time that Jesus visits Jerusalem in Matthew’s Gospel he is killed. A dark shadow indeed.

    Who is this Matthew whose account of the birth of Jesus suddenly seems so unfamiliar to us?

    The short answer is that we do not know.

    We can tell what kind of person he was by reading between the lines of his gospel, but the identity of this person remains unknown.

    What we can discern about this person is that he was a Jewish follower of Jesus, most likely living in the NW corner of ancient Syria, close to the important trading city of Antioch.

    Antioch was a melting pot. Christians and Jews had a long history of mixing and interacting in this city. According to the Acts of the Apostles, most likely written by Luke as the second volume for his history of early Christianity, Antioch was the place where the name ‘Christian’ was first coined. It was also the base from which Paul set out on his missionary journeys that brought Christianity to Europe.

    Antioch was not only a place where Jews and Christians mingled. It was also a place where East met West. Already by the end of the first century, when this gospel is taking shape, Christianity has begun to spread East and beyond the confines of the Roman Empire.

    Enter the wise men!

    The Gospel according to Matthew is the most Jewish of all the gospels in the New Testament. For Matthew, Jesus is the great lawgiver, a new and bigger version of Moses.

    Yet Matthew is also adamant that the message of Jesus is for all people, and not just for the Jews.

    He concludes his story with an episode that has no parallel in any other gospel. Jesus appears to the small group of disciples (‘the Eleven’) on a mountain in Galilee, far away from Jerusalem. He commissions them to go on a universal mission to share his message with all nations:

    Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age. [Matthew 28:19–20]

    That is how the gospel ends for Matthew.

    How does it begin?

    With foreigners from the East, wise men from another spiritual tradition, travelling from far away to adore the Christ Child.

    These magi were advanced practitioners of pagan religion. They were not proselytes, converts to Judaism. They were privileged members of pagan religions, and as such they were completely outside the scope of the Jewish faith as well as the yet to be born Christian faith.

    As a Jew, Matthew should have condemned these pagan astrologers.

    Instead, as a Christian he welcomes their part in his story of the birth of Jesus because they represent where the future of the faith belongs.

    Not with the insiders, but with the outsiders.

    The miracle of Christmas is that we cease drawing circles to exclude those who are different.

    The miracle of Christmas is that we open our hearts to welcome the stranger and the pilgrim.

    The miracle of Christmas is that we do not waste time checking if others have the same beliefs as us.

    The miracle of Christmas is that we proclaim, PEACE.

    Peace to those who are far off, and peace to those who are near.

  • Hark! A herald’s voice is calling

    Advent 3 (B)
    17 December 2017
    Christ Church Cathedral

     

    [video]

    It had been my intention to speak about John the Baptist today.

    For two weeks in a row now, the lectionary has offered us early Christian traditions about the Jewish prophet, John. Last week we heard how Mark describes this John in the opening scenes of his Gospel. Today we hear from a very different perspective within earliest Christianity, the Johannine community.

    Mark and John offer very different portraits of Jesus. Yet they both found it necessary to say something about John as they started to share their story of Jesus.

    John has fascinated people from antiquity through until today.

    He acquired his nickname, ‘the Baptizer’, because of his demand that his followers undergo a water ritual to express their personal response to his prophetic message.

    The most famous of his followers was Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus seems to have been baptised by John in the year 28 of the Common Era.

    That simple fact is one of the most certain things we know about Jesus. None of his followers would ever invent such a story. Indeed, it was something of an embarrassment to them that Jesus had once been a disciple of John, and had been baptised by John.

    That simple fact invites us to explore the relationship between these two Jewish prophets from 2,000 years ago.

    Some of that was what I intended to speak about today. But that can wait until January 7, when we celebrate the Festival of the Baptism of the Lord Jesus.

    In the past few days we have seen the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse complete its careful work extending over the past five years, and present its final report to the Governor-General.

    Given the significance of that report for the community and for the churches, it would be remiss of me to say nothing of its work and to talk about some ‘safe’ Advent topic instead.

    For too long the church has averted its gaze from the horrors of child sexual abuse, as well as the abuse of other vulnerable people.

    We can do that no longer, and in part that is thanks to the impressive work of the Royal Commission.

    There is—I suggest—an unexpected link between John the Baptist and the Royal Commission.

    John was an outsider.

    He opposed the abuse of power and the eager grasping of privileges by the Temple clergy in Jerusalem.

    He may have come from one of those families himself. At least that is what Luke would like us to think. But he broke ranks with the religious institution that operated for its own benefit, and he directed to them a prophetic message about judgment, repentance, and renewal.

    Our opening hymn this morning began with the line: “Hark! A herald voice is calling.”

    Indeed, a herald voice is calling.

    It is the voice of the Royal Commission.

    It is a prophetic voice that names and exposes the sins of our churches, along with other institutions in our national life.

    It is a prophetic voice that speaks words of comfort to the victims. That honours the victims. That treats them with a level of care and respect that our church has failed to do.

    It is a prophetic voice that speaks of restitution, vindication and compensation.

    It is a prophetic voice that calls on churches to change their ways. No more averting our gaze. No more shifting of sexual predators from one parish to another. No more silencing of the victims. No more failure of compassion among the disciples of Jesus.

    It is a prophetic voice that maps out a pathway for restoration and recovery.

    It is a prophetic voice that promises renewal if we are prepared to make these changes.

    So far as I am aware, no cases of sexual abuse of children have happened in this parish. But they have happened in our Diocese and in our national Church.

    For all the evil that has been done—and for all the good that has been left undone—we repent. We apologise. We resolve to make amends.

    Already the contributions by the Cathedral Parish to the Diocesan compensation fund have cost us dearly. Resources that could have funded our ministry have been applied to the more urgent ministry of healing and reconciliation. This is a small price to pay compared to the costs borne by the victims all these years.

    I pray these contributions help the victims to heal, and steel the resolve of our Church to make sure this never happens again.

    As a faith community in Grafton we now need to rebuild our relationship with the city.

    This will take time.

    It will require openness to change on our part.

    And it will require a willingness by the community to trust us again.

    Most of all it will require a change of heart on our part.

    Being a ‘safe church’ is not a compliance issue, it is the very heart of the Gospel. It is in our DNA as a community of Jesus’ followers.

    Jesus gathered broken people into a community. He created a safe place for the broken and wounded to find acceptance, healing and purpose.

    Jesus calls us to that mission.

    John the Baptist challenges us to focus on others and not on ourselves.

    The Royal Commission calls us to account and invites us into a journey of reconciliation and healing.

    Hark! A herald’s voice is calling.

    Let’s not miss what the Spirit is saying to the Church at this time.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Anointed with the spirit of the LORD

    Reflections on the first reading for the Third Sunday of Advent …

    Today’s lectionary offers us a rich set of classic texts for Advent.

    As the sermon will focus on John the Baptizer, this brief note will explore the first reading from Isaiah 61.

    This one of several passages in the central part of the great Isaiah Scroll, that scholars refer to as the Servant Songs. No one is entirely sure how the figure of “the Servant” was understood at the time that the texts were being created, but we know it came to play a significant role in the spiritual imagination of the Jewish people around the time of Jesus.

    Isaiah is one of the three OT books most often cited in the New Testament. (The other two are Deuteronomy and the Psalms.) A similar pattern is found among the Dead Sea Scrolls, where the ancient library of this controversial Jewish sect also has more copies of these three books than any other books from the Hebrew Bible. Indeed, a copy of the Isaiah Scroll was among the first Dead Sea Scrolls discoveries in 1947.

    Who is the Servant of the LORD? Is it a person? Is it the nation as a whole? Is it Jerusalem? From a Christian perspective, we recognise that Jesus of Nazareth is the quintessential Servant of the LORD. But what about us? Are we not also called to be the ‘Servant of the LORD’?

    In today’s passage the Servant is someone on whom the Spirit of God has been poured out. As a result of that anointing with the divine Spirit, the Servant will bring good news to the oppressed, bind up the broken hearted, proclaim liberty to the captives, release to the prisoners, and proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour. In Luke’s account of Jesus’ sermon in Nazareth (Luke 4), he imagined Jesus claiming these same words to describe his own ministry.

    Notice the down to earth consequences of the Servant’s ministry as the Anointed One, the Christ. The mission of the Servant is not to increase attendance at religious ceremonies or raise the level of offerings. Real people will find their own lives turned around. Adverse personal circumstances will be reversed. Destroyed and abandoned towns will be rebuilt. A new beginning for all the people of God, and not simply an increase in religious activity by the faithful.

    May the Spirit of the LORD be poured out upon us all, and may we each claim our vocation as the Servant of the LORD.

  • Christ the King

    Christ the King

    Feast of Christ the King
    Christ Church Cathedral
    26 November 2017

    [video]

    Today is our day: the feast of Christ the King.

    While most people know us as Christ Church Cathedral we are actually the Cathedral Church of Christ the King. So today is our festival day.

    This festival occurs on the final Sunday of the church year.

    Next Sunday we begin Advent and a new church year, but today we wrap up a year that has passed:

    • a year of learning
    • a year of ministry
    • a year of transitions
    • a year of new beginnings

    During this week we might take some time to think back to this time last year:

    • what has happened in your life since then?
    • what has changed?
    • what has remained constant?
    • what has been reaffirmed and strengthened?
    • what do we regret?

     

    A community dedicated to Christ the king

    Looking back can be instructive, but I invite us to look forward at this time. What does it mean for us to be a cathedral community dedicated to Christ as our ‘king’?

    The term ‘king’ can be problematic here as it reflects a world of empire and certainty.

    We have neither. The empire has fallen. We live in a time of transition, and uncertainty is the air we breathe.

    But that exaggerated title still speaks to our core values:

    • we are community for whom Jesus is central
    • it is no longer a claim to privilege
    • it is no longer a claim to certainty
    • but it is certainly our cardinal orientation

    We are a community where Jesus matters:

    • what he believed, we believe
    • how he acted, is our model for action
    • how he treated people, is our guide for life

    So let’s unpack this a little further.

     

    The Wisdom of Jesus

    At the heart of our faith is the spiritual wisdom of Jesus of Nazareth.

    Unlike many spiritual teachers, Jesus had a just a very brief moment in which to live the wisdom that his heart embraced. He did not have 20 or 40 years to unpack his ideas. Rather, his public ministry lasted maybe just 18 months. But what an impact he made in that brief time!

    We find the spiritual wisdom of Jesus especially in his parables and aphorisms. He was an oral poet, and with just a few well-crafted words he invited people to see the world differently.

    More than that, Jesus challenged people to live as if what they had glimpsed was already true. At the heart of his wisdom was a fresh vision of the Kingdom of God, the Empire of God, the Commonwealth of God:

    • not the Empire of Rome
    • not the tribal supremacy of his own Jewish people
    • certainly not Christendom
    • or the empire of the church

    Rather, Jesus proclaimed the reign of God: not at the end of time, but right here and right now.

    If we are the Cathedral Church of Christ the King, then the crazy dream of the reign of God has to be at the very centre of who we are, what we do, and how we do it. We will see the world differently, and act accordingly.

     

    The Practice of Jesus

    The words of Jesus are validated by his actions, and that surely is a message to us as well.

    What we believe must be demonstrated by our actions. We must walk the talk, we must practise what we preach.

    In Jesus’ context that meant creating a community in which the outcast found a place for themselves.

    Jesus lived and died for people on the margins. He was not interested in the powerful, the privileged, or the comfortable.

    Ordinary people, little people, were at the heart of Jesus’ ministry; and that needs to be true of us as well. If we forget that, we have lost touch with Jesus.

    The bottom line here—as surely we must have learned from Royal Commission—is that our best ideas do not have as much impact as worst actions. We must ensure that our actions align with our core beliefs. As a Cathedral, we need to act as a colony of God’s kingdom, rather than as a bastion of privilege—and never simply serve our own interests.

     

    The Integrity of Jesus

    Jesus validated his spiritual wisdom by the circumstances of his death.

    The cross of Jesus looms large in Christian thought, but is mostly misunderstood.

    In the ancient world, the key to a life lived well was how a person died.

    That is a piece of wisdom our culture finds hard to embrace, although it is one that we encounter as our own journey brings us close to death. To die well is to be someone who has lived well.

    Jesus could have evaded death, but he chose not to do so. He could have left Jerusalem, but he chose to stay.

    We shall never fully understand his motives, but we can see the choices he embraced.

    Jesus’ death on the cross, was the validation of his life and his own personal understanding of the reign of God. This is why a common way to depict Christ the King is to portray Jesus on the cross wearing a crown and royal robes.

    In the horror of his death we see the integrity of the one who both understood and embraced the reign of God. The cross becomes his throne, as the Gospel of John seems to understand. The crucified one, the excluded one, becomes the one who reigns because of the ultimate power of God’s love to defeat fear and death.

     

    And now it is our turn!

    As a faith community, we have inherited a fantastic title into which we choose to live: the Cathedral Church of Christ the King.

    Now the challenge is before us:

    • dare we embrace the vision of Jesus?
    • dare we waste our lives for the sake of others?
    • dare we risk failure and death for the sake of our vision of God’s new world?

     

    Yes, we do.
    Yes, we will.
    Yes, nothing else deserves our best!

  • The Mind of Christ: Peace and Joy

    Christ Church Cathedral
    Pentecost 19(A)
    15 October 2017

     

    The Mind of Christ, 4: Peace and Joy

    Background | Chapter One | Chapter TwoChapter Three |  Video

    Here we are—already—at week four of our four week mini-series on Paul’s letters to the Philippians.

    A lot has happened in all of our lives during those four weeks, so let’s catch our breath for a moment and think of those key moments in our own lives, those critical points where God seemed more real (or perhaps more distant) than at other times.

    How has it been with you and God this past month?

    In a sense, that is what Paul was asking his friends in Philippi: How has it been with you all and the Lord lately? Are you happy? Do you have a sense of peace? Are you energised for ministry, or struggling to battle through?

    As you will recall (I hope), in chapter one Paul celebrates the compassion that they felt for him, and that he in turn felt for them. He described a visceral stomach-churning kind of compassion, that is deeper than a big idea and warmer than a nice feeling.

    Mother love comes to mind.

    Then he turned to the humility seen especially in the person of Jesus: a mindset that puts others first, and does not seek power or self-interest.

    Last week we saw that Paul was also celebrating the idea that Christian life is a gift, not something we achieve by hard work or persistent belief. The person whose faithfulness counts is Jesus himself. He is not just the object of our faith, but is himself the ultimate believer. Jesus trusted God. That is enough. Because of the faithfulness Jesus demonstrated, we simply have to open our hearts—even the tiniest wee bit—to God, and all is well.

    This week, in the final section of this ancient Christian letter from the first century, Paul unpacks what “all is well” might look like in everyday terms.

     

    Overview of Philippians 4

    Let’s engage in a very brief overview of this final chapter.

    1: Paul begins by underlining the affection they have for each other

    Therefore, my brothers and sisters, whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm in the Lord in this way, my beloved.

    2–3: He then appeals for his friends (including two named individuals in the community of faith) to get over their conflicts and to have a common mind, or a share in the mind of Jesus

    I urge Euodia and I urge Syntyche to be of the same mind in the Lord. Yes, and I ask you also, my loyal companion, help these women, for they have struggled beside me in the work of the gospel, together with Clement and the rest of my co-workers, whose names are in the book of life.

    4–7: Paul affirms that being upbeat (rejoicing, in his terms) is the key to personal peace, and you may have spotted in this text the biblical basis for the traditional blessing at the end of our Eucharist

    Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

    8–9: Paul encourages them to focus on the positives, and not to dwell on the negative aspects of everyday life

    Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. Keep on doing the things that you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, and the God of peace will be with you.

    10–14: Trouble is real and inevitable, but it will not deflect us because with the help of Christ (v 13) we can do anything

    I rejoice in the Lord greatly that now at last you have revived your concern for me; indeed, you were concerned for me, but had no opportunity to show it. Not that I am referring to being in need; for I have learned to be content with whatever I have. I know what it is to have little, and I know what it is to have plenty. In any and all circumstances I have learned the secret of being well-fed and of going hungry, of having plenty and of being in need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me. In any case, it was kind of you to share my distress.

    15–20: Paul recaps the experiences they have shared, including lots of tough times they faced together

    You Philippians indeed know that in the early days of the gospel, when I left Macedonia, no church shared with me in the matter of giving and receiving, except you alone. For even when I was in Thessalonica, you sent me help for my needs more than once. Not that I seek the gift, but I seek the profit that accumulates to your account. I have been paid in full and have more than enough; I am fully satisfied, now that I have received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent, a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God. And my God will fully satisfy every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus. To our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen.

    21–23: Paul wraps up his letter with some personal greetings

    Greet every saint in Christ Jesus. The friends who are with me greet you. All the saints greet you, especially those of the emperor’s household.

    The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.

     

    Glimpsing the inner experience

    In this letter we have been glimpsing the inner experience of Paul and the Philippians. We do not have a detailed picture. We would like to know more. But we catch a glimpse of what faith and life was like for them in their own time and place.

    As we look back, we are seeking wisdom for now and for the future.

    For them, as for us, life was not all smooth sailing.

    But for them as for us, compassion is at the heart of a life lived well.

    Paul urged them (and us) to be upbeat. We are not selling fire insurance! We are daring to believe that we can live the blessing if we simply say YES to God’s love. How hard is it to say, Yes to the love that beats at the very heart of the universe?

    As people of faith we choose to focus on what is going well.

    We could dwell on the dark stuff, but what would be to give Evil a power over us that it does not deserve. Make space for the good, because God in Christ has demonstrated an investment in our well-being that Evil has never once shown.

    We know in our heart of hearts with Christ on our side we can do anything.

    And that is the basis of the deep peace we have as people of faith:

    • The peace that comes from being who God wants us to be.
    • The peace that comes from being where God has placed us for now.
    • And the peace of being engaged in the work God wat s us to do.

    Not for our sake, but for God’s sake—and for the sake of our city and our world.