Tag: Grafton Cathedral

  • The four temptations of Jesus

    First Sunday of Lent
    Christ Church Cathedral, Grafton
    10 March 2019

    [ video ]

    The tradition of Jesus spending some time alone in the wilderness being “tested” (tempted) by Satan is found in three of the four Gospels, but is unknown to the Gospel of John.  It is a well-known tale that is deeply embedded in our souls.

    In the so-called “Q Gospel”—the material preserved only by Matthew and Luke—this meme is developed into a story with three episodes.

    Many stories in the western cultural canon have three episodes. It is how we like to tell stories, or even construct sermons.

    “Forty days” is itself a biblical meme that occurs repeatedly in the Scriptures. It indicates an extended period of time during which major developments may occur.

    For the anonymous Christian storyteller who shaped this story, this is the time when Jesus undergoes the challenges that any ancient hero was expected to survive in order to demonstrate their character and their skill.

    This story is not a memory of a historical moment, but a meditation on the deeper truth that Jesus constantly had to choose faithfulness to God’s call on his life, rather than be seduced by second-best; an acceptable action in itself but not what God required of him.

    That is a challenge we all face every day.

     

    Turn these stones into bread

    The first temptation …

    And what can be wrong about a hungry person turning a few desert stones into warm bread rolls?

    Nothing in itself, but context is everything.

    The reply Jesus makes to the Satan figure in this story points to a spiritual crisis from which we mostly avert our eyes: “One does not live by bread alone.”

    The “daily bread” for which Jesus teaches us to pray is not at stake here, but rather our insatiable appetite to acquire and consume.

    We want … morefasterbetterimpressiveconvenience

    And we want it now.

    But in our heart of hearts we know that we are not defined by the baubles for which we compete.

    We do not live by “bread” alone …

     

    Look at what could be yours

    The second temptation …

    Come with me to an imaginary mountain from which one can survey the entire world, stretching out in all its immense flatness before us. As far as the eye can see, and then some …

    Can you see that, Jesus?

    Let’s cut a deal.

    I can make you successful, and powerful. One of a kind. All you need to do is play by my rules.

    Power is seductive, but Jesus would never take that route.

    He chooses the path that leads to a cross in the garbage pit outside the walls of Jerusalem, rather than the highway that leads to power.

    We are not called to be powerful, or successful.

    It is enough to be faithful.

     

    At the temple’s edge

    Temptation three …

    Now things are getting a little weird.

    Let’s see what you are made of Jesus; and whether God really cares about you at all.

    Come over here to the very edge of the temple in Jerusalem and throw yourself from the highest point. You will be fine, eh? After all, you are special. God will look after you.

    Jesus would be offered that wrong choice another time: when hanging on the cross. The clergy from the temple say to one another: “Let’s wait and see if God will rescue him, since he claims to be God’s son.”

    None of us would ever fall for that one, right?

    We would never think that God exists to keep us safe from our own stupid choices or the hostile actions of other people?

    We would never treat the planet like it exists for our sake, rather than the other way around?

    We would never take advantage of other people for our own short term satisfaction?

    Selfishness may be the worst temptation of them all.

     

     

    Until next time …

    “When the devil had finished every test, he departed from him until an opportune time.” (Luke 4:13)

    Spiritual victories are never complete.

    There is always next time.

    Jesus was not given a green pass after his successful completion of the inaugural testing regime.

    There would be other opportunities to fail.

    Other moments of vulnerability.

    There always are.

    The authentic life is a commitment to persistent and recurring faithfulness, not an easy jog to the finish line after some early successes.

    We are in this for the long haul.

    So is the dark one.

    But so is God.

     

    The home town crowd

    They know us better than anyone else. Probably better than we know ourselves. If we are truly blessed, they love us despite knowing us so well.

    They are the home town crowd, or simply our family and friends.

    Fresh from his spiritual challenges in the wilderness, Jesus heads home to Nazareth and goes to the synagogue for worship on Shabbat.

    It does not go well.

    The home crowd is a tough gig.  Always has been.

    Jesus reflects somewhat ruefully on a dynamic known across the centuries:

    “Truly I tell you, no prophet is accepted in the prophet’s hometown.”

    That is one of the rare sayings of Jesus which is is found in all four Gospels.

    Another temptation perhaps?

    Living with criticism from those we love?

     

    We have two choices

    The modern Jewish philosopher and social critic, Noam Chomsky, has the last word this week:

    We have two choices. We can be pessimistic, give up, and help ensure that the worst will happen. Or we can be optimistic, grasp the opportunities that surely exist, and maybe help make the world a better place. Not much of a choice.

     

     

  • Mindful worshippers

    mindfulness

    Prayerful Practices

    A checklist for mindful worshippers

     

    A checklist for prayerful practices to help us become more mindful as we engage intentionally with the spirit-work God that calls us to undertake during these 40 days of Lent, and at all times.

     

    When entering the Cathedral

    We are crossing a threshold, a liminal boundary between ‘outside’ and ‘in here’. You may want to acknowledge your entry into this house of prayer by making the sign of the cross, or offering a prayer such as this one attributed to St Francis of Assisi: We adore you, Lord Jesus Christ, here and in all your churches in the whole world, and we bless you, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.

     

    Stillness

    Sit quietly in your place, breathe gently and allow the silence to envelope you in its wings. It is good to be here. It is good to be me.

     

    Light a candle

    Lighting a votive candle is a way of being conscious of a person or a particular matter we wish to hold in God’s love. The candle keeps burning as we walk away, just as our prayers continue to surround the person for who we are praying.

     

    Stations of the Cross

    The Cathedral has a set of modern stations that commemorate different moments in the traditional procession from the palace of Pontius Pilate to the execution grounds at Golgotha. Walk quietly from one to another and reflect on Jesus’ own faithfulness to God’s call on his life, as well as contemporary people who suffer abuse of judicial authority, who see their children tortured and killed, who struggle with doubt and fear.

     

    The Gospel in Glass

    Get to know the windows of this Cathedral and pray for the families who donated them. Delight in the skill of the artist and reflect on the biblical texts or characters depicted in the glass.

     

    Memorial Plaques

    Take time to wander from one memorial plaque to another. Who are they commemorating? What a precious legacy we have here. AMDG Ad maiorem Dei gloriam. Indeed. To the greater glory of God.

     

    Organ preludes and postludes

    The visual art of the building and its installations is matched by the musical art that streams out from the organ, as quiet preludes before the service begins or as triumphant celebrations as the liturgy ends.

     

    Sing, choirs of angels

    The Cathedral choir offers a variety of musical pieces during the liturgy, from the Introit to the Mass Setting of the day to the Psalm and the anthems during Holy Communion. Enjoy being carried by the angels as the Choir leads us in our worship.

     

    During Holy Communion

    While waiting during the time that other people are receiving the sacrament of Christ’s Body and Blood, call to mind those people and those situations in your own life, for which you are seeking a blessing in this most intimate moment of the liturgy.

     

    Pray the Pewsheet

    The weekly bulletin has lots of information, most of which can be pivotal moments for prayer and reflection. Notice the Mass Setting and the musical choices for the day. Pray for those listed as sick, for bereaved families, the recently departed, and those whose year’s mind occurs at this time. Do you know any of these people? How might you offer them care and support this week? For what do you give thanks to God as a result of the time you shared with them?

     

    Preview the Bible Readings

    Our lectionary provides us a with a three-year cycle of texts to challenge, encourage, inform and stretch us. Do you recognise the readings set for today? What memories do those passages stir for you? Are you reminded of another passage you want to read when you get home? Should you be sharing these readings with anyone else who might find them helpful?

     

    Pray the Hymns

    The hymnbook is a rich collection of religious poetry. Look up the hymns set for today and consider why they may have been chosen to complement the readings or today’s festival. Read quietly through the hymns and pause to reflect on the deep experience of God among us that these poems preserve.

     

    As you leave the Cathedral

    Another beautiful prayer attributed to St Francis of Assisi:

    Lord, make me an instrument of your peace;
    where there is hatred, let me sow love;
    where there is injury, pardon;
    where there is doubt, faith;
    where there is despair, hope;
    where there is darkness, light;
    and where there is sadness, joy.
    Grant that I may not so much seek to be
    consoled as to console;
    to be understood, as to understand,
    to be loved as to love;
    for it is in giving that we receive,
    It is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
    and it is in dying
    That we are born to eternal life.

  • And the lot fell on Matthias

    Christ Church Cathedral Grafton
    Feast of St Matthias
    24 February 2019

     

    [ video ]

     

    It was the first extraordinary General Meeting in church history, and they had to fill a key position in the inaugural leadership team of the Jesus movement.

    At least that is how the Acts of the Apostles, written by “Luke” as a sequel for his version of the great tradition about Jesus, tells the story.

    Judas was no longer with them. His place needed to be filled. The Twelve needed to be complete as the new global mission commenced.

    Two candidates are put forward: Joseph and Matthias. Both of them apparently from the circle of people who had been with Jesus since his Baptism, although there is never a mention of them in any earlier traditions. Not even in the earlier verses of Acts 1.

    It was not only the first GM. It was also the first church raffle! And the prize went to … Matthias.

    All told, this is a strange story and it sits oddly alongside the traditions found in the four Gospels as well as the letters of Paul. Matthias comes from nowhere and disappears just as fast. He is never heard of again.

    Matthias matters more to me than most because my first appointment after my ordination as a Deacon was the Church of St Matthias at Zillmere, in Brisbane. The white vestments worn at my first Eucharist as a Priest were a gift from the Church of St Matthias, as was the pottery mass set made by Brother William, SFF and used at that first Eucharist.

    So, what do we do with a story like that and a feast like this?

    Well, in the absence of any solid information let me offer some reflections as we seek wisdom for the journey of life.

    As Luke tells the story in the book of Acts, the early Jesus movement was a religious community with soft edges.

    Already the boundaries were loose and expanding.

    There were the surviving 11 male disciples, there were “certain women” (as if Luke could not quite bring himself to call women like Mary the Magdalene disciples or apostles). There was Mary the mother of the Lord. (A rather surprising tradition, given the life expectancy of peasant women in first-century Palestine.) And Luke says there were the “brothers of the Lord”.

    All up around 120 people, according to Acts 1.

    One hundred and twenty people less 11 disciples, less Mary and less the 4 brothers of Jesus, leaves quite a large group of “certain women” as well as quite a few other blokes, it seems.

    Even if Luke, deferring to the cultural bias of his second-century audience, prefers not to name the women, or even count them.

    That’s not many people really, but a lot more than we would imagine from the earlier Gospels.

    Two of this larger group—excluding the brothers of Jesus (interestingly) and all of the women (not surprisingly)—were nominated at the Special Meeting to fill a vacancy on the Parish Council. Well, not exactly a Parish Council, but you get the idea.

    Our AGM after church this morning will be a lot less dramatic, I expect. And women are welcome to nominate!

    How widely do we cast the net when thinking of our membership circle?

    Are we a community which new people find easy to join and navigate?

    Will they be welcomed into key roles in the parish without having to serve a lengthy apprenticeship while we get to know them and make sure they know how things are done around here?

    Are we a faith community where people are welcome and included no matter their gender or their sexual orientation? Thankfully we can say YES to that one!

    Many churches in town could not say that.

    Are we a community where people bring their gifts as volunteers and contribute to building and shaping spiritual practices that are diverse, healthy and life-affirming?

    Again, I think we can say yes, even if it is one of the best-kept secrets in town.

    Later in the service and again during the service on Wednesday morning, we shall be recognising the ministry of the dozens of volunteers who make our shared life happen. On Wednesday we shall focus on those who contribute primarily to the Op Shop, the Bookshop, and the Cathedral grounds. But in a few minutes, we shall recognise those who do so much to enable and enrich our Sunday worship gatherings,

    Every Sunday is a team effort, and the ones you see up front in fancy robes are just the tip of a large iceberg.

    Meanwhile, whatever happened to Matthias and Joseph?

    For that matter, whatever happened to the other 102 persons whose names are not even mentioned?

    We have no idea, but we do know that because of their faithfulness the legacy of Jesus did not vanish after Easter but became a social movement that challenged, confronted and defeated the Roman Empire.

    Two hundred and ninety-five years after that first Extraordinary General Meeting of the Jesus movement in Jerusalem, the Christian Emperor Constantine summoned the bishops of the Roman world to a council in Nicea. The creed they agreed upon is what we shall stand to say together after this sermon ends.

    It all began with Matthias and the other 119 people who Luke says were gathered in the secret room between the Ascension and Pentecost.

    From little things big things grow.

    Thanks be to God.

     

  • The God who subverts

    Christ Church Cathedral, Grafton
    Epiphany 6C
    17 February 2019

     

    [ video ]

    We really should have expected this from a god who gets himself born to an unwed mother.

    “Blessed are you who are poor … woe to you who are rich …
    Blessed are you who are hungry now … woe to you who are full now …”

    What is this bleeding-heart left-wing nonsense that they are reading in churches all over the world today?

    Oh? It is Jesus! Really?

    I do not like him saying things like that. It makes me feel uncomfortable.

    Read my lips, says Jesus.

     

     

     

     

     

    It has been very so tempting to stop right there and go back to my seat …

    Enough said?

    More than enough for us to work on during the week?

     

     

     

     

    As I reflect on the Beatitudes in Luke a few things strike me:

    Luke’s version is usually seen as closer to what Jesus would have actually said.

    Luke’s version moves from speaking about “them” to addressing us (“you”). We have moved from ideas to praxis, from theory to real life.

    Luke’s version is more confronting for people like us.

    We are not poor, for the most part …

    We are not hungry now, or really ever …

    We do not have much reason to be sad, and the things that should make us weep we mostly ignore …

    We rarely have people saying seriously bad stuff about us …

    On the other hand …

    We are rich, compared to most people alive in the world now and almost everyone else in human history …

    We are so full so much of the time that we have health issues from over-consumption …

    We love to laugh and be entertained, and we prefer politicians who promise to keep us safe from scary people and nasty situations … even when we know they are lying

    We mostly are people about whom others speak well …

    We are respectable, comfortable, nice and good people.

    We are Anglicans.

    We are Cathedral people!

     

    Jesus according to Luke

    You may recall that this is the Year of Luke, and we are paying special attention to Luke’s way of talking about Jesus this year.

    As we noticed in the Dean’s Forum a couple of weeks back, Luke wrote for people like us: nice people with comfortable lives and some degree of social status.

    Yet Luke preserves the prophetic words of Jesus in a form that disturbs us and make us uncomfortable.

    Were Jesus standing for parliament most of us would not vote for him.

    He would raise our taxes and spend the funds on assistance to the poor.

    And he wants our vote?

    No, Jesus does not want our vote. It is much worse than that. Jesus wants our whole being: our hearts, our minds, our assets and our souls.

    He is no politician.

    Jesus is far more dangerous than a politician.

     

    Captain’s pick

    In recent Australian politics we have experienced the famous “captain’s pick” on more than one occasion.

    God makes captain’s picks as well, but she does it differently.

    God chooses the poor, the widows, the orphans, the overlooked younger sibling, the refugees and the asylum seekers, the collaborators (“tax collectors”) and the women with reputations (“the sinners”).

    Phew! That gives us all a chance …

    That is why the priest says each Sunday as we are called to the Table of Jesus:

    The gifts of God for the people of God.
    Holy things for holy people.
    Broken things for broken people.

     

    We are all people with some form of brokenness in our lives: sometimes that brokenness is visible but most of the time it is invisible.

    But the God who subverts calls us (yes, us) to be agents of change and communities of reconciliation.

    The victory song that Luke puts on the lips of Mary in his carefully crafted account of the conception and birth of Jesus captures the essence of the Holy Rebel from Nazareth:

    My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
    for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.
    Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;
    for the Mighty One has done great things for me, and holy is his name.
    His mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation.
    He has shown strength with his arm;
    he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
    He has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly;
    he has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty.
    (Luke 1:46–53 NRSV)

     

    Christians who really believe these words change the world … starting with Grafton.

     

     

     

  • The God who calls

    Christ Church Cathedral Grafton
    Epiphany 5C
    10 February 2019

     

    [ video ]

    Sometimes the readings that are served up by the lectionary are a bit sparse when it comes to offering stimulus material for a sermon. But this week we have a feast of classic texts, each of which could trigger one or more sermons.

    Don’t worry. I am only going to give one short sermon today!

    As you know, we are still in the season of Epiphany; that time in between Christmas and Lent. This is a time when we are invited to reflect on ways in which we have gained some kind of insight into the ways of God with our soul or with our world.

    Those epiphany moments when faith just makes sense, precious moments indeed.

    They may not answer our questions, but they kind of make the questions less important as we embrace a larger kind of truth.

    Indeed, as we shall see this morning, sometimes those insights turn our lives upside down!

    There was an epiphany moment in each of the three readings this morning, and more than one in a couple of the readings.

    Isaiah 6—a high official in the royal court of Jerusalem is attending yet another religious ceremony in the Temple, but this time it was a conversion experience! He was about to be drawn into a whole new ministry as a prophet, and he would leave a legacy whose impact is still felt today. He had been to the Temple numerous times, but this time it was different.

    1 Corinthians 15—Paul is reciting a list of resurrection appearances by the risen Jesus when he describes his own calling to be an apostle. As Paul says, he was an enemy of the Jesus movement and actively persecuting anyone suspected of being a Christian. He was not likely to become the most important interpreter of Jesus ever. Yet God turned his life around and we still pay attention to Paul when we try to understand how to practice our faith.

    Luke 5—it was just another regular fishing day for Peter and his business partners. No catch at all last night despite the hours spent out on the lake. A little distance away he could see Jesus from Nazareth talking to crowds of people on the lake shore about the kingdom of God, but Peter was not even listening. He had nets to clean and mend before they went out again that night in search of fish. Then Jesus comes and asks Peter to take him a short distance offshore in his fishing boat so he could keep on talking to the crowds without being pushed into the lake! Afterwards, this cocky carpenter even told him where to find fish. What would he know? Worse still, he was right! They caught the biggest load of fish Peter had ever seen. Almost sunk his boat and his partner’s boat under the weight of all those fish. As Jesus said, it was time to leave the fishing trade and go learn how to fish for people!

    Those are not just weird stories from 2000 years ago or more.

    That stuff still happens.

    Tomorrow we mark 40 years since I was ordained as a priest, but that was not the career I had in mind as I came to the end of Year Twelve. I was heading for the military. The forms for Duntroon were already completed and waiting to be posted. But someone who knew nothing of my plans was used by God to turn my life pathway upside down and inside out. The forms for Duntroon never got posted.

    If we had time to go around the church this morning and if people felt safe enough to share their personal life stories, I suspect we would find many other stories of lives turned around or even upside down by this audacious God who calls; the God who disturbs and overthrows our best-made plans.

    We really should have a sign at the west doors of this Cathedral warning people not to come inside:

    ALERT!

    ENTER AT YOUR OWN RISK.

    YOU MAY DISCOVER THAT

    GOD HAS A PURPOSE FOR YOUR LIFE

    IF YOU ENTER THIS SACRED PLACE

    WITH AN OPEN HEART

    OR EVEN ONE THAT IS CLOSED

     

    Even the kids who are causing trouble again as they steal candles and mess up the sound system cables may find that God is messing with their lives while they think they are being so tough and so smart. Perhaps they should ask Paul? He was one tough dude until God got at him.

    Actually, the sign would be of no use—except maybe to stimulate discussion, and that might be a good thing.

    Even staying away from the Cathedral will not stop God from touching your heart and calling you into service.

    Even those hundreds of Grafton Anglicans who demonstrate their solid Anglican identity by avoiding worship except for Baptisms and funerals may find that God has plans for them as well. As indeed she does.

    Wherever we are and whatever our current disposition, God has a purpose for our lives and God will persist in calling us to embrace that calling for our sake and for the sake of others.

    Our job as a Cathedral community is to be a safe and supportive place for people to explore what God’s call on their life looks like and to support them as they start the journey God is calling them to make.

    If we can be that kind of faith community others will be blessed and the world will be transformed.

  • Intentional discipleship

    This essay was published in the February 2019 issue of North Coast Anglican which will be available in churches across the Diocese of Grafton this morning.

     

    In the liturgical afterglow of Advent and Christmas with all those special services and all that wonderful music, we pause and catch our breath.

    The season of Epiphany—like its more rigorous cousin, Lent—invites us to reflect on the many ways that we encounter the God who reaches out to us and then to fashion our response to Emmanuel, God with us.

    We are invited into intentional discipleship, as distinct from an inherited religious identity.

    Discipleship is a word that is closely associated with Jesus and the responses people made to him on the other side of Calvary, before the Easter triumph transformed their views of his significance.

    To my surprise when doing a recent word study in preparation for one of the Dean’s Forums at the Cathedral, I discovered that this is not a word ever used by Paul. It is a term only found in the four NT gospels and in the Acts of the Apostles, written originally as part two of the Gospel of Luke.

    The difference between the Gospels and the Epistles is stark.

    So to be a disciple is to be someone with an intentional relationship with Jesus.

    To have beliefs and opinions about Jesus is not the essence of discipleship, even though disciples will have beliefs and opinions that matter deeply to us.

    An intentional relationship with Jesus?

    That would be a continuous Epiphany experience as we discover more and more about God’s loving and compassionate purposes for the universe, including our own selves.

    That would be a lifelong commitment to shape our lives around the beliefs and practices that mattered to Jesus.

    That would be to engage in compassionate action to bring the effective reign of God into the lived experience of our families, friends and local communities.

    An intentional relationship with Jesus is going to be about practice (what we do and how we treat people) more than with ideas (what we believe and how we explain our faith to others).

    As the practical Christian wisdom found in the Letter of James puts it: “Show me your faith apart from your works, and I by my works will show you my faith.” (James 2:18)

    As Anglicans, we are blessed with a rich heritage of spiritual practices that can be embraced as we commit to intentional discipleship. Some of them (like Baptism) are a once in a lifetime event, while others are practices that we can use regularly in our own spiritual disciplines.

    Gathering with other believers for the Lord’s Supper is perhaps the first and greatest spiritual discipline for anyone who is serious about intentional discipleship. We need to ensure that our weekly Eucharistic gatherings are engaging and transformative, and not simply a case of going through the motions. What we celebrate in the Eucharist is the saving presence of God in Jesus and among us. Our liturgies should express that dynamic reality.

    Prayer is at the heart of intentional discipleship. At its most basic level, this means we cultivate mindfulness: we are attentive to the presence of Christ within us, in others, and around us. Our personal and collective rituals can help us develop and sustain our mindfulness, and from that will flow a deeper experience of prayer in all its forms: contemplation, thanksgiving, protest, and intercession.

    Deep engagement with the Scriptures is another of the core spiritual disciplines for anyone who is serious about intentional discipleship. The church already offers many patterns for daily and weekly attention to Scripture, and there is no shortage of Bible reading plans online and in your local Christian bookstore. As the fitness gear retailers constantly remind us: just do it.

    Eucharist, prayer and Bible reading are the big three spiritual disciplines for intentional discipleship, but there are many more. These include cell groups, compassionate action for justice and environmental stewardship, fasting, labyrinth, pilgrimage, preparing a rule of life, sacrificial distribution of our own resources for mission, spiritual direction, and volunteering our time for church and community projects.

    Which of these spiritual disciplines we embrace depends on our circumstances and perhaps our personalities, but the call to intentional discipleship is universal.

    Imagine the transformation in our mission as a Diocese and in the communities we serve if every North Coast Anglican was actively engaged in intentional discipleship.

     

     

    Additional note: A video of the Dean presenting a session on intentional discipleship as part of the My Faith My Life My Church program at Grafton Cathedral is available on the Cathedral website

     

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