Monday, 3 February 2014

Feast of Presentation February 2nd

Malachi asks a leading question today. “who can endure the day of his coming, who can stand when he appears?”
What was it about Simeon that made him so ready and able to see the unfolding of salvation?
Was it because he had been waiting for so long patiently? It was not because he was a man, because Anna was also able to recognise the coming of God too..
Would we have been able to stand there and recognise God as the parents carried the baby to the temple, or more likely I suspect we would be looking over their shoulders for something a bit more obviously comforting.
Anna and Simeon recognised God because they trusted in him all their life. They were connected with generations of faithful Jews before them who looked toward God and not just their faith tradition.
Our problem is that so often we find ourselves looking to our faith tradition and put our hope and trust there, rather than in God himself.
Who can endure to put faith in God, who is able to remain standing strong when he comes?
To look at our faith tradition is often comfort and even uplifting. The saints and teachers down the ages, those who have inspired us and lifted us… the voices of affirmation.
To look to God we face many more uncomfortable things. We see scary moments, moments of pain and failure, moments of doubt and despair, we even perhaps look into the face of death and destruction itself.
That is not a nice place to look.
Can we endure the day of his coming?
As we look to God today we must lift our gaze a little further than we are perhaps used to. Simeon and Anna were able to do this, tradition also suggests Mary was able to do this too.
What have we to take on board to be able to do this “star” gazing. Richard Rohr seeks to open up this question in a book I am reading at present.
1.     We look at ourselves the person we are. We see and recognise our own needs, the way we search for significance and meaning. The desire for self affirmation, and even love. This is the private self and we must recognise it, love it. Hold it. It is not all good we know this, but it is probably not all bad either! We recognise our own private struggles, our journey. This is my story

2.     Against my story we recognise “Our story” the one where I find myself with others. The group I am part of, the church and faith group. The culture I am part of, the people to whom I am faithful too, the ideas I support. The church which has taught us so much about God and prayer. About good and evil, right and wrong. Our concepts of rightness.

3.     Against “Our story” we go further now and see a bigger picture. “The whole story”. The truth and nothing but the truth if you like…. In the real story the smallness of me is seen for what it is, important yes but so small too. Did you know that fifteen people have died to enable you to be here today …….(explain)

Against the real truth we also put into perspective “our story”, the story that makes us who we are too. The illusion that “us” is what matters. That our group is what matters. Against the real truth the whole story that is where God is and it God’s perspective.
Holding together goodness and pain, things which we more naturally want to keep apart, indeed some would say they were opposites, as if they were not connected.
As God see the world goodness and pain are essential together. For Simeon and Anna and for Mary the pain and sharpness of death was bound up in the life of the baby Jesus.
This is what enabled them to endure the day.
As we behold our own stories today let us also be able to see the pain and Joy being held within the gaze of God. Let us feel stronger to recognise God holding us in entirety.
We take our own lives more seriously and honestly when we hold good and bad together. We are not trapped with a small view of ourselves or even the group we belong to, we are lifted to see ourselves as God sees and holds us. It is this picture that the Kingdom of God domes to dwell.
Simeon and Anna felt fulfilled when holding the baby they declared a vision of the Kingdom, not just for their people but for the whole world.
As the songs puts it “he’s got the whole world in his hands, he has all of us in his hands, he has, by being alongside us through the incarnation, drawn everything into God and shown God to everything.
So we are enabled to endure the day of his coming as Simeon and Anna were.
Thanks be to God

Saturday, 1 February 2014

Some bits of news long overdue!

I know February is now upon us, and I am sorry it has taken so long to get writing.

However we have now begun our 150th Anniversary at St Magnus in Lerwick


Here is a picture painted at the turn of last century after the distinctive tower was added.


The Rectory is a lot different this winter thanks to the new windows. It s just as well we had them done because we have had such awful storms that either the windows upstairs may have blown out, or the wind would have found its way inside somehow.

We had a good Up Helly Aa last week and though it was very cold and windy it did stay dry for Da Galley burning.
Jack is busy getting read for his own even next week so I may have some pictures of that.

I am looking forward to introducing Rachel to te Lake District in April. We have booked a week at the Winchester Guest house in Keswick. Hopefully Hannah and Simon will be able to join us for a few days too which will be brilliant. Jack is staying back in Shetland as School is still on, but he will have fun with Grandma and Grandad and his own Dad too.

Work is going well and I am staying very busy. If it not one it is the other!

I must be settling in now because at a recent funeral I seemed to know  a lot of people who came along even though it was not at St Magnus or St Colman. Furthermore those who I did not already know came up to me after and said they knew me! (well actually my in laws and wife... I even met Rachels old teacher, and the lady who died actually used to live in the house Rachel grew up in... so there!


2014 here and now even February!

Sunday is the Feast of the Presentation. This marks the end of th Christmas and Epiphany season.

Here is Sunday's sermon:

Malachi asks a leading question today. “who can endure the day of his coming, who can stand when he appears?”
What was it about Simeon that made him so ready and able to see the unfolding of salvation?
Was it because he had been waiting for so long patiently? It was not because he was a man, because Anna was also able to recognise the coming of God too..
Would we have been able to stand there and recognise God as the parents carried the baby to the temple, or more likely I suspect we would be looking over their shoulders for something a bit more obviously comforting.
Anna and Simeon recognised God because they trusted in him all their life. They were connected with generations of faithful Jews before them who looked toward God and not just their faith tradition.
Our problem is that so often we find ourselves looking to our faith tradition and put our hope and trust there, rather than in God himself.
Who can endure to put faith in God, who is able to remain standing strong when he comes?
To look at our faith tradition is often comfort and even uplifting. The saints and teachers down the ages, those who have inspired us and lifted us… the voices of affirmation.
To look to God we face many more uncomfortable things. We see scary moments, moments of pain and failure, moments of doubt and despair, we even perhaps look into the face of death and destruction itself.
That is not a nice place to look.
Can we endure the day of his coming?
As we look to God today we must lift our gaze a little further than we are perhaps used to. Simeon and Anna were able to do this, tradition also suggests Mary was able to do this too.
What have we to take on board to be able to do this “star” gazing. Richard Rohr seeks to open up this question in a book I am reading at present.
1.     We look at ourselves the person we are. We see and recognise our own needs, the way we search for significance and meaning. The desire for self affirmation, and even love. This is the private self and we must recognise it, love it. Hold it. It is not all good we know this, but it is probably not all bad either! We recognise our own private struggles, our journey. This is my story

2.     Against my story we recognise “Our story” the one where I find myself with others. The group I am part of, the church and faith group. The culture I am part of, the people to whom I am faithful too, the ideas I support. The church which has taught us so much about God and prayer. About good and evil, right and wrong. Our concepts of rightness.

3.     Against “Our story” we go further now and see a bigger picture. “The whole story”. The truth and nothing but the truth if you like…. In the real story the smallness of me is seen for what it is, important yes but so small too. Did you know that fifteen people have died to enable you to be here today …….(explain)

Against the real truth we also put into perspective “our story”, the story that makes us who we are too. The illusion that “us” is what matters. That our group is what matters. Against the real truth the whole story that is where God is and it God’s perspective.
Holding together goodness and pain, things which we more naturally want to keep apart, indeed some would say they were opposites, as if they were not connected.
As God see the world goodness and pain are essential together. For Simeon and Anna and for Mary the pain and sharpness of death was bound up in the life of the baby Jesus.
This is what enabled them to endure the day.
As we behold our own stories today let us also be able to see the pain and Joy being held within the gaze of God. Let us feel stronger to recognise God holding us in entirety.
We take our own lives more seriously and honestly when we hold good and bad together. We are not trapped with a small view of ourselves or even the group we belong to, we are lifted to see ourselves as God sees and holds us. It is this picture that the Kingdom of God domes to dwell.
Simeon and Anna felt fulfilled when holding the baby they declared a vision of the Kingdom, not just for their people but for the whole world.
As the songs puts it “he’s got the whole world in his hands, he has all of us in his hands, he has, by being alongside us through the incarnation, drawn everything into God and shown God to everything.
So we are enabled to endure the day of his coming as Simeon and Anna were.

Thanks be to God