Sunday, 17 March 2013

responding to comments!!

My Auntie Freda, (Godmother) is an avid reader of this blog, so my mum and dad tell me. When I was on the phone the other day I was told that it appeared my sermons had not been posted for a while. Well this does seem to be the case so I will try make ammends. Perhaps appropriately here is today's sermon... it all about busy ness...!!!!


here goes.....


Lent 5 Lerwick 2013 Yr C
Today it all becomes a little more personal. God is declaring in the Old Testament reading that he is about to do something new, he tells us that we should not remember the former things for something new (and by definition new) is going to begin.
I wonder what it is like to held secure and then to be let free. I wonder what it must feel like to be held in prison and then to be released?
It is perhaps no wonder that prisoners find this moment quite daunting and scary. How will we manage, will we make a mess of it over again as we slip back so effortlessly into the old ways, the ways we know.
Today Passiontide begins, we begin to face the cross face to face and realise our own part in it. Our own part in the suffering, not just of Christ, but even of ourselves.
Is God about to do something new, can he make something new happen in us, or are we going to slip back into the ways we are so familiar with?
There is little doubt that the Olympics last year inspired many of us. The tenacity and courage of the athletes to enter the games alone never mind to succeed and win medals was immense. We heard stories of a lifetime of dedication and perseverance. It is no wonder that Paul uses a sporting analogy, when he is talking about the efforts needed to be a believer, the efforts he says are needed to stand alongside Christ in his sufferings so that we can also share the resurrection. It was a life and death scenario for him.
Paul speaks of pressing on to make it his own…. It is a single minded approach, a focused and solitary task. But also a costly journey.
The gospel for today takes us back to the home of Mary and Martha. Mary once again shows us the way as I silence the room is filled with the fragrance of the simple act of contemplation. Like Mary and Martha today we seem to have a choice. We can busy ourselves or we can be still. It comes natural to be busy, but less natural to be still. Our praying can be similar, we can even busy ourselves in prayer and miss the object of the desire completely.
Soren Kierkegaard wrote about prayer in these words “Prayer does not change God, it changes the person who prays” yet our attitude has so long been that we are trying to gain the attention of God when we are praying. We  rarely see it as silence and waiting. As gazing and being held.
We see it in the life of Jesus frequently, and it was reflected in the early years with many seeking solitude in the desert, being with God in silence and expecting something new to happen was what the life of prayer was all about.
It is surprising that we habitually react as if being busy is the right choice.
Stephen Cherry has highlighted this reaction this lent by urging the church to react against the need to proclaim business as the good way. He has challenged many to re think their attitude to living as if it was better to be able to prove that every moment of a working day was crammed with activity.
We are invited to be still in the presence of God, to hear God speaking in the silence of our lives, but we give him little opportunity, as we busy him out or talk over him.
Let us be more still

Monday, 28 January 2013

Sundays sermon


Epiphany means?
Christmas is all about Epiphany
Matthew Mark Luke and John all have Epiphany and they express things differently depending on their readership and time of writing.

The Disciples had Epiphanies, times when the purpose of Jesus was made so very clear to them.

Many characters of the Gospels had epiphanies such as the woman at the well. “He told me everything about me”

Throughout our reading of the bible we also get moments of understanding... times when the work of God is clearly felt in our lives and through the church.

The Church (you and I) are called to be Epiphanies for the world today, but we often manage to obscure this.!!

People in our society today need clarity, they need the Gospel (Good news) that God is for them and not against them. That God is close and not far away.

Far too many people have experienced the church as power and control. (something that was so very obvious in Rome last week) The history of Shetlands churches also give evidence to the power and control the people felt the church put them under

If we can be better epiphanies then people may begin to see how things fit into place. The dawn of new hope may be made clear.

There is a God shaped hole in each of us let us fill it with the God we have seen show himself.

I would like to share this story with you It is set in China when the communists came to power. Many Christians were tried for their faith. One was given the opportunity to reveal why he had chosen Christianity instead of the religion of his ancestors.

He said to the interrogators,
"I was in a deep pit sinking in the mire and totally helpless. I looked up to see a shadow at the top of the pit. The shadow spoke, "My Son, I am Confucius, the father of your country. If you had obeyed my teachings you would never have been here," and then he passed on adding "if you ever get out of this, remember my teachings".
 But of course this did not save him.

Then Buddha appeared at he edge of the pit, and leaning over he spoke to  me at the bottom:" My Son, just count it all as nothing. Enter into rest. Fold your arms and retire within yourself, and you will find nirvana, the peace to which we are all tending. The* I cried out to him, "Father Buddha if you will only help me to get out, I wilI be glad to do so, I could follow your instructions easily if I were where you are, but how can I find rest in this awful place?" Buddha passed on and left me to my despair.

Then another face appeared, it was the face of a man beaming with kindness, and bearing the marks of sorrow. He did not linger a moment, but leaped down to my side, threw his arms around me and lifted me out. He brought me to the solid ground above; then did not even bid me farewell, but took off my filthy garments, put new robes upon me, and bade me follow him, saying," I will never leave you nor forsake you" That is why I became a Christian.

That little story illustrates something of the  Epiphany which is the glory of God in that it helps us to see how the Glory of God is something strangely at our side, something that is always there.

Mother Julian of Norwich once saw in her showings a small I hazelnut and was amazed at the sight of it. It smallness and frailty, and yet she was told this was all that was made and it lasts forever because God loves it. This led Julian to realise three things

1.  that God Made it
2.  That God loves it.
3.  That god looks after it.

The Glory of God is to be found in the life around us. In even the unlikely places of our lives.

Paul, whose conversion we celebrated  on Friday saw the Glory of God revealed in the cross. Again a less likely place for glory to be revealed you couldn’t find. He said "Let us boast of nothing except the cross of Christ Crucified"
Elsewhere, in his epistles  he talks of the Glory of God at work in him in proclaiming the Gospel.

But the remarkable thing is that he speaks
of this as he is in prison and in great suffering for the Faith.

He writes of "Christ in You, the hope of Glory."
 (col 1:27.)

So we pray that the signs of Glory will be seen in and through the church, will be recognised by ourselves in common places of our lives, and will bring light to the darkness of our lives, and that we will be enablers of Epiphany to those around us.

Saturday, 22 December 2012

JUST WAIT AND SEE!! (Fourth Sunday in Advent)



“Just wait and see”
Probably words often spoken when parents are speaking to their children (and step children) at this time of the year.
“just wait and see”
On Thursday night in traditional form we had the wonderful carol service and we attracted a larger than usual spread of people from all over Shetland. After the service many of us gathered in the Hall for Mulled wine wonderfully prepared by Catheryn and Minced pies, many of them kindly donated by Tesco.
I don’t know about you but I felt for a moment that Christmas had come, that there was little more to wait for.
I found myself being pulled back momentarily and I heard myself saying the words,
“Just wait and see”
Little over a week ago, in a probably previously unheard of town in New England USA, 20 children and six members of staff were tragically gunned down. One cannot but wonder the feelings surrounding this town and those families today as we expectantly say  “Just wait and see”
Last Friday was for some expected to be the end of the World.  It was a Christian group in China that had been proclaiming this news, and I even caught sight of a “survival pod” (not like the serco pods at all!) that had been designed in China to help protect the people who had collected inside. The message “just wait and see” rang out, and then it began to dawn upon the world that once again it had famously survived the end once again.
Others have said that the 21st was but the dawn of new hope for the world. “A new Dawn” and on the news on Friday I heard these words “The World’s great mysteries have survived another day”.
We once again have lit the fourth candle. The pink one which represents Mary, the mother of our Lord.
Our gospel reading sees us alongside two expectant mothers, though they both apparently knew they were to have boys. One senior lady and one virgin, not much more than and early teenager. Both had good reason to be surprised to be pregnant, both not expecting to hear the words, “just wait and see” .
Mary’s song proclaims a hope for the people almost long since forgotten, that God would remain and redeem his people. That the hungry, forgotten, naked, blind, lame, outcast, poor, neglected, abused, addict, alcoholic, mentally ill, and any other group which we today put on the fringe of our own society… are all part of the Kingdom of God and all within a grasp of God’s redemption and full love.
So what do we do…. “we must wait and see”.
Christmas is not yet here, though we all know what it might taste like. We catch glimpses of the wonder almost every day now, not least in the carol service the other night.
But the reality of it all is yet to be. We have to wait.
Santa is still preparing, we must wait!
What it is we are waiting for will very much depend on what is deep in our hearts, but we are promised “Peace” healing, Joy, a unity with God’s purpose. A life worth living (or in the words of holywood “A wonderful life”
Don’t shut the doors on hope yet, wait and see what is to come to pass, and let us with the Shepherds travel to see what God is doing in his loving for the world once again.

Saturday, 15 December 2012

The Xmas tree goes up and Santa is prepared!





We are getting ready for Xmas now and the tree went up today. Jack and Rachel did the decorating while I "suopervised"!
Jack has the "santa stop here" sign ready and is getting excited. He received a letter from Santa last week to acknowledge his change of address which put his mind at rest.

It is going to be a busy time with all the usual churchy things and work at annsbrae too, though I am "off" on Christmas Day and Boxing Day.

May we wish all of you a Happy Christmas and all blessings for 2013.

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

A HONEYMOON AT LAST

Rachel and I have booked to spend four nights in Rome early next year. We are very excited about this trip and it does not seem so far away. It will be great to visit this city. Hannah went there some years ago and said it was amazing.

I cannot believe it but Simon is 24 on Saturday!!! Help.

He has paid the ransom for his sock (see facebook!) and it is being returned for his birthday.

Sunday, 4 November 2012

All Saints Sunday Sermon



Today we begin the countdown to the New Church Year beginning again on Advent Sunday
The Sundays after Trinity are behind us and for four weeks our attention is focused on “The Kingdom”. These four weeks conclude with the Feast of Christ the King.
Following conversation with a number of you in recent weeks I have decided I would like to think together about our own rolls in the kingdom. To think quite personally about what we mean when we declare ourselves to be Christian and to be part of the Kingdom of God as proclaimed and heralded by Jesus.
It seems to me that there are basically two marks of the kingdom, two identifiers if you like. One of these is Baptism and the other is the Eucharist. Baptism is the starting place liturgically for most Christians even today, that place where we turned away from evil and turned to Christ. The moment we repented and moved to embrace Christ in his death and resurrection.
But this liturgical event took place in the past. However week by week many of us still gather for the Eucharist, the meal of the kingdom so it is to this meal that I would like to return to over these weeks to draw out from its familiar words the inheritance which is our in the Kingdom.
On this All Saints Sunday where better to start than the concluding words which we actually say altogether. The words which affirm the life of the saints, words which individually tie us in with the key players and founding forebears whose fruits we taste today.
“Help us, who are baptised into the fellowship of Christ’s Body, to live and work to your praise and glory; may we grow together in unity and love, until at last, in your new creation, we enter into our heritage in the company of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the apostles and prophets and of all our brothers and sisters living and departed.”
The Eucharist is the “feast of the kingdom” and yet it is all too easy to approach this meal as if we were eating alone. As if others around the table do not matter to us.
Receiving the bread and wine of the kingdom is however necessarily a private moment. But a private moment need not be a moment of insularity.
We live in a society which is more and more dominated by the individual. “My rights” “I deserve” I want”, I need, etc.
Writing in the Press and Journal recently Ron Ferguson writes about Narcissism. Perhaps a condition sadly contagious. Narcissus in Greek mythology, saw his own reflection and fell in love with it.
It is easy to see how it would be possible to see the world exclusively from our own point of view. As if others past and present hardly mattered or didn’t matter at all.
On Friday night we went to see the new Bond movie at Mareel. As the plot thickened I caught these words spoken by M “Your past will be as non existent as your future”. True enough they were spoken to the vilen of the plot but never the less the thought of this prospect is the driving force of narcissism.  
Our feast is one where not only ourselves but others do matter, both past and present, and our prayer brings this fact out quite strongly indeed.
The Kingdom of which we are apart is all the stronger because it is not just me and God here but the body (us) And conversely we believe  that the “body,” “the kingdom”, is all the stronger because I am here.
Later on in the Bond movie M quotes Tennyson’s “Ulysses” and defiantly says speaking on behalf of the “goodies”
“Moved earth and heaven, …that which we are, we are;
 One equal temper of heroic hearts,
 Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
 To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. “  
          
This is the foundation of All Saints, the countless nameless individuals who have played and still play their part in the “Kingdom” today.
Each of us individually matter. We each play a vital roll. The food we eat is for our own journey in faith. It is to make us stronger, more committed, wiser, more prayerful and more loving people.
The You and I matter not just to God but to each other. By sharing the cup together and breaking the bread together we are promising to be there for each other even if the journey into the wilderness is long and in unchartered territory.
Narcissism, the curse of modern society, according to Ron Ferguson, is about self promotion. 
We pray, that the Holy Spirit will overshadow us that we may be renewed in the service of the Kingdom. We are not here to promote the self, or to even love the self. We are here because of our part in something beyond the self. God.
We come to the Eucharist  because we see in this meal which we share a feeding on the Body and Blood of Jesus. We pray that this bread and wine will become the body and blood of Christ.
Our hands will soon reach out and take what God offers. Our mouths will taste the wine of the new kingdom and we will individually be refreshed.
What is more however as we are refreshed we ourselves become the body of Christ in the world today.
We become what we eat. Our identity becomes that of God in each of us.
What a powerful and significant moment this eating and drinking should be for us. However we see this happening it cannot take away the significance of the happening.
We are the body of Christ, by one Spirit we are baptised into one body, let us share his peace.
We meet in Christ’s name…….

Friday, 26 October 2012

The Fire burns bright, look out Santa!





We have the fire installed and the first logs are burning really well. If shetland had few trees it may have a few less now!!!!
This has already transformed the sitting room.
We shall be celebrating tonight with Champagne and a cuddle of course!