As I continue to settle in Shetland, a place I have loved since 1971, I have been keen to record some of the thoughts and activities of this major migration. It is amazing how the journey unfolds, ups and downs but well worth it. It is wonderful to be here. I would like to pay tribute to Stuart Haves who introduced me to these Islands in 1971. Mr Haves died aged 68 in April 2012
Monday, 2 April 2018
Easter 2018 sermon
Sermon for Easter 2018
It is to the gospel of John which we turn for the Easter
proclamation this year, or should we perhaps say the Easter unveiling.
A few weeks ago, just after Christmas, we had a run of John’s
gospel but in reverse order and you may remember I commented on this and on how
important it was to see John’s account very differently than the other gospels,
especially Luke and Matthew.
John as we know does not have a birth narrative, and starts very
differently seeing Jesus as a cosmic character, the one through who the
creative word of God spoke. Life was found in him and without him not anything has
come into being. The Word became flesh in Jesus and we have seen his glory full
of grace and truth.
Having started his gospel stating the case, we are then taken on a
journey of guesses puzzles and concealment.
We the reader know who this person of Jesus is, but time and time
again the characters of the gospel do not seem to recognize what we already
know.
John takes us through seven signs as he calls them, signs of God’s
activity in Christ, starting with the wine at Cana and ending with the moment
Jesus is raised on the cross… John’s seventh and completing sign… when I am
lifted up I will draw the whole world to myself.
Time and time again in John we are told in Joh that the hour has
not yet come… but as the cross looms on the horizon it is declared by Jesus
“The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.
The business of concealment and gradual realization on the part of
the characters in the story, comes to a dramatic racy conclusion in today’s
gospel reading, when John masterly takes three “seeings” before the truth of
the matter finally dawns.
Three different word in Greek for seeing are used, each one
intended to unpick the idea that seeing what has happened here means more than
just a casual notice, or even a closer look…. Until the penny drops and
literally seeing becomes believing.
As we read this we are also invited to ask ourselves how indeed do
we see Jesus, how deep does our seeing actually go?
John began his unveiling, quite literally by giving us the full
image as clear as you like… In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with
God……The Light shines on in the dark and all that was brought into being is
filled with this light and life.
Now as his gospel ends, and Easter has dawned it is for us to see
that life even in ourselves. The life of God indeed even in us… don’t forget he
has already told us nothing has come into being without this life this Word
being active… and that also means even us.
Easter for John then becomes much more than Jesus being raised
from the dead…. It becomes the moment that believers can see for themselves the
promise of this life. That moment when we “see and believe.”
This search and realization of this “Life” is often described as a
life of Faith. The Christian Church also describes this discovery as a journey
or even a pilgrimage.
Other gospels describe this journey as one of loosing and finding…
Loosing your life for my sake and finding it again, were words we heard
recently as Jesus prepared his disciples for the journey to Jerusalem and the
cross.
Most Christians, it seems to me, would describe moments of loosing
in order to find, and this may even be described as dying in order to live.
Baptism for the Christian literally maps this process out as we
are buried with Christ in Baptism so that we may live with Christ in our world.
Who would ever say this was easy…. I wouldn’t.
Barbara Brown Taylor has wonderfully written,
“I thought that being faithful was
about becoming someone other than who I was”
She had experienced huge setbacks and challenges which some might have
described or experiences as failure……she speaks about how exhausting it had
been to try to be good and realised that her human wholeness was actually more
useful to God.. .
She continues.
“Committing myself to the task of
becoming fully human is saving my life now. This is not the same as the job of
being human, which came with my birth certificate. To become fully human is
something extra, a conscious choice that not everyone makes.”
Jesus asks Mary why she is weeping. She herself has not yet
realized what we know Peter and the other disciple has seen.
She appears to speak with Jesus without realizing who he is…
thinking him to be a stranger…
But for Mary and perhaps for us that moment of realization who it
is that stands before us comes when we hear our own name … Mary, Neil, John,
Margaret etc being used as he calls us to fully recognize who it is that invite
us to share his life, the life of the Easter gospel.
Mary too is then able to say “I have seen the Lord”
And we are brought back to the opening words of the gospel and see
that life surging, in even us.
Sunday, 26 November 2017
Christ the King 2017
Sermon for Christ the King 2017
Perhaps today more of a meditation or collection of thoughts
instead of Sermon!
Last week I shyed away from the Gospel reading because I felt I
was that slave who had buried the treasure without even gaining interest on it
before handing it back. I was the slave cast out into the place of gnashing
teeth. This was a scary pace to be in, so I avoided going there.
This week I am faced with the decision whether I am a sheep or a
goat? Needless to say if I am found to be a goat I head once again to the place
of gnashing teeth and torment.
Yet I am also aware that Jesus always calls and always accepts us
as who we are.
We have got so used to thinking and behaving as if God was
somewhere else… out there… beyond, and have forgotten the image of God we all
carry within us. As Richard Rohr said this week our best access to God is to realize
that he is a lot closer than we had given credit for.. he is within. Our
transformation comes from realizing our union with God is right before our
eyes… God is right here right now.
The king stands before all the nations (all the world) he stands
before us and we look around and recognize that there are people alongside us
who we think do not belong before the king…. (Not of our club) He then tells us
“come you are blessed”
Behaving in simple human terms to one another, if you like
reacting to the image of God in others, means we are blessed.
When we think of God as “beyond”, when we put God “out there” it
is all too easy to see “failure “ in ourselves. We do not meet the mark, we do
not make the grade, …. The sad thing is we never will because we are measuring
in human terms.
The parable of the talents last week was not about money or investment, nor was it in human
terms about reward and punishment. The two slaves were received equally, the
growth in talents were given back to the master, the slaves enjoyed the success
of the master. They remained slave and master.
Today is the feast of Christ the King.
We see this portrayed more often than not as Jesus reigning from
the cross. Our crucified Lord is our King. The one who came alongside us
through incarnation, becomes our King. We hail him as king.
The king before whom we stand pronounces a blessing on us as we
become accepted.
In order to more successfully illustrate this point we need to
head to Golgotha. The place of the cross.
What do we see as we gaze on the “Green hill”
Three crosses, not one. Jesus our King is there, the one we have
followed and listened to despite our weak humanity.
What do we hear as we gaze on the crosses?
We hear Jesus talking to that good for nothing thief, that
criminal, the scum we did not even think was worthy of anything… and we hear
Jesus our King saying…. To him of all people….
Today you will be with me in paradise.
No gnashing of teeth here, just wonderful love and blessings.
Christ is our King… O friends rejoice!
Tuesday, 7 November 2017
Sermon for Bible Sunday 2017
Today we call Bible Sunday, a day in the year when we especially
give thought and reflect on the importance and meaning to what we call “The
Bible”
If we were to ask ourselves “what is the Bible” we may get a
variety of answers. Furthermore if we were to ask people outside the church we
would get another set of answers.
For us it usually comes in the form of a book, though for many
today it may be on line or other digital form.
If we were able to ask the early Christians what was the Bible
they would give a very different answer to us. For Jewish Christians growing up
in the 1st century (Jesus own day and beyond) the Bible as we know
it simply did not exist! Strange to think this I know.
Scriptures did exist and the scrolls were regularly read
publically yet as we hear in Nehemiah they were always read … with
interpretation. The Word of God was never restricted to what was written on the
page the Word of God included “the interpretation”.
The Jewish collection of
books (what we might describe loosely as “Old Testament” or Tenakh in Hebrew, was not fixed until well
into the second century. There are just 5 Torah Book, 13 Prophet books and 4
collections of hymns. (22 books all told)
The New Testament as we know it was argued about for years and
consensus was hard to come by and it was not until the end of the fourth
century that something was decided and in fact a further deliberation came in
the late 16th century that a decision was finally made on the New
Testament Canon.
This also excludes the situation that some even today think the
Apocrypha is or is not acceptable!! So we cannot even reach a conclusion today!
It may seem strange to us who have been so used to thinking of the
New Testament that early Christians did not grow up with what we now simply
take for granted. Even the thought that you did not know the gospel of Luke for
example might make a huge difference to how we would approach Christmas! And
many Christians did indeed not know Luke, and others who may have known Luke
would not have known Matthew etc… everything was much more localized.
Perhaps one way of illustrating this for our minds today is how some
churches use one hymn book, and others a different one…. Think how attached we
become to hymn books!? (perhaps a poor example)
Furthermore we also have that key to scripture as Nehemiah
witnessed and also the Ethiopian Eunuch…. Interpretation…. How can we
understand without interpretation? This has always been key to scripture
throughout Judaism and Christianity.
It goes without saying that Martin Luther’s battle cry “Sola
Scriptura” Scripture alone was actually worked out with very rigorous teaching
and interpretation…. Even if only to cope with clear contradictions and
anomalies we come across in the differing texts.
Biblical Scholarship particularly from the 19th century
onwards has opened the pages of scripture even further, and new ancient texts
have been discovered since then too. Our current Bible is sourced from hundreds
if not thousands of different textual sources, words have been poured over for
years now to bring fresh understanding to a text we many have believed to be
set in stone.
Whoever wrote the epistle we call, to the Hebrews was probably
correct when they wrote:
“the word of God is living and active, sharper
than any two-edged sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit, joints
from marrow; it is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”
Bear in mind of course that even this was written before a word of
the Gospels as we know them had been penned.
I do indeed believe in the strength and wisdom of what we may call
the Word of God….. indeed I feel this more today than I did in the 1980’s and
1990s. The Bible is truly fascinating and gripping, but it only so for me
because of study and learning about its intricacies. The more I read and learn
the more I am able to inwardly digest what is expressed and said. It certainly
takes patience too!
The Bible has forever been a text formulated and interpreted by
countless believers in countless situations. It is amazing how this is. It is a
lifeless thing to me without the people who read it and live through it. The
Bible this way does indeed become living and active.
The Bible without a believer is empty… as illustrated by that
interesting film called the Book of Eli.. the blind man who learnt by heart the
words and in this way was able to save the text from destruction.
And, as has been wonderfully expressed elsewhere
“Be careful how you live. You may be the only Bible
some person ever reads.”
On this Bible Sunday let us give thanks for God’s word living and
breathing through us. The text is nothing without the believer.
Monday, 22 May 2017
Sermon for 21st May 2017
As requested by a few who heard it!
Sermon
Easter 6 2017
St
Magnus and St Colman
At Synod recently we reflected on the content of
the Diocesan Profile. As well as making important changes to it in that it now
reflects the life of the Northern Isles more prominently than it did before we also
reflected on the phrase “the Dream of God for Aberdeen” a choice of words which
was remarked as unfortunate.
Someone spoke about understanding the phrase “the
will of God”, but the “dream of God” was something else!
Personally speaking, though I have heard the
expression “will of God” more, I am still left puzzled about what t may mean.
Some people seem to use it in a way that makes me
at least feel very unconnected to God.
People often ask me how it is that I know God has
called me to be a priest…. I am sure the question can and should be used for
any activity for that matter…. How do we know God wants us to do something… or
to be something?
The answer does not in the end lie with the
individual but in the community. Each of us plays a part in helping us hear
God’s will.
Jesus poses us today a very uncomfortable
challenge….. If you love me you will keep my commandments…. I cannot fail to
hear this in a similar way to a mother saying to a child, if you do this then
this will follow…
However I am not sure this is a helpful way of
hearing wat Jesus is saying to us. I do not find it all that helpful to use the
carrot and stick method of discipleship.
If we look more closely the “If you love me…”
comes with a promise attached…. Jesus is not leaving us alone.
Jesus at the same time as saying “ If you love
me…” also reminds us that Something of God is deep within us and always
encouraging us.
As we move in the church calendar to Ascension and
Pentecost, that time when it may be tempting to see Jesus leaving his disciples
after the resurrection…. So graphically portrayed for us at Ascension Day when
the Paschal Candle is removed, we need to remind ourselves of that important
thing which Jesus reminded his disciples in today’s Gospel, that something of
God truly remains with us and is indeed within.
So often when facing difficulties and stresses of
any kind it is so tempting to think we face things on our own, without
recognising or taking the time to recognise that we are not all alone after
all.
I was reminded very much of this when walking
along the beach the other day when I noticed the footprints in the sand. I
reminded myself of that famous poem: ……
One night I dreamed I was walking
along the beach with the Lord.
Many scenes from my life flashed
across the sky.
In each scene I noticed footprints in
the sand.
Sometimes there were two sets of
footprints,
other times there were one set of footprints.
This bothered me because I noticed
that during the low periods of my life,
when I was suffering from anguish, sorrow
or defeat, I could see only one set of footprints.
So I said to the Lord,
"You promised me Lord, that if I
followed you,
you would walk with me always.
But I have noticed that during the most trying periods of my life there have
only been one set of footprints in the sand.
Why, when I needed you most,
you have not been there for me?"
The Lord replied,
"The times when you have
seen only one set of footprints,
is when I carried you."
This
is an important thing to remember because feeling alone can be totally
devastating for some people.
Furthermore
the Gospel paints a picture of being drawn into God and the feast of the
Ascension (on Thursday) is one way we picture this happening not just for Jesus
but for us too.
We
are Drawn into God, we are God’s offspring as Paul says in the court of the
Areopogus in Athens. Let us not treat God or think of God as if he were apart
from us… he is not above or away…. He is not something made of silver or gold.
God
is closer than we ever really imagined so let us live with one another as if
this was indeed the case, God is close to each one of us.
Footprints
take 2!
Imagine
you and the Lord Jesus are walking down the road together. For much of the way,
the Lord's footprints go along steadily, consistently, rarely varying the pace.
But
your footprints are a disorganized stream of zigzags, starts, stops, turnarounds,
circles, departures, and returns.
For
much of the way, it seems to go like this, but gradually your footprints come
more in line with the Lord's, soon paralleling, His consistently.
You
and Jesus are walking as true friends!
This
seems perfect, but then an interesting thing happens: Your footprints that once
etched the sand next to Jesus' are now walking precisely in His steps.
Inside
His larger footprints are your smaller ones, you and Jesus are becoming one.
This
goes on for many miles, but gradually you notice another change. The footprints
inside the large footprints seem to grow larger.
Eventually
they disappear altogether. There is only one set of footprints.
They
have become one.
This
goes on for a long time, but suddenly the second set of footprints is
back.
This time it seems even worse! Zigzags all over the place. Stops. Starts.
Gashes in the sand. A variable mess of prints.
You
are amazed and shocked.
Your
dream ends. Now you pray:
"Lord,
I understand the first scene, with zigzags and fits. I was a new Christian; I
was just learning. But You walked on through the storm and helped me learn to
walk with You."
"That
is correct."
"And
when the smaller footprints were inside of Yours, I was actually learning to
walk in Your steps, following You very closely."
"Very
good.. You have understood everything so far."
When
the smaller footprints grew and filled in Yours, I suppose that I was becoming
like You in every way."
"Precisely."
"So,
Lord, was there a regression or something? The footprints separated, and this
time it was worse than at first."
There
is a pause as the Lord answers, with a smile in His voice.
"You
didn't know? It was then that we danced!"
To everything there is a season, a
time for every purpose under heaven: A time to weep, a time to laugh, a time to
mourn, and a time to dance.
Ecclesiastes 3:1,4.
Monday, 26 September 2016
Tuesday, 6 September 2016
The Holy Cross sermon
We
adore you most holy Lord Jesus Christ
Here
and in all your churches throughout the world and we bless you for by your holy
cross you have redeemed the world
The prayer of Francis on
entering a church, and no doubt at other
times too.
We begin nearly every
service with this prayer
But what is the cross of
Christ? It may seem a strange question but I wonder now if there are various
answers that can be given here.
I
was with someone recently talking about the cross and I found it interesting to
hear what they were reflecting. There was talk of the difference between a
crucifix and a cross, and for the person I was speaking to the meaning for each
was different.
(explain)
Of
course for the early Christians there was no difference for I am sure that
whatever form of Cross was seen it symbolized horror and torture and
oppression. There could be no cross with any message of good news.
It could be therefore that
we can see a distinction between the death of Jesus and the cross of Jesus.
We are very aware that the symbol of the cross was
not actually used by the church until quite late, but that once it became used
it quickly became more than symbol of a Christian but actually a symbol of
Faith and very much part of devotion and prayer.
By the time the gospels
were written the idea of the cross was very keenly in people’s minds. In fact
the shadow of the cross and the light of Resurrection is deliberately present
in all that is said or written about Jesus.... simply because it was and is
such a decisive event for the gospel writers.
Take Johns Gospel alone.
All the signs throughout
the gospel lead the eye to the cross.
John cleverly describes
each sign in turn. He begins by actually saying “this is the first sign” (Cana)
then he says this is the second sign later in Chapter 4 (healing of centurion
servant.) The healing of the blind man is the 3rd, the feeding of
the 5,000 is number 4. The man born blind is 5 and the raising of Lazarus is 6.
Six carefully mapped out
signs in the first section of the Gospel and the 7th the most
important one is the crown of all... the crucifixion itself.
7th Day
John had planned his
gospel around the creation story, the six days of creation, and the fulfilment
of it with the
It is in his seventh sign
that the full glory of God is seen, the completion of the new creation. The
word has become flesh and we have seen the glory.
Christ is lifted high on
the cross. The moment of exaltation and glory. The moment of the revelation of
God to the chosen people, just as we are told Moses lifted the serpent to bring
healing to the wandering Israelite in the desert.
The cross is for the
Christian the supreme work of Love, it symbolizes the yearning of Love of a
creator for the creation. For you and for me. (Poster I love you)
It is sometimes hard to
think of the love of God. A creator God is not so difficult, and even a Judging
God is often seen, but to see A God who looks on a rebellious people and loves
it so much that the agony is taken to himself. This is the sign of the cross.
In
the Sunday School last week they were thinking about “Friends of Jesus” and
particularly St Theresa of Calcutta who was canonised last Sunday, known affectionately
as Mother Theresa. They were considering how even these people were not perfect
and there was darkness there too. We all have darkness and the children could
understand this point.
The cross is Johns 7th
sign of the new creation. It is there we are seeing the Glory of God.
So the cross is so much
more than crucifixion. The cross makes the most profound statement in the story
of the good news, and in consequence has been used in Art to say many things.
The cross is not the sign
of death, neither it is a just a reminder of the death of Jesus. It is the sign
of new life too, a recreation, the fulfilment of who we are created to be. In
the Cross and through Christ we are made afresh, we take on again the image of
Gods glory. Yes a sign of love and redemption.
Sunday, 10 April 2016
Sermon for Easter 3 10th April 2016
Did you hear the story of the pensioner who had
written a letter to God and had posted it in the mail…. She was living on very
limited resources and did not have much money at all. She had saved 100 pounds
to have a special meal with her two friends who were coming to visit it was
something that she had been longing for and looking forward to. As the time
came nearer to the visit of her friends a burglar broke in to her house and
stole the money.
This theft was the prompt for the letter to God
and she explained all that had happened to God and how she felt.
Seeing a letter addressed to God the local postman
felt moved to open it. On reading its contents he felt moved to do something
and arranged a collection at the sorting office amongst colleagues. 96 pounds
was collected.
He put this in an envelope and delivered it to the
old lady.
A week later he noticed another letter addressed
to God from the old lady. In this letter she thanked God for the money but
wanted to point out that someone in the post office had stolen 4 pounds from
Gods offering.
Perhaps it goes without saying that prayer is
vital to the life of a Christian. Without prayer we whither and die. Without
prayer we will cease to exist.
If you want to know that you are alive you can
either stay quiet for a little while and listen to the sound of your breathing,
or if you are I a bit more of a rush you can put your fingers on your pulses
and feel the heart pumping the blood around your body.
The way a Christian can tell if they are alive is
to find their life in prayer.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
We live the risen life through our praying and
serving. It is not something we can receive and put it in the bottom drawer, or
frame and hang on the wall.
You only have to look at the lives of the saints
to realise this point.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
Prayer of course takes many forms, but the heart
of prayer is always going to be silence. This seems strange to think because we
have so easily conditioned ourselves to think that “to say a prayer” is to use
words.
Silence in worship and silence in prayer is NOT
emptiness…. It is not a gap before something else happens or a pause….. it is
time for GOD. (encountering God)
The times we have in the Eucharist for silence
should become for us the heart of the service… it is then we can hear the heartbeat
of God amongst us and within us.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
Having said that let me also say that familiar
words in prayers are also very important gate openers for me…. As we open this
service with “Almighty God to whom all
hearts are open all desires known…. Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration
of your Holy Spirit…”
I feel physically shifted and moved to a new
place…. Through these familiar words that are so important to me I am transported and made ready for further
encounters during the service we share together.
The Eucharist is then littered with such powerful
and familiar words that deepen my silences and strengthen what I feel are
encounters with God.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
Through Easter we are reminded of the presence of
Jesus with his disciples even when they thought life was at best gloomy or
perhaps even “not worth living anymore”
Even when the usual daily labour they knew so well
was fruitless they discovered new hope with the risen Christ.
Even when Paul breathed threats of death to the
church, the risen Christ somehow breathed into him and warmed his heart.
Even when Annanias was thinking to keep clear of a
potentially difficult situation, God enabled life to break through.
None of this happens without silence and prayer.
Our lives today are often filled with busyness and
activity. This may make us feel worthwhile and it may even leave us feel
exhausted, but For the Christian the life of God within us comes to being
through prayer and we ignore this at our peril.
Easter is a time of recognition… of seeing God
alive in our world, bother amongst the people we live with and amongst, and
within ourselves.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
Prayer happens in so many forms and so many
places, but I urge us to use the familiar words and prayers we encounter (in
our Eucharist) to transport us to deeper places and to transform our hearts and
lives.
“Almighty
God give us such knowledge of his presence with us, that we may be strengthened
and sustained by his risen life.”
Amen
One of Paul's central teachings, which some have
rightly called his "sermon on wisdom" can be found in 1 Corinthians
(1:17-3:3). Here, Paul recognizes that many of his new converts were doing
spiritual things, but still in very immature and unspiritual ways (for example,
to feel or look holy, to cultivate a positive self-image, to "get"
God's love, or to "earn" entry into heaven). Paul calls them
"infants in Christ" who are not yet ready for "solid food"
(1 Corinthians 3:2). Many today have settled for religion as attendance or
belonging, which would surely be baby food, instead of religion as inherently
participating in Love.
Consciously, trustfully, and lovingly
remaining on "the Vine," which is to be connected to our source, is
precisely our access point to deeper spiritual wisdom. We know by participation
with and in God, which creates our very real co-identity with Christ: We are
also both human and divine, as he came to reveal and model. The
foundational meaning of transformation is to surrender to this new identity and
to consciously draw upon it.
Richard Rhor( from mediation)
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