Lent 2
Genesis 17.1-7,15,16
Psalm 22.23-31
Romans 4.13-25
Mark 8.31-38
A sermon preached at St. George's Church, 1st March 2015, by the Revd. Robert Thompson
“If any want to
become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and
follow me.” (Mark 8.34b)
Undoubtedly it is because it is my last Sunday
in the parishes that my attention this week drew primarily to our reading from
the Hebrew Bible. I associate the characters of Abraham and Sarah primarily
with both the emotional and physical reality of journeying and travel. Their
story is told in chapters 11-25 of the Book of Genesis. Today’s
passage is the third renewal of the initial establishing of a personal
relationship between God and Abraham in Genesis 12. It was a relationship that led Abraham to set out and
journey in trust from Haran in search of the land of promise. But as Genesis
tells it the direction of travel is never straightforward, and having come to
Canaan a famine strikes and Abraham's family are exiled to Egypt. The whole Abrahamic cycle of stories is one of
both physical, emotional and relational coming and going, ups and downs, turns
and uturns and roundabouts. But all this is undergirded by a deep sense of the
faithfulness of God, of the trustworthiness of what is ultimately most real and
important.
The story of Abraham and Sarah chimes with the
fact that I am about to embark on a journey myself. Mine is not so much
physical travel, in that I am not
even leaving the flat in which I live. Nor does it involve great distance, in that my parish affiliation is just shifting
across to the other side of Holland Park Avenue. Nor does it involve the level of material sacrifice
that the stories in Genesis depict, in that unlike these characters I am
neither exile, nor immigrant nor refugee.
But my changing of parish affiliation is a
journey to a very different place. My licensing tomorrow night will be in St
James’ Norlands. Its grand setting in James’ Gardens makes it look much like our own parishes. But this is the facade
of the parishes St Clement and St James, behind which lies communities of great
colour and diversity with high levels of social and economic deprivation. Only
50% are ethically white. 75% of people
live in social housing. The Church Urban Fund ranks it in the bottom 7% of
parishes in the country on measurements of poverty.
My journey is however a relational and emotional one. Although it is neither physically far nor arduous it
does in part involve a parting from these communities of St George’s
and St John’s. These are communities saturated with
colourful, diverse, quirky, idiosyncratic, lovable and loving people, that’s
you. You have been, over the past 11 years of my association with St George’s
and 6 years of my more committed presence in both parishes, the location of
what it is that I as a priest ‘do’ - in presidency at
the Eucharist, preaching and teaching. But much, much more than that you have
imprinted yourselves upon my own being, shaping me, teaching me, helping me to
be a more faithful follower of Jesus, much more than I have ever shaped,
taught, or helped you.
What I deeply love about these communities, and
the ways in which they have been shaped and nurtured over time, is that real
tangible sense of the humane, compassionate and humble ways in which we live
out our following of Christ together. I also have much valued the simple
unfussy but dignified manner of our worship. There is
a positive lack of religious arrogance or pretension. There is wonderful
honesty about critically engaging with what it is we hear in scripture with the
realities of the lived experiences of our lives. Knowing ourselves to be
immensely materially privileged there is a real commitment to serving others
through our support of St Mungo's Broadway and
Christian Aid. Realising that none of us are ever perfect there is a definable
lack of judging others for what they believe, or how they live out their faith
and conduct their lives.
Like us, the characters of Abraham and Sarah were not perfect either. Although
following the call of God, they are often portrayed as flawed, feeble, failing
human beings. Behind the story we hear today lie the characters of Hagar and and Ishmael. Hagar
was an Egyptian servant girl of Sarah. Because Sarah was unable to have
children she offered Hagar sexually to her husband. Sarah and Hagar’s
relationship inevitably disintegrated. The jealous wife treated the servant
harshly and eventually Hagar was banished from the household. In exile in the
desert an appearance of an angel prompts her to return to Abraham. But when
Sarah’s son Isaac was born the relationship between
Hagar and Sarah came to it’s tragic, climatic
end. At Isaac’s weaning celebration Sarah found the teenage
Ishmael mocking her son. Deeply upset she demanded that Abraham throw Hagar and
her son out. Sarah declared that Ishmael would not share in Isaac's
inheritance. Hagar and Ishmael run out of water in the desert and are at the
point of death when an angel appears and opens Hagar's eyes to see a well. The angel promises Hagar that God "will make a
great nation" of Ishmael. Hagar and Ishmael were saved. Hagar found
her son a wife from her native home in the land of Egypt and they settled in
the Desert of Paran (Gen 21:14-21).
The stories of Abraham, Sarah and Isaac, of
Hagar and Ishmael are ones that depict deep and searing, domestic and personal loves
and passions: the incapacity to live up to what was expected in marriage at the
time, the bearing of an heir; the exploitation of a servant for sexual ends;
the jealously and envy that comes from seeing the ability of others; the abuse
of power in manipulation,
persecution, and expulsion.
Nothing much changes: the more the world turns, history advances and the
political landscape is transformed, the more its stays the same. Both the
generative and destructive power of human relationships and of individual
emotions are captured in these texts, which is why, as myth, they still ring true true for
us today.
Like us these characters were not perfect. Yet this all too
human depiction of our biblical heroes is framed with the persistent, enduring
and expansive love of God; and it is stringed together by the all too
inadequate characters’ continuing trust in
the the faithfulness of the God who initially called them. Although in the
Christian faith we have tended to focus on the story of Abraham, Sarah and
Isaac, because we following Jesus who was Jewish, trace our own spiritual
ancestry through this line, the text is very clear that God’s
expansive love, God’s promise and God’s blessing rests on
Hagar and Ishmael too. God’s promise, even
here in Genesis, is not sectarian, nor partisan nor partial, but it falls on
those whom God chooses it to fall, even those beyond our own tight family
units, associations and clubs, even on those whom we expel from our own
communities.
Paul in his theological reflection on the faith
of Abraham in today’s epistle rather paints over the Hebrew Bible’s
much more intensely morally problematic and ambiguous depiction of our
spiritual ancestor. It’s as if Paul is a
theological spin doctor telling a tale that suits his own purpose, and failing to give due balance in judgement of the
ancient biblical texts. Paul here is like our modern use of Photoshop,
airbrushing away not only Abraham’s faults but also
eliminating any recollection of God’s promise to Hagar
and Ishmael and their faith too. His hyperbole reaches its crescendo in his
declaration that “No distrust made him (Abraham) waver concerning
the promise God” (Romans 4.21). Paul overstates his case. We of course are much like
Paul in our own recollection of history, our presentations of theology and the
telling of our own stories. We tell them prejudicially in favour of ourselves, overstating our own virtues,
marketing ourselves by airbrushing out much that is failing and lacking within
us, as well as stereotyping others whom we don't much like.
Peter in the story of Jesus’ life in the gospels
is also presented as a character in whom imperfection and faithfulness are embodied. He is a prime example of faith and insight
among the disciples. He is the one who is able to declare that he knows Jesus
to the the Messiah of God. But in today’s
reading we encounter his depiction as an
equally prime example of the failure to understand that Jesus’ messianic vocation includes suffering and death on a cross. Jesus in today’s text then
includes his own disciples in this vocation: “If any want to
become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and
follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who
lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it. For
what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life?
Indeed, what can they give in return for their life?”
(Mark
8. 34b-36).
In T.S. Eliot’s famous poem the Journey
of the Magi today’s themes of
journey, human imperfection and the embrace of death are brought together in
the final stanza. After one of the wise men has told us the tale of the long
and deep journey, in the sharp weather of the dead of winter, and of their
encounter with the Christ child he continues to recollect:
“All
this was a long time ago, I remember,
And I would do it again, but set down
This set down
This: were we lead all that way for
Birth or Death? There was a Birth, certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt. I have seen birth and death,
But had thought they were different; this Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.
We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
But no longer at ease here, in the old dispensation,
With an alien people clutching their gods.
I should be glad of another death.”
And I would do it again, but set down
This set down
This: were we lead all that way for
Birth or Death? There was a Birth, certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt. I have seen birth and death,
But had thought they were different; this Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.
We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
But no longer at ease here, in the old dispensation,
With an alien people clutching their gods.
I should be glad of another death.”
The Magi came simply to witness the produce of
a birth. But that adoration of the Christ precipitated their own death. It led
not to contentment but to a lack of ease with the ways in which they had lived
their lives before, and the gods, the
objects, of their former worship. It was unease that makes the Magus who
narrates the poem yearn for yet another death.
“If any want to
become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and
follow me.” In this Lenten season we are asked to acquire
the consciousness of Eliot’s wise traveller,
of our own need to die to ourselves as we continue to adore the Christ and
follow Jesus. We are asked to become increasingly aware of our own separation
from God, of our imperfections, of our
'sinfulness,' and of need our to turn again in repentance. Today's biblical
'heroes' give us some comfort in the midst of that task: like them we too can
still be faithful followers of God, despite our faltering, failing and flaws. Faithful followers, not because of observing any
exacting disciplines in Lent, the repeated practice of which, we may delusionally think, might lead us closer to
perfection. For as Paul in Romans rightly argues there is nothing we can do, no law that we can
follow, which can bring us an inch closer to God, that is only the fruit of
faith. Rather we are called to be faithful followers, who like the rose
blighted by the aphid which still opens itself up to the rays of the sun, learn
to open ourselves up to the enlivening heat and energy which is simply God's
grace in the person of Jesus Christ.
So as I journey on I hope and pray that this community
may remain humble, and humorous, compassionate and dignified, and above all not
too religious but fully humane. I hope that you continue to find God not just
in church or in Christians, but in the entirety of your lives, in every
event, in joy and in sorrow, and in the faces and bodies of every single human
person you meet. It is with such an opening up to God's grace in others to
which Lent calls us. It is such an opening up that will sustain us on all our
journeys, ameliorate our imperfections, and bring us through our acceptance of suffering and
death and the cross to the the joy of resurrection.
So I end with the poem Chant Against Death of
the contemporary Caribbean port Mervyn Morris. Its short, sharp, incisive
verse which celebrates life, embodies
faith and trust in the ultimate goodness of all creation and ends our journey
in risen life.
Chant Against Death
say family
say friends
say wife
say love
say life
say learning
laughter
sunlight
rain
say cycle
circle
music
memory
say night & day
say sun & moon
say
see you soon