Second Sunday of Easter : This is the message we have heard from Him and proclaim to you, that God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.
A Sermon preached by Revd. Ivo Morshead at St George's Church on 12 April 2015
This
is the message we have heard from Him and proclaim to you, that God is light
and in him there is no darkness at all.
1 John 1. 1-2.2
I am sure that we all have stories to
tell about darkness and light. Parents have the predicament of whether or not
to leave the light on in the corridor for the young child who is frightened of
the dark. Adults need light too. We used to take dishes of food to a couple
living on the fifth floor of a house round the corner from here where there was
a retracting black button as you came into the front door which you pressed to
allow the lighting up of the staircase. Unfortunately the timer was set too
short to allow time to climb up to the top floor and you would find yourself in
total darkness on floor 3 and unable to find the push button for the onward
journey. For child and adult it is a case of Light is good, darkness is bad. This
too is stated biblically as in my text from 1 John. God is light and in him there is no darkness at all. The author of
the Letter to John goes on with the important simile of walking either in darkness or in light as we
heard from today’s epistle If we say that we have fellowship with God
while we are walking in darkness, we lie and do not do what is true; but if we
walk in the light as he himself is in
the light, we have fellowship with one another .
The bible right from the start in the
book of Genesis associates the simile of walking or remaining in the light as a
metaphor of living in relation to God, of behaving as he would wish. We find in
Genesis 17 v 1 the words ;When Abram was
99 years old the Lord appeared to Abram and said to him ‘walk before me and be
blameless’. All through the Old Testament we have light and fire as a sign
of God’s presence, Moses on Mount Sinai receiving the 10 commandments as the Lord descended upon it in fire. We have in Psalm 104 v 4 O Lord my God, you are very great, you are clothed with honour and
majesty wrapped in light as with a garment. In the prophecy
of Isaiah in chapter 2 v 5 the house of Jacob is urged; O House of Jacob come, let us walk in the light of the Lord. This
in emulation of the Servant poem of Isaiah where the Servant of the Lord is the
Light of the Gentiles. In short the
good are sons of light and the wicked sons of
darkness.
Most of us no doubt do our best to walk
in the way of the Lord, to abhor all that is evil. All of us surely glory in
the light and avoid the darkness. It is a well known marketing fact that given
a choice, a retailer or café should choose the sunny side the street for that
is the side of the street that people will choose to walk. So too we choose to
show only the light side of who we are
to others and hide from others the dark
areas that we even perhaps try to keep from ourselves. These areas of ourselves
which we strive to overcome and which are part of human nature which appeared as a warning in the Book of Common Prayer
Epistle for Easter Day. In this we are urged among other things to mortify your members which are upon earth;
uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence and covetousness, which
is idolatry. We need only to look at any advertising on television or any
media to see how corporately the nation is caught up in such tendencies as well
as ourselves in the darker corners of our being. On this Low Sunday as we bask
in the light of the Risen Christ at Easter we are called on to remember This is the message we have heard from Him
and proclaim to you, that God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.
,….which continues but if we walk in
the light as he himself is in the light, we have fellowship with one another,
and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin. It is a dual
message, that of setting the task of walking in the light and the comfort of
the assurance of forgiveness for our failings so to do.
Such a task falls too in the nation
especially at this time of the general election. Listening to the party
statements it is hard to see very much interest in matters other than which
each political party might win over votes be it reducing taxes, cutting
immigration, maintaining the health service and so forth. In the context of
light and darkness many feel that the prospect leans heavily towards the
latter. It is upon this scene that the Church of England Bishops have launched
their letter to Christian men and women suggesting how we should approach this
General Election just four weeks away
from this coming Wednesday.
The Bishops letter is addressed to all
members of the church but the authors hope that others may share their ideas.
It is published in a small booklet of 52 pages entitled ‘Who is my Neighbour’
and there are printouts available in the church as well as one of the booklets.
May I commend this for all to at least look at and if possible read. There is
to start with a categorical statement that politics are very much to do with
the church. Christians everywhere and throughout the ages have prayed as part
of the Lord’s Prayer ‘Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as in heaven.
That is why politics and the life of the Christian disciple cannot be
separated. That is why the church calls its members to play a full part in the
political life of the nation and to support politicians and the government with
their prayers. The bishops do not claim to have a ‘God’s eye view, they remind
all people, including politicians, church leaders and opinion formers , in the
words of Oliver Cromwell to ‘ think it possible
that you may be mistaken’.
There are various key issues that are
brought to our attention in this book. To mention one that affects us all is
the apathy that leads so many not to bother to use their vote. We are reminded
that because of this the different political parties are having to concentrate
their policies on satisfying the wishes
of their core of solid supporters and ignoring
any grander vision of policy making for the good of all. The Bishops remind us
that there have been two such visions and policies in the last seventy years.
One was the Beveridge Report in 1945 in which the party argued for a state welfare system to combat the
‘Five Giant Evils’ of Want, Disease, Ignorance, Squalor and idleness, the other
was Margaret Thatcher’s keenness to restore ‘Victorian Values’ by which she
meant not only the unregulated markets but a strong sense of duty, self-help
and personal responsibility. A case of state versus free market, individuals
dependent on handouts as against standing on their own feet. What is so
difficult is to provide a balance between the two. How to achieve this needs to
be addressed.
Today we have moved on from the times of
Beveridge and Thatcher, both have left
their legacy. The Bishops remind those debating the question of immigration of
the parable of the Good Samaritan. It was in an answer to the question put to
Jesus as to Who is my Neighbour that he told the parable to make two subtle
points. First calling people to follow the example of the foreigner who came to
the aid of the wounded traveller and secondly answering the question by
suggesting that neighbourliness may mean receiving care from a member of a
despised social group. Neighbourliness,
then, is not just about what we do for others, it is also about what we are
willing to receive from those we fear, ignore or despise. The Bishops letter recalls
the words of Disraeli deploring the
state of the nation in his time; ‘Two
nations between whom there is no discourse and no sympathy, who are as ignorant
of each others habits, thoughts and feelings as if they were dwellers in
different zones, or inhabitants of different planets. The rich and the poor’.
As individuals we are called upon to
walk in the light of God as enjoined in today’s epistle; This is the message we have heard from Him and proclaim to you, that
God is light and in him there is no darkness at all. May we pray also for
our nation as a whole and for our leaders at this time that they too will seek
to lead us away from darkness into light.