Patronal Festival St John the Baptist Holland Road
A sermon preached by The Venerable Peter Delaney, MBE at the Patronal
Festival of St John the Baptist Holland Road, 6.30pm on Sunday 21 June
All
who heard them pondered them and said, “What then will this child become?” For,
indeed, the hand of the Lord was with him. Luke 1. 80
How many Christian
figures have inspired an opera by Strauss, ‘Salome’ in which John is beheaded
in the most dramatic way and is the centre of this powerful music drama. In art a myriad of descriptions of John occur
from Piero della Francesca’s Baptism of Jesus in the Jordan in our own National
Gallery to Aubrey Beardsley’s erotic illustrations of John and Herod I the
Yellow Book.
And in Wikipedia that
store of knowledge for the internet user he is shown under five different
headings the first running for 17 pages! So this is no ordinary patron saint
you have in Holland Road.
Who was this man, John
the Baptiser, where did he come from, why is he important? Well Luke’s Gospel
the great gentile gospel full of compassion and sympathy for women carries the
only reference to John’s birth in the New Testament. There’s plenty about his
other appearances but Luke alone tells his birth story. There are 61 references to John the Baptist
in the New Testament, so he was clearly a very unique man and his whole calling
is centred on the wilderness and a solitary beginning.
He is really
important for Christians as he is what is called an intertestamental figure in
other words he bridges the gap between the Old and New Testament. As an
historical prophet in the Jewish tradition he alone continues the mantel of
Isaiah and Jeremiah and as all prophets were seen as instruments of God himself
he was to be feared for as he spoke his words he actually brought into being
the prophecy itself.
So today you
commemorate a character of incredible importance for he was not just seen by
some as a ‘weirdo’ living an extreme lifestyle but he was actually a social
reformer far ahead of his time warning people of the consequences of their
extravagant lifestyles. Now there’s an agenda for St John the Baptist Holland
Road for their next decade an agenda of social reform bringing to this part of
London the message of repentance and freedom from self.
What would this birth
mean today if it happened here in London, and became known to the area? Well it
would certainly cause a stir unconventional and radical would upset some! John
did not conform to those around him, he stood for something else, and because
of this he was respected and not thought of as a crank! The people who followed
John were prepared to live out his way of life.
Reflect for a moment
that John pulled out of the establishment and would not identify with the great
Temple in Jerusalem but spent his time by the River Jordan and amongst a
community which many believe corresponds to the Essenes, the monastic group who
lived near Quamran and where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found. They lived a
simple life and ate a form of insects like locusts and a manna which appeared
in the desert with the dew of morning. Do you remember how John the Baptist is
described in Matthew, “Now John himself had a garment of camel’s hair and a
leather belt around his waist: and his food was locusts and wild honey”
They believed in the
importance of cleansing with water with prayer and studying the holy words of
prophets and teachers. And remember the importance of water to a nomadic people
in the wilderness or desert which is where Jesus migrated to before he began
his own ministry. Near to where the Baptism of Jesus took place by the Dead sea
in the tributary of the Jordan River.
Your patronal feast
is next Wednesday the Nativity of John the Baptist, so our focus should be on
the significance of the birth of John. Those of you who have been able to visit
the Holy Land will reflect on the fact that a short distance from Jerusalem in
the Judean hill county nestling in a small valley is the village of Ein Karim.
A small road runs through this verdant village on the one side nesting in the
hills a beautiful Franciscan church of the Visitation commemorating the visit
of Mary to Elizabeth heralding the news of Johns birth and Jesus and on the
other side of the valley another church built over a cave hewn in the rock kept
as the place of John’s birth.
Here in this valley
the Old and the New Testaments meet in John’s figure the prophet of the new
age. His life from the beginning was set apart born of a Temple priest
Zachariah and Elisabeth Mary’s cousin and charged from the start with preparing
the way for Jesus Christ. It was a tough assignment and meant unpopularity and
isolation. John was unacceptable to his own people where his message was change
and turn around or repent and to those outside the established Jewish Jerusalem
sects an anathema as the words he spoke were seen as blasphemy and sedition
against the status quo.
So John moved out of
the area and walked to the lowest point on the planet the Dead Sea (a day’s
journey from Jerusalem into the desert) and developed his own ministry amongst
the barren desert and those other rebels who had escaped into the wilderness to
be free of the shackles of strict Orthodox Judaism. This meant that John began
to attract those who also felt uncomfortable with traditional Jewish convention
and were looking for a new freedom of the spirit.
It was in effect the
birth of a new movement in Judaism, not of the Zealots or of the warring
classes against Rome but a peaceful revolution about simple living and a sense
of identity with nature and the environment. There were a number of new
communities growing up around the Dead Sea who practised a simple rule of life,
depended upon the deserts provision for food and drink and wanted to return to
how Israel had lived early in its history.
We are therefore not
surprised that Jesus was drawn to the same area to begin his own ministry and
in so doing chose to identify with John and those who gathered by the river
Jordan as it entered the Dead Sea. And at this point two eras confront each
other the last of the Old Testament Prophets John the Baptist and the promised
bringer of the new age, Jesus Christ the first prophet of the New message of
hope.
Shortly after Jesus’s
baptism he returned to the same place to spend forty days and forty nights to
sort himself out as he began his own ministry. But make no mistake about it his
friend John the Baptist help shape the thinking of Jesus Christ and Jesus
lamented the tragic death of John with the moving words “no greater than John
has lived on this earth.”
How does the unique
teaching of John the Baptist influence the community of Holland Road? Here in
this magnificent Brooks church hidden away between other buildings the gospel
has been lived out for over a hundred and twenty six years. Here word and
sacrament, forgiveness and hope have been at the core of Christian life. The
great symbol of St John Baptist points beyond this church to those it serves in
this hidden community.
What I am really
asking myself is where do I see the commitment of John to the new way of life
in my own life and in the ministry of this church? “Repent and believe the good
news” that is the core message. How do we demonstrate that by the way we
organize our church life and our home lives? John sought his God by a life
style that was different from those around him. I suppose a legitimate question
to pose today is repentance central to how you approach each other; forgiving
and forgiven! Can people sense when they meet you that you are open to their
needs and available to them, judging by my welcome here it certainly begins well
how but how is the follow up?
John calls each one
of us to repentance and a new life focussed on Jesus, renewed daily. This community of John the Baptist today
celebrating its Patronal Festival gives thanks for all those who have gone
before in the history of faith, those unknown saints of Holland Road who trail
blaze for us and remind us of loyalty to Jesus Christ and that the way ahead is
full of hope and forgiveness. So put a smile on your face and praise God who
lives in Holland Road - or perhaps you hadn’t noticed?