Trinity 7
A Sermon preached by Fr James Heard on Sunday 19 July at St George's and St John the Baptist
Things are heating
up on our journey through the Gospel of Mark. The disciples have returned from
their first ministry tour – their inauguration into apostles, those who are
sent. Exhilarated and exhausted, they must have had stories to tell Jesus –
thrilling stories of healings and encounters with people. Perhaps there are
also darker stories in the mix as well – stories of failure and rejection. Hard
stories they needed to process privately with Jesus, their rabbi. Jesus senses
that the disciples need a break. They're tired, over stimulated, underfed, and
in significant need of solitude.
In addition, Jesus
had just lost John the Baptist, his beloved cousin and prophet, the one who
baptized him and who spent a lifetime in the wilderness preparing his way. What
must have been alarming to Jesus was the way he was murdered, a terrifying
reminder that God's beloved are not immune to violent or senseless deaths.
Jesus must have felt heartbroken.
As the crowds
throng around them at the edge of the Sea of Galilee, Jesus says to his
disciples, ‘Let's go off by ourselves to a quiet place and rest awhile’. Jesus
wants to provide a time of rest and recuperation for his friends. But he also
is weary; the hunger he articulates here is also his own.
The short boat
trip, however, is the only time that Jesus and his disciples have to
themselves. The desperate crowd tracked their movement and hurried ahead of
them. So, instead of arriving at a deserted place to rest, they’re greeted by a
large and needy crowd. The quiet sanctuary Jesus seeks is nowhere to be found.
What was Jesus’
response? We can probably guess the disciples reaction and perhaps our own. My
instinct would have been to turn the boat around and sail away. We are told
that Jesus ‘…had compassion for them… they were like sheep without a
shepherd…’ Jesus was filled with deep human compassion. The Greek word
(σπλαγχνίζομαι – splagchnizomai) used to describe compassion gives a sense of
‘having one’s bowels turned over’!
It’s the seat of
feeling. There is something profoundly physical about this com-passion, this
feeling with. Feeling another's pain, feeling another's suffering.
The crowd was like
sheep without a shepherd. And Jesus, the Good Shepherd, unlike the shepherds in
our first reading, gathers his sheep, searches for lost sheep, defends them
from predators, and he teaches them from a place of compassion. The lectionary
reading then does a big jump – missing out the feeding of the 5,000 – and the
second half of this week's Gospel is a repeat of the first. Jesus once again
insists that the disciples get back in the boat and sail away. Retreat attempt
number two!
But once again the
crowds anticipate Jesus' plan, and word spreads. As soon as the boat
lands at Gennesaret, the crowds go wild, pushing and jostling to get close to
Jesus. They carry their sick to him on mats. In every village and city Jesus
approaches, swarms of people needing healing press against him. They plead.
They beg to touch the fringe of his robe and receive healing.
Jesus' response?
Once again, he responds with a heart moved by compassion. "All who
touched him were healed." For Jesus, compassion isn’t just a feeling but
it also involves a doing. Jesus brought shalom, wholeness, to broken lives in a
variety of ways healing people from all that oppresses and diminishes human
life. Jesus showed his followers that compassion is inherent to discipleship,
even when they are feeling exhausted and that they have no more to give.
We too are
challenged by Jesus’ response. Jesus is inviting us live and do the work that
springs from a heart filled with compassion, with empathy, with doing our best
to experience another's pain. We can never reach this ideal because each
person's pain is unique. But we help those who need help, not those we deem
worthy of our help. It’s not our own help we offer, of course; we are merely
the vehicles for Christ's healing touch, his saving grace, his word of hope.
Being surrounded by
such huge need – and hearing and seeing on the television and our electronic
devices such need around the world – it is easy to experience what’s been
described as ‘compassion fatigue’. This week's Gospel reading balances the
tension between compassion and self-protection. Jesus was unapologetic about
his need for rest and solitude. He saw no shame in retreating when he and his
disciples needed a break. Yet he never allowed his weariness to overwhelm his
compassion.
Part of the reason
we come to church – where the liturgy slows us down, taking us briefly away
from the need to be useful, or achieve, or go on retreat, or meditate – part of
the reason is to be refreshed, to experience God’s healing touch, to experience
God’s love in the core of our being, to be renewed by the fountain of love, the
source from which we minister to a broken world.
As we reflect upon
our mission action plan in the coming months, we might ask how we can be a
place of hospitality and compassion, a place of healing and of belonging.
Ephesians reflects upon the place of belonging and wholeness that the church is
called to be – and this belonging isn’t based on whether we’ve been circumcised
(thankfully!) – a key issue in the early church – but nor is it based on race,
or gender, or colour, or education. And nor is this belonging based on how much
or little faith one has, which is why I rather like the metaphor of a ship for
the church. It’s a metaphor that was an ancient
Christian symbol. Christians in the early church marked their meeting places
with rough scratchings of a boat and sail. Among the earliest Christian artworks
are representations of the church as a boat, transporting and sheltering
Christians through stormy and dangerous times. Mark uses the boat as a
means of withdrawal from the crowd, a place of refreshment, and as a place of
communion with the disciples.
There is some thing
wonderfully Anglican, something profoundly corporate, something deeply
catholic, in a ship as a metaphor to describe our spiritual journey. This ship
we call the church includes those with much faith and those with little; it
incorporates those who are starting out on their journey of faith, as well as
veterans.
I wonder how we also might be places of refuge, of
spiritual sustenance to those from our frenetic city who are spiritually
hungry. As a church we are called to be a community that is inspired by Jesus
and filled with compassion, doing our best to share another's pain; creating a
place that offers a listening ear to those who are lonely; that offers a meal
to those who are hungry; where we share in another’s grief; a place of prayer,
and of place of healing to those whose lives are broken.