Sermon by The Very Revd Dr Frances E F Ward at St John, Holland Park on 22 April 2018
Sermon by The
Very Revd Dr Frances E F Ward at St John, Holland Park on 22 April 2018
I’m here this evening, sharing in your worship, because of this
wonderful choir.
This group of young people, because they love singing, has
turned themselves into a choir. They bring their talent and enjoyment to
enhance our worship of God. Disparate individuals now greater than the sum of
its parts, a choir to create a beautiful sound to God’s glory.
I reckon, if Jesus were alive today and teaching in London,
telling his stories and parables as he walked our streets, he wouldn’t talk
about sheep and shepherds. Sheep and goats, wheat and birds – so many of his
stories come from the rural environment in which he lived and moved.
Not so relevant in Shepherd’s Bush today.
I reckon he might come here this evening and use the choir to
illustrate his message.
I am the good choir director. The good choir director lays down
his life for the choir. I know my own and my own know me, just as the
Father knows me and I know the Father. And I lay down my life for the choir. I
have other singers that do not belong to this choir. I must bring them also,
and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one choir, one choir
director. For this reason the Father loves me, because I lay down my life in
order to take it up again.
We’re at the heart of the purpose of Jesus’ life here, as he
talks about leading, following and belonging.
My son Jonty is a member of the choir. He will not be sorry
to hear the parable of Jesus retold like this. Choirs are altogether more his
thing than sheep. Sheep are not always the docile, gentle, safe creatures we
can take them for. Ask him afterwards.
I am the good choir director. It’s a skilled business, conducting a
choir. It’s an ongoing creation. The good choir director will give of themself
to hold the choir together and challenge it into ever better performance. You
need to earn and keep respect. You need to lead with sensitivity and authority.
You need to be able to pull people into line, to curtail the dominant members
whose egos run away with them. At times, you encourage this singer, that one,
you tone down. So no one member sings too loud or holds that note too long, or
turns prima donna. You bring it all together, for the sake of the sound of the
choir. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. One voice, not many.
I’ve come down, this morning, from Mirfield in West Yorkshire.
For the last six months I’ve been living alongside a religious community that
sings the psalms morning, evening and night. They are following an ancient
tradition that goes back to St Benedict’s Rule – written in the 6C and the
basis of the monastic life. The Rule of St Benedict begins ‘listen, my child!’
At the beginning of a life of obedience in a religious community is the word
‘listen’. As the monks sing, they listen to each other. It’s crucial in a
choir. Each needs to listen to others, to the choir director, to the
congregation, to the organ or musical accompaniment. Listening – as crucial as
singing – to be in tune, to be obedient to the whole.
When we listen, we grow in knowledge and understanding of
others. Jesus tells his followers how intimately he knows his own, and how
they know him. Anyone who has sung in a choir knows that particular intimacy
that comes of listening and responding, watching the choir director’s every
move, aware and attuned to voices around. There’s a particular and very special
intimacy to this that brings you alive as you are surrounded by sound, a living
choir all around you. That knowledge is held, particularly, by the good choir
director who knows each member – each particular voice, each personality and
character, each contribution as they are part of the whole. That intimacy of
knowledge is at the heart of how Jesus knows his flock.
In another story about sheep, he says that the good shepherd
goes looking for the lost sheep: and so will a good choir director. They will
not want choir members to drift away. She or he will buy them a drink, want to
know what’s wrong. And so that knowledge extends to the pastoral – another
interesting word from a rural history where sheep and pasture were more central
to life than today. A choir will care for each other.
Jesus the good choir director brings in other singers, too, new
talent. New members stir things up and change the sound. Again, it’s the choir
and its corporate personality that’s more important than any individual. New
members come, old members retire. The choir continues.
Now, most choir directors aren’t Jesus. Some think they are, I
know. And many who don’t think they are will feel, at the end of a rehearsal,
that they have laid down their lives. We know the feeling.
At the heart of Jesus’ teaching about the good shepherd is a
life of self-giving. More than that. Self-sacrifice for the sake of the people;
for their life and wellbeing he lays down his life.
The tweet that went around to spread the news I was preaching
tonight said I’d written a book Why
Rousseau was Wrong. I’ve just finished the next book, entitled Full of Character. Out in the autumn.
Plug over.
In it I explore the difference between autonomy and heteronomy.
Autonomy is when we live for ourselves. We trust our own judgement and seek our
own individual self-realisation. Heteronomy is when we don’t put our selves in
the centre of our lives, but rather allow ourselves to be shaped by what is
other to us. Hetero – in classical Greek – means ‘other’.
So someone who chooses to be heteronomous rather than autonomous
will not be self-centred, but will listen to others, to the Other. They will
let themselves be part of something other to them – like a choir, or a sports
team. You can’t make a choir of a load of autonomous individuals. It just
doesn’t work. They don’t listen to each other. They all want to be the loudest.
They all think they know best and everyone should sing like me. To join a choir
you have to be heteronomous – able to listen and accept the authority of the
Other. It’s not easy today, as we’re all brought up to be autonomous, not to be
obedient.
The great thing about Jesus as the good shepherd is that when he
leads the flock he isn’t autonomous either. He knows that he is there to serve
the choir, the flock, the people of God, the disciples, the world. His own self
is shaped not by himself, but by God.
I know my own and my own know me, just as the Father knows
me and I know the Father. The Father loves me, because I lay down my life in
order to take it up again. I have received this command from my Father.
It’s key to understanding what Jesus was all about. That his
life wasn’t for himself. It was for others. So others might have life and live
it to in all abundance. That’s why he laid down his life, went to the cross and
died. The life of the Resurrection – life in all its fullness – was theirs because
Jesus laid down his life.
We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us—and we
ought to lay down our lives for one another. How does God’s love abide in
anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet
refuses help?
This is how the first Christians told it, as John did here,
in his first letter. That’s what Christians sought to do since the earliest
days – they modelled their lives on Jesus, living self-sacrificially for the
sake of other people. Not putting themselves in the centre of things but always
creating something other, for a greater purpose. Life in its fullness for other
people. And so, if you’re a member of a choir, your performance is a gift for others,
to enhance their fullness of life.
It’s particularly special if you sing to lead worship.
Because then the worship of the congregation is paramount. Worship makes the
people of God out of individual members of the Body of Christ. We all serve
each other as we join together to worship.
In doing so, we fulfil our purpose as human beings – to
worship the God who is the ultimate Other to each of us. God, who shapes our
being, individually and corporately, just as God shaped Jesus to be the perfect
human being.
That shaping is called love. We are shaped in love, by love
and for love – a love that is other to us, but makes us truly human.
As members of the congregation, as members of a choir, we
come alive as we obey each other, listening to others around us, and listening,
ultimately to the greatest Other there is, the God of love. The God of love who
brings us to life, filled with the Spirit, as we sing and as we worship,
responding to God’s love with all the love we bring, ready to love one another
as Christ loves us.