Sunday, December 14, 2025

'Tis the prison to be merry.

Sermon preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury on the third Sunday of Advent

Why does God hide Himself?

Have you ever wondered that?

Everyone would be a Christian
if they could see Him.

Wouldn't they?

But we can't see Him
and so we are 
left wondering.

Why does He hide Himself
from us,
His church?

[PAUSE]

St John Baptist
sits in prison.

It's deep, dark and cold,
but he can still get messages
to and from his disciples.

But he is out of the loop.

He remembers that man,
a cousin of his, 
in fact.

He remembers
baptising Him.

He remembers
the water,
the Spirit,
the voice from above.

And then silence.

Silence as He decreases
so that the Christ increases.

Thrown into prison
for telling the king
that he cannot steal 
his brother's wife.

There are rumours.

Oh yes there are rumours,
but this Jesus
is not revealing Himself
in the way that Israel expects.

He is not revesling Himself
in the way 
that St John expects.

Can it really be Him,
the one that is to come?

Or is it someone else?

So St John sends disciples
to find out.

[PAUSE]

They return with the message:
the blind receive sight
the lame walk,
lepers are cleansed,
the deaf hear,
the dead are raised
and the poor have 
the gospel preached to them
and blessed are they
who are not offended in Jesus.

At this St John rests assured.

God has not hidden Himself.

St John rests assured,
but do you rest assured?

Does this answer 
the question for you?

Why does God hide Himself?

[PAUSE]

The answer is 
that He doesn't
though not many
will be convinced at that.

We don't see God the Father.

Why not?

This is a bit 
tricky to understand.

How does Bugs Bunny
know the width of the film
that he is recorded on?

How does Desperate Dan
know the colour of the paper
he is printed on?

How does the algae
that spends its life
on the pond surface
know how deep the water is?

We cannot see God
with our created eyes.

It's not possible.

To do so,
we need to step outside
existence itself
to see Him.

But God wants to be known.

So what does He do?

He becomes like us.

God reveals Himself
not in the way that we think.
Never in the way 
that we think.

Our preconceived ideas
about what constitutes
the Messiah
are always transformed
by how He has
always revealed Himself.

St John's preconceived ideas
are challenged
but presented
with what he knows
in his heart of hearts.

As soon as he hears,
he knows it to be true.

Jesus isn't hiding Himself.

He is making God visible.

Anyone who sees Our Lord
sees the Father and the Holy Ghost.

But why does He hide Himself now?

[PAUSE]

For us here, 
we know that He doesn't
hide Himself.

We shall see Him
not with these eyes
but with the eyes of faith
when we see Him 
in the Blessed Sacrament.

When the priest elevates the host,
we are staring
for a brief moment
at the Centre of the Universe
at Our Creator
and Redeemer.

A consecrated wafer
is God's promise
to one
who cannot have the eyes
to see Him
in His glory.

And,
when we are raised,
we will have eyes to see Him
as He is.

But what about the others?

Why is God hidden from them?

Well, all they have to do,
if they really, really  want to see 
that God is not hiding from them.
is look in the manger
on Christmas Day.

Sunday, December 07, 2025

Turning the last page

Sermon for the second Sunday in Advent

Why do we want 
to know the future?

To be fair,
some of us don't.

Some of us are terrified 
of the future.

It seems that we have
a love-hate relationship
with the things that are to cone.

For many, 
the future stands before them
like the black hooded figure
in A Christmas Carol
ready to point out their grave.

But, think now.

What do you see the future
looking like?

[PAUSE]

There are lots of 
doom mongers out there.

Some use horoscopes
or pendulums
or will even claim
to talk with spirits
about the future.

Some will use science
and scientific data
to predict what will happen.

Some will even use the Bible
or the apparitions of saints
to discern the future.

But why?

We already know
what's on the last page.

[PAUSE]

Turn to the last chapter
of the Book of Revelation
and you see exactly
what Our Lord is telling us.

There will be disruption:
disruption to countries
disruption to the Earth
disruption to the Heavens
disruption even in Heaven itself.

Things will be turned on their heads
and then Christ comes.

That scares us.

We don't like disruption.

We like things to follow a pattern,
even if we are a bit ofba daredevil.

We might love a bit
of drama and chaos
but ww still have
an expectation
that things behave consistently.

We might like the adrenaline rush
but the thought of the Moon
crashing into our planet
would still be a concern.

Even we Christians
who know what it says
on the last page
are frightened of the future.

Why?

[PAUSE]

There are two reasons
at least.

First,
there might be the possibility
that we're wrong
and that the last page of the Bible
won't happen.

This requires faith.

Based on what we know of gravity,
if we throw a ball.into the air
in normal circumstsnces
we have good reason
to believe that it will 
fall back down.

This is faith in the law of gravity.

Based on what we know of God
and how He loves us
and how He wants every human
alive yesterday, today and tomorrow
to be saved,
we can have faith that the last page is true.

Second,
we might be afraid of the future
because
even though God loves us
Christians have gone through
and still go through
the most awful tribulation
to get to the last page
and He doesn't take away
the possibility of
extreme suffering from us.

Yes, this is disturbing.

But this is still an issue of Faith.

Our Lord chooses the death on the cross.

He specifically chooses it.

Even if He has to be executed
He chooses crucifixion,
slow and agonising,
rather than something quick

He does not have to choose it
but He chooses extreme suffering
so that our extreme suffering.
would end in Heaven.

This is our faith.

[PAUSE]

While the future 
may look scary
the back page is still true.

Of course,
people will say
that Our Lord's generation
has come and gone
and He has not returned

We can see why.

Our children and our children's children
still need to know the love of God
even if they have not yet been born.

They are still the generation
of the Apostles.

We are still the generation
of the Apostles
because,
while people are still being baptised
they are still being regenerated
into the Family of the Church
and of the Body of Christ.

The Church has not passed away.
And that's because Our Lord's worda
will not pass away.

[PAUSE]

We do not need to see the future
because we already know what it is.

We still have the Holy Spirit.
The Church is still the Bride of Christ.

The Spirit and the Bride
say, "come!"

Even so, come Lord Jesus!

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Chucking out time in the temple.

Sermon for the first Sunday in Advent, preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury

As the Lord rides
into the temple of your heart,
what will he find there 
to cast out?

Well, there's a nasty question
to be asked on a Sunday morning!

You want nice easy questions
to start the day off
such as
"Isn't it a lovely day?"
or
"don't the flowers look nice?"
or even
"how are you?"

But no,
as soon as you get into Advent
the voice from the pulpit asks,
"As the Lord rides
into the temple of your heart,
what will he find there 
to cast out?"

[PAUSE]

The trouble is
this is what happens
when you open the door
to Our Lord and let Him in.

Look at the chaos He causes!

They let Him into Jerusalem
and He comes in
sitting on a donkey
to shouts of "Hosanna!",
the crowd cheering
and waving palm branches.

And straightaway,
He's off His donkey
and throwing the moneychangers
and the dove sellers
out of the temple!

It's mayhem.

It sounds like Jesus
is not someone
you invite round
to dinner.

[PAUSE]

But people do invite Jesus
round for dinner.

We see this again and again.

And every time we see it,
He's causing some mischief.

And this is the Jesus
that we want to invite 
into our lives!

So it looks like the question
is important:
as the Lord rides
into the temple of your heart,
what will he find there 
to cast out?

[PAUSE]

It may seem impolite
for a guest in your house
to come in and 
immediately start
to throw out your throws,
chuck out your chintz
and shove out your sofa,
but we must remember
that Our Lord has one thing in mind
- our salvation.

Advent marks His desire
to come here at all
and save us all from Satan's power
when we have gone astray.

It's urgent.
Really urgent!

He wants us to be saved
and can't bear the thought of us
being away from God,
and suffering because
we are away from Him.

So straightaway,
He gets to work.

In the same way,
when a parent barges into a room
to deal with a child that has
hurt herself,
forgetting politeness
and courtesy,
Our Lord has the same ferocity
against anything
that is hurting us.

It's that immediate.
It's that intense.

[PAUSE]

This is why we're here.

We actually want Jesus
to come to dinner,
to be part of our lives,
to be our king.

And while we fling wide the gates,
and shout, "Hosanna!"
the question becomes
all the more important:
as the Lord rides
into the temple of your heart,
what will he find there 
to cast out?

This is why Advent
is a penitential season.

It is a time to look
at our lives
and see what we need to throw out
so that it comes as no surprise 
when He comes in
and throws out
all our pride and vanity,
all our wrath and cruelty,
all our lust, greed and desire to control,
all our laziness and envy
even if they don't look so bad
or if everyone else does them.

We have to let Him in
and we have to let Him
throw things out.

We don't need them,
not if He's king of our hearts

[PAUSE]

While this may make us
uncomfortable,
this is such
a refreshing thing!

If we let Him throw things out,
He will make a place
in our hearts in which He can live.

The worst thing we can do
is to bring back in
that which He throws out.

Oh, He will keep throwing it out
but if we will keep bringing it back
then at some point
He will stop and wait
until we are ready to let it go
but if we keep bringing back
something that Our Lord 
throws out,
then maybe
we love it more than
we love Him.

Or maybe the habit to sin 
is so strong
that we realise how weak we are
and must ask Him
to strengthen us
to let Him throw out
what He must.

God wants us 
to have a clear space 
in our hearts for Him
- not for His ego,
but for our good
for what is better
than having hearts
full of goodness and joy
and love and peace?

[PAUSE]

Advent is a penitential season.

We must take it seriously.

But not joylessly.

Indeed, to assist Our Lord
in His preparation
of our heart
so that he can live in it
will help us better
enjoy the truth of Christmas
with all its colour and song.

As the Lord rides
into the temple of your heart,
what will he find there 
to cast out?

Will you be happy 
if He does?

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Takeawsy pop-up toast?


Sermon for the Sunday next before Advent

What do you think it looked like?

Did our Lord reach 
into a basket and 
pull out more bread?

Did it just appear in His hand?

Or did it just pop up
from who knows where
like slices of toast
on the mountainside?

Does Our Lord
have a toaster 
about His person
powered by divine energy?

It must have been something.

Yet nobody notices how,
because,
as usual,
Jesus doesn't make
a show of it.

He just gives the bread
to His disciples
and they go around 
distributing it.

So we miss 
how this bread appears.

[PAUSE]

In some way
this bread has to come
from the bread that's there.

It's not likely
to be freshly baked bread
of the moment,
because the bread that He is given
has been there listening to
Him teaching
with the lad
who has carried it up the mountain
and has been listening to Him.

Wherever it comes from,
this is good bread.

Everyone eats their fill
and there are baskets left over.

But where did this bread come from?

[PAUSE]

Our Lord doesn't say.

But there are hints.

First, 
we remember that
He teaches us to pray
"give us this day 
our daily bread."

The Greek word
we translate as "daily"
is only found here
in all of the Bible.

When we usual see
the Greek for daily,
it usually refers directly
to the Greek for "day".

But, in His prayer,
Our Lord uses a strange word 
Epiousios
which defies a literal translation:
it's sort of like
"exist upon".

Many people 
see this as meaning
"give us this day the bread we need"
and so you can see
why we often translate this as
"daily bread" - the bread we need
today or tomorrow.

It's an appeal to God
to feed us.

And this is exactly what we
see happening here
as the multitude who need bread
are given bread.

Our Lord says
that Our Father in Heaven
knows we have need of these things
and will supply what we need
if we turn to Him.

But the bread that He gives
seems to come
from nowhere
- it just is
- it just exists upon Our Lord's word.

Exists upon
Epiousios

And that is what
Our Lord teaches us
in His prayer.

[PAUSE]

But there is something else.

For the Lord says

"For the bread of God is 
he which cometh down from heaven, 
and giveth life unto the world...
I am the bread of life: 
he that cometh to me 
shall never hunger; 
and he that believeth on me 
shall never thirst."

"cometh down"?
Epiousios!

It's the same idea.

In many ways,
Our Lord is giving to the multitude
a taste of Heaven.

The bread they receive
is of the bread given by a lad
and given to the multitude
we know not how.

It is not the Eucharist
for Our Lord does not say,
"this is my body".

But this miracle shows
what Christ will do
for the whole Church.

He gives us what we need.

Food for the body.
Food for the soul.

And we ask for it
every time,
we pray the Lord's prayer.

[PAUSE]

We take away 
from the mountainside
more than just bread.

We take Jesus with us.

We take a greater faith
strengthened
by God Himself.

We take away hope
knowing that
God will provide
in some way.

We take away love
which we are to distribute
to all we meet
who need it.

Who needs a toaster 
up a mountain?