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?






Sunday, November 16, 2025

Why Christians should never pick up spades


Sermon preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine on the twenty-second Sunday after Trinity

Oh no. 

Someone has dug a hole
in your beautiful lawn.

You've been growing this lawn
for ages,
mowing it carefully,
pulling out all the weeds,
putting down lawn feed,
telling the cat very firmly
that this is not a litter box,
and that you expect 
to be obeyed in this.

It was a beautiful lawn,
and now there is a hole
three feet in diameter
and two feet deep.

The cat denies all responsibility.

What do you do?

Fill it in?

With what?

[PAUSE]

You can't just magic up some earth 
from nowhere.

You can take earth from 
another part of the garden
but that would leave you
with less earth there.

This hole simply can't vanish.

It needs to be filled in with something.

That's the thing with holes
they only get smaller
the more you add something to them.

They get bigger 
the more you take from them.

You could find the person responsible
and demand they fill it in.

That's only fair.

They need to fill that hole in
because they made it.

But what if they can't?

[PAUSE]

Sin and evil work 
in exactly the same way.

Evil is like a hole.

Practically speaking, 
it is a hole in what is good.

Sin, too, is a hole
in our relationship
with God.

The work in the same way.

The only way 
you get rid of evil
is by adding good.

The only way
you get rid of sin
is by turning to God.

But that's easier said
than done.

Let's take an extreme case.

Tom murders Jerry.

It's an act
which we know to be evil.

It's murder, after all.

But what if Tom
sees what he has done,
and realises the evil
he has committed?

He repents,
in anguish,
sorrow,
and with bitter tears
comes to Terry and says,
"I am so sorry,
I have done evil,
I have murdered Jerry,
I will take the punishment,
but please forgive me!"

Terry now faces a choice:
he can forgive Tom
or he can not forgive Tom.

He doesn't have
an obligation
to forgive Tom.

Tom cannot expect
to be forgiven,
but he can hope.

Which is the best course
of action?

[PAUSE]

Well, 
you know the best course of action
because you've been listening
to Jesus.

Forgiveness
heals.

First,
forgiveness 
doesn't take anything away
from the other.person,
so it doesn't increase Evil.

Second,
forgiveness
does not make
the separation from God worse
so it doesn't increase Sin.

Forgiveness
is like one of those
yellow panels 
that workmen put over holes
to stop people falling in.

But notice,
forgiveness
doesn't actually fill in the hole.

Whether or not 
Terry forgives Tom,
Jerry is still dead,
but Terry's forgiveness
stops the hole from
getting bigger.

So how do we fill the hole in?

[PAUSE]

To fill in a hole in the garden,
you need earth.

To fill a hole in what is good,
you need goodness.

To fill a hole in our relationship
with God,
we need God.

The only way
that Jerry's murder
can be rectified
is by God.

We can't do this ourselves.

We can't make things right.

We can't save ourselves.

We need God.

Only God can fill the holes.

That's His justice.

The Church has the authority
to pronounce God's forgiveness
of the sins we confess
but we still have accept 
the consequences -
that is justice.

But God still seeks our love
and bids us return to Him
for repairs and renewal - 
that is mercy.

Nonetheless,
we must forgive
and dare to forgive
even the apparently unforgiveable
because that is
what sets us Christians
apart from the World.

Forgiveness
helps us become truly holy.

Christians must not 
make holes bigger
by digging in them.

Now, tell that to the cat.

Sunday, November 09, 2025

Miracles unaccompanied


Sermon for the twenty-first Sunday after Trinity

Did Jesus have 
to perform miracles?

Wouldn't His words
be enough?

He is clearly 
a charismatic preacher.

We hang on His every word
as He preaches 
the Beatitudes to us
from the mountainside.

He is witty
and good with puns
as Peter the rock
will tell you.

Isn't it to our shame then
that we won't believe Him
until He performs miracles?

[PAUSE]

That really depends 
on what the miracles are for.

Clearly, we do need them
otherwise, 
Jesus would not perform them.

They are expressions of His
compassion
and love.

They seek to supply
what is lacking
and correct
what is amiss.

Empty bellies are filled.
Senses are restored.
Life is given.

Our Lord shows
good faith to us
by allowing us to 
sample a little of
what He promises.

Enough to back up
what He tells us.

But these miracles
come only second to what 
He is trying to tell us.

The only miracle
that need prove the Gospel 
is the Cross.

Our Lord accomplishes
the redemption of mankind
in that one act 
of Death and Resurrection 
which
to our eyes
can only be a miracle.

That is the only 
necessary muracle.

Even that
isn't performed in order 
to be a miracle:
it is only a miracle 
in what we see.

[PAUSE]

As much as we would love
to see miracles, 
Our Lord wants us 
to have faith in Him
and what He tells us.

True,
we believe because 
He has backed up His words
with signs and wonders
but we now know
we can believe Him.

But what of those
who still don't?

Don't they need signs and wonders?

[PAUSE]

These days,
if you perform a miracle 
someone would post a video
on Youtube to debunk it.

Signs and wonders 
have never been enough
to convince everyone.

To some,
a miracle would
back up Our Lord's words
only for a while.

It is only by 
living with Our Lord
and getting to know Him,
listening to what He is saying,
eating with Him
laughing with Him,
watching Him in action
that we believe Him.

But people don't want
to spend time
growing in Faith.

They want
crash, bang, wallop!

And 
Hey presto!

But that doesn't get us
to the real Jesus.

[PAUSE]

Admittedly, 
it would be nice 
for us to have a few miracles today
to show people that
we Christians are telling the truth.

A star shining on our Cathedral, 
a Eucharistic miracle,
an apparition of Our Lady
would certainly 
gladdens our hearts
in a world of unbelief
and bring people to the Church. 

But it is Christ we preach,
and we rejoice in just
being able to speak of
the love He has for us
and showing others 
the same compassion 
that He has shown us.

If He chooses to give
us a sign and wonder
to follow what we say and do
then that is something 
we can rejoice in
and marvel at.

But a new miracle is something 
we don't need to expect
for the Gospel we proclaim
to be true.

The miracle of the Cross
will always do.

Sunday, November 02, 2025

Bless your heart

Sermon for the Sunday in the Octave of All Saints

Someone one sneezes.

What do you say?

Why?

[PAUSE]

When you say, "Bless you!"
you are essentially asking
for God to bless the person
and prevent them from
falling ill.

That seems straightforward. 

That's not the same word
that we hear Jesus say
in the Beatitudes.

When He says,
"Blessed are the pure in heart,"
that's not the same as
"The one who sneezed is blessed."

Can you hear the difference?

How is it different 
to be blessed when you sneeze
from being blessed for being 
pure in heart?

And what does all this 
to do with the Saints?

Always go to the Greek!

In the Greek, 
to bless someone
usually means
to speak well of,
to praise,
to wish good things.

But when Our Lord says,
"Blessed are the pure in heart..."
He's using the word meaning
"Happy!"

Actually,  if we're being very picky, 
Our Lord doesn't actually say
"Blessed are the pure in heart..."
He says,
"Happy the pure in heart...!"

Can you hear it? It's stronger.

To be pure in heart is to be happy.
To be a peacemaker is to be happy.
To hunger and thirst after righteousness 
is to be happy.
To be persecuted for righteousness' sake
is to be happy!

To be persecuted is to be happy?

What's gone wrong there?

[PAUSE]

Nothing's gone wrong.

Look at the saints.

Are they not happy?

You might say,
"well, they weren't happy
when they were being crucified
or chopped up
or burned."

The trouble is
that to say that 
misses the force
of what Our Lord
is telling us.

Among the saints
are many martyrs
who indeed suffer
horrible torments for Christ. 

But their suffering 
is confined to this Earthly realm.

Their full selves,
their happy selves
are in Eternity 
where in some sense,
they have always been.

Their happiness -
our happiness -
is God.

It's not that our suffering on Earth
doesn't matter to God. 

It's that He perfects our suffering 
and gives it purpose
to be close to Him.

His suffering is part of ours
and our suffering is part of His.

God stands waiting for us
at the end of our Earthly lives
in order to give us Eternal lives.

It is in our Eternal lives
that our Earthly lives
are not destroyed 
but are perfected.

Grace perfecting nature!

If we hunger and thirst after righteousness 
then that is our Eternal life
poking through 
into our Earthly life.

If we are persecuted for righteousness' sake 
that is our happiness 
soaking through into
the little life we know now.

The lives of the saints
are full of these acts
and its how we know them
to be saints.

We see the fruit of their labours
and by their fruits 
shall we know them.

We recognise the saints 
because through their
purity in heart 
we see God's light shining.

[PAUSE]

Some may ask us,
where are your saints today?

Whose lives shine forth light?

Elizabeth Barton
who challenges even kings
to seek righteousness?

Fr Alfred Patten, 
restorer of the shrine of Our Lady?

Bishop Albert Chambers
the one who defies
unjust rules
to ensure that the sacraments 
are preserved?

And then there's you?

Why not you?

Bless you.