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.
