Saturday, August 09, 2025

Future Tense?

Sermon for the eighth Sunday after Trinity

Do you know
that the world
was supposed to end in 2012?

That's according to 
an old Mayan calendar.

According to St Malachi
Pope Francis is supposed 
to be the last.

Nostradamus
predicts an apocalyptic event
in 1999.

And perhaps you remember 
Harold Camping
who very publicly
proclaims the end of the World.

When that doesn't happen
he says he's got his sums wrong
and gives another date.

When the world doesn't end
on that day either,
he says it is a spiritual apocalypse.

Prophets of doom
have an expiry date
when we know whether
they are truly foreseeing the future.

By the fruit of their prophecy
we will know them.

Until then, 
we might laugh off
a prediction about the end of the world
but still keep an eye 
on the calendar.

But we know that 
not all prophets are 
as easy to test.

The fruit of a prophet's testimony 
always lies in the future.

[PAUSE]

The future is the place
where all our work is tested
and sometimes waiting to see
the outcome of our labours
is uncomfortable. 

But it is the prophet of God
whose work will be 
most rigorously tested
in the passage of Time.

And that makes it 
uncomfortable for us 
because we cannot see 
whether this prophet is true 
or false
for the foreseeable future.

A prophet 
may do wonderful deeds now
but turn out to be
a damp squib.

For us with the benefit
of 20-20 hindsight
we can see clearly
that Our Lord's prophecy
is reliable 
and that He truly is
the Son of God.

When we think 
that His testimony 
is snuffed out on the cross,
He rises again
not only proving Himself 
to be the Son of God
but also proving the worth
of the Old Testament prophets
who said that He would.

He rises again
according to the Scriptures.

The prophets of the past
though dead
live again
and are proved to be truly 
the messengers of God
which is why we,
in their future,
venerate their prophecy
in our Bible.

Our Lord Jesus
in His resurrection 
binds up the past, present and future -
Jesus Christ
the same yesterday, 
today
and forever. 

[PAUSE]

This is important for us.

We are born in time,
haunted by the past
and worried about the future.

Around us are sheep
that have always looked like sheep
but who will be
unmasked by the future
as ravening wolves.

People and institutions
that we thought were good
may turn out to be far from good.

Do we have any way of knowing?

Is there anything
or anyone who can
give us confidence?

Such a one must be
the same yesterday, today
and forever.

[PAUSE]

We don't put our trust
in anyone but Christ.

Even the saints
receptive their trustworthiness 
through Christ.

Even Our Lady,
the Queen of Heaven
can only be a true saint
because of her son,
Our Lord.

The Church can only ever be
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
if it is true to the One Lord Jesus Christ,
separated from the World 
by His Holiness, 
according to the sane Catholic Faith
proclaimed everywhere
by His faithful Apostles
and their successors.

In order to see the future,
we Christians 
must hold onto the past,
but we only hold onto the past
in order to sanctify the future.

As Christians,
we embrace past, present and future
altogether. 

We might not see the future
but we can be confident 
in what is coming
by holding on to what
we have always been taught.

What we Christians see in the future
is the return of Christ,
the judgement of the world
by Him
and the exaltation of
all who believe in Him.

In the future,
we will see the union 
of all Christians 
because all Christians 
will gather at the feet of Christ.

For this reason 
we must see the sacraments 
as passports to the future.

Our priests aren't ordained 
just for now but for ever 
after the order of Melchisedek;
our bishops are consecrated
in order to keep the Apostolic line going
for our brothers and sisters yet to come. 

And the same is true 
of all Christians. 

Whatever we do,
we must do it for Christ and, 
in doing what we do for Christ,
we are doing it also
for our brothers and sisters yet to come:
the Christians who aren't yet born,
the Christians who will live
long after we are dead and gone,
the Christians we will only meet
at the Resurrection of the Dead.

[PAUSE]

We Christians aren't meant
to live just for now. 

Our behaviour shouldn't be
just for pleasures
that seem wonderful now
but are blown into oblivion
on the winds of Time.

Our lives are to be built on
the rock that is Christ
and this means
living faithfully to Him
despite what those winds of Time 
blow at us.

We must live
as if we are building something
that we would expect
to be permanent 
for God.

If we do,
then we should not find
the future a worry for us
but rather the arena
in which we will meet God
face to face.

Saturday, August 02, 2025

Fishfinger sandwiches


Sermon for the sixth Sunday after Trinity

There is probably
nothing quite as
quintessentially English
as a fishfinger sandwich.

It's a delicacy that
has not really made it
across the Pond 
to America
and yet, perhaps,
in a twisted imagination,
just perhaps,
Our Lord feeds the four thousand
with something like
fishfinger sandwiches. 

Perhaps this is proof
that Our Lord
really is Anglican!

But then,
perhaps this is 
a somewhat spurious 
argument.

It does, however,
cause us to wonder
where the fish come
In Our Lord's miracle.

We always hear about bread:
the Bread of Life,
the breaking of bread
leavened and unleavened bread
and so on.

Our Lord consecrates bread
to become His body
in the Eucharist
and the parallels 
between the Eucharist
and the feeding of the multitudes
is unmistakable. 

But we always seem
to gloss over the fish.

Where do the fish fit in?

[PAUSE]

The multitude have followed
Our Lord into a wilderness
in the Decapolis region
which is not far
from the Sea of Galilee
where Peter, James and John 
usually fish.

While bread is a food
that is shared across 
so many different communities
and cultures,
fish are usually found
only in fishing communities.

Fish don't travel well
unless they are refrigerated 
or dried out in the sun.

The fact that these fish
have survived a few days
in the wilderness 
is a miracle in itself.

Yet, here too, 
the fish are multiplied
for people to eat,
and they clearly eat well.

It is a food
that they are used to.

But still, the question remains:

If the feeding of the multitude 
is supposed to be a clear pointer
of the Eucharist,
and if we have bread at the Eucharist,
why do we not have fish as well?

[PAUSE]

Put simply,
it's because 
there were no fish 
at the Passover.

And Our Lord
fulfils the Passover 
when He offers us His Body and Blood
under the appearance 
of bread and wine
which are associated 
with the Passover,
Our Lord Himself being 
the Paschal Lamb.

No fish.

So what does this detail
told to us by St Mark 
tell us
that the multitude are fed with fish?

Why are the fish 
important for us to know about?

[PAUSE]

In our Mass,
you will be aware 
of the Offertory.

It's when the priest 
takes the host
and the wine
and offers them up.

What else happens?

Isn't the collection 
of money offered up too?

It's what we bring to Jesus
that gets offered up
and sanctified.

We do the same sort of thing
in our Harvest Festivals.

We bring our produce 
to God to give thanks
and for that produce to be blessed.

And the fish are
the produce of Galilee.

They are offered to God
Who blesses them
and then magnifies them
to feed so many people.

It's what we bring to Christ
that matters.

We offer Him bread 
and He makes it His body.

We offer Him wine 
and He makes it His blood.

We offer Him fish
and four thousand people
are fed good food.

It's what we bring to Christ 
that matters.

We only get anything out of the Mass
if we have put something in.

If we leave Church
feeling uninspired
or grumpy
or indifferent,
is it because we did not 
bring anything with us
for Christ to sanctify?

Did we forget 
to offer ourselves
to God
to be made Holy
to be distributed for
the good of all people?

We only get out of the Mass 
what we are willing
to invest in it.

If we don't even bring ourselves
to be sanctified 
then the Mass will be
just as much as a desert
but without the miracle.

We can receive
the Body and Blood of God
but if we only offer indifference
to Him,
we will only receive indifference 
in abundance.

[PAUSE]

The fish represent
ourselves,
our situations,
our cultures,
our homes and families,
our daily lives.

If we offer these to God,
He will bless them and use them.

If He can consecrate
a fishfinger sandwich, 
how much more
will He consecrate us 
in His service
and in His love?



Monday, July 28, 2025

Anglican Catholic Soundbites

 


Why we have to be careful about the language we use to bring Christ to the people and people to Christ.

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Judging disciples


Sermon for the sixth Sunday after Trinity

"You Christians
are so judgemental!"

We hear that a lot,
but what does it mean?

We often find ourselves
in situations 
where the Christian life
runs contrary 
to the life of the world.

We have seen this 
in the public votes
in Parliament 
which have ruled
that there are circumstances 
in which it is lawful
to take the lives of innocent people.

We also live in an age
where profoundly 
destructive worldviews 
are being taught 
uncritically 
to those who are
learning how to live life.

And we Christians speak out
and get pilloried for doing so.

But we have to be careful
because people do not like to be judged.

Why not?

They think that
what they are doing
is good,
not harmful,
beneficial,
even beautiful.

And the basis for their judgement 
is that it "feels right" and
"isn't hurting anyone "
and "isn't trying to control people".

The basis of their sense of righteousness 
is themselves 
or it is the culture around them 
telling them that they are right.

Their righteousness 
is man-made,
not God-made.

Their righteousness 
will change with the times
and they will look back on the past
and declare it immoral
"by today's standards."

But "today's standards"
will be immoral by tomorrow's.

[PAUSE]

Our righteousness 
as disciples of Christ
has to exceed the righteousness 
of the Scribes and Pharisees 
of today.

Let's be clear,
there is no-one more 
educated in the Law
than the Pharisee. 

It's his job to know 
and to follow all the little bits and pieces
of the Divine law,
but his basis for the Law
is the law itself.

The Pharisees righteousness 
is based on a law
which is indeed God-given
but applied by a greater law
namely the Pharisee's
self-righteousness.

But doesn't the Church 
follow the Divine Law?

What makes the Church
any better than the Pharisees?

[PAUSE]

Our Lord shows us
that the law 
goes beyond the letter.

To.murder someone 
means more than 
sticking a knife into them.

We can commit murder
by calling someone a fool
and kill their place
in our hearts.

We can commit adultery
by looking lustfully at a women 
just as well as getting her
into bed.

The law of the Pharisee
is written on parchment. 

The law of God
is written on human hearts.

We've seen the effects
of applying the written law
inhumanely 
and the effects have been appalling.

If the written law 
has the capacity
to end the life of 
an innocent person 
then innocent people will die
and the world will think
that it has done a good thing.

And anyone who objects
will be regarded as
judgemental
and inhumanely
for allowing people's suffering 
to continue. 

[PAUSE]

This, of course,
ignores the sovereignty of God
and His ability
to turn our suffering into joy,
perhaps not in this life
but Eternally so.

All pain and suffering on earth
will end in time
and the heart that seeks
the righteousness of God
will find peace in Him.

Man does not have the capacity
to see the fulness of another's pain
nor the value that it possesses.

Man can only walk with those 
who suffer and tend
the wounds inflicted. 

Only God can reach the cause
of pain
because pain tells us
that something is wrong,
that there is a conflict 
between what is and what should be.

The righteousness of this world
seeks to numb that pain
by providing a distraction 
or a pleasure to distract
from sorrow
rather than addressing 
the actual cause.

[PAUSE]

It is only through Christ
that we can see true righteousness 
which will exceed the righteousness 
of Scribe and Pharisee 
because it is based
on Love
- not the sentimental feeling,
- not the legalised idea of compassion
- not the politically correct form of caring.

God is Love
and God is Righteousness. 

He is the basis of morality 
and if we make our judgements
based on His love,
then the World can call us judgemental
as much as it likes
but our judgement will be good
because it will pour the love of God
into the wounds of the suffering
and they will be healed in Him
eternally.



Saturday, July 19, 2025

Baited breath?


Sermon for the fifth Sunday after Trinity 

What does He say
that draws people to Him?

What words does He use
that makes Him worth listening to?

What is it about Him
that makes crowds of people
gather around Him
to the extent
that He can only teach
by launching Himself 
out onto the Sea of Gennesareth
and using the natural acoustics
to magnify His words?

Our Lord is clearly 
a phenomenal teacher.

But then,
we must admit,
He does back up
His extraordinary claims
with miracles.

If Our Lord is
the great Fisher of Men
what is He using as bait?

[PAUSE]

It is interesting that
St Peter probably does not use bait
to catch the fish.

This is why he fishes at night.

The idea is that the fish
don't see the net as well
and swim into it unawares.

If this is the case
then we see why St Peter
thinks Our Lord's words
to cast the net in broad daylight
as odd and perhaps
even a bit exasperating.

The result: two ships full of fish!

Clearly something 
has drawn them to this place
where they can be caught. 

Just like the crowd.

Something has drawn them
to this place
where they can be caught
by God
in broad daylight.

Why broad daylight?

If you can see the net
then you can choose
to swim into it
or not.

Ironically, 
it is those who swim 
into Our Lord's net
who are saved.

Unlike St Peter,
Our Lord uses bait. 

He knows that there is something 
for which each of us
is truly longing.

It may not be something 
that we realise we long for.

It may be a longing 
which we mistake for another longing 
or one which we try to cover up
with something 
more accessible 
and immediately gratifying. 

Our Lord knows
what we truly long for
and He can supply it.

And this is something 
that we crave because 
we are created
and we look to our Creator
to make us whole again
from the wounds 
Caused by the battering 
that sin, the World and the Devil
inflict upon us.

Our Lord Himself is the bait.

He says,
"no man can come to Me, 
except the Father 
which hath sent Me draw him: 
and I will raise him up 
at the last day."

It is the Father 
that draws us,
and if we see Jesus
then we see the Father.

And it is Jesus
who will raise us 
from the depths of Death.

How?

Because in consuming His flesh
and drinking His blood
we become one
with Christ's humanity.

But it is the Divine nature of Christ 
that draws Him up from Death
into Heaven
to stand before the Father.

If we are one with Christ
then we are drawn up into Heaven
to stand before the Father.

We have been caught
and landed
like a prize carp
on the end of a line.

While the carp may be cooked
and eaten
we have been drawn to life
and joy.

This is what Salvation is.

And we need to fall for it,
hook, line and sinker.