Sunday, January 04, 2026

Branching out of Nazareth

Sermon preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury for the second Sunday after Christmas

Can St Matthew be wrong?

He says of Our Lord 
that the prophets say,
"He shall be called a Nazarene."

Which prophets?

Bethlehem is prophesied
by Micah.

Egypt is mentioned by
Hosea.

But who mentions Nazareth?

Any ideas?

Neither have the scholars!

Where on earth 
has St Matthew plucked this?

Is he misreading 
the Old Testament prophets?

Is he referring to a prophet
that isn't in the Old Testament?

Or is his memory failing?

[PAUSE]

St Jerome tells us
to be fair.

He reminds us
that St Matthew doesn't 
mention a specific prophet
or specific prophecy
but is rather 
referring to a fact
borne out the combined
testimony of the prophets.

We're used to this.
The Holy Trinity
isn't mentioned
explicitly in the Bible.

But the doctrine is there
when you put the pieces together.

St Matthew isn't talking
about one prophet.
He's putting the pieces 
of the prophets together.

]PAUSE]

You see Nazareth
sounds a lot like 
Netser which is Aramaic
for branch.

Both Jeremiah 
snd Isaiah refer
to Our Lord as being
a branch out of David's line.

So, this is one reason
why Our Lord
is called a Nazarene.

But there is another possibility
which goes along with that.

The Prophet Isaiah
says that the Messiah
will be despised and rejected,
of little account,
having no beauty.

Nazareth is famous
for being less glamorous
than Chatham docks 
after the dockers
have spent New Year's Eve
at a dodgy curry house.

It does not have a good reputation.

Indeed, you remember that
St Nathanael asks,
"Can anything good 
come out of Nazareth?"

This is in keeping
with a baby born in a stable
laid in a cattle trough
who will dine
with the prostitutes
and tax collectors
and die a cruel 
and humiliating death
with thieves.

If Nazareth is the dunghill of Judaea,
then Our Lord's life of humility
shows that He is indeed called
a Nazarene.

And from dunghills,
branches can grow and flourish.

[PAUSE]

You see why
St Matthew cannot identify
a single prophet
because Our Lord's life and work
is encoded 
in the entirety of the Old Testament.

We may see Him.
in poverty in Isaiah,
as a cuckold in Hosea,
as the blossoming rod of Aaron
as the Son of Man in Daniel
even, possibly,
as Melchizedek
or one of the visitors to Abraham.

Just like St Matthew
might struggle
to find explicit, specific references
to Our Lord in the Old Testament,
so we might struggle to see Him
explicitly and specifically, 
not just in the Old Testament
but here and now.

While it is good
to have something concrete
to refer to,
Our Lord,
the Word of God,
is written on our hearts
more than just on the page.

Our life of prayer
is as much about 
knowing His presence with us
as it is knowing what is
written about Him in the Bible.

Internal presence
and external book:
both are important.

And both are united
through the grace of the Sacrament,
because that's what sacraments do.

They nourish the soul
through physical means.

[PAUSE]

But we do have to remember
that in opening our hearts 
to Christ,
we open our hearts
to a Nazarene,
the lowest of the low,
the one who challenges us
not to feel contempt.

Our Lord's humility
challenges us to be humble.

If we are wise,
we must learn to see ourselves
as Nazarenes
from which the branch of David
can grow
live and thrive.

That's not to say
that we are worthless,
because the Incarnation
says we are worth more
than we know.

It's more that
we should recognise
the cheapness of the World around
and trust God 
to lead us to fruitful lives
which mean more than
the World will ever know.

Following Our Lord,
we too will branch
out of our Nazareth.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Innocence and the sword

Sermon for the feast of the Holy Innocents

Today
is one of the most uncomfortable,
and even distressing feasts
in the Church Kalendar.

Today,
in amidst all the joy,
happiness,
feasting and merriment,
we are faced with atrocity
- naked atrocity.

Many of us 
try to turn away 
and focus on the events
of Christmas Day
rather than on the 
deaths of little babies.

That's natural.

So why remember it at all?

And if we must remember it,
why do we remember it here
at Christmas time?

[PAUSE]

Well,
the day after Christmas,
we remember the death
of St Stephen.

And that doesn't seem 
to bother us as much.

His death,
although distressing
is, in some way,
chosen by St Stephen.

He could have just shut up
and said nothing,
but instead glorifies God
and is killed for it.

His death doesn't 
affect us
in the same way
as the Holy Innocents.

But surely,
St Stephen was a baby once,
so why is the death
of the babies of Bethlehem
so much more dreadful?

Why is the death of a newborn
so much more horrible
in our eyes
than the murder 
of a young man?

[PAUSE]

We react to death
in the proportion
that we love.

We remember 
that grief is a transformation
of our love 
because we can
no longer engage
with the person we love.

The baby newly born
is small, innocent and helpless
born separated from mother
and separated from God.

A baby is born
needing love,
needing that human goodness
to be nourished
and cared for,
to grow and become
her own person.

And,
in Bethlehem,
instead of that love
the baby meets a sword,

[PAUSE]

If that appals you,
if you feel like crying,
if you are disturbed by that,
then there is love in you.

Well done!

In grasping this horrible truth,
you have shown yourself capable
of love
and meeting hatred head on.

The depth of our love
Is measured by its capacity 
to suffer.

And we Christians 
are born to suffer
because we are born to love.

And it isn't our personal injuries
that cause us to suffer
it is the injuries that others suffer
that we count as our own.

We mourn 
with those who mourn.

And there is no grief
like that 
of a bereaved mother.

[PAUSE]

For nine months,
mother and baby
are inseparable.

Within her grows
someone beautiful
of her own body
and of the father's.

When we gaze into the face
of a baby,
we see a beauty as yet
untouched by the world,
and this beauty 
is a reflection 
an ikon of God Himself.

To destroy this child
is an act against God Himself.

Conversely,
to love this child,
to protect her,
to nourish her,
to hold her close and keep her safe
is an act of love shown
to God Himself.

To remember the Holy Innocents
is to remember our own humanity,
our need,
not only to be loved,
but to love,
actively and fully.

St Stephen chooses to proclaim
the love of God,
knowing that
it will lead to his death,
and we love him 
for his bravery and faith.

But the babies
have no choice at all.

Death comes for them
in their innocence
and in that innocence
they, too,
bear witness to the death of Death.

In the Holy Innocents' fate,
we recognise 
not only the evil 
that we can perpetrate,
but our ability to love
that has not been lost.

If we can still feel love,
then we can still love
and there is some health in us.

We are not totally depraved.

And this means 
that God thinks
we are worth saving,
worth the shame and spitting
and the Cross.

[PAUSE]

But what about joy?

Why is it the feast of the Holy Innocents?

Because they are not dead.

In Christ, 
they are full of life,
full of humanity,
full of joy, peace and love.

And because
not only can no further evil touch them
but also that evil flees from them.

Love has conquered hate
and death is swallowed up
in Christ's victory
which they share.

They may have never spoken
a single word on the Earth
but they intercede 
for us in Heaven nonetheless.

And they invite us
into their joy
which is hard won
but worth winning.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

The Red Herring of Advent


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

Suppose you want 
to stop a fox hunt
or a rabbit hunt.

What do you do?

One practice is to get
a smoked fish, 
wait until its gone
a bit ripe -
well, okay, a lot ripe,
and drag it across the track 
behind the rabbit
as it flees.

The stinky trail
will send the dogs off
in completely the wrong direction.

And which type of fish
would be best?

A herring!

And, if you leave it
for long enough,
it will turn red.

That's where 
the red herring 
comes from.

The red herring
is designed 
to throw us off the scent
and confuse us
so we don't see
what's going on.

Is St John the Baptist
a red herring?

[PAUSE]

The priests and Levites 
might think so.

There in front of them -
a man calling for them
to repent,
and not mincing his words.

Who is he?

Is he the Christ? 

No.

Well, that seems 
straightforward enough.

Is he Elijah?

No?

Except that he is.

God says through 
the prophet Malachi,
"Behold, I will send you 
Elijah the prophet 
before the coming of 
the great and dreadful day of the LORD."

God is not being literal
but identifying
the last prophet with Elijah

Jesus Himself
will say that St John
comes in Elijah's spirit.

But hang on!

All this is a red herring.

We are being side-tracked.

Do you see that?

[PAUSE]

What is the real issue?

Who is this John the Baptist?

We've just seen one red herring
perhaps this man is another.

Hear him,
"I am the voice of him
that crieth in the wilderness,
'make straight 
the way of the Lord!'"

That's as far from being
a red herring as you can get!

A red herring is
supposed put you 
off the scent 
not put you on it.

St John clearly 
points the way to Christ
so why don't the rulers
of Jewish society
go the way that 
St John is pointing?

The have received 
another red herring.

They are seeking the Christ
but they are not seeking Jesus.

Their senses have become
confused with the different
scents of the previous centuries.

Israel has erred and strayed
from the way of God 
like a lost sheep.

Israel has been overrun
and conquered
ruled by Emperors 
that think they are gods,
and by self-important kings,
like Herod,
who want to be gods.

The people of Judaea
seek the Christ,
but their eyes have become clouded
by politics,
and expectations,
and battles,
and protests,
and invasions,
and rulers in it for themselves.

This is the smell 
of the red herring,
one thrown into draw people
away from Christ
by the Devil
who knows that the time is near
when his head will be crushed
by a virgin bearing a child.

Only St John
in his rags,
poverty,
and disrespect 
for human vanity
points the way clearly
in exactly the same way
that the prophet Elijah might.

Only those
who sniff past
the stench of this world's
depravity and degradation
will smell the sweetness
of Christ Himself.

[PAUSE]

Our Advent has been spent
clearing our noses
from Hell's smells.

We smell the mulled wine,
the pine needles and mince pies 
the candles and the frankincense
but we know that 
they draw us on to the Lord
because we recognise 
His presence with us
despite the aroma of
the world outside.

[PAUSE]

The more we know Christ
the more we will be able
to sniff Him out
despite the red herrings
that are thrown at us.