Saturday, June 28, 2025

Clearly apostles


Sermon for the Feast of St Peter and St Paul

There is just 
so much noise.

A million voices
ricochet around us
spreading confusion 
and misinformation. 

We hear so much
that claims to be news
but isn't.  

It's fake news.

And that which is called
"fake news"
sometimes turns out
to be true.

And we don't know 
what to believe.

[PAUSE]

We don't know 
what to believe 
until we hear a voice
"Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the Living God."

A moment of clarity. 

The clouds of confusion part.

Not St John the Baptist.
Nor Elias. 
Nor Jeremiah.
Nor another prophet.

But the Christ!

Peter's words
might just be more words
among so many.

Just another statement 
of fake news.

What makes them different?

[PAUSE]

It's the truth!

If Our Lord tells us
that He will rise from the dead
and then does so.

If He preaches,
and then backs up His words
with miracles. 

If He touches the hearts of people
and inspires them to love
and go to their deaths for love, 
then He is telling the truth. 

His is the voice 
that we should believe.

And St Peter 
confirms that with his words.

In St Peter,
there is clarity 
a rock on which the Faith will grow.

Christ the chief cornerstone of the Church
and Peter the rock.

And to St Peter 
are given keys 
the authority to bind 
and loose sins.

That authority 
isn't given to St Peter alone 
for St John tells us
that it is given to all the Disciples
when the Lord 
breathes the Holy Ghost on them.

St Peter has the truth
as do the other apostles.

And as does St Paul.

[PAUSE]

St Paul,
the zealous Pharisee
is given the truth 
that blinds him for a while.

He is blinded to 
the cacophony of sights
which,
like the noise,
disrupt and confuse our lives.

The blindness of St Paul
helps him to be
refocused on the truth,
a truth which he once thought
unpalatable 
but now defends 
with his every breath,
with his every word.

And to him
is given authority 
to bind and loose sins
as he becomes 
one of the first bishops 
to receive episcopal consecration 
at the hands of the Apostles.

He is given the authority 
of the Truth
to cut through the swathes
of falsehood 
through the doctrine 
he has received through
the grace of Christ.

[PAUSE]

For us,
the noise is louder than ever.

False gospels are being preached.
The truth is supposedly 
being debunked.
The saints are still being 
contradicted
and even vilified.

For us, 
there is much confusion
and disharmony. 

But for us,
there is also truth
a truth which grounds our Faith.

Our Faith begins
when we say with St Peter
to the face of the man Jesus
"Thou art the Christ
the Son of the Living God."

That is where we put our trust.

That is where we ground 
our knowledge,
our belief, 
our faith.

And we grow 
by reading the first writte documents
of our faith
which are the letters of St Paul:
Gospel written before
the gospels.

This is how we cut through
all the noise.

We shut it out
and listen to the Holy Apostles 
for they speak with greater clarity
than the world can know 
and yet wants to prevent us
from knowing.

Jesus truly is the Christ
the Son of the Living God.

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Articulating Christ's Body

Sermon for the Sunday in the Octave of Corpus Christi

"The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper
was not by Christ's ordinance
reserved,
carried about,
lifted up 
or worshipped."

Does that sound familiar?

And yet,
we do reserved the Body of Christ,
we do carry it about,
we do lift it up
and we worship Christ
in the Most Holy Sacrament. 

Are we being wrong?
Are we being idolatrous?
Are we blaspheming?

[PAUSE]

One reason why 
we Anglican Catholics 
do not regard 
the Thirty-Nine Articles
as being authoritative 
is because of their ambiguity.

They were designed to appease
polarising factions 
within the Church of England.

They were designed
to stop the struggle 
for the Soul of England
to be a war within the streets.

And that's why 
the Articles have 
a historical importance 
that has allowed 
Anglican Protestants 
to walk with Anglican Catholics 
until comparatively recently.

So they are necessarily ambiguous. 

And this Article 
about the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper,
which we Catholics 
commonly call the Mass,
is deliberately ambiguous. 

It's true to say
that Our Lord
at the Last Supper
does not tell His Disciples
to reserve His Body
nor to carry it about
nor to lift it up
nor to worship it.

Neither does He expressly 
forbid it
even though He knows full well
the tendency of human beings
to fall into Idolatry.

He remembers the Golden Calf incident 
all too clearly.

And He does not forbid 
the reservation,
the carrying around,
the lifting up
or the worship
of His Body.

Why not?

Why does He not forbid it?

[PAUSE]

There is three underlying factors
behind how we Catholics
treat the Sacrament of the Mass.

Simply, it's Faith, Hope and Love.

By our Faith in Christ
we believe that 
what we behold
in the Sacrament of the Altar 
really, truly and fully 
is the Body and Blood
of Christ.

It is what He promised:
His flesh and blood
so that we might have life within us.

By our Hope,
we believe that showing people 
the Body and Blood of Christ,
displaying our faith
that what seems to be 
a disc of unleavened bread
is truly the Body of Christ,
we may stir in the hearts
of people hungry for hope 
the truth of Christ's presence with us.

By our Love, 
we reserve that Sacrament 
so that those who are unable 
to come to Mass 
may partake of the Body of Christ
and we carry it
to those who are too sick
to receive it.

And we do not worship 
bread and wine
because we believe 
that they have been transformed 
into the true Body and Blood of Christ,
Body, Soul, Mind, Humanity and Divinity
all that pertains to
the Person of the Son.

And the Son is God
and God is to be worshipped 
for our benefit
not His.

[PAUSE]

No. Christ does not command
that we should take the Sacrament 
of His Supper
and reserve it,
carry it about,
lift it up
and worship it.

He does not command that
but He does give us Himself
to be present with us
and to be consumed by us
so that we might love God
and neighbour.

We reserve the Love of God 
for our neighbour to eat.
We carry about the Love of God 
to our neighbour in his frailty.
We lift up the Love of God
for our neighbour to see.
We worship the Love of God
for our neighbour to share.

This is why
we put the Consecrated Host
into a monstrance 
for people to see
and be blessed 
so that one day they might receive.

[PAUSE]

The Articles of Religion 
are not authoritative 
for us Anglican Catholics 
especially when they give the impression 
that what we do is not 
part of the Catholic Religion. 

We don't need to hold them now
because, we pray,
we know better than going to war
with Anglican Protestants
whom we love despite our separation.

Nonetheless,
the Real, Objective and Physical Presence 
of Our Lord in the Most Holy Sacrament 
should draw us closer to Christ
in faith, hope and love for our neighbour.

Food for thought?
Or food for prayer?




Saturday, June 14, 2025

From the top


Sermon for Trinity Sunday

We know that Jesus can speak Greek.

Greek in Israel for Jesus
is like English is for us.

It's a language 
that everyone knows
but often not well.

Indeed, 
some older people
who have taken up English
later in life sometimes struggle
to say what they mean.

And even now,
we hear that confusion
and it is a confusion
that still affects the way
that people translate
Holy Scripture from Greek 
to English.

St Nicodemus hears our Lord say
that we must be born anōthen
- that's the Greek word.

It's a word that describes
the garment taken from Our Lord 
at His Crucifixion:
that seamless garment
woven from the top.

So anōthen is a word 
that we could translate
as "from the top".

The trouble is
that there are two meanings
to the phrase "from the top".

[PAUSE]

It could mean,
afresh or again,
and this is what St Nicodemus hears.

St Nicodemus hears
Our Lord say
we must be "born again"
which is why he gets confused 
and thinks that his poor mother
is going to have to suffer 
a terrible fate.

But that's not what Jesus means.

He us using the other meaning 
of "from the top".

He is talking about
being born from above 
from Heaven,
by the power of God

This is why He talks about us
being born of water and the Spirit.

It's a clear indication 
of our need for Baptism.

It is through the waters of Baptism
that we are born from above
into the Kingdom of God
and thereby into Eternal life.

This birth from above
is not from this world.

It is a birth that lies beyond
our experience in life
and why it is given to us
as a Sacrament. 

We see the external water
and know that,
through the covenant with God 
we are born in the Holy Ghost.

Our Baptism is Baptism by the Holy Ghost.

And our birth in Him
can only be known
in this world
through the water in the font.

And what on Earth 
has all this to do 
with Trinity Sunday?

[PAUSE]

What on Earth?
Well, that's the point exactly.

If we are born from above,
then we are aware of things above
which have only pale shadows 
here on Earth.

And our God,
The Triune God,
The Three-in-One,
Father, Son and Holy Ghost
Whom Earth and Heaven adore,
is not a thing of the Earth.

He is not created -
His Incarnation took
our Human Nature 
into His Godhead
- He is not created.

And this means 
we cannot expect
to understand 
with minds of Earth
the Truth from above
that God is Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

We know it 
because He shows it to us
in the words of Scripture and the Fathers
and the rational intelligence 
that draws its Holy conclusions
from the words of Scripture and the Fathers.

We know it by His revelation,
not by looking at shamrocks
or ice-water-steam 
or one flame on three wicks.

They are imperfect illustrations 
and even the most complete
theological understanding 
by the greatest Doctors of the Church
is like straw
compared with the reality of God
that is revealed from the top down to us.

[PAUSE]

If the world gives us grief
because it does not understand 
the Holy Trinity,
that is not our problem 
because the world listens 
with ears of clay
to words born from on high.

Our task is to spread the news
of Our Lord Jesus Christ,
and to baptise as many of those
who believe 
so that they may be born
from the top.