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.

Monday, October 27, 2025

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Checkmate?

Sermon for the feast of Christ the King preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury 

If He were a common criminal,
why would you give Him
even the time of day?

If He were a common criminal
you'd take one look
and hand Him over
to your Sadducee friends
and your old chum Caiaphas
with permission 
to crucify Him at their pleasure.

So why not?

Why talk with this man
at all?

Is it because possibly, 
just possibly,
He really is 
The King of the Jews?

[PAUSE]

If He isn't a king,
then it's not a problem
He can just go to that place...
Calvary...Golgotha...
whatever it's called.

If He is a king,
then we've got to be careful,
because he has followers
- a kingdom!
soldiers!
an army!

And peace in Jerusalem
is fragile at the best of times.

So we need to check Him out.

Is He a king?

His reply is strange.

What does He mean 
when He asks
whether we know this ourselves 
or whether someone told us?

Do we look Jewish?
Of course, someone told us!

This man in front of us
is here because
His own people,
His own priests,
have brought Him here.

Thinking about it,
that doesn't really
make Him a king does it?

If the people have given Him over.

If the chief priests have given Him over.

He can't be a king,
can He?

Unless there is some Civil War
brewing amongst the Jews.

And Civil War would
be a big deal.

We need to keep control
or Emperor Tiberius
will have our guts for garters
for losing Judaea.

This man has followers
and that's the problem -
He's causing trouble.

What has He done?

Yes, what has He done?

[PAUSE]

His kingdom is not of this world?

Well, that's true,
if His kingdom were of this world 
we'd already know about it
from the pitch battles
and struggles and blood.

He wouldn't be here
in front of us
all beaten up by the Jews.

Is He a king, then?

[PAUSE]

So we are right to call Him king!

But the way He understands 
Himself to be king
is not the way
that we understand 
being a King to mean.

He says that He is 
a witness to the Truth.

What is Truth?

The man's a philosopher!

And philosophers aren't a threat.

He hasn't done anything wrong.
And that's the truth.

They have brought Him here
because they envy Him.

He is getting more followers
than they are
but His armies
are not armies the Imperial Army
needs to worry about.

It's them kicking up the fuss,
not this man,
standing here,
bruised and bloody,
controlled and meek,
no angry words,
no screaming for mercy,
no ranting and raving.

He's in perfect control
of this whole situation.

It's as if He knew that 
this was coming
and He is ready 
to do battle with it.

Perhaps He is a king!

He has a kingdom 
in His followers.

He has a battle plan.

He has the bearing 
and dignity of a King
and has done nothing wrong.

How can we convict Him?

We will flog Him 
to show that we are boss
and we'll let Him go.

We can let Him go.
We rule Judaea.
Of course we can let Him go.

We can let Him go,
can't we?

Can't we just let Him go?

We can't, can we?

Saturday, October 18, 2025

The nature of Love


Sermon for the eighteenth Sunday after Trinity

Of the 613 commandments 
of the Jewish Law
you know the top two,
don't you?

Love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart and soul
and mind and strength.

Love thy neighbour 
as thou lovest yourself.

Right?

Yes?

No!

[PAUSE]

The first commandment is correct.

The second isn't,
but the difference is subtle.

It isn't,
"Love thy neighbour 
as thou lovest thyself"
it's 
"Love thy neighbour as thyself."

Same difference?

Just different phrasing?

It's so much deeper than that.

[PAUSE]

In this day and age,
we see ourselves 
as individuals 
each doing our own thing.

More and more people
are choosing to live alone
so that they can live
their life by their rules.

We see people challenging 
even the most obvious 
and basic facts about the world
so that they can live
how they want to live.

The temptation that we have
is that we are in control 
of our identity 
and no-one,
not even society,
biology,
logic
or even God
has a right to say who we are.

We define ourselves,
on our terms
based on what 
we feel ourselves to be.

We are always looking 
for what makes us distinct 
from other people
particularly those
with whom we disagree most.

In this vision,
the human race
becomes nothing 
but a collection of individuals 
with no connection to each other,
no relationship of any depth
beyond the emotional,
no responsibility to each other
than just following the law.

There is no love there
apart from the feeling
of warmth and niceness
about someone.

And when that feeling ebbs away
so does love.

[PAUSE]

Love thy neighbour as thyself.

The Lord is challenging us
to look for the connection 
that unites all humanity.

He invites,
not forces us
to see ourselves 
in other people 
that,
at the very depth of our being
we share something,
something fundamentally human.

The Lord invites us
to see that the good 
that we want for ourselves 
is the good that we want for others
because we share human nature 
and God loves human beings.

The depths of God's love for us
is cross-shaped
- we know that so well.

But in being made man,
Christ unites each of us
in His humanity
so that we can be united 
in His divinity.

If we are each united in Him
then we are each united 
with each other.

The happiness we wish for ourselves 
is the happiness that God wants for us,
and is the happiness that 
we must wish for our neighbour 
precisely because,
whether we like it or not,
we share our humanity with them.

To paraphrase Dorothy Day
our love for God 
is measured by the love
we have for the one we love least.

[PAUSE]

It also means that 
we are worthy of love,
just by existing.

No-one is unloved 
even if we feel it,
even if we sit in the darkness 
of the misery of our fallen lives.

We are loved 
and that love is always 
close to us in God.

Let us, then,
let that love be close to others
in our lives and relationships 
with them.


Sunday, October 12, 2025

Equalising equality

Sermon preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine on the seventeenth Sunday after Trinity 

What does equality
mean for you?

We often hear 
quoted to us
St Paul's  words 
to the Galatians
that,
"There is neither 
Jew nor Greek, 
there is neither bond nor free, 
there is neither male nor female: 
for ye are all one in Christ Jesus."

So, we are all equal 
in the eyes of God,
is that right?

If that's true,
why are we all different?

We can understand 
that being a slave or a master
or being rich or poor,
or even Jew or Gentile
are products of human society.

But,
if we are all equal,
why did God Himself
create us
Male and Female?

Why are these 
not interchangeable,
especially when
having children is concerned?

[PAUSE]

Our Lord speaks
of how we should attend
a wedding banquet.

We are to go to the lowest room,
the lowest place,
so that we can be invited up,
and then find honour
in the eyes of the other guests,
whereas those
who take the best place
get told to move down.

There seems to be
a pecking order
at this banquet.

One room is higher
than another.

One person seems to be
regarded as more important 
than another.

Does this mean
that, at the Wedding Feast of the Lamb 
there will be higher and lower places?

Does this mean
that Our Lord
is saying that
human beings are not equal?

Of course,
the answer is yes!

[PAUSE]

Think about it.

In the Revelstion to St John
there are the four and twenty elders
who sit crowned on thrones
next to the Throne of God.

Do we really imagine
that in Heaven,
we shall sit next to St Peter
or St Paul,
or even at Our Lord's right hand?

Remember,
we're human beings
and human beings have bodies,
so we shall.be physically present.

We shall have a place in Heaven,
but will it be a place 
that's of honour?

Will it be a place
near to Our Lord's throne?

Or will it be nearer the door?

We know that it's common sense
that Our Lady will be closest to Our Lord.

She must have a place very near Him.

Our Lord Himself teaches
"Honour thy father and thy mother."

He must surely honour her
by giving her a place beside Him
in glory.

And He also says that 
"For whosoever 
shall do the will of my Father 
which is in heaven, 
the same is my brother, 
and sister, 
and mother."

[PAUSE]

Just like any wedding, 
the Heavenly Feast 
is ordered by relationship.

It is those whom 
the Bride and Groom love most
who sit nearest to them 
at the wedding. 

It is the same with God
that it is those who love Him most
will sit nearer to Him
in Heaven.

The more we love
the nearer to God we are 
because God is Love.

Those who care more about
their status,
their rights 
and entitlements,
their nation and culture
cannot have a higher place.

In God,
human beings are equal
in their salvation
in their opportunity 
to love each other.

We all have the same opportunity 
to sit at the Wedding Feast of the Lamb 
regardless of
our race, our status and our sex.

It is how we view that opportunity 
that matters.

We are not created 
to be identical
nor to be interchangeable,
but to have the same opportunity 
to know and love God
as the person He has created.

[PAUSE]

Political equality
is concerned 
about ensuring people
are the same under law.

This is where the language 
of rights,
benefits,
entitlements
and duties comes in.

These may have their beginning 
in justice and the desire for good,
but we see them become 
ends in themselves:
rights to be clung to,
benefits that are rightfully ours,
entitlements that we must fight for.

Political equality
quickly loses faith, 
because people trust their rights
rather than God;
it loses hope 
because when entitlements are not met,
life is somehow not worth living;
and it loses love
because we focus more 
on the right to be loved
rather than the duty to love.

The Pharisees 
with their sense of entitlement 
move further down 
from the place of honour
because the Heavenly seating plan
is based upon love of God 
and neighbour,
not social or political entitlement.

[PAUSE]

We should not care 
where we sit in Heaven,
for wherever we sit,
we shall know the love of God:
it will be the same feast
that we enjoy together.

He invites us all, 
equally, 
to join Him in the Feast,
and, wherever we sit,
we shall be in good company 
for it is a company based on love.