Sunday, March 15, 2026

Magic, mystery and the multitudes


Sermon for the fourth Sunday in Lent

So, how is he doing it?

Five small barley loaves,
Two small fish
Twelve baskets over
Five thousand fed.

What do we see?

Does Our Lord 
put the bread 
into a magic hat,
or a magic bag
and then produce more bread
like Tubbo the Clown produces
a coin 
from behind the ear
of a jelly-smeared urchin?

Or does he break some off
from a loaf
that never seems 
to get smaller?

Is one of the disciples
behind Our Lord
secretly handing Him
bread smuggled 
from the bags
of the multitudes around.

Just what are we seeing,
when we behold 
this miracle?

[PAUSE]

We know that magicians
like to reproduce miracles.

We even see that
in the plagues of Egypt
when Pharaoh's Court Sorcerors
replicate some of the plagues
that Moses instigates.

Don't they realise that
they are adding to 
Egypt's suffering?

 But magicians
are using
sleight of hand,
special props,
misdirection 
and our assumptions
about the situation
to deceive us.

And that's the key.
Magic is amusement by deception.
We try to figure out
how it is done
as well as being amazed.

But we know it's a trick.

We know the coin
hasn't appeared from 
the ear of the child
unless the child is in fact 
Dumbo the Elephant,
and Tubbo is wearing rubber gloves.

Is that what Our Lord is doing?

He isn't prancing about
In top hat and cloak
because He is not a showman.

He's not a trickster.

He does not deceive.

His concern
is what these five thousand 
will eat.

Perhaps He turns
the stones on the mountain
into bread?

[PAUSE]

And now we're back
to the beginning of Lent.

Man shall not live
by bread alone
but by every word
that proceeds
from the mouth of God.

We can be sure 
that Our Lord
is not contradicting Himself.

He is concerned only
that these people are fed,
body and soul.

Somehow,
he is multiplying the bread,
not by magic or deceit
but by some act of creation
that we cannot be privy to
by the fact that 
are created.

It's a mystery,
not lost to Time,
but above our concepts
of Time, Space, Matter and Reality.

It's not how Jesus does it,
it's why He does it that matters,
and that lies
entirely in His intention
not to gather followers
by impressing them
but to gather those who
hunger and thirst 
for righteousness
and feed them until they are 
fully satisfied
with Truth and not deceit.

All He asks of us
is to use the gift of faith
that He gives us
to receive salvation,
refreshment
and restoration.

Our salvation comes
out of the empty tomb,
not from behind our ear.

Sunday, March 08, 2026

Better the Devil you know?


Sermon preached at the Cathedral of St Augustine of Canterbury on the third Sunday in Lent

Do you know your devil?

We are often told,
"better the devil you know
than the devil you don't."

So do you know your devil?

[PAUSE]

We often have this image
that on our right shoulder
stands our guardian angel
who looks like
a small version of us
only prettier and cleaner
and without unsightly hairs,
dressed in white
with halo and wings
and a rather simpering smile
over its smug little face.

Whereas, 
on our left shoulder
stands our devil,
who looks like
a small version of us
only uglier and red-skinned
with furry legs, horns,
more unsightly hairs,
and a mischievous twinkle
in its malevolent yellow eyes.

Is that what your angel 
and devil look like?

If they do,
then be prepared for a shock.

Any devil
that tries to tempt you
will look more like 
the image that you have
of your angel...
at first.

But let's dispel a few rumours.

[PAUSE]

You do not have
a devil and an angel
sitting on your shoulders.

Your guardian angel does not
sit on your right shoulder.

It is beetling up and down
between you
and the Throne of Heaven,
defending you,
praying for you,
correcting your prayers,
trying to steer you
and warn you,
but by directing your attention
to what is good,
or revealing the bad,
and not by whispering
in your ear...
normally.

More importantly,
you have a conscience,
which is really what
that idea of
the angel on your shoulder
represents.

That conscience 
is directed towards God,
but because of our fallen nature
it needs to be informed
to be of use.

It can only direct you
in the paths of righteousness
as far as you are willing
to have taught it what is good.

You need to keep its user manual 
up to date,
install the latest updates
and recognise bad habits
the more you grow in faith in God.

We inform our conscience
by learning what is 
good, true, clean, holy, lovely
and ordered to a better 
life with God.

But why would your devil
look more like your angel?

There's a good reason
why it definitely
does not look
like a hornèd imp.

Well, we still have 
more rumours
to dispel.

[PAUSE]

You don't have a devil,
at least not in the sense
the Holy Scriptures mean.

You have a dark side of your mind
where all the negative ideas
you have about yourself lie.

This dark side has grown
from sins and bad habits,
and not always your sins
and bad habits.

From the Holy Scriptures,
however,
we understand that
it is possible
to be controlled by devils
- that is at the heart of what we call
demonic possession,
where the will is
completely enslaved
by the powers of darkness.

In these situations
those who are possessed 
cannot do otherwise.

We see, 
in the Bible
that devils can make us dumb
or make us super strong
and raving mad.

But that doesn't mean
that being dumb
or super strong
or having significant 
mental illness
is necessarily caused
by a devil.

But if your conscience
can be informed by
good habits and good practices,
it can be damaged by bad habits
and bad practices.

And that's what the devils want.

So,
they pose as angels
to persuade you
into bad habits
by making them
look good
or, at least,
inconsequential.

If they looked like imps
you wouldn't take them
seriously.

The devils' job
is to make sin look attractive,
desireable,
irresistable.

That way,
even if you break a bad habit,
you have to watch out
because if you go back to it,
you get seven devils
trying to tempt you.

The worst of it is that,
when you give in to temptation
and you feel sorry,
the devils then make you feel
that you are unforgivable.

They don't drop
the façade
of looking like angels.

Instead,
they make you look
like the hornèd imp,
they give you the red skin
and yellow eyes
and convince you
that you are the devil,
hell-bound
and hated by God.

That is the lie.

You don't have a devil.
You are tempted by them.

But you don't possess a devil
and a devil doesn't possess you,
God forbid.

So if there isn't a devil 
on your left shoulder
nor an angel on your right,
how do you deal with
all those conflicting ideas?

How do we separate
what seems good
but is bad
and what seems bad
but is actually good
from
what seems good
and is actually good?

[PAUSE]

Two things.

First, the goal of the Devil
is to separate you from God.

So, if you know Who God Is,
then you know 
when someone is trying
to separate you.from Him
by tempting you
into despising what is holy
and loving what is unholy.

The more you strive
to be holy,
the more you try to know God,
the more you will recognise
the devil that's tempting you.

Second, the Devil will try 
either to persuade you
that he is equal with God
or that he himself doesn't exist.

The Devil will try to dominate you.

And he's right,
he is stronger than you,
but he is not another god.

Indeed, 
Jesus is the strong man
who breaks into the Devil's home
to carry out those
who are enslaved to him
- that's us.

Our Lord is the strong man
who carries us out
of the Devil's clutches
because we are God's priceless treasure.

And if the Devil
should try to persuade you
that he doesn't exist
and that all the evil in the world
comes from you,
then remind him
that he must exist
because Our Lord's foot 
is crushing his head.

[PAUSE]

The more we get into good habits
the more will we recognise
when we are duped.

Our angel will guide us
if we ask it.

The Devil will flee from us
when we oppose him
with Christ at our head.

The Devil can
circle our head as much as he likes.

We just 
don't let him sit
on our shoulder.

Sunday, March 01, 2026

The consequence of Us and Them

Sermon for the second Sunday in Lent

"She's not one of us!"

"Stay away!"

"She's got no part in our nation!"

This is what the Canaanite Woman hears.

Already even in the first century,
politics in the Middle East
is complicated
and emotive.

The people of Canaan
are worse than Samaritans.

Their practices are disgusting
and no faithful Israelite
has any dealings
with such low life.

And this woman is one of them.

Keep her away.

[PAUSE]

Yet,
still she calls out
to the One she believes
can free her daughter
of devils.

She knows how vile she is
in the eyes of the Jews.

The Master's disciples,
naturally urge that she be
sent away.

She is used to that.

She hears his voice,
"I am not sent,
but unto the lost sheep
of the house of Israel."

This is the response
everyone expects.

The disciples know
that Our Lord
is supremely faithful
to the Jewish law.

The Messiah
is prophesied
to fight for the salvation
of the people of Israel.

And He does!

He comes to Israel first
knowing that,
when they reject Him,
He is justified in 
reaching out to the gentiles.

There is no surprise.

And despite the fact
that she knows is
this Canaanite Woman
this most unclean of the unclean
still sees in the Christ
something worth fighting for.
something to pursue.

She doesn't know
she is a bit premature.

But then,
does she have a choice?

He is special;
He is a wonderworker;
He speaks the truth;
He is loyal to His nation.

And so she fights 
through the protests,
derision
and hatred,
and worships the God
she is not allowed to approach.

"Help me!"

The Christ stops
and bothers to speak to her,
"It is not meet 
to take the children's bread,
and to cast it to the dogs."

The Jewish people smile smugly
for the Christ has put her 
in her place.

He's not for the likes of her.
He's proud of His nation.
Not going to be sullied by 
associating with her.

[PAUSE]

Dogs?

It's the word He uses
but it is not the word
she expects to hear.

She is expecting
a different Greek word for dog
that has always been used
to describe her Canaanite people
as being unclean and impure.

But the word He uses,
He calls her a puppy, a pet dog
one of those animals
for which there is affection

Immediately,
she sees them snuffling
round the family 
at the table
being fed treats.

If this is what she is to Him
even these little dogs 
get a scrap of kindness.

"Truth, Lord,
yet the dogs eat of the crumbs
which fall from the master's table."

And something shifts.

Not in the Christ,
for He knows what He does.

"O woman,"
He says.

Already this is significant
for "O Woman" 
is how He addresses His mother
at the wedding in Cana.

"O Woman"
a term of respect
of acknowledgement
of seeing her
without the Nationalistic label

"O Woman,
great is thy faith!"

Her faith has crossed 
the divide caused by
tribalism
Nationalism
political jingoism.

It's a woman
talking to a man
- a man Who just happens
to be God.

Her faith in Him
is greater
than the derision
of those who hate her.

"Be it unto thee
even as thou wilt."

And a way away,
a devil screeches
as the barrier of hatred is lifted
removing his protection
from being evicted.

The woman
who has struck at 
the barrier
that separates her and God
has let the light of Christ
pour forth onto her daughter
freeing her from darkness.

Jesus knows her
and through this
knowing her faith
He shows up the pettiness
of those who cling to their
national identity
above the good of a human being.

As we know this
because this is recorded for us
in the Gospels,
not as an.example
of Jesus being rude or unkind
but of showing that His love
will not be constrained 
by anything man made.

Yes, He comes to save
the Jewish people first
because of His promises
to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

He is faithful to them 
but they reject Him.

And so, 
as the prophets foretell,
He comes for the people
of Tyre, Sidon, Cairo, Athens
Antioch, Alexandria,
Rome, London and Faversham
with the same promise
of salvation.

[PAUSE]

The faith of this Canaanite woman
saves her daughter
but it also reaches out to us
and challenges us
to see our fellow man
in all whom we meet.