Sermon for the sixth Sunday after Trinity preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury
When people
encounter the Christian Faith,
they usually very quickly
bring up the question of Hell
and what you can be
punished for Eternally.
Can you go to Hell
for using your neighbour's WiFi?
Can you go to Hell
for staring too long
at a naked dummy
In a shop window?
Can you go to Hell
for eating somebody else's
cheese straws?
Can you go to Hell for emotions?
Can you go to Hell for...
Enough already!
[PAUSE]
There is an obsession
among non-Christians
and the Eternal flames.
Why?
The idea scares them.
Some say it isn't true
and deny the existence of Hell
or that Hell is eternal.
Some will become worried
that a single action
will lose their salvation.
An old Victorian belief
is that a dodgy potato
could send you to Hell
through indigestion.
It is ridiculous.
[PAUSE]
Our Eternal fate is based
on how we grow in God.
When Our Lord shows us
the parable of the talents
He shows us that what matters
is the conscious effort
that we put into our faith
that makes the value
of the talent increase.
It isn't how we seek to grow in Christ
it's that we seek to grow in Christ.
We cast ourselves into Hell
for rejecting Christ
to the extent that we alter ourselves
in order that we cannot be saved.
If we refuse the Eternal medicine
then we shall be Eternally ill.
Hell is serious.
Deadly serious.
[PAUSE]
Yet Our Lord seems
to show us that what we do
can destine us for Hell.
If we are angry with our neighbour
without a cause
we will have to make an account
before the judge.
If we say to our neighbour,
"Raca!"
- "Empty head"!
an unthinking insult
said in the heat of the moment
- will have to make an account
before a full blown tribunal
of the supreme court.
If we call our neighbour,
"you fool"
(the Greek word is
where we get our word, moron)
deliberately and wilfully,
filled with anger,
then we are destined for Hell!
These are the words of Christ,
and they make us
uncomfortable.
[PAUSE]
But we need understand
what Hell is.
We say,
"eternal separation from God".
Yet He is always near us,
whether we reject Him
or not.
In Hell,
we reject any knowledge of God.
God is love
and anger leads to hate.
In Hell,
we know only hate,
we will not know love,
even though God still loves us.
In Hell,
we make our own rules
because we reject God's authority.
In Hell
we judge by what
we say is right,
because we reject God's goodness.
Imagine so many people together
for Eternity
all rejecting faith, hope, love,
truth, order, generosity,
reason, common decency,
even health of body and soul,
because they know better than God.
This is why Hell
is so mindnumbingly terrifying,
and anger born of hatred
leads us here.
[PAUSE]
So, if we're angry with someone,
we should leave our gift at the altar
and be reconciled?
No.
That's not what Our Lord tells us.
Hear His words:
"If thou bring thy gift to the altar,
and there rememberest
that thy brother hath ought against thee,
leave there thy gift
and go and be reconciled
with thy brother..."
He's telling us
that if we think
someone is angry with us,
then it's our job
to be reconciled.
But that's backwards,
isn't it?
[PAUSE]
No.
If we think someone
is in danger
of going to Hell
because of their hatred of us,
we need to do something,
because that is what love does.
If we love our neighbour
as the Lord commands,
then we cannot simply
let them go to Hell.
We have to fight for them.
Our Lord wants us
to love those who hate us
because He does not want
anyone to end up in Hell,
and hatred leads to Hell.
Of course,
there is only so much
that we can do.
If someone is not willing
to give up hatred,
then we must draw a line
once we have done what we can.
But we remember
that all things are possible
with God.
This is why the Cross is so important.
Upon it,
Our Lord reconciles us
with God.
God hates our sins so much
that He would rather die
than just let us go to Hell.
As far as we can,
we live at peace with everyone.
When someone hurts us,
we forgive
and take the hit.
If we think we've hurt someone
we do what we can
to reconcile and repair.
Anger is an emotion.
We all feel it at times.
That's all it is,
so we treat it like an emotion
and not turn it into a way of life.
Anger is not a way of life.
Christ is.
