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.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Devil's Advocate


Sermon for the first Sunday of Lent

Let's play Devil's advocate.

How would you bring Christ down?

Yes of course, 
as Christians,
we know Christ to be God.

We couldn't bring Him down
even if we tried
and we don't want to try.

Sadly,
others do.

So how might they do it?

Well they need to show
that Jesus is not God.

They need to show
that He is not all-powerful
that He is not all-knowing
and that He is not all-good.

If the Devil 
can convince us
of just one of these things
then he has us.

And because Jesus is a man,
this should be easy.

If the Devil 
can convince us
that Jesus is only a man
then it's job done.

So how do we start?

[PAUSE]

Showing that 
He is not all-knowing
is tricky.

We might try
to show that 
He is not all-good.

But let's show
that He is not all-powerful.

That's easiest

That means we need 
to show that He is weak.

And He is weak too.

Look at Him
all hungry.

If He doesn't eat, 
then He'll die.

If He's God,
then He can change
these stones into bread
and feed Himself.

"Man shall not live by bread alone, 
but by every word that proceedeth 
out of the mouth of God"

Now,
is that more
or less powerful
than changing stones to bread?

Ah!

But if He does change
stones to bread
he can be fed
and show us that He is God.

He refuses!

So He's not all-powerful.

But what if he's right?

What if it's not the bread
that makes us live,
but the words of the mouth of God?

If He speaks the truth,
then changing stones to bread
would be needless
and, in the circumstances,
show us that He bows
to temptation.

So not turning stones to bread,
that's actually more powerful
and we still have no evidence
to show that
He is not all-powerful.

But we have no evidence
that He is all-powerful.

[PAUSE]

If He says
that we live by every word 
that comes out of His mouth
then let Him show it.

Let Him give proof
that He is all-powerful.

Send Him up
to the top of the pinnacle.

If He lives
by every word of God,
then, if He throws Himself down,
God's word will summon the angels, 
because Holy Scripture says,
"He shall give his angels 
charge concerning thee, 
and in their hands 
they shall bear thee up, 
lest at any time thou dash thy foot 
against a stone."

But if He does,
the He will not have seen
through the trick.

He will not know 
that He is being.deceived
into proving His word.

If He throws Himself down
then He might prove
that He is kept by God's word
but He will also prove
that He can be manipulated.

It will show that
He is not all-knowing
and not all-powerful.

[PAUSE]

"Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God."

So, He's not stupid.

He's not being fooled
by the clever ploy.

Last chance for now. 

Tempt Him
with everything
on the conditon
He stops worshipping God.

Every man has his price.

So offer Him
everything,
absolutely everything
to turn from God.

If He does,
He won't be all-good
because He doesn't worship God;
He won't be all-knowing
because He won't see through this trick,
He won't be all-powerful
for the riches of.the whole world
control Him.

And then we are done.

[PAUSE]

"Get thee hence, Satan; 
for it is written, 
Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, 
and him only shalt thou serve."

And that's the best we can do.

The Devil can't show that 
Jesus is not all-powerful
nor that
Jesus is not all-knowing
nor that
Jesus is not all-good.

To be fair,
Jesus hasn't shown
that He is all-knowing, 
all-powerful and all-good.

But He doesn't need to.

Watch.Him.

Watch what He does.

Watch Him.heal.
Watch Him forgive.
Watch Him teach.
Watch Him raise the dead.

And
Watch Him die.
Watch why He dies.

And watch Him rise in glory.

The Devil can
and will do his worst
and God shows us
why playing Devil's advocate
only leads us to see
the glory of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

To Him be honour
and glory unto the age of ages.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Two blind, two see

 
Sermon for Quinquagesima preached at the Cathedral Church of St Augustine of Canterbury

How's your eyesight?

Some of us are lucky
and have perfect vision.

Some of us
can discern that 
one of the altar candles
is adrift from upright
by one twenty-seventh
of a degree,
or an n dash from an m dash
at 100 paces.

Lots of people wear glasses these days.

Is that because
watching too many screens
is making our eyesight bad
or is it because
opticians are now very good 
at picking up
subtle problems with 
our eyesight?

We can now correct
all manner of problems
with spectacles
or contact lenses
or even low-level surgery.

What do you think
is the most difficult
problem with our sight
for us to correct?

[PAUSE]

Have you gone for 
the most obvious answer?

Not having eyes at all?

Absolutely.

Trying to fit
an earthworm 
with contact lenses
is raising futility to a high art.

Yet we know
that Our Lord heals the blind.

That includes those blinded
by diseases,
and it also includes those
born blind.

In fact, 
if you look at that
instance where Our Lord
heals the man born blind
we can reasonably infer
that the man was born without eyes
or eyes so deformed 
that they actually need
to be re-created 
which our Lord does do
with the dust of the earth,
demonstrating clearly
that He is the Creator.

What is interesting today
in St Luke's record of the Gospel,
we hear of two blindnesses
but only one that is healed
- at least only one 
that is healed straightaway.

[PAUSE]

St Luke tells us of the situation
in which Our Lord lets 
His confused disciples know
that He is going to Jerusalem
for the last time. 

On that last trip to Jerusalem
they encounter a blind man at Jericho
who is calling to the Son of David 
to have mercy upon him.

He shouts out in his blindness,
recognising
that there is one near
who can restore his sight.

He sees wirhout seeing.

His faith saves him,
and by 'save' here, 
we can understand the word 'heals'
for 'salvation' and 'health' 
are two sides of the same coin.

So there's one blindness.

Did you spot the other blindness?

[PAUSE]

There, right at the beginning!

Our Lord tells his disciples
that He is going to Jerusalem
to be crucified.

They do not understand.

They do not see.

And they won't see,
not until the events of Good Friday
are played out
in front of them.

Only when
they see Him appear to them
in the flesh
do they understand Him
- they see what He is on about.

There is a sight of the eye
and the sight of the mind's eye.

The blind man sees 
Christ in his mind's eye
but not with his fleshly eyes.

The disciples see
Christ with their fleshly eyes,
but not in their mind's eye.

The Lord heals both.

As Our Saviour
- our restorer to our full health
in God,
He reveals His love
in revealing to us
the God to Whom 
we have been blind
since our Fall 
in the Garden of Eden.

Yet we still hear
the Atheist say to us
"Show us your God!
Show Him and we will believe.
Seeing is believing!"

What do we do then?

How do we respond?

Especially when
we do not see Our Lord
among us.

[PAUSE]

We might point
to the Eucharist
where we see Our Lord
under the appearance
of bread and wine.

But, as St Thomas Aquinas points out
Our Lord is truly present,
Body, Soul, Humanity
and Divinity,
but that He is seen
with eyes of faith.

He is not seen 
through microscopes,
telescopes,
oscilloscopes
or periscopes,
or even kalaidoscopes.

He is present with us
for us to see
with our eyes of faith,
- the same eyes
with which the Apostles
see Him
until their last earthly breath
and their first heavenly breath.

Those who do not believe
will not see Him
in the Most Holy Sacrament,
because they are blind.

For them to ask us
to show Him to them
is impossible
for their mind's eye is blind.

All we can do
is just bear witness to 
what we see,
what the Apostles see,
what the Church sees
in the hope that the eyes of faith
may be opened 
in the eyes of those 
whose mind is blind.

And what do we see?

[PAUSE]

We see a man,
a healer,
a teacher,
a preacher,
a giver of faith, hope and love.

We see a man,
mocked,
spat on,
flogged,
and crucified
for the love of each one of us.

And we see a tomb,
an empty tomb,
and, with our eyes of faith
we see Him who
once occupied it.

That is what we see
and that is what we show the world
in the hope that
that which is now blind
may soon see.




Monday, February 09, 2026