Sermon for the fourth
Sunday after Easter
How do you prepare yourself when a loved one leaves?
The pain of separation is one of the most acute stress
factors that human beings can suffer. According to some sources, the most
stressful things that a human being can undergo are the death of a loved one,
childhood trauma, and divorce. Each is centred around and breeds from a loss of
love. Yet, each one of us will suffer these sorts of stresses in our lifetime.
It’s unavoidable.
Sometimes, it seems that Our Lord glosses over this sort of
pain. We hear Him say to the Eleven Disciples, and us, “Ye have heard how I
said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you. If ye loved me, ye would
rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I.”
Is it really that easy to rejoice, knowing that a loved one
is going away to a better place? Is this not a bit of emotional blackmail on
the part of the Lord Jesus? “If you really loved me, then you would rejoice…”
Is that what He is saying?
[PAUSE]
The pain of separation is caused by nothing less than our
love. It’s a pain that many people can’t truly face and so try to avoid it
where possible. Some will try never to love but remain protected in a shell
that keeps everyone at a distance. Others will fill their lives with
distractions, turning from this fashion to that fashion so that they are not
still enough for love to catch up with them. Others will numb themselves to the
pain, even through things like drink and drugs. This is happening so much in the
world around us.
The fact is that Love requires the greatest investment we
can give, and yet it is only something that we can give as a gift. It’s never a
bargaining tool. If we give love, then we can only give it freely in the
knowledge that, in so doing, our hearts will be broken.
If this is the case then why does Our Lord tell us that if
we love Him then we would rejoice because He goes back to the Father? Is that
not like saying, “if you really loved me, you wouldn’t get that tattoo”?
[PAUSE]
The fact is that Our Lord does recognise that His departure
will lead to our sorrow. “Now I go my way to him that sent me, and none of you
asketh me, Whither goest thou? But, because I have said these things unto you,
sorrow hath filled your heart.” Yet He must go so that He can bestow more love
upon us, namely the gift of the presence of the Holy Ghost. It is through the
Holy Ghost that God can be present to each and everyone who desires His
presence. But that presence is unseen and His ways are unseen. If we love Him
then we must trust Him because trusting someone is what we do as part of our
love for them. We can rejoice in Our Lord’s impending departure because we know
where He is going and, in Him, we have the hope that we will go there, too!
In Christ, there is pure Hope! - a certainty of our resurrection
and the end of our pain. It can only come through Him and through no other
means. No self-help book, no philosophy, no other religion can give us that
certainty because it comes through realising Who Jesus is and entering into a
relationship of love with Him.
Of course Love is hard – really hard. The pain it will cause
each one of us is immense because it requires giving of ourselves at a level
that we simply don’t believe we can afford. This is why many of us try to
protect ourselves from it, or numb ourselves to its pain. In so doing, we lose
the benefits of Hope and Faith that come with Love and are subject to it.
[PAUSE]
Love is the perfect gift that comes down to us from Heaven
from the Father of lights. As Christians, we dare to receive that gift and the
cross that comes with it. Do we receive the Hope that also comes? It is part of
the package deal after all.