...it's round here somewhere. Seriously, here's a disclaimer. On this blog, I draw my own interpretations, publish my own sermons, and ruminate on the state of the Church independently of any establishment to which I'm affiliated. There are statements contained herein which may be wrong. Please correct me so that I can learn from this.
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Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Sunday, November 26, 2023
As the darkness deepens
Sermon for the Sunday next before Advent
Who is Jeremiah
speaking to?
He tells us that God
"will raise unto David
a righteous Branch,
and a King shall reign,
and prosper,
and shall execute judgment
and justice in the earth."
Is that message for us?
[PAUSE]
It would seem not.
Jeremiah
is preaching to
the peoples of Israel
and Judah
affected by the Great Captivity
and scattering
among the nations.
He tells of the coming Messiah,
the Branch of David,
the Root of Jesse,
the Lion of Judah.
But that's all past.
Jesus has come and gone.
What possible message
can Jeremiah have
for us now?
What can Jeremiah say
to this time
in which there is still
a barbarous war
in the Middle East
in which so much hatred
is being aired
and acted upon
with such great ferocity?
[PAUSE]
What message does Jeremiah
have for us
in a world in which
there is much
darkness and depression?
Mankind is becoming
anxious,
fearful,
untrusting,
resentful,
demanding recompense
in order to find some closure
on the pains of living.
Mankind is seeing its demons
in Society,
in the Environment,
in the hearts of others,
in the stars and planets,
in the systems of living
which are supposed to protect
and allow for growth.
Mankind is now
imprisoned in a cage of freedom
which has been fabricated
by our fall from the face of God.
Mankind seems to be losing hope
and the darkness is coming.
[PAUSE]
But who is Jeremiah
speaking to?
He addresses precisely
those who have lost hope.
His words
are the words of God
- he is a prophet after all.
His words tell us
of the growth of the Branch
the coming of the Kingdom
the establishment of justice.
He is not presenting
a final end
but the beginning of something
that, for us,
has already been sown
but is growing now
and will continue to grow
throughout Human history.
God's message through Jeremiah
is a message of hope.
God wants us to have hope
and hold it
and allow it to grow
so that faith and love
may also increase.
God has never,
never left the people who love Him
without hope.
Granted,
we may not know what God is doing -
in fact we probably cannot know
what God is doing -
but he tells us to hold on
and continue to dare to hope
in Him
though the stars fall from the Heavens
and the angel trumpets echo
around the earth,
though the dreaded horsemen
thunder across the nations
and men become sick and faint.
We hold on.
[PAUSE]
Advent approaches.
This is a time for us
to fast and pray
and to nuture the tiny grains of hope
that we have
because the Kingdom of God
is coming
and is now here with us
and we shall see it again
present with us
in the tiny Christ Child
of Christmas Day.
The Devil will always
try to destroy that hope
in whatever way he can,
but, while the Innocents may perish,
the Christ Child will not
and He will give all good things
to those who lose for His sake.
The Innocents will receive their justice.
And we will see our hope fulfilled,
because we dare to cling onto it
for the love of Him
Who dares to hope in us
and shares His hope with us.
Glory be to Him
that sitteth upon the throne
and to the Lamb
now and unto the age of ages.
Amen.
Monday, November 20, 2023
A present of presenting a present Presentation
Why the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lady hammers home the incredible story of our redemption.
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Making Jesus unclean?
Sermon for the twenty-fourth Sunday after Trinity
Let's just be clear about this.
According to the Jewish Law
touching blood
makes you unclean.
And,
if someone unclean
touches you
you become unclean too.
How selfish of this woman, then,
to touch the hem of
Jesus' garment,
just to stop her bleeding.
She doesn't even ask him.
She just does it.
She makes Jesus unclean
without Him knowing.
Not only is Jesus unclean
but all whom He touches
become unclean.
Who knows
how many people
become contaminated
just because this woman
wants to stop bleeding.
Who knows how many people
have had their relationship with God
damaged
by one woman's selfishness.
[PAUSE]
That's the way
a Pharisee might see it,
all fixated on the Law
and the Rite
and the purity.
But there is something
they will overlook.
Does the woman's bleeding stop?
Yes,
of course.
So,
how can someone unclean
on the outside of society
unable to approach God heal her?
This healing comes from God.
It means that Jesus is
not unclean.
Oh,
He notices the power leave Him
to heal her,
but see how He tells her
that her faith has made her whole.
He does not see selfishness.
He sees her trust in Him.
She knows that,
if He is the great Healer
that He has shown Himself to be,
if He is the Messiah
that she believes Him to be,
if He is the Son of God
that He claims to be
then He can never be made unclean.
She has complete faith in Him.
But she is scared
nonetheless.
It's scary having
your faith tested!
The devil likes to put
his little grain of doubt
in your mind.
But Jesus Himself says
that a grain of faith
can grow bigger than anything
and she has that grain of faith
enough to dare to touch Him
and be healed.
She lets go
of the grip of the Jewish Law
with its restrictions
on clean and unclean
and allows the cleanness
of her faith
to bring her to the One
Who, not only can heal,
but Who wants to heal.
And, to strengthen this point
He goes to a girl
whom everyone says is dead
and who laugh at Him
when He says she isn't.
And this dead girl
he touches
and the Jewish Law cries,
"Unclean!"
But the girl revives
and is alive
and cannot now be unclean.
Where has the uncleanness gone?
In Christ
it is nullified
- made nothing.
The only uncleanness
is the scorn
that pours out of
unbelieving,
unkind,
unfaithful hearts.
It is not what goes into a man
that makes him unclean
but what comes out of his heart.
[PAUSE]
Our faith in Christ
is the beginning of our healing
and comes from the same grace
that God gives to everyone.
We cannot make Christ unclean
with our presence,
we cannot contaminate His Grace
with our sin.
We can never despair
of the mercy of Christ
Who will forgive the sins,
no matter how great,
that we present to Him
in repentance and humility.
While we are contaminated
by the sins of those
around us,
while our sins can
and do contaminate
those around us,
they are blotted out
through the Love of God.
Our baptism
has made us clean
and started the process
of justification,
sanctification
and glorification
in us
which will continue
for as long as we turn to Christ.
Monday, November 13, 2023
Sunday, November 12, 2023
The Antidote of Occult
Sermon for the twenty-third Sunday after Trinity
Did you have a good Hallowe'en?
For many people
the association of All Saintstide
and the Occult
is too uncomfortable.
They have a point.
Some people take Hallowe'en
as an excuse
to be unpleasantly morbid
in what they wear
and in what they do.
Telling a good ghost story
reminds us that
there is a world beyond our vision
and that the soul
continues its existence after death.
The problem comes
when people seek
to use the "spirits of the dead"
to gain information
or to do their bidding.
That's clearly prohibited
by Holy Scripture.
But there is something
very tantalising about
the idea of magic
and the Occult.
It appalls us
and fascinates us,
thrills us
and disgusts us
at the same time?
Why?
[PAUSE]
Let's be clear.
What do we mean by "occult"?
The word literally means "hidden"
or secret,
and it refers to the belief
that our real world
is surrounded by a hidden world.
Now here you might worry.
We believe in a hidden world.
We believe in Heaven and Hell
and the Third State between.
We believe in a hidden God,
and our sacraments
are outward signs
of hidden grace,
aren't they?
Is Christianity an occult religion?
Wow!
That is a deeply uncomfortable
thing to say!
But before we start to worry,
there is something more.
There is something
profoundly different
about Christianity
and the truly Occult.
It is the Lord's Prayer.
[PAUSE]
The Occult is dangerous
because its central idea
is to use what is hidden
to do your will.
That's the central idea:
do what you will
is the whole law
for those who follow the Occult.
Put simply
the Occult law is
"My Kingdom come.
My will be done."
As Christians know
it's God's will be done.
We see exactly that in
Christ the King Sunday
and that He promises
Eternal Life
to those who serve Him
in Love.
We see exactly that
He fulfils His promises
in All Saintstide.
To those who prefer the Occult,
we Christians are saps,
victims and brainwashed
because we prefer to serve
the will of God
than serve our own wills.
But serving our own wills
separates us
from becoming aware of God
in our lives.
[PAUSE]
The sad thing is
that many people
turn to Spiritualism
as a result of the First World War
trying to deal with
the intense grief
at the immense loss of life
of so many soldiers
in seeking to serve
their countries.
Ironically,
the soldiers give up
their wills to serve
unlike the mediums
who seek to control
their spirits at their bidding
to cash in on the grief
of the bereaved.
[PAUSE]
What we do today
in remembering
the dead servicemen and women
is the opposite of the Occult.
We generate their memory
by giving up our wills
in the Great Silence
to their memory
and thanking God
for their sacrifice.
And, rather than
manipulate the dead
to comfort the bereaved
we seek to bring
the bereaved to God
by giving up ourselves
to their pain
in sorrow, prayer and compassion.
St Paul is very clear:
we follow Christ
because He is the King
and has command
of the whole universe
much to the dismay
of the Occultists.
If we truly want
to reverse the influence
of the Occult
then we pray the Lord's Prayer
and put it into action.
Monday, November 06, 2023
Sunday, November 05, 2023
How not to be dead
Sermon for the Sunday in the Octave of All Saints
"You're talking to the dead.
They can't hear you.
They can't do anything for you.
In fact, in trying to talk to them
you are committing
the sin of spiritualism
of necromancy.
In talking to the dead
you are like the Witch of Endor,
not a Christian."
Wow!
Have you heard people
talk to you like that
when they hear you say
"Hail Mary full of grace"
or
"St Anthony, pray for me"?
Are we really praying to the dead?
[PAUSE]
Let's listen to Jesus.
"Blessed are the pure in heart
for they shall see God."
"Blessed are those who are persecuted
for righteousness' sake:
for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven."
Those who are reviled and hated
for Christ's sake
have a reward in Heaven
If Christ is faithful
then His promises are fulfilled.
This means that
all those who have died
and have been faithful to God
are enjoying the Kingdom of God.
And St John says that
they saints in Heaven praise God.
And we know that
the Dead do not praise God
so the saints in Heaven
are not dead, but alive.
St Paul also tells us
that we are surrounded by
a cloud of witnesses
watching us run the race
to the Kingdom of Heaven.
They watch us and are aware
of our lives,
they rejoice in Heaven
when sinners repent.
And the prayers of the saints
rise up before the throne of God
as incense.
For us Christians
Death has ceased to be a state
which prevents us
from living.
In Christ,
Death loses its power
to curtail our life
but becomes the gateway
to an opening up
of our little lives on Earth
into the Eternity of God's life.
So, when we pray "Hail Mary"
she heard us.
Even if a countless number
of people pray
"Hail Mary"
every second,
she hears every single one
because she sees Christ
and is like Him
because she sees Him as He is.
This is not being all-knowing
because the prayers
of a finite number of people
are finite, though large in number.
Only God knows the
infinities of truths
that are and might be.
If Our Lady's life
is Eternal now
then it lies beyond the comprehension
of those of us who are not
in Eternity.
We can be sure
that the saints hear our prayers.
But we must be careful.
[PAUSE]
We may pray to St Anthony
when we lose our keys
as long as we don't expect him
to find them for us.
We can pray to Our Lady
for the undoing of
the knots of our lives
as long as we don't expect her
to be doing the disentangling.
The prayers of the saints
go to God directly.
Indeed,
nothing stops us
from praying to God directly.
It is God,
and God alone,
who answers prayers.
In praying to the saints
we are opening ourselves up
to the Church.
Just as St James
bids us to confess our sins
in the presence of the Church
so we offer our concerns to God
in the presence of the Church
for those who stand around
are there to support us
to raise us up to God,
to will our perfection in Him.
The prayers of the saints
are nothing less
than our expression of love for us
and to ask those prayers
recignises our need for love
and to love.
This is also why we pray
for the dead.
Our prayers are expressions
of our love
for those we cannot reach
and help physically.
To pray is to reach out in love.
To ask for prayers is to seek
to be perfected
and allow others to love us.
It's not spiritualism
because we aren't seeking
knowledge of the future
or secret knowledge of Heaven.
We seek only love
for one another.
The communion of the saints
us exactly that.
It's just that some of us
have passed through death
some of us haven't
and some of us
have not yet been born.
But we are nonetheless
one Church because there is
one Lord Jesus Christ
who reconciles all who believe in Him
to His Father in His
one perfect sacrifice on the Cross
in which we participate
in the Mass.
[PAUSE]
The saints are not dead,
they live in Heaven
and yet surround us.
They pray for us
and so continue to love us
across death's divide.
They don't do anything for us
beyond the will of God
but stand alongside us
and support us
as we stand before
the Throne of Grace.
We may use the "direct line"
to God if we wish
but there are many friends
around us right now
who see the Face of God
and want us to see it, too.