...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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Monday, February 26, 2024
Sunday, February 25, 2024
It's a dog's faith
Sermon for the second Sunday in Lent
Does this story disturb you?
A woman asks Jesus for help.
He says that
it is not right
to give the children's bread
to the dogs.
Of course,
she says that
even the dogs eat
of the crumbs
that fall from the table.
Only then
does Jesus
heal the daughter of this woman.
Surely it disturbs us
because
we don't expect Jesus
to be so, well, rude!
The Jesus we know
and love
would heal the daughter
immediately
with kind words.
But He doesn't.
He effectively calls her
a dog,
albeit a family pet
rather than
a wild dog.
What's gone wrong?
[PAUSE]
We're rather presented
with a Jesus
that does not always
behave the way
we expect Him to,
or that we want Him to.
This might cause us to doubt Him.
Many people leave
the Christian Faith
because they
cannot reconcile
the God of Love
with some of the actions
they believe He commits.
The old argument goes
that because there is Evil
God cannot be wholly good,
or He cannot be Almighty
or He cannot be all-knowing.
But this argument forgets
that we human beings
are not wholly good
are not Almighty
are not all-knowing.
It means that
we cannot know
the mind of God.
We weren't there
at the moment of Creation.
We didn't see His blueprints
for the Universe.
We didn't see Him
ponder over which
laws of physics to choose.
We don't know Him.
But God knows
we don't know Him.
It is because we can't know Him
that He bids us to have faith,
to trust Him
when we are terrified
to hold on to Him
when we are in the greatest pain,
to believe in Him
when we can't see where He has gone.
[PAUSE]
We can't always know the reason why.
But look at this woman.
Look at what happens to her.
She has faith.
She doesn't lose
faith in Christ
or in His love
or in His power.
He calls her a dog
and she stands her ground.
She doesn't run away crying
her image of a nice Jesus
broken to bits.
She knows that this Man
can heal her daughter
and she trusts that He will.
She keeps faith
and answers Him
respectfully,
humbly,
and with the determination
that comes by faith in Him.
And then Jesus
shows her that He is faithful
and heals her daughter.
Actually,
He does more.
Jesus shows us that He is faithful
and He shows that this woman
is faithful.
[PAUSE]
We cannot expect
God to be exactly how
we want Him to be.
This is a sickness that has
invaded some parts of the Church.
To often,
we expect Jesus to
agree with us,
to be on our side of the argument
to be fighting for the causes
we support.
This is not Jesus.
This is a cardboard cutout
- not even an ikon.
If we are to grow in faith
then it will be in the hardships of life,
in the sadnesses, fears,
pains and sorrows,
the injustices and cruelty of life
that will cause that growth.
We cannot know God's purposes
but we can grow in faith
and believe that,
whatever is happening,
not only does He have a good reason for it
but we will become closer to Him
as a result.
This is part of our
business of repentance.
No-one said that
this would be easy
but perhaps we should
thank God for the fact that it is not easy.
For then we are
the greater in our faith
and deeper in our love.
God truly loves us:
He wants us to be perfect in Him,
even when we can't know
how to be perfect yet.
Monday, February 19, 2024
Sunday, February 18, 2024
Distracting distractions
Sermon for the first Sunday of Lent
We know why the Lord
is tempted.
St Paul in his letter
to the Hebrews
says that Our Lord
is tempted
so that He can sympathise
with us
in our temptations.
But we are tempted
all of our lives
not just forty days and forty nights.
How can Our Lord
be tempted as we are
but without sin
if He only endures it
for forty days?
[PAUSE]
We know this isn't true.
St Peter
inadvertently tempts Jesus
by trying to prevent
His crucifixion.
And,
even in Gethsemane
the temptation for Our Lord
to give up
is enormous.
If Jesus is tempted
all throughout His Incarnation
as we are tempted,
what are these forty days
and forty nights of fasting
and praying for?
Let's be careful.
It is only after forty days and forty nights
that the Devil starts tempting Him
as far as we know.
It is because He is hungry
that the Devil starts
trying to get Him to turn
stones into bread.
The Devil believes
that Our Lord's hunger
that will be the weak point
in His dedication to
His business of doing
the will of His Father.
And that's his mistake.
[PAUSE]
Our Lord is taken into the desert
by the Holy Ghost
precisely for Him
to wrestle with temptation.
These forty days
are days of preparation
for hard work.
They always have been.
For forty days,
Noah was in the Ark
not sitting twiddling his thumbs
but preparing things
for the new life
after the flood.
For forty days,
Moses was up Mount Sinai
preparing to deliver
the law to the Israel.
For forty days,
the Ninevites fasted
in repentance
and were saved.
These forty days
are always a preparation
for battle,
for a new life,
for new business to do.
This is why
Our Lord remains with us
for forty days
after His resurrection
to prepare the Church
for the new mission.
Where the Devil makes his mistake
is that Our Lord fasts
forty days and forty nights
In order to wrestle with temptation,
to meet it head on
rather than be surprised by it.
[PAUSE]
Temptation often
takes us by surprise.
It preys upon us
at our weak spot
in order to catch us out
and distract us from our business
of repentance
and the search
for God's righteousness.
Not only does Jesus
identify with us in our temptation,
He shows us that the way to deal with it
is by prayer and fasting
in order to meet it head on,
to expose our weaknesses
to ourselves
and to immerse ourselves
in the things of the Holy Spirit
which war against
the spirit of the age
and the materialism
of the world around us.
[PAUSE]
Lent helps us mean business
when we seek to turn our lives
to Christ and His Kingdom.
The Devil seeks to distract us
from this business.
If he can't win against Jesus,
then he cannot ultimately win
against hearts that are focussed
on the business of God.
Monday, February 12, 2024
Sunday, February 11, 2024
In praise of the JHPCU
Why I support the Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi Christian University
Last year I completed my doctoral studies in Theology and was elected a Fellow of this university and I find it a great honour to have been so.
Let me first start by giving some indication as to my ability to speak of educational institutes. As you will know from my pen-name, my first university education was at the University of Warwick in Mathematics. I am proud of my degrees there: I was taught well at an institution which was rated by the QS World University Rankings as 21st (2021) and 19th (2023) for the quality of Mathematics. To put that in perspective for my American readership, in the same year, Duke University was ranked 55th (2021) and 57th (2023) for Mathematics. I hope you will understand that I have some barometer by which I can judge the quality of education that I have received.
While I was at Warwick, I would often pass by pictures of the Mathematics Institute at its beginning. There was a particular photograph of the nascent Institute in 1965 of a collection of a few mathematicians, mainly from Cambridge, who were setting up that institute. The most notable was Professor Sir Christopher Zeeman but also Professor David Epstein whose images in hyperbolic geometry are still used today. I was taught by the latter since Sir Christopher was by then the master of an Oxbridge college. What stayed with me was that august institutions have small beginnings.
I can say the same of the Anglican Catholic Church: we received autonomy in 1978 and have grown as an institution to the body we have now, making our contribution to Church unity as one of the G3.
To be present at a birth is always a privilege. To be responsible in bringing something to birth is tense, fraught and yet truly wonderful.
And so to the JHPCU.
I became aware of the JHPCU through Professor Stewart Thompson who is now the principal of the Victoria College of Music. The VCM is an independent college which has the weight of a century in its work. It has its roots in Christianity - indeed, one of the modules it offered was that of Bible Reading. From the VCM, I found myself intrigued by the existence of the JHPCU.
Why JHP? Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi was a swiss pedagogue and committed Christian whose overriding thesis is that education should be a right, not a privilege. I am in full agreement of that for education is that which enables us to find a deeper language with which we can talk to, and talk about, God. The existence of God is written in all things and it is through education that we see that writing.
I resolved to study with them because I am involved in the Board of Ministry and Education in my diocese. We needed a training programme for our clergy and found that with the VCM but now had the opportunity to enhance that training with a university. If we wanted to use the JHPCU for our training then I needed to be trained by them. I also felt that such a project would help us as a diocese understand our identity as Anglican Catholics and give me an opportunity for my writing to be given a more rigorous scrutiny by proper academics. The tuition fees were very reasonable, as to be expected from an institution which seeks to provide a right rather than offer a privilege.
My supervisor was Professor Craig Paterson. Since coming to know him, I have been impressed by his significant credentials. I have his book on Analytic Thomism - a subject of serious academic weight - and found that he has worked with a luminary no less than Professor Elizabeth Anscombe. I know academics - I have been in the presence of such wonderful people such as Professor Jack Cohen and Professor Ian Stewart. I shook hands with Sir Roger Penrose and Professor Sir Michael Atiyah for whose great niece I would go on to administer public examinations. By this blatant name-dropping, again I hope I show that I know academics of quality, and so I was reassured that under Professor Paterson, I would receive sound supervision. And I did!
Paterson didn't let me get away with anything - no sloppy thinking allowed, nor the omission of full and complete references. The difference was that I received a better, more pastoral supervision filled with encouragement that, sadly, I did not receive at Warwick where my supervisor was not always available or ready to listen. I may have learned independence at Warwick but I did not learn confidence.
When finally I came to my viva, I was examined by Bishop Andrew Linley and The Venerable Peter Johnson - again certainly no intellectual lightweights. Again they took me to task to make sure that I produced works of quality. The fact that they passed me both for my masters and doctorate means that I met their standards. You may judge that for yourself as I have published my masters thesis as The Meaning of Anglican Catholicism and my doctoral thesis as Anglican Catholic Moral Theology, available from Lulu. Whether you agree with my conclusions or not, you will see the quality of education I have received and I am quite proud of my work.
Of course, the big difference is that Warwick is a very secular institution; the JHPCU is not. It is Christian and that informs the pastoral care. Neither is it a narrow institution: the JHPCU is involved in the Latimer Institute run by the UECNA which is of a decidedly Old High Protestant persuasion. Again, I might disagree with certain aspects of the theology of the UECNA, but I see in The Latimer Institute hard work being undertaken by the academics there and good on them - they ought to be proud of themselves!
From my point of view as a member of my diocesan board of ministry, education is not the be-all and end-all. My diocese is committed to spiritual formation as well as theological education as we want our priests to lead a balanced and rounded life of prayer and not just study. The JHPCU also sees spiritual development as something that can be informed by, but not subsumed in, theological education.
And so I am now a Fellow for the University. I don't receive a wage - none of us do because that is beside the point - so I cannot be accused of being in someone's pockets. I see myself like as of one of the few standing outside the farmhouse which housed Warwick's first mathematics institute. I have high hopes for the JHPCU's future and pray daily for its ministry in the world. It may be a new institution but the ACC is a new institution, too, and I believe that also has an important commission to fulfil.
Good news! Crucifixion and Miracles!
Sermon for Quinquagesima
We've been trying
to mind our own business
in the run up
to Lent.
We've been learning
to leave others' business
to them
and concentrate on our business
which is sowing
the seed of the Gospel
into the hearts of men.
If our business
as Christians is
to bear witness to the Gospel
how do we do it?
Do we do what Our Lord does?
[PAUSE]
It seems we must,
but if we look
at what Our Lord
says and does with His disciples
we run into some
uncomfortable truths.
First,
Our Lord speaks about
what will happen to Him.
He speaks of the consequences
of telling human beings
the Gospel,
that repentance
from a life of Sin
by turning to Him
will bring everlasting joy
and salvation.
These consequences
are derision
and persecution
and crucifixion.
That's not a comforting thought
about preaching good news.
The second uncomfortable truth
is that after speaking about
the reality of persecution,
Our Lord casually,
effortlessly
and freely
gives a man back his sight.
Crucifixion and miracles,
is that what we have to do
to preach the Gospel properly?
No wonder many Christians
don't bother
or preach a socially acceptable "Gospel"
that doesn't result in either
crucifixion or miracles.
[PAUSE]
If we feel like this
perhaps
we're looking at things
in The wrong way.
The fact is
we are not Jesus.
We are meant to be like Him.
That is true.
But we can only truly be like Him
when we see Him.as He really is.
That takes work.
And that's our business.
Our business is that
of repentance
and repentance is hard,
painful and sometimes
seemingly impossible.
We remember, though,
that repentance is not
a negative thing,
it is not without joy
it is not without laughter
it is not without enjoying
the good things of life.
But it is serious.
Deadly serious
Repentance is always
about turning to face Christ
and daring to look Him
straight in the eye
having committed
the sins that we have
and yet seeing
ourselves reflected in those eyes
as people of light.
In those Divine human eyes
we may see our shame
where we fall short,
but we see also love,
the will of God for our perfection
- our perfection in God.
Our business
is repentance
and, by repenting
and living active lives
of repentance,
Our Lord's light
will shine in us.
That doesn't mean
we live ostentatiously
flaunting our good deeds.
Our good deeds will flow
from our choice to repent
In honesty and truth,
and our choice
to make our lives perfect
in Christ.
[PAUSE]
And when we do suffer
or are in grievous pain
because we repent
then we know that
our repentance is working
and making visible
God's reality in our lives
and in our world
darkened by sin.
And, should God decide
to work a miracle
through us,
then that is His decision
and nothing to do with us,
but rather
allow ourselves to wonder
at the wonderful works of God
in gratitude at His desire
to work with us.
[PAUSE]
Preaching the Gospel
is a life of repentance
in which we strive
to see Christ
in all we do or see.
This is because salvation
is a process
in which we participate actively
and not a one-off event.
And so we begin Lent
looking at what our own business is,
and minding it,
and seeking Christ out
from the clutter of our lives.
God bless you this Lent.
Monday, February 05, 2024
Sunday, February 04, 2024
Sow, sow, sow your crop...
Sermon for Sexagesima
Who is the parable for?
Our Lord preaches
about the Sower
sowing the word of God
and the fate of each of the seed,
but who is the parable for?
[PAUSE]
We know that it can't be
for everyone.
Our Lord Himself
says that parables
are only for those
who have ears to hear.
But, clearly the disciples
have ears to hear
which is why Jesus
explains the parable.
Except.
Except, who is the Sower?
Who is sowing
the word of God?
Does Jesus say?
[PAUSE]
In each of the gospels of
St Matthew,
St Mark
and St Luke,
we are not told who the Sower is.
Isn't it God?
Well, no.
For God would know
where to sow for a good crop.
God doesn't waste things.
If He knows the number
of stars, sparrows
and hairs on your head,
then we know
that everything works for good
for those who love God.
If God were the Sower,
would He allow the devil
to take the word of salvation
from the hearts of men?
God is not the Sower.
Jesus is not the Sower.
Jesus is talking
to the sowers of His word.
This parable
is for the disciples
because it is their calling
to serve God by preaching the Gospel.
[PAUSE]
Our Lord explains
the pitfalls of preaching.
We cannot expect
our preaching always to be effective.
Sometimes
before anyone can hear the Gospel,
the Devil gets in the way.
So we must preach again
to those by the wayside.
Sometimes
the Gospel goes a little way in
but the rocky hearts of men
can stop it from growing.
So we must preach again
to those in rocky ground.
Sometimes
the Gospel goes in and starts growing
but the world around
distracts and disorders
so that a person doesn't
fully come to faith.
So we must preach again
to those in briars and thistles and weeds.
[PAUSE]
It is our duty
to keep preaching
because we don't know
where the word of God
is ending up.
We can't see
the birds,
the rocks,
the thistles,
or even the fertile soil.
But we can be sure
that one seed
in the good soil
will grow and produce
more than we know.
[PAUSE]
it is at the end of Time
that the harvest will be reckoned
the sheaves bundled
the tares and weeds and thistles
burned away.
Until then,
we must mind our own business
and
sow, sow, sow
even in tears and sorrow
because we will come
again in joy
bringing in a good harvest
and rejoicing
in the salvation
of all our brothers and sisters.