Monday, April 29, 2024
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Trinitarian displacement?
Sermon for the fourth Sunday after Easter
We see
Our Lord Jesus Christ
talking with His disciples.
They have had
their last supper
and the Lord has told them
of His departure.
The Lord knows
that they understand
that He will be taken from them
and return to the Father.
But they sorrow
and their sorrow is clear
to the Lord
as he talks with them.
His response is
to tell them that
He must go away
or the Holy Ghost will
not come to them.
Why?
Is it impossible
for the Holy Ghost
to walk the world
alongside Jesus?
Don't they have
a ministry on Earth
together?
Why do we get
One of the Trinity
at a time?
[PAUSE]
The first thing is
we have to know
where Jesus is going.
This isn't the Ascension.
He's walking to crucifixion here.
He is about to die,
and we know why
He has to die.
[PAUSE]
In His death,
Jesus redeems Mankind,
opens the door to Heaven,
brings us back to God.
Only after Our Lord
accomplishes
this great task
of reconciliation
and atonement
as only He can,
do we find ourselves
able to receive
the Holy Ghost.
This reconciliation
can only take place
because of Our Lord's uniqueness
as being fully God and fully Man.
But being fully human
Is a limitation.
In order to be human
Our Lord has to empty Himself.
He becomes visible
so that we can see the Father.
He becomes human
so that He can sanctify
our humanity
so that God can be with us.
And He gives us
the Holy Eucharist
precisely so that
He can be with us physically
unto the end of the age.
It's not that the Holy Ghost
and Our Lord cannot work
alongside each other.
Jesus doesn't go away from us
to make room for the Holy Ghost
but rather He goes to the Father
in order to send the Holy Ghost.
He brings the Holy Ghost with Him
at His Resurrection
and breathes Him upon the Disciples.
It is not that the Holy Ghost is absent
from us until Christ brings Him.
He has always been present,
but Christ brings Him
in order to introduce Him
to us who have not fully known Him.
The reason is clear.
Jesus is sanctifying
the ministry of the Church
with the gift of the Holy Ghost
operating with us and in us.
The Holy Ghost comes to us
precisely for Him to work
with us in His Church.
Our work is important to Him
- vitally important!
It is the Holy Ghost
that gives the Church authority
to make clear to the world
the presence of sin
because the world does not
believe in Christ.
It is the Holy Ghost
that gives the Church the purpose
of making clear to the world
the presence of righteousness
because Our Lord goes to the Father
and becomes invisible
to those who do not believe.
It is the Holy Ghost
that gives the Church the right
to proclaim the judgement
that God has made
against the prince of this world,
exposing his temptations
as he leads people into sin.
[PAUSE]
Of course,
each one of us sins
and falls short,
but it is the righteousness
that the Holy Ghost
reveals to His Church
that exposes our sins,
not for our condemnation,
but for our repentance
and reconciliation in Christ.
[PAUSE]
We cannot think
that one Person of the Trinity
displaces another
but that God is present to us
in His Trinity
at all times and in all places.
Through Christ,
we have seen the Father
and know the Holy Ghost.
It is His desire
that we work with Him
to present His process of salvation
to the world
and He gives our work
the dignity that
our actions of worship
and evangelism
are precious to Him.
We may think
our worship small
and insignificant
but it is the Holy Ghost's presence
that makes our little actions
glorious in the sight of Heaven
Monday, April 22, 2024
An Anglican Catholic approach to Confession
Saturday, April 20, 2024
Labouring under an apprehension
Sermon for the third Sunday after Easter
There are many great
mysteries in life.
Some mysteries
emerge from facts
lost to History
and exist as ghosts
of speculation.
Some mysteries
lie in the fathomless
depths of space
barely penetrated
by the telescopes
and proves
sent out by astronomers.
And some mysteries
exist within our own species.
One such mystery
can be found troubling
the minds of men
when they are confronted
with something that they
can never truly know
- the pain of childbirth.
[PAUSE]
The husband
who joins his wife
In the delivery room
is confronted
with a wall of
impenetrable ignorance.
He works hard to support
and understand the needs
of his wife as she struggles
to bring the baby into the world
but he is at a loss because
for all his care and attention
he cannot supply anything
that she needs
based on his experience.
All words he says to comfort
and encourage his wife
cannot be based
on anything other than
his own imagination
of what she is going through
and it usually falls short
of the pain that she is enduring.
All he can do
is faithfully and actively
extend his love, respect
and gratitude
to his wife
and prepare himself
for fatherhood.
A man cannot know
his wife's pain.
Can she know his?
Can anyone know
another's pain?
[PAUSE]
This is a mystery indeed!
We can only know
our own pain and suffering.
We can only know
what it is like for us
to sprain an ankle,
cut a finger,
or even give birth.
No two labours
are the same
because no two women
are the same
and no two babies are the same.
This is the deep mystery
of being human.
We cannot truly
know the pain of others.
This means
all our Christian attempts
to love each other
fall at the first hurdle
because we do not know
what our neighbour
wants or needs to be perfect.
This is why human love
fails to unite humanity.
This is why the rule
"do unto others
as you would have them
do unto you"
cannot work.
Indeed,
this is why the Church appears divided
because
we are ignorant
of how to love each other
properly.
But because we try so hard
to love
we end up doing damage
to the Church
to the world
and to each other.
Our sin,
even our unintended sin,
causes pain
from the very moment
Eve grasps that fruit.
From that moment
we are blind to God
and we are blind
to what true love is.
[PAUSE]
And so Love comes among us
to show us Who He is.
We are born, so He is born.
We struggle, so He struggles.
We weep, so He weeps.
We due, so He dies.
And in so doing
He supplies what is lacking
and corrects what is done amiss,
so that the pain of living
has a purpose
even as bringing a baby into the world
makes the pain tolerable.
A woman may remember
the ordeal of labour
but the baby she holds
means she needs not choose
to remember the pain.
But then,
not all labour goes to plan.
[PAUSE]
There are labours
that go badly
that have the worst possible outcomes.
There are countless women
who after the pain of labour
hold in their arms
one whose life has ended
before it even saw the light of day.
And that pain
frightens us
causes our hearts to break
and to call up to God,
"Why?"
"Why is my baby dead?"
And we might be tempted
look at Our Lord's words
about sorrow being turned to joy
and to brand them glib
- even an insult -
ignorant of the mother crying out
over her dead baby,
ignorant of the husband,
dazed and confused as
to why he's not a father
or even no longer a husband,
ignorant of every human being
who has cried our in despair
at the injustice of life.
Words cannot be enough.
But the explanation
cannot take the pain away.
Answering the "Why?"
will not return breath to the little body.
There has to be action.
So God dies
horribly,
terribly,
in agony,
surrounded by those who hate Him
who laugh and mock and jeer.
And then He comes back,
not to show off
but to show that He is faithful,
that He sees our pain
and the utter devastation
of the human heart
and to remind us of His promise
that the pain we feel now
is nothing,
nothing to the joy we feel
with Him in Heaven.
The Cross is not something
with which we should
compare our pain:
it is the vehicle
of the promise we have
received.
It is not a question of
"well, God suffered
so your pain means nothing."
It is more,
"you're in pain
but God is with you
and will bring you through
even though
you can only know your pain."
[PAUSE]
We look out
onto a world
filled with so much pain
and suffering
and we cannot truly know
what that pain and suffering are.
But we Christians hold fast
to the Cross
while bearing our own crosses,
venerating them
as much as we venerate
the Cross of Christ,
knowing that God
is never ignorant of our pain
but will bring to birth in us
Faith, Hope and Love
and that these will last
much longer than any pain can.
Monday, April 15, 2024
Making saints the Anglican Catholic way
How does a person become a saint in the Anglican Catholic Church?
Sorry, my video got cut off.
I meant to add:
God bless you in your progress to sainthood. May you always bear witness to Almighty God.
And God bless you that you may join all your favourite saints in the glory of God.
And please pray for me
Saturday, April 13, 2024
Ovine Comparisons
Sermon for the second Sunday after Easter
Analogies and metaphors
can only go so far.
Our Lord describes us
as His sheep.
To our ears,
that makes us sound
like dumb animals.
Perhaps we object to that
as it hurts our dignity
as human beings.
But if we compare ourselves
with God
we are not even sheep.
What is a pot
compared with the potter?
Or the stick man
idly doodled onto the page
of an exercise book
compared with the bored
schoolboy trying to cope
with learning
the politics of World War I?
To be compared as a sheep
with the Divine Master
is a compliment.
But if we are concerned
about being compared with sheep
in the first place
then we're missing the point.
[PAUSE]
To compare two things
puts them in opposition.
We look at two things
to see which is bigger,
which is worth more money,
which is prettier,
which smells worse.
The moment we try that with God
then the comparisons
stop making any sense.
Which is redder:
the post box,
or the colour red?
Which is brighter:
the sun,
or light itself?
Which is more holy
the saints,
or God Himself?
[PAUSE]
We are always so ready
to compare ourselves with others
that frequently we miss the point.
Jesus is the Good Shepherd
we are His sheep,
not of the fold
of the inheritance of Israel
but of the gentile fold
that Jesus has taken to Himself.
Yes, the metaphor
compares us with sheep
but the point is clear:
God is with us.
He isn't against us.
He is not comparing Himself with us.
He is not setting Himself up
in opposition to us.
If Jesus is using
the metaphor of the sheep
to make the point
that He is greater than us
then He would have to deny
the fact that He has a human nature
like us.
To reinforce His difference from us
would be to despise His Incarnation
and that would defeat the whole object
of why He became flesh for us.
If humans are sheep
then He would be a sheep as well.
In saying that He is the shepherd
Jesus is not exalting Himself over us.
Quite the reverse.
He is saying that He is with us.
He is on our side.
He has our backs,
won't let us go,
will fight for us
will die for us
will lead us into the ecstasy
of Heaven itself
all because He loves us
and enjoys
to be around us.
[PAUSE]
However we appear
in Our Lord's parables
we can trust
that He means us
in the best possible way
in order to bring us to our perfection
and happiness
which can only happen
when He is in our midst.
Monday, April 08, 2024
Announcing Time's Tapestry
Why transferring the Feast of the Annunciation reminds us of the promise of Eternity.
Saturday, April 06, 2024
Proceedings from Easter
Sermon for Low Sunday
The Lord breathes
on the Apostles
and then says,
"Receive the Holy Ghost."
But don't they receive
the Holy Ghost
on the day of Pentecost?
What's going on?
[PAUSE]
The first thing to note
is that the Holy Ghost
is proceeding from the Son.
But the Son is not the source
of the Holy Ghost.
Jesus is the means
by which the Holy Ghost
proceeds to us.
The scripture here
is very clear.
The Spirit proceeds
from the Father as the source
of all being and yet
through the Son
and upon the apostles.
Why should this be important
to us?
Does it matter how
the Persons of the Trinity
relate to one another?
Does it matter how
the Holy Ghost shows Himself to us?
[PAUSE]
What do we see?
The Lord Jesus breathes
the Holy Ghost
into the Apostles
and He gives them authority
to bind and loose sins.
This authority
is not just some certificate,
not some rubber stamp,
or ID card that says
"Licence to forgive sins."
This authority
is the Holy Ghost Himself.
It shows us
that when the Apostles forgive sins
in the name of
the Father, Son and Holy Ghost,
they really are forgiven
that the relationship
between God and those who repent
is healing and strengthening.
This authority has its source
in God the Father
because God the Father
is the source of all things good.
This authority proceeds through
God the Son,
because the Incarnation
of Jesus Christ was expressly
for the purpose of redeeming souls
and the forgiveness of sins.
So we see that the Holy Ghost
proceeds from the Father
through the Son
to us
for the purpose
of freeing us from our sins.
[PAUSE]
The Apostles clearly receive
the Holy Ghost here
and here He begins His work
of transforming
Disciple to Apostle.
When that transformation is complete
then the Holy Ghost
makes His presence visible
fifty days after Easter.
But that is another story.
Monday, April 01, 2024
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