All Saints’ Day
Today is All Saints Day, a day when we celebrate, not just the saints who forged out faith and inspired us, but also our own calling to be saints. Both of our readings speak of difficulty, and of the hope that allows us to continue to thrive in the face of those difficulties. Daniel 7:1-3, 15-18 gives us a vision of the ocean (the symbol of chaos) from which rise 4 beasts. But despite the strength of the beasts, Daniel is assured that the arc of history will bring justice and peace. Luke 6:20-31 gives us the beatitudes: blessed are the poor, blessed are the hungry, blessed are those who mourn. These do not seem like blessings, but the blessing is in the reversal: those who are poor WILL inherit the kingdom, those who are hungry WILL be filled. The church, the saints, are called to stand in the middle, between the struggle and the triumph: we are the ones who are to fill the hungry, we are the ones to bring joy to those who weep. Today, together with the PCC, we will explore the ways in which we might be called to be the agents of reversal and the agents of blessing in this place.
Last Sunday after Trinity
Our Gospel reading is a sneaky one this morning: Jesus, Luke 18:9-14, tells a parable of the pharisee who prays out loud, assured of his own righteousness, and judgemental of the tax collectors mumbling his prayers in the corner. The tax collector is convinced only of his own failures, yet he is the one who Jesus calls justified. Our instinctive reaction is to judge the pharisee but in doing so we commit the same sin: we are the included not the includers, we are the judged not the judges. Nothing we do, for better or for worse, will make God love us more. And nothing we do will make God love us less. Our ‘righteousness’ or ‘justification’ is the work of God and God alone. As Jeremiah 14:7-10, 19-22, reminds us “we set out hope on you, O Lord our God, for it is you who does all this.”
Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity
Our readings this week focus on the effort involved in living a life of faith. In Genesis 32:22-32 Jacob wrestles all night with the divine; in Luke 18:1-8 Jesus gives us a role model of persistent prayer. The story of Jacob wrestling the angel is one of my favourites: the life of faith is not without risks. At the end of the struggle Jacob is left with both a wound and a blessing. We might wonder whether the struggle is worth it. Jacob has everything he could have wanted in life: status, prosperity, family, yet he is restless and discontent. More than this, he is stuck, he cannot move forward. His night of wrestling with God provides him with direction and meaning and, finally, he can move on to a fuller life. This morning we celebrate the long and devoted ministry of Mother Caroline. Someone who has never shied away from the struggle, and is persistent in her wrestling with the divine on behalf of a whole community.
Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity
Today we celebrate the Harvest Festival. Our readings try to get to the heart of why we celebrate harvest and what makes it relevant for us.
When the people of God bring their first fruits, Deuteronomy 26:1-13, they are encouraged to recall their history: that a stranger and a foreigner was their ancestor, that they were slaves, that God liberated them and gave them a land of plenty. Having been reminded that they once had nothing and were dependent on the goodness of God and others, the people are sent home to feast, not only with their families, but with the slaves and foreigners and strangers in the land. After the festival is over, the people of God are reminded that they should be putting aside a share of their wealth every year to give to those who are most needy in their community.
In the Gospel, John 6:32-35, Jesus explains that we give not just to help others but to help ourselves: building community, giving of ourselves, sharing with others is what brings us life.
At harvest time, as we give thanks for all the gifts we enjoy, we are challenged to think about how we can live abundantly and help to build a community of plenty.
Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity
Today we celebrate the feast of St Michael and All Angels and our readings focus on the image of the angelic ladder stretched between earth and heaven. In Genesis 28:10-17 Jacob dreams of this ladder and, although God tells him he will be with him wherever he goes, Jacob sees the ladder as fixed in this one particular holy place. Jesus though, in John 1:47-51, describes himself as the ladder between heaven and earth. In baptism we too become like Christ, christened, and we are all called, from the littlest to the greatest, to be ladders between heaven and earth, lifting others to God and bringing God’s love to them.
Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity
This week’s readings are both about the way in which the concerns and the pleasures of life can prevent us from connecting with one another and perceiving our innate interdependence. In Amos 6:1-7 the prophet is criticising the rich and idle. He is not, however, rejecting abundance, pleasure, enjoyment - these are good gifts from God to be enjoyed - but to their tendency to isolate us from one another. Jesus in Luke 16:19-31 gives us an example: the rich man in his story cannot even see Lazarus; he is invisible to him, although he sits at his gate daily. On earth there is a great gulf between them: not a geographical one but one caused by the difference in their stations in life. The rich man could have bridged this distance but was too preoccupied to do so. Now he is concerned for his own brothers, still not seeing that Lazarus is also his brother - still not able to reach across the distance between them.
Sunday 18th September, 6.30pm
Service of Thanksgiving, Sunday 18th September, 6.30pm
A special commemoration service marking the death of her late majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity
Last week Jesus was praising a shepherd who abandoned his 99 sheep to go looking for a lost one. This week he’s applauding a manager who gives away his master’s goods, (Luke 16:1-13).
At the start of the story the manager is in solidarity with the master, the one with wealth and power. By the end of the story, he is in solidarity with the debtors, those with little wealth and power (echoing the call of the prophet in our first reading, Amos 8:4-7). Irrespective of his motives, his actions ease the burden of the poor. Once he acknowledges his own insecurity, his own vulnerability, he acts to lessen the insecurity and vulnerability of others. We might (reasonably) complain that he does so by giving away what is not his in the first place. But in God’s radical economy, nothing is truly ours. All that we have - our life, our breath, our relationships, our talents - are a gift from God. If we share them, there will be enough for all God’s children.
Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity
Today we reflect on the life and death of HM Queen Elizabeth II (1926-2022).
Twelfth Sunday after Trinity (Parish Eucharist and Baptism)
This Sunday we celebrate a baptism and the welcoming of a new member to our church and to the family of God. When considering our Gospel reading Luke: 14:25-33, it is important then to look at the use of “love vs hate” in the gospel. It is meant to indicate what happens when we choose one path over another: if you follow one master you are unable to follow another. When we become part of the family of God, that family takes priority. We can no longer consider just the needs of our own household, our own aged parents, our own vulnerable little ones; our concern necessarily expands to all aged parents and all vulnerable little ones. Love is no longer privatised, it is set free to embrace those God embraces. Jesus then goes on to tell the story of a man building a tower and a king going to war; neither have the resources to finish the job. We will never have the resources to love the entire world, no matter, God is a God of abundance, when we take our place in the economy of God’s love we receive much more than we are able to give.
Eleventh Sunday after Trinity
Both of today’s readings give us a lecture on table manners. Proverbs 25:6-7 reminds us to be humble and not assume a status greater than we have. But it still holds out the hope that our humility will be rewarded. It looks as though Jesus, in Luke 14:1, 7-14, is just repeating this advice, but then he begins to talk about reciprocity. Human relations are built on the idea of reciprocity: I give to you and you will, in turn, give back to me; I invite you to dinner, you invite me to dinner. Instead Jesus tells us to give without expecting reciprocity: none of us are capable of reciprocating what God offers us. In the kingdom of God none of us are hosts, we are all guests. We are invited to share that divine hospitality without favour.
Image copyright: Jan Richardson, The Painted Prayerbook
Tenth Sunday after Trinity
In today’s gospel, Luke 13:10-17, Jesus heals a woman who has been bent over and bowed down. The faith community are not happy with him because he healed her on the Sabbath. The Sabbath, Isaiah 58:9b-14 reminds us, is a day in which to delight in the Lord and the freedom we have received. For Christ, freedom is something we share: I cannot be truly free if you are not also free; injustice anywhere threatens justice everywhere. Christ points out, as Isaiah does, that we are often responsible for the burdens of others, and invites us all to be agents who share in the unbinding of others.
Ninth Sunday after Trinity
No easy summer reading for us this week. The prophet, Jeremiah (Jeremiah 23:23-29), and Jesus, (Luke 12:49-56), both promise us fire and division. This is not Christ, the bringer of peace, that we are used to. This feels like a much more Old Testament Christ, sending down the fire of punishment. The conflict that Jesus warns of is not, however, a punishment; he is merely describing the reality of a world in which some have power and prosperity and some do not. In such a world crisis (the baptism of fire which Jesus speaks of) reveals already existing divisions. Sadly, it often takes the fire of race riots to reveal the divisions of racism. It takes the crisis of refugees risking their lives on small boats and washing up on our shores to reveal the injustice of our immigration policies. The fire offered in this morning’s readings is a fire that reveals injustice, that offers us a chance to burn down existing inequalities. Yes, it is fire that destroys but also a fire that transforms.
Eighth Sunday after Trinity
Is enough ever enough?
In this week’s texts Abraham has been promised everything (Genesis 15:1-6), and Jesus’ followers have been promised the kingdom (Luke 12:32-40). But still they are behaving as if they do not have enough.They are acting out of a fear of scarcity.
In the midst of a cost of living crisis it is easy to do the same. But the advice given by God is “stop counting, start living”. The image of the thief in the night may seem like scaremongering, but it is really the opposite. Like the parable of the rich fool in last week’s gospel, its message is that all we need is right here before us.
Fear makes us look inward. To look outward we require both hope and trust.
Do we believe that life is about more than mere security? Can we risk behaving as if a different life is possible?
Seventh Sunday after Trinity
My word, how miserable are the characters in both our readings today! They are both successful, wealthy men, yet one, Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14, 2:18-23, bemoans the fact that others will benefit from his prosperity, and the other, Luke 12:13-21, the man who has been obsessed with hoarding his bounty, drops dead before enjoying any of it (exactly what the character in Ecclesiastes is afraid of!). The readings are NOT peddling the line that “money is the root of all evil”, but rather asking us what the point of plenty is. What is money for? Are our riches, talents and resources a source of anxiety or are they the way of bringing blessing and life to ourselves and others?
Sixth Sunday after Trinity
This week’s readings are both about prayer, or more accurately, our relationship with God. In Genesis 18:20-32 Abraham has an extraordinary exchange in which he argues with God about the nature of God’s justice; surely God would not punish the innocent for the actions of the guilty? Whereas in Luke 11:1-13 Jesus teaches his disciples how to pray. It is striking that in both passages the purpose of prayer is seen as advocacy on behalf of others: Abraham negotiating for the life of the inhabitants of Sodom, and in Luke the example of the ideal prayer of someone petitioning a neighbour for help in fulfilling the needs of a visitor. In neither case is the prayer a list of demands or requests. Prayer at heart is a relationship of trust. A relationship which changes us rather than God. If our prayers shape and form us into the likeness of Christ they will change us into a people whose deepest desire is the well-being of those in need.
Fifth Sunday after Trinity
Today’s readings both concern the role of those who serve, those whose unseen and unsung labours keep the world turning.
Our Old Testament reading, Genesis 18:1-10, is known as the “hospitality of Abraham”, but Abraham does precious little to provide for his guests. It is his elderly wife and unnamed servants who do all the work whilst Abraham is served with his guests. Sarah does not eat or sit with the guests; she does not even enter the tent. In contrast, in Luke 10:38-42, Mary sits at Jesus’ feet alongside the male disciples. What is also significant is that Martha, unlike Sarah, is given a voice. She can raise her concerns about the injustice of her role.
In our lives we are provoked to ponder who is listening to the voices of those whose essential work is often unseen and unsung? Who is inviting them into the conversation to make decisions about how our world and our future could be shaped?
Fourth Sunday after Trinity
I am guessing that we can all remember at least one sermon on the Good Samaritan, Luke 10:25-37. Maybe it was a school assembly teaching us to be kind, maybe it was Margaret Thatcher’s famous take on how the Samaritan had amassed wealth under a free market economy, which allowed him to be generous with his charity, or even Martin Luther King’s reflection that whilst the Priest and the Levite had thought about what would happen to them if they stopped to help the man in need, only the Samaritan thought about what would happen to the man if he didn’t stop to help him. In my humble opinion all of them missed the point that Jesus is trying to make. The scholar asks Jesus a question: who is my neighbour? He put himself in the story as the subject and the neighbour as the object. Jesus replies: who was a neighbour to the man in need? He makes the scholar the object not the subject. We are the ones in need of a neighbour. We are the ones in danger. This story that Jesus tells is like the parable of the lost sheep: if we are the 99 who do not go in search of the lost sheep, we are the ones who are in fact lost. Our first reading also switches the point of view, Amos 7:7-17: Amos is an Israelite, he is supposed (according to those in power) to prophesy for Israel and against Israel’s enemies: what if, Amos asks, Israel is its own enemy? As ever, both scriptures criticize us for judging and for assuming that we are the ones who have the right to decide who is worthy of inclusion and who is not. It’s a hard lesson but still, as Jesus says: go and do likewise.
Third Sunday after Trinity
It’s a busy day today: we are welcoming a new member of our church family, Harry, who is being baptised today, we are saying farewell to our beloved Nathan as he takes up his new job in Scotland AND we are celebrating Pride. Our reading for today tells the story of the healing of Naaman by the prophet Elisha, 2 Kings 5:1-14. This is an extraordinary story of a man who had great power, wealth and status who risked becoming a social outcast when he developed leprosy. Naaman is offered healing but is on the brink of refusing it because it involves wading into the river Jordan; a river which was used by everyone for everything. Something which offended his dignity. The wonderful thing about becoming part of God’s family is that everyone is included, everyone is invited. The appalling thing about God’s family is that … everyone is included, everyone is invited! Sadly, the Church of England still doesn’t reflect the inclusive and all embracing nature of God’s love. Thankfully this didn’t stop Nathan joining us and working with us to try and reflect that inclusivity here in Clapham, we shall miss him greatly. Naaman finally accepted the free gift that he was offered and was healed. Today we commit ourselves to accepting that gift: the gift of a love that values and embraces all God’s people, this is the family into which we welcome Harry with joy.
Second Sunday after Trinity
The readings don’t get any easier do they? Last week we had Jesus braving foreign lands, naked lunatics and suicidal pigs. This week he sets his face to Jerusalem, Luke 9:51-62, and warns his followers of hardship. He will have no place to lay his head, nowhere to call home. Similarly in 1 Kings 19:15,16,19-21 the prophet Elijah warns Elisha not to follow him. Elisha leaves his home to do just that. As an act of commitment to his chosen path, before he leaves Elisha slaughters his oxen, the symbol of his previous role as a farmer of the land. Today we would say that he is burning his bridges. It is not possible to have one foot in and one foot out of the kingdom of God. Importantly, Elisha cooks the oxen and offers the food to his people. What he has and who he is, is no longer for his use but is to serve the world God loves. Today’s readings encourage us to reflect on what we need to leave behind to follow God’s call to us.